Sharp Electronics Corporation v. Deutsche Financial Services Corporation

216 F.3d 388, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 14217, 2000 WL 790929
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 20, 2000
Docket99-1555
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 216 F.3d 388 (Sharp Electronics Corporation v. Deutsche Financial Services Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharp Electronics Corporation v. Deutsche Financial Services Corporation, 216 F.3d 388, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 14217, 2000 WL 790929 (4th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Judge NIEMEYER wrote the opinion, in which Senior Judge MINER and Judge GOODWIN joined.

OPINION

NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge:

This appeal presents the question under Illinois law of whether a finance company may unilaterally modify the terms of a standing floorplan financing agreement before it agrees to finance a given transaction. Because we hold that the floorplan financing agreement in this case was a unilateral contract that did not bind the finance company until it undertook to finance a specific transaction, we conclude that the finance company could, as a condition of continuing under the arrangement, modify the terms under which it was willing to continue to finance transactions. Accordingly, we vacate the district court’s judgment entered against the finance company after it refused to • finance a $1.3 million transaction except on terms that it had unilaterally demanded and remand with instructions as specified herein.

I

Deutsche Financial Services Corporation (“Deutsche Financial”) and Sharp Elec *390 tronics Corporation (“Sharp”) signed a financing agreement, entitled “Floorplan Repurchase Agreement,” which provided, that if Deutsche Financial would agree from time to time to: finance certain transactions between Sharp and its wholesale customers, Sharp -would reduce Deutsche Financial’s risk by repurchasing any financed merchandise that Deutsche Financial might find necessary to repossess upon default. The agreement was unilateral in that Sharp offered Deutsche Financial inducements — specifically agreements to reduce its risk — to provide financing for ongoing transactions between Sharp' and its customers, in this case Montgomery Ward & Co., Incorporated (“Montgomery Ward”), but Deutsche Financial was not obligated to provide any financing. The agreement simply invited Deutsche Financial to accept the inducements by providing the financing.

In particular the agreement provided: “To induee[Deutsche Financial] to finance the acquisition of Merchandise by any [customer of Sharp],” Sharp agrees that

(1) It will assure that the underlying transaction is current and authentic; that the merchandise is “free and clear of all liens”; and that the merchandise is saleable;
(2) It will assign to Deutsche Financial “the vendor’s privilege and lien” on merchandise as granted under Louisiana law;
(3) It will “repurchase such Merchandise from[Deutsche Financial] upon demand” and for specified prices whenever' Deutsche Financial will have a need to repossess the merchandise from customers in default.

And while the agreement invited Deutsche Financial to finance transactions in response to Sharp’s assurances, it specifically did not require Deutsche Financial to finance any transaction, providing, “This Agreement shall in no way bind [Deutsche Financial] to finance any Merchandise for [Sharp’s] retail dealers. From time to time [Sharp] will inquire as to whether [Deutsche Financial] agree[s] to finance Merchandise for certain dealers.” Under the agreement, Deutsche Financial would be invited to respond to applications or “requests” made by both Sharp and Montgomery Ward. Only after Deutsche Financial approved a specific request to finance a transaction would it become obligated to complete performance under the terms of the Floorplan Repurchase Agreement by paying the invoice amount of the proposed transaction less agreed-upon finance charges. This obligation to pay, however, was conditioned on (1) Sharp’s shipment of the merchandise to Montgomery Ward within’ 30 days of Deutsche Financial’s approval and (2) Deutsche Financial’s receipt of the invoice for the transaction within 10 days after delivery of the merchandise.

Underlying Deutsche. Financial’s willingness to approve financing under the Floor-plan Repurchase Agreement for Montgomery Ward’s purchases from Sharp was Deutsche Financial’s independently defined role as administrator of a financial' “facility” for Montgomery Ward that provided Montgomery Ward with a $100 million line of credit.

Until November 1996, the practice under the Floorplan Repurchase Agreement between Deutsche Financial and Sharp with respect to Montgomery Ward’s purchases routinely took the following form: Montgomery Ward would place a purchase order for merchandise with Sharp; Sharp would call Deutsche Financial and request an approval number for the financing of the merchandise; and Deutsche Financial would, if it elected to finance the transaction and if Montgomery Ward had not yet reached its credit limit with Deutsche Financial, orally issue Sharp an approval number. In November 1996, the arrangement changed slightly. Thereafter, Sharp would fax Deutsche Financial its financing request, and Deutsche Financial would fax its approval to Sharp. Sharp would then enter the approval number into its computer system, ship the merchandise to Mont *391 gomery Ward, and send the invoice to Deutsche Financial, which would pay Sharp.

In early May 1997, in response to its deteriorating financial condition, Montgomery Ward met with its suppliers to discuss its condition and its plans to restructure. As part of these plans, Montgomery Ward announced its intention to transfer the administration of its line of credit from Deutsche Financial to General Electric Capital Corporation, a shareholder of Montgomery Ward. Upon the accomplishment of that transfer, Deutsche Financial would no longer be financing any Montgomery Ward purchases, including those from Sharp. No representative of Sharp attended this meeting, but Sharp’s general manager learned of it later. He also was aware that General Electric Capital had been “getting more involved” with Montgomery Ward and that it might “step in either as the lender or the administrator of the floor plan program.” Based on this knowledge, Sharp’s general manager recognized the possibility that Sharp “would be requested to do something different” with regard to the financing of its sales to Montgomery Ward.

Sharp first received formal notice of a change in Montgomery Ward’s financing arrangements on May 22, 1997, when Montgomery Ward faxed it a letter stating: “Effective May 23, 1997, the administrator on the inventory finance facility is being changed from Deutsche Financial Services to GE Capital. Deutsche will not issue approval numbers after May 23, 1997.... A copy of GE Capital’s boilerplate Inventory Repurchase Agreement will be faxed to you on Friday, May 23, 1997.” On May 23, 1997, Deutsche Financial also faxed a letter to Sharp, which Sharp received at 2:17 p.m., announcing the termination of its financing role and setting deadlines for future transactions in light of that termination. Deutsche Financial’s fax, which was entirely consistent with Montgomery Ward’s fax, stated in pertinent part:

Per Montgomery Ward’s request, the financing program between [Deutsche Financial and] Montgomery Ward ... will change administrators on May 23, 1997, 5:00 PM CST. [Deutsche Financial] will continue to review your requests for approval numbers until such time, and will continue to administer the Program for any invoices dated May 28, 1997 and earlier. However, any requests for approvals after May 23, 1997 should be processed through General Electric Capital Corporation ...

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Bluebook (online)
216 F.3d 388, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 14217, 2000 WL 790929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharp-electronics-corporation-v-deutsche-financial-services-corporation-ca4-2000.