Co-Options v. News America Mktg., No. X01 Cv 00 0163095 S (Feb. 27, 2002)

2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 2238
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 2002
DocketNo. X01 CV 00 0163095 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 2238 (Co-Options v. News America Mktg., No. X01 Cv 00 0163095 S (Feb. 27, 2002)) 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
Co-Options v. News America Mktg., No. X01 Cv 00 0163095 S (Feb. 27, 2002), 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 2238 (Colo. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON THE MERITS OF THE CLAIMS AND COUNTERCLAIM
The above-captioned action was tried to the court after withdrawal of the claim for trial by jury. At the commencement of the trial, the plaintiff withdrew Counts Nine and Ten of the complaint. The defendant withdrew its second counterclaim. The parties have filed post-trial briefs and reply briefs.

The plaintiff, Co-Options, Inc. ("Co-Options") claims that it had an CT Page 2239 agreement with the defendant, News America Marketing In Store, Inc. ("News America"), to participate in a marketing project in 2000, 2001 and 2002 and that News America failed to fulfill its obligations under that agreement.

The plaintiff's causes of action against the defendant, as pleaded in its amended complaint dated June 22, 2002, are as follows:

Count One — breach of express contract to jointly develop, sell and execute a program known as New Product Showcase in 2001 and later;

Count Two (in the alternative) — breach of implied contract to jointly develop, sell and execute a program known as New Product Showcase in 2001 and later;

Count Three (in the alternative) — promissory estoppel based conduct intended to induce reliance and actual reliance by plaintiff;

Count Four — breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing with regard to contract alleged at Count 1;

Count Five — violation of Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act ("CUTPA"), Conn. Gen. Stats. § 42-110a et seq.;

Count Six — intentional misrepresentation;

Count Seven (in the alternative) — negligent misrepresentation;

Count Eight — "innocent misrepresentation".

The defendant has asserted as its first counterclaim a claim that Co-Options owes it $30,000 pursuant to a separate and unrelated project known as "Got Milk?" Specifically, News America alleges that Co-Options agreed to pay it $30,000 in commissions by June 30, 2000. Co-Options, by counsel, acknowledged this debt in open court but took the position that it would be offset by amounts owed to Co-Options by News America under the claims alleged in Co-Options' complaint.

Findings of fact CT Page 2240

Co-Options is a Connecticut corporation, located in Darien, which is engaged in the business of designing, selling and executing promotional sampling and coupon programs in which the manufacturers of products ("brands") cooperate in joint programs with each other and retailers. Such joint or co-operative ventures help brands reach consumers to encourage purchase of their products. Co-Options puts together packages of samples or sets of coupons for brands, apparently to increase consumer interest in the multiple products presented and to provide such exposure to brands at lower cost than if each brand undertook its own project of providing samples and coupons. Co-Options also designs and executes what it calls "custom" programs for individual brands or manufacturers without the feature of cooperation with other brands.

Co-Options is a small company, started by people with experience in marketing functions with other employers. It has been in existence since 1994. Its founder, president and sole shareholder is Brian Sockin. Sockin and the other management employees of Co-Options had experience with and contacts among brands but not among retail establishments, such as supermarket chains. Co-Options has never employed more than ten people.

News America is a large company with offices located in Norwalk. The plaintiff's claims arise from a transaction with News America's in-store sampling division, which performs sampling programs that build on News America's contacts both with brands and with retailers, including supermarket chains. That division is not a separate corporation. News America has other divisions not involved in the claims herein.

In 2000, Co-Options and News America's in-store sampling division participated together in a project known as "Got Milk?" Their efforts in this joint endeavor included preparation of packs of samples of products and of coupons to be displayed in supermarkets participating in this campaign, which was related to an advertising campaign sponsored by milk producers. Many of the documents presented in evidence with regard to the plaintiff's claims mention the Got Milk? project or its details, and it is necessary to distinguish communications about this project from those concerning the project that is the subject of the plaintiff's claims in this suit.

In July 1999, Janet Grottalio1 of Co-Options approached executives in News America's in-store sampling division with the idea of a joint undertaking to combine live sampling, sample packs and coupons for new products from various brands for supermarkets to present to shoppers. The project was to be known as New Product Showcase. Co-Options was unable to pursue this idea on its own because it lacked contacts with supermarket chains and the capacity to do "wet sampling." "Wet sampling" is the marketing device of puffing people in stores to hand shoppers samples of CT Page 2241 items, for example, slices of a new cheese spread on a cracker. "Dry sampling," by contrast, consists of handing or otherwise distributing a packaged free sample to the shopper. Some supermarkets charge brands an access fee to do sampling in their stores; others do not.

When it began the Got Milk? project in 1997, Co-Options did not undertake the task of signing up the retailers in whose stores samples and coupons were distributed. Instead, Co-Options collaborated with a consultant from Tulsa, Oklahoma, who signed up the retailers in return for a share of the revenues. As of 1999, Co-Options had developed some contacts with the dairy managers in stores that had participated in the Got Milk? program and it was able to continue that program into 1999-2000; however, it lacked the contacts with corporate executives of grocery store chains necessary to pursue the New Product Showcase program.

Lacking a workforce to perform wet sampling at stores, Co-Options was able to pursue its New Product Showcase idea only by joining forces with an in-store sampling company that had the capacity to do wet sampling or by paying another company to sign up retailers and manage a sampling work force, as Co-Options had done in the Got Milk? project.

Co-Options decided that the former approach offered the best prospects for profitability. In July 1999, Grottalio met with William Fasano, a senior vice-president of business management at News America who had responsibility for the in-store sampling division. Grottalio proposed that Co-Options and News America work together to sign up both brands and retail stores for New Product Showcase, dividing the work, the costs and the profits. After News America signed a confidentiality agreement concerning the concept that Co-Options was about to disclose to it, representatives of the parties met and Co-Options described its New Product Showcase idea and its proposal that News America participate not as a supplier of services, as it had in Got Milk?, but as a joint venturer. Fasano designated Kimberly Kiner, Director of Business Development at News America, to continue the discussion of the project with Grottalio and Sockin of Co-Options. Between October 1999 and May 2000, Sockin, Grottalio, Fasano and Kiner exchanged numerous emails discussing possible features of a collaboration on New Product Showcase. (Exs.

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Bluebook (online)
2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 2238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/co-options-v-news-america-mktg-no-x01-cv-00-0163095-s-feb-27-2002-connsuperct-2002.