Kirin Brewery of Am., L.L.C. v. Virginia Imports, Ltd.

60 Va. Cir. 151, 2002 Va. Cir. LEXIS 241
CourtVirginia Circuit Court
DecidedAugust 27, 2002
DocketCase No. (Law) 200104
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 60 Va. Cir. 151 (Kirin Brewery of Am., L.L.C. v. Virginia Imports, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Virginia Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirin Brewery of Am., L.L.C. v. Virginia Imports, Ltd., 60 Va. Cir. 151, 2002 Va. Cir. LEXIS 241 (Va. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

By Judge Jane Marum Roush

This case arises under Virginia’s Beer Franchise Act, Virginia Code §§ 4-118.3, et seq. (the “Act”). The parties to this case are Kirin Brewery of America, L.L.C., a “brewery” (“Kirin”); Virginia Imports, Ltd., a “wholesaler” (“Virginia Imports”); and the Virginia Alcoholic Beverage Control Board (the “Board”). The matter came before the Court on March 22, 2002, upon Kirin’s appeal of a final decision of the Board holding that Kirin acted without good cause and in bad faith in terminating the distributorship agreement between Kirin and Virginia Imports. The Court has now had the opportunity to consider fully the briefs and the arguments of counsel, the record before the Board, and the applicable statutes. For the reasons stated below, the Court will remand this case to the Board for dismissal.

[152]*152 Preliminary Matter

On May 1, 2002, Kirin moved for leave to supplement the record in this case. Under Virginia Code § 2.2-4027, this Court must determine issues of fact from the agency record. Because the affidavit that Kirin seeks to add to the record was not included in the agency record in this case, I have not considered it.

Facts and Agency Proceedings

Kirin and Virginia Imports had a long-standing “agreement,” as defined by Va. Code §4.1-500, by which Virginia Imports was authorized to distribute certain brands of Kirin beer in Northern Virginia.

In 1999, Kirin advised Virginia Imports that Kirin was dissatisfied with several aspects of Virginia Imports’ performance. On August 3,1999, Kirin began the statutory termination process pursuant to Va. Code § 4.1-506 when it notified Virginia Imports of Kirin’s intent to terminate the distributorship agreement. The termination letter set forth several grounds for termination, including Virginia Imports’ sales of Kirin beer outside Virginia Imports’ designated territory, failure to remove out-of-code (stale) beer from retail shelves, failure to follow Kirin’s freshness policy, and several other sales performance issues. Kirin complied with Va. Code § 4.1-506(A)bysendinga copy of the termination letter to the Board.

On October 4,1999, Virginia Imports sent a letter to Kirin asserting that Virginia Imports cured the deficiencies cited in the termination letter.. Virginia Imports, however, did not send a copy of its cure letter to the Board, in contravention of Va. Code § 4.1-506(B), which provides that “[a] copy ofthe notice shall be mailed at the same time to the Board.” Thus, the Board was not notified that Virginia Imports was attempting to cure the deficiencies Kirin identified.

On October 22,1999, having received Virginia Imports’ cure letter, Kirin requested a hearing before the Board pursuant to Va. Code § 4.1-506(D) on the issue of whether Virginia Imports had cured the deficiencies and whether Kirin had “good cause” to terminate the distributorship. In its October 22, 1999, letter, Kirin expressed its continued dissatisfaction with “out of code beer and ... [VirginiaImports’] poor service.”

By letter of February 9,2000, the Secretary ofthe Board (the “Secretary”) wrote Kirin as follows:

[153]*153Our records indicate that by letter dated August 3, 1999, your company gave notice to Virginia Imports, Ltd., of your intent to terminate your agreement designating Virginia Imports, Ltd., as the wholesale distributor of Kirin brands in certain territories in Virginia. More than ninety days have now passed since that notice, and we have received neither a notice from the wholesaler that it has taken action to rectify the conditions constituting the reason for the termination, nor a request for a hearing on the issue of reasonable cause. Therefore, under the provisions of the Beer Franchise Act, the agreement between Kirin and Virginia Imports, Ltd., was effectively terminated ninety days after the August 3,1999, notice.
Kirin is free to appoint other distributors for the territories formerly held by Virginia Imports, Ltd.

In response, Kirin wrote to the Secretary on February 10,2000, indicating that Kirin was designating Anheuser-Busch, Inc., as Kirin’s distributor for Virginia.

Virginia Imports asked the Secretary temporarily to suspend the effectiveness of his February 9, 2000, letter. That request was not granted. Similarly, the Board refused to reinstate the distributorship agreement between Kirin and Virginia Imports to maintain the status quo.

Virginia Imports protested the Secretary’s actions. On April 17,2000, the Secretary referred the matter for a hearing. The hearing panel found that the primary reason advanced by Kirin for its termination of the agreement was Virginia Imports’ failure to comply with Kirin’s freshness policy. The hearing panel reasoned that “although conceptually an out-of-code policy may be entirely reasonable, the manner in which this policy was enforced against Virginia Imports was unreasonable, and, indeed, unattainable.” Accordingly, the hearing panel concluded that Kirin failed to prove that it imposed a “reasonable and material requirement” on the wholesaler as required by Va. Code §4.1-505 and that “good cause” existed for its termination of the agreement. The hearing pánel held that, even if Kirin’s freshness policy were reasonable, Virginia Imports had substantially complied with the policy. The hearing panel concluded that Kirin acted in bad faith in terminating the agreement because, inter alia, Kirin only began visiting retail accounts and finding out-of-code beer after Virginia Imports repeatedly refused Kirin’s offers to purchase the distribution rights for Kirin beer. The hearing panel reasoned that a brewery cannot have good cause for termination in the absence of good faith.

[154]*154Both parties appealed the hearing panel’s decision to the Board. On September 26, 2001, the Board issued its Final Order. The Board overruled the hearing panel’s decision in part, finding that Kirin had instituted a reasonable freshness policy for its products and noting that:

The hearing panel appears to adopt a theory that a brewery terminating a franchise agreement is guilty of bad faith under the Beer Franchise Act if it possesses a motive which does not amount to good cause for termination under the Act, even if it has made reasonable and material requirements with which the wholesaler has not substantially complied. The Board does not adopt this interpretation of the Act’s requirements.

Board Final Order at 3. The Board found that Virginia Imports had substantially complied with Kirin’s freshness policy and, thus, that Kirin lacked good cause to terminate Virginia Imports. The Board further found Kirin guilty of bad faith “in proceeding to terminate its agreement with Virginia Imports in February 2000, even though it was on notice that Virginia Imports had claimed to have taken corrective action with respect to all the causes for termination.” As a remedy, the Board ordered Kirin to pay Virginia Imports’ reasonable costs and attorney’s fees.

Standard of Review

This appeal arises under Va. Code § 4.1-509, which provides for review by the circuit court pursuant to the Administrative Process Act, Va. Code § § 2.2-4000, et seq. Va.

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Bluebook (online)
60 Va. Cir. 151, 2002 Va. Cir. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirin-brewery-of-am-llc-v-virginia-imports-ltd-vacc-2002.