Press Publishing, Ltd. v. Matol Botanical International, Ltd.

2001 UT 1121, 2001 UT 106
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 2001
DocketNo. 990136
StatusPublished

This text of 2001 UT 1121 (Press Publishing, Ltd. v. Matol Botanical International, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Press Publishing, Ltd. v. Matol Botanical International, Ltd., 2001 UT 1121, 2001 UT 106 (Utah 2001).

Opinion

DURHAM, Justice:

11 Plaintiff Press Publishing Ltd. (Press) entered into numerous contracts with Matol Botanical International Ltd. (MBI) for the provision of printing services. After disputes arose between the parties, MBI sued Press for breach of contract. Press counterclaimed, alleging that defendants misappropriated its creative work. Eventually, MBI voluntarily withdrew its claims and defendants sought summary judgment on Press's counterclaims. The district court ruled in defendants' favor and this appeal followed.

[1123]*1123BACKGROUND

2 The facts in this case are undisputed. MBI was a Canadian company that sold health supplements worldwide through independent distributors. As part of its operation, MBI prepared and provided promotional brochures and sales materials to its distributors. MBI's policy required these promotional materials to be authorized, prepared and printed under its supervision. From 1986 to 1989, Press provided printing services to MBI. To set forth the terms of each job, Press used a job authorization form (JAF). All first time customers were required to sign a JAF; subsequent JAFs did not need to be signed. The JAF contained eighteen terms and conditions on the reverse side. Paragraphs four and six expressly provided that any creative work and all preparatory materials developed and furnished by Press would remain its exclusive property, "except upon compensation" or "otherwise agreed in writing." Relying on approximately 250 JAF's, Press claims it created and/or modified numerous MBI promotional materials, such as logos, business cards, manuals, job applications, brochures, magazines and video tape covers.1

13 In 1989, Sam Kalenuik, Robert Bolduc, and Anthony Jurak, MBI's owners, hired Press's director of marketing and operations, Kevin Olsen, to form a new entity, Matol Communications Corporation (MCC), to supply all of MBI's future printing services. To facilitate Olsen's transition, MBI and Press entered into a number of agreements2 (transition agreements). However, MCC soon notified Press that it had terminated the transition agreements because they were ex-ecutory and not supported by consideration. Thereafter, Press filed a counterclaim setting forth numerous causes of action in this lawsuit, which had originally been filed by MBI for breach of contract claims.3 All of Press's claims were based on the premise that (1) Kalenuik, Bolduc, and Jurak operated all of the Matol entities as a partnership, thereby "mak[ing] all [of them as] defendants liable [for] each other's acts," and (2) they conspired with Olsen to improperly obtain Press's proprietary property and destroy Press by foreclosing it from doing any business with MBI entities or distributors.

14 In November 1994, after conducting extensive discovery, defendants Olsen and Garrett, along with the Matol entities, filed a motion for partial summary judgment (first motion for summary judgment)4 pertaining to the claims made in Press's third amended counterclaim, except with respect to breach of fiduciary duty. The motion was joined by defendants Bolduc, Kalenuik and Jurak. MBI argued, in part, that the claims for misappropriation of trade secrets and pro-tectable proprietary property failed because: the materials produced by Press were neither secret nor creative work; MBI was only bound by the JAF's it had signed; the transition agreements were overly broad, void for lack of consideration, or only binding against Olsen; and Press had failed to show unfair competition, wrongful interference or anti[1124]*1124trust injuries. The erux of Press's response was that "the Defendants concocted this scheme to destroy Press and, acting in concert and as agents and alter egos of one another ... carried out their plan." Press's position was that "there was no distinctness between any of the Defendants ... they are all obligated jointly and severally for each of the [eighteen] causes of action." After hearings in December 1994 and January 1995, the court took the matter under advisement,5 requesting supplemental briefs regarding the applicability of the Uniform Commercial Code to Press's JAF's.

15 Prior to the issuance of a ruling from the trial court, in March 1995, MBI commenced a C-86 bankruptcy reorganization proceeding in the Superior Court of the Province of Quebec in the District of Montreal, Canada (the C-86 Court).6 Three months later, an involuntary bankruptcy proceeding was filed against MBI in the United States Bankruptey Court in the District of Nevada (Bankruptcy Court).7 In July 1995, the trial court below entered an order extending comity to the C-86 proceeding and staying this litigation against all defendants. However, the Bankruptcy Court granted Press limited relief from the automatic stay in this case to allow it to complete discovery and litigate pending motions.

T6 In addition, the Bankruptcy Court ordered the trustee to negotiate a protocol, subject to court approval, with the C-86 interim manager to coordinate the reorganization procedures between the two bankruptcy cases.8 The trustee and the interim manager executed a Protocol Re Obligations of Interim Manager and U.S. Trustee (the Protocol) in November 1995. Application for approval of the Protocol was served on all creditors, including Press, and the Protocol was approved by both the Bankruptcy Court and the C-86 Court. Once the Protocol was approved, the Bankruptey Court anticipated that the C-86 Plan of Arrangement would "become binding on the creditor classes and other parties in interest including, but not limited to shareholders, officers, directors, coordinators and managing agents of MBI."

T 7 The Protocol set up procedures to allow the Canadian and American courts to work together to produce a joint outcome. With respect to the procedures for handling claims, section three of the Protocol provided in relevant part that (1) claims filed with either country would be deemed filed in both courts; (2) claims over $50,000, as well as disputed claims, were to be adjudicated in the C-86 proceeding; and (8) claims determined in the C-36 proceeding would be ree-ognized in the Bankruptey Court.

18 On February 6, 1996, the district court issued a ruling with respect to MBI's first motion for summary judgment. The court found that (1) the transition agreements were binding only as to Olsen, dismissing claims one, three and four as to all other defendants; (2) the JAFs were predominant[1125]*1125ly contracts for personal services, not subject to the Uniform Commercial Code, dismissing the sixth claim; and (8) Press had not created or sufficiently modified the items in question in order to support a misappropriation claim. The district court, however, did not sign an order regarding this ruling until June 2, 1998.

T9 Shortly after the lower court's ruling on the first motion for summary judgment, on February 22, 1996, Press filed a timely notice of claim for $8,250,000 in the Bank-ruptey Court; it cited the entire record of this case, including the fourth amended counterclaim, the briefs on summary judgment, and the hearing transcripts, as evidence. A few months later, the C-86 Court approved MBI's Third Plan of Arrangement. This plan specifically provided notice to creditors regarding the filing of proof of claims, the procedures for determination of claims, and the procedures for accepting or disallowing claims, including appeal of disallowed claims.

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