Independent Quality Foods, LLC v. Kansas City Steak Company, LLC

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 15, 2019
DocketWD82390
StatusPublished

This text of Independent Quality Foods, LLC v. Kansas City Steak Company, LLC (Independent Quality Foods, LLC v. Kansas City Steak Company, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Independent Quality Foods, LLC v. Kansas City Steak Company, LLC, (Mo. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT INDEPENDENT QUALITY ) FOODS, LLC, ) ) Appellant, ) ) vs. ) WD82390 ) ) FILED: October 15, 2019 KANSAS CITY STEAK ) COMPANY, LLC, et al., ) ) Respondents. ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of Jackson County The Honorable Justine E. Del Muro, Judge Before Division One: Cynthia L. Martin, P.J., and Victor C. Howard and Alok Ahuja, JJ. Independent Quality Foods, LLC (“IQ Foods”) sued Kansas City Steak

Company, LLC and its owner National Beef Packing Company, LLC (collectively “KC Steak”), alleging that KC Steak had failed to pay IQ Foods commissions it was

owed under a contract between the parties. The circuit court granted KC Steak’s

motion for summary judgment. IQ Foods appeals. We reverse, and remand the

case to the circuit court for further proceedings.

Factual Background On September 7, 2012, KC Steak’s President Ed Scavuzzo and IQ Foods’

owner Brandon Lobaugh executed a one-page “marketing/brokerage agreement.”

Pursuant to the contract, KC Steak would pay IQ Foods commissions on beef products sold by KC Steak to the restaurant customers listed in the agreement.

Specifically, the contract provided:

We agree to a marketing/brokerage agreement of $.08 on all products for the following customers as of the signed date: CURRENT

● TGI Friday’s ○ 2013 Top Butts only at $.05 vs. $.08 ● ABRH Holding’s [sic] (inclusive to all brands) IN-PROCESS

● Applebee’s ● Chili’s ● Steakco (Texas Land and Cattle/Lonestar) ● Ponderosa ● Sirloin Stockade .... ● This agreement is effective as long as stated customers above are doing business with Kansas City Steak .... ● Payment is contingent upon regular payments to Kansas City Steak Company by listed customers within payment terms ● An addendum to this agreement will be added as new customers are added with stated terms above In October 2017, IQ Foods filed its one-count petition, which alleged that KC Steak breached the contract by failing and refusing to pay IQ Foods the

commissions to which it was entitled under the agreement. KC Steak’s answer

alleged as an affirmative defense that IQ Foods had failed to provide adequate

brokerage services, depriving KC Steak of the benefit of the bargain. KC Steak’s

answer also asserted the affirmative defense of intervening or superseding cause,

contending that KC Steak had no obligation to pay commissions for any customer

which had changed its pricing structure.

It is uncontested that IQ Foods never brokered a contract for KC Steak with Applebee’s, Chile’s, Steakco, or Ponderosa. The dispute between the parties

2 concerns commissions for sales of beef to ABRH Holdings restaurants in 2016

through 2017, and to Sirloin Stockade in 2014 through 2016.

KC Steak moved for summary judgment, making three principal arguments.

First, KC Steak argued that it was entitled to summary judgment because the

marketing/brokerage agreement did not contain a specific end date, and was

therefore terminable at will. KC Steak alleged that it had terminated the

agreement in November 2015. Second, KC Steak contended that it had no

obligation to pay IQ Foods commissions for sales to ABRH Holdings after December

31, 2015, because KC Steak and ABRH Holdings had agreed to a changed pricing

structure. KC Steak argued that, because payment of commissions under the

agreement was “contingent upon regular payments to Kansas City Steak Company

by listed customers within payment terms,” the pricing change absolved KC Steak of

its obligation to pay commissions on later sales to ABRH Holdings. Finally, KC

Steak argued that it was entitled to judgment as a matter of law with respect to

sales to Sirloin Stockade because the parties never executed an addendum adding

Sirloin Stockade as a customer for which commissions were owed.

In its response to KC Steak’s motion for summary judgment, IQ Foods argued

that the agreement provided a specific and definite termination date: when KC Steak ceased doing business with the customers identified in the contract. IQ Foods

asserted that its only obligation under the agreement was to broker the relationship

between a customer and KC Steak. IQ Foods contended that, once a relationship

was established, it had no further obligations under the agreement, and was

thereafter due a commission so long as the KC Steak did business with the

customer. IQ Foods also alleged that the phrase “within payment terms” referred to

the method of payment, and not to the pricing relationship between KC Steak and

any customer. Finally, IQ Foods argued that Sirloin Stockade was identified in the contract as an “In-Process” customer, and that no addendum was necessary to add

3 it to the contract. In making these arguments, IQ Foods relied on the express terms

of the contract and the affidavit testimony of the contract’s signatories – Scavuzzo

and Lobaugh – regarding the parties’ intentions.

The circuit court entered summary judgment in favor of KC Steak on

November 8, 2018. It did not consider the affidavits of Scavuzzo and Lobaugh,

because IQ Foods had never argued that the contract was vague or ambiguous. The

court determined that the agreement was for an indefinite period of time and was

therefore terminable at will. It further found that an addendum was required to

add Sirloin Stockade as a customer for which commissions would be due under the

agreement. The trial court’s judgment did not address KC Steak’s argument

concerning the change in pricing terms for sales to ABRH Holdings.

This appeal by IQ Foods followed.

Standard of Review Appellate review of the grant of summary judgment is de novo. ITT

Commercial Fin. Corp. v. Mid-Am. Marine Supply Corp., 854 S.W.2d 371, 376 (Mo.

banc 1993). Summary judgment is appropriate if no genuine issues of material fact

exist, and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law and. Id. at 377.

We view the record in the light most favorable to the party against whom judgment

was entered, according that party all reasonable inferences that may be drawn from

the record. Id. at 376.

Contract interpretation is a question of law that we review de novo. RLI Ins.

Co. v. S. Union Co., 341 S.W.3d 821, 831 (Mo. App. W.D. 2011).

Discussion IQ Foods challenges the circuit court’s entry of summary judgment in five

Points on appeal. It argues that (1) the contract was not too indefinite to enforce

because it contained all of the essential elements of a binding, enforceable contract and the parties performed under those terms for over three years; (2) the trial court

4 had an obligation to determine the parties’ intent from the affidavits of the

contract’s signatories; (3) the contract was not terminable at will because it

specified an objective and ascertainable “triggering event” for termination; (4) even

if the contract was terminable at will, KC Steak would still owe commissions that

IQ Foods had already earned by procuring particular customers; and (5) no

addendum to the contract was required for Sirloin Stockade because Sirloin

Stockade was identified as a customer in the contract. We begin by addressing IQ

Foods’ fourth Point.

KC Steak’s principal argument in support of summary judgment was that it

had a right to terminate the contract at will, and that it had exercised that

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Independent Quality Foods, LLC v. Kansas City Steak Company, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/independent-quality-foods-llc-v-kansas-city-steak-company-llc-moctapp-2019.