3 P.M., Inc. v. Basic Four Corp.

591 F. Supp. 1350
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedAugust 2, 1984
DocketCiv. A. 79-74416
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 591 F. Supp. 1350 (3 P.M., Inc. v. Basic Four Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
3 P.M., Inc. v. Basic Four Corp., 591 F. Supp. 1350 (E.D. Mich. 1984).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

PHILIP PRATT, District Judge.

Plaintiff 3 P.M., Inc. (“3PM”) brought this action against defendants Basic Four Corporation (“B/4”), Sorbus, Inc. (“Sorbus”), and Management Assistance, Inc. (“MAI”), alleging four violations of the Sherman and Clayton Acts 1 and bringing pendent state claims of fraud and breach of contract. Now before the Court are defendants’ motion for summary judgment as to all counts of plaintiff’s complaint, and plaintiff’s cross-motion for summary judgment as to Counts I and II of its complaint. For the following reasons, the Court hereby grants defendants’ motion in full and denies plaintiff’s cross-motion.

The following facts are undisputed. 3PM sells, installs, and services small business computer systems in the Detroit metropolitan area. MAI is a holding company which owns all of the stock in both B/4 and Sorbus. 2 Sorbus installs and maintains computer systems, including those manufactured by B/4. B/4 designs and manufactures computer systems. Its systems consist of a Central Processing Unit along with one or more “peripheral” items, such as video display terminals and printers, which are sold as a unitary system under the B/4 trademark. Some of the peripherals are not manufactured by B/4, but are rather purchased by B/4 from other manufacturers and then resold as part of the B/4 system. B/4’s practice was to charge a “foreign device fee” for each such peripheral, allegedly for the cost of adapting the peripheral for use in the B/4 system.

B/4 markets its products both through company-owned branch sales offices and through independent dealers. B/4 assigns each independent dealer the exclusive right to sell B/4 systems within a designated territory, subject to provisions included in a dealer agreement.

On March 25, 1977, B/4 and 3PM executed a dealer agreement under which 3PM became the B/4 dealer in the Detroit metropolitan area. The agreement included the following provisions:

2. (C) Whenever the Dealer has a potential order for installation of Products outside the Territory, the Dealer shall register with the Seller in writing the name of the potential customer and shall advise the Seller, to the extent known, of the terms of any such prospective sale
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(D) Whenever the Seller has a potential order for Products from an existing or potential user of Systems involving the installation of Products within and outside the Territory and such sale is consummated between the customer and a party unaffiliated with Dealer, the Seller shall notify the Dealer ...
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6. (A) This agreement may be can-celled:
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(2) By the Seller:
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(d) At its discretion, if the Dealer fails to meet the Purchase Quota established in Schedule D hereto for any of the successive six (6) month periods commencing with the “Purchase Quota Commencement Date” specified in Schedule D hereto, the cancellation to be effective thirty (30) days after delivery of notice to the Dealer as to its failure to meet the Purchase Quota, provided that such notice is *1354 delivered within sixty (60) days after the end of any such six (6) month period ...
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10. (A) The Dealer shall promote the sale and distribution of Products in the Territory and provide adequate support, which efforts shall include the following:
* * * * * *
(2) To provide an adequate size, caliber and trained sales force to promote and maximize the sale of the Products____
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16. ... the Dealer will, and will use its best efforts to require purchasers from it of Products to, make arrangements with Sorbus for the installation and maintenance of Products during at least the two (2) year period commencing with delivery to a user ...
23. The Dealer shall not purchase from any source other than the Seller any item manufactured or sold by the Seller except for the purchase of any Product installed in the Territory.
29. (A) The entire Agreement between the Seller and Dealer covering the Products is set forth herein and any amendment or modification shall be in writing and shall be executed by duly authorized representatives in the same manner as this Agreement.

Schedule D to the agreement included the following quota provisions:

Quota Year First Six Month Purchase Quota Period Second Six Month Purchase Quota Period
Year 1 $210,000 $280,000
Year 2 $437,500 $437,500
Year 3 $647,500 $647,500
3. ... Eligibility of accepted orders for (quota) credit as to products sold by Dealer and installed outside the Territory shall be at Seller’s sole discretion.

The dealer agreement was executed only after rather protracted negotiations. The draft of the agreement initially sent to 3PM contained ¶ 6(A)(2)(d) as set forth above, and quota requirements which were higher than those eventually included in the agreement. After reviewing the proposed draft, Robert Yanover and George Squillace, 3PM’s president and vice-president, met with B/4 officials. Yanover specifically requested that 116(A)(2)(d) be deleted from the agreement, and that the quota requirements be “substantially reduced”. Yanover Deposition at 338-9. B/4 officials agreed to reduce the quota figures to those set forth above. B/4 officials further stated that B/4 planned to have long-term relationships with its dealers, and that the quotas contained in the agreement were attainable.

However, B/4 emphatically refused to delete 116(A)(2)(d) from the agreement. B/4 also refused to include a provision, requested by Yanover, to the effect that 3PM would not be terminated if it was using its best efforts. Yanover Deposition at 339. Despite B/4’s refusal to make these requested changes in the agreement, 3PM executed the dealer agreement and began promoting the sales of B/4 products.

3PM attained its quota for the first six-month period set forth in the agreement, which ended December 31,1977. However, its sales in the second six-month period declined dramatically. Its total sales for this six-month period were only $63,662.00, a figure which was approximately 23% of the quota requirement. During the last three months of this period, moreover, 3PM did not employ a single full-time salesperson.

B/4 was aware of this dramatic decrease in sales, and it warned 3PM that it was required to meet the quota requirements in the agreement. On July 28, 1978, within the 60-day period required by 1( 6(A)(2)(d) of the agreement, B/4 notified 3PM that it was terminating 3PM’s dealership because of 3PM’s failure to achieve the quota requirements.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
591 F. Supp. 1350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/3-pm-inc-v-basic-four-corp-mied-1984.