International Forest Products, L.L.C. v. AAR Manufacturing, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 2025
Docket2:22-cv-02002
StatusUnknown

This text of International Forest Products, L.L.C. v. AAR Manufacturing, Inc. (International Forest Products, L.L.C. v. AAR Manufacturing, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Forest Products, L.L.C. v. AAR Manufacturing, Inc., (D. Kan. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS INTERNATIONAL FOREST PRODUCTS, LLC, Plaintiff, v. AAR MANUFACTURING, INC., Defendant. Case No. 22-CV-2002-EFM AAR MANUFACTURING, INC., Counter-Plaintiff, v. INTERNATIONAL FOREST PRODUCTS, LLC, Counter-Defendant.

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER Before the Court is Defendant/Counter-Plaintiff AAR Manufacturing, Inc. (“AAR”)’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 122) and Plaintiff/Counter-Defendant International Forest Products, LLC (“IFP”)’s Partial Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 131). Related are the parties’ respective Motions to Exclude Expert Testimony (Docs. 120, 125). IFP claims that AAR breached their Supply Agreement by failing to meet minimum purchasing requirements, honor IFP’s right-of-first-refusal, and provide adequate termination notice. In contrast, AAR argues that IFP waived its purchasing minimums and right-of-first-refusal, anticipatorily repudiated the Supply Agreement, and shifted their arrangement to a month-to-month purchasing model, under which AAR fulfilled its obligations. For the reasons stated below, the Court grants AAR’s Motion for Summary Judgment and grants in part and denies in part IFP’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. I. Factual and Procedural Background1 IFP is a Kansas LLC with two members. Mike Kincaid is IFP’s majority owner, president, and managing member. Stephen Wilde is IFP’s minority owner. IFP del Ecuador SA (“IFP

Ecuador”) is a corporation organized under the laws of Ecuador and is approximately 99.9998% owned by IFP. AAR is an Illinois corporation with its principal place of business in Michigan. IFP oversees the production and sale of balsa wood products to various industrial manufacturers. IFP arranges deliveries, handles customs, and invoices customers. In contrast, IFP Ecuador purchases raw balsa wood, manufactures it in its Ecuador factory, and sells it to IFP. AAR is an industrial manufacturer who manufactures certain supplies for the United States Air Force, among other customers. Specifically, AAR uses the balsa sheets supplied by IFP to create wooden pallets for the Air Force. Each Air Force pallet requires four sheets of 2.08” thick balsa in AAR’s manufacturing process. IFP also sold AAR 1.14” and 0.945” thick balsa sheets. However, the 2.08” sheets represent about 97% of all AAR’s sheet purchases with IFP.

On September 9, 2011, IFP and AAR entered into a written Supply Agreement. In it, IFP agreed to supply, and AAR agreed to pay for, certain balsa wood products until May 31, 2013 (the “Agreement Term”). The agreement was hand-signed by IFP’s President, Mike Kincaid, and AAR’s General Manager, Lee Krantz. The Supply Agreement contained product pricing, purchasing requirements, and other obligations. Specifically, the pricing section directed: AAR shall purchase from [IFP] the Material in accordance with the prices set forth on the following basis until 2/1/12:

1 The facts in this section are uncontroverted by the parties unless otherwise cited. AAR part number 12001001 [2.08”] = $61.60 AAR part number 12001296 [1.14”] = $29.49 AAR part number 12000016 [0.945”] = $25.37 After February 1, 2012, the Supply Agreement specified that IFP would adjust its price per panel by factoring wood and labor costs. After making these calculations on February 1, 2012, the new baseline price would be valid through January 31, 2013. On February 1, 2013, IFP would again adjust the price based on wood and labor costs to determine a new baseline price for deliveries made through May 31, 2013. IFP promised that the price increase would not exceed 7% of the prices in effect on January 31, 2012. The Supply Agreement’s purchasing requirements directed: If AAR has pallet delivery orders from the Air Force, and the returned pallets assets to support production, AAR will schedule a minimum of 5 truck loads per month for the period of 1/1/12 to 5/31/13 and provide IFP the right of first refusal for the first seven trucks per month during the course of this contract. AAR is not obligated to purchase 5 trucks of Balsa per month from IFP if they do not have enough pallets or delivery order funding from the Air Force to support the consumption of 5 trucks of Balsa per month.2 The Supply Agreement also contained a modification provision which allowed changes to the agreement under three conditions. A valid amendment must (1) reference the Supply Agreement; (2) be reduced to writing in a separate agreement; and (3) be executed by authorized representatives from both parties. The Supply Agreement was formally amended four times between 2013 and May 29, 2019. In addition, the parties mutually agreed to amend balsa pricing through a series of phone calls or emails without following the formal amendment requirements. The parties formally amended the Supply Agreement for the first time on November 30, 2012, and incorporated the material terms of the original Supply Agreement (the “First

2 A later amendment to the Supply Agreement clarified that “a truck is defined as fifty two (52) pallets or one thousand one hundred and forty four (1144) panels of AAR part number 12001001.” Amendment”). The First Amendment met the amendment requirements. It extended the Agreement Term from May 31, 2013, through August 31, 2016. It also changed the purchasing requirements to a five-truck minimum of IFP’s balsa wood if AAR had sufficient demand from the Air Force. Moreover, the First Amendment gave IFP a right-of-first-refusal (“ROFR”) on truck deliveries over five per month and less than eight. The First Amendment’s “Ratification” provision

left all other terms and conditions of the Agreement unchanged. The parties formally amended the agreement a second time on December 5, 2013, and again incorporated the material terms from the original Supply Agreement (the “Second Amendment”). The Second Amendment met the amendment requirements. It extended the Agreement Term from August 31, 2016, through August 31, 2018. It left intact AAR’s requirement to purchase a minimum of five trucks of balsa wood materials if it had sufficient demand from the Air Force, but it expanded the ROFR on truck deliveries to over five per month and less than 11 per month. The Second Amendment included a Ratification provision. The parties formally amended the Agreement a third time on May 9, 2016, again

incorporating the material terms from the original Supply Agreement (the “Third Amendment”). The Third Amendment met the amendment requirements. It extended the Agreement Term from August 31, 2018, through August 31, 2023. Similarly, the Third Amendment included a Ratification provision. In 2019, the global demand for raw balsa wood materials surged, largely driven by Chinese companies purchasing balsa wood to manufacture wind farm components. The increased demand for, and resulting scarcity of, balsa wood drove up balsa prices. In January 2019, pursuant to a request from AAR, IFP agreed not to raise prices for balsa orders from February 1, 2019, through May 31, 2019. This agreement did not follow the formal amendment requirements. Around this same time, IFP began communicating with Chinese buyers who expressed interest in purchasing its balsa. On June 18, 2019, the parties executed an amended version of the original Supply Agreement (the “Fourth Amendment”). This Amendment was in writing, referenced the parties’ original Supply Agreement and the prior amendments, and was executed by hand signatures of

IFP’s President, Michael Kincaid, and AAR’s General Manager, Lee Krantz. The Fourth Amendment did not change the Agreement Term, nor did it change the purchasing requirements or ROFR. However, it did fix the price of 2.08” balsa sheets at $69.14 from June 1, 2019, until January 31, 2020. The Fourth Amendment likewise contained a Ratification provision.

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International Forest Products, L.L.C. v. AAR Manufacturing, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-forest-products-llc-v-aar-manufacturing-inc-ksd-2025.