Electrical Products Co. v. Combined Communications Corp.

535 F. Supp. 356, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17018
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Mexico
DecidedDecember 9, 1980
DocketCiv. 80-016 HB
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 535 F. Supp. 356 (Electrical Products Co. v. Combined Communications Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Mexico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Electrical Products Co. v. Combined Communications Corp., 535 F. Supp. 356, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17018 (D.N.M. 1980).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

BRATTON, Chief Judge.

This case arises in the aftermath of two contractual transactions between the parties. Trial on the merits has been heard by the Court, and this Memorandum Opinion shall constitute the findings of fact and conclusions of law required by Rule 52 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.

In 1976, a division of defendant Combined Communications Corporation (CCC) called Electrical Products Signs, Inc., (EPSI) was engaged in the electrical sign business in New Mexico. Lionel Specter was general manager of EPSI.

The electrical sign business involves the manufacture, sale, and maintenance of electrically illuminated signs that advertise or identify business establishments. Many businesses find it economically burdensome to purchase electrical signs outright, so a system of leasing has developed in the industry under which customers lease signs from the manufacturer and pay, over the period of the lease, rent adequate to compensate the manufacturer for the cost of producing the sign, maintaining it, and financing the lease. Some profit is also derived from the rental. At the end of the

*358 lease period, the sign is removed unless the customer elects to renew the lease or purchase the sign. Because a sign has essentially been paid for during the initial lease, rent payments from lease renewals form an important element of profit in the electrical sign industry.

CCC desired to phase out its electrical sign operations in New Mexico. Specter and some associates were interested in purchasing this part of CCC’s business and operating it independently of the parent corporation. Specter lacked capital to purchase the entire operation at once, so a scheme was devised under which it was contemplated that part of the assets of EPSI would be transferred to Specter’s group immediately, while the remainder could be acquired over time. Accordingly, Specter’s group formed Electrical Products Company of New Mexico (EPCO), the plaintiff in this case, and in May of 1976 CCC and EPCO entered into their first agreement (the 1976 Agreement). Under this agreement, EPCO purchased the real estate, supplies, and equipment of EPSI. CCC retained ownership of the signs themselves and of all lease arrangements with its customers. Paragraph 15 of the agreement further provided:

(i) Lease Contracts — ... . Buyer [EPCO] agrees to perform all the service as may be required under the terms of the specific lease contracts in consideration for the monthly payment by Seller [CCC] of 25% of the gross current monthly billing. At the end of the term of any lease contract, Buyer will negotiate for the renewal of the lease contracts, and, if renewed thereupon, pay to Seller a sum equal to 25% of the aggregate rentals for the entire renewal period at the time of such renewal for the purchase of said lease contract and the display covered by it.

Thus EPCO could anticipate a gradual takeover, through renewal and purchase, of most of the signs and leases retained by CCC, which constituted a substantial portion of the Albuquerque market.

Both parties began to operate under the 1976 Agreement: EPCO performed maintenance on leased' signs and received payments from CCC; EPCO also renewed leases with CCC’s customers and, after paying 25 percent of the anticipated rentals to CCC, assumed ownership of the signs and leases involved. EPCO departed from the usual industry practice of renewing leases for a three- to five-year period and renewed the CCC leases for a one-year term. In this way it was able to purchase the renewed leases and associated signs from CCC with a smaller capital outlay than if the leases had been renewed for the customary term. CCC did not challenge this practice; indeed, neither party questioned the adequacy of the other’s performance.

In the summer of 1978, Jeff Lawlis, operating through Lenox Investments, Inc., became interested in purchasing the signs and leases still owned by CCC. Under the 1976 Agreement, CCC was free to make such a sale.

Lawlis was unaware that the 1976 Agreement gave EPCO rights relating to maintenance of the signs and renewal of the leases. Several months of negotiations between Lawlis and CCC culminated in mid-August of 1978 with an offer by Lawlis to purchase the signs and leases for $325,000. Throughout the negotiations, Lawlis was never informed by CCC of the terms of the 1976 Agreement; he believed CCC could transfer unrestricted ownership of the signs and leases to him.

While negotiating with Lawlis, CCC’s officers resolved to offer EPCO a right of first refusal to purchase the signs and leases on the terms offered by Lawlis, although CCC was not required to do so. Consequently, CCC’s vice president and assistant counsel, Quinn Williams, began communicating with EPCO by telephone and through the mail concerning the proposed sale.

On August 19, 1978, Williams sent Specter a letter informing him that a tentative offer had been made to CCC and requesting that EPCO refrain from negotiating lease renewals under the 1976 Agreement until *359 further notice. The letter also stated that CCC would offer EPCO a chance to match the offer if CCC should decide to accept it. On August 21, Williams wrote to Specter to inform him of the terms of Lawlis’s offer and to extend formally a right of first refusal to EPCO.

Specter and his associates feared that a sale by CCC to a third party would undermine the 1976 Agreement. Their concern was aggravated by CCC, whose officers had decided as a deliberate strategy not to refer to the 1976 Agreement unless EPCO raised the issue. But Specter’s group did not question CCC about the 1976 Agreement; instead they decided that EPCO should acquire the signs and leases that CCC planned to sell.

On August 28, 1978, EPCO exercised its right of first refusal, subject to its determination that a bona fide offer had in fact been made to CCC. Williams sent Specter a copy of Lawlis’s written offer to CCC, with the offeror’s name obliterated. “Lenox Investments” remained legible, however, and Specter was able to determine that Lawlis was the person behind the offer. Specter then arranged a bank loan for $325,000 and flew to Phoenix to consummate the deal. In Phoenix Specter met with Williams on September 1 and signed the second agreement between EPCO and CCC (the 1978 Agreement). At this meeting Specter first mentioned to Williams that he though EPCO was entitled to a price reduction because under the 1976 Agreement it already had some interest in the signs and leases. But when Williams asserted that he was not authorized to bargain at that time, Specter agreed to the price demanded.

Under the 1978 Agreement, EPCO paid $325,000 for CCC’s remaining signs and leases, receiving CCC’s entire interest in them and assuming all of CCC’s obligations regarding them. Immediately after the agreement was executed, the parties stopped making payments to each other under the 1976 Agreement. Fifteen months later, EPCO filed this suit.

EPCO set forth three counts in its complaint.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
535 F. Supp. 356, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/electrical-products-co-v-combined-communications-corp-nmd-1980.