Allstate Financial Corp. v. Professional Housewares Distributors, Inc.

999 F. Supp. 1049, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4817, 1998 WL 166613
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedApril 6, 1998
DocketNo. 1:95-CV-2570
StatusPublished

This text of 999 F. Supp. 1049 (Allstate Financial Corp. v. Professional Housewares Distributors, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allstate Financial Corp. v. Professional Housewares Distributors, Inc., 999 F. Supp. 1049, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4817, 1998 WL 166613 (N.D. Ohio 1998).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

GWIN, District Judge.

On November 21, 1997, Plaintiff Allstate Financial Corporation filed a motion for partial summary judgment in this commercial litigation [Doc. 53]. Plaintiffs motion, if granted, would strike the defendant’s twelfth defense. Defendant Professional Housewares Distributors, Inc. says a “price protection clause” in its written purchase orders bar most of the plaintiffs claims. For the reasons outlined below, the Court denies the motion.

I

Plaintiff Allstate Financial purchased accounts receivable from Third-Party Defendant Allied Voice Tech., Inc. Plaintiff is Allied’s factor and assignee. The accounts receivable arose from Allied’s sale of electronic voice recording products to the defendant. Professional Housewares Distributors, Inc., defaulted on its obligations to pay Allstate Financial for the products Professional Housewares purchased from Allied.

In a four-count complaint in this diversity action,1 the plaintiff seeks more than $ 1 million as recovery of the contract prices for fraud, breach of contract, action on account, and negligent misrepresentation. Defendant answered, joined the Allied defendants, then cross-claimed against the three new defendants.2 The Court granted a default judgment against the three third-party defendants pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 55(b) and in favor of the defendant’s cross-claims for breach of contract and fraud.

In defense to plaintiff’s claim against the defendant for recovery of the contract prices for these items, Professional Housewares relies on a term in its purchase orders, which it drafted and tendered to Allied. The defendant contends that it was entitled under the contracts to reduce the price of the goods it purchased.

Beginning in approximately June 1995, the defendant placed written purchase orders with Allied for the sales. The reverse side of the purchase orders contained the defendant’s offer terms.3 The third clause appearing in the defendant’s printed purchase orders presented to Allied provided as follows:

As a supplier to Professional Houseware Distributors, Inc. .and by accepting this order you confirm that all prices offered to us are the lowest prices at which you sell to any warehousing jobber and or anyone buying from you in similar quantities and that all special offers, allowances, and discounts available are being offered to Professional Houseware Distributors, Inc. Prices are guaranteed against manufacturer’s or seller’s own decline and legitimate competition. Seller will meet prices of legitimate competition or accept cancellation and return.

Relying on the foregoing clause, Professional Housewares has failed to satisfy certain of the accounts. Specifically, the defendant gives itself credits as follows:

[1051]*1051Netdowns to Meet Competition-Merchandise Sold $421,735.20
Netdowns to Meet Competition — Quantity on Hand $375,384.50
TOTAL: $797,119.70

Professional Housewares asserts that it is entitled to write off $797,119.70 of its debt to Allstate Financial due to the price protection provision of its purchase orders. The substantial discount represents about 80 percent of the unpaid invoices under contest, according to the plaintiff.

As the Court must view the facts in a pending summary judgment motion in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, the Court will rely largely on the version of events submitted by Professional Housewares.

In the spring of 1995, Allied marketed a line of three voice recording products to Professional Housewares, a national distributor of small appliances and consumer goods. These products were known as the “Designer Series” and featured the Voice Pro 4000, a pocket-sized, state-of-the-art, voice-activated, one-button recorder which provided up to one minute of recording time for each message. According to Lawrence Gaus, the independent sales agent representing Allied, the Voice Pro 4000 “was going to be the ... the most sophisticated, and that was the most elite product of the group that we had, the most advanced product.” Allied promoted the Voice Pro 4000 as a sophisticated message recorder which could compete with the high-end message recorder marketed by Voice-it, a competing manufacturer. The suggested retail price for the Voice Pro 4000 was $69.95, the same as the suggested retail price for the Voice-it.

To complement the Voice Pro 4000, Allied included the Mobile Office Minder (“MOM”) in the Designer Series. The MOM was a low-end, hand-held, battery-operated message recorder, marketed as a substitute for an ordinary paper message pad. The MOM was physically larger than the Voice Pro 4000, had fewer features, and had a substantially lower recording time (20 seconds) than the Voice Pro 4000. The MOM initially retailed for $29.95. The Designer Series also included the Time Minder, an alarm clock which replayed user recorded messages.

To solicit the sale of the Designer Series, Allied gave a sales presentation focusing on the Voice Pro 4000 to the defendant’s purchasing and sales personnel at the defendant’s offices in Wickliffe, Ohio. Professional Housewares was so impressed with the Designer Series, and the Voice Pro 4000 in particular, that it arranged for Allied to present the Designer Series to the defendant’s major department store customers such as Dillard’s and Carson Praire Scott at the 1995 Gourmet Show in Las Vegas. The defendant says the Designer Series, and in particular the Voice Pro 4000, generated an overwhelming demand for the products among Professional Housewares’s customers.

Based on customer response to Allied’s presentation and Allied’s assurances to the defendant and its customers 4 that the complete Designer Series would be available on specific dates for the 1995 holiday season,5 Professional Housewares issued purchase orders to Allied for the Designer Series. Despite the repeated oral and written assurances of Allied’s President, Steve Lipman, both directly and through Allied’s sales representative, Gaus, Allied failed to deliver the Voice Pro 4000 as agreed and delivered the Time Minders and the MOMs late.

Allied’s failure to timely deliver the Voice Pro 4000 seriously undermined the marketing campaign for the Designer Series because a number of the defendant’s customers withdrew catalog advertisements and greatly reduced their marketing efforts when it became apparent that Allied would not deliver the Voice Pro 4000 in time for the 1995 holiday season. As a result, the MOM and the Time Minder did not receive the market[1052]*1052ing benefit retailers previously earmarked for the Designer Series. Numerous retailers canceled their orders with the defendant for MOMs. Other retailers demanded and took price reductions from Professional Housewares on the MOMs and Time Minders as the market price “spiraled downward.”

H

Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c) states the procedure for granting summary judgment and says in pertinent part:

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999 F. Supp. 1049, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4817, 1998 WL 166613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allstate-financial-corp-v-professional-housewares-distributors-inc-ohnd-1998.