Coffee Beanery, Ltd v. WW LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 18, 2008
Docket07-1830
StatusUnpublished

This text of Coffee Beanery, Ltd v. WW LLC (Coffee Beanery, Ltd v. WW LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coffee Beanery, Ltd v. WW LLC, (6th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION File Name: 08a0502n.06 Filed: August 18, 2008

No. 07-1830

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

COFFEE BEANERY, LTD., ET AL., ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE Petitioners-Appellees, ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN v. ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN ) WW, L.L.C.; DEBORAH WILLIAMS; and ) OPINION RICHARD WELSHANS, ) ) Respondents-Appellants. )

BEFORE: COLE and CLAY, Circuit Judges; RUSSELL, District Judge.*

COLE, Circuit Judge. Respondent-Appellant WW, L.L.C. and its two principal owners,

Richard Welshans and Deborah Williams (collectively, “WW”), appeal the district court’s denial of

their motion to vacate an arbitration award. At issue is whether the Arbitrator showed a manifest

disregard of the law when she issued her award. Because we conclude that the failure to disclose

a prior felony conviction for grand larceny violates the Maryland Franchise Registration and

Disclosure Law (“Franchise Act”), Md. Bus. Reg. Code Ann. § 14-216(8)(i), and because the

Arbitrator showed a manifest disregard of the law in concluding otherwise, we REVERSE the

judgment of the district court and VACATE the Arbitrator’s award.

* The Honorable Thomas B. Russell, United States District Judge for the Western District of Kentucky, sitting by designation. No. 07-1830 Coffee Beanery, Ltd. v. WW, LLC

I. BACKGROUND

Petitioner-Appellee, The Coffee Beanery Ltd., is a Michigan corporation with its principal

place of business in Flushing, Michigan. Its primary business is to sell and operate Coffee Beanery

franchises across the United States. The remaining Petitioners-Appellees, Joanne Shaw, Julius

Shaw, Kevin Shaw, Kurt Shaw, Ken Coxen, Walter Pilon, and Owen Stearn, are officers of the

company (collectively, “the Coffee Beanery”). WW, L.L.C. is a Maryland corporation with its

principal place of business in Annapolis, Maryland.

This dispute arises out of a failed business agreement to license a Coffee Beanery Cafe. In

Spring of 2003, Richard Welshans and Deborah Williams, husband and wife, began researching the

idea of opening a small coffee shop that would sell coffee and other beverages. The two arranged

a meeting with Kevin Shaw, the Coffee Beanery’s Vice President of Real Estate, to discuss the

details of a purchase and a potential location for a store.

In June 2003, Richard and Deborah attended a Coffee Beanery “discovery day” at the

headquarters in Flushing, Michigan to investigate the purchase of a franchise. During this trip,

Coffee Beanery representatives took the two on a tour of the company-owned Coffee Beanery Cafe,

where they met some employees and sampled food and beverages. That same day, Richard and

Deborah agreed to license a Cafe Store in Annapolis, Maryland, and signed a franchise agreement

to purchase and operate a store. With the consent of the Coffee Beanery, the rights, title and interest

in and obligations under this agreement were later assigned to WW, L.L.C.

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The parties have different versions of what happened during this meeting. According to

Richard and Deborah, they had originally intended to purchase a traditional Coffee Beanery store,

but several representatives of the Coffee Beanery, including Shaw, encouraged them to purchase a

Cafe Store, suggesting that the Cafe Stores were potentially more lucrative, in part, because they

were not “seasonal.” In a private meeting after the tour, Shaw asked them, “Can you get by on

$125,000?,” and presented a pro forma financial work sheet containing information about input costs

for operations and projected income. Based on what Richard and Deborah assert to be false

representations, they agreed to purchase and operate a Cafe Store, which required an initial franchise

fee of $25,000. The Coffee Beanery, unsurprisingly, believes that it provided adequate, proper and

timely disclosure, sufficient training, comprehensive assistance, and made no false representations.

After its opening in 2003, WW’s Cafe Store immediately encountered numerous difficulties.

Spurned by significant losses, in January 2005, WW sent the American Arbitration Association

(“AAA”) and the Coffee Beanery a Demand for Mediation and Arbitration. The nature of the

dispute, according to the demand, included fraud, negligent misrepresentation, fraudulent

misrepresentation, fraudulent non-disclosure, breach of contract, breach of the covenant of good faith

and fair dealing, violations of the Maryland Franchise Registration and Disclosure Law, Michigan

Franchise Investment Law, and the Michigan Consumer Protection Act.

The arbitration process hit a snag when counsel for WW sent an email to AAA retracting its

earlier demand for arbitration, because “the arbitration clause in the franchise agreement is limited

to controversies between [the Coffee Beanery] and Store Owner.” “The legal action that my clients

are considering,” the email explained, does not “fall within the scope of the arbitration agreement,”

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and therefore “any arbitration requirement would also be of no force and effect.” Based on those

reasons, on December 15, 2005, WW abandoned arbitration altogether and filed suit in the United

States District Court for the District of Maryland, alleging violations of the Maryland Franchise Act

and seeking relief under other state-law claims for detrimental reliance, intentional

misrepresentation, and negligent misrepresentation.

Independently, on January 19, 2006, the Securities Commissioner of Maryland

(“Commissioner”) issued an administrative “Order to Show Cause” against the Coffee Beanery and

Kevin Shaw, alleging violations of the disclosure and anti-fraud provisions of the Franchise Act, Md.

Bus. Reg. Code Ann. § 14-210 et seq. The substance of the Commissioner’s claims was nearly

identical to WW’s allegations—namely, that the Coffee Beanery made material misrepresentations

in connection with the offer and sale of Cafe Store franchises, that Shaw inappropriately told

prospective buyers that they could expect a specific income level from the operation of a Cafe Store,

and that the Coffee Beanery failed to timely provide prospective franchisees a copy of the offering

prospectus and a proposed franchise agreement.

On January 30, 2006, eleven days after the Commissioner issued her Order, the Coffee

Beanery responded in kind by filing a petition to compel arbitration in the United States District

Court for the Eastern District of Michigan. The Coffee Beanery alleged that, under the arbitration

clause of the franchise agreement, any claim or controversy arising out of or related to the franchise

agreement should be settled by arbitration.

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The district court granted the Coffee Beanery’s petition to compel arbitration and refused to

stay the case.1 Coffee Beanery v. WW L.L.C., No. 06-10408, 2006 WL 2033929 (E.D. Mich. July

18, 2006) (“Coffee Beanery I”). But before arbitration could proceed, on September 12, 2006, the

Commissioner reached a Consent Order with the Coffee Beanery and Shaw, under which the Coffee

Beanery and Shaw acknowledged that they had violated the Maryland Franchise Act by making

material misrepresentations of fact or omissions of material fact to prospective Maryland franchisees,

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