MOONSCOOP SAS v. American Greetings Corp.

709 F. Supp. 2d 583, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40937, 2010 WL 1744568
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedApril 27, 2010
DocketCase 1:09-CV-1885
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 709 F. Supp. 2d 583 (MOONSCOOP SAS v. American Greetings Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MOONSCOOP SAS v. American Greetings Corp., 709 F. Supp. 2d 583, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40937, 2010 WL 1744568 (N.D. Ohio 2010).

Opinion

OPINION & ORDER [Resolving Doc. Nos. 86, 87, 88 ]

JAMES S. GWIN, District Judge:

In this breach of contract case, Plaintiff MoonScoop SAS (“MoonScoop”) moves for summary judgment as to its claims against Defendant American Greetings Corp. (“American Greetings”) and against Third-Party Defendant Cookie Jar Entertainment, Inc. (“Cookie Jar”)’s cross-claims. American Greetings separately moves for summary judgment against MoonScoop.

The parties dispute whether each satisfied contracts for the sale of American Greetings’s interest in the intellectual property associated with the Strawberry Shortcake and Care Bear characters. MoonScoop says that American Greetings broke a contract requiring American Greetings to transfer rights in Strawberry Shortcake and Care Bears and ending any claim of Cookie Jar to the characters. American Greetings says that MoonScoop lost its right to purchase the Strawberry Shortcake and Care Bear character properties when it failed to close the transaction and pay for the properties before June 7, 2009, a closing date that American Greetings says MoonScoop knew was crucial. Finally, Cookie Jar says that Moon-Scoop wrongly interfered with its rights to the same properties.

For the following reasons, this Court GRANTS MoonScoop’s Motion for Summary Judgment against Cookie Jar, [Doc. 86 ], GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART MoonScoop’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment against American Greetings, [Doc. 87 ], and GRANTS American Greetings’s Motion for Summary Judgment against MoonScoop. [Doc. 88. ]

*586 I. Background

Since American Greetings designed the character Strawberry Shortcake in the late 1970s, she has generated “billions of dollars in revenues” for the company and its subsidiary Those Characters from Cleveland, Inc. In 2001, American Greetings entered into a long-term contract with DIC Entertainment Corporation (“DIC”), a television production and licensing company. Under its contract with American Greetings, DIC served as licensing agent for Strawberry Shortcake, marketing and distributing certain television, video, merchandising, and other products involving the character. [Doc. 89-2.]

The American Greeting — DIC agreement gave DIC favorable commission rights, arguably because DIC principles brought special talents to marketing Strawberry Shortcake. Reflecting this, the 2001 Licensing Agreement contained a “key-man” provision that permitted American Greetings to terminate the agreement if two DIC principals — CEO Andy Hey-ward and president Brad Brooks — left the company or if DIC was sold to an American Greetings competitor. [Doc. 89-2 at 29.]

In early 2008, Cookie Jar, a Canada-based entertainment production and licensing company, entered into negotiations to acquire DIC. [Doc. 89-8.] Ultimately, a Cookie Jar subsidiary entered into a merger agreement with DIC’s parent company, DIC Entertainment Holdings, Inc. (“Holdings”). Believing this merger violated the 2001 Licensing Agreement, American Greetings immediately terminated the agreement and filed suit against DIC, Holdings, and Cookie Jar. [N.D. Ohio Case No. L08-CV-15333. In July 2008, soon before a scheduled preliminary injunction hearing, the parties reached a settlement. The July 2008 settlement largely underlies instant dispute.

As part of the settlement, American Greetings and Cookie Jar entered into several contracts. In addition to a Settlement Agreement and Release, in which American Greetings consented to the DIC-Cookie Jar merger, the parties executed a Binding Letter Agreement (“2008 Letter Agreement”) and an Amendment to the 2001 Licensing Agreement. Under this 2008 Letter Agreement, Cookie Jar agreed to purchase the Strawberry Shortcake and Care Bears intellectual properties from American Greetings for $195 million. [Doc. 89-5.]

Under the 2008 Letter Agreement, Cookie Jar needed to close its purchase of Strawberry Shortcake and Care Bears no later than September 30, 2008. [Doc. 89-5 at 2.] Cookie Jar defaulted on this obligation. After Cookie Jar’s default and consistent with the 2008 Letter Agreement, American Greetings began soliciting bids for the properties from other interested buyers.. [Doc. 89-5 at 6.]

On March 24, 2009, American Greetings agreed to sell the properties to Moon-Scoop, a French entertainment production and brand management company. American Greetings and MoonScoop reflected their sales contract in a Binding Term Sheet (“MoonScoop Term Sheet”). [Doc. 89-6.] Under this term sheet, MoonScoop agreed to purchase the properties, including Cookie Jar’s licensing rights, for $95 million. [Id.] The parties set the closing date for the sale at the earlier of thirty days from its signing (unless the parties agreed to an extension) or one business day following the satisfaction or waiver of the term sheet’s “Conditions.” [Id. at 2.] Important to the issues involved with the summary judgment motions, the term sheet also provided that “in no event” could the transaction close later than seventy-five days from its date. [Id.]

*587 As required under a “Matching Right” provision, in its 2008 Letter Agreement with Cookie Jar, American Greetings also notified Cookie Jar of the MoonScoop offer. On March 30, 2009, Cookie Jar said that it would match MoonScoop’s $95 million offer. [Doc. 89-7.] American Greetings responded the same day, confirming that Cookie Jar would have the right to match the terms of the MoonScoop Term Sheet and informing Cookie Jar it had until April 30, 2009, to close the transaction. [Doc. 89-8.]

Although American Greetings and Cookie Jar discussed extending this deadline, the parties could not agree on an extension. [Doc. 89-9, 110-2.] On the April 30 closing date, Cookie Jar informed American Greetings that it was “still in the process of seeking financing.” Cookie Jar also complained that American Greetings had failed to offer Cookie Jar the same amount of time given MoonScoop to close the deal and complained that American Greetings had given MoonScoop a $22.5 million produetion/work-for-hire agreement that American Greetings had not offered Cookie Jar. [Doc. 89-10.]

On May 1, 2009, American Greetings informed MoonScoop that Cookie Jar had not completed its match. [Doc. 87-2 at A] Although the parties dispute the date’s significance, they agree that June 7, 2009, became the new date for the American Greetings-MoonScoop closing, seventy-five days after the March 24, 2009 term sheet. [Doc. 88-1 at 12, 87-1 at 11.]

After Cookie Jar’s alleged failure to match the MoonScoop offer, American Greetings and MoonScoop resumed communications. With their discussions, American Greetings and MoonScoop focused much attention to a “Drag Along” provision of the 2008 Letter Agreement and American Greetings’s obligation and ability to deliver Cookie Jar’s current licensing rights to MoonScoop as part of the deal.

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709 F. Supp. 2d 583, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40937, 2010 WL 1744568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moonscoop-sas-v-american-greetings-corp-ohnd-2010.