English & Sons, Inc. v. Straw Hat Restaurants, Inc.

176 F. Supp. 3d 904, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 44803, 2016 WL 1305946
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedApril 1, 2016
DocketCase No.15-cv-01382-LB
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 176 F. Supp. 3d 904 (English & Sons, Inc. v. Straw Hat Restaurants, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
English & Sons, Inc. v. Straw Hat Restaurants, Inc., 176 F. Supp. 3d 904, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 44803, 2016 WL 1305946 (N.D. Cal. 2016).

Opinion

SUMMARY-JUDGMENT ORDER

[Re: EÓF Nos. 55, 60, 61]

LAUREL BEELER, United States Magistrate Judge .

INTRODUCTION

This case involves a falling out among members of the Straw Hat Pizza restaurant chain. The plaintiffs are those members of the Straw Hat chain who dissented from a majority vote to dissolve the existing company and move Straw Hat from a cooperative to a franchise model. The defendants are Straw Hat members who either voted to dissolve the company, or at least honored the results of that vote, and converted their restaurants into Straw Hat franchises. The parties’ essential dispute is over who has the right to control the cooperative (the entity that elected to dissolve itself) and its assets — especially its intellectual property (like trademarks, operating manuals, recipes, and so on). The parties have filed a series of summary-judgment motions on many (though not all) of their respective claims and counterclaims. The court’s central holding is that, as a matter .of law, the plaintiffs had no power after the June 2011 dissolution vote to decide that they were the cooperative’s “only remaining members,” or to take the actions that they did: such as electing a new board of directors, revoking the dissolution vote, and transferring the company’s intellectual property to a new entity that only they controlled. The court holds that all such acts by the plaintiffs are null. The court orders the plaintiffs to roll back everything that they did as a putatively revamped cooperative after June 2011; holds that the cooperative’s duly authorized board of directors is the board as constituted on June 15, 2011; and [907]*907directs the parties to inform the court of the practical steps that are needed to restore the previous status- quo. The court sets out below its holdings on the parties’ specific claims.

STATEMENT

1. Introduction: The parties and the basic dispute

The material facts of this case are undisputed. Indeed, almost all the facts of this case are undisputed. This lawsuit is not about factual disagreement so much as the legal effects of the parties’ acts. This case involves a dispute among members of the Straw Hat Pizza restaurant chain. Since 1987, Straw Hat restaurants have operated as .individual members of Straw Hat Cooperative Corporation (“SHCC”). In June 2011, a majority of SHCC’s members voted to dissolve the cooperative as part of changing the company’s business model from a cooperative to a franchise system. A group of SHCC members who voted against dissolution — the six plaintiffs here1 — challenged that decision. They sued to enjoin the dissolution and then, after concluding that they were the “only remaining members” of SHCC, purported to elect a new SHCC board of directors. This revamped SHCC voted to transfer its intellectual property to a new company that the plaintiffs had created for that purpose: Straw Hat Intellectual Property Holding LLC (“SHIPH”).2 SHIPH then recorded a notice of assignment with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office memorializing the purported transfer of the Straw - Hat registered trademarks from SHCC to SHIPH.3 The present dispute asks whether the plaintiffs could rightly do what they did, and at its core seeks to determine the legal, status of SHCC and its property.

(This may be the best place to take care of some housekeeping. First, all the business entities involved here are California companies. Second, SHCC is named as both a plaintiff and a defendant in this case; both sides claim to be the rightful SHCC directors, with power to control the company and its assets. Third, the relevant events here involve several corporate votes. No one disputes the procedural validity of any such vote: no one argues that a ballot was flawed, for example, or a vote wrongly counted. The parties challenge each other’s acts on substantive legal grounds, but the discussion need not bog down in the procedural aspects of the several corporate votes.)

2. Longstanding plans to change to a franchise model

It is undisputed that, before the falling out in 2011, SHCC had for some time considered a move away from the cooperative structure to a franchise model. The parties describe franchising as providing a vehicle for the Straw Hat chain to grow. To this end,' in 2006' SHCC’s board of directors formed Straw Hat Restaurants, Inc. (“SHRI”), to serve as the franchisor [908]*908company.4 SHRI began offering Straw Hat franchises two years later.5

In 2008, SHCC’s members amended the cooperative’s bylaws. Of the bylaws adopted in 2008, the following two are among the most salient for present purposes. The first addresses how SHCC members can convert to franchises under SHRI:

Sale or Conversion of Existing Restaurants. A Member' may sell, transfer or convert a restaurant to a Franchise. If the Member chooses to convert the store into a Franchise, then such action will cause that Member to lose that share of the [cooperative] Corporation associated with that restaurant.6

The second ensures that SHRI — and, by extension, its franchisees — would be able to use Straw Hat’s intellectual property:

Licenses. The, Corporation [ie., SHCC] shall license to SHRI... [the] intellectual property and other assets of [SHCC]... including, but not limited to... the Corporation’s logo, trademarks, other intellectual property, systems, processes, and procedures.7

The defendants have produced the 2008 “System License Agreement” that apparently put this last bylaw into effect.8 Under this agreement, SHCC granted SHRI a “perpetual[ ]” license to use the Straw Hat intellectual property in the franchise side of the business. More specifically, the license grants SHRI the use of, “All intellectual property.. .owned by [SHCC] and used in the operation of a Straw Hat [restaurant] ... ”; this principally included the “trademarks and service marks associated with Straw Hat Restaurants,” “store manuals ... describing the manner and method[ ] of building and operating a Straw Hat Restaurant,” and the Internet domain name “strawhatpizza.com.”9 The plaintiffs “dispute the validity of [this] license,”10 but that dispute is immaterial to the present analysis! The license is useful for showing (in more detail than the 2008 bylaw) the intended relationship between SHCC and the franchising SHRI side of the business. The license also shows — what no one really denies; and what other evidence equally proves — that, before the company’s breakdown in 2011, everyone understood that SHCC owned the Straw Hat intellectual property.

3. The 2011 dissolution vote — Members convert to SHRI franchises — The plaintiffs sue and then form a new SHCC — Events in 2012

This dispute grows most immediately from events that happened in and after June 2011. In that month, a majority of SHCC members voted to “voluntarily... wind up and dissolve SHCC.”11 Twenty-three of SHCC’s 42 members voted to dissolve the cooperative.12 (Fifteen members voted against dissolution, while three abstained or did not vote.13) The plaintiffs voted against dissolution.14 The majority [909]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 F. Supp. 3d 904, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 44803, 2016 WL 1305946, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/english-sons-inc-v-straw-hat-restaurants-inc-cand-2016.