Fleet National Bank v. Anchor Media

Case Date: 01/26/1995
Court: United States Court of Appeals
Docket No: 94-1490



January 27, 1995 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

__________________

No. 94-1490

FLEET NATIONAL BANK,
Plaintiff,

v.

ANCHOR MEDIA TELEVISION, INC.,
AND KOVR OF DELAWARE, INC.,
Defendants, Appellants.
__________________

NARRAGANSETT CAPITAL, INC.,
AND EDWIN PFEIFFER,
Defendants, Appellees.
__________________
ERRATA SHEET ERRATA SHEET

The opinion of this court issued on January 26, 1995, is
amended as follows:

The second sentence of the first full paragraph on page 25
should be deleted, and the following two sentences should be
inserted in its place:

And the only other evidence of a representation
regarding commercialization levels at KOVR introduced
by Anchor at the second trial was the so-called
July/August 1988 day-part summary, a document that
summarized commercialization levels and commercial-
generated income by day and time (e.g., 7/25, 8:00-9:00
p.m.) for July and August 1988. The July/August 1988
day-part summary allegedly misrepresented that KOVR was
undercommercialized in July and August 1988 and ___________________
understated commercial-generated income during this
same period.


UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
____________________

No. 94-1490

FLEET NATIONAL BANK,

Plaintiff,

v.

ANCHOR MEDIA TELEVISION, INC.,
AND KOVR OF DELAWARE, INC.,

Defendants, Appellants.
___________________

NARRAGANSETT CAPITAL, INC.,
AND EDWIN PFEIFFER,

Defendants, Appellees.
____________________

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

[Hon. Francis J. Boyle, Senior U.S. District Judge] __________________________

____________________

Before
Cyr, Circuit Judge, _____________
Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________
and Stahl, Circuit Judge. _____________

____________________

Stephen M. Sacks, with whom Tim Atkeson, Arnold & Porter, Anthony ________________ ____________ _______________ _______
F. Muri, and Goldenberg & Muri were on brief for appellants. _______ _________________
Charles I. Poret, with whom Richard M. Sharfman, Mark J. Kenney, ________________ ____________________ _______________
A. Lauriston Parks, Sharfman, Shanman, Poret & Siviglia, P.C., ____________________ ______________________________________________
Severson & Werson, and Hanson, Curran, Parks & Whitman, were on brief _________________ _______________________________
for defendants-appellees Narragansett Capital, Inc. and Edwin
Pfeiffer.

____________________
January 26, 1995

____________________







BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge. In this appeal, BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge. _____________________

appellants Anchor Media Television, Inc. ("Anchor"), and

KOVR-TV of Delaware, Inc. ("KOVR"), contend that the district

court committed several legal and discretionary errors in the

course of two trials of their claims of fraud and breach of

contract against appellees Narragansett Capital, Inc.

("Narragansett"), KOVR's former owner, and Edwin Pfeiffer,

KOVR's former general manager. After carefully reviewing the

record and considering appellants' arguments, we affirm.

I. I. __

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND __________

The complicated factual predicate of this

litigation has been meticulously rehearsed in a published

opinion by the district court. See Fleet Nat'l Bank v. ___ _________________

Anchor Media Television, Inc., 831 F. Supp. 16, 21-31 (D.R.I. _____________________________

1993). It will be reiterated here only to the extent

necessary to resolve the issues before us.

The case arises out of Narragansett's sale to

Anchor of KOVR, an ABC-affiliate television station located

in Sacramento, California. Anchor was awarded the station

after submitting the high bid at a closed auction held in

late September 1988. The sale price eventually agreed upon

by the parties was $162 million. The deal was structured as

a merger of an Anchor subsidiary into the corporate owner of

KOVR, and became final on January 25, 1989. The terms of the

-2- 2

merger were memorialized in a merger agreement ("the

Agreement") dated October 12, 1988. The case came before the

district court as an interpleader action filed by plaintiff

Fleet National Bank ("Fleet"). Fleet controlled a $5 million

escrow account established by the Agreement to address claims

that might arise from KOVR's sale. In its complaint, Fleet

asked the district court to determine proper allocation of

the escrow funds. Anchor and Narragansett, among others,

were named as defendants to the action.

Subsequently, Anchor filed cross-claims against

Narragansett and Pfeiffer, alleging breach of the Agreement

and common law fraud.1 Underlying these claims were

allegations that Narragansett had fraudulently increased its

cash flow in the months preceding the auction by: (1)

actually running more commercials than was customary in the

industry while representing that it was running fewer

commercials than was customary ("the overcommercialization

allegation"); (2) running local commercials at a time when it

was contractually obliged to be running an ABC newsbrief

("the ABC newsbrief allegation"); (3) surreptitiously

shifting to subsequent years certain operating expenses

____________________

1. Pfeiffer also brought a cross-claim against Anchor for
breach of his employment contract. The subject matter of
this claim is not before us.

-3- 3

incurred as a result of a contract with Nielson Media

Research2 ("the Nielson allegation"); and (4) charging

political candidates too much money to run political

advertisements ("the political advertising allegation"). We

discuss the particulars of these allegations infra. _____

Anchor claimed that these practices had a damaging

effect upon its bid, which was largely formulated in

accordance with standard industry valuation practices --

i.e., by taking the projected year-of-sale cash flow

(essentially, profit) and multiplying it by a number ("the

multiplier") which appropriately accounted for certain

characteristics inhering in the target market. In projecting

year-of-sale cash flow, Anchor used actual cash flow figures

from January 1, 1988 through August 31, 1988, and financial

information which enabled it to project cash flow from

September 1, 1988 through the end of the year. All of the

information on which Anchor relied in formulating its bid was

generated prior to September 28, 1988, the day on which the

bid was submitted.

Put in concrete terms, Anchor argued that

Narragansett's fraudulent inflation of its 1988 cash flow

(quantified at trial as being at least $1,943,000) caused

Anchor to bid at least $27 million more for the station than

____________________

2. Nielson Media Research is a rating service that monitors
audience viewership of a television station. Fleet Nat'l ___________
Bank, 831 F. Supp. at 28. ____

-4- 4

it would have absent the fraud. Anchor reached this number

by taking the amount of improperly-obtained 1988 cash flow

and multiplying it by 13.6, the multiplier it had used in

valuing the Sacramento market. This "effect on the bid"

constituted Anchor's theory of damages.3

____________________

3. We have some doubts about the viability of Anchor's
"effect on the bid" damages theory in the context of this
case. The parties agree that Rhode Island law, which governs
Anchor's fraud claim, applies the "benefit of the bargain"
rule in assessing damages for fraudulent misrepresentations
inducing a party to contract for the purchase of property.
See Barnes v. Whipple, 68 A. 430 (R.I. 1907). Under this ___ ______ _______
rule, the defrauded purchaser is entitled to recover the
difference between the actual value of the purchased item and
its value had the seller's representations been true. See ___
Learjet Corp. v. Spenlinhauer, 901 F.2d 198, 203 (1st Cir. ______________ ____________
1990) (applying Kansas law); see also J. F. Rydstrom, ___ ____
Annotation, "Out of Pocket" or "Benefit of Bargain" as Proper ________________________________________________
Rule of Damages for Fraudulent Representations Inducing _____________________________________________________________
Contract for the Transfer of Property, 13 A.L.R. 3d 875, 885 ______________________________________
(1967). This value differential is measured at the time of
the sale. Learjet Corp., 901 F.2d at 203. _____________
When (as is usually the case) the negotiation of the sale
price immediately precedes the consummation of the sale, the
effect of the seller's fraud on the purchase price will
almost invariably quantify the difference between the actual
value of the purchased item and its value had the
representations been true. Here, however, the consummation
of the sale (i.e., the merger) took place nearly four months
after the negotiation of the sale price, at a time when fluid _____
market conditions (there was much testimony to this effect)
might have led a buyer to utilize a different multiplier than _________
the one Anchor used in formulating its bid. Moreover, the
merger took place in a calendar year different from the one _________
in which the sale price was negotiated. A buyer applying
Anchor's valuation theory at the time of merger therefore __ ___ ____ __ ______
would presumably have been looking at a different period of
time in projecting cash flow than the one at which Anchor
looked. Thus, it strikes us as somewhat speculative to infer
that the effect Narragansett's fraud had on Anchor's 1988 bid
accurately quantifies the difference between the actual value
of KOVR on January 25, 1989 (the date of the merger) and its
putative value on that date had Narragansett's
representations been true.

-5- 5

A. The First Trial A. The First Trial ___________________

A jury trial commenced on April 2, 1991, and lasted

fourteen trial days. In the course of the trial, the

district court ruled, as a matter of law and for a variety of

reasons, that a reasonable jury could not find a breach of

the Agreement or fraud on the basis of the political

advertising allegation. The court did, however, allow Anchor

to present to the jury, as the predicate for its contract and

fraud claims, the evidence underlying its

overcommercialization, ABC newsbrief, and Nielson

allegations.4 At the trial's conclusion, the jury awarded

Anchor $4.5 million for breach of contract and $13.5 million

for fraud. It also awarded Anchor $1 million in punitive

damages.

Subsequent to this verdict, and in accordance with

then-Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(b), Narragansett and Pfeiffer moved

for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, in the
____________________

In any event, Narragansett has not raised the absence of
proof of damages as an alternative ground for affirmance.
Because this issue is somewhat involved and has not been
argued, and because we believe that affirmance is otherwise
compelled on the record and briefs before us, we do not delve
further into the damages question at this time.

4. In so stating, we reject Anchor's contention on appeal
that the Nielson allegation did not constitute part of its
breach of contract claim. In fact, we find this argument
difficult to fathom. In his closing argument, Anchor's trial
counsel clearly asserted that the alleged subterfuge
involving the Nielson contract constituted a breach of the
Agreement.

-6- 6

alternative, for a new trial. For reasons not disclosed by

the record, the district court kept this motion under

advisement for more than two years, until June 1993, when it

issued Fleet Nat'l Bank. See 831 F. Supp. 16. ________________ ___

In addressing the Rule 50(b) motion, the court

first held that Narragansett and Pfeiffer were entitled to a

new trial on Anchor's breach of contract claim. See id. at ___ ___

34-38. While the court believed that there had been

sufficient evidence to support the jury's contract verdict

based on the ABC newsbrief allegation, id. at 34-36, it ___

determined that the evidence did not permit a reasonable jury

to find breach of contract on the basis of either the

overcommercialization or Nielson allegations, id. at 36-37 ___

and 43 n.6. In making this determination, the court ruled

that Narragansett and Pfeiffer had not made any

representations or warranties in the Agreement regarding the __ ___ _________

number of commercials KOVR had broadcast in 1988, id. at 36- ___

37, and that the Nielson allegation was not viable because

Anchor had failed to prove justifiable reliance on the

alleged misrepresentation, id. at 43 n.6. A new trial was ___

ordered because the general verdict form did not allow the

court to ascertain whether the jury had relied on the legally

defective allegations in reaching its contract verdict. Id. ___

at 37-38 (citing, inter alia, Sunkist Growers, Inc. v. _____ ____ _______________________

Winckler & Smith Citrus Prods. Co., 370 U.S. 19, 29-30 (1962) __________________________________

-7- 7

and Brochu v. Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp., 642 F.2d 652, 662 ______ ___________________________

(1st Cir. 1981)).

The court also held that Narragansett was entitled

to a new trial on Anchor's fraud claim. See id. at 38-44. ___ ___

While the court believed that there had been sufficient

evidence to support the jury's verdict on this claim with

regard to the ABC newsbrief and overcommercialization

allegations, it ruled that the defective Nielson allegation

may have poisoned the general fraud verdict beyond cure. Id. ___

at 42-43.

Finally, the court negated the jury's punitive

damages award as lacking evidentiary support. Id. at 45. ___

Anchor does not challenge this ruling on appeal.

B. The Second Trial B. The Second Trial ____________________

In accordance with the district court's opinion, a

second jury trial commenced on March 21, 1994, and lasted

eleven trial days. Prior to submitting the case to the jury,

the court ruled as a matter of law, see Fed. R. Civ. P. ___

50(a), that Anchor's overcommercialization allegation could

not be presented to the jury in support of its fraud claim,

and that Anchor's ABC newsbrief allegation could not be

presented to the jury in support of its contract claim. The

court based these rulings on determinations that Anchor had

not proven damages in connection with its

overcommercialization allegation, and that Anchor had not

-8- 8

provided Narragansett and Pfeiffer with notice of the ABC

newsbrief allegation within the fifteen-day time period

contemplated by the Agreement.5 The court also rebuffed

Anchor's attempt to revive its political advertising

allegation at this time. Thus, only Anchor's fraud claim,

now based solely on the ABC newsbrief allegation, went to the

jury. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Narragansett

and Pfeiffer on this claim. After the verdict, the court

took the apparently unprecedented step of granting the

verdict's beneficiaries judgment as a matter of law on the

same claim. In so doing, the court stated that it was ruling

on the reserved motion so that any error in the jury

instructions could be ignored in subsequent proceedings.

This appeal followed.

II. II. ___

STANDARD OF REVIEW STANDARD OF REVIEW __________________

We first deal with a technical, nomenclature

matter. Rule 50 was amended during the course of the

proceedings before the district court. The amendments

abandoned the terms "directed verdict" and "judgment n.o.v.,"

which were commonly associated with the former Rule, in favor

of the phrase "judgment as a matter of law." See generally ___ _________

____________________

5. Section 8.5 of the Agreement required any party with a
claim arising out of the Agreement to send a notice of claim
to the breaching party within fifteen business days of coming
to the belief that it had suffered damages in connection with
the claim.

-9- 9

Fed. R. Civ. P. 50 advisory committee's note. The amendments

did not, however, affect either the standard by which

district courts review motions brought under the Rule or the

standard by which we review a district court's rulings. See ___

id. ("If a motion is denominated a motion for directed ___

verdict or for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, the

party's error is merely formal. Such a motion should be

treated as a motion for judgment as a matter of law in

accordance with this rule."). For simplicity's sake, we

therefore refer to Narragansett's and Pfeiffer's various

motions, however denominated at the time of filing, as

motions for judgment as a matter of law.

To the extent that Anchor is challenging the

district court's post-trial rulings that Narragansett and

Pfeiffer were entitled to judgment as a matter of law on

certain issues, our review is de novo. See Lama v. Borras, __ ____ ___ ____ ______

16 F.3d 473, 477 (1st Cir. 1994) (affirming denial of a post-

verdict Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(b) motion for judgment as a matter

of law); Rolon-Alvarado v. Municipality of San Juan, 1 F.3d ______________ ________________________

74, 77 (1st Cir. 1993) (affirming grant of Fed. R. Civ. P.

50(a) motion for judgment as a matter of law at the close of

plaintiff's case). Thus, we will affirm these rulings only

if, after scrutinizing the proof and inferences derivable

therefrom in the light most hospitable to Anchor, we

determine that a reasonable factfinder could have reached but

-10- 10

one conclusion: that Narragansett and Pfeiffer were entitled

to judgment. See Lama, 16 F.3d at 477. Because the court's ___ ____

order granting Narragansett and Pfeiffer a new trial was

based solely upon its legal conclusions that defective claims ______

had been allowed to go to the jury, we first determine the

correctness of the court's rulings in this regard.

If we decide that the court's legal conclusions

were correct, our review becomes significantly more

circumscribed. Where the trial court has correctly

determined that legal error infected a claim presented to the

jury, we will defer to the court's judgment that a new trial

was called for on that claim absent an abuse of discretion.

See Allied Chem. Corp. v. Daiflon, Inc., 449 U.S. 33, 36 ___ ___________________ _____________

(1980) (per curiam); see also Payton v. Abbott Labs. 780 F.2d ___ ______ ___ ____ ______ ____________

147, 152 (1st Cir. 1985); 11 Charles A. Wright & Arthur R.

Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure, 2818, at 119-20 _______________________________

(1973) (deference is appropriate because "[t]he trial judge

was on the spot and is better able than an appellate court to

decide whether the error affected the substantial rights of

the parties").

Deference in this case is particularly appropriate

for two reasons. First, in its published opinion, the

district court explicitly cited as controlling authority two

cases which make clear that courts should set aside jury

verdicts in only the most compelling of circumstances. See ___

-11- 11

Fleet Nat'l Bank, 831 F. Supp. at 32 (citing Coffran v. __________________ _______

Hitchcock Clinic, Inc., 683 F.2d 5, 6 (1st Cir.) (trial judge ______________________

may not set aside jury verdict merely because s/he would have

reached a different conclusion than the jury), cert. denied, _____ ______

459 U.S. 1087 (1982), and Borras v. Sea-Land Serv., Inc., 586 ______ ____________________

F.2d 881, 886 (1st Cir. 1978) (trial court may set aside jury

verdict only where verdict (1) is against clear weight of

evidence; (2) is based upon evidence which is false; or (3)

will result in a miscarriage of justice)). And second, in

that same opinion, the court clearly stated its reasons for

ordering a new trial. See id. at 37-38 and 43 (court could ___ ___

not tell whether jury had awarded Anchor damages on

erroneously submitted evidence or improperly allowed

arguments).

Finally, we review the district court's rulings

excluding evidence offered by Anchor under the abuse of

discretion standard. E.g., Fairfield 274-278 Clarendon Trust ____ _________________________________

v. Dwek, 970 F.2d 990, 995 (1st Cir. 1992). Moreover, we are ____

free to affirm the trial judge's decisions "on any

independently sufficient ground made manifest by the record."

See, e.g., Ticketmaster-New York, Inc. v. Alioto, 26 F.3d ___ ____ ____________________________ ______

201, 204 (1st Cir. 1994).

With these criteria in mind, we review Anchor's

claims.

III. III. ____

-12- 12

DISCUSSION DISCUSSION __________

Anchor makes a number of arguments, the order of

which we rearrange for ease of analysis. As to the first

trial, Anchor contends: (1) the court erred in deciding that

the evidence was insufficient for a reasonable jury to have

found fraud based on the Nielson allegation; (2) the jury

could not, at any rate, have relied upon this allegation in

reaching its contract and fraud verdicts;6 and (3) the court

erred in ruling post-trial that Anchor should not have been

allowed to raise the issue of overcommercialization in

connection with its breach of contract claim.

As to the second trial, Anchor asserts: (1) the

district court improperly prohibited its witnesses from

testifying regarding customary levels of commercialization in

the industry; (2) the court otherwise erred in taking from

the jury the fraud claim based on the overcommercialization

allegation; (3) the court erroneously precluded Anchor from

renewing its claims based on the political advertising

allegation; (4) the court improperly excluded certain "state

of mind" evidence relevant to the question of when Anchor

learned that it had suffered damages as a result of the

improper running of local commercials during the ABC
____________________

6. We have already rejected Anchor's argument that the
district court erred in assuming that the Nielson allegation
partially undergirded the breach of contract claim. See ___
supra note 4. _____

-13- 13

newsbrief time slot; (5) the court otherwise erred in taking

from the jury the breach of contract claim based on the ABC

newsbrief allegation; (6) the court erred in instructing the

jury on the one issue -- fraud based on the ABC newsbrief

allegation -- the jury was permitted to consider; and (7) the

court was without the power to grant judgment as a matter of

law to Narragansett and Pfeiffer after the jury had returned

a verdict in their favor on this issue.

A. Alleged First Trial Errors A. Alleged First Trial Errors ______________________________

1. Legal Viability of the Nielson Allegation _____________________________________________

Anchor first argues that the court erred in

determining that the evidence was insufficient for a

reasonable jury to have found fraud based on the Nielson

allegation. As previously stated, the Nielson allegation

involved the claimed surreptitious shifting to subsequent

years of certain 1988 operating expenses incurred as a result

of a contract between Narragansett and Nielson Media

Research. The specifics of the allegation are as follows.

Sometime after August 3, 1988, at the time Anchor

was preparing to submit its bid, Narragansett supplied Anchor

with a box that contained hundreds of contracts involving

KOVR. One of these was the Nielson contract, which set the

monthly amount that KOVR would pay for Nielson's rating

service. Attached to the contract was a two-page appendix.

On the first page of the appendix, in a section captioned

-14- 14

"Base Rate per Month," the figure "$10,000" was typed in the

space provided for the time period May 1988 through April

1989. An asterisk was next to this figure, and a

corresponding note, typed at the bottom of the same page,

read "see attached letter dated 4/7/88." No letter was

attached to the contract.

The second page of the appendix included a

computation worksheet. The worksheet included a space for

"Base Rate per Month." The figure "$3,000" was typed in this

space. Further down the page was a space captioned "Monthly

Adjustment (estimated) as of May 1988." The figure "$90.00,"

which represented 3% of the base monthly rate, was typed in

this space. Directly beneath this was a space captioned

"Estimated Monthly Net Charge as of May 1988." The figure

"$3,090.00," which represented the Base Rate per Month plus

the Monthly Adjustment, was typed in this space.

The discrepancy between the base monthly rates

provided for on the first and second pages of the appendix

was explained in the 4/7/88 letter, which Anchor discovered

only after taking control of KOVR. This letter memorialized

Nielson's agreement to Narragansett's request to defer until

the following year $7,000 per month in payments owed for the

period May through December 1988. Anchor alleged that

Narragansett's failure to include the 4/7/88 letter in the

box of contracts involving KOVR amounted to a fraudulent

-15- 15

concealment of the deferral of 1988 operating expenses in an

attempt to inflate 1988 cash flow. The alleged

misrepresentations were the "$10,000" base monthly rate

figure typed on the first page of the Nielson contract

appendix, and subsequent representations by Narragansett

officials (including Pfeiffer), both oral and in the

Agreement, that Narragansett had provided Anchor with a true

and complete set of contracts relating to KOVR.

In its order on the motions filed subsequent to the

first trial, the district court stated that, in order to make

out a fraud claim under Rhode Island law (which governs

here), Anchor was required to prove that Narragansett and

Pfeiffer knowingly misrepresented a material fact with intent

to deceive, thereby inducing Anchor to rely justifiably on

the misrepresentation to its detriment. See Fleet Nat'l ___ ____________

Bank, 831 F. Supp. at 38. The court then concluded that, in ____

light of the asterisk referring interested readers to the

4/7/88 letter and the two statements on the second page of

the Nielson contract appendix referencing a $3,000 base

monthly rate for May 1988, no reasonable jury could have

found that Anchor justifiably relied on the $10,000

representation on the first page of the Nielson contract's

appendix. See Fleet Nat'l Bank, 831 F. Supp. at 42-43. ___ ________________

Regardless of whether Anchor's reliance was

justifiable, we regard as independently supported the

-16- 16

district court's conclusion that the fraud claim based on the

Nielson allegation was not legally viable. See Alioto, 26 ___ ______

F.3d at 204. Under Rhode Island law, liability for fraud

cannot attach unless the misrepresentation at issue was

intentionally made with an intent to deceive. See East ___ ____

Providence Loan Co., 236 A.2d at 641; see also Cliftex ____________________ ___ ____ _______

Clothing Co., Inc. v. Di Santo, 148 A.2d 273, 275 (R.I. ____________________ ________

1959); Campanelli v. Vescera, 63 A.2d 722, 723 (R.I. 1949); __________ _______

Cheetham v. Ferreira, 56 A.2d 861, 864 (R.I. 1948). In our ________ ________

view, the same representations and references (i.e., the

asterisk, reference to the 4/7/88 letter, and correct

statements of the base monthly rate) which led the district

court to determine that Anchor's reliance on the $10,000

figure was not justifiable compel the conclusion that the

alleged misrepresentations were not intentionally made with

an intent to deceive. Simply put, we do not think a jury

could reasonably infer such an intent where there is an

explicit reference to the term-altering document -- the

4/7/88 letter -- on the same page as the crucial alleged __ ___ ____ ____

misrepresentation, where the true base monthly rate is twice _____

set forth on the very next page of the addendum, and where ____ ____ ____

there is no evidence that the exclusion of the letter from

the box of documents involving KOVR was intentional.

Accordingly, we affirm the court's grant of judgment as a

-17- 17

matter of law to Narragansett and Pfeiffer on Anchor's fraud

claim based on the Nielson allegation.

2. Effect of the Nielson Allegation on the Verdict ___________________________________________________

Anchor makes an alternative argument that the

Nielson allegation, and its supporting evidence, could not

possibly have influenced the jury's verdict on its breach of

contract and fraud claims. Anchor contends that it

introduced little evidence in support of the Nielson

allegation at trial, and that it did not quantify the damages

arising out of it during its closing. Relying on this

contention, Anchor asserts that the district court, by

jettisoning the contract and fraud verdicts, allowed "the

tail to wag the dog."

Although the Nielson allegation was not the primary

focus of Anchor's case, a review of the first trial record

shows that Anchor specifically mentioned it in both its

opening and closing arguments. Moreover, Anchor supported

the allegation by having Patrick Murphy, its Chief Financial

Officer, testify to the incompleteness of the Nielson

contract and explain to the jury that the omission of the

4/7/88 letter from the box of contracts involving KOVR

fraudulently "presented to us a larger cash flow than what

they should have because of the shifting of expenses." And

while Anchor did not quantify for the jury the damages

arising out of the Nielson allegation, it did provide the

-18- 18

jury with a damages theory (i.e., improperly-obtained 1988

cash flow multiplied by 13.6, the multiplier Anchor used in

arriving at its bid) by which the jury could easily and

rationally have quantified the damages for itself. In light

of all this, and in the absence of any suggestion on appeal

that a remittitur would have been appropriate, we cannot say

that the district court abused its discretion in determining

that the general fraud and contract verdicts returned at the

conclusion of the first trial may have been incurably

infected by the legally deficient Nielson allegation.

Accordingly, we affirm the district court's decision to award

Narragansett and Pfeiffer new trials on Anchor's contract and

fraud claims.

3. The Breach of Contract Claim Based on the ___________________________________________________
Overcommercialization Allegation ________________________________

As we have noted, a second basis for the setting

aside of the contract verdict was the district court's post-

trial determination that there were no representations or

warranties in the Agreement regarding the number of

commercials KOVR had been running prior to Anchor's

submission of its bid. Anchor claims that the court erred in

reaching this conclusion, denoting three contractual

provisions which, in its view, a reasonable juror could have

construed as pertaining to 1988 commercialization levels.

The first of these provisions, which can be found

at paragraph 5.1(a) of the Agreement, and which is captioned
-19- 19

"Conduct of the Business Until Effective Time," states:

"Except as [Anchor] may otherwise consent in writing, until

the Effective Time [Narragansett] will (i) operate its ____

business only in the usual, regular and ordinary manner . . .

." (Emphasis supplied). Plainly, through its use of the

future tense "will," this representation covers only the

period of time between the date of the Agreement, October 12,

1988, and the date the merger became effective, January 25,

1989. Thus, despite Anchor's attempts to convince us

otherwise,7 paragraph 5.1(a) simply cannot be read as

pertaining to the period of time (i.e., that portion of 1988

prior to Anchor's submission of its bid) when the sale and _____ __

running of too many commercials at KOVR might have affected

the amount Anchor bid for the station. And because Anchor's

damages theory involved only the effect of artificially

inflated 1988 cash flow on its bid, conduct which took place __ ___ ___

after the submission of the bid is completely irrelevant to

its claims.

The second provision, found at paragraph 5.1(e) and

captioned "Preservation of Business," does not help Anchor

for the same reason. The provision states: "[Narragansett]

____________________

7. In what appears to be an attempt to avoid paragraph
5.1(a)'s temporal limitations, the citation to paragraph
5.1(a) in Anchor's brief omits paragraph 5.1(a)'s caption
("Conduct of Business Until Effective Time") and alters the
phrase "will (i) operate" to read "operat[ed]." If this was
deliberate, it was deceptive; if a mistake, it was
inexcusable.

-20- 20

shall conduct the business and operations of the Station _____

diligently and in the ordinary course in substantially the

same manner as heretofore conducted." (Emphasis supplied).

Through its use of the future tense "shall," this provision

also only covers a period of time subsequent to October 12,

1988, the date of the Agreement. And as we have explained,

any improper actions taken by Narragansett or Pfeiffer during

this time period are irrelevant under the damages theory

pursued by Anchor.

The final provision relied upon by Anchor,

paragraph 4.1(f), simply cannot be construed as warranting

"customary" commercialization levels at KOVR. Captioned

"Absence of Certain Changes or Events," the provision sets

forth a number of illustrative asset-dissipating and capital

structure-altering events and transactions, warranting an

absence of such events or transactions "since the date of the

Unaudited Financial Statements [August 31, 1988]." The

proviso upon which Anchor seizes states that "the Company has

not . . . (v) entered into . . . any other material

commitment, contractual obligation or transaction other than

in the ordinary course of business . . . ."

Leaving aside the fact that Anchor did not

introduce specific evidence of overcommercialization at KOVR

from August 31, 1988 through September 28, 1988 (the only

period of time prior to Anchor's submission of its bid that

-21- 21

this provision can be read to cover), we are at a loss to see

how it would be reasonable to regard the sales of commercials

challenged here as being transactions outside of KOVR's

"ordinary course of business." As the district court

observed, paragraph 4.1(f)'s "ordinary course of business"

proviso, when read in context, should be construed as simply

warranting that Narragansett had not entered into any

transactions (1) of an unusual type for a television station;

or (2) that would tend to unduly dissipate KOVR's assets or

alter its capital structure. See Fleet Nat'l Bank, 831 F. ___ _________________

Supp. at 37. Certainly, sales of commercial time are not

unusual transactions for a television station; indeed, the

revenues generated by such sales constitute a station's

lifeblood. Moreover, the record is devoid of evidence that

the number of such sales entered into by Narragansett during

the relevant time period -- even if in excess of industry

norms -- threatened to unduly dissipate KOVR's assets or

alter its capital structure.

To be sure, the actual meaning of a contractual

provision which can reasonably accommodate two or more __________

interpretations should be left to the jury. See, e.g., ___ ____

Bushkin Assocs., Inc. v. Raytheon Co., 815 F.2d 142, 148-49 ______________________ ____________

(1st Cir. 1987) (applying Massachusetts law). But the

question whether a provision can reasonably support a

proffered interpretation is a legal one, to be decided by the

-22- 22

court. See Fashion House, Inc. v. K Mart Corp., 892 F.2d ___ ____________________ _____________

1076, 1083 (1st Cir. 1989) (applying Michigan law)

("Determining whether or not a contract is ambiguous is, like

other questions of contract construction, a matter for the

court."). Here, we think that the court correctly determined

that Anchor's proffered interpretation of paragraph 4.1(f)'s

"ordinary course of business" proviso -- which reads the

proviso as warranting customary commercialization levels at

KOVR during 1988 -- was not one that a reasonable juror could

accept. Accordingly, we affirm the court's ruling.

In sum, we agree with the district court that

Anchor should not have been permitted to present the Nielson

allegation to the jury, and that Anchor should not have been

allowed to raise the issue of overcommercialization in

connection with its breach of contract claim. We further

rule that the court did not abuse its discretion in

determining that these improperly asserted allegations may

well have affected the jury's general contract and fraud

verdicts at the first trial. We therefore affirm the court's

post-trial order, see Fleet Nat'l Bank, 831 F. Supp. 16, in ___ _________________

all respects.8

____________________

8. Because of these rulings, we need not discuss whether the
court's new trial order on the fraud claim against
Narragansett can be alternatively upheld on the basis of the
court's post-trial determination that it should not have
submitted to the jury the question of Narragansett's
vicarious liability as Pfeiffer's alter ego or co-
conspirator. See Fleet Nat'l Bank, 831 F. Supp. at 44-45. ___ ________________

-23- 23

B. Alleged Second Trial Errors B. Alleged Second Trial Errors _______________________________

1. Exclusion of Witness Testimony Regarding ___________________________________________________
Customary Levels of Commercialization in the ___________________________________________________
Industry Anchor complains that, at the second trial, ________

the district court improperly excluded, for lack of

foundation, testimony by Anchor's Senior Vice President,

Lawrence Clamage, regarding customary levels of

commercialization in the industry. Anchor underscores this

plaint by pointing out that Clamage was permitted to testify,

over objection, to industry norms in the first trial, and

that the court offered no rationale for its contrary ruling

at the second trial. Anchor further contends that the court

committed legal error in not allowing it to read to the jury

testimony regarding industry norms given at the first trial

by John Sheehan, who was unavailable for the second trial.

In the alternative, Anchor asserts that the court abused its

discretion by denying it a one-day continuance so that

Sheehan could appear. Anchor claims that all three of these

erroneous, discretionary rulings were highly prejudicial

because the court's award of judgment as a matter of law on

Anchor's fraud claim based on overcommercialization was

premised upon an absence of evidence by which Anchor could

"structure the amount of damages for overcommercialization."

While the equities of the situation involving

Sheehan are not nearly as one-sided as Anchor represents them

-24- 24

in its brief,9 we can understand Anchor's frustration with

the court's failure to explain why Clamage's testimony was

admissible in the first trial but not in the second.

Especially in light of the two-year delay in deciding the new

trial motion, we think that Anchor was entitled to an

explanation for the court's change of mind. The fact of the

matter is, however, that evidence regarding commercialization

norms in the industry was completely irrelevant in the second

trial.

As we have explained, the court properly ruled that

the Agreement could not be construed as warranting customary

commercialization levels during the time period Anchor

examined in developing its bid. And the only other evidence

of a representation regarding commercialization levels at

KOVR introduced by Anchor at the second trial was the so-

called July/August 1988 day-part summary, a document that

summarized commercialization levels and commercial-generated

income by day and time (e.g., 7/25, 8:00-9:00 p.m.) for July

and August 1988. The July/August 1988 day-part summary

allegedly misrepresented that KOVR was undercommercialized in ___________________

July and August 1988 and understated commercial-generated

____________________

9. Anchor had more than a month's notice that the second
trial would begin on March 21, 1994. Despite this notice,
Anchor apparently did not ascertain Sheehan's availability as
a witness until it was in the middle of presenting its case.
Indeed, Anchor did not communicate with Sheehan at all
between January 27, 1994 and March 25, 1994, the date on
which it learned of Sheehan's unavailability.

-25- 25

income during this same period. Thus, there was no evidence

in the second trial of a representation to Anchor that KOVR

was commercialized in accordance with industry norms in 1988,

and Anchor had no basis for arguing that it was damaged

because it bid too much in reliance on such a representation.

Accordingly, we affirm the court's exclusion of the testimony

regarding industry standards on the independent ground that

it was irrelevant. See Alioto, 26 F.3d at 204; see also Fed. ___ ______ ___ ____

R.Evid.402("Evidence whichisnotrelevantis notadmissible.").10

____________________

10. After the district court excluded evidence regarding
industry norms at the second trial, Anchor argued an
alternative "expectancy" damages theory. Under this late-
arising theory, Anchor sought to recover the revenue it
expected to generate by running more commercials on KOVR,
which it had been fraudulently induced to believe was
substantially undercommercialized at the time of the sale.
In a throw-away line in its reply brief, Anchor contends that
evidence of industry norms was relevant to proof of damages
under its expectancy damages theory.
An expectancy damages theory which would look to the
difference between the revenue Narragansett falsely claimed
to have been generating in July/August 1988, and the revenue
that a station commercialized in accordance with industry
norms would have been generating at that time, is not
implausible. Indeed, it strikes us as being much more in
line with the fraud damages to which Anchor actually was
entitled under Rhode Island law than the "effect on the bid"
theory pursued throu