Meinrath v. Singer Co.

87 F.R.D. 422, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12324
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 3, 1980
DocketNo. 79 Civ. 2442
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 87 F.R.D. 422 (Meinrath v. Singer Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meinrath v. Singer Co., 87 F.R.D. 422, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12324 (S.D.N.Y. 1980).

Opinion

OPINION

EDWARD WEINFELD, District Judge.

Plaintiff Leopold Meinrath is a Belgian entrepreneur engaged in the marketing and distribution of computers and computer-related products principally in the Benelux countries and France. He commenced this suit to recover payments of “bonus compensation” allegedly due under an Agreement of Purchase and Sale (the “Agreement”) entered into among him, the four “Unicard companies” in which he had controlling interests,1 and the defendant The Singer Company (“Singer”) on September 7, 1973. The detailed terms of that Agreement have been described in an earlier opinion by this Court, familiarity with which is assumed.2 For purposes of this motion, it is sufficient to say that the Agreement was comprised of three integrated parts: (1) an agreement of purchase and sale, by which Meinrath agreed to sell and Singer to purchase for the sum of $280,000 his exclusive rights to distribute Cogar computers and computer-related equipment throughout Europe through his four “Unicard companies”; (2) an employment agreement, whereby Singer hired Meinrath to aid in the sale and distribution of its subsidiary Cogar’s computers in Europe at an annual salary of $40,000; and (3) a bonus compensation agreement, by which Singer agreed to pay to Meinrath commissions, ranging from a minimum of $220,000 to a maximum of $720,000, for orders booked for the sale or lease of the computers. Only the last of these is at issue here.

In his amended complaint Meinrath seeks recovery of three separate items of damage, each under a different theory of law. First, he claims that as of the date of the Agreement he “had consummated or [was] in the process of consummating” enough sales to entitle him to receive the maximum amount of bonus compensation under the contract; that is, $720,000. The parties agree that to date Meinrath has received bonus compensation payments of $220,000 in American currency3 and later payments in Belgian francs in amounts equivalent to $200,000. Thus, his first claim is for $300,-000 — the difference between the amount he received in bonus compensation and the maximum allowable amount, to which he claims entitlement.

The second item of his claim is based upon the dramatic decline of the dollar visa-vis the Belgian franc in the years since the unpaid bonus compensation allegedly became due. Meinrath claims that, in addition to the $300,000 in bonus compensation, he is entitled to $155,000, which represents the “present-day American currency equivalent of the number of additional Belgian francs which [he] should have been paid as and when maximum Bonus Compensation was due and owing.” The contract, upon which plaintiff predicates his claim, mentions only amounts in American dollars; it does not refer to or require payments in Belgian or any other currency.

Third, Meinrath claims “consequential damages” in the amount of U.S. $770,000. This claim is based upon allegations that Singer knew at the time it entered into the contract that Meinrath had substantial subsisting business ventures that would survive the Agreement; that Meinrath repeatedly apprised Singer and its representatives of the necessity for prompt payment of the bonus compensation as it became due in order to provide working capital for his Unicard ventures; and that as a direct, [425]*425foreseeable result of Singer’s failure to make timely payments to which he claims he was entitled but defendant denies, Mein-rath’s other businesses suffered substantial losses, which in turn injured him.

In its amended answer Singer raises eight affirmative defenses ranging from the allegation that plaintiff’s amended complaint has failed to state a claim, to assertions that Meinrath breached warranties in the contract and failed adequately to perform his employment obligations under the contract. In addition, Singer has asserted counterclaims for: (1) the return of any bonus compensation paid to plaintiff that in fact was not due under the agreement, and (2) for $3,597.57 allegedly owed by one of Mein-rath’s companies, Unieard France, for computer-related goods shipped to it by Singer’s subsidiary, the Cogar Corporation (“Co-gar”), on November 7, 1972, which remains unpaid.

Presently before the Court are cross-motions by Singer for summary judgment on the consequential damages and dollar depreciation claims; and by plaintiff to strike all eight affirmative defenses, as well as for summary judgment on the two counterclaims. In short, the only claim not challenged here, and which the parties at least tacitly agree must be resolved by the trier of fact, is plaintiff’s basic claim for a balance of $300,000 in bonus compensation. Each of the parties’ contentions will be examined in turn.

I.

Defendant’s Motion

A. Consequential Damages

Meinrath’s claim for consequential damages consists of (1) losses of approximately $648,000 in invested capital suffered as a result of the liquidation of Unicard France in 1975, and of the forced sale of all assets of Unicard Nederland in 1974 for the nominal sum of $2, and (2) a $122,000 decline in the net worth of Unicard Belgique which Meinrath continues to own and operate, due to operating and tax losses allegedly attributable to the losses suffered by the other two Unicard companies. These latter losses, which plaintiff’s counsel at oral argument acknowledged are “the most tenuous” of Meinrath's claims, are asserted solely on behalf of the company, despite the Court’s ruling of January 10, 1980 and plaintiff’s repeated representations that only claims personal to Meinrath are cognizable in this action. He disregards Unicard Belgique’s corporate entity upon a claim that he is its sole shareholder and entitled to its assets upon a distribution but this also disregards the claims of and rights of the corporation’s creditors.

The essence of each of these claims is that at the time of the signing of their Agreement and even prior thereto, Singer had a special awareness of the Unicard companies’ financial plight and their dire need for funds with a consequent obligation upon Singer to make timely payments of bonus compensation. In essence, plaintiff seeks to parlay Singer’s knowledge of his and his companies’ financial predicament into a claim that Singer was required to provide them with necessary financial capital by making prompt payment of all amounts due under the Agreement. The Agreement contains no such explicit or implicit undertakings; plaintiff was to be paid commission on revenues collected from sales and leases of equipment by Singer affiliates during a period of two and one-half years after September 1, 1973. No liquidated damages are specified in the event of nonpayment or late payment of bonus compensation.

This is Singer’s second motion to dismiss the consequential damages claim. The first was made before discovery had commenced and before the precise nature of plaintiff’s claim had been clearly defined. In denying relief, the Court’s opinion of November 7, 1979 recognized that the rule of this Circuit, announced in Spang Industries, Inc. v. Aet-na Casualty & Surety Co.,4 authorizes the recovery of consequential damages in cer[426]*426tain “special circumstances.”5 Now that discovery has been completed, it is clear that plaintiff’s claim does not come within the Spang rule and must be dismissed as a matter of law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 F.R.D. 422, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meinrath-v-singer-co-nysd-1980.