James Dunlap v. Cottman Transmissions Systems ( 2013 )


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  •                                 UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 11-2327
    JAMES M. DUNLAP,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    v.
    COTTMAN TRANSMISSIONS SYSTEMS, LLC; TODD P. LEFF,
    Defendants - Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern
    District of Virginia, at Norfolk. Arenda Wright Allen, District
    Judge. (2:11-cv-00272-AWA-DEM)
    Argued:   May 14, 2013                         Decided:    August 21, 2013
    Before Sandra Day O’CONNOR, Associate Justice (Retired), Supreme
    Court of the United States, sitting by designation, and WYNN and
    DIAZ, Circuit Judges.
    Unpublished     Order   of   Certification    to   the   Supreme   Court   of
    Virginia.
    ARGUED:   Crystal M. Johnson, UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA SCHOOL OF
    LAW,   Appellate   Litigation   Clinic,  Athens,   Georgia,   for
    Appellant. James C. Rubinger, PLAVE KOCH PLC, Reston, Virginia,
    for Appellees.    ON BRIEF:   Peter B. Rutledge, Paula Briceno,
    Brittany Cambre, UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA SCHOOL OF LAW, Appellate
    Litigation Clinic, Athens, Georgia, for Appellant.    Benjamin B.
    Reed, PLAVE KOCH, PLC, Reston, Virginia, for Appellees.
    PER CURIAM:
    I.    Questions Certified
    The United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit,
    exercising the privilege afforded it by the Supreme Court of
    Virginia through its Rule 5:40 to certify questions of law to
    the Supreme Court of Virginia when a question of Virginia law is
    determinative in a pending action and there is no controlling
    Virginia     precedent      on    point,       requests      the    Supreme       Court    of
    Virginia     to   exercise       its    discretion      to    answer       the    following
    questions:
    1.    May a plaintiff use tortious interference with contract or
    tortious    interference             with   business       expectancy       as    the
    predicate     unlawful         act    for   a   claim      under    the   Virginia
    business conspiracy statute, Va. Code §§ 18.2-499, 18.2-
    500?
    2.    Does a two-year or five-year statute of limitations apply
    to   claims    of    tortious         interference         with    contract       and
    tortious interference with business expectancy under Va.
    Code § 8.01-243?
    We acknowledge that the Supreme Court of Virginia may restate
    these questions.      See Va. Sup. Ct. R. 5:40(d).
    2
    II.     Nature of the Controversy and Statement of Relevant Facts
    AAMCO Transmissions, Inc. is a nationwide transmission and
    automobile       repair       company      that       operates       through         local
    franchises.        This    case     involves    a    dispute      between       an   AAMCO
    franchisee named James Dunlap and various parties related to
    AAMCO    and     its    recent      attempt    to     eliminate       certain         local
    franchises with overlapping business areas in Virginia.
    Dunlap,    the   plaintiff-appellant,           has      operated    a    pair    of
    AAMCO franchises for over 30 years.                 In 2006, AAMCO was acquired
    by an asset-management company that already held a large share
    of   Cottman     Transmission       Systems,        LLC,    an    AAMCO    competitor.
    Because of the substantial overlap among the businesses – and
    the potential for competition among local franchisees – the new
    AAMCO owners attempted to convert Cottman franchises to AAMCO
    franchises     and     then   close     some   existing         franchises.          Dunlap
    found himself among the disfavored franchisees.                       See J.A. 5-8,
    11-14.
    Dunlap fought AAMCO to stay in business, and the parties
    eventually     litigated      and   settled    cross-disputes         for       trademark
    infringement      and     wrongful      termination        of    Dunlap’s       franchise
    agreements.       Subject      to   conditions       not     particularly        relevant
    here, this settlement allowed Dunlap to continue to operate his
    AAMCO franchises.          Then, as now, Dunlap maintained that AAMCO
    tried    to    terminate      his   franchises       for     minor   or     trumped     up
    3
    violations of their franchise agreements as a pretext to force
    him out of business.              See J.A. 11-14; AAMCO Transmissions, Inc.
    v. Dunlap, 
    2011 WL 3586225
     (E.D. Pa. Aug. 16, 2011).                             Because
    AAMCO was the contracting party, and its duties were resolved in
    the prior litigation, Dunlap’s present complaint is not directed
    to AAMCO itself.           Instead, Dunlap now asserts that the decision
    to    force   him    out    of    business       was   a    conspiracy   for    personal
    profit among new AAMCO principal Todd Leff, Cottman Transmission
    Systems, and certain of Dunlap’s local competitors who would
    benefit from his exit.                J.A. 11-20.          He maintains that AAMCO’s
    actions, precipitated by these other parties, caused irreparable
    harm to his business by depriving him of marketing benefits that
    typically     flow    from        a    franchise       arrangement.       The   present
    complaint thus names Leff and Cottman as defendants in an action
    for: (1) violation of Virginia’s business conspiracy statute,
    (2)    tortious      interference         with      contract,     and    (3)    tortious
    interference with business expectancy.                     J.A. 4-5, 20-24.
    The district court dismissed the business conspiracy count
    for failure to allege a valid “unlawful act” as a predicate for
    the conspiracy.            It relied on a recent Virginia Supreme Court
    decision called Station #2, LLC v. Lynch, 
    280 Va. 166
     (2010),
    which held that “a conspiracy merely to breach a contract that
    does    not   involve        an       independent      duty    arising    outside   the
    contract is insufficient to establish a civil claim under [the
    4
    Virginia   business        conspiracy      statute].”        Id.   at   174.       The
    district court then found that “[a]ll of the duties involved in
    this case arise out of and the damages flow from contractual
    obligations” – namely, the franchise agreements between Dunlap
    and    AAMCO.       J.A.      43-44.      Accordingly,      the    district    court
    concluded that applying the business conspiracy statute in this
    case   would    risk   exactly     what    the    Virginia    Supreme    Court     had
    tried expressly to avoid: “turning every breach of contract into
    an actionable claim for fraud.”                  Station #2, 280 Va. at 174
    (citation omitted).           In dismissing this claim, it joined another
    district    court      from    this    Circuit     that    recently     rejected     a
    tortious interference allegation as the predicate for a business
    conspiracy count under the rule announced in Station #2.                           See
    J.A. 43 (discussing Zurich Am. Ins. Co. v. Turbyfill, 
    2010 WL 4065527
     (W.D. Va. Oct. 15, 2010)).
    Next, the district court dismissed both of the independent
    common-law tort claims as untimely.                 Virginia has a five-year
    statute of limitations for injuries to property rights, see Va.
    Code § 8.01-243(B), but a two-year statute of limitations for
    actions    related       to     personal       injuries,     id.    § 8.01-243(A).
    Relying on Willard v. Moneta Bldg. Supply, Inc., 
    262 Va. 473
    (2001), the district court noted that “an allegation of nothing
    more than disappointed economic expectations does not amount to
    an injury to property” because “the law of contracts provides
    5
    the sole remedy for such a loss.”            J.A. 45 (quoting Willard, 
    262 Va. at 480
    ).       Having already characterized the common-law tort
    claims as flowing from breach of contract for purposes of the
    conspiracy count, the district court again relied on Station #2
    to classify them as contract (and, thus, personal injury) claims
    for purposes of the two-year statute of limitations.                 J.A. 44-45
    & n.2.      In other words, because the injury in this case went to
    Dunlap’s disappointed expectations about how AAMCO would perform
    and   the    profitability    of   Dunlap’s    business    –   and    not    to    a
    property injury as such – the district court applied the shorter
    statute of limitations, and dismissed.
    III.   Legal Discussion and Relevant Virginia Case Law
    A.    Business Conspiracy Issue
    The reason to certify the first issue is straightforward:
    The   Virginia     Supreme    Court’s   recent   decision      in    Station      #2
    signals     obvious   skepticism     about    business    conspiracy        claims
    predicated on contract disputes, but we are unable to ascertain
    with certainty how far that skepticism extends.
    On the one hand, Station #2 clearly represents an important
    change in Virginia’s business conspiracy law, and we agree with
    the district court that this case raises concerns of the kind
    addressed there.       In Station #2, the Virginia Supreme Court at
    least     partly   rejected    its   established    case       law   making       it
    actionable to “conspire[] to procure the breach of a contract.”
    6
    See 280 Va. at 174 (rejecting Chaves v. Johnson, 
    230 Va. 112
    (1985), and Worrie v. Boze, 
    198 Va. 533
     (1956)).                          The Court
    noted that, while it had previously approved such claims, it was
    now “of opinion that a conspiracy merely to breach a contract
    that does not involve an independent duty arising outside the
    contract   is    insufficient      to   establish      a    civil   [conspiracy]
    claim.”       
    Id.
       (emphasis   added).         The    Court     warned     against
    allowing mere contract disputes to be transformed into claims of
    fraud and conspiracy.        
    Id.
         And the standard that it announced
    appears to ask whether the duty that has been violated “aris[es]
    outside the contract,” 
    id.
     – a standard one might think unmet by
    garden-variety claims of tortious interference with contract or
    with the business expectations that contract law protects.
    On the other hand, there are plausible reasons to limit
    Station #2’s holding to actual breach of contract claims, and to
    distinguish     tortious    interferences       with   contract      or    business
    expectancy.      As Dunlap points out, see Appellant’s Br. 15-16,
    the duty not to interfere with the agreements of others arises
    as a common-law corollary of the contract, not from the contract
    itself.    Indeed,     it   cannot      arise   from       the   contract    itself
    because the duty is one that falls upon third parties, not the
    parties to the agreement.          According to Dunlap, this distinction
    is sufficient to place the violated duty “outside the contract”
    for purposes of Station #2.
    7
    Whether (and when) this is a meaningful distinction is, we
    think, a question that is best posed to the Virginia Supreme
    Court,   for    it    involves       interpretation          of    its    precedents       and
    important questions of state law and policy.                            To begin, Station
    #2 does not definitively settle the question:                            It is true that
    the   duty     to    avoid    contractual           interference          does    not     flow
    directly from a party’s contractual agreements, but it is also
    true that the ultimate duty that is breached is contractual, and
    the set of harms redressed flows entirely from the contract.                               In
    other words, Station #2 poses a question of how to conceptualize
    tortious     interference          for    the       purpose        of     the     conspiracy
    statute’s      unlawful      act   requirement,           but     does    not    answer    it.
    Moreover, in typical cases alleging tortious interference the
    challenged     conduct      will     –   as    here   –    involve       discussions       and
    negotiations among one contracting party and potential business
    partners about the possibility of breaching the old contract and
    starting a new relationship.                  Whether to view such negotiations
    as “conspiratorial” is an important question of state policy:
    Doing so elevates the sanctity of contract, but perhaps too far.
    A state court could easily conclude that it is adequate, and
    more likely to encourage efficient business decisions, to give
    the   harmed        party     only       the       benefit      of       its     contractual
    expectations through a simple breach of contract action against
    its counter-party.           Cf. Station #2, 280 Va. at 174 (expressing
    8
    concern     about    “turning        every       breach     of        contract      into    an
    actionable claim for fraud”) (citation omitted).
    Moreover, especially in light of these policy concerns, it
    may be that the right answer involves finer distinctions of the
    kind that the Virginia Supreme Court is better fit to make.                                 For
    example, it is possible that tortious interference claims should
    sometimes     constitute         “unlawful        acts”     for       purposes       of    the
    business conspiracy statute, but only in exceptional cases.                                 Cf.
    Advanced Marine Enters., Inc. v. PRC Inc., 
    256 Va. 106
    , 117-18
    (1998)     (allowing        conspiracy       claim        predicated          on    tortious
    interference,        before       Station         #2,     in      a        case    involving
    “outrageous”    conduct          such   as       theft    of     corporate         files    by
    breaching employees).            The extent to which Station #2 preserves
    any such claim is unclear, however, and so we think it best to
    seek a definitive answer from the Virginia Supreme Court.
    B.    Statute of Limitations Issue
    The    reason    to     certify    the      second     question         is    even    more
    straightforward:       The question which statute of limitations to
    apply to tortious interference claims is a pure legal issue that
    has not been settled by the Virginia Supreme Court.                                 Virginia
    applies a two-year statute of limitations to claims regarding
    personal    injuries       and   a   five-year          statute       of    limitations      to
    claims regarding injuries to property.                     See, e.g., Willard, 
    262 Va. at 478
    .     But that distinction can be hard to draw, and the
    9
    Virginia Supreme Court has previously disagreed with how this
    Circuit      has    attempted        to     articulate              it.      See    
    id. at 479
    (rejecting the test applied in Brown v. Am. Broad. Co., 
    704 F.2d 1296
    , 1303-04 (4th Cir. 1983)).                      As with the previous issue, we
    believe that this question at bottom concerns an ambiguity in
    the    Virginia      Supreme       Court’s       recent          precedent         that    is    best
    resolved by that Court.
    Indeed, the Virginia Supreme Court’s decision in Willard
    can be read to support either side in this case.                                    Willard held
    that   an    infringement          on     the    dissenters’              rights    of    corporate
    shareholders was an injury to property interests for purposes of
    the five-year statute of limitations.                           Id. at 481.         In so doing,
    it    made   clear        that    “conduct       .    .     .    directed      at       [another’s]
    property, . . . constitutes an injury to property,” for purposes
    of    the    limitation          periods    whether         the       injury       is    direct     or
    indirect.           Id.    at     480     (citation             omitted).          But     it     also
    emphasized      that       “disappointed         economic            expectations         do[]     not
    amount to an injury to property” because “the law of contracts
    provides      the    sole        remedy    for       such       a    loss.”         Id.         Dunlap
    plausibly      argues       that    the     conduct         here      was     directed      at     his
    property      (that       is,     his     franchises).                The     district          court,
    however, plausibly viewed the injuries as flowing from Dunlap’s
    disappointed expectations about those franchises’ profitability
    had AAMCO continued to perform under its contracts.                                     As with the
    10
    previous      issue,        it    is        possible          to     conceptualize        tortious
    interference as being fundamentally a part of the protections
    for business expectations provided by the “law of contracts,”
    id.,    or    as    a    protection          for     contractually           secured      property
    rights      that    sounds       most       fundamentally            in    the    law    of   torts.
    Accordingly, it may be wise judicial policy to impose the same
    limitations period for tortious interference as for the breach
    of    contract       that    it     ultimately               addresses,      or    it    may       not.
    Especially         given    our     decision            to    seek    the    guidance         of    the
    Virginia      Supreme       Court      on    the     first         issue    in    this    case,      we
    prefer to ask that Court to settle this related issue as well.
    In sum, we find ourselves unable to predict with confidence
    how    the    Virginia      Supreme          Court       would       rule    on   the    questions
    discussed above.            As a result, we respectfully request that the
    Virginia Supreme Court answer our certified questions.
    IV.    Certified Questions Determine This Proceeding
    We    also    note,       briefly,      that          the     two    questions     together
    determine the outcome of this case.                           If the district court’s two
    holdings regarding tortious interference are correct as a matter
    of Virginia law, we would affirm.                             If either is incorrect, we
    would reverse and remand for further proceedings because these
    were    the       sole   rationales          adopted          by    the     district     court       in
    dismissing the case.
    11
    V.   The Parties and Their Counsel
    A.
    The Plaintiff–Appellant is James Dunlap.         Counsel for the
    Plaintiff–Appellant is:
    Peter B. Rutledge
    Paula Briceno
    Brittany Cambre
    Crystal M. Johnson
    University of Georgia School of Law
    Appellate Litigation Clinic
    100 Herty Drive,
    Athens, GA 30602
    (706) 542-1328 (Telephone)
    (706) 542-5556 (Facsimile)
    B.
    The   Defendants–Appellees   are   Todd   P.   Leff   and   Cottman
    Transmission Systems, LLC.     Counsel for the Defendants–Appellees
    is:
    James C. Rubinger
    Benjamin B. Reed
    Plave Koch PLC
    12355 Sunrise Valley Drive,
    Suite 230
    Reston, VA 20191
    (703) 774-1200 (Telephone)
    (703) 774-1201 (Facsimile)
    12
    VI. Conclusion
    Pursuant     to   the   privilege   made    available     by   Virginia
    Supreme Court Rule 5:40, we respectfully:
    1) Certify the questions stated in Part I of this Order of
    Certification to the Supreme Court of Virginia for resolution;
    2) Order the Clerk of this Court to forward to the Supreme Court
    of Virginia, under the official seal of this Court, a copy of
    this   Order   of    Certification,    together     with   the    original   or
    copies of the record before this Court to the extent requested
    by the Supreme Court of Virginia; and
    3) Order that any request for all or part of the record be
    fulfilled by the Clerk of this Court simply upon notification
    from the Clerk of the Supreme Court of Virginia.
    QUESTIONS CERTIFIED
    FOR THE COURT
    /s/ James A. Wynn, Jr.
    Circuit Judge
    13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 11-2327

Judges: O'Connor, Wynn, Diaz

Filed Date: 8/21/2013

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/6/2024