Lamonte v. Premier Sales, Inc.

776 So. 2d 493, 2000 WL 1538334
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 29, 2001
Docket00-CA-298 and 00-CA-299
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 776 So. 2d 493 (Lamonte v. Premier Sales, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamonte v. Premier Sales, Inc., 776 So. 2d 493, 2000 WL 1538334 (La. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

776 So.2d 493 (2000)

Danny M. LAMONTE
v.
PREMIER SALES, INC.

Nos. 00-CA-298 and 00-CA-299.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

October 18, 2000.
Opinion on Grant of Rehearing January 29, 2001.
Rehearing Denied March 5, 2001.

*494 Robin B. Cheatham, Philip A. Franco, Raymond J. Turcotte, Jr., New Orleans, LA, for Plaintiffs-Appellees.

Joseph R. Martin, Baton Rouge, LA, for Defendant-Appellant.

Panel composed of Judges EDWARD A. DUFRESNE, Jr., JAMES C. GULOTTA, Pro Tem. and H. CHARLES GAUDIN, Pro Tem.

DUFRESNE, Judge.

This is an appeal by Premier Sales, Inc., defendant, from a judgment in favor of Danny Lamonte, plaintiff, in this contract dispute. Lamonte has also appealed parts of the judgment. For the following reasons we set aside those portions of the judgment awarding Lamonte damages for defamation, certain loan expenses, loss on the sale of a crypt, and attorney fees. We also set aside the damage award to Premier for its trade name infringement claim. In all other respect, the judgment is affirmed.

The facts are as follows. Premier Sales, Inc. was in the business of supplying commercial heating, air conditioning and ventilation systems. However, it did not sell the actual commercial air conditioning units. In about 1996 Premier began investigating the possibility of selling such units and contacted several air conditioner manufacturers. It discovered that these manufacturers only dealt through distributors who would handle both residential and commercial units. Rather than attempt to build up a residential business, Premier decided instead to purchase an ongoing residential heating and air conditioning business. It learned that Danny Lamonte, the owner of Heating and Cooling Equipment Sales, Inc., was interested in selling just such a business.

On March 18, 1997, Lamonte sold his 20 year old business to Premier for $225,000, payable in installments of $100,000 at the time of sale, $50,000 on April 1, 1998, $50,000 on April 1, 1999, and $25,000 on April 1, 2000. The sale was for all of the assets of the company, including its name. The agreement also contained a "Covenant Not to Compete & Employment Agreement" clause which provided that Lamonte would not compete with Premier for two years after the sale and, as further consideration, would be employed by it for these same two years. The terms of employment were a $60,000 per year salary, $350 per month car allowance, and commissions. It also stated that "either party may terminate the employment contract for material cause."

Six months later, in September of 1997, Lamonte's employment ended. He asserted that he had been fired for no "material cause" and demanded payment of his salary *495 and benefits for the remaining 18 months of the contract. Premier's position was that Lamonte decided to leave the employment on his own. Lamonte then went back into business for himself as "Lamonte's Heating and Cooling Equipment Sales, L.L.C." Two lawsuits were then filed. In one, Lamonte sued Premier and its president, Joseph Tibodeaux, for his salary and benefits under the contract, as well as for financial losses occasioned by his having to borrow money and sell a funeral crypt at a distressed price to compensate for his lost salary. He also alleged that he had been defamed by Keith May, one of Premier's employees, after he left its employment. Premier urged in the second suit that Lamonte was violating the non-competition clause of the contract by going back into business for himself, and was also infringing on the trade name which it had purchased from him, i.e. "Heating and Cooling Equipment Sales, Inc."

Both suits were consolidated for a nonjury trial. The trial judge ruled that Lamonte indeed had been fired without material cause and awarded him the remaining 18 months of salary and benefits. She also found that he had expended $20,000 in costs to secure loans and had lost $5,000 on sale of the crypt, and awarded him those two amounts, as well as $52,000 in attorney fees. She further found that he had been defamed by a non-party employee of Premier, but not by the defendant Keith May. She nonetheless found Premier liable under the principle of respondeat superior and awarded Lamonte $20,000 for that item. She ruled in Premier's favor on the infringement of trade name claim and enjoined Lamonte from continuing to use the name, as well as awarding Premier $20,000 in damages. However, she found in Lamonte's favor on the non-competition issue, deciding that once Lamonte's employment ended so did the non-competition clause. Both parties have now appealed.

Premier urges first that it was error to find that it breached the employment agreement because the evidence showed that it did not fire Lamonte, but that he instead left voluntarily. Alternatively, it argues that even if Lamonte was fired, it was for a material cause, and likewise that this was not a breach. Second, it asserts that even if it did breach the agreement, there was no finding of bad faith on its part and therefore that the awards of damages for the loan and crypt losses, as well as attorney fees, were not legally supported. Third, it argues that there was no defamation attributable to it, and even if there were the award of $20,000 for this item was excessive. Lamonte urges, to the contrary, that the defamation award should be increased. He also attacks the award of $20,000 for the trade name infringement as unsupported by the evidence. Finally, he asserts that based on evidence presented at trial the judge erred in not finding that Tibodeaux and May had intentionally interfered with his employment contract with Premier.

The main issue here is whether Premier breached the contract of employment. As noted by the trial judge, resolution of this question was a fact intensive inquiry and she made the factual findings that Premier fired Lamonte for no material cause and thus breached the employment contract. On appeal of these findings, the standard of review here is not whether we would have found different facts had we been sitting as the triers of fact, but rather whether the findings made in the trial court are manifestly erroneous or clearly wrong in the context of the entire record of the case, Rosell v. ESCO, 549 So.2d 840 (La.1989).

The generally undisputed evidence showed that Premier's motive in purchasing Lamonte's business was to establish a residential air conditioning sales business in order to get distribution rights to commercial units. At the time of the sale, Lamonte was selling three brands of units and had a warehouse of parts for these three lines. His operation was based on personal contact with contractors and his *496 major promotional techniques involved having frequent coffees at the office and occasional dinners. He did only an in-store business and had no outside salesmen. Premier's president, Joseph Tibodeaux, was aware of the nature of Lamonte's business at the time of the sale.

When Premier took over, Lamonte was made equipment sales manager for its air conditioning operation, a job which Tibodeaux said primarily involved developing and implementing an overall sales strategy. However, one of premier's first decisions was to discontinue all three of Lamonte's brands and attempt to develop a residential unit business with a fourth brand in order to get that manufacturer's commercial line as well. Lamonte convinced Premier to keep at least one of his lines, that of Nordine, but the other two were discontinued and all warehoused parts for these brands were sold at a discount.

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776 So. 2d 493, 2000 WL 1538334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamonte-v-premier-sales-inc-lactapp-2001.