- 1 2 3 4 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 5 NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 6 7 MAGIC LINK GARMENT LTD, Case No. 18-cv-07366-PJH 8 Plaintiff, 9 v. ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART PLAINTIFF 10 THIRDLOVE, INC., COUNTER-DEFENDANT'S MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT 11 Defendant. AND SUMMARY JUDGMENT 12 Re: Dkt. Nos. 79, 80, 81, 90 13 Before the court is plaintiff counter-defendant Magic Link Garment Ltd.’s 14 (“plaintiff”) motion for summary judgment and partial summary judgment. The matter is 15 fully briefed and suitable for decision without oral argument. Having read the parties’ 16 papers and carefully considered their arguments and the relevant legal authority, and 17 good cause appearing, the court hereby GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART 18 plaintiff’s motion. 19 BACKGROUND 20 This action arises out of a commercial dispute between plaintiff and defendant 21 counterclaimant ThirdLove, Inc. (“defendant”). Plaintiff is a Hong Kong-based contract 22 manufacturer of women’s intimate apparel with manufacturing facilities in China, 23 Thailand, and Cambodia. Dkt. 81-1 ¶ 2. Defendant is a San Francisco-based online 24 retailer of women’s intimate apparel. Dkt. 22 ¶ 4. The parties’ dispute concerns multiple 25 purchase orders for undergarment bras. 26 A. Procedural Posture 27 Plaintiff initiated this action in Massachusetts state court. Dkt. 1-1. On December 1 Massachusetts (“District of Massachusetts”) transferred the action to this court. Dkt. 31. 2 Plaintiff filed its operative first amended complaint (“FAC”) on October 4, 2018. 3 Dkt. 9. Defendant filed its answer and counterclaims (“Ans.”) on November 1, 2018. Dkt. 4 22. Relevant to the instant motion, plaintiff previously acknowledged in its motion to 5 transfer before the District Court of Massachusetts that California law applies. Dkt. 31 at 6 8. 7 On March 2, 2020, the parties filed a joint stipulation to mutually dismiss certain 8 claims and counterclaims. Dkt. 83 at 2-3. Given that stipulation, the remaining claims in 9 plaintiff’s operative First Amended Complaint are for the following: 10 • A claim for “breach of agreement,” premised upon defendant’s “failing to pay 11 invoices for products that were shipped and delivered, wrongfully canceling 12 products, and wrongfully deducting amounts from invoices.” FAC ¶ 21. 13 • A claim for violation of California Business and Professions Code § 17200 14 premised upon defendant’s purported effort to misappropriate plaintiff’s trade 15 secret information and interfere with its “relationships with its critical suppliers 16 and vendors.” Id. ¶ 29. 17 The defendant’s remaining counterclaims are for the following: 18 • Breach of contract, premised upon both the “delivery of products with quality 19 and workmanship defects and its use of unauthorized third-party 20 subcontractors to manufacture products for [defendant].” Ans. ¶¶ 16, 24-30. 21 • Breach of implied warranty of merchantability, premised upon the subject 22 goods’ “quality and manufacturing defects,” particularly “splitting or otherwise 23 coming apart,” that “rendered them unfit for the ordinary purposes for which 24 those goods were intended and used.” Id. ¶¶ 31-37. 25 On February 26, 2020, a few days before the parties’ filed their stipulation mutually 26 dismissing certain claims, plaintiff filed the instant two-part motion for summary judgment 27 and partial summary judgment. Dkt. 81. The dismissed claims are irrelevant to the 1 In the summary judgment portion of its motion, plaintiff challenges all of 2 defendant’s remaining counterclaims. Id. at 5. In the partial summary judgment portion 3 of its motion, plaintiff contends that there is no triable issue as to certain elements that it 4 must show to substantiate (or facts that it will rely upon at trial to support) its claim for 5 breach of contract. Id. Rather than describe them here, the court specifies each of 6 plaintiff’s four particular requests in its analysis below. 7 B. Factual Summary 8 For brevity, the following provides only a summary of the parties’ business 9 relationship and the transactions and their underlying events at issue in this litigation. 10 The court cites additional evidence or assertions as necessary in its analysis below. 11 1. The Parties Prior Business Arrangement 12 Plaintiff and defendant have worked together since 2012. Dkt. 80-28 at 11. 13 Neither party contests that their business arrangements, including the transactions at 14 issue in this litigation, have been or are controlled by a master manufacturing agreement. 15 Instead, the ordinary course of their dealings involved defendant discussing with 16 plaintiff the development of a style of bra, the two would work together to develop the bra, 17 including preparing samples, and defendant would then place a purchase order with 18 plainitff. Ans. ¶¶ 10, 11; Dkt. 81-1 ¶ 5. Plaintiff asserts, and defendant does not 19 disagree, that the parties used this process in late December 2016 through January 2017 20 to develop the TL 50A plus size bras (“TL 50A bras,” also referred to by the parties as the 21 “perfect coverage” bras) that are the focus of defendant’s counterclaims. Dkt. 81 at 8; 22 Dkt. 84-6 at 175. 23 2. The Transactions At Issue 24 The claims at issue in this motion all arise out of two dozen purchase orders 25 entered into by the parties. For analytical purposes, each order falls into only one of the 26 following three categories. 27 a. The Purchase Orders for the Shipped Bras 1 557, 560, 562, 563, 567, 576, 617, 618, 628 and 629. Dkt. 80-3 (associated invoices). 2 This category of purchase orders includes those that defendant received bras under but 3 admittedly did not pay for. Dkt. 80-31 at 22. The sum of the amount owed for the bras 4 under these orders is $1,460,281.82. Dkt. 81-1 ¶ 8. 5 For clarity, the court will refer to the bras provided under these purchase orders as 6 the “shipped bras” and this category of purchase orders as the “shipped bras purchase 7 orders.” These purchase orders provide the basis for plaintiff’s breach of agreement 8 claim and are the focus of its first request in its motion for partial summary judgment. 9 Dkt. 81 at 5. 10 b. The Purchase Orders for the Withheld Bras 11 The second category includes the following purchase order numbers: 570, 571, 12 624, 625, 632, 633, 545, 546, 630, and 631. Dkt. 81-1 ¶¶ 12-14; Dkt. 81-3 (associated 13 sale confirmations). This category of purchase orders includes those that defendant 14 placed to receive bras under, were set for shipping by fall 2018, but, following 15 defendant’s non-payment of the amounts owed for the shipped bras, plaintiff withheld. 16 Dkt. 81-1 ¶ 15. The sum of the amount owed for the bras under these orders is 17 $725,367.98. Id. ¶ 14. 18 For clarity, the court will refer to the bras provided under these purchase orders as 19 the “withheld bras” and this category of purchase orders as the “withheld bras purchase 20 orders.” These purchase orders provide the basis for plaintiff’s breach of agreement 21 claim and are the focus of its second request for its motion for partial summary judgment. 22 Dkt. 81 at 5.1 23 c. The Purchase Order 542 Bras 24 The remaining category concerns only purchase order 542 (“PO 542”). The 25 parties agree that PO 542 comprises 26 distinct shipments totaling 65,076 TL 50A bras 26 27 1 Plaintiff’s third request for its motion for partial summary judgment involves $51,565.05 1 (the “PO 542 bras”) sent to and received by defendant at its designated FedEx facilities in 2 Fontana, California and Greenwood, Indiana. Dkt. 81 at 16; Dkt. 80-25 at 6-9. 3 While plaintiff usually manufactured defendant’s goods at its China facility, the 4 parties agreed that plaintiff could manufacture the PO 542 bras in its Cambodia facility. 5 Neither party provided direct evidence of that agreement but both represent that fact in 6 their briefing. Dkt. 81 at 13; Dkt. 84 at 9. Plaintiff also asserted that defendant paid the 7 full amount owed to it for the PO 542 bras, Dkt. 81 at 14, which, in its opposition, 8 defendant did not contest, Dkt. 84 at 18-20. That uncontested assertion is separately 9 shown by defendant’s discovery responses. Dkt. 80-25 at 16 (listing “payments to Magic 10 Link” for PO 542 bras quarantined or withheld from sale as a category of damages). 11 On or around June 20, 2018, defendant emailed plaintiff stating that it had 12 identified “significant production quality issues” with the PO 542 bras then-received to 13 date. Dkt. 84-7 at 282. Such purported issues included stains and a lack of general 14 care. Id. 15 On July 13, 2018, defendant instructed FedEx to “quarantine” the remaining four 16 PO 542 shipments set for receipt on July 16, 2018 and July 17, 2018. Dkt. 84-2 ¶ 2. 17 Those shipments comprised 20,819 of the 65,076 PO 542 bras. Id. ¶ 4. 18 In its discovery responses, defendant testified that it did not make any of those 19 20,819 bras available for sale, Dkt. 80-25 at 6-8, although plaintiff points out that 20 defendant continued to sell TL 50A bras until at least August 26, 2018, Dkt. 80-30 at 10. 21 In sum, defendant sold 39,960 of the 65,076 PO 542 bras and earned approximately 22 $2,419,970 in revenues from such sales. Dkt. 80-25 at 8. 23 The parties’ dispute the source and extent of the purported defects in the PO 542 24 bras. Defendant does not dispute, however, that, between April 2018 and early-May 25 2018, its independent reviewers, Bureau Veritas (“BV”) reviewed three sample sets from 26 the PO 542 production in Cambodia prior to their shipment. Dkt. 81-9 (April 25, 2018 27 report); Dkt. 80-19 (May 8, 2018 report); Dkt. 80-20 (May 11, 2018 report). The court 1 PO 542 provides the basis for defendant’s breach of contract and breach of 2 implied warranty of merchantability counterclaims and is the focus of plaintiff’s motion for 3 summary judgment on those claims. Dkt. 81 at 5 (request no. 4). 4 3. The Recently Discovered PO 542 Bras 5 A sub-issue in this litigation concerns the number of PO 542 bras that defendant 6 either quarantined, did not quarantine but did not sell, or otherwise identified as defective. 7 In its opposition, defendant proffered the declaration of a FedEx account manager, Jason 8 Trisoline, declaring that FedEx maintained 1,087 unopened boxes of approximately 20 TL 9 50A bras each from the final four PO 542 shipments, Dkt. 84-3 ¶ 7, which would amount 10 to 21,740 TL 50A bras. He also declared that FedEx maintained an additional 3,075 TL 11 50A bras in its inventory. Id. ¶ 8. 12 According to defendant, when combined with the 1,855 TL 50A bras that BV 13 purportedly found defective in its 100 percent inspections at the FedEx facilities in 14 Fontana and Greenwood in July 2018, Dkt. 84-6 at 224; Dkt. 84-6 at 245, the total 15 number of PO 542 bras either quarantined, remaining in inventory, or identified as 16 defective is 25,734. 17 Plaintiff contests the admissibility of this evidence as belatedly disclosed and 18 hearsay. Plaintiff claims that defendant should be held to its purportedly prior 19 representation that only approximately 11,800 PO 542 bras remained in its possession. 20 Dkt. 88 at 11-13. The court will, for purpose of this motion only, treat the total number of 21 remaining PO 542 bras as 25,116 (which is the difference between the 65,076 PO 542 22 bras undisputedly shipped and the 39,960 undisputedly sold). As further addressed 23 below, whether the court should preclude defendant from offering evidence of the 24 approximately 13,000 “undisclosed” PO 542 bras is the proper subject of a pre-trial 25 motion in limine, not the instant motion for summary judgment 26 4. The Parties’ Relationship Deteriorates 27 By mid-July 2018, the parties appear to have mutually understood that their 1 concerns with plaintiff’s Cambodia facility TL 50A productions. Dkt. 84-7 at 79. On July 2 13, 2018, defendant instructed plaintiff to “stop production on all POs for TL 50A” bras 3 (including various purchase orders beyond PO 542, particularly POs 619, 620, 626, and 4 627). Dkt. 84-7 at 268. Significantly, as part of that instruction, defendant did not 5 indicate to plaintiff its decision to quarantine the final four shipments of the PO 542 bras. 6 Around that time, plaintiff reiterated its requests for payment of the $1,700,000 7 owed for the shipped bras. Dkt. 81-1 ¶ 9. Defendant failed to respond to those requests. 8 Id. ¶ 11. On August 17, 2018, plaintiff initiated this action on. Dkt. 1-1 at 17. 9 DISCUSSION 10 A. Legal Standard 11 Summary judgment is proper where the pleadings, discovery, and affidavits show 12 that there is “no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to 13 judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). Material facts are those which may 14 affect the outcome of the case. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 15 (1986). A dispute as to a material fact is genuine if there is sufficient evidence for a 16 reasonable jury to return a verdict for the nonmoving party. Id. “A ‘scintilla of evidence,’ 17 or evidence that is ‘merely colorable’ or ‘not significantly probative,’ is not sufficient to 18 present a genuine issue as to a material fact.” United Steelworkers of Am. v. Phelps 19 Dodge Corp., 865 F.2d 1539, 1542 (9th Cir. 1989). 20 Courts recognize two ways for a moving defendant to show the absence of a 21 genuine dispute of material fact: (1) proffer evidence affirmatively negating any element 22 of the challenged claim or (2) identify the absence of evidence necessary for plaintiff to 23 substantiate such claim. Nissan Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Fritz Cos., 210 F.3d 1099, 1102 24 (9th Cir. 2000) (“In order to carry its burden of production, the moving party must either 25 produce evidence negating an essential element of the nonmoving party's claim or 26 defense or show that the nonmoving party does not have enough evidence of an 27 essential element to carry its ultimate burden of persuasion at trial.”). Rule 56(c)(1) 1 must “cit[e] to particular parts of materials in the record.” Fed. R. Civ. Pro. 56(c)(1). 2 The party moving for summary judgment bears the initial burden of identifying 3 those portions of the pleadings, discovery and affidavits which demonstrate the absence 4 of a genuine issue of material fact. Celotex Corp. v. Cattrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986). 5 Where the moving party will have the burden of proof on an issue at trial, it must 6 affirmatively demonstrate that no reasonable trier of fact could find other than for the 7 moving party. However, on an issue for which the opposing party will have the burden of 8 proof at trial, the moving party need only point out “that there is an absence of evidence 9 to support the nonmoving party's case.” Id. at 325; In re Brazier Forest Prod., Inc., 921 10 F.2d 221, 223 (9th Cir. 1990) (“[I]if the nonmoving party bears the burden of proof on an 11 issue at trial, the moving party need not produce affirmative evidence of an absence of 12 fact to satisfy its burden. The moving party may simply point to the absence of evidence 13 to support the nonmoving party's case. The nonmoving party must then make a sufficient 14 showing to establish the existence of all elements essential to their case on which they 15 will bear the burden of proof at trial.”) (quoting Celotex Corp. at 322-23). 16 “Where a moving party carries its burden of production, the nonmoving party must 17 produce evidence to support its claim or defense.” Friedman v. Live Nation Merch., Inc., 18 833 F.3d 1180, 1188 (9th Cir. 2016) (internal citations omitted). The court is only 19 concerned with disputes over material facts and “factual disputes that are irrelevant or 20 unnecessary will not be counted.” Anderson, 477 U.S. at 248. It is not the task of the 21 court to scour the record in search of a genuine issue of triable fact. Keenan v. Allen, 91 22 F.3d 1275, 1279 (9th Cir. 1996). The nonmoving party has the burden of identifying, with 23 reasonable particularity, the evidence that precludes summary judgment. Id. 24 The court must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving 25 party: if evidence produced by the moving party conflicts with evidence produced by the 26 nonmoving party, the judge must assume the truth of the evidence set forth by the 27 nonmoving party with respect to that fact. Tolan v. Cotton, 134 S. Ct. 1861, 1865 (2014); 1 produce evidence rebutting the moving party’s initial showing, “the moving party is 2 entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Celotex Corp., 477 U.S. at 323. 3 Lastly, without granting summary judgment of an entire claim, courts may rely 4 upon Rule 56 to determine certain facts or elements of a claim as established and 5 thereby dispose of the need to adjudicate them at trial. Lahoti v. VeriCheck, Inc., 586 6 F.3d 1190, 1202 n. 9 (9th Cir. 2009) (Citing with approval then-existing Rule 56(d)’s 7 advisory committee note that “[t]he partial summary judgment is merely a pretrial 8 adjudication that certain issues shall be deemed established for the trial of the case . . . 9 and likewise serves the purpose of speeding up litigation by eliminating before trial 10 matters wherein there is no genuine issue of fact.”). 11 B. Analysis 12 As an initial matter, the parties assume—without explanation in their pleadings or 13 briefing—that the Uniform Commercial Code (“UCC”), as codified under the California 14 Commercial Code, controls the breach of contract and implied warranty of 15 merchantability claims and counterclaims at issue here. FAC ¶¶ 20-22; Ans. ¶¶ 24-37; 16 Dkt. 81 at 19 (citing California Commercial Code); Dkt. 84 at 15-16 (same). Given that 17 California state law recognizes that the UCC applies to “transactions in goods,” Cal. 18 Comm. Code § 2102, and “goods” are generally defined as “all things . . . which are 19 movable at the time of identification to the contract for sale,” id. § 2105, the court 20 concludes that the UCC, as codified in the California Commercial Code and not common 21 law principles, control the claims in this litigation. 22 1. Partial Summary Judgment on Issues Presented in Plaintiff’s Claims 23 Apparently for the purpose of streamlining the issues necessary to prove its claims 24 at trial, plaintiff seeks partial summary judgment establishing the following four facts or 25 elements: 26 • “There is no dispute of fact defendant failed to pay plaintiff for $1,460,281.82 in 27 products defendant accepted, received and sold to its customers.” Dkt. 81 at 1 411, 450, 556, 557, 560, 562, 563, 567, 576, 617, 618, 628, and 628. 2 • “There is no dispute of fact defendant deducted without authorization 3 $51,565.05 in spurious “finance charges” from various invoices plaintiff issued 4 to it.” Id. 5 • “There is no dispute of fact defendant failed to provide assurances, adequate 6 or otherwise, it would pay for $725,367.98 in other products plaintiff 7 manufactured for it.” Id. The bras subject to this request are the withheld bras 8 ordered under POs 570, 571, 624, 625, 632, 633, 545, 546, 630, and 631. 9 The court analyzes each request in turn. 10 a. Defendant Accepted the Shipped Bras 11 Here, there is no triable issue of fact that defendant accepted the shipped bras. In 12 its opening brief, plaintiff asserted with respect to the shipped bras that “[t]here can be no 13 dispute [defendant] ordered, accepted, received and presumably sold products for which 14 [plaintiff] issued invoices of almost $1.7 million,” Dkt. 81 at 18, only $238,528.86 of which 15 defendant actually paid for, id. at 8-9. To support this assertion, plaintiff proffered the 16 various invoices charged to defendant once the subject bras were shipped, Dkt. 80-4, 17 and testimony that defendant failed to pay their amounts. Dkt. 81-1 ¶ 8. Defendant’s 18 own chief executive officer, David Spector, admitted that defendant did not pay any of the 19 invoices associated with these goods. Dkt. 80-31 at 22. 20 In its opposition, defendant failed to contest this assertion. Instead, defendant 21 argues that plaintiff is not entitled to partial summary judgment on its affirmative claim for 22 the $1,460,281.82 owed for the shipped bras because plaintiff failed to address 23 defendant’s estoppel defense and also failed to show its own compliance with its 24 “contractual obligations.” Dkt. 84 at 29. 25 Defendant misunderstands partial summary judgment. As previously stated, 26 partial summary judgment allows for the summary adjudication of a particular element or 27 fact. Here, plaintiff has proffered sufficient evidence to satisfy its initial burden that 1 acceptance at issue. As a result, the court grants plaintiff’s request for partial summary 2 judgment as to the fact that defendant accepted the shipped bras worth $1,460,281.82 3 While that fact is now established, the court reminds the parties that it does not 4 alter defendant’s ability to nonetheless introduce evidence that would substantiate its 5 purported estoppel affirmative defense at trial. 6 b. Defendant Deducted $51,565.05 from Various Payments Without 7 Plaintiff’s Authorization 8 Here, there is no triable issue of fact that defendant deducted $51,565.05 in 9 purported “finance charges” from various purchase orders without plaintiff’s authorization. 10 To support its request as to this fact, plaintiff proffered documentary evidence detailing 11 the sum of the various deducted charges and testimony that plaintiff objected to 12 defendant’s deduction practices. Dkt. 80-1 ¶¶ 19-20, Ex. F. Plaintiff also pointed out 13 that, aside from plaintiff’s refusal to extend defendant “proper financing,” defendant’s own 14 chief executive officer and Rule 30(b)(6) witness (for this issue) could not identify any 15 contractual justification for these deductions. Dkt. 80-31 at 12-14 (Q: “Was there any 16 kind of agreement that ThirdLove entered into with Magic Link which allowed ThirdLove 17 to deduct those amounts?” A: “I actually wouldn’t know if we did have one.”). 18 In its opposition, defendant failed to contest that it engaged in the conduct 19 underlying plaintiff’s request. Instead, defendant again relies upon only its alleged 20 estoppel affirmative defense to contest its non-liability for such conduct. Dkt. 84 at 29 21 (“[Plaintiff] argues that it is owed payments of $1.46 million on past due invoices for 22 products accepted by [defendant] and $51,565.05 for what it terms improper finance 23 charge deductions. But Magic Link ignores [defendant’s] affirmative defense of estoppel 24 and that Magic Link must demonstrate its own compliance with its contractual obligations 25 to recover for any purported breach of contract by [defendant].”). As discussed 26 immediately above, whether defendant’s estoppel defense absolves it of liability for its 27 unauthorized finance charges is a different issue than whether it actually levied such 1 to the fact that defendant deducted $51,565.05 from various invoices without plaintiff’s 2 authorization. 3 c. There Is a Triable Issue of Fact Concerning Whether Defendant 4 Failed to Provide Adequate Assurance That It Would Pay for the 5 Withheld Bras 6 California Commercial Code § 2609 provides the following in relevant part: 7 “(1) A contract for sale imposes an obligation on each party that the other's expectation of receiving due performance will 8 not be impaired. When reasonable grounds for insecurity arise with respect to the performance of either party the 9 other may in writing demand adequate assurance of due performance and until he receives such assurance may if 10 commercially reasonable suspend any performance for which he has not already received the agreed return. 11 (2) Between merchants the reasonableness of grounds for insecurity and the adequacy of any assurance offered shall be 12 determined according to commercial standards.” Cal. Comm. Code § 2609(1)-(2) (emphases added). 13 14 “Whether in a specific case a buyer has reasonable grounds for insecurity is a 15 question of fact. . . . Because the reasonableness of a party's insecurity is determined by 16 commercial standards, there must be an objective factual basis for the insecurity, rather 17 than a purely subjective fear that the party will not perform.” In re Pac. Gas & Elec. Co., 18 271 B.R. 626, 640 (N.D. Cal. 2002). “While courts have on occasion determined the 19 existence of reasonable grounds for insecurity as a matter of law, those decisions came 20 in cases of bad faith or unequivocal facts.” Id. 640 n.9. 21 Here, there is a triable issue of fact concerning whether defendant failed to provide 22 adequate assurance of its due performance with respect to the withheld bras. 23 Significantly, plaintiff failed to provide any evidence of the commercial standards used to 24 determine both the reasonableness of plaintiff’s insecurity as well as the adequacy of 25 assurance required to justify plaintiff’s conduct. In its opposition, defendant points out 26 this evidentiary shortcoming, Dkt. 84 at 27, and, in its reply, plaintiff offers only a 27 summary and rhetorical rebuttal, Dkt. 88 at 10-11 (“Magic Link therefore has established 1 buyer which has already received $1.7 million worth of product for which payment was 2 overdue, was over the credit limit the seller/creditor was willing to provide, and clearly 3 was refusing to communicate about payment?”). 4 While the court understands plaintiff’s position that because defendant failed to 5 provide any assurance it necessarily failed to provide “adequate” assurance, it remains 6 unclear to the court that a failure to respond to a request for a payment “update” within 7 six days, Dkt. 81-2 at 5, 7 (email chain showing plaintiff’s July 25, 2018 request for “any 8 update news regard[ing] payment [sic]?” followed by its July 31, 2018 statement that “all 9 shipments have been hold [sic] until you clear outstanding payments”), falls short of what 10 the commercial standards require. Absent evidence of such standards, the court cannot 11 conclude that defendant’s failure to pay for the shipped bras or respond to plaintiff’s 12 various requests for payment necessarily provides plaintiff a reasonable ground for 13 insecurity and serves as inadequate assurance within the meaning of § 2609. As a 14 result, the court denies plaintiff’s request for partial summary judgment as to the fact that 15 defendant failed to provide the assurance contemplated under § 2609. 16 2. Summary Judgment on Defendant’s Counterclaims 17 Separate from the partial summary judgment portion of its motion, plaintiff seeks 18 summary judgment on defendant’s counterclaims for breach of contract and breach of the 19 implied warranty of merchantability. On the basis of the evidence cited and proffered by 20 the parties,2 the court analyzes each counterclaim in turn. 21 22 23 2 Citing plaintiff’s purportedly improper attempt to introduce new evidence on reply, defendant filed a motion to strike or, in the alternative, leave to file a sur-reply. Dkt. 90. 24 The court DENIES defendant’s motion to strike. The argument and evidence that plaintiff advanced in its reply is reasonably related to plaintiff’s initial argument in its opening brief 25 that defendant accepted the PO 542 bras. Moreover, as defendant itself acknowledges in its sur-reply, the challenged evidence was a response to defendant’s argument in its 26 opposition that there exists a triable issue concerning its right to revoke its acceptance of the PO 542 bras. Dkt. 90-1 at 6. To give defendant an opportunity to respond in the 27 absence of oral argument, the court GRANTS its motion for leave to file a sur-reply (Dkt. 1 a. Summary Judgment of the Breach of Contract Counterclaim Is 2 Improper 3 Plaintiff seeks an order establishing that “[t]here is no dispute of fact defendant 4 accepted 65,076 bras manufactured under purchase order no. 542 (‘PO 542’), shipped 5 the overwhelming majority to customers, collected payment from them, and cannot meet 6 its burden to show the breach by [plaintiff] of any express warranty regarding them.” Dkt. 7 81 at 5. Because plaintiff seeks an order summarily adjudicating the issue of its breach 8 with respect to PO 542, the court will construe plaintiff’s request as a motion for summary 9 judgment of defendant’s breach of contract counterclaim. 10 Plaintiff proffers the following two arguments in support of this request: (1) 11 defendant irrevocably accepted the PO 542 bras and, as a result, may not sue for breach 12 of contract in the first instance, Dkt. 81 at 20-23; and (2) defendant cannot satisfy its 13 burden of showing systemic flaws in PO 542 and, to the extent any latent defects actually 14 existed, defendant had the opportunity to identify them, id. at 23-26. The court addresses 15 each argument below. 16 i. Acceptance of the PO 542 Bras Does Not Necessarily 17 Preclude Defendant’s Breach of Contract Counterclaim 18 In its opening brief, plaintiff asserts that “once a buyer accepts the goods, it can no 19 longer assert a breach of contract claim and is limited to asserting a claim for breach of 20 warranty.” Dkt. 81 at 22. In support of that purported rule, plaintiff cites only a single 21 Central District of California case, Tabletop Media, LLC v. Citizen Sys. of Am. Corp., 22 2017 WL 10591885, at *7 (C.D. Cal. Mar. 3, 2017). 23 Contrary to plaintiff’s statement, the court in Tabletop Media did not set forth such 24 a rule. Rather, the court in Tabletop Media merely considered an argument in favor of it, 25 id. at *7 (“Tabletop’s second claim is for breach of contract. . . . Citizen asserts that 26 Tabletop’s breach of contract allegations are deficient because (1) under the Uniform 27 Commercial Code (‘UCC’), Tabletop ‘accepted’ the printers and did not ‘revoke’ its 1 cause of action for breach of contract”) (emphasis added), and then rejected it, id. at *10 2 (“The Court DENIES Citizen’s motion to the extent it alleged that Tabletop could not 3 assert both a breach of contract and breach of implied warranty claim, or to the extent it 4 argued that Tabletop had not alleged sufficient facts to plausibly state that Tabletop 5 revoked acceptance of the printers.”). In fact, the court in Tabletop Media expressly 6 recognized that “[i]f the buyer has accepted the goods, the buyer must allege that it 7 ‘justifiably revoked acceptance of the goods if it is to state a claim for breach of contract 8 under the UCC and earn an entitlement to breach of contract remedies under § 2711.” Id. 9 (citing Cal. Comm. Code § 2711(1)).3 10 As a result, regardless of whether defendant accepted any of the PO 542 11 products, the court concludes that defendant may nonetheless pursue a breach of 12 contract counterclaim on the basis of such products if it revoked its acceptance of them. 13 ii. Defendant Irrevocably Accepted Some But Not All of the 14 65,076 PO 542 Bras 15 California Commercial Code § 2606(1) provides that “[a]cceptance of goods 16 occurs when the buyer . . . 17 (a) After a reasonable opportunity to inspect the goods signifies to the seller that the goods are conforming or that he 18 will take or retain them in spite of their nonconformity; or (b) Fails to make an effective rejection (subdivision (1) of 19 Section 2602), but such acceptance does not occur until the buyer has had a reasonable opportunity to inspect them; or 20 (c) Does any act inconsistent with the seller's ownership; but if such act is wrongful as against the seller it is an acceptance 21 only if ratified by him.” Cal. Comm. Code § 2606(1). 22 Relatedly, California Commercial Code § 2608(1) provides that a buyer may 23 revoke his acceptance of goods “whose nonconformity substantially impairs its value to 24 him if he has accepted it . . . 25 26 3 Even if the court Tabletop Media did impose such a rule, plaintiff fails to identify any basis in California decisional or statutory law for limiting a purchaser’s defective products 27 related action to a breach of implied warranty claim in the event such buyer “accepted” (a) On the reasonable assumption that its nonconformity 1 would be cured and it has not been seasonably cured; or (b) Without discovery of such nonconformity if his acceptance 2 was reasonably induced either by the difficulty of discovery before acceptance or by the seller's assurances.” Cal. Comm. 3 Code § 2608. 4 Under § 2608(2), “revocation of acceptance must occur within a reasonable time 5 after the buyer discovers or should have discovered the ground for it and before any 6 substantial change in condition of the goods which is not caused by their own defects. It 7 is not effective until the buyer notifies the seller of it.” Cal. Comm. Code § 2608(2). 8 1. Defendant Irrevocably Accepted the 39,960 PO 542 9 Bras It Sold to Customers 10 In its opening brief, plaintiff proffered evidence showing that defendant admitted to 11 selling customers 39,960 of the 65,076 TL 50A bras and receiving over $2,400,000 in 12 revenue from such sales. Dkt. 80-25 at 6-8. Defendant failed to contest or otherwise 13 address this admission in its opposition. Dkt. 84 at 18-20. Because defendant’s sale of 14 this subset of the PO 542 bras is necessarily inconsistent with plaintiff’s ownership of 15 them, the court finds that defendant accepted them within the meaning of § 2606. 16 Further, except for the complaints concerning defects in the approximately 200 or so TL 17 50A bras sold to customers (noted below), defendant failed to expressly identify any 18 evidence showing that any non-conformity in that subset substantially impaired their 19 value. Given that, there is no triable issue that defendant irrevocably accepted the 20 39,960 PO 542 bras sold to customers. 21 In its review of the evidence, the court identified in defendant’s supplemental 22 interrogatory responses that it had “received returns or requests for exchange on 13,606” 23 PO 542 bras shipped to customers, which required defendant to provide approximately 24 $456,219 in refunds. Dkt. 80-25 at 8. In its opposition, defendant failed to address these 25 returns or otherwise advance any argument that they created a triable issue about the 26 revocability of defendant’s acceptance of this subset of the PO 542 bras. Given that, the 27 court finds that defendant waived its right to make any such argument. John-Charles v. 1 argument on this front, and thus has waived it.”). 2 As a result, with respect to the subset of 39,960 PO 542 bras sold, the court grants 3 plaintiff’s request for summary judgment on defendant’s breach of contract counterclaim. 4 2. Defendant Accepted the Remaining 25,116 PO 542 5 Bras 6 Defendant unquestionably accepted the remaining 25,116 PO 542 bras. However, 7 unlike the 39,960 PO 542 bras that defendant sold to its customers, defendant’s ongoing 8 possession of the remaining 25,116 PO 542 bras itself is not necessarily inconsistent with 9 plaintiff’s ownership of those bras. Given that, plaintiff must rely upon § 2606(1)(a)-(b) to 10 establish defendant’s acceptance of the 20,819 quarantined PO 542 bras and the non- 11 quarantined, inventoried 4,297 PO 542 bras.. 12 Both § 2606(1)(a) and § 2606(1)(b) require that defendant have a “reasonable 13 opportunity to inspect” the subject goods. Cal. Comm. Code § 2606(1)(a)-(b). “What 14 constitutes a reasonable opportunity is always a question of fact to be determined 15 according to the reasonable man standard by the trier of fact, in this case a jury.” Square 16 Deal Mach. Co. v. Garrett Corp., 128 Cal. App. 2d 286, 291 (1954) (construing California 17 Civil Code § 1767). The court in Square Deal explained that a buyer’s right to a 18 reasonable opportunity to inspect includes “a reasonable time within which to make it,” 19 and that “what is reasonable” depends “upon the circumstances of each case, the 20 situation of the goods, [and] the nature of the business and the customs of the trade.” Id. 21 Here, the evidence undisputedly shows that defendant, through its relationship 22 with FedEx, has maintained possession over the remaining 25,116 PO 542 bras since 23 July 18, 2018 or earlier. Whatever a “reasonable opportunity” to inspect those bras may 24 require, such opportunity is plainly satisfied here because, as an incident to its 25 possession, defendant had the ability to conduct an inspection for almost one month 26 before plaintiff initiated suit, over three months before filing its counterclaims, and nearly 27 two years since the instant motion. 1 prior to plaintiff’s filing suit on August 17, 2018, defendant told plaintiff that it rejected the 2 final four PO 542 shipments or were holding their contents in “quarantine.” Dkt. 84 at 11. 3 Rather, defendant simply notes that it “instructed FedEx to quarantine upon receipt [the 4 remaining 20,189 PO 542 bras] rather than place into inventory,” id., and—with nothing 5 more than a vague cross-reference to “pp. 6-9” its opposition—asserts that it “notified 6 [plaintiff] of the defects immediately after they were discovered, informed [plaintiff] that 7 defective products were not acceptable, conducted inspections to identify and separate 8 out defective products and, eventually, decided to no longer sell the products,” id. 9 However, no pre-litigation communication between the parties (or pre-answer 10 communication, for that matter) cited in defendant’s vague cross-reference shows that 11 defendant told plaintiff that it was quarantining the remaining PO 542 products upon 12 receipt or otherwise rejecting them. Dkt. 84 at 11-14. Defendant’s single sentence 13 statement that “[o]n July 13, 2018, [defendant] instructed [plaintiff] to cease production of 14 the TL 50A bras and that the TL 50A products in Cambodia should not be shipped,” Dkt. 15 84 at 13-14 (emphasis added), misses the point because that instruction does not refer to 16 the PO 542 bras that arrived on July 16, 2018 and July 17, 2018, the acceptance of 17 which is at issue here. 18 Absent any evidence that defendant timely communicated its rejection of the 19 remaining PO 542 bras, Cal. Comm. Code § 2602(1), defendant’s apparent failure to do 20 so—coupled with its full payment for the PO 542 bras, Dkt. 80-25 at 16 (listing “payments 21 to Magic Link” for PO 542 bras quarantined or withheld from sale as a category of 22 damages), and ongoing undisputed possession, Dkt. 81 at 21—unquestionably 23 establishes that it accepted the remaining 25,116 PO 542 bras within the meaning of § 24 2606. The question then becomes whether such acceptance was revoked within the 25 meaning of § 2608. 26 27 1 3. There Is a Triable Issue on Whether Defendant 2 Revoked Its Acceptance of the Remaining 25,116 3 PO 542 Bras 4 Unlike defendant’s failure to timely reject the remaining 25,116 PO 542 bras upon 5 their delivery, Cal. Comm. Code § 2602 (tying timely rejection to the time of delivery), a 6 reasonable jury could find that defendant timely communicated its revocation of its 7 acceptance of those bras through its November 1, 2018 counterclaim, Cal. Comm. Code 8 § 2608(2) (tying timely revocation to when the defects were or should have been 9 discovered). The remaining question is whether there is a triable issue concerning the 10 substantial impairment of the quarantined or unsold 25,116 PO 542 bras. 11 The court concludes that there is. Significantly, defendant proffered sufficient 12 evidence supporting a triable issue of whether the PO 542 bras manufactured at plaintiff’s 13 Cambodia facility were generally defective. First, defendant presented evidence of over 14 200 customer complaints about bras with ripped centers. Dkt. 84-7 at 300-03 (defendant 15 employee testimony authenticating 47-page spreadsheet detailing complaints re TL 50A 16 bras); Dkt. 84-7 at 208-55 (47-page spreadsheet). 17 Second, defendant also proffered two reports by BV, dated July 10, 2018, Dkt. 84- 18 6 at 221-241 and July 2, 2018, Dkt. 84-6 at 243-253, respectively showing the results of 19 two “workmanship” inspections of the PO 542 bras in defendant’s inventory at the FedEx 20 Fontana and Greenwood facilities immediately prior to defendant’s July 16, 2018 and July 21 17, 2018 receipt of the remaining 20,819 PO 542 bras.4 Significantly, the July 10, 2018 22 23 4 Plaintiff objects to these reports as inadmissible hearsay. Dkt. 88 at 15-16. The court OVERRULES that objection because plaintiff failed to explain why defendant would not 24 be able to proffer their contents in the form of live testimony by BV at trial. JL Beverage Co., LLC v. Jim Beam Brands Co., 828 F.3d 1098, 1110 (9th Cir. 2016) (“We note, 25 however, that at summary judgment a district court may consider hearsay evidence submitted in an inadmissible form, so long as the underlying evidence could be provided 26 in an admissible form at trial, such as by live testimony.”). To the extent plaintiff complains that consideration of these reports is inappropriate because “[defendant] 27 denied to [plaintiff] the opportunity to review any of the units that BV looked at and which 1 report found that 564 of the 4,349 bras inspected at the Fontana facility had stains, 2 reflecting a 13 percent stain rate. Dkt. 84-6 at 223. This report further noted 559 3 “uneven gores” and a total of 1,574 “major defectives.” Id. at 224. The report also 4 attached 43 color photographs reflecting such purported defects. Id. at 227-31. 5 Similarly, the July 2, 2018 report found that 154 of the 2,524 bras inspected at the 6 Greenwood facility had stains, reflecting a six percent stain rate. Dkt. 84-6 at 244. This 7 report further noted 45 “uneven gores” and a total of 331 “major defectives.” Id. at 245. 8 This report attached nine black and white photographs reflecting such purported defects, 9 Id. at 248. 10 Third, defendant’s expert, Joyce Baran, opined that the PO 542 bras 11 manufactured at plaintiff’s Cambodia facility, as opposed to its China counterpart, served 12 as the most important factor explaining the purported defects in the PO 542 bras. Dkt. 13 84-4 at 19 (“Most importantly, Magic Link’s construction of the TL50A bras manufactured 14 in Cambodia was significant factor in the center gore splitting. Magic Link placed the 15 underwire on top of the cup (instead of underneath the cup as customarily manufactured, 16 and as Magic Link did on the TL50 and TL50A samples from China), omitted back 17 tack and constructed inconsistent margins between 1/16 inch to 1/4 inch margins 18 seaming gore and cup. . .”) (emphasis added). The veracity of that explanation is 19 separately supported by plaintiff’s own employee, Larry Chan, who, in a July 6, 2018 20 email, rhetorically admitted that that facility is a “shit hole.” Dkt. 84-7 at 200-01 21 (“[S]ounds like I am the only one [who] doesn’t know what is going on in MLCB. Why I 22 never see any inspection report or defective numbers from you guys? How true is the BV 23 report? How do you want me to reply? Admit our MLCB is a shit hole?”) (emphasis 24 added). 25 Internal documents apparently maintained by plaintiff’s Cambodia personnel 26 substantiate that admission. Defendant identified at least two internal quality control 27 records showing that such personnel identified defect rates in TL 50A bras manufactured 1 over 30 percent following a 100 percent “QC check.” Dkt. 84-7 at 142-167; Dkt. 84-7 at 2 125. While evidence of aberrational defect rates in non-PO 542 TL 50A bras 3 manufactured in plaintiff’s Cambodia facility does not directly show that the PO 542 4 production itself contained such high defect rates, it supports such an inference. 5 While plaintiff is correct that defendant’s own admission that it failed to open the 6 shipments quarantined at the FedEx facilities in Greenwood undermines its ability to 7 claim that their bras are substantially impaired, Dkt. 88 at 15, the fact that all PO 542 bras 8 share a common source of manufacturing would allow a trier of fact to reasonably infer 9 that the same sort of defects found in the inspected or sold PO 542 bras existed in the 10 remaining 25,116 PO 542 bras (even if their boxes are unopened). Again, such an 11 inference is further bolstered by the internal records concerning defect rates found in 12 plaintiff’s Cambodia facility’s non-PO 542 productions. 13 Lastly, in its reply, plaintiff cites the report of its expert, Glynn Raven, stating that 14 Raven found that his sample of the PO 542 bras were “good quality.” Dkt. 88 at 16 n.9. 15 However, as defendant responds in its reply, Raven’s six-hour inspection amounted to a 16 roughly one minute per PO 542 inspection, Dkt. 90-1 at 7, and the purported flaws 17 identified by Baran, defendant’s other expert (Wesley Gibson), and defendant’s 18 employees call into question the accuracy or scope of his inspection, id. at 6-7. While 19 plaintiff and its experts may offer a more persuasive explanation for any failures or the 20 absence of any defects in the remaining PO 542 bras, this motion is not the proper 21 vehicle for crediting such competing accounts. 22 In short, the court concludes defendant has proffered sufficient evidence to show a 23 triable issue concerning its revocation of its acceptance of the remaining PO 542 bras. 24 As a result, the court denies plaintiff’s request for summary judgment of defendant’s 25 breach of contract claim with respect to the remaining 25,116 PO 542 bras 26 b. Summary Judgment on Defendant’s Breach of Implied Warranty 27 of Merchantability Counterclaim Is Improper 1 summary judgment of defendant’s breach of implied warranty counterclaim: (1) BV’s April 2 2018 and May 2018 inspections of PO 542 bras could and should have revealed defects 3 in the PO 542 bras and, as a result, no implied warranty may arise in the first instance, id. 4 at 22; (2) defendant provided certain bra specifications amounting to an express warranty 5 that displaced any purported implied warranty, id. at 22-23. The court analyzes each 6 argument in turn. 7 i. BV’s Pre-Shipment Reviews Do Not Preclude Any PO 542 8 Implied Warranty of Merchantability 9 In its opening brief, plaintiff argues that “an implied warranty will not arise where 10 an alleged defect could have been revealed upon a reasonably prudent examination of 11 the product, and the buyer had reasonable opportunity to make such examination.” Dkt. 12 81 at 22. In support of that position, plaintiff cites Guttman v. Nissin Foods (U.S.A.) Co, 13 Inc., 2015 WL 4881073 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 14, 2015) and California Commercial Code § 14 2316(3)(b). Plaintiff overstates the applicability of these authorities here. 15 California Commercial Code § 2316(3)(b) provides the following: 16 “When the buyer before entering into the contract has examined the goods or the sample or model as fully as he 17 desired or has refused to examine the goods there is no implied warranty with regard to defects which an examination 18 ought in the circumstances to have revealed to him.” Cal. Comm. Code § 2316(3)(b). 19 20 While plaintiff proffered evidence that BV conducted at least three sample set 21 reviews at plaintiff’s Cambodia facility prior to shipment of at least some of the PO 542 22 bras, Dkt. 81-9 (April 25, 2018 report); Dkt. 80-19 (May 8, 2018 report); Dkt. 80-20 (May 23 11, 2018 report), Comment 8 to § 2316’s parallel UCC provision recognizes a distinction 24 between an examination prior to an executed agreement and an inspection subsequent 25 to such execution. Cal. Comm. Code § 2316, UCC Cmt. 8 (“Under paragraph (b) of 26 subsection (3) warranties may be excluded or modified by the circumstances where the 27 buyer examines the goods or a sample or model of them before entering into the 1 before acceptance or at any other time after the contract has been made.”) 2 (emphases added). 3 Here, regardless of whether BV’s sample set reviews qualify as “inspections” or 4 “examinations” (which the parties needlessly dispute at length), such reviews occurred 5 after the parties entered into PO 542 in December 2017. Dkt. 81 at 13 citing Ans. ¶ 13. 6 Plaintiff does not contest that PO 542 had been “entered into” at any other time. Thus, § 7 2316(b)(3) does not preclude defendant’s breach of implied warranty claim on the basis 8 of BV’s reviews of PO 542. 9 Plaintiff’s citation to the court in Guttman does not alter this conclusion. The court 10 in Guttman dealt with a situation where the plaintiff “actually did inspect some product 11 labels to discern whether they contained [the claimed trans-fat defect].” Id. at *2 (italics in 12 the original) (emphasis added). Given that fact, to the extent plaintiff suggests that 13 Guttman stands for the proposition that an examination need only be available (not 14 actually conducted) to preclude a purchaser’s breach of implied warranty claim, such 15 suggestion is unsupported. 16 Lastly, when questioning defendant’s employee, Veronique Powell, plaintiff itself 17 characterized BV’s Cambodia sample reviews as “initial inspections.” Dkt. 80-30 at 20 18 (Q: “What was the inspection strategy for the initial inspections of PO 542? . . . Q: “Are 19 you aware of any information given to Bureau Veritas to guide them in the inspections of 20 PO 542, the initial inspections?” . . . . Q: “Okay. Are you aware of the results of the 21 initial inspections of PO 542 by BV?”) (emphases added). Such characterization 22 undermines the finality of defendant’s right to further review any shipped goods and, in 23 any event, effectively admits that BV’s sample reviews were not “examinations” (because 24 they were “inspections”) within the meaning of § 2316. 25 Given the above, the court concludes that summary judgment of defendant’s 26 breach of implied warranty counterclaim on the basis of plaintiff’s first argument is 27 unwarranted. 1 ii. The TL 50A Specifications Do Not Displace Any PO 542 2 Implied Warranty of Merchantability 3 In its opening brief, plaintiff argues that because defendant admits that it provided 4 design specifications to plaintiff, Ans. ¶¶ 25, 32, defendant may not allege a claim for 5 breach of implied warranty, Dkt. 81 at 22. In support of that position, plaintiff cites 6 Bancroft v. San Francisco Tool Co., 120 Cal. 228, 232 (1898), Carpenter Steel Co. v. 7 Pellegrin, 46 Cal. Rptr. 502, 504 (Ct. App. 1965), and Comment 9 to California 8 Commercial Code § 2316’s parallel UCC provision. Neither authority supports plaintiff’s 9 argument. 10 The court in Bancroft, a case from 1898, construed the then-existing California 11 Civil Code § 1770, not the UCC provision now incorporated in the California Commercial 12 Code. 120 Cal. at 231-32. Defendant pointed out this distinction in its opposition, Dkt. 84 13 at 22, and plaintiff failed to offer any rebuttal in its reply. 14 Similarly, the court Carpenter relied upon then-existing California Civil Code § 15 1735 when rejecting plaintiff’s implied warranty claim, not the sort of UCC provision at 16 issue here. 46 Cal. Rptr. at 504. Additionally, in its opposition, defendant pointed out 17 that Carpenter dealt with a situation where the buyers claimed implied warranties that 18 were inconsistent with the specifications provided, Dkt. 84 at 22, and plaintiff again failed 19 to offer any rebuttal in its reply. 20 Lastly, the UCC comment relied upon by plaintiff does not support its position on 21 this issue. In relevant part, that comment provides the following: 22 “The situation in which the buyer gives precise and complete specifications to the seller is not explicitly covered in this 23 section . . . The warranty of merchantability in such a transaction, however, must be considered in connection with 24 the next section on the cumulation and conflict of warranties. Under paragraph (c) of that section in case of 25 such an inconsistency the implied warranty of merchantability is displaced by the express warranty that the goods will 26 comply with the specifications. Thus, where the buyer gives detailed specifications as to the goods, neither of the implied 27 warranties as to quality will normally apply to the transaction 1 California Commercial Code § 2317 provides that “[w]arranties whether express or 2 implied shall be construed as consistent with each other and as cumulative, but if 3 such construction is unreasonable the intention of the parties shall determine which 4 warranty is dominant. In ascertaining that intention the following rules apply: . . . (c) 5 Express warranties displace [sic] inconsistent implied warranties other than an 6 implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose.” Cal. Comm. Code § 2317 (emphases 7 added). 8 Plaintiff failed to explain how or why the design specifications commissioned by 9 defendant are inconsistent with the warranty of merchantability implied by California law. 10 Absent such explanation, such specifications do not bar defendant’s claim for breach of 11 that warranty. Thus, the court concludes that summary judgment of that claim on the 12 basis of plaintiff’s second argument is unwarranted. As a result, the court denies 13 plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment of defendant’s breach of implied warranty of 14 merchantability counterclaim. 15 c. Partial Summary Judgment on Defendant’s Prayer for Lost 16 Profits Is Improper 17 California Commercial Code § 2714(1) provides the following: 18 “Where the buyer has accepted goods and given notification [under § 2607(3)] he . . . may recover, as damages for any 19 nonconformity of tender, the loss resulting in the ordinary course of events from the seller’s breach as determined in any 20 manner that is reasonable.” Cal. Comm. Code § 2714(1). 21 Here, the court concludes that defendant may assert a lost profits damages theory 22 when pursuing its counterclaims. As established above, defendant accepted all 65,076 23 of the PO 542 bras. Plaintiff failed to advance any argument establishing defendant’s 24 inability to show notification under § 2607. While neither party cites any California 25 authority on the issue, the court concludes that a lost profits theory qualifies as a 26 “reasonable manner” to measure a buyer’s losses from a seller’s breach in the sort of 27 retail commercial relationship here. Significantly, the parties agree that defendant sold 1 reasonable to infer that, in the ordinary course of events, where defendant did not stop 2 offering the PO 542 bras to customers, defendant would have continued to make sales 3 and, presumably, profits. 4 Plaintiff’s argument on this issue does not change that conclusion. In its opening 5 brief, plaintiff argues that defendant cannot “claim” lost profits for the unsold PO 542 bras 6 because defendant’s decision not to sell such bras was self-inflicted. Dkt. 81 at 26. In 7 response, defendant cited plaintiff’s expert’s testimony purportedly acknowledging that, 8 when defendant first started receiving notice of the ripped bras from its customer, it had 9 no way to know the extent of defects in the PO 542 bras and needed to perform a risk 10 analysis. Dkt. 84 at 24. Defendant also cited Baran’s testimony that defendant’s 11 decision to quarantine and stop selling the PO 542 was “appropriate and necessary” 12 under industry standards and that, in her opinion, “the high percentage of defects and 13 potential fallout” from those defects would potentially damage defendant’s brand. Id. 14 Aside from contesting the purportedly late disclosure of the additional PO 542 bras 15 at the Greenwood and Fontana facilities, which the court addresses below, plaintiff fails 16 to offer any rebuttal in its reply. In light of the above, the court denies plaintiff’s request 17 for partial summary judgment on defendant’s damages theory. 18 3. Outstanding Issues Relevant to the Parties’ Pretrial Filings 19 As noted above, the court appreciates plaintiff’s position that defendant wrongfully 20 withheld information concerning the additional PO 542 bras maintained at the FedEx 21 facilities in Greenwood and Fontana, Dkt. 88 at 11-13 (“ThirdLove now suddenly claims 22 to be aware of more ‘quarantined’ bras in Greenwood, Indiana than it made available to 23 Magic Link’s expert and principal in November 2019. It ought not to be allowed to rely 24 in any respect on hypothetical units from PO 542 it never identified or made 25 available despite multiple request.”) (emphasis added). The court also understands 26 defendant’s response to that charge. Dkt. 90-1 at 11-12. 27 Plaintiff may bring a motion in limine to preclude defendant from proffering 1 any wrongful nondisclosure during discovery. However, such purported failure does not 2 prevent the court from making a simple calculation on the basis of the evidence provided 3 that the sum of the unsold remaining PO 542 bras, albeit in quarantine or defendant’s 4 inventory, is 25,116. 5 4. Motions to Seal 6 In support of its motion, plaintiff lodged multiple exhibits under seal that defendant 7 deemed “confidential.” Dkt. 79; Dkt. 80. In its seemingly duplicative administrative 8 motions to seal such exhibits, plaintiff took the position that the lodged exhibits were not 9 truly confidential. Id. In response, defendant provided a declaration requesting that the 10 court seal only Exhibit Y to the Hecker Declaration (“Exhibit Y”). Dkt. 85. In it, defendant 11 explained that that exhibit reflects sensitive financial information, including profit margins, 12 costs, and sales for certain products. Id. Defendant further testified that it keeps such 13 information confidential and, if that information were disclosed, such disclosure could 14 deprive it of certain competitive advantages. Id. In its proposed order submitted with its 15 declaration, defendant acknowledged that the court should deny sealing all exhibits, 16 except Exhibit Y. Dkt. 85-1. 17 Cited above by the court, Exhibit Y details defendant’s supplemental interrogatory 18 responses. Based on its review of that document, the court concludes that compelling 19 reasons exist to protect the confidential business information identified by defendant. Ctr. 20 for Auto Safety v. Chrysler Grp., LLC, 809 F.3d 1092 (9th Cir. 2016). As a result, the 21 court DENIES plaintiff’s motions to seal all exhibits to those motions, except Exhibit Y 22 (Dkt. 80-25), and GRANTS those motions with respect to only Exhibit Y. 23 CONCLUSION 24 For the foregoing reasons, the court GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART 25 plaintiff’s motion for partial summary judgment as to its claims and summary judgment as 26 to defendant’s counterclaims. 27 1 IT IS SO ORDERED. 2 Dated: April 22, 2020 3 /s/ Phyllis J. Hamilton PHYLLIS J. HAMILTON 4 United States District Judge 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27
Document Info
Docket Number: 4:18-cv-07366
Filed Date: 4/22/2020
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 6/20/2024