Software Clearing House, Inc. v. Intrak, Inc.

583 N.E.2d 1056, 66 Ohio App. 3d 163, 1990 Ohio App. LEXIS 492
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 14, 1990
DocketNos. C-880469, C-880497.
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 583 N.E.2d 1056 (Software Clearing House, Inc. v. Intrak, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Software Clearing House, Inc. v. Intrak, Inc., 583 N.E.2d 1056, 66 Ohio App. 3d 163, 1990 Ohio App. LEXIS 492 (Ohio Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

These appeals arise from an action in which the complaint of Software Clearing House, Inc. (“SCH”) and the counterclaim of Intrak, Inc. (“Intrak”) each sought relief for breach of contract. Under the trial court’s judgment, SCH was awarded $193,900.48 on its complaint, including $32,941.75 in prejudgment interest, after its damages in the amount of $359,907.49 were offset by the $166,007.01 awarded to Intrak on its counterclaim. Intrak raises several issues in its appeal, including whether the manifest weight of the evidence shows, contrary to the trial court’s finding, that SCH’s breaches were material. Intrak also challenges the trial court’s enforcement of an oral modification of the written contract, the award of prejudgment interest and the exclusion of testimony relating to admissions of unreported sales by foreign agents and to the parties’ intent concerning competition after termination of the contract. SCH claims in its cross-appeal that the trial court *168 erred by awarding Intrak money for sales by SCH’s foreign agent for which SCH did not receive payment, and for maintenance fees billed to, but not paid by, foreign customers. We find no error in the trial court’s judgment except with respect to its award of prejudgment interest and its assessment of Intrak’s offsetting damages.

Intrak is a developer and supplier of computer software products that, in 1980, entered into a series of exclusive sales contracts with SCH, a company that markets software products. The contracts provided for domestic marketing, sales and distribution of several of Intrak’s products. The contracts also provided for the rental of Intrak’s products and the provision of continued maintenance to customers located by SCH. One year later, the parties entered into another series of similar agreements in which SCH agreed to establish and manage an international marketing, sales and distribution network for the same Intrak products.

The contracts provided that Intrak was to receive sixty-five percent of the U.S. sales price for each sale, and that SCH was to receive the remaining thirty-five percent. Foreign agents were permitted to determine their own sales prices, provided that they paid SCH one hundred percent of the U.S. sales price as the “transfer fee.” SCH was, in turn, to remit sixty-five percent of the transfer fee to Intrak. Intrak was responsible for collections on domestic sales, however, and paid SCH its thirty-five percent share of sales out of the proceeds.

Before entering into the contracts, the parties considered the potential windfall that might accrue to Intrak if it terminated the contracts after the development of a substantial customer base and thereby avoided paying commissions on subsequent but inevitable sales of its products. In order to avoid that possibility, the parties agreed to a “traildown” clause in which Intrak agreed to pay SCH a gradually decreasing commission on sales made over a period of twelve months following termination. Although the contracts expressly prohibited SCH’s sale of other products in direct competition with Intrak’s products, they did not expressly define the duration of the competitive bar or whether it applied to the twelve-month “traildown” period.

The parties were successful in achieving a rapid growth in sales, at least with respect to the domestic market. Foreign sales agents complained, however, that the transfer fee, equal to the U.S. sales price, was excessive. Following a trade convention in 1982 attended both by Intrak and by SCH and some of its foreign sales agents, the parties orally agreed to permit the foreign agents to keep all but eighty percent of the U.S. sales price, which would then be paid to SCH and split between SCH and Intrak according to the previously agreed percentages. This modification was followed until 1983, *169 when the parties further agreed to provide foreign agents an optional pricing structure under which the agent was permitted to retain forty percent of gross sales revenues and remit the remaining proceeds to SCH, to be divided as before.

Problems with the parties’ relationship began developing in the spring of 1984, when one of SCH’s foreign agents, RX Computers, Ltd. (“RX”), began experiencing difficulty meeting sales quotas and performance standards. SCH eventually terminated RX as its agent in the summer of 1984, and shortly thereafter discovered that RX had been making unauthorized “rogue” sales and keeping all the proceeds for itself. SCH wrote a letter to Intrak dated September 14, 1987, enclosing payment for Intrak’s share of profits which would have accrued from the rogue sales during the term of RX’s agency. The letter further stated, “As we obtain evidence of other payments of RX, we will forward these monies as well.” Although RX continued to make unauthorized sales of Intrak software after its termination by SCH, no further payments were made by SCH to Intrak. In November 1984, Intrak began “deferring” payments of commissions due SCH for domestic sales, ostensibly for the purpose of compensating itself for the additional rogue sales by RX.

Shortly after terminating RX as its agent, SCH began to establish its own international telemarketing operation directed largely to the region previously served by RX, England and France. SCH paid Intrak sixty-five percent of U.S. list price for such sales, which represented a change from its previous practice of paying Intrak sixty-five percent of the gross sales price for the small number of direct, international sales it made before RX was terminated. This practice, referred to by Intrak as “double dipping,” effectively resulted in SCH receiving the share of proceeds otherwise retained by the foreign agent, in addition to its usual thirty-five percent share.

In February 1985, Intrak sent SCH a notice of termination concerning two of its less successful products, NAVIGATOR and FLAWCHECK, while maintaining its two most successful agreements for products called DATFAST and TOPICS. SCH initially filed suit seeking a declaratory judgment and an accounting. Intrak formally terminated the remaining DATFAST and TOPICS contracts on June 27, 1985, and refused to make any payments pursuant to the “traildown” clause or to refund any amounts it had previously withheld. SCH began withholding funds due Intrak from international sales on July 1, 1985. In order to protect its customer base after termination SCH began offering its customers “tradeouts” of similar, competing products for a nominal fee. The day the trial began, the parties stipulated to the amounts due the other in the event the trial court determined the various underlying *170 issues of liability, including the amounts withheld by each side, the amount due under the “traildown” provision, the amount due from the oral modifications of the contracts and changes in pricing structure, including SCH’s “double-dipping” practices, and the amounts due from rogue sales and other maintenance fees billed by RX.

Intrak’s first three assignments of error are addressed essentially to the same proposition: that the trial court’s finding that SCH’s breaches of contract were not material and did not excuse Intrak’s performance under the “traildown” clause was against the manifest weight of the evidence. 1

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Bluebook (online)
583 N.E.2d 1056, 66 Ohio App. 3d 163, 1990 Ohio App. LEXIS 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/software-clearing-house-inc-v-intrak-inc-ohioctapp-1990.