Capital Ideas, LLC v. Springboard Advertising LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedOctober 6, 2021
Docket20-0296
StatusPublished

This text of Capital Ideas, LLC v. Springboard Advertising LLC (Capital Ideas, LLC v. Springboard Advertising LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capital Ideas, LLC v. Springboard Advertising LLC, (iowactapp 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 20-0296 Filed October 6, 2021

CAPITAL IDEAS, LLC, Plaintiff-Appellant/Cross-Appellee,

vs.

SPRINGBOARD ADVERTISING LLC and CHRISTINA AMYS, Defendants-Appellees/Cross-Appellants. ________________________________

SPRINGBOARD ADVERTISING LLC and CHRISTINA AMYS, Counterclaim Plaintiffs,

CAPITAL IDEAS, LLC and MICHAEL WOODY, Counterclaim Defendants-Appellants/Cross-Appellees. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, David Nelmark, Judge.

Capital Ideas, LLC and Michael Woody appeal a money judgment in favor

of Springboard Advertising LLC and Christina Amys. Springboard and Amys cross

appeal. REVERSED AND REMANDED ON APPEAL; AFFIRMED ON CROSS-

APPEAL.

Jeffrey R. Kappelman, Erik P. Bergeland, and Andrew T. Patton of The

Finley Law Firm, P.C., Des Moines, for appellant.

Brenda L. Myers-Maas of Myers Mass Law, PLC, West Des Moines, for

appellees.

Heard by Mullins, P.J., and May and Ahlers, JJ. 2

MAY, Judge.

A jury awarded $220,000 in damages to Springboard Advertising LLC

(Springboard) and Christina Amys on their claim1 of defamation per se against

Capital Ideas, LLC (Capital) and Michael Woody. Capital and Woody appeal from

the resulting judgment. Springboard and Amys cross-appeal. They argue the

district court erred in rejecting some other defamation claims.

We conclude Capital and Woody were entitled to judgment notwithstanding

the verdict (JNOV) on the claim of defamation per se. As to that claim, we reverse

and remand for dismissal. As to all other issues, we affirm.

I. Factual Background

Amys and Woody are advertising professionals. Amys’s business is called

Springboard Advertising, LLC. Woody’s business is called Capital Ideas, LLC.

In 2010, Woody and Amys decided their companies should cooperate.

Each company brought its clients to the joint effort. They worked together under

Capital Ideas’s flag.

For years, this arrangement worked well. But in early 2017, the story started

to arc. Woody allegedly fired a major client without obtaining Amys’s consent.

Amys felt there were other problems, too, like Woody “micromanaging” her.

In June, Amys told Woody it was time for her to leave. Amys later testified

about what she said:

I told him that I needed a more flexible schedule. I told him that I didn’t want 30-plus accounts, which is what he wanted. We

1 The defamation per se claim was technically a counterclaim. Because this distinction makes no difference to our analysis, we sometimes use claim to refer to counterclaims as well as claims. 3

were spinning our wheels with 30-plus accounts. I was working all the time. Clients were firing us. He was firing clients. It was madness. I did not—I said, We can’t even handle the accounts we have. Why would we have 30-plus more accounts? I did say that we are in different stages of our lives and, because of all these hours that I’m working trying to juggle all of accounts, I am missing out on my kids’ lives and didn’t want to do it anymore. So I said it is time for me to go back to Springboard Advertising.

So Amys and Woody began working on the terms of their dissolution. There

has been some dispute about what they agreed on. For example, while Woody

has claimed they agreed that Amys would not solicit certain clients, Amys

vehemently denies that claim.

But it seems undisputed they agreed Woody would (as he ultimately did)

email this message to all of their clients:

After six and a half great years, [Amys] and I have decided to end our partnership. Effective mid-July, [Amys] will go back to focusing on her original advertising agency, Springboard Advertising, and I will continue supporting clients for Capital Ideas. The split has been very amicable and we will remain good friends and maybe even collaborate on a few customer projects down the road. [Amys] has retained the clients that she brought to our agency from Springboard Advertising, plus a few others. I will very much miss working directly with those clients but I know they are in great hands and I am certain that they will continue to see huge results and grow under [Amys’s] direct supervision. Please join me in wishing [Amys] well as she heads back into the world of sole agency ownership! Capital Ideas will continue to operate as usual and we are already on our way to arranging for a new bookkeeper to help pick up a portion of [Amys’s] duties. I will be in touch with all of you in the next few weeks as Capital Ideas will continue to offer the service and experience you’ve come to expect.

In private, though, Woody also told clients some other information about

Amys’s reasons for leaving. He said so in this interrogatory answer:

Interrogatory No. 20: Set forth all communications, whether verbal, written, or electronic, you have had with any third party (other 4

than privileged attorney client communications) regarding your separation from Christina Amys/Springboard Advertising. Answer: I sent an email to the Des Moines Register to see if my representative was going to honor the agency/media client confidentiality agreement. I suspected she was not. I was correct. Any other information I shared about Chris is that she did not want to work this hard, wanted less accounts and stress and was planning to spend much more time with her kids. All of those items she told me were her reasons for leaving and shared many times with reps and clients in my presence. In conversations with clients and reps, I told them how happy I was for her to be able to take this time to spend with her family.

(Emphasis added.)

Woody also made some other statements to Kelly Brown, the local sales

manager for KCCI television. According to Brown’s testimony, Woody told her that

Amys had failed to honor their agreement about “whose clients would be whose,”

and that “his trust of [Amys] was broken.” After this conversation, Woody sent

Brown an email entitled “sorry to unload on you . . .” In its body, the email stated:

“It has been a really bad two weeks as I find that the person I trusted with the

finances of my company has no ethics. I am so disappointed in her.” Brown knew

the email was about Amys.

In January 2018, Capital began this litigation against Springboard and

Amys. Capital pled claims for breach of contract and interference with business

relationships. The gist of the suit was that Amys was wrongfully soliciting Capital’s

clients.

Springboard and Amys answered and raised affirmative defenses. They

also brought counterclaims for interference with business relationships, unfair

competition, and defamation. 5

As trial approached, the issues narrowed. At summary judgment, the court

dismissed all of the interference-with-business-relationship claims. The court also

provided pre-trial rulings on whether certain statements by Woody were actionable

as defamation per se, defamation per quod, or not at all. Two of those rulings are

important here. First, the court ruled that one of Woody’s statements was

defamation per se. The statement was this: “[Amys] does not want to work this

hard, wanted less accounts and stress and was planning to spend much more time

with her kids.”

The court also ruled on Woody’s statement to Brown that “I find the person

I trusted with the finances of my company has no ethics.” The court concluded this

statement was not actionable because “[t]he assertion that someone has ‘no

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Capital Ideas, LLC v. Springboard Advertising LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capital-ideas-llc-v-springboard-advertising-llc-iowactapp-2021.