foti fuels v. kurrle

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedDecember 28, 2023
Docket326-5-09 wncv
StatusPublished

This text of foti fuels v. kurrle (foti fuels v. kurrle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
foti fuels v. kurrle, (Vt. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT

SUPERIOR COURT crea ye A LU CIVIL DIVISION Washington Unit TNS FEO -H OA Docket # 326-5-09 Wnev

FOTI FUELS, INC, and ROBERT A.FOTE 6 = | Plaintiffs HO

¥.

KURRLE CORPORATION, PAYJACK, LLC, and JAMES J. KURRLE, Defendants

FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW, AND ORDER

This matter came before the Court for final hearing on the merits on November 24 and 25, 2014 and January 6, 2015 on remaining claims following remand from the Vermont Supreme Court as set forth in Foti Fuels, Inc. vy. Kurrle Corp., 2013 VT 111. Plaintiffs are represented by Attorney Jennifer E. MacDonald, Defendants are represented by Attorney L. Brooke Dingledine.

The claims on remand included the Defendant Kurrle Corporation’s counterclaim against Plaintiff Robert A. Foti for breach of a Non-Competition Agreement and claims of breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing. Oral rulings were made on the record on November 25" resulting in judgment for Plaintiffs on Defendants’ breach of covenant claims. This decision addresses the remaining claim, which is Defendant Kurrle Corporation’s counterclaim for breach of contract related to the Non-Competition Agreement.

Findings of Fact

Beginning in the 1970’s, Robert A. Foti owned several businesses related to sale and distribution of fuel in central Vermont, which he operated from a facility on Route 2 in Montpelier. As of 1999, he was planning a move to Arizona and entered into an arrangement with James and Lindsey Kurrle, a younger couple looking to buy a business. James Kurrle came to work for Mr. Foti as a business manager and in order to learn the business. The plan was that after Mr. Kurrle had received adequate training in managing the businesses, Mr. Foti would sell his business interests to the Kurrles. Mr. Kurrle began to work as Mr. Foti’s manager in 2000 pursuant to this plan.

In 2003, Mr. Foti sold the Kurrles some, but not all, of his business interests. Just prior to the sale, he owned the following businesses: 1. Acorporation entitled Foti Fuels, Inc. (FFD) that was a distributorship of gasoline products. It bought gasoline from major suppliers and distributed it wholesale to gas stations in Central Vermont;

2. Acorporation entitled Foti Fuels Enterprises, Inc. (FFED) that owned three tractor trucks and permits and was a contract hauler of petroleum products. FFI paid FFEI to transport the fuel that FFI sold and delivered to gas stations;

3. A gas station and convenience store on Route 2 that sold gas, kerosene, and on-road diesel from pumps; and

4, Four bulk tanks at the Route 2 facility that were leased to Ultramar, a home

- heating company; for the storage of home heating fuel.

Mr, Foti sold to the Kurrles (a) assets that included the real estate, gas station, convenience store, and bulk tanks, and (b) the stock of FFEI, the transportation company. He retained the gas distributorship business, FFI, which he continued to own, and which Mr. Kurrle continued to manage under a separate post-closing agreement that included other terms, such as a right of first refusal to purchase FFI and an agreement not to compete. The Kurrles owned and ran the transportation company, which they renamed Kurrle Transport, and the gas station, convenience store, and bulk tanks.

Pursuant to the terms of the post-closing agreement, Mr. Foti executed a Non- Competition Agreement in which he agreed that for five years from March 1, 2004, he would not do two things:

1. “not directly, or indirectly, as owner, officer, director, employee or otherwise, engage in or be interested in any business which is in competition with the business of retail sale of gasoline and/or the operation of a convenience store by the KURRLE CORPORATION, its successors or assigns.” This was applicable within a 10 mile radius of the purchased property on Route 2 in Montpelier.

2. “not manage, finance, own or control any interest in any entity or person engaged in the transportation of petroleum products in the states of Maine, Vermont and New Hampshire.”

Consideration for the whole five-year agreement was identified in the agreement itself as the sum of $30,000. The parties agreed on and incorporated a payment schedule that was requested by Mr. Foti as advantageous to him for income tax purposes as it spread his receipt of income out over the five years. Accordingly, payments of $6,000.00 each were made to Mr. Foti on the following dates: March 1, 2005, March 1, 2006, March 1, 2007, March 1, 2008, and April 9, 2009.

After purchase, the Kurrles added the sale of off-road diesel to the other products they sold at the gas station: gasoline, kerosene, and on-road diesel. On-road diesel is used primarily by certain types of trucks. Off-road diesel is used by large pieces of equipment such as excavators. In 2005, approximately a year into the non-compete period, Mr. Foti urged Mr. Kurrle to expand into the home heating oil business. Mr. Foti had previously been in the home heating business himself, but had sold that portion of the business in 1997 to Ultramar. Now he urged Mr. Kurrle to get into it. Mr. Kurrle did not want to do so. The Kurrles had undertaken considerable debt to finance their purchase already and did not want to undertake more risk. Furthermore, they did not want to go into competition with Ultramar, which provided revenues to Kurrle businesses through lease payments for fuel storage and by contracting for transport of Ultramar wholesale fuel. They did not wish to lose the Ultramar transportation contract by competing with it. Mr. Foti brought up the ~ proposal séveral times, and was not pleased with Mr. Kurrle’s unwillingtiéss to go into the home heating oil business.

Ellery Packard was the principal of EE Packard Enterprises, Inc., a construction company in the area that was engaged primarily in excavation work. The business bought gasoline at the pumps at the Kurrle station. It purchased diesel for its equipment by filling skid tanks on the back of trucks. The skid tanks could then be placed at work sites for refueling excavators. Mr. Packard decided around 2006 to build his own fuel distribution facility, at least in part so that he could directly meet his own company’s equipment refueling needs but the business plan was broader than that. In order to justify the costs of the bulk tanks, he included in his business plan the delivery to the end user of home heating oil, on-road diesel, and off-road diesel.

He created Packard Fuels LLC, which sought zoning approval in 2006 for a facility 2.2 miles away from the Kurrle property. The plan was for an office, a vehicle shop, storage space, and a fuel distribution center to include four storage tanks for both on-road and off-road diesel, kerosene, and home heating oil.

Beginning in 2006 Ellery Packard consulted regularly with Mr. Foti, whom he had known for years and who took an active interest in the project. Mr. Foti began serving as an informal consultant and mentor with respect to the development of both the home heating and diesel fuel businesses. His role was to help get the business up and running. He reviewed plans for the storage tanks, talked with financing banks to provide assurance of the availability of fuel (through FFI as supplier), helped set up the computer program and the general ledger, talked with customers, provided training in ticketing and monitoring inventory, advised on pricing, set up the “degree-day clock,” dispatched and drove trucks, and provided whatever help Mr. Packard needed. He was active in all phases of running the business. Starting in October of 2007, Mr. Foti was formally an employee of Packard Fuels LLC.

Some of Mr. Foti’s work related to Packard Fuels’s home heating business, and the Non-Competition Agreement did not prevent Mr. Foti from work in a home heating business.

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