Aussenhandel v. Grant Airmass Corp., No. Cv 89 0103541 (Apr. 28, 1993)

1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 4141
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedApril 28, 1993
DocketNo. CV 89 0103541
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 4141 (Aussenhandel v. Grant Airmass Corp., No. Cv 89 0103541 (Apr. 28, 1993)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aussenhandel v. Grant Airmass Corp., No. Cv 89 0103541 (Apr. 28, 1993), 1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 4141 (Colo. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The plaintiffs in this action are Rehoex Aussenhandel, a proprietorship in Germany, and its principal, Hans-Georg Hoffmann. The defendants are Grant CT Page 4142 Airmass Corporation (Grant), a corporation with its principal office in Stamford, and Bengt Johansson d/b/a Intercon Marketing (Intercon), a proprietorship located in Matthews, North Carolina. The product involved in this controversy is manufactured by Grant and is an air mattress equipped with pumps and air pockets to help bedridden patients avoid developing bedsores. The plaintiffs are import agents in Germany and Intercon was the export agent in this country for the Grant air mattress.

Rehoex and Hoffmann allege that the defendants (1) failed to manufacture and distribute to the plaintiffs the required quantity of mattresses; (2) unilaterally canceled a contract appointing plaintiffs the exclusive sales agent for Germany and two other countries; and (3) did business with another German importer in violation of their exclusive sales agency. They sued the defendants in a complaint containing claims of breach of contract, breach of the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose, fraud, unjust enrichment, and a violation of the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act (CUTPA), General Statutes 42a-110a et seq. The defendants filed answers generally denying the complaint. Intercon also filed a counterclaim against the plaintiffs, alleging that plaintiffs were obliged by the contract to import and sell a certain minimum number of air mattresses manufactured by Grant and had failed to do so.

The case was referred to Attorney Jane F. Donovan, an attorney trial referee, in accordance with General Statutes 52-434(a) and Practice Book 428 et seq. Hearings were held over the course of a number of days, after which the attorney trial referee filed her report containing a number of findings of fact. She found that: (1) the plaintiffs and Intercon met in Germany where they agreed that the plaintiffs would have the exclusive right to sell Grant air mattresses in Germany Austria and Yugoslavia; (2) the agreement was worked out by Hoffmann for the plaintiffs and Johansson for the defendants without benefit of counsel; (3) the agreement was signed by Rehoex and Intercon on February 10, 1987, with an effective date of March 15, 1987, and was "accepted and approved" by Grant on March 23, 1987; (4) the agreement was a binding contract but "was essentially a contract for the assignment of an exclusive dealership rather than a contract for the sale of goods;1 (5) the plaintiffs subsequently obtained the approval of the air mattress by TUEV, the German equivalent of the Underwriters Laboratories in this country; (6) the plaintiffs did not purchase as many air mattresses as all the parties had originally hoped, and it began to cost Grant more to manufacture the required "private brand" of mattress than the number of orders warranted, and hence Grant ceased doing business with the plaintiffs; (7) the contract did not require the plaintiffs to purchase any specific minimum number of mattresses; (8) on December 14, 1987 Intercon wrote to Rehoex to say that "This is to CT Page 4143 confirm that the subject agreement has been extended with the new expiration date to be June 30, 1988. Renewall (sic) of the agreement to be negotiated during the month of March 1988"; (9) the contract between the plaintiffs and the defendants expired on June 30, 1988, not June 30, 1989 as argued by plaintiffs, because no negotiations regarding renewal ever took place during March of 1988; and (10) the lists and projections that the defendants claim the plaintiffs failed to live up to were, according to the referee, "targets or goals" rather than "binding or enforceable quotas."

The attorney trial referee concluded that: (1) the plaintiffs could not recover against the defendants on any of their various theories, since the only promise made to them by the defendants was to be their exclusive sales agent in Germany and the other two countries; (2) this agency relationship expired on June 30, 1988, prior to the time when the defendants began to utilize another German entity, Uniroll, to distribute Grant products in Germany; (3) the plaintiffs' claim that they should be reimbursed for their efforts in obtaining "TUEV" laboratory approval as well as other promotional and marketing expenses was rejected because they were considered to be normal expenditures as part of the plaintiffs' exclusive sales agency; and (4) defendant Intercon's counterclaim was rejected because the plaintiffs had not obligated themselves to purchase a specific minimum number of air mattresses.

Pursuant to Practice Book 438, the plaintiffs moved to correct the report. They claimed that the findings of fact should be amended in a number of respects, because: (1) Intercon's letter of December 14, 1987 extended the agreement to June 30, 1989: (2) the agreement was automatically extended until June 30, 1989, because it had not been terminated ninety days before it was due to end; (3) by using Uniroll to distribute its products before the termination of the plaintiffs' exclusive sales agency, the defendants breached the contract; (4) plaintiffs were entitled to lost profits for sales that would have been made during the period that the exclusive agency relationship was still in force, but during which the defendants wrongfully ceased distributing the mattresses to them; (5) the defendants were unjustly enriched by plaintiffs' expenditures in their behalf; and (6) defendants' conduct constituted a violation of CUTPA.

The referee declined to make any corrections in her report, but did note that: (1) the December 14, 1987 letter from Intercon said the contract with the plaintiffs would terminate June 30, 1988, unless an agreement to extend was negotiated during March, 1988, and because no such negotiations occurred, the agreement ended on June 30, 1988; (2) the fact that Intercon continued to process some sales through the plaintiffs CT Page 4144 after June 30, 1988, the date the contract was terminated, is immaterial as the defendants were free after that date to use anyone, including the plaintiffs, to sell the Grant mattresses; (3) the complaint by Intercon in October, 1988 to the plaintiffs that they were "not living up to the delivery schedule as set forth in the contract" did not mean that Intercon believed the contract was still in force, but rather represented an attempt to urge Hans-Georg Hoffmann, who had formed a relationship with a new business entity, to continue his best efforts to sell Grant products; and (4) Johansson's testimony that he did not want to ship the mattresses to any other importer in Germany until his formal termination letter, sent on the advice of his lawyer, was received by the plaintiffs was not inconsistent with the termination of the agreement on June 30, 1988.

The plaintiffs then filed exceptions to the report; Practice Book 439; which mirror their motion to correct and contend that: (1) the December 14, 1987 letter extending the contract to June 30, 1988 carried with it the automatic extension provision of the original agreement, and hence the arrangement with the plaintiffs did not terminate until June 30, 1989 since the agreement was not terminated ninety days before it was otherwise due to end; (2) the defendants used Uniroll to distribute its products prior to the formal letter of termination sent plaintiffs in November, 1988 by Intercon's lawyer, Kolvenbach; and (3) the defendants breached the contract by unilaterally attempting to terminate the contract prior to June 30, 1989 and plaintiffs suffered damages as a result.

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Bluebook (online)
1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 4141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aussenhandel-v-grant-airmass-corp-no-cv-89-0103541-apr-28-1993-connsuperct-1993.