Process America, Inc. v. Cynergy Holdings, LLC
Filing
OPINION, the district court judgment is affirmed in part, vacated in part and remanded, by RDS, GEL, J. MURTHA, FILED.[1877525] [15-2081]
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15‐2081
Process America v. Cynergy Holdings
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
August Term, 2015
(Argued: June 6, 2016 Decided: October 5, 2016)
Docket No. 15‐2081‐cv
PROCESS AMERICA, INC.,*
Plaintiff‐Counter‐Defendant‐Appellant,
— v. —
CYNERGY HOLDINGS, LLC,
Defendant‐Counter‐Claimant‐Appellee.
B e f o r e:
SACK and LYNCH, Circuit Judges, and MURTHA, District Judge.**
__________________
*
The Clerk of Court is directed to amend the caption of the case.
**
Judge J. Garvan Murtha, of the United States District Court for the District of
Vermont, sitting by designation.
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Plaintiff‐Counter‐Defendant‐Appellant Process America, Inc. (“Process
America”) appeals from the judgment of the United States District Court for the
Eastern District of New York (Brian Cogan, Judge) awarding damages following a
bench trial limited to the issue of Defendant‐Counter‐Claimant‐Appellee
Cynergy Holdings, LLC’s (“Cynergy”) damages on its counterclaims, and from a
series of interim rulings prior to the trial. Process America sued Cynergy for
breach of contract. Cynergy counterclaimed, alleging, inter alia, that Process
America improperly solicited its customers.
Following cross‐motions for summary judgment, the district court held
that Process America breached the parties’ contract by soliciting Cynergy’s
customers following termination of the contract and that Cynergy’s own breaches
of contract did not vitiate Process America’s obligation not to solicit customers. In
limine, the district court additionally concluded that a contractual damages cap
limited Cynergy’s liability to approximately $300,000. After conducting a bench
trial, the court found that Process America was responsible for the increased rate
at which customers canceled their contracts with Cynergy and awarded Cynergy
over $8.8 million in damages, offset only by the approximately $300,000 awarded
to Process America.
We AFFIRM the district court’s holdings with respect to liability. We
conclude, however, that the method of calculating damages gave Cynergy more
than the expected value of the contract because it did not account for saved costs,
and accordingly VACATE and REMAND for calculation of damages in
conformity with this opinion.
AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
MITCHELL C. SHAPIRO, Carter Ledyard & Milburn LLP, New
York, New York, for Plaintiff‐Counter‐Defendant‐Appellant Process
America, Inc.
MICHAEL C. MARSH (Jennifer C. Glasser, Katherine E. Giddings,
and Diane G. DeWolf, on the brief), Akerman LLP, Miami, Florida
and Tallahassee, Florida, for Defendant‐Counter‐Claimant‐Appellee
Cynergy Holdings, LLC.
2
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GERARD E. LYNCH, Circuit Judge:
This case arises from the termination of a commercial relationship between
Plaintiff‐Counter‐Defendant‐Appellant Process America, Inc. (“Process
America”) and Defendant‐Counter‐Claimant‐Appellee Cynergy Holdings, LLC
(“Cynergy”). Process America is an Independent Sales Organization (“ISO”) that,
prior to the termination of their relationship, solicited and referred merchants to
Cynergy, a bankcard processor. Following the termination of the relationship
between Process America and Cynergy, Process America sued Cynergy for
breach of contract. Cynergy counterclaimed, contending, among other things,
that Process America improperly solicited Cynergy’s clients. Following a series of
interim decisions and a bench trial limited to the issue of damages on Cynergy’s
counterclaims, the district court held that although both parties had breached the
contract, Cynergy’s liability was capped by the contract. The district court
awarded Cynergy a net total of $8,521,182 in damages. Process America appeals.
BACKGROUND
I.
Merchant Services Generally
The parties are involved in the “merchant services” industry, which
provides credit and debit card transaction processing services to merchants. The
3
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basic mechanics of the process by which bankcard transactions are conducted
may be summarized as follows:
[T]he customer presents a credit card to pay for goods
or services to the merchant; the merchant relays the
transaction information to the acquiring bank; the
acquiring bank processes the information and relays it
to the network [e.g., Visa or MasterCard]; the network
relays the information to the issuing bank; if the issuing
bank approves the transaction, that approval is relayed
to the acquiring bank, which then relays it to the
merchant. If the transaction is approved, the merchant
receives the purchase price minus two fees: the
“interchange fee” that the issuing bank charged the
acquiring bank and the “merchant discount fee” that the
acquiring bank charged the merchant.
In re Payment Card Interchange Fee & Merch. Disc. Antitrust Litig., 827 F.3d 223, 228
(2d Cir. 2016).
Acquiring banks – which are also known as “sponsor banks” – are
financial institutions that are members of the Visa or MasterCard network.
Generally, the acquiring banks delegate merchant solicitation, processing,
underwriting, and customer service obligations to “Processors,” who manage
card transaction processing, ISO recruitment, merchant customer services,
liability for merchant losses, and fraud monitoring, and to ISOs, who solicit
merchants to offer them the services of an acquiring bank and access to a
4
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Processor. An ISO’s primary role is to solicit new merchants and then provide
first‐line customer support. ISOs are paid a portion of the discount fee paid by
merchants to the acquiring bank.
II.
The Relationship between Cynergy and Process America
Cynergy provides back‐end processing services for credit and debit card
transactions through its relationship with its acquiring bank, Harris Bank
N.A./Moneris (“Moneris”). After receiving funds from the issuing bank, Moneris
receives, and holds, merchant funds for one to three days before remitting any
portion to the merchant. Cynergy calculates the money due to merchants through
its proprietary platform called VIMAS.
In 2004, Process America signed a standard ISO agreement (the “ISO
Agreement”) with Cynergy’s predecessor, Cynergy Data (hereinafter “Old
Cynergy”).1 Pursuant to the ISO Agrement, Process America sold Cynergy’s
bankcard processing services to merchants and received as compensation a
portion of the discount fee charged to merchants, known as “residuals.”
1
Old Cynergy filed for bankruptcy in 2009. Cynergy Holdings, LLC – referred to
in this opinion merely as “Cynergy” – acquired the rights and obligations arising
under the ISO Agreement from Old Cynergy.
5
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As relevant to this appeal, the ISO Agreement states that Cynergy “owns”
the merchant agreements solicited by Process America, but that, upon satisfaction
of certain benchmarks, ownership of those agreements will “vest” in Process
America. J.A. 202. That contract provision also describes the mechanism by
which Process America may transfer the merchant accounts to a third‐party
processor. Additionally, the contract contains a non‐solicitation clause that bars
Process America from soliciting any merchant with whom Cynergy has a
contract for a period of five years following the termination of the ISO
Agreement and also contains a damages cap limiting Cynergy’s liability. The
contract further provides that Cynergy must continue to make residual payments
to Process America unless Cynergy terminated the contract “due to a material
breach” by Process America. J.A. 210.
The ISO Agreement also incorporates by reference the rules created and
enforced by the credit card networks, Visa and MasterCard (the “Rules”). The
Rules prohibit ISOs like Process America from directly accessing or holding
merchant funds, which must instead be held by acquiring banks.
Under the terms of the ISO Agreement, Process America is fully liable for
merchant chargebacks, which are consumer reversals of transactions, typically
6
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due to fraud. In order to reduce chargeback losses, Process America developed
the “Chargeback Reduction Incentive Program,” known as “CRIP.” Process
America characterizes CRIP as a rewards program funded by Process America’s
own residuals wherein merchants who followed a list of “best practices” were
rebated a portion of their fees. Cynergy, by contrast, characterizes CRIP as a
merchant reserve in which, in clear contravention of the Rules, Process America
retained funds owned by merchants to offset the cost of chargebacks.
III.
Termination of the Relationship
In January 2011, Moneris sent Cynergy a letter stating, in relevant part,
that:
[O]ne of Cynergy’s ISOs, Process America, appears to be
retaining funds from Merchants as security against
merchant liabilities. Because this would clearly fall
within the definition of Merchant Reserves in Cynergy’s
attestations and make those attestations inaccurate, we
wanted to formally register our concerns regarding
Process America’s practices and demand that the
following actions be taken immediately . . .
1. Terminate Process America as an ISO. . . .
Until these steps have been taken, Moneris considers
Cynergy to be in breach of its obligations . . . .
7
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J.A. 1350. In response, Cynergy informed Moneris that it was taking steps to
identify merchant funds held by Process America, but would “not immediately
terminate Process America’s processing agreement,” and would instead not
renew the agreement upon its expiration in May 2011. J.A. 1355. Moneris
responded that, “[i]f the funds in this reserve have been returned in full as you
indicate below, then it would appear that that particular breach has now been
cured,” J.A. 1352, but also requested a full audit of Process America’s accounts.
Shortly after receiving the letter from Moneris, Cynergy ceased making
residual payments to Process America. Approximately one month later, Cynergy
sent Process America a letter stating in part:
We hereby notify you that we find you in material
breach of the [ISO] Agreement. Among other
provisions, we find that you have breached your
representations and warranties under Sections 4.1 F (No
Violation) and 4.1 G (Compliance). These breaches stem
from your withholding and maintaining merchant
funds in reserve in violation of the Rules. Naming a
reserve an insurance program merely obfuscates the
facts but does not lessen the violation or the breach.
Further, we find that you are in material default
pursuant to Sections 6.3 C (False Representation), 6.3 D
(Breach) and 6.3 E (Goodwill) also in relation to your
withholding and maintaining merchant funds as a
reserve. As a result of the Section 6.3 C and 6.3 E events,
we hereby terminate the Agreement immediately and
intend to fully enforce ramifications upon termination.
8
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Despite the Events of Default that we believe to be
irrefutable, pursuant to Section 6.2 B of the Agreement
by providing notice ninety days prior to the renewal
date, either party may choose not to renew the
Agreement and as such we hereby provide notice of
non‐renewal. To be clear, this notice is not relief from
your Events of Default but clear notice that we shall
ensure your contract will not continue.
This letter is provided in accordance with the notice
provisions of Section 7.2 of the Agreement.
J.A. 2619‐20. Process America then contracted with approximately 25% of the
merchants in its portfolio of merchant agreements (the “Portfolio”) on behalf of
another processor and subsequently sold that portion of the Portfolio for
approximately $2 million. In attempting to get merchants to change processors,
Process America referenced Old Cynergy’s earlier bankruptcy and, in some
instances, suggested that funds held in the merchant’s account could be at risk.
Following the period in which Process America sought to induce merchants to
switch processors, a number of merchants canceled their contracts with Cynergy.
In total, the rate of post‐termination attrition was 79%. The attrition rate for the
six‐month period preceding termination was 16%.
9
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IV.
Procedural History
Process America sued Cynergy, alleging breach of contract and other
causes of action. Cynergy counterclaimed, alleging, inter alia, that Process
America had breached the contract by soliciting merchants and selling the
Portfolio and, in the process of soliciting merchants, had also defamed Cynergy.
Following cross‐motions for summary judgment, the district court held that
under the terms of the ISO Agreement, which the parties stipulated were
unambiguous, Cynergy, not Process America, owned the Portfolio at the time of
Process America’s solicitation, and entered summary judgment in Cynergy’s
favor. The court also determined that there was a material issue of fact as to
whether CRIP was a merchant reserve in violation of the Rules, but that if it was,
it would be a material breach of the ISO Agreement.
Both parties moved for reconsideration. The district court declined to
disturb its holding with respect to the issue of who owned the Portfolio. With
respect to CRIP, however, the district court concluded that the prior denial of
summary judgment had been premature; held that, in light of the contracts used
by Process America to enroll merchants in CRIP, CRIP was a merchant reserve in
violation of the Rules; and entered judgment in favor of Cynergy. The district
10
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court nevertheless concluded that, despite the material breach, Cynergy was not
entitled to withhold residuals under the terms of the contract without giving
Process America notice and an opportunity to cure. The district court therefore
entered summary judgment in favor of Process America with respect to its breach
of contract claim based on the improper withholding of residuals, but dismissed
all of its remaining claims. In the same opinion, the district court further held that
Cynergy was entitled to summary judgment on its counterclaim based on breach
of the non‐solicitation clause in the agreement and its defamation counterclaim.
In a separate opinion, following a motion in limine, the district court held
that the damages cap in the contract limited Process America’s recovery to fees
derived as a result of the ISO Agreement during the last four months of the
Agreement, which the parties stipulated was approximately $300,000. Having
dismissed or granted summary judgment on the issue of liability with respect to
all of the parties’ claims and counterclaims, the district court held a bench trial
limited solely to the issue of Cynergy’s damages. Measuring damages based on
the rate of attrition of merchant accounts in the Portfolio after Process America’s
solicitation, and rejecting Process America’s arguments that the increased
attrition rate could be attributable to something other than solicitation, the
11
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district court awarded Cynergy $8.82 million in damages, offset only by the
$300,000 awarded to Process America for Cynergy’s breach of contract.
Process America challenges only some of the district court’s rulings.
Process America argues that the district court erred in holding that Cynergy
owned the Portfolio, that CRIP violated the Rules, that Process America’s
statements to merchants constituted per se defamation, that Process America’s
damages were limited to $300,000, and that Cynergy’s damages should not be
offset by the full value of the withheld residuals. Process America also argues
that Cynergy’s withholding of residuals allowed it to treat the contract as void.
Process America further challenges the district court’s finding at trial that
Cynergy met its burden in proving damages. Process America does not appeal
the district court’s dismissal of its other claims. Cynergy did not file a cross‐
appeal, and does not challenge the district court’s conclusion that the
withholding of residuals constituted a breach of the ISO Agreement.
DISCUSSION
On appeal, Process America challenges the district court’s interim
decisions concluding that it breached the ISO Agreement and that Cynergy’s
liability for its own breach of contract was limited by the damages cap. Process
12
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America also challenges the district court’s post‐trial findings regarding
Cynergy’s damages. We address these issues in turn.2
2
We do not, however, address the question of whether CRIP constituted a
material breach of the contact. For the purposes of this appeal, whether CRIP
constituted a material breach of the contract is relevant only to the extent that it
would allow Cynergy to withhold residuals; the district court found that it did
not, as Cynergy failed to provide notice and an opportunity to cure. Cynergy
does not challenge that decision on appeal, although it argues that Process
America’s solicitation of customers provides a separate basis for withholding
residuals.
With respect to Cynergy’s defamation claim, although we agree with the
district court that Process America failed to demonstrate that its defamatory
statements were substantially true, we note that a determination of the merits of
this claim will not have an impact on Cynergy’s damages on this record. The
district court’s damages award, which accepted Cynergy’s expert’s methodology
and the data underlying his conclusions, was based on the overall rate of
merchant attrition due to Process America’s solicitation. No differentiation was
made between the damages Process America owed following its solicitation
(which, as discussed infra, breached the ISO Agreement) and the damages
resulting from Process America’s defamation. The district court’s operative
assumption appears to have been that any defamatory statements for which
Process America could be held liable were made solely in connection with
Process America’s solicitation. There is, however, some record evidence which
suggests that Process America’s defamation might have caused abnormal
attrition of merchants from Cynergy’s Portfolio which we understand to be
distinct from the abnormal attrition caused by Process America’s direct
solicitation (via defamatory means or otherwise) of Cynergy’s merchants. See J.A.
844, 848 (August 2011 e‐mails from third‐party companies to Cynergy’s
merchants referencing Cynergy’s allegedly recent bankruptcy and unstable
financial posture). Because neither party has argued on appeal that Cynergy’s
expert’s calculations were incorrect because they failed to make this distinction,
we need not address this issue or Cynergy’s defamation claim further.
13
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I.
Contract Interpretation Issues
The district court entered judgment on all matters relating to liability on
summary judgment or in limine.3 We review a district court’s grant of summary
judgment de novo. Bryant v. Maffucci, 923 F.2d 979, 982 (2d Cir. 1991). “Summary
judgment is proper ‘if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to
any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.’”
Zaretsky v. William Goldberg Diamond Corp., 820 F.3d 513, 519 (2d Cir. 2016),
quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
New York law governs the ISO Agreement, pursuant to its choice‐of‐law
provision. In interpreting a contract under New York law, “words and phrases . .
. should be given their plain meaning, and the contract should be construed so as
to give full meaning and effect to all of its provisions.” Olin Corp. v. Am. Home
Assurance Co., 704 F.3d 89, 99 (2d Cir. 2012) (internal quotation marks omitted).
“An interpretation of a contract that has the effect of rendering at least one clause
superfluous or meaningless is not preferred and will be avoided if possible.”
LaSalle Bank Nat’l Ass’n v. Nomura Asset Capital Corp., 424 F.3d 195, 206 (2d Cir.
2005) (alterations and internal quotation marks omitted).
3
The motion in limine was framed as a motion for summary judgment, and we
apply the same standards as we would to a motion for summary judgment. See
Parker v. Sony Pictures Entm’t, Inc., 260 F.3d 100, 111 (2d Cir. 2001).
14
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A.
The Portfolio
The parties both contend that under the unambiguous terms of the ISO
Agreement, they owned the Portfolio at the time that Process America solicited
merchants to switch to another processor, to whom Process America ultimately
sold approximately 25% of the Portfolio. Section 2.6 of the ISO Agreement,
entitled “Ownership of Merchant Agreements,” governs the process of
transferring and selling the merchant accounts. Section 2.6 provides:
A. Ownership. The parties agree that upon execution of
this Agreement, throughout the Initial Term, and until
the Ownership Trigger Date, Cynergy Data shall own
and have all rights to the Merchant Agreements. On the
Ownership Trigger Date, ownership of the Merchant
Agreements will vest in [Process America]. The
“Ownership Trigger Date” means anytime after the
Initial Term, and the first day of the month following
the month in which all of the Ownership Trigger Events
are satisfied. An Ownership Trigger Event will be
deemed satisfied immediately upon its occurrence.
“Ownership Trigger Events” will occur [when Process
America meets certain benchmarks] . . . . Upon
satisfaction of the conditions set forth in Section 2.6.B, both
parties shall execute an asset transfer agreement reasonably
satisfactory to both parties pursuant to which ownership
rights in Merchants will be transferred from Cynergy Data to
[Process America] for nominal consideration.
B. Transfer of Merchants. At any time while this
Agreement is in effect and after the Ownership Trigger
15
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Date, [Process America] may move all or any portion of
the Merchants to a third party credit card processor,
subject to all of the following: i) [Process America]
grants to Cynergy Data a right of first refusal on the
Merchant portfolio. . . . ii) [Process America] shall pay to
Cynergy Data an exit fee equal to the average monthly
revenue derived by Cynergy Data over the most recent
3 month period, excluding the month of December,
attributable to the Merchant Agreements to be
transferred multiplied by the greater of either a) the
multiple figure offered by the third party, or b) 30. iii)
The execution of an assignment agreement between
Cynergy Data, [Moneris], and the new credit card
processor containing terms typical of such a transaction
and satisfactory to [Moneris] and Cynergy Data. Upon
satisfaction of i) and ii) and iii), Cynergy Data will
cooperate in transferring the Merchant Agreements to
the third party designated by [Process America]. . . .
J.A. 202‐03 (emphasis added). The non‐solicitation clause in Section 3.8 of the ISO
Agreement additionally provides that:
Except as otherwise provided in Section 2.6.B, during the
term of this Agreement and for 5 years after termination
of this Agreement . . . , [Process America] . . . will not
directly or indirectly solicit or endeavor to obtain as a
customer for credit or debit card processing services, or
contract with, any Merchant [who has entered into a
merchant agreement with Cynergy] for credit or debit
card processing services.
J.A. 204 (emphasis added). Section 7.11 of the ISO Agreement further provides
that both Section 2.6 and Section 3.8 survive termination of the Agreement.
16
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It is undisputed that Process America met the benchmarks required for an
Ownership Trigger Event, but did not comply with Section 2.6.B’s requirements
for transfer of the merchant accounts. Pointing to the language in Section 2.6.A
stating that “ownership of the [Portfolio] will vest in” Process America “[o]n the
Ownership Trigger Date,” which occurs after an Ownership Trigger Event is
satisfied, J.A. 202, Process America argues that ownership of the Portfolio
transferred as soon as it met as the benchmarks required for an Ownership
Trigger Event. Cynergy, in turn, references the last sentence of Section 2.6.A
which states that, upon satisfaction of the conditions set forth in Section 2.6.B,
“ownership rights” will be transferred “from Cynergy . . . to [Process America].”
Id.
The parties frame the dispute over those provisions as a question of
“ownership,” with the implication being that if Process America owned the
merchant agreements, the sale of the Portfolio would not constitute a breach of
contract and Cynergy’s “seizure” of the Portfolio would be a breach. The district
court resolved the apparently contradictory language by interpreting the term
“ownership” to mean the “right to exercise ownership and transfer ‘ownership
rights’ from Cynergy,” S.A. 62, rather than “full ownership,” S.A. 61.
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We may resolve the instant appeal, however, by addressing a narrower
question than the generalized claim of ownership: whether the solicitation of
merchants, and transfer of a portion of the Portfolio to a third party, violate the
ISO Agreement which permits transfer only pursuant to Section 2.6.B, such that
Cynergy is entitled to damages based on the increased rate of attrition of
merchant accounts in the Portfolio. We conclude that it does.
Notwithstanding the ISO Agreement’s opaque treatment of the word
“ownership,” the Agreement contemplates only one method for transferring the
merchant agreements contained in the Portfolio to Process America and then to a
third party: compliance with Section 2.6.B. Process America has not identified,
nor have we found, any other contract provision that would allow for the transfer
of merchant agreements.
Section 2.6.B enumerates three conditions that must be satisfied before any
transfer may take place, including providing notice and the right of first refusal
to Cynergy, paying a substantial fee to Cynergy, and executing a new processing
agreement that satisfies both Cynergy and Moneris. Those requirements serve
both to provide Cynergy with substantial rights in the Portfolio, even after the
Ownership Trigger Date has passed, and to ensure continuity of service in
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processing bankcard transactions. Given Process America’s role in the processing
transaction generally – as a salesman and customer service provider, but not as a
processor of bankcard transactions – it is unsurprising that the contract includes
requirements intended to ensure continuity of service. The only real benefit that
Process America can derive from its claimed “ownership” of the Portfolio is the
right to sell it to a third‐party. Section 2.6.B describes that sale procedure, and
further provides Cynergy with substantial rights, including the right of first
refusal and the right to an exit fee, until the accounts are actually transferred.
Process America does not dispute that it did not comply, or attempt to
comply, with Section 2.6.B prior to soliciting merchants with the intention of
selling those accounts to a third party. Rather, it contends that, because Section
2.6.A survives termination of the agreement, it possessed an ownership interest
that also survived and therefore Cynergy’s purported “seizure” of the Portfolio
was wrongful. That argument suffers from two flaws. First, it ignores the fact
that, even assuming that Process America “owned” the Portfolio, it was
nevertheless a breach of contract to transfer the Portfolio to a different processor
without complying with Section 2.6.B. Second, it fails to acknowledge that
Section 3.8 flatly prohibits any solicitation of merchants who have contracts with
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Cynergy. As it is undisputed that the merchant accounts had not been transferred
to a third‐party prior to Process America’s solicitation, Cynergy still had
contracts with all of the solicited merchants and any contact with those
merchants was in breach of the ISO Agreement.
Our interpretation of Section 2.6 comports with the other provisions of the
ISO Agreement. Section 3.8 prohibits solicitation of merchants “[e]xcept as
otherwise provided in Section 2.6.B.” J.A. 204 (emphasis added). And, as Process
America itself argues, Section 7.11ʹs survival clause would allow it to transfer the
accounts post‐termination. See Appellant’s Br. 27.4 We thus conclude that Process
America’s solicitation of merchants, and sale of a portion of the Portfolio without
compliance with Section 2.6.B, constitutes a breach of contract, and that Process
America may be liable for the resulting increased attrition of merchants in the
Portfolio.
4
We note that Section 2.6.B begins by stating that Process America may transfer
accounts to a third‐party processor “[a]t any time while th[e ISO Agreement] is in
effect.” Process America does not argue that this language would preclude it
from transferring the Portfolio to a third party after the contract was terminated;
indeed, Process America points to an admission by Cynergy’s counsel that, “‘[i]f,
after termination, Process America had come to us and said we’re exercising
[Section 2.6.B], . . . I don’t think we could stop them.’” Appellant’s Br. 27, quoting
J.A. 328.
20
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B.
Excusal of Performance
Process America next argues that, even if the solicitation of merchants
would ordinarily be a breach of the non‐solicitation clause, it is excused from
performing its obligations under that provision as a result of Cynergy’s failure to
pay Process America residuals. We reject that argument.5
Under New York law, a party’s performance under a contract is excused
where the other party has substantially failed to perform its side of the bargain
or, synonymously, where that party has committed a material breach. See Hadden
v. Consol. Edison Co. of N.Y., 34 N.Y.2d 88, 96 n.9 (1974). Whether a failure to
perform constitutes a “material breach” turns on several factors, such as the
absolute and relative magnitude of default, its effect on the contract’s purpose,
willfulness, and the degree to which the injured party has benefitted under the
5
Cynergy argues that this argument is waived because Process America failed to
raise it before the district court. We disagree. Although the issue was raised in a
portion of Process America’s opening brief relating to a tortious interference
claim, Process America expressly argued that: “[D]ue to Cynergy’s wrongful
withholding of Process America’s residuals, Process America was entitled to
solicit merchants and did not breach the ISO Agreement for any merchant
solicitations. In fact, merchant solicitation is considered damage mitigation for
which Cynergy is liable.” No. 12‐cv‐772, Doc. No. 126 at 33‐34 (citations omitted).
Process America also raised the issue in its reply brief. Furthermore, the district
court considered, and rejected, this argument on the merits.
21
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contract. Id. For a breach to be material, it must “go to the root of the agreement
between the parties.” Septembertide Publ’g, B.V. v. Stein & Day, Inc., 884 F.2d 675,
678 (2d Cir. 1989); see also Callanan v. Powers, 199 N.Y. 268, 284 (1910)
(“[Rescission] is not permitted for a slight, casual, or technical breach, but, as a
general rule, only for such as are material and willful, or, if not willful, so
substantial and fundamental as to strongly tend to defeat the object of the parties
in making the contract.”); Frank Felix Assocs., Ltd. v. Austin Drugs, Inc., 111 F.3d
284, 287‐89 (2d Cir. 1997).
A partial breach may entitle the non‐breaching party to damages for the
breach, but does not entitle the party to simply to treat the contract as at an end.
See, e.g., Lovink v. Guilford Mills, Inc., 878 F.2d 584, 586 (2d Cir. 1989). “‘A partial
breach by one party . . . does not justify the other party’s subsequent failure to
perform; both parties may be guilty of breaches, each having a right to
damages.’” New Windsor Volunteer Ambulance Corps, Inc. v. Meyers, 442 F.3d 101,
117‐18 (2d Cir. 2006), quoting 4 Corbin on Contracts § 946, at 811 (1951).
Process America argues that Cynergy’s failure to pay residuals constitutes
a material breach that excuses it from its obligation not to solicit merchants. The
non‐solicitation clause, however, survives for a period of five years post‐
22
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termination, regardless of how the contract was terminated. Moreover, although
the failure to pay an agent may go to the “root” of the contract and could excuse
the agent from continuing to work for the principal, Cynergy’s breach occurred
after a lengthy period of performance and the non‐solicitation clause is a
prohibition rather than an affirmative obligation on Process America. Under
those circumstances, Cynergy’s failure to pay residuals is not so significant as to
constitute a material breach. Furthermore, Section 6.4 of the ISO Agreement
explicitly states that Process America is not entitled to residuals if Cynergy
terminates the ISO Agreement due to Process America’s material breach. Thus,
the ISO Agreement explicitly contemplates the situation that occurred here –
Cynergy’s unilateral withholding of residual payments. It is true that, as the
district court found, Cynergy was not entitled to do so under the particular
circumstances. Nonetheless, Cynergy’s attempt to exercise an express contractual
right does not constitute a material breach of the contract that would excuse non‐
performance of a separate obligation.
Process America attempts to connect the non‐solicitation and continued
compensation provisions by arguing that the obligation to pay residuals and the
obligation not to solicit merchants are the only duties that survive termination
23
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and therefore necessarily show mutuality. But the agreement to perform certain
duties post‐termination is part of the bargained‐for exchange embodied in the
contract as a whole and cannot be viewed in isolation. The mere fact that both
provisions survive termination does not make them contingent on each other.
C.
Damages Cap
Process America also contends that the district court erred both in
interpreting the limitation on Cynergy’s damages contained in the ISO
Agreement and in concluding, at the summary judgment stage, that the carve‐out
for willful misconduct did not apply. Section 4.6 of the ISO Agreement provides
that:
Except for the liability arising from gross negligence,
recklessness, or willful misconduct, the total cumulative
liability of Cynergy Data in the aggregate for damages
arising from any breach of this Agreement or for any
other claims under this Agreement, shall not exceed . . .
fees derived by Cynergy Data . . . during the last 4
months of this Agreement [which equals $300,818].
J.A. 208. The district court found, and we agree, that the plain language of
Section 4.6 limits damages for Cynergy’s breach of contract to $300,818.
Process America argues that reading Section 4.6 to limit Cynergy’s liability
would render Section 6.4 of the ISO Agreement superfluous. That argument fails.
24
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Section 6.4 simply provides that termination of the ISO Agreement will not affect
Process America’s right to receive residuals, unless Cynergy terminates the ISO
Agreement “due to a material breach of the Agreement by [Process America].”
J.A. 210. But, as the district court observed, Section 6.4 says nothing about
damages; it merely establishes a substantive right (to continue receiving
residuals) for Process America. There is no contradiction between the two
provisions and thus no need to “harmonize” them, which, in Process America’s
view, would require us to simply ignore Section 4.6. We note that the interplay
between those two provisions does give Cynergy an incentive to stop paying
residuals where the payments owed would exceed the damages cap. But that is
the contract that the parties bargained for, and to the extent that Cynergy’s
decision to withhold residuals constituted willful misconduct, the damages cap
would not apply.
Process America also contends that the district court erred in determining,
following a motion in limine, that Cynergy’s withholding of residuals was not
“gross negligence, recklessness, or willful misconduct,” J.A. 210, such that the
damages cap does not apply. Process America argues that it set forth sufficient
evidence of “willful misconduct” as to require a trial on that issue.
25
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New York courts have routinely enforced liability‐limitation provisions
when contracted by sophisticated parties, recognizing such clauses as a means of
allocating economic risk in the event that a contract is not fully performed.6 See,
e.g., Biotronik A.G. v. Conor Medsystems Ireland, Ltd., 22 N.Y.3d 799, 822 (2014);
Peluso v. Tauscher Cronacher Prof’l Eng’rs, P.C., 704 N.Y.S.2d 289, 290 (App. Div.
2nd Dep’t 2000); Scott v. Palermo, 649 N.Y.S.2d 289, 290‐91 (App. Div. 4th Dep’t
1996). In interpreting an exculpatory clause similar to Section 4.6, the New York
Court of Appeals stated:
In excepting willful acts from defendant’s general
immunity from liability . . . we think the parties
intended to narrowly exclude from protection truly
culpable, harmful conduct, not merely intentional
nonperformance of the Agreement motivated by
financial self‐ interest. . . . We, therefore, conclude that
the term willful acts as used in this contract was
intended by the parties to subsume conduct which is
tortious in nature, i.e., wrongful conduct in which
defendant willfully intends to inflict harm on plaintiff at
least in part through the means of breaching the
contract between the parties.
6
Process America suggests that it was not a “sophisticated” party because it was
new to the merchant services industry and was unrepresented when it signed the
ISO Agreement. Even assuming that Process America was unrepresented,
Process America remains a “sophisticated” entity as the term is used in this
context. Business entities negotiating in a commercial setting do not warrant any
special solicitude as “unsophisticated” parties simply because they are new to a
particular industry and choose to forego representation by counsel.
26
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Metro. Life Ins. Co. v. Noble Lowndes Int’l, Inc., 84 N.Y.2d 430, 438 (1994). The Court
of Appeals then observed that where repudiation of a contract was “motivated
exclusively by . . . economic self‐interest,” there was insufficient proof of any
intent to “inflict harm.” Id. at 439. Nonetheless, in interpreting exculpatory
clauses, courts should “endeavor to give the contract construction most equitable
to both parties” as “[l]anguage in contracts placing one party at the mercy of the
other is not favored by the courts.” Id. at 438 (alterations and internal quotation
marks omitted).
At least one appellate court in New York has since clarified that “economic
self‐interest” is not an “excuse [for] all manner of misconduct,” as “[e]conomic
self‐interest is the motivation for fraud, self‐dealing and breach of fiduciary
duty.” Banc of Am. Sec. LLC v. Solow Bldg. Co. II, 847 N.Y.S.2d 49, 55 (App. Div. 1st
Dep’t 2007) (citations omitted). Applying that principle to a case where a
landlord refused to review proposed modifications in order to extort a $6 million
payment from the plaintiff, the court indicated that misconduct that “extends
well beyond a simple breach of” contract may be excluded from an exculpatory
27
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provision. Id. at 56.7
Even applying the more lenient definition of “willful misconduct” from
Solow, the district court did not err in holding that Process America failed to
submit sufficient evidence as to whether Cynergy’s breach was willful. Because
the ISO Agreement permitted Cynergy to terminate the ISO Agreement and
withhold residuals for certain breaches, to show that Cynergy’s conduct was
anything more than a right specifically reserved to it under the contract, Process
America must set forth some evidence that Cynergy did not believe it was
justified in terminating the Agreement, rendering Cynergy’s conduct – even if
falling below the level of “tortious” – wrongful. Before turning to Process
America’s evidence of willfulness, we discuss briefly the evidence relevant to
Cynergy’s assessment of whether Process America had, in fact, breached the
contract by maintaining a merchant reserve in violation of the Rules.
7
The district court, as have other courts in this Circuit, treated Solow as
inconsistent with Noble Lowndes, at least insofar as Solow suggested that an
intentional breach, without more, could result in the non‐enforcement of an
exculpatory clause. S.A. 17; see also Five Star Dev. Resort Cmtys., LLC v. iStar RC
Paradise Valley, LLC, No. 09 Civ. 2085, 2012 WL 4119561, at *5 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 18,
2012). We need not resolve any potential conflict between Solow and Lowndes,
however, because Solow provides little support for Process America’s argument
that Cynergy’s breach was willful.
28
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The district court concluded that CRIP, as a merchant reserve, was a
material breach of contract, but did not justify Cynergy’s termination of the
contract without notice. The court therefore concluded that Cynergy’s breach
resulted solely from its failure to give notice and an opportunity to cure, which
the district court described as “technical” in nature. S.A. 17. We do not reach the
question of whether CRIP was a material breach of contract in this opinion. But,
even assuming that the district court erred in granting summary judgment
because there was a question of fact as to whether CRIP was funded out of
Process America’s own residuals, Cynergy would certainly be entitled to believe
that CRIP involved a merchant reserve. The form Process America used to sign
merchants up for CRIP is entitled “Merchant Reserve Acknowledgment” and
describes the money used to fund CRIP as a “reserve,” J.A. 1743.8 Moreover, it is
clear that Moneris considered CRIP to be a merchant reserve. Therefore, whether
or not there was a material breach, the undisputed facts show that Cynergy
would have been justified in believing one had occurred.
8
We note that while the forms were unambiguous in describing CRIP as a
merchant reserve, the question at issue in determining whether CRIP was a
material breach of contract is not how Process America described the program in
its contracts with merchants, but rather how Process America actually funded it.
The enrollment contracts are not necessarily dispositive in that regard.
29
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Process America identifies the following as the principal evidence of
willfulness: (1) evidence that Old Cynergy was aware of CRIP and Cynergy later
denied knowledge of CRIP in its communications with Moneris; (2) the delay
between Cynergy’s receipt of the letter from Moneris regarding CRIP and when
Cynergy informed Process America that CRIP was a material breach; (3) an email
exchange in which Cynergy executives sought to “intercept” merchants severing
their contracts with Cynergy, J.A. 2635; and (4) a sworn statement from Alyssa B.
Klausner, Process America’s attorney, that Cynergy’s General Counsel stated that
the reason for withholding residuals was to “break” Process America. J.A. 2598‐
99.
None of this evidence is sufficient to raise a triable question of fact as to
whether Cynergy’s conduct “extend[ed] well beyond a simple breach of the
[contract],” Solow, 847 N.Y.S.2d at 56 (emphasis added), let alone evidence that
Cynergy “willfully intend[ed] to inflict harm on [Process America] at least in part
through the means of breaching the contract between the parties.” Noble Lowndes,
84 N.Y. at 438. Evidence that Cynergy knew about CRIP prior to termination, and
later concealed its knowledge from Moneris, does not suggest that Cynergy did
not believe it was justified in terminating the contract because of CRIP,
30
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particularly as the event precipitating the termination was a letter from Moneris
to Cynergy describing CRIP as a merchant reserve and requesting that Cynergy
terminate Process America as an ISO. The fact that Cynergy waited a month after
receiving the letter before informing Process America of the termination is
similarly irrelevant.
The internal email in which Cynergy sought to “intercept” merchants
canceling their contract, sent just weeks after Cynergy terminated the contract,
also fails to support Process America’s position. In that email, Cynergy’s Chief
Operating Officer instructed Cynergy personnel in the retention department:
Take a look at all [Process America] cancels for the last 3
months and see if any good ones got away. We
cancelled [Process America’s] contract and are holding
their residuals so it’s likely they will move a lot of
accounts. Let’s try to intercept them if we can. Once
they cancel . . . it’s open game.
J.A. 2635. But that email was in response to a message from a Cynergy employee
stating that Process America had told a merchant that Cynergy was “bankrupt”
and “stealing money” from the merchant reserves. J.A. 2636. In that context, no
misfeasance can be inferred from the COO’s instruction to Cynergy personnel to
“intercept” merchants canceling accounts with Cynergy who may have been told
false things about Cynergy’s business practices and financial stability.
31
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The only evidence that Process America set forth that would suggest that
Cynergy did not believe it was entitled to cancel the contract is an oral statement,
relayed in a sworn affidavit by Klausner, that Cynergy was withholding reserves
to “break” Process America. With respect to that statement, the affidavit states in
full:
I continued to negotiate with Ms. Corvino [Cynergy’s
General Counsel] in the [months after termination] to
resolve the dispute between Cynergy and Process
America regarding whether CRIP was a breach and
under what circumstances Cynergy would pay the
residuals that it was improperly withholding from
Process America. It became clear that [Cynergy] was
intent on permanently disrupting Process America’s
ability to do business and Ms. Corvino went as far as to
admit to me that she and [Cynergy] were withholding
the residuals from Process America in order to “break”
Process America.
J.A. 2598‐99. The affidavit fails to describe the context in which the statement was
made, and quotes only a single word from the original statement. The only
indication that Cynergy was withholding residuals for any improper reason is
Klausner’s speculation as to Cynergy’s motives, which is insufficient to raise a
triable issue of fact. See, e.g., Res. Developers, Inc. v. Statue of Liberty‐Ellis Island
Found., Inc., 926 F.2d 134, 141 (2d Cir. 1991) (“We have not hesitated to affirm a
32
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summary judgment when the only proof proffered in opposition amounts to
nothing more than speculation and conjecture.”).
Because Process America failed to provide any evidence that would raise a
genuine issue of material fact as to Cynergy’s basis for terminating the contract,
we agree with the district court that the carve‐out in Section 4.6 for willful
misconduct does not apply.
II.
Calculation of Damages
The district court held a bench trial limited solely to the issue of damages.
When reviewing a judgment following a bench trial, we review a district court’s
findings of fact for clear error and its conclusions of law de novo. Merck Eprova
AG v. Gnosis S.p.A., 760 F.3d 247, 255 (2d Cir. 2014). Under the clearly erroneous
standard, “the reviewing court must give due regard to the trial court’s
opportunity to judge the witnesses’ credibility.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a)(6). “We are
not allowed to second‐guess the court’s credibility assessments,” and “[w]here
there are two permissible views of the evidence, the factfinder’s choice between
them cannot be clearly erroneous.” Diesel Props S.r.l. v. Greystone Bus. Credit II
LLC, 631 F.3d 42, 52 (2d Cir. 2011) (internal quotation marks omitted).
33
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Process America challenges the district court’s damages award principally
on two separate grounds. First, it contends that Cynergy failed to meet its burden
at trial to provide a stable foundation for its damages claim. Second, it argues
that the district court failed to reduce the award by the improperly withheld
residuals. We consider each argument in turn.
A.
Proof of Damages
Proof of damages is an essential element of a claim for breach of contract
under New York law. See Harsco Corp. v. Segui, 91 F.3d 337, 348 (2d Cir. 1996). A
non‐breaching party “is entitled, as a matter of law, to recover market value
damages to the extent that they can be proven with reasonable certainty.”
Schonfeld v. Hilliard, 218 F.3d 164, 182 (2d Cir. 2000). Where, however, the non‐
breaching party has proven the fact of damages by a preponderance of the
evidence, “the burden of uncertainty as to the amount of damage is upon the
wrongdoer.” Contemporary Mission, Inc. v. Famous Music Corp., 557 F.2d 918, 926
(2d Cir. 1977); see also Tractebel Energy Mktg., Inc. v. AEP Power Mktg., Inc., 487
F.3d 89, 110 (2d Cir. 2007). Doubts are generally resolved against the party in
breach. Sir Speedy, Inc. v. L & P Graphics, Inc., 957 F.2d 1033, 1038 (2d Cir. 1992).
Therefore, a plaintiff need only show a “stable foundation for a reasonable
34
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estimate” of the damages incurred as a result of the breach. Freund v. Washington
Square Press, Inc., 34 N.Y.2d 379, 383 (1974). At that point, the burden of any
uncertainty as to the amount of damages is on the breaching party. See Boyce v.
Soundview Tech. Grp., Inc., 464 F.3d 376, 392 (2d Cir. 2006).
Process America argues that Cynergy failed to meet this burden at trial
because Cynergy’s expert relied on flawed methodology and Cynergy failed to
prove that Process America’s solicitation caused merchants to terminate their
contracts with Cynergy. Crediting the testimony of Cynergy’s expert, the district
court rejected these arguments. The district court calculated damages by
comparing a normal attrition rate – the rate at which merchants ceased using
Cynergy’s services – to the post‐solicitation attrition rate, and revenue generated
by the Portfolio before and after Process America’s solicitation. The district court
found that Process America solicited at least 214 of the 805 merchants in the
Portfolio; that solicitation was the cause of the increased attrition rate; and that
Cynergy was entitled to damages calculated by comparing the attrition rate pre‐
and post‐solicitation. We can find no clear error in the district court’s factual
findings.
35
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With respect to methodological errors, Process America primarily argues
that the testimony of Cynergy’s expert, Raymond Sobzcyk, was flawed because it
relied on a six‐month period for determining a normal attrition rate for Cynergy
rather than a twelve‐month period. Sobzcyk, however, testified that six months
was the “relevant” period, J.A. 2864, and Process America identifies no evidence,
as distinguished from its own briefing, that would indicate that reliance on a
twelve‐month is required to calculate a normalized attrition rate.9
Process America also contends that Cynergy failed to show by a
preponderance of the evidence that solicitation caused the increased rate of
attrition. At trial, both Sobczyk and Process America’s expert testified regarding
causation. Sobcyzk testified that, although it is “very difficult to isolate
cause of attrition without a first‐level kind of inquiry to the merchant,” J.A.
9
Process America argues that, had a twelve‐month period been used, the
normalized attrition rate would have been 55% (rather than the six‐month rate of
16%), compared to the post‐termination attrition rate of 79%. That twelve‐month
period, however, includes a review of merchant accounts by Cynergy’s new
management following Old Cynergy’s bankruptcy and sale that resulted in the
closure of a number of merchant accounts, and thus may be unreliable. We
further observe that Sobczyk’s expert report appears to have used a nine‐month
period for calculating the attrition rate, and found that the attrition rate was still
16% over that period.
36
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2809,10 he knew “of no other factors that would cause abnormal attrition in the
[P]ortfolio” following termination. J.A. 2814. Cynergy’s COO testified that there
was no increase in customer service calls following termination. The district court
credited that testimony, and found, in light of that testimony and the high
attrition rate, that Cynergy had met its burden in showing the “fact of damages,”
S.A. 5, as a result of Process America’s solicitation. Giving appropriate deference
to the district court’s credibility findings and weighing of the evidence, that
finding was not clearly erroneous.
Having concluded that Cynergy met its burden in showing the fact of
damages, doubts as to the amount of damages are resolved against the breaching
party. Acknowledging that it was unlikely that the entire increase in attrition
was, as a practical matter, due to Process America’s actions, the district court
nonetheless found that Process America had failed to show that any attrition was
caused by some other factor. That finding is also not clearly erroneous.
Process America’s expert, Adam Atlas, identified a number of other factors
that could have resulted in increased attrition. For example, he suggested that if
10
Neither Sobczyk, nor Process America’s expert witness, attempted to survey
the merchants who terminated their contracts with Cynergy to determine the
cause. Sobczyk suggested that such surveys can be unreliable.
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Cynergy had rebranded the statements going out to merchants, merchants could
have chosen to switch processors. Atlas conceded, however, that he did not know
if Cynergy had actually changed its branding and was not aware of any merchant
that canceled its contract with Cynergy for that reason. He also testified that that
attrition may have occurred because “[t]he service to the merchants very likely
declined in quality because Cynergy Data acquired the portfolio for free and
therefore didn’t need to work hard to earn it or keep it.” J.A. 3557. Atlas
conceded again, however, that he had no knowledge of whether Cynergy’s
customer service had, in fact, decreased in quality, and this speculation is
inconsistent with the testimony credited by the district court that customer
service calls did not increase. Furthermore, neither Atlas, nor any other Process
America witness, provided any alternative damages calculation apart from
suggesting that no damages could be attributed to Process America’s solicitation.
In short, none of the evidence proffered by Process America at trial or identified
on appeal casts doubt on the district court’s factual findings.
Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s damages calculation to the
extent that it attributes 100% of the increased attrition to Process America.
38
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B.
Improperly‐Withheld Residuals
Process America also contends that the damages calculation was erroneous
because it improperly included residuals that would have been paid to Process
America. We agree.
“Although the amount of recoverable damages is a question of fact, the
measure of damages upon which the factual computation is based is a question
of law.” Wolff & Munier, Inc. v. Whiting–Turner Contracting Co., 946 F.2d 1003,
1009 (2d Cir. 1991) (internal quotation marks omitted). “[D]amages for breach of
contract should put the plaintiff in the same economic position he would have
occupied had the breaching party performed the contract.” Oscar Gruss & Son,
Inc. v. Hollander, 337 F.3d 186, 196 (2d Cir. 2003). “In implementing this general
rule, we have stated that when computing damages for a defendant’s wrongful
conduct, ‘if any benefit or opportunity for benefit appears to have accrued to the
plaintiff because of the breach, a balance must be struck between benefit and loss,
and the defendant is only chargeable with the net loss.’” Indu Craft, Inc. v. Bank of
Baroda, 47 F.3d 490, 495 (2d Cir. 1995), quoting S & K Sales Co. v. Nike, Inc., 816
F.2d 843, 852 (2d Cir. 1987). Therefore, “revenues due a plaintiff because of a
breached contract must be offset by any amount plaintiff saved as a result of the
39
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breach,” including fixed and variable costs. Id.
The damages calculation set forth by Sobczyk, and adopted by the district
court, assumed that Cynergy was entitled to retain Process America’s residuals.
That assumption contradicts the district court’s unchallenged summary
judgment ruling that Cynergy was not entitled to withhold residuals because of
CRIP, which Cynergy maintains was the basis for the termination of the ISO
Agreement. Cynergy’s damages award must therefore account for the
compensation that should have been, but was not, paid to Process America. To
hold otherwise would put Cynergy in a better position than if the contract was
performed: rather than simply allowing Cynergy to recover its expected profit on
the contract, it would allow Cynergy to recover expected net revenue without
accounting for costs that would have been paid had the contract been fully
performed. The withholding of residuals is thus a “benefit . . . [that has] accrued
to [Cynergy] because of the breach,” and any “revenues due [to Cynergy] . . .
must be offset by any amount [Cynergy] saved as a result of the breach,” id.
Our conclusion here does not contradict Section 4.6’s damages cap. That
cap limits only the amount of money that Cynergy may be required to pay as
damages for its own breach of contract. It does not, however, abrogate the basic
40
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rule of contract law that a party should receive as damages the expected value –
including lost benefits offset by saved costs – of the contract if fully performed.
We acknowledge that our conclusion has an effect similar to that of ignoring the
damages cap; however, that is solely due to the nature of Cynergy’s specific
breach, which essentially consisted of withholding compensation that should
have been paid (and thus saving costs), rather than to an interpretation of the
contract to exclude the damages cap.
In response, Cynergy argues that, even if it was not permitted to withhold
residuals because of CRIP, Process America’s post‐termination solicitation of
merchants constitutes a second material breach that vitiates Process America’s
right to residuals and thus would support the district court’s damages award. We
disagree.
Section 6.4 requires Cynergy to continue paying Process America residuals
“unless the Agreement is terminated by Cynergy Data due to a material breach of
the Agreement by [Process America].” J.A. 210 (emphasis added). The
unambiguous language of the contract thus provides that Cynergy may withhold
residuals only where the material breach itself caused the termination. Cynergy
itself describes Process America’s solicitation as occurring post‐termination, see
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Appellee’s Br. 32, which – by definition – means that Cynergy did not
“terminate” the ISO Agreement because of improper post‐termination
solicitation. Furthermore, as Cynergy repeatedly argued below and on appeal, it
terminated the ISO Agreement because of CRIP – not because of solicitation.
Thus, if Cynergy was not entitled to withhold residuals because of CRIP (as the
district court held), Process America’s solicitation cannot provide a separate basis
for doing so.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s interim decisions
regarding Process America’s liability. With respect to the district court’s
calculation of damages, we VACATE the district court’s judgment and REMAND
for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
42
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