Bankdirect Capital Finance, LLC v. Capital Premium Financing, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedFebruary 20, 2018
Docket1:15-cv-10340
StatusUnknown

This text of Bankdirect Capital Finance, LLC v. Capital Premium Financing, Inc. (Bankdirect Capital Finance, LLC v. Capital Premium Financing, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bankdirect Capital Finance, LLC v. Capital Premium Financing, Inc., (N.D. Ill. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION BANKDIRECT CAPITAL FINANCE, LLC ) ) Plaintiff, ) No. 15 C 10340 ) v. ) ) CAPITAL PREMIUM FINANCING, INC., ) Magistrate Judge Jeffrey Cole ) Defendant. ) MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER INTRODUCTION BankDirect, which is a diversified financial services company, which, from its inception, has conducted business nationally with well-established insurance agencies, [Dkt. #28 at 12], has sued Capital Premium Financing, Inc. under an Option Agreement and related Master Transaction Agreement. The Third Amended Complaint spans 75 pages and 270 paragraphs. [Dkt.#160]. While the parties’ labyrinthine undertakings are, in many ways, typical of modern corporate transactions, at bottom the Third Amended Complaint alleges a breach of contract.1 Insisting that the Defendant has done nothing wrong, the Answer raised 12 “Affirmative Defenses,” and its 226-paragraph “Supplemented Counterclaims” charge BankDirect with “willful and bad faith breaches of [the] Master Transaction Agreement and related agreements....”

1 This is not in any way to minimize the importance of contracts. Indeed, “[c]ontracts mark the progress of communities in civilization and prosperity... They seek to give stability to the present and certainty to the future. They gauge the confidence of man in the truthfulness and integrity of his fellowman...Without them, society could not go on.” Farrington v. Tennessee, 95 U.S. 679, 682 (1877). At the heart of the Defendant’s claim of wrongdoing is the contention that the Plaintiff had falsely represented during contract negotiations that it would exclusively market and promote the Defendant’s loan products – an allegation denied by the Plaintiff – especially in the Eastern United States to small to midsize insurance agencies, and that as a consequence it was contemplated that

the Defendant’s sales and earnings during the five-year term of the contract would be substantially and positively affected. The Counterclaim charges that, instead, the Plaintiff purchased Standard Funding, “a direct competitor” of the Defendant2 and failed to market and promote the Defendant’s loan products as it allegedly had promised. Here is a sampling of the relevant allegations in the Counterclaim: 197. A key component of the MTA [the contract between the parties] for [Defendant] was the marketing and promotion of its loan products and services by BankDirect’s large sales force, throughout the United States, and particularly in the Eastern United States, for small to mid-sized agencies, which would have substantially increased CPFI’s sales and earnings during the 5-year MTA period. 198. BankDirect representatives made several material and misleading representations during negotiations that BankDirect would exclusively market [the defendant’s] products for small to midsized agencies throughout the United States, and particularly in the Eastern United States. 199. Prior to entering into the [Agreements with Defendant], BankDirect was negotiating the acquisition of Standard Funding, a direct competitor of CPFI. 200. BankDirect subsequently acquired Standard Funding shortly after the MTA and Option Agreement were executed. 201. Thereafter, BankDirect marketed and promoted its own products in the Eastern United States to the exclusion of marketing CPFI’s products. 209. CPFI reasonably relied on BankDirect’s promises concerning the exclusivity of 2 The Complaint alleged that Standard Funding was a direct competitor of the Plaintiff. Resolution of that disputed question is obviously an appropriate matter for discovery. Request 33 did not seek to resolve that question. 2 the marketing in the small to mid-sized agency market segment. (Emphasis added). (Dkt. #172, at 114-115). It is against this background of charges and countercharges that the present discovery controversy arose. In Request 33, the Defendant demanded that the Plaintiff produce:

“Documents sufficient to determine the proportion of BankDirect’s loan volume that is attributable to the 150 largest insurance agencies in the United States from 2010 to present.”3 Although the contract at issue was signed in 2016, the Request sought documents dating back to 2010. Who would decide what documents would be “sufficient” to show the proportion of the Plaintiff’s loan volume attributable to the 150 largest insurance agencies in the United States over an 8 year period and what would they consist of. In the first instance, of course, it would be the Plaintiff. Potentially, extensive billing and other records for every agency will have to be reviewed and a very large number produced. Remember, the Request does not seek a number; it seeks documents “sufficient” to enable the calculation. Perhaps the Defendant would say the documents that have been produced are insufficient, in which event there will be further wrangling. What seems likely, however, is that the disclosure of documents responsive to Request 33 will reveal those

3 For example, assume the loan volume from the “top 150 agencies” (assuming they could be identified) was $20 million. Further assume that the Plaintiff’s loan volume from other agencies was $10 million. In this example, the proportion of loan volume derived from the top 150 agencies would be two thirds. (Of course the figures in this example are arbitrary and are not intended to correspond to the actual facts). The 150 figure was employed because the Defendant alleged that BankDirect primarily focused its relationships with the 150 largest insurance agencies in the United States. BankDirect denied this allegation, stating that it is a “diversified financial services company that conducts business nationally with well-established insurance agencies, regardless of size.” (Dkt. #28 at ¶ 23). 3 agencies with which the Plaintiff is doing business and the volume of business each is doing, Yet, the Defendant has not claimed it is entitled to see such documents, and it is likely they are not entitled to learn customer identities or billing practices. But that issue has not been discussed by the Plaintiff , and so we move on. Aker v. Americollect, Inc., 854 F.3d 397, 399 (7th Cir. 2017).

BankDirect objected to the Request: BankDirect’s relationship with the 150 largest insurance agencies in the United States, and the proportion of BankDirect’s business attributable to these agencies, is not in any way related to any claim, counterclaim, defense or other factual dispute in this litigation. As such, Request No.33 constitutes nothing more than an impermissible and harassing fishing expedition into BankDirect’s non-CPFI related business. [Dkt. #209 at 1](Emphasis supplied). The actual request, as it was quoted in the materials submitted to me, did not ask for documents showing the “relationship” the Plaintiff had with the top 150 agencies in the United States. Rather, it asked for documents “sufficient to show” the proportion that Plaintiff’s loan volume attributable to the 150 largest insurance agencies in the United States bore to the Plaintiff’s total loan volume.4 It is Capital Finance’s theory that these documents would show the potential for the claimed marketing collaboration agreement. In Capital Finance’s words: “Said another way, because BankDirect focused on large agencies, BankDirect’s sales force in certain regions could market Capital Premium’s product to small and mid-sized agencies. Thus, the parties respective market positions directly impact the potential for the marketing collaboration agreement.”(Dkt. 209 at 2)(Bold in original).

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Bluebook (online)
Bankdirect Capital Finance, LLC v. Capital Premium Financing, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bankdirect-capital-finance-llc-v-capital-premium-financing-inc-ilnd-2018.