PBA Tour Gear, Inc. v. Professional Bowlers Ass'n (In Re PBA Tour Gear, Inc.)

301 B.R. 387, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 1540, 2003 WL 22753430
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. New York
DecidedNovember 14, 2003
Docket1-19-40795
StatusPublished

This text of 301 B.R. 387 (PBA Tour Gear, Inc. v. Professional Bowlers Ass'n (In Re PBA Tour Gear, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PBA Tour Gear, Inc. v. Professional Bowlers Ass'n (In Re PBA Tour Gear, Inc.), 301 B.R. 387, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 1540, 2003 WL 22753430 (N.Y. 2003).

Opinion

AMENDED DECISION DENYING SUMMARY JUDGMENT ON ISSUE OF WAIVER

DOROTHY EISENBERG, Bankruptcy Judge.

PBA Tour Gear, Inc. (“Tour Gear”) and IAMG Holdings, Inc. (“IAMG Holdings”), Chapter 11 debtors (Tour Gear and IAMG Holdings collectively referred to as the “Debtors” or the “Plaintiffs”), commenced an adversary proceeding against numerous parties, including the Professional Bowlers Association LLC (the “PBA”) and Brunswick Bowling & Billiards, Inc. (“Brunswick”), alleging numerous causes of action. The adversary complaint, as amended, was dismissed as to all defendants except the PBA and Brunswick (collectively, the “Defendants”). The controversy arises out of a license agreement (the “License Agreement”) regarding the PBA’s proprietary marks, entered into between the PBA, as licensor, and IAMG Group, Ltd. (sometimes referred to herein as “IAM”), the predecessor-in-interest to IAMG Holdings, as licensee, in May 1999 and amended on January 26, 2000, March 20, 2001 (the “March 20th Amendment”) and May 1, 2001 (the “May 1st Amendment”). Before the Court is a motion by the PBA to dismiss certain causes of action in the Third Amended Adversary Complaint, which the Court has previously deemed a motion for partial summary judgment (the “Summary Judgment Motion”), 1 requesting, among other things, (a) a ruling that the March 20th and the May 1st Amendments to the License Agreement are valid and enforceable as a matter of law, based on waiver by the Debtors; (b) dismissal of any claim asserted by the Debtors that arose prior to March 20, 2001 (claims related to changes in logo patch design; changes in logo patch placement on the shirts of the professional bowlers; claims related to sponsorship and product registration; claims related to manufacture of bowling bag tags and of other “giveaway” items; and claims related to the manufacture and sale of bowling balls and pins); (c) dismissal of any claim related to the Debtors’ failure to obtain financing from Equity Merchants Banking Corporation (“EMBC”) or any other lender due to conduct of the PBA; and (d) dismissal of the Debtors’ claim for rescission of the March 20th Amendment for failure of consideration. The PBA also requests partial summary judgment terminating the License *391 Agreement because of the Debtors’ assertion of claims in this action in alleged violation of the March 20th and May 1st Amendments to the License Agreement. The Plaintiffs filed various documents in opposition to the Summary Judgment Motion, including a memorandum of law and an amended memorandum of law.

The Court conducted a hearing on the PBA’s Summary Judgment Motion and the Plaintiffs’ opposition thereto on January 13, 2003, at which were present counsel to the Plaintiffs, the PBA and Brunswick. As part of their opposition to the instant motion, the Plaintiffs submitted a notarized statement from Mr. George Schwartz, an employee of EMBC who was responsible for negotiating with the PBA certain terms of the financing sought by IAMG Holdings, which raised issues of fact requiring an evidentiary hearing. 2 By Decision and Order dated February 7, 2003, as amended on February 11, 2003, the Court found that a determination of the Summary Judgment Motion required the interpretation and construction of the March 20th Amendment to the License Agreement. The Court further found that Paragraph 2 of the March 20th Amendment contains a condition precedent to the effect that the rights conferred to the PBA by the amendment “shall immediately vest in the PBA upon execution [of the March 20th Amendment] and the completion of PBA’s good faith discussions with EMBC with respect to the requested assignment of the License bg IAM to EMBC” (3/20/01 Amendment, ¶ 2, emphasis supplied), and that an evidentiary hearing was necessary. Accordingly, hearings were held on April 3, 4, and 30, 2003 and May 1, 2003.

After consideration of the Summary Judgment Motion, the opposition thereto, the memoranda of law filed by the Plaintiffs and the PBA, the testimony of the witnesses, the documentary evidence presented at the hearing, and the post-trial filings, the Court has determined that, as a matter of law, the March 20th Amendment cannot be enforced for failure of consideration. Said amendment is rescinded and the causes of action which accrued prior to the execution of said amendment were not waived by IAMG Holdings. This decision constitutes the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Fed. R. Bankr.P. 7052.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. In October 2000, IAMG Holdings advised the PBA of its efforts to obtain financing. (4/4/03 Tr., p. 24). Jahn Avarello, President of IAMG Holdings and Hal Wolfe, an investment advisor hired by IAMG Holdings to assist it in its efforts to raise capital, advised PBA’s attorney, and other representatives of the PBA of this fact during a meeting in New York in October 2000. (4/4/03 Tr., p. 23).

2. EMBC was initially contacted as a potential lender for IAMG Holdings through Hal Wolfe, of International Technologies and Finance, LLC. (4/4/03 Tr., p. 144-45; 5/1/03 Tr., p. 134). George Schwartz was an employee of EMBC with primary responsibility for obtaining funding for IAMG Holdings. Stacie Daley is in-house counsel for EMBC.

*392 3. During its due diligence, EMBC discovered that the assets of IAMG Holdings, other than its License with the PBA, were insufficient to secure the amount of financing IAMG Holdings required. (4/4/03 Tr., pp. 171-74; 5/1/03 Tr., p. 134). Accordingly, the License became the centerpiece of the financing transaction.

4. IAMG Holdings received and provided to EMBC a valuation of the License, which estimated the value of the License at $16 million. (4/4/03 Tr., p. 147; Plaintiffs Exh. 4).

5. EMBC contacted Connecticut Bank of Commerce (“CBC”) to act as a lender for IAMG Holdings. 3 (4/4/03 Tr., p. 161). The Senior Vice-President of CBC in charge of the Structured Finance Group with direct responsibility for the IAMG Holdings loan, advised Mr. Schwartz that CBC would require an assignment of the License by IAMG Holdings as a condition precedent to closing the loan. (5/1/03 Tr., pp. 122-24). Further, CBC would require the assignment of the License to contain a “put.” (5/1/03 Tr., pp. 107, 122-23, 128).

6. A “put” is a device whereby, in the event of a default by IAMG Holdings, CBC would be able to sell the license back to the PBA for an agreed upon cash amount. (4/4/03 Tr., p. 155; 5/1/03 Tr., p. 61). EMBC and CBC required an assignment and a “put” as an element of the assignment because of the fractious relationship and dealings between the PBA and its licensee, IAMG Holdings. (5/1/03 Tr., pp. 122-24,129-30).

7. Mr. Schwartz advised Jahn Avarello that, in order to proceed with the loan, IAMG Holdings must assign the PBA License to EMBC, which assignment must contain a “put,” and that EMBC required that the PBA consent to an assignment of the License in order for IAMG Holdings to obtain the financing. (4/4/03 Tr., p. 33; 4/30/03 Tr., pp. 3S-39). 4

8. The PBA, through its general counsel, spoke with Mr. Schwartz and Mr.

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301 B.R. 387, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 1540, 2003 WL 22753430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pba-tour-gear-inc-v-professional-bowlers-assn-in-re-pba-tour-gear-nyeb-2003.