Coyote Portable Storage, LLC v. PODS Enterprises, Inc.

618 F. App'x 525
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 8, 2015
Docket13-14996
StatusUnpublished

This text of 618 F. App'x 525 (Coyote Portable Storage, LLC v. PODS Enterprises, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coyote Portable Storage, LLC v. PODS Enterprises, Inc., 618 F. App'x 525 (11th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

HINKLE, District Judge:

This is a dispute over the meaning of two royalty provisions in a series of franchise agreements. We conclude that the first disputed provision is ambiguous. The contemporaneous documentary evidence makes clear beyond dispute that the representatives who negotiated the provision on both sides had the same understanding of the provision’s meaning; we construe the provision as they understood it. The second disputed provision is clear, as both sides agree even now. We apply the pro *527 vision as written, rejecting the franchisor’s contention that the provision was included in the agreements only through a scrivener’s error. Finally, we reject the franchisor’s assertion that the franchisees’ claims are barred by a release or lack of notice.

I

Some might say PODS, Inc. built a better mousetrap: a system for moving from one residence to another without the time constraints that ordinarily attend the process. A traditional moving van must be promptly loaded, driven to the destination, and promptly unloaded. Otherwise the customer incurs substantial extra charges; the van and its crew are the traditional moving company’s stock in trade and cannot be kept idle. If the new residence is not ready when the old one must be vacated, the customer’s furniture and household goods must be loaded, transported, unloaded, stored, and then loaded and unloaded again. A pod, in contrast, can be left unattended at the customer’s location or stored. So a customer can have a pod loaded or can load it at the customer’s convenience over time, can have the pod stored (without unloading it) if the new residence is not ready when the old one must be vacated, and can have the pod unloaded or can unload it at the customer’s convenience. There is no need for a second loading and unloading.

“PODS” is an acronym for portable on demand storage. PODS, Inc., has now been succeeded by PODS Enterprises, Inc., the defendant in the district court and appellant here. This opinion uses “PODS” as a reference to either.

When PODS began its business, the focus was on local moving and storage; moving from one city to another became a focus only later. PODS established franchises in local markets. The plaintiffs in the district court — the appellees here — are three franchisees under common ownership: Coyote Portable Storage, LLC (“Coyote”) with operations in Phoenix; Desert Portable Storage, LLC (“Desert”) with operations in Las Vegas;. and Cactus Portable Storage, LLC (“Cactus”) with operations in Tucson.

PODS entered franchise agreements with Coyote and Desert on September 29, 2003. The agreements were identical to one another and identical in most respects to PODS’s standard franchise agreement. But PODS did not insist that franchisees accept its standard agreement. Here there were negotiations that resulted in changes set out in an addendum to each agreement. PODS entered a franchise agreement with Cactus on June 15, 2004, again with an addendum altering the standard agreement as a result of arm’s length negotiations.

Under the agreements, PODS was entitled to royalties calculated as a minimum amount each month or, if greater, a specified percentage of the franchisee’s “net sales.” Customers ordinarily remitted payments to PODS, who withheld royalties (and other appropriate amounts) and remitted the balance to the franchisee. The first issue on this appeal is whether “net sales” included only revenues from local operations — the primary source of revenues at the time — or also included revenues from moves between separate franchised territories. The parties have sometimes referred to revenues from non-local moves as “cross-country,” “inter-franchise,” or “I-F” revenues. This opinion ordinarily refers to them as “cross-country revenues.”

PODS periodically evaluated its franchisees. The standard franchise agreement provided an incentive for satisfactory performance that became applicable only after the franchisee had been in operation for *528 three years: the base royalty was 10% but a separate term provided a 2% rebate for a satisfactory rating. The Coyote, Desert, and Cactus addendums all changed the base royalty to 8% but allowed PODS to increase this to 10% for unsatisfactory performance. The Cactus addendum deleted the separate term providing a 2% rebate for satisfactory performance, so with satisfactory performance, Cactus’s royalty was 8%, as both sides agree. The Coyote and Desert addendums did not delete the separate term providing a 2% rebate. The second issue on this appeal is whether that term remained applicable, that is, whether, with a satisfactory rating, the effective royalty for Coyote and Desert was 6% or 8%. The issue arose when the Cactus agreement was being negotiated — Cactus asked for the same 6% effective royalty Coyote and Desert had received, but PODS said that was a mistake.

In June 2007, the parties entered a second addendum to the Coyote and Desert franchise agreements changing PODS’s option to purchase the franchisee’s assets. Neither the option nor the change is at issue here. But each franchisee’s second addendum included a general release.

In January 2008, Coyote, Desert, and Cactus formally notified PODS of the claims they now assert: the claim to the return of royalties withheld based on cross-country revenues and, for Coyote and Desert, the claim to a 2% rebate for satisfactory performance. Coyote and Desert asserted claims only from July 2007 forward, recognizing that their general releases barred claims for earlier periods. PODS rejected the claims.

The claims implicate two provisions of the franchise agreements not addressed to this point. First, the agreements include a choice-of-law provision: Florida law controls. All parties agree the provision is binding. Second, the agreements include a provision requiring a franchisee to give PODS notice within 12 months after it learns or should learn of a breach and, “except as otherwise prohibited or limited by applicable law,” barring any claim for which timely notice was not given.

II

On April 30, 2009, Coyote, Desert, and Cactus filed this action in the Northern District of Georgia based on diversity jurisdiction. The only claims still at issue are common-law contract claims — claims for the return of the royalties PODS exacted based on cross-country revenues (count 1), for the disputed 2% rebates (count 2), for a declaratory judgment on these issues (count 9), and for attorney’s fees under the franchise agreements’ prevailing-party fee provisions (count 12). The district court granted summary judgment for the franchisees and awarded damages and attorney’s fees. PODS brings this appeal.

We review de novo the district court’s summary-judgment ruling, see, e.g., Ellis v. England, 482 F.3d 1321, 1325 (11th Cir.2005), and its interpretation of the franchise agreements, see, e.g., Bragg v. Bill Heard Chevrolet, Inc., 374 F.3d 1060, 1065 (11th Cir.2004).

III

Each franchise agreement includes two back-to-back definitions of “net sales.” They could be exhibit A in a law-school class on bad drafting. The first definition is a 139-word sentence fragment. The second is a 58-word “which” clause in the agreement’s next sentence.

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Bluebook (online)
618 F. App'x 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coyote-portable-storage-llc-v-pods-enterprises-inc-ca11-2015.