All Line, Inc., Cross-Appellant v. Rabar Corp., D/B/A Hooven Allison, Cross-Appellee

919 F.2d 475, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 20912
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 4, 1990
Docket89-2419, 89-2541
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 919 F.2d 475 (All Line, Inc., Cross-Appellant v. Rabar Corp., D/B/A Hooven Allison, Cross-Appellee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
All Line, Inc., Cross-Appellant v. Rabar Corp., D/B/A Hooven Allison, Cross-Appellee, 919 F.2d 475, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 20912 (7th Cir. 1990).

Opinion

COFFEY, Circuit Judge.

Rabar Corporation appeals an order of the district court awarding All Line, Inc. damages for future profits lost as a result of Rabar’s breach of a non-competition agreement, and it also appeals the profit margin used by the district judge to determine the profits. On cross-appeal, All Line challenges the district court’s limitation of damages to twenty months after termination of the non-competition agreement as well as the imposition of interest on All Line’s past-due invoices. We affirm the district judge’s decision dealing with the assessment of interest against All Line on its account with Rabar and the profit margin used to compute All Line’s damages from Rabar’s breach of contract; we reverse the award of lost future profits.

I. BACKGROUND

All.Line, Inc., a manufacturer and distributor of rope and rope products, is based in Naperville, Illinois. Rabar, also a manufacturer of rope who sometimes supplies rope to All Line, is based in Xenia, Ohio. Little Tikes, a manufacturer of children’s toys, at one time was All Line’s largest customer but now buys rope directly from Rabar — thus the controversy.

All Line began supplying a variety of rope products to Little Tikes in 1983. In the summer of 1986, All Line began supplying 23-foot-long pieces of %ths-inch poly *477 propylene rope to Little Tikes for children’s swings. Initially, All Line purchased bulk rope from a foreign manufacturer, cut it, sealed the ends, and delivered it to Little Tikes. In the fall of 1986, All Line sought to replace that foreign manufacturer with a more reliable, domestic manufacturer because the foreign manufacturer was supplying an insufficient quantity of rope. James Doherty, All Line’s purchasing manager and salesman for the Little Tikes account, contacted Gary Connor, Rabar’s vice president of sales and marketing, to inquire whether Rabar could manufacture and supply the rope that All Line needed for Little Tikes (All Line did not provide the identity of their customer during negotiations). On November 26, 1986, Gary Connor met with James Doherty and Rick Moore, All Line's president, in Naperville, Illinois. They agreed that Rabar would manufacture and supply All Line with the rope.

In order to facilitate the manufacture of rope to Little Tikes’ satisfaction, All Line believed it would be helpful to introduce Little Tikes to Rabar so the ultimate customer and the manufacturer might work out any technical details. Prior to making the introduction, and as a precondition to purchasing rope from Rabar, All Line required Rabar to agree not to compete for Little Tikes’ business. Rabar agreed not to compete with All Line, and on November 28, 1986, Gary Connor sent a letter to All Line embodying the non-competition agreement. The relevant part of the letter reads as follows:

“This letter is a confirmation of my statements during our meeting of November 26, 1986, relevant [sic] to ‘non-compete’ areas that we will adhere to. Any prospective account that you are working with and one that we are not selling at that time, will not be solicited by any Principal or Agent of Hooven Allison, as long as Hooven Allison is being considered as a possible or existing sub-contractor in conjunction with All-Line, Inc. In addition, if any existing or potential account approaches Hooven Allison on a direct basis, in an attempt to by-pass All-Line, Inc. we will make it clear that we sell through a ‘two-step’ structure and that we cannot jeopartize [sic] that structure by selling direct to the end user.
I further agree to furnish you will [sic] copies of any/all ■ correspondence between Hooven Allison and any account that would fall into the above classification.”

The parties agree that this non-competition letter was a binding contract between them. (Indeed, at trial the parties agreed the letter was unambiguous.) In essence, the letter stated that as long as All Line purchased rope from Rabar, Rabar would not sell directly to All Line’s customer; if All Line’s customer approached Rabar to buy directly, Rabar would notify All Line of the contact and tell the customer that Rabar’s contractual relationship with All Line prohibited direct sales from Rabar to All Line customers. It is clear from the language of the letter, however, that it fails to articulate any obligation on the part of All Line or the duration of the agreement.

Shortly after All Line introduced Rabar to Little Tikes, Rabar literally breached the terms of the agreement. In January 1987, Rabar sold a shipment of rope directly to Little Tikes, but when All Line discovered the sale and protested, Rabar invoiced the sale through All Line. In March 1987, Little Tikes contacted Rabar about direct sales. Rabar refused to sell directly at that time. Instead, Gary Connor advised Little Tikes of the two-step procedure set forth in the non-competition letter and that Rabar was obligated to sell to Little Tikes through All Line. Some eight months later, Little Tikes again approached Rabar about direct sales indicating that it was seeking a different source of rope, and it intended to terminate All Line whether Little Tikes found that other source in Rabar or in another manufacturer. Rabar failed to inform All Line of these contacts, and in late 1987 Rabar opened negotiations with Little Tikes about direct sales. As a result of these negotiations, in February of 1988 Rabar began making direct sales to Little Tikes. In this new mode of direct dealing, Little Tikes issued purchase orders to Ra- *478 bar for bulk rope, and Rabar shipped the rope to a company called Lesko; Lesko cut the rope, shipped it to Little Tikes, and billed Little Tikes directly for the cutting. Little Tikes purchased rope directly from Rabar as well as from All Line until April 13, 1988.

On April 13, 1988, Little Tikes informed All Line that Little Tikes had been buying rope from Rabar directly as well as from All Line and that they now intended to buy through Rabar alone. Because of Rabar’s decision to sell directly to Little Tikes in violation of the non-competition agreement, All Line suspended payment to Rabar on invoices amounting to $81,971.

Rabar sent a Mailgram to All Line on April 28, 1988, stating that the letter agreement would be terminated effective May 4, 1988, unless the account was paid or arrangement for payment had been made by that time. All Line responded with a Mail-gram on May 4 refusing to pay the debt or to recognize the termination of the non-competition agreement. It professed to view the unpaid debt as partial payment of damages from Rabar’s breach of the contract and now asserts that damages continue to accrue. In contrast, Rabar considers the agreement terminated and damages concluded as of May 4, 1988.

All Line sought damages for lost profits from Rabar in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, and Rabar counterclaimed for the balance due from unpaid invoices. After a five-day bench trial, the trial court found that Rabar had breached the letter agreement by making direct sales to Little Tikes before the May 4,1988 termination. The trial judge awarded lost profits of 20% on these pre-termi-nation sales, stipulated to be $75,639, for a total of $15,128.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
919 F.2d 475, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 20912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/all-line-inc-cross-appellant-v-rabar-corp-dba-hooven-allison-ca7-1990.