Kel-Keef Enterprises, Inc. v. Quality Components Corp.

738 N.E.2d 524, 250 Ill. Dec. 308, 316 Ill. App. 3d 998
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 27, 2000
Docket1-99-2478
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 738 N.E.2d 524 (Kel-Keef Enterprises, Inc. v. Quality Components Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kel-Keef Enterprises, Inc. v. Quality Components Corp., 738 N.E.2d 524, 250 Ill. Dec. 308, 316 Ill. App. 3d 998 (Ill. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

JUSTICE GORDON

delivered the opinion of the court:

BACKGROUND FACTS

This litigation is a consolidated action that arose out of a transaction for the sale of a business that sold replacement parts for printing presses. This action consists of two suits, the first one brought in the chancery division by plaintiff Robert Fleck against Quality Components, Wally Stoneham and William Guckien for payment of money owed to him under a noncompetition agreement between him and Quality and guaranteed by Stoneham and Guckien, and by plaintiff Kel-Keef for payment on a promissory note between it and Quality and guaranteed by Stoneham and Guckien for the assets of the business that Kel-Keef sold to Quality pursuant to a purchase agreement. The second lawsuit was brought in the law division against Fleck and Kel-Keef by Quality for breach of those same agreements.

At the trial William Stoneham testified for Quality Components Corporation (QCC II) that he began working for a company known as DEV Industries (DEV) in 1984 as a salesman. DEV was in the business of selling replacement parts for printing presses. DEV did not manufacture the parts but kept blueprints numbering in the hundreds or thousands for all of the parts that it sold, which it would then job out to machine shops to fabricate the parts that its customers requested. While working at DEV Stoneham became aware of a lawsuit (the Rockwell I litigation) that was brought in federal court against DEV by Rockwell Graphics (Rockwell), which claimed the ownership to certain of these blueprints. In 1988 defendant Robert Fleck (Fleck) purchased the replacement parts division of DEV (for which Stoneham worked) and named the new company Quality Components Corporation (QCC I). Fleck had previously been president of DEV and was one of its four shareholders. Stoneham became an employee of the new company (QCC I) and helped move the drawers of blueprints from DEV to QCC I.

In 1989 Stoneham and William Guckien (Guckien) began negotiations with Fleck to purchase the assets of QCC I. During the negotiations, Stoneham had several discussions with Fleck regarding the Rockwell I litigation. Fleck told Stoneham that none of the blueprints that QCC I possessed were involved in the Rockwell lawsuit. Stone-ham and Guckien set up a corporation (later identified as Components Holdings Inc. (CHI)) to purchase the assets of QCC I. After it acquired the assets of QCC I, CHI adopted the name of the vendor, Quality Components Corporation (QCC II). After the sale of its assets to QCC II, QCC I changed its name to Kel-Keef Enterprises, Inc. (Kel-Keef).

In 1991 QCC II was joined as a defendant in a lawsuit brought in Cook County circuit court (No. 91 CH 01011) by Rockwell (the Rockwell II litigation), which also named DEV and Fleck. The lawsuit was related to the Rockwell I litigation against DEV alleging that QCC II had blueprints that belonged to Rockwell. There was no fist attached to Rockwell’s suit papers identifying the blueprints that the lawsuit related to, but Fleck sent Stoneham a list of the blueprints that were at issue in the first lawsuit against DEV from which Stoneham determined that 53 of the blueprints that QCC II had acquired from QCC I were in fact claimed by Rockwell in its lawsuit. QCC II thereupon settled the Rockwell II litigation against it in 1993 pursuant to which QCC II gave up to Rockwell the 53 blueprints that Rockwell claimed from it in that lawsuit. Stoneham further averred that, on the advice of their attorney, Stoneham and Guckien decided to stop making payments to Fleck pursuant to the noncompetition agreement and to Kel-Keef pursuant to the purchase agreement.

Deborah Ruff testified in rebuttal for QCC II that she is an attorney who represented Rockwell in several lawsuits against Fleck, DEV QCC II and other parties pursuant to Rockwell’s allegations that those parties possessed or misappropriated Rockwell’s blueprints. Ruff testified that the first case, Rockwell I, was filed in federal court in 1984 against Fleck and DEV In 1991 Rockwell initiated the Rockwell II litigation in state court against DEV Fleck and QCC II. QCC and Rockwell settled the Rockwell II case for $3,300. The third Rockwell case (the Rockwell III litigation) was filed in federal court in 1992 against Fleck.

It is not in dispute that in 1989 the federal magistrate in the Rockwell I litigation found in favor of Fleck and that decision was later overturned by the Seventh Circuit. The Rockwell I litigation ultimately ended with an injunction being entered against Fleck in 1993. The Rockwell III litigation also ended against Fleck in 1993 when Fleck signed a consent decree to settle the litigation in which he admitted misappropriating trade secrets from Rockwell.

William Guckien testified for QCC II that he and Stoneham purchased the assets of QCC I from Fleck. The purchase included the blueprints for the replacement parts that QCC I sold, and Guckien averred that those blueprints were of critical importance to the business. After QCC II settled the Rockwell II litigation, it was no longer able to use the 53 blueprints that Rockwell had claimed. As a consequence, QCC II could no longer obtain the parts described by those blueprints at competitive prices. Thus, according to Guckien, QCC II was not able to effectively compete with other companies in the replacement parts business and it was resultantly forced to shut down. QCC II ceased making payments owed to Fleck and Kel-Keef on the purchase agreement and the noncompetition agreement because Fleck had admitted in a consent decree pursuant to the Rockwell III litigation that he had obtained the blueprints illegally. Fleck and Kel-Keef then sued QCC II in chancery demanding payment pursuant to the purchase and noncompetition agreements. QCC II responded by suing Fleck and Kel-Keef at law for breach of contract and fraud.

Mark Bischoff testified for Kel-Keef that he was the attorney who represented Fleck and QCC I during the sale of QCC I’s assets to Stoneham and Guckien’s company, CHI. Bischoff testified that he told the buyers about the Rockwell I litigation; that Fleck and QCC I did not want to make any representations concerning it; and that they should look into that litigation. Bischoff further stated that the buyers were encouraged to contact the attorneys for Rockwell. At one point in the negotiations, the attorney for the buyers asked for an indemnification agreement that would hold Fleck and DEV responsible for any damages sustained by QCC II as a result of the Rockwell litigation; however, Fleck refused to consent to such an indemnification agreement. Bischoff averred that an attorney for the buyers (CHI) told him that they would “live with the Rockwell situation.”

Robert Fleck, the president of Kel-Keef, testified for Kel-Keef. Fleck averred that in 1989 he did not believe that he had misappropriated trade secrets from Rockwell. He further stated that in 1989, on the day of the closing, the magistrate judge in the Rockwell I litigation found in his favor. That ruling was later overturned on appeal, and Fleck identified an injunction that was entered against him pursuant to the Rockwell I litigation on July 26, 1993. Fleck also identified a consent decree that he had signed on December 14, 1993, pursuant to the Rockwell III litigation.

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Bluebook (online)
738 N.E.2d 524, 250 Ill. Dec. 308, 316 Ill. App. 3d 998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kel-keef-enterprises-inc-v-quality-components-corp-illappct-2000.