Fiberlok, Inc., Counter-Defendant-Appellant v. Lms Enterprises, Inc., Counter-Claimant-Appellee

976 F.2d 958, 1992 WL 302419
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 7, 1993
Docket91-4781
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 976 F.2d 958 (Fiberlok, Inc., Counter-Defendant-Appellant v. Lms Enterprises, Inc., Counter-Claimant-Appellee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fiberlok, Inc., Counter-Defendant-Appellant v. Lms Enterprises, Inc., Counter-Claimant-Appellee, 976 F.2d 958, 1992 WL 302419 (5th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

LITTLE, District Judge:

Fiberlok, Inc., the plaintiff-appellant, is the licensor of bonded fiber cushioning processes and products. Fiberlok entered into two agreements with LMS Enterprises, Inc., the defendant-appellee. The first of these agreements was a supply contract in *960 which LMS agreed to supply Fiberlok with resin. In addition there was a milling agreement between the parties under which LMS was to mill resin for Fiberlok’s licensees. In conjunction with these agreements, Fiberlok advanced funds and loaned equipment to LMS.

On 9 August 1988, Fiberlok commenced this action seeking the return of equipment held by LMS and damages for conversion of resin, resin overcharges and negligent destruction of equipment. LMS counterclaimed stating causes of actions for trade infringement, fraudulent inducement, and breach of the supply contract. The district court denied Fiberlok’s demands and ruled in favor of LMS on its counterclaims. The district court reasoned that Fiberlok fraudulently induced LMS to enter into the contract and that Fiberlok made several material breaches of the contract. The district court ruled that LMS was entitled to recover slightly over $460,000 for lost profits over the contract period, subject to an offset of slightly over $66,000. Accordingly, the district court rendered judgment for LMS in the amount of $406,727, together with pre-judgment and post-judgment interest. Fiberlok now brings this appeal. Fi-berlok does not contest the district court’s findings on liability. Rather, this appeal concerns the district court’s determination of quantum bound principally to the issue of lost profits. We affirm the judgment of the district court.

FACTS

Because the issues on appeal are related to the calculation of damages only, the facts in this case are for the most part undisputed, but painfully complicated. Therefore, this court adopts the district court’s findings of fact as they relate to liability, and only those findings of fact pertinent to quantum, the issue of this appeal, are discussed.

Fiberlok, Inc. (“Fiberlok”), is a Tennessee corporation engaged in the business of fiberbonding. It maintains its principal office and place of business in Memphis, Tennessee and is authorized to do business in the state of Texas. George Buck is the chairman and chief executive officer of Fi-berlok.

Fiberlok owns patents on a process for making nonwoven pads, batts and other structures that employ certain thermoplastic resins that are distributed in the fibers that make up the structure. The fibers are subsequently heated, caused to melt, and then refrozen or cooled so that the structure holds its desired final configuration (the “Fiberlok process”). The Fiberlok process is used to manufacture a variety of textile based products such as the inside' of a mattress or the cushion portion of a chair or car seat. These various kinds of cushioning are referred to as cushion batts, pads, or mats. Manufacturers that produce structures using the Fiberlok process compete against manufacturers that produce nonwoven pads and batts by other processes and also against manufacturers who make alternatives such as foam rubber. Therefore, Fiberlok has an interest in assuring the availability of thermoplastic resins at prices that make the structures produced with the Fiberlok process an economical alternative to other forms of processing batts and pads.

LMS Enterprises, Inc. (“LMS”), is a Texas corporation, engaged in the business of manufacturing drilling fluid and dry powdered resins for polyvinyl chloride (PVC) pipe and fiberbonding applications. LMS maintained its principal office and place of business in Longview, Texas. Hans Krier, Heinz Krier and Egon Dangel were the principals of LMS.

In November of 1985, LMS and Fiberlok began discussing the formation of a resin supply contract. A draft of the contract provided that LMS’s total output of micron-ized resin under the FLEX-LOCK designation would be sold to Fiberlok. The draft further stated that “Fiberlok estimate[d] that annual resin use by its current licensees [would] be not less than 3,000,000 pounds after introduction and acceptance in 1986 and that resin use by current and new customers and (sic) [might] exceed 6,000,-000 pounds in 1987 depending on satisfactory price.” In other words, Fiberlok’s annual resin needs to satisfy its contractual *961 obligations were 3,000,000 pounds. If business improved, the need could double.

In late 1985, Dow Chemical Company (Dow), LMS’s supplier of SARAN, Dow’s trade name for its resin blends, began to reduce LMS’s supply. By the end of February 1986, LMS could no longer purchase desirable resin from Dow. Fiberlok was informed of the loss of supply. LMS searched for another source of supply. This absence of a reliable source of resin caused LMS and Fiberlok to suspend their contract discussions.

Both LMS and Fiberlok experimented with resins that could possibly serve as alternatives to Dow’s product, and exchanged or discussed the results with each other. In addition, LMS communicated with a variety of brokers and suppliers of resins in hopes of finding a suitable resin for fiberbonding. LMS called Joyce Tor-regrossa, a broker, who operated Surplus Chemicals Marketing, Inc. (“Surplus Chemicals”). Dangel and Krier, employees of LMS, had been buying off-grade PVC from Torregrossa since early 1981. Continuing its search, LMS obtained a sample of VSSS/VSSP, a solution vinyl resin from the producer, Union Carbide Corporation (“Union Carbide” or “UCC”). LMS tested and approved use of the material as it was relatively easy to grind and melt.

In July of 1986, Fiberlok concurred with LMS as to the utility of the VSSS/VSSP resin. The parties agreed to market the newly discovered product as Flexlok 052. With a new source of resin located, LMS and Fiberlok decided to renew their contract negotiations. A binding contract was confected. The district court found that the contract required Fiberlok to purchase at least 3,000,000 pounds of resin per year in twelve monthly installments of 250,000 pounds, and that under the terms of the contract, LMS would be Fiberlok’s exclusive supplier of resin.

Post contract, LMS suspicioned that Fi-berlok was not purchasing resin amounts as promised. In November 1986, LMS officials complained to Buck that Fiberlok was violating the contract by not dealing with LMS as Fiberlok’s exclusive supplier of resin. In a spirit of cohesiveness, the parties entered into a milling agreement in which LMS promised to be Fiberlok’s exclusive miller. Milling is a process of mixing and blending resins and grinding the mixture into a fine powder referred to as mi-cronized resin. The parties agreed that LMS would be paid $0.125 per pound for milling Flexlok. Buck intended to have LMS mill the resin that Fiberlok had purchased from an outside supplier. Following this agreement, in early December 1986, Buck purchased approximately 210,-000 pounds of resin from Heller & Co. (“Heller”). Heller is a resin broker, not a manufacturer of resin. The Heller resin, referred to as MC20 and MC29, was delivered to LMS for milling.

Until December of 1986 LMS had been purchasing the Union Carbide produced resin from Surplus Chemicals, a broker. In December, LMS began having cash flow problems. Fiberlok and Surplus Chemicals, through their respective agents Buck and Torregrossa, began communicating directly about their material.

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Bluebook (online)
976 F.2d 958, 1992 WL 302419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fiberlok-inc-counter-defendant-appellant-v-lms-enterprises-inc-ca5-1993.