Cramton v. Grabbagreen Franchising LLC

CourtDistrict Court, D. Arizona
DecidedDecember 23, 2019
Docket2:17-cv-04663
StatusUnknown

This text of Cramton v. Grabbagreen Franchising LLC (Cramton v. Grabbagreen Franchising LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cramton v. Grabbagreen Franchising LLC, (D. Ariz. 2019).

Opinion

1 WO 2 3 4 5 6 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 7 FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARIZONA 8 9 Kim Cramton, No. CV-17-04663-PHX-DWL 10 Plaintiff, ORDER 11 v. 12 Grabbagreen Franchising LLC, et al., 13 Defendants. 14 15 The parties have filed a series of interrelated motions in this hotly contested 16 employment action. (Docs. 142, 143, 200, 206, 220, and 229.) The motions recently

17 became fully briefed, and the Court hereby rules as follows. 18 BACKGROUND

19 I. The Parties, Claims, And Essential Facts1

20 From September 2014 through September 2017, Plaintiff Kim Cramton 21 (“Cramton”) was affiliated in various capacities with a trio of related entities, Grabbagreen 22 Franchising, LLC (“GFL”), Eat Clean Operations, LLC (“ECO”), and Eat Clean Holdings,

23 LLC (“ECH”) (collectively, the “Corporate Defendants”). The business purpose of the

24 Corporate Defendants, which were owned and/or operated by Keely Newman (“Keely”)

25 and her spouse, attorney Kelli Newman (“Kelli”), was to oversee the “Grabbagreen”

26 restaurant franchise, which features healthy fast food and juice. For ease of reference, the 27 1 The Background section of the order is simply intended to give a broad overview of 28 the issues and claims in this case. To the extent material disputes of fact exist, they will be addressed in further detail in the Discussion section. 1 Corporate Defendants, Keely, and Kelli will be referred to collectively as “Defendants.” 2 On September 25, 2017, Cramton stopped working for Defendants. At the time of 3 her departure, Cramton held an 18.6% ownership interest in ECH. However, in October 4 2017, Keely purported to exercise a contractual provision that permitted her to repurchase 5 Cramton’s ownership interest for $1 if Cramton voluntarily resigned. Later, in November 6 2017, Cramton began working for Kahala Brands Ltd. (“Kahala”), where her role was to 7 promote the franchising of the “Blimpie” line of sandwich shops. 8 Cramton filed this lawsuit in December 2017. The operative 10-count complaint 9 (Doc. 88) raises claims that can be grouped into the following four categories: 10 ▪ ADA Claims (Counts 1-3): Cramton contends she became disabled in April 2017, 11 after being diagnosed with a brain aneurysm, yet the Corporate Defendants refused her 12 request for an accommodation, retaliated against her, and subjected her to emotional abuse. 13 Cramton thus contends her seeming resignation on September 25, 2017 was actually a 14 constructive discharge. 15 ▪ Minimum Wage Claim (Count 4): Cramton contends she didn’t receive any 16 wages for her work for Defendants throughout 2017, in violation of Arizona’s minimum 17 wage statute. Nevertheless, in late 2017, Cramton received a W-2 statement stating GFL 18 had paid her $25,000 in wages in 2017. Cramton contends the $25,000 didn’t constitute 19 wages (instead, it represented the partial repayment of a loan) and that Defendants 20 improperly issued the W-2 in an attempt to evade liability on her wage claim. 21 ▪ Contract Claim (Count 5): Cramton contends she loaned over $66,000 to ECO 22 in October 2016, to help fund the acquisition of a Grabbagreen franchise location, but has 23 only received partial repayment on the note. 24 ▪ Tort And Contract Claims (Count 6-10): These claims all arise, in one form or 25 another, from a phone call on September 18, 2017 during which Keely allegedly told 26 Cramton that a planned sale of Grabbagreen to Kahala had fallen through and that Kahala 27 would not be making any future offers. Cramton departed soon after receiving this 28 information. In fact, Kahala ended up acquiring Grabbagreen in March 2018 for $2.675

-2- 1 million, and Cramton contends that Keely’s statement during the phone call was false 2 because Keely knew at the time that Kahala remained interested in an acquisition. Cramton 3 thus seeks, under a variety of tort and contract theories, the portion of the Kahala 4 acquisition proceeds she would have received if she hadn’t left the company in September 5 2017. 6 Defendants deny these allegations and assert an array of counterclaims against 7 Cramton. (Doc. 95.) In a nutshell, Defendants contend that Cramton violated a 8 confidentiality and non-compete agreement, and engaged in unfair competition, by joining 9 Kahala, an alleged competitor in the restaurant franchise industry; violated a contractual 10 release of claims by bringing this lawsuit; and wrongfully interfered with their efforts to 11 sell Grabbagreen to Kahala, causing the ultimate sale price to be at least $1 million lower 12 than it should have been. Defendants’ overarching theory is that Cramton impulsively 13 resigned in September 2017, didn’t realize she was forfeiting her 18.6% ownership interest 14 by doing so, and concocted this lawsuit in an effort to recoup the $500,000 or so she would 15 have earned from the Kahala acquisition if she’d stuck around instead of resigning. (See, 16 e.g., Doc. 143 at 5; Doc. 172 at 1.) 17 One of the key issues in this case is what, exactly, Cramton knew about Kahala’s 18 acquisition plans when she resigned. In addition to disputing Cramton’s characterization 19 of what Keely said during the fateful phone call on September 18, 2017—according to 20 Defendants, Keely merely told Cramton that Kahala had declined to accept a particular 21 offer and didn’t say the overall deal was dead—Defendants contend that Cramton had 22 friends within Grabbagreen and Kahala who were secretly feeding her information about 23 Kahala’s plans. (This theory, if true, would undermine Cramton’s suggestion that she 24 detrimentally relied on Keely’s purported statement.) In Defendants’ view, the evidence 25 of these communications should have been found on Cramton’s company-issued computer 26 and cell phone. Unfortunately, around the time of her departure, Cramton brought both 27 devices to a third-party data vendor in an attempt to have them “wiped.” Much ink has 28 been spilled over what consequences, if any, should flow from that decision.

-3- 1 II. Relevant Procedural Background 2 On December 13, 2018, Defendants deposed Cramton. (Doc. 107.) Afterward, 3 Defendants filed a motion seeking authorization to conduct three additional hours of 4 examination. (Id.) 5 On December 28, 2018, the Court issued an order denying Defendants’ request. 6 (Doc. 108.) 7 On February 22, 2019, Defendants filed a motion for reconsideration, arguing, inter 8 alia, that Cramton had submitted declarations following her deposition that contradicted 9 her deposition testimony and her MIDP disclosures. (Doc. 136.) 10 On March 1, 2019, Cramton filed a motion for partial summary judgment. (Doc. 11 142.) It seeks summary judgment on Count 4 (the minimum wage claim), on Count 5 (the 12 breach-of-contract claim pertaining to the promissory note), on whether the Corporate 13 Defendants comprise an “integrated enterprise” for purposes of Counts 1-3 (the ADA 14 claims), and on all of Defendants’ counterclaims, which Cramton contends were “only 15 asserted for purposes of maliciously imposing additional litigation costs against [her].” (Id. 16 at 2-3.) This motion appeared to become fully briefed on April 16, 2019. (Docs. 158, 171.) 17 Separately, on March 1, 2019, Defendants filed their own motion for summary 18 judgment. (Doc. 143.) It seeks summary judgment on all of Cramton’s claims except 19 Count 5 (the breach-of-contract claim pertaining to the promissory note). This motion also 20 appeared to become fully briefed on April 16, 2019. (Docs. 159, 172.) 21 On April 30, 2019, the Court issued an order granting Defendants’ motion for 22 reconsideration and authorizing Defendants to re-depose Cramton for three hours on 23 certain topics. (Doc. 175.) 24 On May 21, 2019, the renewed deposition took place. (Doc.

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Cramton v. Grabbagreen Franchising LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cramton-v-grabbagreen-franchising-llc-azd-2019.