Intervisual Communications, Inc. v. Volkert

975 F. Supp. 1092, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13498, 1997 WL 557559
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedSeptember 4, 1997
Docket96 C 2740
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 975 F. Supp. 1092 (Intervisual Communications, Inc. v. Volkert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Intervisual Communications, Inc. v. Volkert, 975 F. Supp. 1092, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13498, 1997 WL 557559 (N.D. Ill. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

KEYS, United States Magistrate Judge.

This matter is before the Court on Plaintiffs Complaint, seeking declaratory judgment, injunctive relief, and damages for interference with prospective economic advantage and for lost profits. Additionally, Defendants have counterclaimed for de *1095 claratory judgment, injunctive relief, and damages based on patent infringement as well as Plaintiffs alleged failure to use its “best efforts” to market Defendants’ goods. For the following reasons, the Court enters declaratory judgment in favor of Plaintiff and against Defendants. Accordingly, the Court awards $567,667 to Plaintiff for damages. Plaintiffs claims for interference with prospective economic advantage and injunctive relief fail, as do Defendants’ counterclaims.

FINDINGS OF FACT 1

Plaintiff, Intervisual Communications, Inc., (“Intervisual”), is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in California. (Compl. at 2.) Intervisual markets interactive advertising devices, such as hand-assembled and machine-made “pop-ups” 2 and talking advertisements to marketing firms. (Compl. at 2.) Intervisual contracts with third parties to manufacture its advertising devices. (Compl. at 3.) Intervisual, under a succession of names, has operated in the hand-assembled pop-up market since 1962. 3 (R. at 20.)

Defendant John Volkert is an Illinois resident. (Compl. at 2.) Mr. Volkert is the president of One-Up, Inc., (“One-Up”), a separately-named defendant. One-Up is a corporation with its principal place of business in Illinois. 4 (Compl. at 2.) Mr. Volkert is an inventor and a salesman, with many years of experience designing and manufacturing machine-made pop-ups. (R. at 217; Compl. at 3.) He began working for F.N. Volkert and Company, his family’s bookbinding business, in 1958. (R. at 216.) Starting out as a factory worker, Mr. Volkert rose through the ranks and eventually became president of the company. (R. at 216.) In 1982, Mr. Volkert began working for Paper-masters, Inc., and One-Up, developing and licensing patents relating to creative advertising concepts. (R. at 216.) Mr. Volkert, through One-Up, currently owns as many as fifteen patents involving pop-up products and methods for making pop-ups. 5 (R. at 265; PL’s 12(m) Statement, ¶ 6.)

Intervisual and Mr. Volkert first developed a business relationship in 1987, when Messrs. Volkert and Richwine met and talked about merging Intervisual and One-Up. (R. at 36.) However, according to Mr. Richwine, Mr. Volkert was “having some other legal problems” at that time, so talk of merging their companies “went away.” (R. at 36.) Merger discussion resumed in 1990, and, even though Mr. Volkert was still involved in litigation, Intervisual and Mr. Volkert entered into an exclusive license agreement on October 21, *1096 1991. 6 (R. at 36.)

This exclusive license agreement, which was amended on January 24,1992, and renegotiated on January 20, 1993, is the focus of the dispute between Intervisual and Mr. Vol-kert. The essence of the 1991 agreement was that Mr. Volkert granted Intervisual the exclusive right to use and market his patents, 7 in exchange for annual royalties on the sale of any products using one of his patents. Additionally, Mr. Volkert agreed to provide his expertise to help design and manufacture pop-ups, assist in training Intervisual’s sales force, develop new concepts utilizing pop-ups, attend trade shows with Intervisual, and participate in sales presentations with Intervisual. (Joint Ex. 2, Art. II.)

Specifically, the contract required Mr. Vol-kert to devote at least 1,380 hours per year to providing consulting services to Intervisual to support the exclusive license agreement. (Joint Ex. 2, Art. II.) In exchange, Intervisual would pay Mr. Volkert a nonrefundable sum of $50,000 upon signing the agreement. (Joint Ex. 2, Art. III.) Twenty-five thousand dollars of this $50,000 advance was to be paid directly to Mr. Volkert, and $25,000 was to be escrowed to pay for Mr. Volkert’s legal costs relating to pending litigation. 8 (Joint Ex. 2, Art. III-IV.) In addition, Intervisual agreed to pay Mr. Volkert a $100,000 ad-vanee against future royalty payments and an annual license fee of $5,000 for the duration of the agreement. (Joint Ex. 2, Art. III.) Intervisual also agreed to pay Mr. Vol-kert annual royalties in the amount of 7% for the first $3,000,000 of annual revenue for patented pop-ups, and 5% for all such revenues thereafter. (Joint Ex. 2, Art. III.) After the fifth anniversary of the agreement, the annual royalty rate dropped to 5% on all patented pop-up revenue. (Joint Ex. 2, Art. III.)

The exclusive license agreement provided for termination, by either party, under a variety of circumstances. Mr. Volkert could terminate the agreement, upon 30-days’ notice, if Intervisual did not meet a minimum level of annual sales of patented pop-ups for two consecutive years. 9 (Joint Ex. 2, Art. IV.) Intervisual had the right to terminate the agreement, upon giving Mr. Volkert twelve months’ notice, after the tenth anniversary of the effective date of the agreement. (Joint Ex. 2, Art. IV.) Both parties could rightfully terminate the agreement “on thirty (30) days prior written notice if the other party is in breach of this Agreement,” provided that the breaching party failed to cure “to the nonbreaching party’s reasonable satisfaction during such thirty (30) day period.” 10 (Joint Ex. 2, Art. IV.) Otherwise, the *1097 agreement would last until the expiration of the last patent involved in the agreement. 11 (Joint Ex. 2, Art. IV.)

After signing the 1991 agreement with Mr. Volkert, Intervisual was “excited” by the prospect of marketing in-line pop-ups, and planned to “aggressively sell them.” (R. at 49.) Intervisual moved its office from Chicago to Northbrook, where Mr. Volkert was headquartered, in an effort to give its sales staff an opportunity to learn about machine-made pop-ups from Mr. Volkert. (R. at 54.) Not long after signing the agreement, however, the relationship between Mr. Volkert and Intervisual began to deteriorate. Mr. Vol-kert was displeased that Intervisual was “selling other products instead of just in-line pop-ups.” (R. at 54.)

As a result, Messrs. Richwine and Vol-kert negotiated, and signed, an amendment to the 1991 agreement on January 24, 1992. (R. at 57.) That amendment waived the previous requirement that Mr. Volkert completely resolve the pending litigation with lb Penick and Weberaft before Intervisual would exercise its option to add the two patents at issue to the exclusive license agreement. (Joint Ex.

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