Medina & Medina, Inc. v. Hormel Foods Corporation

840 F.3d 26, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 19033, 2016 WL 6135470
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedOctober 21, 2016
Docket14-2055P
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 840 F.3d 26 (Medina & Medina, Inc. v. Hormel Foods Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Medina & Medina, Inc. v. Hormel Foods Corporation, 840 F.3d 26, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 19033, 2016 WL 6135470 (1st Cir. 2016).

Opinion

LIPEZ, Circuit Judge.

This case involves a dispute over an unwritten and allegedly exclusive distributorship agreement between Medina & Medina, Inc. (“Medina”) and Hormel Foods Corp. (“Hormel”) under Puerto Rico’s Dealer’s Contracts Act (“Law 75”), see P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 10, §§ 278-278e. Medina, a Puerto Rico-based distributor of refrigerated food products, brought a lawsuit against its principal, Hormel, seeking a declaration that Medina is the exclusive distributor of Hormel’s retail refrigerated products in Puerto Rico. Medina also claimed that Hormel violated the exclusive distribution agreement and hence Law 75 by: selling Supreme Party Platters directly to Costco while bypassing Medina, and subsequently refusing to sell its new retail refrigerated products to Medina on account of this lawsuit. Medina sought damages for those violations. Hormel filed counterclaims, asserting, inter alia, that Medina is not an exclusive distributor.

The parties’ claims' were evaluated by the court through multiple proceedings, including, ultimately, a bench trial. After the trial, the district court reached the following conclusions: (1) Medina’s exclusivity' claim was time-barred by the three-year statute of limitations under Law 75; (2) Hormel’s counterclaim that Medina was not its exclusive distributor was moot in light of the court’s statute of limitations ruling; (3) notwithstanding the time bar for Medina’s exclusivity claim, Hormel’s sales of Supreme Party Platters to Costco violated Law 75; and (4) Hormel was not liable for refusing to sell its new retail refrigerated products to Medina. The parties cross-appealed.

Medina claims that the district court misunderstood its exclusivity claim, construing it as one of “airtight exclusivity,” a type of exclusive arrangement that prohibits stateside distributors from reselling products into the Puerto Rico market. Rather, Medina argues that it has only claimed to be the exclusive distributor based in Puerto Rico for Hormel’s retail refrigerated products. In its cross-appeal, Hormel makes the argument, inter alia, that the court’s imposition of liability for Hormel’s Costco transactions is inconsistent with the court’s finding that any exclusivity claim is barred by the statute of limitations.

Having carefully considered these claims, we agree with the district court that Medina’s exclusivity claim as presented is time-barred. However, we conclude that the statute of limitations bar to l’ecov- *29 ery extends to Medina’s Costco-related claim as well. Hence, we affirm the district court’s judgment in part and reverse it in part.

I.

Medina, a company based in San Juan, purchases and distributes refrigerated products to retailers in Puerto Rico. Hormel is a multinational food corporation with its principal place of business in Minnesota. Hormel produces, among other products, refrigerated food items that are sold at various retail stores in the continental United States and Puerto Rico. The dispute in this case, which arises under Puerto Rico’s Law 75, was brought in federal court, based on diversity jurisdiction. See 28 U.S.C. § 1332.

Much of the dispute in this case involves whether Medina argued for airtight exclusivity in its pleadings and in the district court proceedings, and, if so, when the statute of limitations accrued for such an exclusivity claim. Medina argues that it has never claimed airtight exclusivity; rather, according to Medina, it has alleged throughout the proceedings below, only that it is the exclusive distributer based in Puerto Rico for Hormel’s retail refrigerated products for the Puerto Rico market. Hormel contends that the exclusivity arrangement alleged by Medina is—and has always been—one of airtight exclusivity, and that the district court was correct to construe it as such in finding the claim to be time-barred. We examine the facts and the procedural background with this disagreement in mind. It is critical to an assessment of the statute of limitations ruling.

A. Distribution Arrangement

The facts underlying the origin of the parties’ relationship’ are undisputed. -In May 1987, Pepin Medina (“Pepin”), Executive Vice President of Medina, 1 met Jim Dinicola and Tony Alonso, 2 Vice President of Sales and National Accounts Sales Manager for Food Service at Hormel, respectively, at a food show in Chicago. Pepin and Dinicola discussed Law 75 and Hormel’s experience with a prior exclusive distribution arrangement in Puerto Rico. Din-icola remarked that Law 75 is “a cutthroat law,” and that it is “one of the things stopping [Hormel] from going into the Puerto Rican market.”

Several months later,' Pepin, Dinicola, and Alonso met again in Austin, Minneso-tá, to further discuss the prospect of’Hormel entering the Puerto Rico market. Dini-cola indicated that Hormel was considering appointing Medina as its distributor in Puerto Rico. Dinicola reiterated, however, the concern regarding exclusivity under Law 75. Pepin responded that because Puerto Rico is a small market, non-exclusivity would mean “bumping heads every d'áy ... with competition,” including competition from mainland distributors. Pepin told Dinicola, “[i]f we are not exclusive, we are not interested [in distributing Hormel’s products].”

Then, in April 1988, several Hormel executives, including Dinicola and Alonso, traveled to Puerto Rico and attended a food show at which Medina had a booth displaying Hormel’s products and logo. During the same trip, the Hormel executives also attended a dinner party held by Pepin at La Casona. At this party, Dinicola told Pepin, “Pepin, let’s go ahead, you go ahead' and distribute the Hormel product.” *30 That remark formed a verbal agreement between the parties, and Medina has since distributed Hormel’s products in Puerto Rico. No written distribution agreement was signed by the parties.

B. Retail Refrigerated Products

Medina has distributed two types of Hormel products since 1988: retail refrigerated products and food service products. Retail refrigerated products are branded products or commodity-based products that can be .marketed under a brand at retail stores. 3 Food service products are items sold to institutions such as hotels, restaurants, and cafeterias, which then prepare and sell the products to an end user, who is often an individual customer. Since the beginning of the distributorship arrangement with Medina in 1988, Hormel has not sold retail refrigerated products to any other distributors based in Puerto Rico besides Medina. Hormel’s food service products, by contrast (which we will address under a separate subheading below), have been marketed in Puerto Rico through multiple Puerto Rico-based distributors at , different times. Medina claims to be the exclusive distributor only of Hormel’s retail refrigerated products, not of its food service products, for the Puerto Rico market.

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840 F.3d 26, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 19033, 2016 WL 6135470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/medina-medina-inc-v-hormel-foods-corporation-ca1-2016.