UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Planet Fitness International Franchise
v. Civil No. 20-cv-693-LM Opinion No. 2021 DNH 148 P JEG-United, LLC
ORDER
Planet Fitness International Franchise (“Planet Fitness”),1 a franchisor of
gyms, and JEG-United, LLC, a company that develops Planet Fitness franchises in
Mexico, assert claims against one another. Planet Fitness moves for partial
summary judgment (doc. no. 24) on JEG-United’s counterclaims, arguing that a
release of liability bars the counterclaims to the extent they arise from events
predating December 26, 2019. JEG-United objects. For the following reasons,
Planet Fitness’s motion is denied.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Summary judgment is proper only if the moving party can demonstrate “that
there is no evidence in the record to support a judgment for the nonmoving party.”
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 318, 332 (1986); see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). If
1 For the purposes of this order, “Planet Fitness” refers to both Planet Fitness
International Franchise and its Chief Development Officer, Raymond Miolla. Miolla is named as a counterclaim defendant by JEG-United. the moving party succeeds in making that showing, “the burden shifts to the
nonmoving party, who must, with respect to each issue on which she would bear the
burden of proof at trial, demonstrate that a trier of fact could reasonably resolve
that issue in her favor.” Borges v. Serrano-Isern, 605 F.3d 1, 5 (1st Cir. 2010). The
nonmoving party’s failure to meet that burden by reference to “significantly
probative” materials “of evidentiary quality” entitles the moving party to summary
judgment. Flovac, Inc. v. Airvac, Inc., 817 F.3d 849, 853 (1st Cir. 2016) (citations
omitted). In evaluating a motion for summary judgment, the courts must view the
evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, must draw all
reasonable inferences in that party’s favor, and may neither make credibility
determinations nor weigh the evidence. Harris v. Scarcelli, 835 F.3d 24, 29 (1st Cir.
2016); Hicks v. Johnson, 755 F.3d 738, 743 (1st Cir. 2014).
BACKGROUND
I. JEG-United and Planet Fitness
Counterclaim defendant Planet Fitness is an international franchisor of
gyms. Counterclaim plaintiff JEG-United, a Delaware limited liability company,
develops Planet Fitness franchises in Mexico. In March 2019, JEG-United and
Planet Fitness entered a contract (the “Side-Letter Agreement”) in which they
agreed to negotiate about providing exclusive development rights to JEG-United to
open and operate Planet Fitness franchises in parts of Mexico. In its counterclaims
against Planet Fitness, JEG-United alleges that Planet Fitness breached the Side-
2 Letter Agreement (Count I), breached implied covenants of good faith and fair
dealing (Count II), tortiously interfered with contractual and prospective business
relationships (Count III), and violated the New Hampshire Consumer Protection
Act (Count IV).2 In its motion for partial summary judgment, Planet Fitness
contends that JEG-United’s counterclaims, to the extent they arise from events
predating December 26, 2019, are barred by a release of liability. Planet Fitness
contends that JEG-United, which is not expressly named in the release, is
nonetheless bound to it by virtue of JEG-United’s corporate relationship with the
release’s actual signatories, JEG-Mexico Bueno, S. de R.L. de C.V. and United PF
Holdings, LLC, (“PF Holdings”) neither of which are parties in the present lawsuit.
II. General Release
The release arose from a transaction unrelated to the present lawsuit. In
December 2019, PF Holdings, which owns and operates many United States-based
Planet Fitness franchises, was sold to a third party. At the time of the sale, PF
Holdings also held interests in Mexico-based Planet Fitness franchises.
Specifically, PF Holdings owned an entity called United PF MEX. United PF MEX
is one of JEG-United’s two members. And JEG-United—through two wholly-owned
2 This brief overview of the parties’ relationship is intended to place the circumstances of Planet Fitness’s motion for summary judgment in context. It should not be construed as a definitive recitation of the parties’ underlying substantive dispute.
3 subsidiaries—holds an interest in JEG-Mexico Bueno, which, in turn, operates five
Planet Fitness franchises in Mexico.
Because only PF Holdings’s interests in the United States-based franchises
were to be included in the sale, the sale was facilitated by transferring PF
Holdings’s interest in United PF MEX to PF Holdings’s parent. All other pertinent
corporate relationships, however, remained the same as they were before the sale.
Because the sale affected gyms with which Planet Fitness held franchise
agreements, Planet Fitness’s approval was required to complete the transaction.3
As a condition of its approval of the sale, Planet Fitness required JEG-Mexico
Bueno and PF Holdings to execute a contract entitled “General Release,” which,
among other terms, contained the following release clause:
Release. Franchisee [JEG-Mexico Bueno] and Transferring Owner [PF Holdings], for themselves and their successors, predecessors, assigns, beneficiaries, executors, trustees, gents, representatives, employees, officers, directors, shareholders, partners, members, subsidiaries and affiliates (jointly and severally, the “Releasors”), irrevocably and absolutely release and forever discharge Franchisor [Planet Fitness] and its successors, predecessors, assigns, beneficiaries, executors, trustees, agents, representatives, employees, officers, directors, shareholders, partners, members, subsidiaries and affiliates (jointly and severally, the “Releasees”), of and from all claims, obligations, actions or causes of action (however denominated), whether in law or in equity, and whether known or unknown, present or contingent, for any injury, damage, or loss whatsoever arising from any acts or occurrences occurring as of or prior to the date of this Release [December 26, 2019] relating to the Franchise Agreements, the businesses operated under the Franchise Agreements, and/or any other previously existing agreement between any of the Releasees and any of the Releasors, including but not limited to, any alleged violations of
3 Planet Fitness’s franchise agreements include a provision granting it approval authority over certain transfers of its franchisees or their assets. 4 any deceptive or unfair trade practices laws, franchise laws, or other local, municipal, state, federal, or other laws, statutes, rules or regulations, and any alleged violations of the Franchise Agreements or any other related agreement. The Releasors, and each of them, also covenant not to sue or otherwise bring a claim against any of the Releasees regarding any of the claims being released under this Release.
Doc. no. 24-2 at 180. The General Release later states that “[e]ach party whose
signature is affixed hereto in a representative capacity represents and warrants
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Planet Fitness International Franchise
v. Civil No. 20-cv-693-LM Opinion No. 2021 DNH 148 P JEG-United, LLC
ORDER
Planet Fitness International Franchise (“Planet Fitness”),1 a franchisor of
gyms, and JEG-United, LLC, a company that develops Planet Fitness franchises in
Mexico, assert claims against one another. Planet Fitness moves for partial
summary judgment (doc. no. 24) on JEG-United’s counterclaims, arguing that a
release of liability bars the counterclaims to the extent they arise from events
predating December 26, 2019. JEG-United objects. For the following reasons,
Planet Fitness’s motion is denied.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Summary judgment is proper only if the moving party can demonstrate “that
there is no evidence in the record to support a judgment for the nonmoving party.”
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 318, 332 (1986); see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). If
1 For the purposes of this order, “Planet Fitness” refers to both Planet Fitness
International Franchise and its Chief Development Officer, Raymond Miolla. Miolla is named as a counterclaim defendant by JEG-United. the moving party succeeds in making that showing, “the burden shifts to the
nonmoving party, who must, with respect to each issue on which she would bear the
burden of proof at trial, demonstrate that a trier of fact could reasonably resolve
that issue in her favor.” Borges v. Serrano-Isern, 605 F.3d 1, 5 (1st Cir. 2010). The
nonmoving party’s failure to meet that burden by reference to “significantly
probative” materials “of evidentiary quality” entitles the moving party to summary
judgment. Flovac, Inc. v. Airvac, Inc., 817 F.3d 849, 853 (1st Cir. 2016) (citations
omitted). In evaluating a motion for summary judgment, the courts must view the
evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, must draw all
reasonable inferences in that party’s favor, and may neither make credibility
determinations nor weigh the evidence. Harris v. Scarcelli, 835 F.3d 24, 29 (1st Cir.
2016); Hicks v. Johnson, 755 F.3d 738, 743 (1st Cir. 2014).
BACKGROUND
I. JEG-United and Planet Fitness
Counterclaim defendant Planet Fitness is an international franchisor of
gyms. Counterclaim plaintiff JEG-United, a Delaware limited liability company,
develops Planet Fitness franchises in Mexico. In March 2019, JEG-United and
Planet Fitness entered a contract (the “Side-Letter Agreement”) in which they
agreed to negotiate about providing exclusive development rights to JEG-United to
open and operate Planet Fitness franchises in parts of Mexico. In its counterclaims
against Planet Fitness, JEG-United alleges that Planet Fitness breached the Side-
2 Letter Agreement (Count I), breached implied covenants of good faith and fair
dealing (Count II), tortiously interfered with contractual and prospective business
relationships (Count III), and violated the New Hampshire Consumer Protection
Act (Count IV).2 In its motion for partial summary judgment, Planet Fitness
contends that JEG-United’s counterclaims, to the extent they arise from events
predating December 26, 2019, are barred by a release of liability. Planet Fitness
contends that JEG-United, which is not expressly named in the release, is
nonetheless bound to it by virtue of JEG-United’s corporate relationship with the
release’s actual signatories, JEG-Mexico Bueno, S. de R.L. de C.V. and United PF
Holdings, LLC, (“PF Holdings”) neither of which are parties in the present lawsuit.
II. General Release
The release arose from a transaction unrelated to the present lawsuit. In
December 2019, PF Holdings, which owns and operates many United States-based
Planet Fitness franchises, was sold to a third party. At the time of the sale, PF
Holdings also held interests in Mexico-based Planet Fitness franchises.
Specifically, PF Holdings owned an entity called United PF MEX. United PF MEX
is one of JEG-United’s two members. And JEG-United—through two wholly-owned
2 This brief overview of the parties’ relationship is intended to place the circumstances of Planet Fitness’s motion for summary judgment in context. It should not be construed as a definitive recitation of the parties’ underlying substantive dispute.
3 subsidiaries—holds an interest in JEG-Mexico Bueno, which, in turn, operates five
Planet Fitness franchises in Mexico.
Because only PF Holdings’s interests in the United States-based franchises
were to be included in the sale, the sale was facilitated by transferring PF
Holdings’s interest in United PF MEX to PF Holdings’s parent. All other pertinent
corporate relationships, however, remained the same as they were before the sale.
Because the sale affected gyms with which Planet Fitness held franchise
agreements, Planet Fitness’s approval was required to complete the transaction.3
As a condition of its approval of the sale, Planet Fitness required JEG-Mexico
Bueno and PF Holdings to execute a contract entitled “General Release,” which,
among other terms, contained the following release clause:
Release. Franchisee [JEG-Mexico Bueno] and Transferring Owner [PF Holdings], for themselves and their successors, predecessors, assigns, beneficiaries, executors, trustees, gents, representatives, employees, officers, directors, shareholders, partners, members, subsidiaries and affiliates (jointly and severally, the “Releasors”), irrevocably and absolutely release and forever discharge Franchisor [Planet Fitness] and its successors, predecessors, assigns, beneficiaries, executors, trustees, agents, representatives, employees, officers, directors, shareholders, partners, members, subsidiaries and affiliates (jointly and severally, the “Releasees”), of and from all claims, obligations, actions or causes of action (however denominated), whether in law or in equity, and whether known or unknown, present or contingent, for any injury, damage, or loss whatsoever arising from any acts or occurrences occurring as of or prior to the date of this Release [December 26, 2019] relating to the Franchise Agreements, the businesses operated under the Franchise Agreements, and/or any other previously existing agreement between any of the Releasees and any of the Releasors, including but not limited to, any alleged violations of
3 Planet Fitness’s franchise agreements include a provision granting it approval authority over certain transfers of its franchisees or their assets. 4 any deceptive or unfair trade practices laws, franchise laws, or other local, municipal, state, federal, or other laws, statutes, rules or regulations, and any alleged violations of the Franchise Agreements or any other related agreement. The Releasors, and each of them, also covenant not to sue or otherwise bring a claim against any of the Releasees regarding any of the claims being released under this Release.
Doc. no. 24-2 at 180. The General Release later states that “[e]ach party whose
signature is affixed hereto in a representative capacity represents and warrants
that he or she is authorized to execute this Agreement on behalf of and to bind the
entity on whose behalf his or her signature is affixed.” Id. at 183. Ray Owen III
signed for PF Holdings and JEG-Mexico Bueno.
JEG-United is not identified by name in the General Release, and there is no
space on the General Release’s signature page for a signature by an agent of JEG-
United. JEG-United’s board of managers did not review or approve the General
Release. Ray Owen III was not an officer or member of JEG-United at the time he
executed the General Release, and, as discussed further below, a genuine dispute of
fact exists as to whether he was a manager of JEG-United at the time he signed the
contract. Of the three signatories to the General Release—PF Holdings, JEG-
Mexico Bueno, and Planet Fitness—only Planet Fitness is a party in this suit.
DISCUSSION
Planet Fitness contends that JEG-United is bound by the General Release
because JEG-United wholly owns entities that, together, wholly own signatory JEG-
Mexico Bueno and because one of JEG-United’s two members was, at the time the
5 General Release was signed, wholly owned by signatory PF Holdings. Planet
Fitness argues that the General Release therefore extinguishes JEG-United’s
counterclaims to the extent they arise from events before the effective date of the
release, December 26, 2019. JEG-United objects, arguing that Ray Owen III, who
signed the General Release for PF Holdings and JEG-Mexico Bueno, did not have
actual or apparent authority to sign the General Release for JEG-United and that it
cannot be bound to the release merely because a parent of one of its members or a
subsidiary of a subsidiary were signatories to the contract.
To invoke the defense of release, the moving party “must establish that the
release (1) applied to defendants, (2) encompassed the claims asserted in the
present lawsuit, and (3) was legally enforceable.” Bourne v. Town of Madison, 494
F. Supp. 2d 80, 96 (D.N.H. 2007) (quoting Nottingham Partners v. Trans-Lux Corp.,
925 F.2d 29, 32 (1st Cir. 1991)) (internal modifications omitted). The party
asserting the defense of release—Planet Fitness in this case—bears the burden to
show that the release operates to discharge its liability. See Moore v. Grau, 171
N.H. 190, 194 (2018).
Planet Fitness has failed to demonstrate that the General Release is legally
enforceable against JEG-United. A genuine dispute of material fact exists as to
whether JEG-United assented to the General Release’s terms through an agent
acting with actual or apparent authority.
“Ordinary principles of contract formation and interpretation apply to
releases.” Bourne, 494 F. Supp. 2d at 96 (citing Huguelet v. Allstate Ins. Co., 141
6 N.H. 777, 779 (1997)).4 To be enforceable, a contract requires “offer, acceptance,
consideration, and a meeting of the minds.” Durgin v. Pillsbury Lake Water Dist.,
153 N.H. 818, 821 (2006). JEG-United is an incorporated entity, which “can act
only through its agents.” Coach, Inc. v. Sapatis, 27 F. Supp. 3d 239, 245 (D.N.H.
2014); see also Daniel Webster Council, Inc. v. St. James Ass’n, Inc., 129 N.H. 681,
683 (1987) (holding that a contract could not be enforced against a corporation when
the persons executing the contract were not the corporation’s agents). Accordingly,
to show that JEG-United assented to the General Release, Planet Fitness must
demonstrate that an agent with authority to bind JEG-United in fact did so. See
Daniel Webster Council, 129 N.H. at 683.
“The necessary factual elements to establish agency involve: (1) authorization
from the principal that the agent shall act for [it]; (2) the agent’s consent to so act;
and (3) the understanding that the principal is to exert some control over the
agent’s actions.” Boynton v. Figueroa, 154 N.H. 592, 604 (2006). Authority to act
can be actual or apparent. See State v. Zeta Chi Fraternity, 142 N.H. 16, 22 (1997).
Proof of actual or apparent authority to act is evaluated from “all the circumstances
and conduct in a given situation and the reasonable inferences to be drawn
therefrom.” Id.
Planet Fitness contends that Ray Owen III, the person who executed the
release on JEG-Mexico Bueno’s and PF Holdings’s behalf, was also acting as JEG-
4 Per the terms of the General Release, New Hampshire law on contracts and
releases governs. See doc. no. 28-1 at 31-32. Neither party contests the application of New Hampshire law to these issues. 7 United’s agent, such that JEG-United is bound by the release. JEG-United
responds that Owen did not have actual or apparent authority to execute the
release on its behalf.
I. Actual Authority
Planet Fitness has not identified evidence to show that Owen had actual
authority to bind JEG-United to the General Release. Per JEG-United’s limited
liability company agreement, its board of managers, acting as a body, is vested with
authority to bind the company and to designate other people to do so.5 But JEG-
United’s board of managers never considered the General Release, let alone
approved it. And Planet Fitness has not identified any evidence showing that JEG-
United’s board designated Owen to sign the General Release specifically or
authorized him generally to sign contracts such as the General Release without the
board’s prior approval.
II. Apparent Authority
Planet Fitness fares no better on the alternative theory that Owen had
apparent authority to sign the General Release for JEG-United. “Apparent
5 A Delaware limited liability company such as JEG-United is governed by the
terms of its limited liability company agreement. See Del. Code Ann. § 18-402 (“Management of limited liability company”). Planet Fitness does not dispute that JEG-United’s limited liability company agreement dictates who can bind it or that it vests power to bind JEG-United “solely and exclusively in the Board [of managers] and its authorized designees.” Doc. no. 28-1 at 60. 8 authority . . . exists where the principal so conducts itself as to cause a third party
to reasonably believe that the agent is authorized to act.” Zeta Chi Fraternity, 142
N.H. at 22 (quotation and brackets omitted). If reasonable due diligence by the
party seeking enforcement would have revealed that the apparent agent was not, in
fact, authorized to act, then apparent authority does not exist. See Daniel Webster
Council, 129 N.H. at 683 (stating that a party can rely on apparent authority only if
a reasonably prudent person “in the exercise of due diligence and sound discretion”
would naturally have supposed the apparent agent to have authority); Shakra v.
Benedictine Sisters of Bedford, New Hampshire, Inc., 131 N.H. 417, 422 (1989)
(holding that contract for land transfer was unenforceable when exercise of
reasonable diligence would have revealed that person signing the contract was
acting beyond the scope of her actual authority).
The only evidence Planet Fitness identifies that could support an apparent
authority theory is Owen’s signing of a “Franchise Agreement” as a manager for
JEG-United in July 2019.6 Nevertheless, considered in the light most favorable to
JEG-United, the other evidence in the record is sufficient to create a genuine
dispute of material fact about whether it was reasonable for Planet Fitness to
believe that Owen was authorized to act as JEG-United’s agent.
First, there is evidence that Planet Fitness knew that Owen was not an agent
of JEG-United when he signed the General Release in December 2019. Specifically,
6 Planet Fitness asserts that Owen signed the “Franchise Agreement” in August 2019. This is incorrect. While the contract’s effective date is in August 2019, the date next to Owen’s signature is July 11, 2019. Doc. no. 31-1 at 96. 9 in October 2019, JEG-United provided Planet Fitness with a list of its managers
and that list did not include Owen. Doc. no. 28-1 at 19. Therefore, while Planet
Fitness submits evidence indicating that Owen may have been a manager of
JEG-United in July 2019, JEG-United has offered evidence that Planet Fitness
knew Owen was not a manager of JEG-United by October 2019. And, even if Owen
were a manager of JEG-United in December 2019, JEG-United’s managers cannot
unilaterally bind the company and reasonable diligence by Planet Fitness would
have revealed that fact.
Second, when Owen signed the “Franchise Agreement” in July 2019 for
JEG-United, the contract stated that Owen signed as a manager for JEG-United.7
By comparison, the General Release identifies Owen as signing for JEG-Mexico
Bueno and PF Holdings, but does not similarly identify him as signing for
JEG-United, which, as stated above, is never identified by name as being a party to
the General Release and does not have a place on its signatures page. Furthermore,
the General Release states that Owen’s signatures are relative to “the entity on
whose behalf [his] signature is affixed,” and the contract does not contemplate that
any signatory executed the document on behalf of other, unnamed entities or for the
“Releasors” generally. See doc. no. 24-2 at 180.
Third, Planet Fitness identifies no evidence that JEG-United ever told Planet
Fitness or suggested to Planet Fitness that persons executing documents on behalf
7 Owen signed the “Franchise Agreement” multiple times on behalf of several
other entities, each of which was specifically identified. 10 of PF Holdings or JEG-Mexico Bueno were likewise authorized to execute
documents on JEG-United’s behalf. Similarly, there is no evidence in the record
that JEG-United ever indicated to Planet Fitness that Owen had general authority
to sign contracts on its behalf. Moreover, when the General Release was signed,
Planet Fitness was aware of the corporate structure within which JEG-United
operated. Planet Fitness does not argue or submit evidence to show that
JEG-United deceived Planet Fitness about who could act on its behalf or that JEG-
United obfuscated its company agreement, which dictates who can act on its behalf.
For those reasons, Planet Fitness has failed to show that there are no
genuine disputes of material fact about whether JEG-United assented to the
General Release. Accordingly, Planet Fitness’s motion for partial summary
judgment, which is premised on enforcing the General Release against JEG-United,
must be denied.
CONCLUSION
Planet Fitness’s motion for partial summary judgment (doc. no. 24) is denied.
SO ORDERED.
__________________________ Landya McCafferty United States District Judge
September 21, 2021
cc: Counsel of Record 11