Perceptics Corp. v. Societe Electronique Et Systemes Trindel

907 F. Supp. 1139, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22522, 1992 WL 739031
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 30, 1992
DocketCiv. 3-91-0316
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 907 F. Supp. 1139 (Perceptics Corp. v. Societe Electronique Et Systemes Trindel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perceptics Corp. v. Societe Electronique Et Systemes Trindel, 907 F. Supp. 1139, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22522, 1992 WL 739031 (E.D. Tenn. 1992).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

JORDAN, District Judge.

This civil action is before the court for consideration of the motion to dismiss [doc. 3] filed by the defendant, called “Elsydel” for short. The motion raises issues of arbitrability and forum non conveniens in the context of an international commercial dispute.

Some understanding of the plaintiffs cause of action is necessary to an adjudication of the pending motion. The plaintiff Percepties is a Tennessee- corporation with its principal place of business in Knoxville. Elsydel is a corporation organized under the laws of the French Republic, and has its principal place of business in Paris. Elsydel designs and manufactures toll and access control systems. For example, an Elsydel system might be used to restrict access to parking lots to automobiles for which access fees have been paid.

Elsydel and Percepties entered into an agreement under which Percepties was to develop and to supply for incorporation into Elsydel’s toll and access control systems license plate reading (LPR) technology. Per-ceptics’ product, had all gone well, would have consisted, at least during the first stage of the parties’ planned relationship, of a dedicated computer board and software. The agreement also contemplated ongoing cooperation in research, development, training and marketing.

According to the allegations in Percepties’ complaint, representatives of Elsydel visited Knoxville to negotiate this agreement. Elsy-del first signed, in France, the resulting written agreement, and then sent it to Tennessee, where Percepties signed it. The agreement is- in English.

Also according to the allegations in Per-ceptics’ complaint, this agreement contemplated a five-year relationship under which Percepties would work on its LPR technology while Elsydel would work on marketing the toll and access control systems in the United States and Europe. The agreement required Elsydel to fund Percepties’ LPR research and development to the extent of at least $250,000.00. Also, the agreement required Elsydel to purchase from Percepties minimum amounts, measured in United States dollars, of goods and services. The amounts of these minimum purchases changed from year to year during the life of the agreement, and, in any year in which Elsydel failed to purchase the required minimum, the agreement imposed a license fee on the French corporation.

Percepties says that Elsydel breached the parties’ agreement, by never funding the LPR research and development, and by purchasing only about $50,000.00 worth of goods and services during the first year of their contractual relationship, when, according to the agreement, Elsydel should have purchased goods and services worth at least five times that amount. Percepties perceived El-sydel’s breach as a repudiation of the parties’ agreement, and so commenced this lawsuit.

I

Elsydel makes two arguments why the court should dismiss this lawsuit. The first *1141 is that the parties agreed to arbitrate, and the second is that Tennessee does- not provide a convenient forum. Concerning the arbitrability of the parties’ dispute, Elsydel points to article 24 on page 15 of the parties’ written agreement, under the heading “CONTROLLING LAW” 1 :

This agreement is made, entered into, executed and delivered between international corporations and, as such, shall be governed, controlled, interpreted and defined by and under the rules and the jurisdiction of the International Chamber of Commerce, entirely independent of the forum in which this agreement or any part thereof may come up for construction, interpretation or enforcement. 2

In support of its argument in favor of arbitrability, Elsydel submitted with its reply memorandum [doc. 7] the affidavit of one of its officers, Claude Verrier, in which Mr. Verrier describes the negotiations which led to the inclusion of article 24 in the parties’ written agreement. However, as counsel for Elsydel conceded at oral argument on his client’s motion, Mr. Verrier confused the agreement in issue with another written agreement between the same parties, with the result that paragraphs 3, 4 and 5 of his affidavit must be treated as having been withdrawn.

Setting aside these withdrawn paragraphs, it appears that Perceptics first proposed as article 24 of the agreement in issue a choice of law provision which made Tennessee law the governing law. Elsydel objected to this. Notes prepared by Perceptics after a May, 1988 meeting between the parties to discuss the agreement indicate that Elsydel wanted a provision such as “Any disagreements will be discussed and negotiated until resolved, with the International Chamber of Commerce being the governing body.” The Perceptics employee who sent a copy of these meeting notes to Elsydel wrote in his cover letter, “I must emphasize that these meeting notes do not imply agreement for either Elsydel or Perceptics. I have tried to emphasize the Elsydel perspective.”

After Perceptics sent this letter to Elsydel, Perceptics prepared the next draft of the agreement, in which article 24 appears under the same heading and in the same language as in the final written agreement, with one exception: the agreement is stated in this draft to be governed, controlled, interpreted and defined “by and under the jurisdiction of the International Chamber of Commerce,” whereas the language in the final, signed draft refers to “the rules and the jurisdiction of the International Chamber of Commerce”. (Emphasis added.) This addition was made at the request of Elsydel.

Perceptics, in support of its response [doc. 9] to Elsydel’s reply concerning the pending motion, submitted the affidavit of its president, R.C. Gonzalez. Mr. Gonzalez does not dispute Mr. Vender's version (without the withdrawn paragraphs) of the evolution of article 24, but says that he did not understand this provision to be an agreement to arbitrate. Mr. Gonzalez states in his affidavit that Elsydel requested that the original choice of law provision be modified to refer to the International Chamber of Commerce instead of to Tennessee, and that

Elsydel did not demand that any disputes be submitted to arbitration. There were no discussions as to what effect this change would have, nor did any of the people at that meeting discuss arbitration; that was the extent of the discussions regarding Article 24 at the meeting. Later, Mr. Malbrunot [of Elsydel] did request in writing that the provision be modified to refer to the rules of the ICC.
After the negotiation of the Agreement, I did not believe that Perceptics had agreed to submit any disputes to arbitration nor *1142 did Perceptics intend to agree to arbitration under § 24 of the Agreement.

Perceptics also submitted the affidavit of its vice-president, R.E. Woods, who points out that Perceptics and Elsydel, in a previous written agreement, included an express agreement to arbitrate:

Article 5 — Arbitration

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
907 F. Supp. 1139, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22522, 1992 WL 739031, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perceptics-corp-v-societe-electronique-et-systemes-trindel-tned-1992.