Retail Works Funding LLC v. Tubby's Sub Shops Inc

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 31, 2017
Docket332453
StatusUnpublished

This text of Retail Works Funding LLC v. Tubby's Sub Shops Inc (Retail Works Funding LLC v. Tubby's Sub Shops Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Retail Works Funding LLC v. Tubby's Sub Shops Inc, (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

RETAIL WORKS FUNDING LLC, UNPUBLISHED August 31, 2017 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 332453 Oakland Circuit Court TUBBY’S SUB SHOPS INC. and JB LC No. 2015-148461-CB DEVELOPMENT LLC,

Defendants-Appellees.

Before: GADOLA, P.J., and METER and FORT HOOD, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff, Retail Works Funding LLC, appeals as of right the trial court’s order granting the motion for summary disposition filed by defendants, Tubby’s Sub Shops Inc. (Tubby’s) and JB Development LLC (JB Development), regarding plaintiff’s claims of alter ego/successor liability and unjust enrichment arising from JB Development’s purchase of a service mark previously held by Just Baked Shop LLC (Just Baked). The trial court also awarded defendants attorney fees and costs after concluding that plaintiff’s claims were frivolous. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND FACTS

Just Baked was a bakery retail chain that owned several retail stores and franchised several additional stores in Michigan. Todd Turkin testified that he and his wife, Pam Turkin, co-founded Just Baked. In June 2015, plaintiff obtained a judgment against Just Baked in the amount of $184,241.62. At the time, Just Baked also owed hundreds of thousands of dollars of state and federal back taxes. According to plaintiff, by August 2015, Just Baked had closed all of its retail stores and only approximately four franchise locations remained open.

Defendants explained that Tubby’s is in the business of “franchising independent businesses selling submarine style sandwiches and other related food products . . . .” According to defendants, JB Development was organized in May 2015, for the purpose of purchasing the “Just Baked” service mark. In June 2015, JB Development entered a “Service Mark Purchase Agreement” with Just Baked, in which Just Baked agreed to

assign[], sell[], transfer[] and convey[] to [JB Development] its entire right, title and interest in and to the [“service mark ‘Just Baked’ with logo” (the Mark)] and the registration therefor . . . together with all of [Just Baked’s] goodwill

-1- symbolized by the Mark and any and all copyright and other intellectual property rights associated with the Mark . . . .

A third-party appraisal conducted earlier in the year concluded that the “estimate of value of the trademark of [Just Baked] as of January 31, 2015 was $3,000.” JB Development agreed to pay $4,000 for the service mark. The state released its lien on the service mark to allow the sale, and the purchase money was distributed directly to the Michigan Department of Treasury. 1

In August 2015, plaintiff filed a complaint asserting that defendants were liable for the money judgment it obtained against Just Baked under theories of alter ego/successor liability and unjust enrichment. Plaintiff alleged that JB Development was a holding company for Tubby’s. Under its “Alter Ego/Successor Liability” claim, plaintiff alleged that defendants purchased “all of the assets of Just Baked,” failed to pay fair consideration for the assets, failed to provide for the debt owed to plaintiff in the sale, and “are merely a continuation of Just Baked, as Tubby’s will be carrying Just Baked products in its retail stores.” Under its “Unjust Enrichment” claim, plaintiff asserted that defendants “cherry picked the only assets of any value from Just Baked as a means for all parties to evade Plaintiff’s Judgment” and that inequity resulted because Just Baked was able to carry on its business without providing for the debt owed to plaintiff.

Defendants moved for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(8) and (C)(10), arguing that JB Development purchased the service mark in an arms-length transaction and that the purchase did not involve any other assets held by Just Baked or the assumption of any of Just Baked’s liabilities. Defendants further argued that plaintiff failed to set forth any facts showing that Tubby’s had any relationship with Just Baked under the terms of the Service Mark Purchase Agreement. Defendants argued that plaintiff’s unjust enrichment claim failed as a matter of law because JB Development purchased the service mark at a price above its fair-market value and Tubby’s was not a participant in the transaction. Among other documents, defendants attached to their motion a copy of the Service Mark Purchase Agreement and the affidavit of Robert Paganes, a member and officer of JB Development and a shareholder and officer of Tubby’s, who asserted that Tubby’s did not purchase any of Just Baked’s assets and that “the only asset JB purchased from [Just Baked] was its service mark.”

Plaintiff argued in response that “Tubby’s held itself out to the world as having ‘merged with’ or ‘purchased’ or ‘acquired’ Just Baked,” attaching four articles from online news sources.2

1 The Internal Revenue Service also discharged the service mark from its federal tax lien against Just Baked after finding that the “interest of the United States under the federal tax lien(s) against [Just Baked] in the following described property is, at present, valueless.” 2 A summary of these news articles is as follows: (1) From Eater Detroit, an article titled, “Tubby’s Sandwiches Acquires Just Baked Cupcakes,” stating that “Tubby’s . . . has acquired a majority stake in Just Baked cupcakes, the company announced in a pun-filled statement for Crain’s.”

-2- Plaintiff argued that the transaction between Just Baked and defendants amounted to a de facto merger and that defendants failed to pay sufficient consideration for the assets they acquired. Plaintiff conceded that defendants paid $4,000 for the service mark, but argued that there was no evidence that defendants paid for the “recipes, rights to franchise, and rights to build franchises,” which they apparently also acquired from Just Baked. Finally, plaintiff argued that the “elements [of unjust enrichment] are easily applied to the case at hand” because defendants received a benefit in “their purchase of Just Baked” while plaintiff had no recourse against Just Baked.

Two weeks later, plaintiff filed a supplemental brief to which it attached a press release stating that “Tubby’s purchased the Just Baked trademark, product recipes and distribution rights and will begin supplying cupcakes to Tubby’s locations in the next few months.” Plaintiff also attached the deposition testimony of Todd Turkin, taken in a separate case, in which he explained that the “nature of the sale to Tubby’s” included intellectual property rights, franchise rights, distribution rights, and recipes. Turkin explained that his wife, Pam Turkin, entered a consulting agreement in which she agreed to “put together recipes, pick out equipment, design the layout from an aesthetic as well as functional standpoint for the new chain of Just Bakeds” in return for a share of the royalties and franchise fees.

The trial court issued an opinion and order granting defendants’ motion for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10). Citing the factors from Turner v Bituminous Cas Co, 397 Mich 406; 244 NW2d 873 (1976), the trial court concluded that defendants could not be held liable for plaintiff’s judgment because the evidence showed that JB Development only purchased a single asset from Just Baked. Further, the court concluded that defendants purchased the service mark at a price above fair-market value, so they did not receive any unjust benefit that could establish a claim of unjust enrichment. In rendering its decision, the trial court explained that it did not consider plaintiff’s supplemental brief because the “Court rules do not [allow] such a brief, and Plaintiff did not seek leave of the Court to file the same.” The court further ordered that defendants could file a motion for sanctions.

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Retail Works Funding LLC v. Tubby's Sub Shops Inc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/retail-works-funding-llc-v-tubbys-sub-shops-inc-michctapp-2017.