EASY PAY SOLUTIONS INC v. TURNER

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedJanuary 10, 2025
Docket2:24-cv-00085
StatusUnknown

This text of EASY PAY SOLUTIONS INC v. TURNER (EASY PAY SOLUTIONS INC v. TURNER) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
EASY PAY SOLUTIONS INC v. TURNER, (D. Me. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

DISTRICT OF MAINE

EASY PAY SOLUTIONS, INC., ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) No. 2:24-cv-00085-SDN ) JAMES TURNER d/b/a ) COACTIVE PARTNERS, ) ) Defendant. )

ORDER INTRODUCTION This case arises from a contractual dispute between Easy Pay Solutions (“EPS”), an electronic payment processing business, and James Turner (doing business as CoActive Partners), an agent who marketed EPS’s services for a fee. For nearly seventeen years, the parties operated pursuant to a written agreement (the “Agreement”). ECF No. 10 at 8–9, ¶¶ 5–6. EPS terminated the Agreement effective June 28, 2023. Id. at 11, ¶¶ 16– 17. EPS contends the terms of the Agreement require EPS to pay CoActive for only two years after termination of the Agreement. ECF No. 1 at 4, ¶ 18. CoActive argues a separate document, titled “Clarification,” validly modifies the original Agreement and entitles CoActive to payment in perpetuity. ECF No. 10 at 11, ¶ 14. EPS brought this action by filing a single Complaint, simultaneously petitioning the Court to compel arbitration of the parties’ dispute pursuant to an arbitration clause in the Agreement and requesting a declaratory judgment to determine the meaning of the Clarification. ECF No. 1. CoActive answered and counterclaimed for declaratory relief and breach of contract. ECF No. 10. EPS then moved to dismiss those counterclaims and to compel arbitration. ECF No. 15. For the reasons below, the Court grants EPS’s petition to compel arbitration and dismisses the case. BACKGROUND1

I. Factual Background EPS is an electronic payment processing business providing credit card transaction hardware and software to merchants. ECF No. 10 at 8, ¶ 4. When EPS customers collect credit card payments, they pay EPS a fee. Id. at 9, ¶ 7. James Turner is an independent contractor who, under the CoActive moniker as its sole proprietor, sought “to provide credit card processing services to health care providers and recurring payment merchants.” ECF 10-1, at 1. Turner also occasionally worked as an employee at EPS. ECF No. 10 at 9, ¶ 6. On June 29, 2006, CoActive and EPS signed the Agreement under which CoActive would market EPS’s products and services to merchants. Id. at 8, ¶ 5. Pursuant to the Agreement, if CoActive successfully solicited a merchant for EPS, EPS would pay CoActive a portion of the revenue the merchant

generated. Id. at 9, ¶ 8. Either the Agreement or “a separate agreement or understanding”

1 I have drawn these facts from CoActive’s countercomplaint. Motions to compel arbitration are typically resolved under the summary judgment standard. Air-Con, Inc. v. Daikin Applied Latin Am., LLC, 21 F.4th 168, 176 (1st Cir. 2021). When the parties do not submit evidentiary materials, Air-Con instructs courts to “evaluate the motion to compel arbitration pursuant to the Rule 12(b)(6) standard.” Id. at 177 n.10. In an unusual procedural posture such as this one, see infra pp. 6–11, it’s not clear what standard the Court should apply. Because EPS prevails on its motion to compel under any standard, the Court proceeds under the standard most favorable to CoActive, taking the facts alleged in its countercomplaint as true. The Court notes it would reach the same result if it relied exclusively on facts from EPS’s Complaint that CoActive admits to, particularly ¶¶ 11, 12, 13, 20, 21, and 27, which establish that EPS and CoActive entered into the Agreement, the Agreement directed them to resolve disputes under the Agreement through arbitration, and the Clarification purported to amend the Agreement. ECF No. 1. determined the percentage each party was entitled to. Id. The parties referred to this process as “boarding” a merchant. See id. at 9, ¶ 8. CoActive’s business with EPS did not always follow the standard form; some transactions were more complex. CoActive occasionally solicited independent software vendors (“ISVs”), which are not merchants. In such cases, EPS and CoActive would work

together to integrate EPS’s payment software into ISVs’ software. Then, when merchants—mostly healthcare providers—contracted to use ISVs’ software, the merchants would separately board with EPS for its integrated payment processing system. Id. at 9, ¶ 9. A. EPS Allegedly Cuts CoActive Out In 2018, an ISV named InSync Healthcare Solutions (“InSync”) integrated with EPS and began boarding merchants onto EPS’s payment system. InSync and EPS did not form a written agreement determining the revenue split,2 but for the next five years they operated under the “customary split”: 50% to EPS, 30% to InSync, and 20% to CoActive. Id. at 10, ¶ 12. In December 2023, EPS “renegotiated” the split with InSync and agreed in writing that InSync would receive 60% of revenue, with the potential to increase to 80%.

Id. CoActive alleges EPS then “began cutting CoActive out of the split for all new [m]erchants boarded by EPS through InSync.” Id. Further still, CoActive alleges that after terminating the Agreement, EPS stopped paying CoActive its share for “all new [m]erchants boarded by EPS” through any ISV that CoActive had solicited. Accordingly, CoActive claims EasyPay breached the Agreement. Id. at 13, ¶ 24.

2 CoActive alleges on April 29, 2018, CoActive and EPS agreed to an amendment to the Agreement, (“Amendment”) “which established the commission split for CoActive with respect to certain ISVs.” ECF No. 10 at 10, ¶ 13. B. CoActive and EPS Negotiate the “Clarification” In June 2018, Turner (the sole proprietor of CoActive) approached EPS to negotiate potentially returning to his occasional position as an EPS employee. Turner sought retirement benefits but, according to CoActive, EPS “decided that it would be more cost-effective” to retain CoActive as a contractor “by offering CoActive perpetual residual

income from the [m]erchants boarded by CoActive with EPS.” ECF 10 at 11, ¶ 14. This arrangement “was offered in lieu of the requested retirement benefits.” Id. CoActive alleges EPS and CoActive memorialized this deal in a document titled “Clarification to Agent Agreement between Easy Pay Solutions (EPS) and Coactive Partners, Jim Turner (Distributor) dated June 29, 2006.”3 ECF 10-3. It reads in whole: Section 7.3 Assignment. In the event that EPS sells the company or sells or assigns its merchant portfolio, or purchaser or assignee sells or moves Distributor’s portfolio, Distributor’s commission under this Agreement will continue unchanged. Purchaser or assignee agrees to continue paying Distributor’s commission as long as Distributor’s merchants and sub- distributors’ merchants are processing transactions. In the event that Distributor’s merchants are migrated to a different bank, processor, or software platform, Distributor will continue to receive all commissions as defined under the Agreement dated June 29, 2006 and the Amendment dated April 29, 2018. The intent of this Amendment is to protect Distributor’s future commissions in spite of organizational or any other changes that may occur, such that Distributor will reap the future benefits of his efforts.

ECF No. 10-3. The Clarification is dated June 15, 2018, and appears to be signed by the former president of EPS.4 CoActive claims “the Clarification was intended to provide for perpetual payment” to CoActive. ECF No. 10 at 12, ¶ 19. In its first counterclaim for declaratory relief, CoActive asks this Court to determine that “the

3 The Agreement is dated June 29, 2006. ECF No. 10-1 at 1. 4 The signatory’s name is not printed. However, EPS explains in its motion to dismiss that the former president of EPS sent the document. ECF No. 15 at 2. And, though the signature is not completely legible, it matches the signature of the same former president who signed the Agreement. Compare ECF No. 10-1 at 14, with ECF No. 10-3 at 1.

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EASY PAY SOLUTIONS INC v. TURNER, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/easy-pay-solutions-inc-v-turner-med-2025.