Court Opinion

ID: 4508463
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-02-19 16:04:18.348635+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:37:42.696558
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                  No. 18-1932
                            Filed February 19, 2020

GREATAMERICA FINANCIAL SERVICES CORPORATION,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

PERSONAL TOUCH MEDICAL MANAGEMENT, INC. and MARISOL APONTE,
     Defendants-Appellants.
________________________________________________________________

      Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Linn County, Ian K. Thornhill, Judge.

      The defendants appeal an adverse summary judgment ruling in this breach-

of-contract action. REVERSED AND REMANDED.

      Peter C. Riley of Tom Riley Law Firm, P.L.C., Cedar Rapids, for appellants.

      Randall D. Armentrout and Leslie C. Behaunek of Nyemaster Goode, P.C.,

Des Moines, for appellee.

      Heard by Bower, C.J., and May and Greer, JJ.
                                         2

BOWER, Chief Judge.

       The defendants, Personal Touch Medical Management (PTMM) and

Marisol Aponte (Aponte), appeal from an adverse summary judgment ruling in this

breach-of-contract action brought by GreatAmerica Financial Services Corporation

(GreatAmerica).    The defendants assert the district court erred in granting

summary judgment as there remain genuine issues of material fact as to whether

there is a valid contract between the parties. They also challenge the court’s award

of attorney fees. Because GreatAmerica has not proved a breach of contract as a

matter of law, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

       PTMM is a New York management services organization that offers a

number of administrative services to medical professionals, including the medical

practice of Mujibur R. Majumder, MD, P.C. of Bronx, New York.

       On May 21, 2015, Aponte, the chief executive officer of PTMM, signed a

software and services term sheet for PTMM offered by a vendor, InSync

Healthcare Solutions, LLC (InSync). The software was to be used to assist with

practice management (“PM”) and electronic medical records (“EMR”) for PTMM’s

clients, including Mujibur R. Majumder, MD, P.C. The term sheet signed by Aponte

provided:
                                         3

                                                     InSync PM+EMR
                                                     License Purchase
 License term                                        License purchase

 Total Upfront Costs                                         $0

 Monthly Payment/Provider                                   $130

 Monthly Payment                                            $650
 (for All Licensed Providers)
 Number of Monthly Payments                                  60

 3rd Party Fees                                              $75

       Roland Therriault, the vice president of sales, signed the term sheet on

behalf of InSync on May 27, 2015.

       GreatAmerica is an Iowa corporation that provides financing to companies

that desire to acquire business equipment or software for commercial use. Two

GreatAmerica documents dated June 6, 2015—a “Software Finance Agreement”

and a “Prefund Request and Authorization”—for customer “Mujibur R Majumder,

MD, P.C.” and vendor “InSync Healthcare Solutions” show a signature in the area

entitled “customer’s authorized signature” next to the printed customer “name &

title” of “Mujibur Majumder.”

       The GreatAmerica software finance agreement provides for sixty months of

monthly payments of $649.97.        It states in bold and capital letters, “THIS

AGREEMENT IS NON-CANCELABLE AND IRREVOCABLE. IT CANNOT BE

TERMINATED.”

       The prefund request contains the following language:

              By your execution of this Prefund Request and Authorization
       (the “Prefund Request”), you hereby request that GreatAmerica . . .
       pay to your Vendor all, or a substantial portion (as indicated by your
       Vendor), of the amount your Vendor has invoiced us (or you) for the
                                        4

      items being leased and/or financed under the Agreement (the
      “Financed Items”), notwithstanding that you have not received some
      or all of the Financed Items. . . . To induce us to pay the Advance
      Funding Amount to your Vendor immediately, YOU AGREE THAT
      YOUR OBLIGATION TO MAKE THE PAYMENTS CALLED FOR
      UNDER         THE    AGREEMENT           HEREBY       COMMENCES
      IMMEDIATELY.          YOU FURTHER AGREE THAT YOUR
      OBLIGATION TO MAKE THE PAYMENTS CALLED FOR UNDER
      THE AGREEMENT IS UNCONDITIONAL AND THAT YOU WILL
      TIMELY PERFORM ALL SUCH OBLIGATIONS WITHOUT ANY
      CLAIM OF SETOFF, EVEN IF: (A) YOU DO NOT RECEIVE SOME
      OR ALL OF THE FINANCED ITEMS; (B) THE FINANCED ITEMS
      ARE RECEIVED BY YOU, BUT NOT ON A TIMELY BASIS;
      AND/OR (C) THE FINANCED ITEMS DO NOT, AT THE TIME OF
      YOUR RECEIPT OR THEREAFTER, OPERATE PROPERLY, ARE
      INEFFECTIVE, OR THERE IS ANY OTHER NONCONFORMANCE
      IN ANY SUCH FINANCED ITEM. . . .

      On November 23, 2016, GreatAmerica filed suit against Mujibur R.

Majumder, MD, P.C. and Mujibur R. Majumder (hereinafter collectively MRM),

alleging breach of the software finance agreement, breach of guaranty, and unjust

enrichment. MRM answered, denying the allegations.

      In April 2017, GreatAmerica moved to amend the petition to add a

fraudulent-misrepresentation claim against PTMM and Aponte based upon an

affidavit provided by Aponte and produced by MRM. In the affidavit Aponte states:

             (4) I am the Chief Executive Officer of Personal Touch Medical
      Management, Inc.
             (5) I have been so engaged for [seven] years.
             (6) In the course of my duties as CEO of Personal Touch
      Medical Management, Inc. I have come to know Mujibur R.
      Majumder, M.D.
             (7) Mujibur R. M[a]jumder, M.D. is not, either personally or in
      conjunction with Mujibur R. Majumder, M.D. P.C. an owner,
      stockholder, employee, subject to or affiliated with the management
      of Personal Touch Medical Management Inc. in any way.
             (8) Dr. Majumder is a contracted service provider of Personal
      Touch Medical Management, which does not have any authority over
      him personally or his professional corporation in any way.
             (9) I had no authority with nor was I granted any authority or
      permission from Dr. Majumder or anyone affiliated with him
                                                 5

          personally or through his Professional Corporation to act on his
          behalf, sign his name, contract, commit or bind him in any way, either
          personally or corporately.
                  (10) Dr. Majumder did not participate in any way in the
          creation or course of any business relationship between Personal
          Touch Medical Management, Inc. and InSync Healthcare Solutions,
          LLC.
                  (11) Dr. Majumder did not participate in any way in the
          creation or course of any business relationship between Personal
          Touch Medical Management, Inc. and GreatAmerica Financial
          Services Corporation.
                  (12) To the best of my knowledge, Dr. Majumder did not
          participate in any way in the creation or course of any business
          relationship between GreatAmerica Financial Services Corporation
          and InSync Healthcare Solutions, LLC.
                  (13) Dr. Majumder did not direct, solicit or otherwise
          participate in the preparation of the documents referred to in the
          Plaintiff's lawsuit.
                  (14) The signatures that the Plaintiff purports to be Dr.
          Majumder’s are not his. I signed them as I described in detail in my
          letter dated October 28, 2016,[1] a copy of which is attached and

1
    The October 28, 2016 letter provides:
         Dear Ms. Zirtzman,
                 First and foremost, thank you for the extension granted to us late
         last week. This has afforded us the ability to further research the
         relationship between InSync[ ], GreatAmerica, Dr. Majumder and Personal
         Touch Medical Management.
                 We’re an organization that takes our debts, and our monthly
         obligations seriously.
                 In reviewing the situation with InSync[ ]/GreatAmerica, many
         questions and concerns have arisen.
                 First and foremost, at no time did Dr. Majumder authorize the
         purchase or lease of any software from lnSync[ ]. Further, at no time did
         Dr. Majumder sign or otherwise authorize any agreement with
         GreatAmerica to finance such a purchase.
                 Let me give you the background to this situation.
                 [PTMM] is a management services organization that offers a
         number of administrative services to medical professionals. Dr. Majumder
         is a client of ours. We decided to contract with lnSync for Practice
         Management software and an Electronic Health Record System, for the
         benefit of a number of our clients. The plan we wished to obtain was a
         monthly subscription plan, not a lease or purchase.
                 I have contracts in front of me as I write this letter. It appears that I
         signed the original InSync[ ] PRACTICE MANAGEMENT contract on
         05/27/2015. Roland Therriault, VP Sales signed on InSync[ ]’s behalf. I
         then signed another, similar PM contract with modifications on 11/13/2015.
         It looks like there were dollar adjustments when compared to the original
         PM contract.
                                        6

incorporated by reference herein. I did not have his permission to do
so.
        (15) Despite repeatedly advising GreatAmerica of the above
facts, they have continued to pursue and harass Dr. Majumder in this
matter.

         I am astounded and quite concerned that the contract documents
that I have in my possession contain only a brief description of the software
modules desired, with costs. There are NO general terms and conditions,
so that these documents standing alone, do not represent legally
enforceable contracts. Looking into this further, it seems the “general terms
and conditions” or the primary contract is contained in an End User License
Agreement that is required at every login.
         I hardly need to say it, but this is highly unusual, and in fact quite
irregular, in business software contracts. I have never before encountered
this situation in over three decades of business experience. There are so
many problems with this approach, I hardly know where to begin. Let me
confine myself to some of the more obvious and troubling aspects.
         First, I have no copy of the agreement with my signature on it.
Second, this approach allows the software company to change the terms
and conditions of the contract at any time, without notice or adequate
opportunity for the user to review. A busy practitioner is not going to review
a contract every time he/she logs in. And finally, the practitioner agreeing
to the contract may have no authority to do so, as in this case.
         If, in fact, InSync has a valid hard copy contract with my signature
on it, please have them send a copy to me for my review.
         It is at this point that GreatAmerica becomes involved, much to my
surprise. In the beginning of June 2015 InSync[ ] sent a trainer to the
PTMM location to do on-site training for the new InSync[ ] EMR
activation/install. At the completion of the training, the trainer (I think it was
a Ms. Laura Jurgens) passed a new, never previously discussed form to
me, saying that InSync[ ] needed to know the physician who would be using
the EMR. At no time was I informed that this was a contract for financing
a purchase of the software, a purchase that I never desired or requested;
at no time was GreatAmerica mentioned; at no time did I agree to such a
transaction. I did write in the name of Dr. Majumder on the form, thinking
it was informational only.
         The form has tiny print and confusing language. My impression is,
this was a “sign here” tactic in a fast paced medical environment with ample
distraction to ensure lack of proper review. That the contract hand-off was
done at the completion of training as opposed to at the beginning further
illustrates the “bait and switch” aspects of the situation.
         It appears to me that InSync[ ] and GreatAmerica are
co-conspirators in a highly suspect and predatory scheme to take
advantage of medical professionals who are not well versed in business
practices and the law. Medical professionals, in fact, like my clients, who
depend on me to protect them from abusive practices such as these.
                                         7

The court allowed the amendment. Aponte and PTMM filed their answer generally

denying the allegations and including a number of affirmative defenses, including

that the alleged contract is void for lack of acceptance or meeting of the minds and

that GreatAmerica engaged in unfair and deceptive trade practices.

       On August 21, 2017, the MRM defendants filed a motion for summary

judgment.

       On August 28, GreatAmerica dismissed its claims against the MRM

defendants without prejudice.

       Aponte and PTMM filed an amended answer to a paragraph of the amended

petition (“After [contract] default, Aponte alleged that she signed Majumder’s name

on the Agreement without his permission.”), which includes the following

statement:

              Denied as phrased. As should be clear from the April 3, 2017
       Affidavit of Marisol Aponte, which incorporates her October 28, 2016
       letter to Rita Zirtsman of GreatAmerica Financial Services
       Corporation, Aponte did not have any authority to bind Dr.
       M[a]jumder or his professional corporation to any contract and
       Aponte did not understand she was signing a contract or agreement,
       but that the person she believed at the time to be a trainer for the
       InSync Trainer asked her to write in the name of the doctor who
       would be using the software and Aponte did not understand she was
       signing any contract agreement on behalf of Dr. M[a]jumder, herself,
       the corporation she represents, or anyone else.

The amended answer also added an affirmative defense that Aponte “was induced

by fraudulent misrepresentations of [GreatAmerica’s] representative when she

wrote ‘Dr. M[a]jumder’ on certain documents at the request of [GreatAmerica’s]

representative or agent.” A counterclaim was also included. Further amendments

to the pleadings were offered and allowed.
                                             8

         On June 25, 2018, GreatAmerica filed a motion for summary judgment on

its amended claims of breach of contract by PTMM, breach of guaranty by Aponte,

and fraudulent misrepresentation concerning both PTMM and Aponte.                    The

defendants resisted. In reply to the resistance, GreatAmerica asserted, “The court

should reform the [software financing] agreement to be in the names of PTMM and

Aponte to accurately reflect the true intent of the parties.”

         The district court proceeded to enter its ruling without hearing. With respect

to the fraud claim, the court found factual questions remained including Aponte’s

intent at the time of forming the contract and whether GreatAmerica justifiably

relied on the signature of MRM. With respect to Aponte’s intent, the district court

wrote:

         It is not for the court to assess at this juncture what facts appear more
         plausible, or what Ms. Aponte knew or intended. The court believes
         that there are two possible inferences to be drawn from the facts on
         this issue and the Court is obligated to deny summary judgment to
         the Plaintiff on that basis.

         As for the issue of justifiable reliance, the court wrote,

         It is not clear to the court what exactly Dr. Majumder was told, or
         what he verified if they did in fact talk to him on the phone. There
         was an inconsistency in the address for the doctor and that fact was
         sufficiently obvious that GreatAmerica should have fully verified that
         they had approval of the contract. There remains a fact question as
         to whether they did so.

         The court then considered the breach-of-contract claim noting, “[T]he

question before the court is whether the defendants can be held liable for a

breached contract and guaranty that were signed by them but not in their name

and on what conditions.” The court answered that question in the affirmative,

finding there was a contract, a breach of contract, and a breach of guaranty.
                                          9

       Thereafter, GreatAmerica dismissed its fraud claim without prejudice. The

court awarded damages to GreatAmerica in the amount of $32,314.22, and—over

defendants’ objection—awarded attorney fees in the amount of $62,543.00.

       Defendants appeal.

II. Scope and Standard of Review.

       We review the grant of summary judgment in favor of GreatAmerica for

correction of errors at law. See C & J Vantage Leasing Co. v. Wolfe, 795 N.W.2d

65, 73 (Iowa 2011). Summary judgment is proper when the record reveals no

genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a

matter of law. Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.981(3). The nonmoving party—the defendants—

are entitled to have the evidence viewed in the light most favorable to its position.

See Luana Sav. Bank v. Pro-Build Holdings, Inc., 856 N.W.2d 892, 895 (Iowa

2014). “Where reasonable minds can differ on how an issue should be resolved,

a fact question has been generated, and summary judgment should not be

granted.” Wolfe, 795 N.W.2d at 73. “[O]ur review is limited to whether a genuine

issue of material fact exists and whether the district court applied the correct law.”

Id.

III. Discussion.

       On appeal, the defendants assert the court erred in finding no genuine issue

of material fact existed with respect to the breach-of-contract and breach-of-

guaranty claims. We agree.

       GreatAmerica hangs its hat on this exchange in Aponte’s deposition when

asked what her intent was by ordering the software on May 21, 2015:
                                         10

             Q. [W]as it your intent at that time to enter into some sort of a
       new contract to get electronic medical records? A: Yes.
             Q: Was the intent to do it in the name of Personal Touch
       Medical Management? A. Yes.

       We note, however, that Aponte was ordering software from InSync—not

GreatAmerica. GreatAmerica is not identified by name anywhere on the term

sheet between PTMM and InSync. Moreover, the contracts the court found to be

binding are the June 6, 2015, GreatAmerica finance agreement and prefund

request. Despite its express ruling that a factual issue remained as “what Ms.

Aponte knew or intended,” the court proceeded to conclude Aponte intended to

enter a contract:

               Factually, even Ms. Aponte’s version of the facts seems to be
       that she entered into a contract for software that PTMM wanted to
       use and that she merely noted Dr. Majumder as the provider who
       would be served with the software. In that case, it was always her
       intent that PTMM be bound. The document was labeled “Agreement”
       and the guaranty instructs the signer to only sign if it was a personal
       guarantee of the obligations under the prefund authorization.
       Defendant argues that Ms. Aponte did not understand the nature of
       the contract and had no intention to bind anyone to it.
               ....
               . . . Ms. Aponte had every opportunity to know what she was
       signing. Regardless of whose name she signed, she admits that she
       signed a contract, she did so with the opportunity to read it before
       she signed it, and doing so, she agreed to all the terms and
       conditions contained in that contract.
               Further Ms. Aponte accepted the software, used it for at least
       nine months and made payments on it. It was Ms. Aponte and
       PTMM who used the software and not Dr. Majumder’s practice or
       anyone else. Where an individual accepts the benefits of a contract
       she cannot avoid the obligations. Further, the payments that were
       made on the contract were signed by Ms. Aponte and written as
       checks from both her and from PTMM, indicating participation in the
       contract. Based upon the representations of Ms. Aponte in the
       contract and the payments that GreatAmerica received for
       approximately nine months, the court finds that a contract does exist
       between GreatAmerica and Ms. Aponte.

(Emphasis added) (citation omitted).
                                          11

       The summary judgment record is not undisputed on the issue of Aponte’s

intent. In her deposition, Aponte testified she often wrote Dr. Majumder’s name

for purposes of billing, credentialing, and scheduling patients. With respect to June

6, 2015, she “wasn’t aware [she] was signing any documents. [She] was just

writing his name as the medical provider that was going to be using the software.”

       With respect to paying for the software, Aponte testified:

               A. At this time [June 22, 2015] I was still looking at the invoice
       as InSync EMR system, and I did not—at this time did not know what
       GreatAmerica had to do with Insync, but I just—(Interruption by court
       reporter.)
               A. —I just viewed it as an invoice from InSync.
               Q. Even though it says at the top GreatAmerica Financial
       Services? A. Yes, because the description is InSync EMR, and
       again, I was not aware that I was in a lease contract with
       GreatAmerica.
               Q. And again, the June 6 agreements do state GreatAmerica
       at the top of those, Exhibits 2 and 3? A. Yes, I see it.
               Q. So were you concerned at all that you received an invoice
       from GreatAmerica in June of 2015 if you didn’t think you were
       dealing with a company from Iowa? A. No. I didn’t think I was dealing
       with anyone from GreatAmerica.
               Q. In fact, you paid the invoices? A. Yes. I paid it because
       we were using InSync and InSync was what I was given as a
       description in the invoice, and that’s what I was aware I was paying.

       Because GreatAmerica has not proved a breach of contract as a matter of

law, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.             In addition, because

summary judgment was improperly granted, we vacate the award of attorney fees.

       REVERSED AND REMANDED.

       May, J., concurs specially; Greer, J., concurs in part and dissents in part.
                                        12

MAY, Judge (concurring specially).

      I believe we should reverse for three reasons. First, we generally enforce

written contracts as they are written. Iowa R. App. P. 6.904(3)(n); see Smith v.

Stowell, 125 N.W.2d 795, 799 (Iowa 1964) (noting our reluctance to “remake”

contracts). The contract at issue is GreatAmerica’s “Software Finance Agreement”

(Agreement). As Aponte and PTMM correctly argue, “The plain language of the

[Agreement] did not” mention Aponte or PTMM. Its words placed no obligation on

Aponte or PTMM. So, as it is written, the Agreement cannot support the judgment

against Aponte and PTMM.

      Second, at this summary-judgment stage, I do not think we should reform

the Agreement to place obligations on Aponte and PTMM. See Iowa R. App.

P. 6.904(4)(k) (defining the limited circumstances under which reformation can be

granted); see also Kansas v. Nebraska, 135 S. Ct. 1042, 1061 (2015) (noting

“courts should hesitate, and then hesitate some more, before modifying a contract,

even to remove an inadvertent flaw”). Reformation could be available if (1) the

written contract—the Agreement—failed to reflect the parties’ real agreement

because of (2) “mistake by one party and fraud or inequitable conduct by the other.”

Gouge v. McNamara, 586 N.W.2d 710, 713 (Iowa Ct. App. 1998). As the majority

correctly observes, however, there is record evidence Aponte only intended to

enter a contract with InSync—not with GreatAmerica. Moreover, the record is

mixed as to whether Aponte tried to deceive GreatAmerica—and, therefore,

engaged in “fraud or inequitable conduct”—when she wrote Dr. Majumder’s name

on the Agreement. There is record evidence Aponte believed she was merely

identifying Dr. Majumder as a provider for whom the software would be used.
                                          13

While her story may seem thin, its truth or falsity cannot be determined from this

paper record.

       Finally, at least under these facts, I am not convinced ratification can

substitute for reformation. I found no reported decision in which ratification has

been used to add new obligors—like PTMM and Aponte—whom the original

written contract did not identify as obligors. Cf. Life Inv’rs Ins. Co. of Am. v. Estate

of Corrado, 838 N.W.2d 640, 642 (Iowa 2013) (addressing the question of whether

a party ratifies a contract containing the party’s signature that was executed by an

unknown person when the party does not object to the contract or challenge the

signature and accepts benefits and obligations under the contract). As far as I can

tell, that is not what happened in the cases cited by GreatAmerica.                See

GreatAmerica Leasing Corp. v. Wahoo Prods. of Florida, Inc., No. 09-CV-137-

LRR, 2011 WL 1559935, at *9 (N.D. Iowa Apr. 21, 2011) (granting judgment

against defendant Wahoo on lease agreement and addendum to which Wahoo

was a party); GreatAmerica Leasing Corp. v. Davis-Lynch, Inc., No. 10-CV-13-

LRR, 2011 WL 167248, at *1, *9 (N.D. Iowa Jan. 19, 2011) (granting judgment

against defendant Davis-Lyncy on “C/CAMP Agreements” to which Davis-Lynch

was a party); Wells Fargo Fin. Leasing, Inc. v. Piggie Park Enters., Inc., No. 3:09-

1752-JFA, 2010 WL 500454, at *3 (D.S.C. Feb. 5, 2010) (granting judgment

against defendant Piggie Park on “Order Agreement and Lease Agreement” to

which Piggie Park was a party); Affiliated Corp. Servs. v. Englewood Cmty. Health

Org., Inc., No. 98 C 7420, 1999 WL 652027, at *1, *4 (N.D. Ill. Aug. 20, 1999)

(granting judgment against defendant ECHO on lease agreement to which ECHO

was a party).
                                        14

      To recap: the words of the Agreement did not obligate Aponte or PTMM;

the current record does not allow us to reform the Agreement; and I do not think

ratification can substitute for reformation.   So I believe the judgment against

Aponte and PTMM should be reversed.
                                        15

GREER, Judge (concurring in part and dissenting in part).

      I respectfully dissent in part; I would affirm the district court and grant

GreatAmerica summary judgment against PTMM but not Aponte.               Under the

record provided to us, even though Aponte only signed the name of the customer

who ultimately would benefit from the software services on the GreatAmerica

agreement, by its actions, PTMM ratified and agreed to be bound to the agreement

for such software. Ratification of that contract occurred when PTMM accepted the

software and paid GreatAmerica for the software over many months. We have no

similar record as to Aponte or that she agreed to be personally liable as well.

      While the majority opines that the trial court ruling provided a hurdle to

summary judgment, I disagree. The majority highlights the contradiction that the

district court denied summary judgment on the fraud claim because “a factual issue

remained as [to] ‘what Ms Aponte knew or intended,’” yet granted summary

judgment on the contract claim. A factual dispute as to an element of one claim

does not always preclude summary judgment on another claim.                   Here

GreatAmerica raised a breach-of-contract claim and a fraud claim. The district

court rejected summary judgment on the fraud claim citing a factual issue related

to Aponte’s fraudulent intent. The district court explained that there were “two

possible inferences to be drawn from the facts on this issue.” (Emphasis added.)

“This issue” in the fraud claim is Aponte’s intent to deceive. Spreitzer v. Hawkeye

State Bank, 779 N.W.2d 726, 735 (Iowa 2009) (noting one element of fraud

requires proof that “the defendant intended to deceive the plaintiff”). As to that

legal issue—fraud—the court believed that although Aponte asserted she did not

intend the writing to be a signature, the court believed the two inferences were
                                           16

“either it was merely the name of the physician associated with the practice or it

was intended to be her signature.” Aponte and PTMM contended this factual

conflict in the fraud claim prohibited summary judgment in the contract claim. I

disagree because Aponte’s intent to deceive is not determinative of the contract

claim under these facts.

         Turning to the contract claim with PTMM, GreatAmerica was required to

prove:

         (1) the existence of a contract; (2) the terms and conditions of the
         contract; (3) that it has performed all the terms and conditions
         required under the contract; (4) the defendant’s breach of the
         contract in some particular way; and (5) that plaintiff has suffered
         damages as a result of the breach.

Molo Oil Co. v. River City Ford Truck Sales, Inc., 578 N.W.2d 222, 224 (Iowa

1998). The majority concedes that, on behalf of PTMM, Aponte said,

               Q. [W]as it your intent at that time to enter into some sort of a
         new contract to get electronic medical records? A. Yes.
               Q. Was the intent to do it in the name of Personal Touch
         Medical Management? A. Yes.

         But the issue preventing summary judgment for the majority is that Aponte

maintains she was unaware she was signing the contracts with GreatAmerica for

software. Even so, we agree (1) PTMM/Aponte wanted software for her doctor

clientele, (2) that clientele included Dr. Majumder, (3) Aponte agreed she placed

Majumder’s name on the document to identify him as a service provider of PTMM,

(4) Aponte confirmed she had no authority to bind Majumder on the document,

(5) PTMM wanted to purchase InSync software, (6) PTMM received and utilized

InSync software, (7) PTMM made monthly payments to GreatAmerica for InSync
                                         17

software, and (8) PTMM utilized InSync software until it stopped paying the

GreatAmerica invoices for the software.

       Simply put, the question is: Can Aponte bind her company to a contract she

has not signed while reaping the benefit of the deal? While Aponte did not sign

her name on the GreatAmerica Software Finance Agreement, she did place a

signature on that agreement. The argument she did not read the agreement

cannot win the day.

       [A] party is charged with notice of the terms and conditions of a
       contract if the party is able or has had the opportunity to read the
       agreement. A party is also bound by a document the party signs
       even though the party has not expressly accepted all of the contract
       provisions and is not aware of them.

Advance Elevator Co. v. Four State Supply Co., 572 N.W.2d 186, 188 (Iowa Ct.

App. 1997).

       Even if we agree Aponte did not sign the agreement on behalf of PTMM,

ratification may still occur. “Signature is not always essential to the binding force

of an agreement.      If accepted and acted upon by the parties as a binding

engagement, mutuality appears without formal signature. This is elementary.”

Henderson v. Henderson, 114 N.W. 178, 179 (Iowa 1907). PTMM made nine and

one-half total payments to GreatAmerica for the software product. Then PTMM

breached the agreement by failing to make all payments. And because of that,

GreatAmerica proved it was damaged. The district court found Aponte had ratified

the contract by “accept[ing] the software, us[ing] it for at least nine months[,] and

ma[king] payments on it.”

       Our supreme court has said, “Ratification is the affirmance by a person of a

prior act which did not bind him but which was done or professedly done on his
                                           18

account, whereby the act, as to some or all persons, is given effect as if originally

authorized by him.”     Abodeely v. Cavras, 221 N.W.2d 494, 502 (Iowa 1974)

(quoting Restatement (Second) of Agency § 82, at 210 (1958)). “There are two

types of ratification: (1) ratification by the principal of the signature of an agent, and

(2) ratification by an individual who had the power to avoid the contract but affirmed

the contract.” Life Inv’rs Ins. Co. of Am. v. Estate of Corrado, 838 N.W.2d 640,

645 (Iowa 2013). Whether the party “expressly or implicitly authorized a person to

sign on his behalf is not a necessary fact to determine” ratification of a contract

since a principal may ratify the act of an agent. Id. at 644. “In other words, if

ratification exists a contract exists and the action is on the contract.” Id.

       As the special concurrence points out, our case law on ratification offers no

case directly on point. While I agree that the typical ratification case addresses

whether a signing party is bound under a contract, I disagree that the same

premise cannot apply under these unusual facts.             The core of a ratification

argument is that someone denies they signed or denies knowledge of the contract

itself yet accepted the benefits of the contract. In my analysis of these undisputed

facts, ratification occurred in this case. Many of our cases involve the first type of

ratification—ratification by the principal of the signature of an agent. See, e.g.,

Mayrath Co. v. Helgeson, 139 N.W.2d 303, 306–09 (Iowa 1966) (holding

ratification occurred where corporation knew employee accepted settlement

agreement and corporation accepted benefit of contract); In re Johnson’s Estate,

232 N.W. 282, 286–88 (Iowa 1930) (holding ratification occurred where cashier of

bank acted as agent for the bank).
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       But the cases addressing the second type of ratification—ratification by an

individual who had the power to avoid the contract but affirmed the contract—

suggest failure to act is fatal.2 Aponte had the power to avoid the contract with

GreatAmerica yet affirmed the terms by purchasing software, accepting software,

and paying for software until the breach. The subsequent conduct is the ratification

of the contract. Ratification of the contract under this record occurred and allows

summary judgment as to the contract between GreatAmerica and PTMM.

       Aponte, on behalf of PTMM, cannot save the day here. I would affirm the

summary judgment ruling on the contract claim only as to PTMM and enter

judgment accordingly.

2 In French v. Northwestern Laundry, 107 N.W. 430, 431 (Iowa 1906), the court
found: “If the effect of this was to perpetrate a fraud on him, he should have at
once announced his purpose to rescind, he should have refused to turn over his
property and take the stock in payment. Not having done so then he cannot be
heard to do so now.” See also Grymes v. Sanders, 93 U.S. 55, 62 (1876) (stating
a party benefitting from a contract “is not permitted to play fast and loose. Delay
and vacillation are fatal to the right which had before subsisted”). Likewise in
Windahl v. Vanderwilt, 203 N.W. 252, 255 (Iowa 1925), the court confirmed, “It is
elementary that a ratification of such an act must include the intention to give
sanction and validity to the act, which would not be binding upon him except for
his subsequent conduct in giving assent or confirmation thereto.”