Robert Burton and Curtis B. Clark, Co-Partners, D/B/A Insco v. Hitachi America, Ltd., a New York Corporation

504 F.2d 721, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 6450
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 18, 1974
Docket74-1125
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 504 F.2d 721 (Robert Burton and Curtis B. Clark, Co-Partners, D/B/A Insco v. Hitachi America, Ltd., a New York Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert Burton and Curtis B. Clark, Co-Partners, D/B/A Insco v. Hitachi America, Ltd., a New York Corporation, 504 F.2d 721, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 6450 (7th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

HASTINGS, Senior Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs Burton and Clark had an oral agreement, implemented by letters, with defendant Hitachi to sell Hitachi Japanese electric motors in an exclusive sales territory in Illinois. After an original complaint had been filed, together with a third party action, two counterclaims and an interminable amount of legal skirmishing, this matter was finally submitted for trial by jury some three years later on an amended complaint in three counts charging breach of contract, tortious interference with a contractual relationship, for hiring plaintiffs’ partner and salesman, Mahoney, and for conspiracy resulting in the termination of their agency agreement four months after it had begun. Defendant filed a counterclaim based upon fraud.

The jury found for plaintiffs on Count I (charging breach of contract) and awarded damages in the amounts of $27,000 for actual outlays and $35,000 for loss of profits. On Counts II and III together (charging tortious interference and conspiracy), the jury again found for plaintiffs and awarded damages in the amounts of $27,000 for actual outlays, $35,000 for loss of profits and $50,000 for punitive damages. On motion of defendant, the trial court directed a remittitur of $27,000 on Count I (actual outlays), which plaintiffs accepted, leaving a total amount of $147,000 damages awarded plaintiff, upon which judgment was entered. The jury found against defendant and for plaintiffs on defendant’s counterclaim and defendant took nothing thereunder.

Defendant appeals only from the final judgment of $147,000 for damages and costs and from the denial of its post-trial motions for further relief. Defendant does not appeal from the final adverse judgment on its counterclaim.

In substance, the issues raised on this appeal challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to warrant the jury’s having found a breach of contract, tortious inducement of breach of contract, conspiracy, and the amount of damages assessed. It is also charged that certain instructions given the jury were misleading and erroneous.

The tangled skein of docket entries and pre-trial proceedings almost defies description. Jurisdiction in the trial court was based upon diversity of citizenship. The substantive law of Illinois governs. Most of the acute questions relating to the sufficiency of the evidence may be clarified by a rather full statement of the facts. No special interrogatories were submitted to the jury.

*723 From our careful consideration of the record as a whole we have concluded that basically the following is a narrative of the factual situation which the jury would have been fully justified in finding from the evidence adduced in this case.

Plaintiffs Robert J. Burton and Curtis B. Clark were co-partners and owners of an electrical wholesale supply business, under the firm name of Princeton Electric Supply Company (Princeton Electric), with its principal place of business in Princeton, Illinois. Defendant Hitachi America, Ltd. (Hitachi), is a subsidiary of a Japanese corporation, and is incorporated under the laws of New York with an established place of business in Indianapolis, Indiana. From Indianapolis, Hitachi was engaged in the business of attempting to sell Japanese electric motors in Illinois and elsewhere. Darwin Mitchell served Hitachi as national sales manager of its electric motor division in Indianapolis, and had as his regional sales manager Russell Der-derian. Mitchell and Derderian were and had been residents of Indiana.

In August 1969, Burton learned from one of Princeton Electric’s customers, Champion Pneumatic, that Hitachi’s man Derderian had called them inquiring whether they would be interested in purchasing Hitachi motors. The customer asked Burton whether he would be interested in marketing Hitachi motors or in a franchise through Princeton Electric. Burton then contacted Der-derian by telephone and the call led to several preliminary meetings of plaintiffs with Mitchell and Derderian. These meetings culminated in the determination of plaintiffs to form a separate agency. William Mahoney, a salesman for Westinghouse, and Thomas Jolley, a salesman for Reliance Electric, were to. join the sales agency, with Mahoney to be in charge.

Since Princeton Electric had certain established customers who might adversely react to their sale of foreign-made motors, plaintiffs, under assumed names, executed a new and separate partnership agreement under the firm name of Insco. Mitchell was advised of this arrangement by Burton and made no objection.

During this interim period Burton made sales calls on two of his old manufacturing customers in Princeton, Champion Pneumatic and Princeton Air Compressors. Using quotations furnished by Derderian, Burton secured three purchase orders from them for a combined total of more than $700,000 worth of Hitachi motors.

In a meeting of plaintiffs and Maho-ney with Mitchell and Derderian on November 24, 1969, the proposed Insco plan was presented and discussed. Mitchell agreed to grant Insco an exclusive sales territory encompassing all of Illinois north of Highway 36. Commissions to be paid Insco were discussed, resulting in an agreement to pay what would probably amount to an average commission rate of five per cent. Plaintiffs advised Mitchell that they had estimated it would cost them $50,000 a year to operate the proposed agency and requested an agreement for a specific length of time in order to be assured that they would have sufficient time to recoup their investment and conduct a profitable enterprise. Mitchell agreed that this was a reasonable estimate and said that “it had been his experience that it took two years to get something like this up and rolling.” Mitchell assured plaintiffs that they should not be concerned about the length of the agreement because “the Japanese were very honorable people” and that he would not put the length of time of the agreement in writing because Hitachi was an honorable company and that their relationship “would be like a marriage and last forever” and, further, that this relationship was “a matter of mutual trust between the parties.” This line of assurance by Hitachi appears throughout subsequent proceedings between the parties, in which Mitchell reiterated that “the Japanese were honorable people, but this would be an affront to them to ask them to put it down [in writing],” and that *724 plaintiffs “would have nothing to worry about.” At the end of this meeting plaintiffs gave Mitchell the three large purchase orders which were accepted by Mitchell with enthusiastic comment.

The parties next talked in Princeton on December 9, 1969, and met Jolley. Further sales discussions ensued and Burton asked Mitchell for a five-year agreement. Mitchell responded as before and also said he would have to discuss it with Hitachi. On December 11, 1969, Derderian wrote to Clark to confirm the interim agreement reached on December 9 that “for approximately six months” certain base prices mentioned would be in force, and to confirm Insco’s appointment as exclusive sales representative for Hitachi.

At plaintiffs’ request all parties concerned met in Indianapolis on January 14, 1970. Plaintiffs presented a letter prepared by their attorneys to Derderi-an providing, inter alia, that Insco’s appointment would be for a five-year term.

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504 F.2d 721, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 6450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-burton-and-curtis-b-clark-co-partners-dba-insco-v-hitachi-ca7-1974.