Naylor Medical Sales & Rentals, Inc. v. Invacare Continuing Care, Inc.

517 F. App'x 443
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 18, 2013
Docket11-5820, 11-5844, 11-6044, 11-6050
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 517 F. App'x 443 (Naylor Medical Sales & Rentals, Inc. v. Invacare Continuing Care, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Naylor Medical Sales & Rentals, Inc. v. Invacare Continuing Care, Inc., 517 F. App'x 443 (6th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

COOK, Circuit Judge.

In this contract dispute concerning the sale of a medical equipment rental business’s assets, defendants-counterplaintiffs Invaeare Continuing Care, Inc., and Inva-care Corp. (“Invaeare”) appeal the district court’s bench trial judgment finding them liable for breach of contract, intentional misrepresentation, and violation of the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA”). Plaintiffs-counterdefendants Naylor Medical Sales & Rentals, Inc. (“Naylor”), and Jerry Allen Underwood cross-appeal the damages awarded. We AFFIRM the district court’s liability findings, but REVERSE the district court’s award of $210,000 in compensatory damages, $315,000 in punitive damages, and $8,000 for damage to rental beds.

I. Background

Invaeare, a company involved in the manufacture and distribution of medical equipment, sought to expand into the medical equipment rental industry. In late 2006 it hired Scott McDaniel as a consultant to help develop its rental business. His consulting agreement structured his compensation into two components: a flat monthly fee and a quarterly bonus equivalent to a percentage of Invacare’s rental profits.

Shortly after his hire, McDaniel introduced Underwood, a close friend and President of Naylor, to Invaeare. Underwood knew that McDaniel worked as a eonsul-tant for Invaeare and that a part of his compensation depended on the growth of Invacare’s rental profits. Invaeare began negotiating with Underwood regarding the sale of Naylor’s assets. After several months of due diligence, Invaeare proposed a purchase price between $1.8 million and $2.1 million — a valuation derived by calculating a price range around four to five times Naylor’s earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (“EBITDA”) — in a letter of intent. Underwood received only one other formal offer for Naylor, offering $1 million, retention of accounts receivable (valued at about $250,000 at the time), and job opportunities for Underwood. Eventually, after an offer and a counteroffer, Invaeare and Underwood agreed on a purchase price of $2.1 million for most of Naylor’s assets. They signed an asset purchase agreement (“APA”) on March 31, 2008. They also verbally agreed to share profits from a bed rental business fifty-fifty, wherein Inva-care would rent beds from plaintiffs (the beds were one of the few assets of Nay-lor’s not included in the asset purchase) and re-rent them to customers.

A. Relevant Terms of the APA

The APA provided that Invaeare would pay $380,000 of the purchase price into an escrow, “pursuant to the terms of the Escrow Agreement.” APA § 3.2(b). Under the Escrow Agreement, the escrow funds would remain deposited in a government-backed money market account until a year after the signing of the APA, where, absent a claim against the escrow funds, the money would automatically be released to Underwood. In particular, Section 3 of the Escrow Agreement permits Invaeare *446 to give notice of a claim to Naylor and the escrow agent, “specifying in reasonable detail the nature and dollar amount of any claim.” Filing a notice locks the escrow funds, preventing release without the written consent of both parties or a final non-appealable court order.

The APA also contains three other sets of provisions relevant to this litigation. In Sections 5.2.4 and 5.2.6 (“Finder’s Fee Provisions”), Invacare represented the following: that no broker acted for Invacare in connection with the APA, that no Inva-care finder was entitled to a finder’s fee, and that none of Invacare’s representations contained any “untrue statement of a material fact” or omitted “a material fact necessary to make the statements contained, in light of the circumstances in which they are made, not misleading.”

In Section 7.6 (“Accounts Receivable Repurchase Provision”), the parties agreed that, at Invacare’s option any time before the anniversary of the sale, Naylor and Underwood would jointly and severally commit to repurchase accounts receivable that remain unpaid 180 days after the date of the invoice (minus a certain contractually defined “excess” amount and subject to a deductible). The same section guarantees to Naylor the “right to verify the existence of the unpaid balance of any accounts receivable.” Both this provision and the Finder’s Fee Provisions were added at the request of Underwood’s attorney.

Last, in Section 4.5.6 of the APA (“Customer Loss Provision”), Naylor and Underwood represented that “[n]o customer or supplier which had accounted for more than ten percent ... of the total sales, rentals or purchases for the year 2007 and no other customer or supplier material to the Business” had “decreased or delayed materially, or threatened to decrease or delay materially” its purchase, rentals, or sales to Naylor. They also represented that they had no knowledge of facts or events that “could reasonably be expected” to cause such decreases or delays and that to their knowledge the sale would not adversely affect customer or supplier relationships.

B. Events Leading to Claims on Escrow and Lawsuit

1. Events Concerning the Finder’s Fee Provisions.

At some point shortly before the close of sale, Invacare’s leadership discovered an ambiguity in McDaniel’s Consulting Agreement that could allow McDaniel to count the revenue from the Naylor acquisition toward the calculation of his revenue-dependent quarterly bonus. Disinclined to pay such a bonus, Invacare offered to pay McDaniel a flat bonus of $30,000 in lieu of his usual profit-dependent quarterly bonus — an offer which McDaniel reluctantly accepted. Invacare called this bonus a “finder’s fee” for accounting purposes (i.e., in order to capitalize the expense in the purchase price and to avoid counting the bonus as cost against the operating income of the new business). Consistent with this practice, it referred to this bonus as a “finder’s fee” in internal documents. Mike Will, who served as Invacare’s Director of Rentals and point man in the Naylor acquisition, flagged a draft of the Finder’s Fee Provision with the words “Scott McDaniel” and inquired in internal discussions whether the company should consider disclosing McDaniel’s bonus to Underwood. Invacare declined to disclose this information, however.

Upon discovering McDaniel’s bonus almost two years after the sale, Underwood sued Invacare for breach of the Finder’s Fee Provisions. Though McDaniel described his involvement in the asset purchase as limited, Underwood claimed that *447 his ignorance of McDaniel’s role and incentives as finder caused him to acquiesce to a lower purchase price. He maintained that, absent this misrepresentation, he would have held out for a buyer willing to offer a purchase price over $8 million or would have continued to operate Naylor at a profit of about $550,000 per year.

2. Events Concerning the Accounts Receivable Repurchase Provision.

After taking reasonable steps to collect on the accounts receivable, Invacare gave notice to the Escrow Agent for a claim invoking the buyback right under the Accounts Receivable Repurchase Provision. Underwood invoked his right to verify the existence of the unpaid balance on the accounts receivable, requesting invoice numbers, invoice dates, and more readable spreadsheets documenting the unpaid accounts receivable.

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Bluebook (online)
517 F. App'x 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/naylor-medical-sales-rentals-inc-v-invacare-continuing-care-inc-ca6-2013.