Larry Jeppesen v. David Rust and Marcus Rust, and Rose Acre Farms, Inc.

8 F.3d 1235, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 28955
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 5, 1993
Docket92-3352, 92-3427
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 8 F.3d 1235 (Larry Jeppesen v. David Rust and Marcus Rust, and Rose Acre Farms, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larry Jeppesen v. David Rust and Marcus Rust, and Rose Acre Farms, Inc., 8 F.3d 1235, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 28955 (7th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.

In 1985 Rose Acre Farms was the fourth largest egg producer in the United States and growing rapidly. It was building an automated facility in White County, Indiana, housing about 1.5 million hens, and planned to construct similar facilities at the rate of one per year. Rose Acre used conveyer belts to move the eggs directly from chicken to carton, washing, drying, and sorting the eggs by size along the way. Integrated collection and packaging reduced Rose Acre’s costs but also left some eggs with tiny cracks. If more than 5% of eggs had checks (the name for such cracks), the United States Department of Agriculture would not apply its Grade A seal; as a result Rose Acre sold most of its eggs without federal certification.

Larry Jeppesen, at the time a self-employed consultant on the marketing of eggs, proposed to Marcus Rust, a director and vice-president of Rose Acre, that Jeppesen take charge of marketing eggs from the new White County facility. Jeppesen proposed to sell the eggs to retail groceries (a market he knew well); to get top dollar, the eggs would need USDA certification. After an exchange of correspondence, Marcus agreed to Jeppesen’s proposal, which called for him to receive a stated salary ($100,000 the first year, falling to $60,000 the third) against one-third of the profits. Marcus and his father David (who owned a majority of Rose Acre’s shares) were to split the rest of the profits. American Egg Company, as Jeppesen called the unincorporated marketing operation, would buy eggs from Rose Acre at the best price Rose Acre offered to any customer and would have the exclusive right to market Rose Acre’s production from White County. Jeppesen agreed to pay the cost of bringing USDA inspectors to the site so that qualifying eggs could receive the Grade A seal. This agreement was memorialized in a letter Jeppesen sent to Marcus, and a handwritten note back from Marcus. Rose Acre’s board did not vote on this proposal, although David and Marcus Rust stood on both sides of the transaction.

By mid-1986, after a year of operation, American Egg’s sales were short of expectations. Groceries wanted large, USDA-certified Grade A eggs. The size of eggs increases with the age of the pullets, and those at White County were still young. The USDA certified as Grade A only about half of the facility’s production. Jeppesen therefore sold a large fraction of the eggs to the wholesale trade, at lower prices than retailers would have paid for the kind of eggs consumers prefer. American Egg’s largest customer was Boomsma, Inc., a producer of eggs and a jobber for other producers’ surplus. One of Rose Acre’s larger competitors, Boomsma was among six plaintiffs in an antitrust suit charging Rose Acre with predatory pricing. In August 1986 Rose Acre decided to sell Boomsma the entire production of its White County facility at a substantial discount; the Rusts expected Boomsma to dismiss the antitrust suit in exchange. American Egg was dropped. In January 1987 Rose Acre stopped selling to Boomsma, which had not dismissed the suit. At this point Rose Acre had the worst of both worlds: Boomsma was still pursuing its claim under the antitrust laws, and Jeppesen had filed this suit under the diversity jurisdiction charging the Rusts and Rose Acre with breach of contract and interference with his business of selling eggs to Boomsma.

*1237 Each jury decided against Rose Acre. In the antitrust case the jury returned a verdict of $28 million after trebling, but the district court entered judgment in Rose Acre’s favor after concluding that it lacked market power. We affirmed. A.A. Poultry Farms, Inc. v. Rose Acre Farms, Inc., 881 F.2d 1396 (7th Cir.1989). In Jeppesen’s suit the jury concluded that both Marcus and David Rust breached their joint venture agreement and awarded $140,000 in compensatory damages against both Rusts plus $20,000 in punitive damages against Marcus Rust. The jury also concluded that David Rust (but not Marcus) had interfered with the Jeppesen-Boomsma business and awarded an additional $60,000 in punitive damages. Before sending the case to the jury, the district court granted judgment as a matter of law in favor of Rose Acre, holding that no evidence supported Jeppesen’s claim that the corporation was one of the joint venturers. The judge rebuffed all challenges to the jury’s verdict, leading to cross-appeals: The Rusts crave exoneration, and Jeppesen wants damages from Rose Acre.

Let us start with Jeppesen’s claim against Rose Acre. According to Jeppesen, Rose Acre broke its promise to sell the entire output of the White County facility through American Egg. This argument fails for multiple reasons, (i) In the district court Jeppesen argued that Rose Acre was a participant in the joint venture, not that it was an outsider obliged by contract to give the joint venture exclusive distribution rights. The district court decided that the evidence did not support Jeppesen’s contention, which he has abandoned on appeal. The contract argument, not having been presented to the district judge, is waived. Indeed, Jeppesen has waived any opportunity to contest the waiver possibility. Rose Acre raised this obstacle in its brief, and Jeppesen ignored the point altogether; at oral argument his lawyer vaguely alluded to things that might or might not have been said in the conference on jury instructions, but this was too late to contest the point — too late in both courts, (ii) The right plaintiff on a contract theory would be the joint venture itself: American Egg. Yet American Egg is not a party, and for two good reasons: first, its presence would destroy diversity of citizenship; second, Jeppesen owned only a third of American Egg, and the Rusts, who held the rest, could have prevented it from filing suit, (iii) None of the documents specifies a term for any exclusive distributorship. When the parties do not set their own duration for a contract, Indiana law (which the parties agree governs) provides that the term is at will. House of Crane Inc. v. H. Fendrich, Inc., 146 Ind.App. 478, 256 N.E.2d 578 (1970); Monon R.R. v. New York Central R.R., 141 Ind.App. 277, 227 N.E.2d 450, 456 (1967). Rose Acre did not sell behind American Egg’s back during a period of supposedly exclusive dealing; it made a clean break of things, as is appropriate for a contract terminable at will.

Jeppesen’s principal contention is that the Rusts violated the terms of the joint venture they established. The Rusts concede that if there was a joint venture they are liable to Jeppesen, but they deny that there was such a venture. The jury resolved this question against them, and the evidence supports its decision. We may assume that in Indiana a “joint venture” is an unincorporated association in which the participants share profits and losses, although the cases do not squarely hold that loss-sharing is a necessary ingredient. See Mantooth v. Federal Land Bank of Louisville, 528 N.E.2d 1132, 1140-41 (Ind.App.1988); Baker v. Billingsley, 126 Ind.App. 703, 132 N.E.2d 273, 276 (1956).

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8 F.3d 1235, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 28955, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larry-jeppesen-v-david-rust-and-marcus-rust-and-rose-acre-farms-inc-ca7-1993.