Hill v. Gateway 2000, Inc.
105 F.3d 1147 (7th Cir. 1997), cert den. 118 S.Ct. 47 (1997)
Easterbrook, Circuit Judge.
A customer picks up the phone, orders a computer, and gives a credit
card number. Presently a box arrives, containing the computer and a list of terms, said to
govern unless the customer returns the computer within 30 days. Are these terms effective
as the parties' contract, or is the contract term-free because the order-taker did not
read any terms over the phone and elicit the customer's assent?
One of the terms in the box containing a Gateway 2000 system was an
arbitration clause. Rich and Enza Hill, the customers, kept the computer more than 30 days
before complaining about its components and performance. They
filed suit in federal court arguing, among other things, that the product's shortcomings
make Gateway a racketeer (mail and wire fraud are said to be the predicate offenses),
leading to treble damages under RICO for the Hills and a class of all other purchasers.
Gateway asked the district court to enforce the arbitration clause; the judge refused,
writing that "the present record is insufficient to support a finding of a valid
arbitration agreement between the parties or that the plaintiffs were given adequate
notice of the arbitration clause." Gateway took an immediate appeal, as is its right.
9 U.S.C. § 16(a)(1)(A).
The Hills say that the arbitration
clause did not stand out: they concede noticing the statement of terms but deny reading it
closely enough to discover the agreement to arbitrate, and they ask us to conclude
that they therefore may go to court. Yet an agreement to arbitrate must be enforced
"save upon such grounds as exist at law or in equity for the revocation of any
contract." 9 U.S.C. § 2. Doctor's Associates, Inc. v. Casarotto, 134 L. Ed. 2d 902,
116 S. Ct. 1652 (1996), holds that this provision of the Federal Arbitration Act is
inconsistent with any requirement that an arbitration clause be prominent. A contract need
not be read to be effective; people who accept take the risk that the unread terms may in
retrospect prove unwelcome. Terms inside Gateway's box stand or fall together. If
they constitute the parties' contract because the Hills had an opportunity to return the
computer after reading them, then all must be enforced.
ProCD, Inc. v. Zeidenberg, 86 F.3d 1447 (7th
Cir. 1996), holds that terms inside a box of software bind consumers who use the software
after an opportunity to read the terms and to reject them by returning the product.
Likewise, Carnival Cruise Lines, Inc. v. Shute, 499 U.S. 585, 113 L. Ed. 2d 622, 111 S.
Ct. 1522 (1991), enforces a forum-selection clause that was included among three pages of
terms attached to a cruise ship ticket. ProCD and Carnival Cruise Lines exemplify the many
commercial transactions in which people pay for products with terms to follow; ProCD
discusses others. 86 F.3d at 1451-52. The district court concluded in ProCD that the
contract is formed when the consumer pays for the software; as a result, the court held,
only terms known to the consumer at that moment are part of the contract, and provisos
inside the box do not count. Although this is one way a contract could be formed, it is
not the only way: "A vendor, as master of the offer, may invite acceptance by
conduct, and may propose limitations on the kind of conduct that constitutes acceptance. A
buyer may accept by performing the acts the vendor proposes to treat as acceptance."
Id. at 1452. Gateway shipped computers with the same
sort of accept-or-return offer ProCD made to users of its software. ProCD relied on
the Uniform Commercial Code rather than any peculiarities of Wisconsin law; both Illinois
and South Dakota, the two states whose law might govern relations between Gateway and the
Hills, have adopted the UCC; neither side has pointed us to any atypical doctrines in
those states that might be pertinent; ProCD therefore applies to this dispute.
Plaintiffs ask us to limit ProCD to software, but where's the sense in
that? ProCD is about the law of contract, not the law of software. Payment preceding the
revelation of full terms is common for air transportation, insurance, and many other
endeavors. Practical considerations support allowing vendors to enclose the full legal
terms with their products. Cashiers cannot be expected to read legal documents to
customers before ringing up sales. If the staff at the other end of the phone for
direct-sales operations such as Gateway's had to read the four-page statement of terms
before taking the buyer's credit card number, the droning voice would anesthetize rather
than enlighten many potential buyers. Others would hang up in a rage over the waste of
their time. And oral recitation would not avoid customers' assertions (whether true or
feigned) that the clerk did not read term X to them, or that they did not remember or
understand it. Writing provides benefits for both sides of commercial transactions.
Customers as a group are better off when vendors skip costly and ineffectual steps such as
telephonic recitation, and use instead a simple approve-or-return device. Competent adults
are bound by such documents, read or unread. For what little it is worth, we add that the
box from Gateway was crammed with software. The computer came with an operating system,
without which it was useful only as a boat anchor. See Digital Equipment Corp. v. Uniq
Digital Technologies, Inc., 73 F.3d 756, 761 (7th Cir. 1996). Gateway also included many
application programs. So the Hills' effort to limit ProCD to software would not avail them
factually, even if it were sound legally--which it is not.
For their second sally, the Hills contend that ProCD should be limited
to executory contracts (to licenses in particular), and therefore does not apply because
both parties' performance of this contract was complete when the box arrived at their
home. This is legally and factually wrong: legally because the question at hand concerns
the formation of the contract rather than its performance, and factually because both
contracts were incompletely performed. ProCD did not depend on the fact that the seller
characterized the transaction as a license rather than as a contract; we treated it as a
contract for the sale of goods and reserved the question whether for other purposes a
"license" characterization might be preferable. 86 F.3d at 1450. All debates
about characterization to one side, the transaction in ProCD was no more executory than
the one here: Zeidenberg paid for the software and walked out of the store with a box
under his arm, so if arrival of the box with the product ends the time for revelation of
contractual terms, then the time ended in ProCD before Zeidenberg opened the box. But of
course ProCD had not completed performance with delivery of the box, and neither had
Gateway. One element of the transaction was the warranty, which obliges sellers to fix
defects in their products. The Hills have invoked Gateway's warranty and are not satisfied
with its response, so they are not well positioned to say that Gateway's obligations were
fulfilled when the motor carrier unloaded the box. What is more, both ProCD and Gateway
promised to help customers to use their products. Long-term service and information
obligations are common in the computer business, on both hardware and software sides.
Gateway offers "lifetime service" and has a round-the-clock telephone hotline to
fulfil this promise. Some vendors spend more money helping customers use their products
than on developing and manufacturing them. The document in Gateway's box includes promises
of future performance that some consumers value highly; these promises bind Gateway just
as the arbitration clause binds the Hills.
Next the Hills insist that ProCD is irrelevant because Zeidenberg was a
"merchant" and they are not. Section 2-207(2) of the UCC, the infamous
battle-of-the-forms section, states that "additional terms [following acceptance of
an offer] are to be construed as proposals for addition to a contract. Between merchants
such terms become part of the contract unless. . .". Plaintiffs tell us that ProCD
came out as it did only because Zeidenberg was a "merchant" and the terms inside
ProCD's box were not excluded by the "unless" clause. This argument pays scant
attention to the opinion in ProCD, which concluded that, when there is only one form,
" §2-207 is irrelevant." 86 F.3d at 1452. The question in ProCD was not whether
terms were added to a contract after its formation, but how and when the contract was
formed--in particular, whether a vendor may propose that a contract of sale be formed, not
in the store (or over the phone) with the payment of money or a general "send me the
product," but after the customer has had a chance to inspect both the item and the
terms. ProCD answers "yes," for merchants and consumers alike. Yet again, for
what little it is worth we observe that the Hills misunderstand the setting of ProCD. A
"merchant" under the UCC "means a person who deals in goods of the kind or
otherwise by his occupation holds himself out as having knowledge or skill peculiar to the
practices or goods involved in the transaction", § 2-104(1). Zeidenberg bought the
product at a retail store, an uncommon place for merchants to acquire inventory. His
corporation put ProCD's database on the Internet for anyone to browse, which led to the
litigation but did not make Zeidenberg a software merchant.
At oral argument the Hills propounded still another distinction: the
box containing ProCD's software displayed a notice that additional terms were within,
while the box containing Gateway's computer did not. The difference is functional, not
legal. Consumers browsing the aisles of a store can look at the box, and if they are
unwilling to deal with the prospect of additional terms can leave the box alone, avoiding
the transactions costs of returning the package after reviewing its contents. Gateway's
box, by contrast, is just a shipping carton; it is not on display anywhere. Its function
is to protect the product during transit, and the information on its sides is for the use
of handlers ("Fragile!" "This Side Up!" ) rather than would-be
purchasers.
Perhaps the Hills would have had a better argument if they were first
alerted to the bundling of hardware and legal-ware after opening the box and wanted to
return the computer in order to avoid disagreeable terms, but were dissuaded by the expense of shipping. What the remedy would be in
such a case--could it exceed the shipping charges?--is an interesting question, but one
that need not detain us because the Hills knew before they ordered the computer that the
carton would include some important terms, and they did not seek to discover these in
advance. Gateway's ads state that their products come with limited warranties and lifetime
support. How limited was the warranty--30 days, with service contingent on shipping the
computer back, or five years, with free onsite service? What sort of support was offered?
Shoppers have three principal ways to discover these things. First, they can ask the
vendor to send a copy before deciding whether to buy. The Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act
requires firms to distribute their warranty terms on request, 15 U.S.C. § 2302(b)(1)(A);
the Hills do not contend that Gateway would have refused to enclose the remaining terms
too. Concealment would be bad for business, scaring some customers away and leading to
excess returns from others. Second, shoppers can consult public sources (computer
magazines, the Web sites of vendors) that may contain this information. Third, they may
inspect the documents after the product's delivery. Like Zeidenberg, the Hills took the
third option. By keeping the computer beyond 30 days, the Hills accepted Gateway's offer,
including the arbitration clause.
The Hills' remaining arguments, including a contention that the
arbitration clause is unenforceable as part of a scheme to defraud, do not require more
than a citation to Prima Paint Corp. v. Flood & Conklin Mfg. Co., 388 U.S. 395, 18 L.
Ed. 2d 1270, 87 S. Ct. 1801 (1967). Whatever may be said pro and con about the cost and
efficacy of arbitration (which the Hills disparage) is for Congress and the contracting
parties to consider. Claims based on RICO are no less arbitrable than those founded on the
contract or the law of torts. Shearson/ American Express, Inc. v. McMahon, 482 U.S. 220,
238-42, 96 L. Ed. 2d 185, 107 S. Ct. 2332 (1987). The decision of the district court is
vacated, and this case is remanded with instructions to compel the Hills to submit their
dispute to arbitration.