Dakota Heritage Bank v. Pankonin

2013 ND 15
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 2013
Docket20120335
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2013 ND 15 (Dakota Heritage Bank v. Pankonin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dakota Heritage Bank v. Pankonin, 2013 ND 15 (N.D. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 1/28/13 by Clerk of Supreme Court

IN THE SUPREME COURT

STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA

2013 ND 14

John Riedlinger, Steam Brothers

of Austin/Albert Lea, LLC, Dale Stroh,

Kevin Vetter, K&M, Inc., Leo Horner,

and Duane Leier, Plaintiffs and Appellees

v.

Steam Brothers, Inc., d/b/a

Steam Brothers Carpet Cleaning, Defendant and Appellant

No. 20120111

Appeal from the District Court of Burleigh County, South Central Judicial District, the Honorable Cynthia M. Feland, Judge.

REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Opinion of the Court by VandeWalle, Chief Justice.

Rob A. Stefonowicz (argued) and John A. Cotter (on brief), 7900 Xerxes Avenue South, Minneapolis, MN 55431, for plaintiffs and appellees.

Benjamin J. Hasbrouck (argued), 51B Broadway, Suite 402, Fargo, N.D. 58102-4970, for defendant and appellant.

Emily Duke (on brief), 200 South 6th Street, Suite 4000, Minneapolis, MN 55402-1425, for defendant and appellant.

Riedlinger v. Steam Brothers, Inc.

VandeWalle, Chief Justice.

[¶1] Steam Brothers, Inc., doing business as Steam Brothers Carpet Cleaning, appealed from a summary judgment in a declaratory judgment action by John Riedlinger, Dale Stroh, Kevin Vetter, Leo Horner, and Duane Leier, five individuals with separate license agreements creating business relationships with Steam Brothers (collectively referred to as “licensees”), in which the district court decided the clear and unambiguous language of the license agreements did not obligate the licensees to provide Steam Brothers and its current owner, Jerry Thomas, with certain business information and precluded Steam Brothers from terminating the license agreements absent mutual consent of the parties.  We reverse and remand, concluding the license agreements are ambiguous about the parties’ rights and obligations.

I

[¶2] In 1983, Adam Leier formed Steam Brothers, a Bismarck-based business for residential and commercial carpet cleaning and related services, including furniture and drapery cleaning and water and smoke damage remediation.  Steam Brothers registered “Steam Brothers” as a service mark (footnote: 1) with the United States Patent and Trademark Office for use in connection with its carpet cleaning and related services, and Steam Brothers franchised independently owned businesses to use its cleaning system and service mark in designated geographic territories.  The five licensees are all relatives of Adam Leier and have each operated separate businesses using the Steam Brothers’ cleaning system and service mark in designated geographic territories in North Dakota, South Dakota, and Minnesota since the 1980s.  The licensees initially executed separate agreements with Steam Brothers and Adam Leier, which required each licensee to pay an on-going franchise fee to Steam Brothers.  According to Adam Leier, he provided each licensee extensive training under the Steam Brothers’ system, including on-the-job training and seminars in fiber identity, chemical use, cleaning methods, odor control, promotion, and advertising.  The licensees initially purchased cleaning chemicals and supplies directly from Steam Brothers, which Adam Leier said allowed him to monitor the licensees’ business operations and cleaning methods under the Steam Brothers’ system and service mark.

[¶3] According to Adam Leier, the licensees became dissatisfied with their business relationship with Steam Brothers in 1991, informing him they no longer wanted to pay Steam Brothers the on-going franchise fee, and he agreed to eliminate the fee and enter new license agreements with each licensee.  In May 1991, the licensees and Steam Brothers, through Adam Leier, executed separate license agreements, which stated the new agreements terminated and replaced the prior agreements and fully governed the parties’ relationship.  In 1996, Steam Brothers amended its license agreement with Kevin Vetter after legal proceedings about the scope of his designated territory.  As relevant to the issues in this case, Steam Brothers’ 1996 license agreement with Vetter is substantially the same as the 1991 agreements with the other four licensees.

[¶4] The operative license agreements said the respective licensees had been franchisees within the Steam Brothers’ cleaning system under a prior license agreement, and Steam Brothers and the licensees were “desirous of converting the said franchise relationship between the parties to a very different type of business relationship.”  Under the new agreements, the licensees were no longer required to pay Steam Brothers an on-going franchise fee; instead, each licensee paid Steam Brothers a lump sum of $12,000 “as a fee to terminate the prior License Agreement.”  The new agreements did not grant the licensees an ownership or proprietary right in Steam Brothers’ name, service mark, or other material.  Rather, the new agreements said the licensee had the “right to use any designs, devices, marks, service marks, trademarks, trade names, systems slogans or symbols connected with and including the name of Steam Brothers or A-1 Steam Brothers” in the licensee’s designated geographic territory.  The agreements said that in order to protect the goodwill and reputation of “Steam Brothers’ names, marks, other related material, and carpet cleaning and related system,” the licensee “shall conduct the subject business operation in a manner that reflects favorably on such names, marks, other material, and carpet cleaning and related system” and the licensee shall not “in any way be involved in any activity of any kind which negatively [a]ffects [Steam Brothers, its] franchises or affiliates, or the reputations or business activities related thereto.”

[¶5] The new agreements said Adam Leier may be available to consult the licensees for a consulting fee, but the licensees “shall no longer be entitled to any advertising materials, toll free number, visits, training, or other obligations of any kind from” Steam Brothers.  Under the new agreements, for five years from the date of any transfer of the licensees’ business to an unrelated entity or from termination of the agreement for any reason, the licensees agreed not to engage in the same or a substantially similar business.  During the term of the agreements, Steam Brothers and Adam Leier, or their successors, also agreed not to engage in the same or a substantially similar business in the licensees’ designated geographic territories.  The agreements also precluded Steam Brothers from divulging or communicating any information or knowledge about the licensees’ “customer names and addresses, business methods, operating procedures or programs or methods of promotion and sales,” which were communicated to Steam Brothers under the new agreements or under the prior agreements.

[¶6] Under the new agreements, the licensees acknowledged Steam Brothers would suffer irreparable injury if the licensees failed to maintain the standards or requirements regarding Steam Brothers’ name and service mark, and the licensees agreed if they anticipatorily or actually breached the agreement, Steam Brothers was entitled “in addition to any other remedies and damages available: (a) to an injunction to restrain any such violation and/or to compel specific performance . . .

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Related

Dakota Heritage Bank v. Pankonin
2014 ND 150 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2014)
Riedlinger v. Steam Brothers, Inc.
2013 ND 14 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2013 ND 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dakota-heritage-bank-v-pankonin-nd-2013.