Heartland Payment Systems, LLC v. Inteam Associates, LLC

171 A.3d 544
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedAugust 17, 2017
Docket582, 2016
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 171 A.3d 544 (Heartland Payment Systems, LLC v. Inteam Associates, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heartland Payment Systems, LLC v. Inteam Associates, LLC, 171 A.3d 544 (Del. 2017).

Opinion

SEITZ, Justice:

In 2010, Congress enacted the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act which made major changes to the national school lunch program. The Act required the United States Department of Agriculture (the “USDA”) to develop new regulations to take effect in 2012 to address new nutritional guidelines. In 2011, Heartland Payment Systems, Inc. (“Heartland”), a credit card processing company, wanted to expand its school operations. To pursue this strategy, Heartland purchased some of the assets of School Link Technologies, Inc. (“SL-Tech”). SL-Tech marketed software products to schools to manage their foodservice operations.

Through the purchase of SL-Tech, Heartland acquired WebSMARTT, a software program that allowed schools to monitor school meal nutrition through point of sale, free and reduced meal eligibility tracking, menu planning, nutrient analysis, and recordkeeping. Carved out of the transaction, however, was a consulting division of SL-Tech called inTEAM and its software, Decision Support Toolkit (“DST”), which was still in development at the time of the transaction. inTEAM was designing DST for school districts as a complementary product to WebSMARTT. It was intended to collect menu plan data from WebSMARTT and similar applications and then use the data to model the effect of menu plans on staffing, equipment, and other costs.

The parties executed three contracts involving Heartland, SL-Tech, and SL-Tech’s CEO, Lawrence Goodman. The contracts contained non-compete, non-solicitation, exclusivity, cross-marketing, and support obligations. Through the carve-out of SL-Tech’s inTEAM business, the parties agreed that inTEAM could continue with the “inTEAM Business as currently conducted” after closing.

With the transaction in the rear-view mirror, the parties quickly lost sight of their post-closing contractual obligations. inTEAM developed a new software program module, Menu Compliance Tool+, with overlapping capabilities with Web-SMARTT — specifically, nutrient analysis and menu planning. Goodman tried to solicit one of Heartland’s customers. Heartland paired with one of inTEAM’s biggest competitors to submit a bid to provide software to the Texas Department of Agriculture.

The disputes eventually found their way to the Court of Chancery through breach of contract claims and counterclaims. After a four-day trial, the Court of Chancery found inTEAM did not breach any of its contractual obligations, but Goodman and *547 Heartland had breached certain of theirs. According to the court, although Web-SMARTT and the Menu Compliance Tool+ module both analyzed nutrients, the USDA approved each of the software programs for nutrient analysis under different standards. Thus, they did not compete with each other. The Court of Chancery also found that the carve-out for the “in-TEAM Business as currently conducted” allowed inTEAM to develop software with menu planning functionality — the same functionality also present in the Web-SMARTT software program.

Turning to Heartland, the Court of Chancery found Heartland breached the non-compete and exclusivity provisions of the co-marketing agreement by working with a known inTEAM competitor. The court decided that Heartland’s breach began on March 17, 2014 and ran until September 8, 2015, and thus extended Heartland’s non-compete restrictions for an additional eighteen months. For Goodman, the court determined that Goodman breached a non-solicitation provision in the consulting agreement by soliciting one of Heartland’s customers. As the court held, Goodman’s breach ran from July 24, 2014 to December 15, 2014, and thus the court extended Goodman’s non-solicitation period by an additional six months. The Court of Chancery also ordered Goodman to pay Heartland damages equal to the salary he was paid while he was in breach, totaling $50,003.01. The Court of Chancery did not award inTEAM attorneys’ fees, finding that a cap on liability in the co-marketing agreement precluded the fee award. Both parties appealed.

We reverse the Court of Chancery’s finding that Goodman and inTEAM did not breach their non-compete obligations under the various agreements, but otherwise affirm the court’s decision. Goodman was prohibited from providing any competitive services or products or engaging in any business that SL-Tech conducted as of the closing date. inTEAM had similar restrictions. At the time of the transaction SL-Tech had a software product, Web-SMARTT, that was part of SL-Tech’s business as of the closing date that performed nutrient analysis and menu planning. inTEAM did not. At closing, in-TEAM’s business was data analytics and modeling, not school lunch program data generation and menu planning- for USDA compliance purposes. The transaction agreements prohibited inTEAM from developing a software product that competed head to head with WebSMARTT, a product Heartland paid SL-Tech $17 million to acquire. By changing direction and developing Menu Compliance Tool+ to perform nutrient analysis and menu planning, Goodman and inTEAM competed directly with WebSMARTT and breached the transaction agreements.

As for the remaining issues, the Court of Chancery properly found that Heartland breached its contractual obligations by collaborating with an inTEAM competitor, and Goodman breached by soliciting a customer of Heartland. The court also did not abuse its discretion when it required an extension of the non-competes and assessed damages against Goodman.

We therefore affirm in part and reverse in part the decision of the Court of Chancery. We remand the case to the Court of Chancery to exercise its broad discretion to craft a remedy sufficient to compensate Heartland for Goodman’s and inTEAM’s breaches of the transaction agreements.

I.

A

Since Congress passed the National School Lunch Act in 1946, the USDA has *548 regulated and provided federal subsidies to state school lunch ■ programs. From the mid-1940s into the 1990s, regulations fo-: cused on four meal components: meat, vegetables/fruit, grains, and milk. In thé mid-1990s, . regulations shifted to aged-based nutrient targets, which required schools to track extensive amounts of data to obtain their subsidies. Software developers designed programs to assist school districts in managing the data and submitting reimbursement .claims to state agencies, which are charged with distributing federal funds made available by the USDA.

In 2010, Congress passed the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act (“HHFKA” or the “Act”), the first major change to the school lunch program in fifteen years. The Act set minimum standards for school wellness policies, mandated’ minimum fruit, vegetable, and whole grain servings, and set maximum sodium, sugar, and fat content of meals. It also authorized the USDA to set new standards for the school lunch program, and required the USDA to. publish proposed meal pattern regulations within eighteen months of its enactment. 1

The newly issued USDA regulations went back to food group-based menu planning to replace nutrient-based menu planning. The new meal pattern requirements were centered around five main food groups: meat/high protein foods; whole grains; vegetables; fruit; and fat free/low-fat milk. Each food group, has specified subcategories and nutrient targets for calories, saturated fat, trans fat, and sodium.

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Bluebook (online)
171 A.3d 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heartland-payment-systems-llc-v-inteam-associates-llc-del-2017.