Advanced Recovery Systems v. American Agencies

CourtDistrict Court, D. Utah
DecidedNovember 30, 2020
Docket2:13-cv-00283
StatusUnknown

This text of Advanced Recovery Systems v. American Agencies (Advanced Recovery Systems v. American Agencies) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Advanced Recovery Systems v. American Agencies, (D. Utah 2020).

Opinion

U . S . D IC SL TE RR ICK T COURT

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF UTAH

AMERICAN AGENCIES, LLC, MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER Third-Party Plaintiff, GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART MOTION FOR SUMMARY v. JUDGMENT

BRENT SLOAN, Case No. 2:13-cv-00283-JNP-CMR

Third-Party Defendant. District Judge Jill N. Parrish

Before the court is Brent Sloan’s motion for summary judgment on American Agencies’ (AA’s) claim against him for tortious interference with contract. ECF No. 619. Sloan also argues that, as a matter of law, consequential damages for this cause of action may not include AA’s attorney fees. The court GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART the motion for summary judgment. BACKGROUND AA is a debt-collection agency. It used software owned by Advanced Recovery Systems (ARS) to issue a series of automated collection letters for past-due accounts owed to small businesses. AA entered into a license agreement with ARS that gave AA the exclusive right to use the software. The agreement also gave AA the right of first refusal to purchase ARS if the owners offered the company for sale. The license agreement permitted ARS to recruit independent sales agents to sell AA’s debt collection services for a commission. The sales agents were required to pay $25,000 to AA for the right to sell the services. The license agreement required AA to then pay the $25,000 fee to ARS as consideration for recruiting the sales agent. In 2012, Sloan was looking to get into the debt collection industry. He began negotiating with the owners of ARS, Scott Mitchell and Blake Reynolds, to form a collection services

company. AA was unaware of these negotiations. In early 2013, the owner of AA, Steve Kusic, proposed selling the company to ARS. Mitchell and Reynolds informed Sloan of the offer. Sloan saw the proposed sale as an opportunity to partner with ARS. During the negotiations for the sale, AA discovered that it had not received a $25,000 payment from some of the sales agents that ARS had recruited. In a March 6, 2013 email with the subject line “Embezzlement,” Kusic asked Mitchell and Reynolds to send a check to him for the missing payments. Kusic stated: “Why would you embezzle money, that I would turn around and give you 100% license fee back to you [sic] under the terms of the contract?” A few hours later, Reynolds responded that the six sales agents had insisted on paying the fee directly to it and that ARS had promised them that it would reimburse the fee if “the company is not as we have

represented.” He stated that ARS would be responsible for reimbursing the money if any refund requests were made. Reynolds also represented in his email that ARS had just wired $75,000 to AA. Kusic sent a reply email in which he stated: “Sorry, this is embezzlement, clear and simple. So my question is why were not forwarded [sic] to AA, the day you received them?” ARS later sent a second $75,000 payment, for a total of $150,000 for the six sales agents recruited by ARS. Sloan provided a large portion of the $150,000 that was sent to AA for the sales agent fees. He loaned the money to ARS believing that it would be refunded pursuant to the terms of the license agreement between AA and ARS. But AA refused to return the $150,000. On March 20, 2013, Reynolds sent an email to Kusic stating that he still wanted to pursue negotiations for ARS 2 to purchase AA. In the email, Reynolds also gave formal notice of ARS’s accusation that AA had breached the license agreement by (1) failing to reimburse travel expenses, (2) failing to make contractual payments on time, (3) failing to pay commissions, and (4) failing to pay back the $150,000 in sales agent fees. Reynolds stated that under the license agreement, AA had 30 days to

remedy the deficiencies. On March 26, 2013, corporate counsel for AA responded to Reynold’s email. She stated that AA had rejected ARS’s purchase offer. Counsel for AA further asserted that “with what has transpired with the alleged embezzlement issues and unknown changes to our documents, AA cannot in good faith, continue to negotiate under the same terms.” She made a counteroffer for a substantially higher price. AA’s counsel also denied that AA had breached the license agreement. As to the $150,000 payment, she accused ARS of making unauthorized changes to the contracts signed by the sales agents. She stated that AA had deposited the $150,000 in a separate bank account and that the contract modifications had to be clarified “before discussion about releasing the funds [could] be undertaken.”

On April 2, 2013, AA’s corporate counsel sent a follow-up letter. She asked Reynolds to state what changes had been made to the contracts signed by the sales agents. She also added a new complaint: “To date Mr. Kusic has not received an acceptable reason for checks being made out to ARS and then ARS depositing those checks. Assuming there is no illegal or malicious intent behind those deposits a reasonable explanation for this activity has yet to be provided.” AA’s corporate counsel issued an ultimatum: “If we do not receive any acceptable response from you for these issues within seven (7) days, American Agencies will be keeping the funds and forfeiting your commission.”

3 The parties abandoned negotiations for the purchase of AA. ARS, after consulting with lawyers, decided to sue AA. Sloan participated in the decision to sue AA and primarily funded the lawsuit. ARS filed its complaint against AA on April 22, 2013. In the suit, ARS asserted that AA breached the license agreement by: (1) refusing to pay ARS the $150,000 in license fees collected

from the sales agents, (2) failing to pay $19,000 for travel expenses, and (3) failing to pay an unknown amount of commissions due under the agreement. ARS sought damages and a declaration that it was no longer bound by the license agreement due to these alleged breaches. ARS also alleged that the parties had formed an enforceable agreement for ARS to purchase AA and that AA breached that agreement by refusing to honor the deal. In mid-April 2013, Mitchell and Reynolds introduced Sloan to Bruce Klinger and Rick Rainho. Klinger and Rainho owned Fidelis, a debt collection company that competed with AA. In May 2013, Klinger and Rainho traveled to Utah to meet with Mitchell, Reynolds, and Sloan to discuss Fidelis purchasing the assets of ARS. Klinger and Rainho were interested in the deal because they wanted to gain access to the software owned by ARS. The meetings were held in

Sloan’s offices. Klinger and Rainho were notified of the existence of the licensing agreement between ARS and AA. But they believed that the agreement was no longer binding because AA had breached the agreement. Klinger and Rainho did not know that the license agreement contained a right of first refusal for AA to purchase ARS. The negotiations were successful and Fidelis acquired the assets of ARS, including the software and its legal claims against AA. Mitchell and Reynolds received shares of Fidelis in exchange. On June 10, 2013, Sloan purchased shares of Fidelis and became its CEO. Fidelis changed its name to Kinum.

4 Meanwhile, AA countersued ARS and asserted third-party claims against Sloan. AA alleged, among other things, that Sloan was liable for tortious interference with the contract between AA and ARS. After about three and a half years of litigation, the court granted summary judgment in favor of AA on all of ARS’s claims against it and set a trial date for AA’s claims.

Before trial, AA asserted that Sloan was liable for its attorney fees as consequential damages for its claim for tortious interference with contract. The jury found that Sloan was liable for tortious interference with contract and determined that attorney fees should be awarded as damages for the claim.

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Advanced Recovery Systems v. American Agencies, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/advanced-recovery-systems-v-american-agencies-utd-2020.