Sokol & Associates, Inc. v. Techsonic Industries, Inc.

495 F.3d 605, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 17796, 2007 WL 2127349
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 26, 2007
Docket06-2379
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 495 F.3d 605 (Sokol & Associates, Inc. v. Techsonic Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sokol & Associates, Inc. v. Techsonic Industries, Inc., 495 F.3d 605, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 17796, 2007 WL 2127349 (8th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

MELLOY, Circuit Judge.

Sokol & Associates, Inc. (“SA Inc.”) appeals the district court’s 1 grant of summary judgment in favor of Techsonic Industries, Inc. (“Techsonic”) and Johnson Outdoors, Inc. (“Johnson”) on SA Ine.’s claim for breach of a sales representative agreement. We affirm.

I. Background

SA Inc., the sole appellant in this matter, is a Minnesota corporation that serves as an independent sales representative to manufacturers of hunting, fishing, and marine products. SA Inc. is a successor-in-interest to Sokol and Associates (“S&A”), a sole proprietorship under which Paul Sokol (“Mr.Sokol”) conducted the same type of business. Although Mr. Sokol created both entities and they have similar names, they are legally distinct.

Appellee Techsonic is an Alabama corporation that manufactures fishing and marine products, such as fishfinders, under a variety of brand names. In May 2004, appellee Johnson, a publicly-held marketer of outdoor recreation products, acquired Techsonic from Teleflex Incorporated (“Teleflex”). Until May 2004, Techsonic was a wholly owned subsidiary of Teleflex. Teleflex is not a party to this lawsuit.

In 1997, Techsonic purchased Zercom Marine (“Zercom”), a company that also manufactured marine products. Mr. Sokol had been involved in the founding of Zer-com. As a result of Zercom’s acquisition, Techsonic entered into a sales representative agreement (“the 1997 Agreement”) with S&A whereby Mr. Sokol, doing business as S&A, would sell Zercom-branded products to customers within a specific geographic area and to certain non-territory-based customers. The agreement contained a choice-of-law provision invoking Minnesota state law. The agreement stated, in pertinent part:

The Representative shall faithfully, diligently and to the best of its ability endeavor to promote and extend the sales of the Company’s Zercom Marine branded products (the “Products”) which are presently those products described in Exhibit A.

The 1997 Agreement had a ten-year term and allowed Techsonic to terminate the agreement prior to the end of that period only if S&A breached a material term of the contract and failed to cure the breach within ninety days. Techsonic had the right to discontinue the sale of products that were no longer economically viable. S&A was to earn a five percent commis *608 sion on all of S&A’s Zercom sales. The agreement did not explicitly provide for modification; SA Inc. contends the parties anticipated modifications with respect to the product lines to be sold by S&A. Techsonic president Charles Stott signed the agreement on behalf of Techsonic and Mr. Sokol signed it on behalf of S&A.

In the fall of 1998, Techsonic acquired Fisheye, a marine products brand. Shortly thereafter, Stott verbally assigned S&A the right to sell Fisheye products and set a commission rate of five percent for those sales.

Beginning in November 1998, Techsonic and S&A engaged in negotiations regarding the sale of Humminbird products. Humminbird is another brand of marine products manufactured by Techsonic. In August 1999, Dave Overstreet, a regional sales manager for Teleflex, informed Mr. Sokol that S&A would be gaining responsibility for selling Humminbird products. Overstreet states that “one of the main reasons why Teleflex decided that [S&A] would take over for [the previous sales representatives] with respect to selling Humminbird products, was the fact that Techsonic and [S&A] were party to a 10-year agreement, which agreement did not expire until 2007.” S&A records reflect S&A began to sell Humminbird products in October 1999.

Also in October 1999, Teleflex proposed a written contract to S&A (“the 1999 Agreement”). Tom Douglass, a vice president with Teleflex, copied John Cinis 2 and Techsonic President Stott on the proposal. The products covered by the agreement and the commissions to be applied to sales were listed in Exhibits A and C attached to the contract, which were dated October 15, 1999 and referenced in the contract’s main text. The products listed in Exhibit A included the Zercom, Fisheye, and Hum-minbird brands. The 1999 Agreement specified that either party could terminate the agreement with thirty days notice. S&A initially rejected the proposal and further negotiations ensued.

During the course of the negotiations, S&A requested a letter confirming the relationship between the 1997 Agreement with Techsonic and the proposed 1999 Agreement with Teleflex. On January 4, 2000, Douglass sent S&A a letter which stated, in part:

To confirm our conversation in regards to the old vs. new contract, Teleflex Marine agrees that your Original Contract for Representation of Zercom, which was written as a result of the acquisition of Zercom by Techsonic Industries, will continue in effect for its duration as stated in that contract.
The new contract, dated October 15, 1999, supplements your original contract. Changes in territory and commission paid, as agreed by you, John Cinis and me, are stated in Exhibits “A” and “C” of the new contract. These Exhibits are dated January 4, 2000.

The exhibits were enclosed with the letter.

SA Inc. contends Mr. Sokol received assurances that the 1999 Agreement was a matter of housekeeping and would not affect the 1997 Agreement. However, S&A failed to obtain any further written assur- *609 anees regarding either contract. Notably, S&A did not obtain, or even request, written confirmation that the ten-year term of the 1997 Agreement governed Hummin-bird products, which were not expressly listed in the 1997 Agreement.

S&A ultimately made no changes to the proposed 1999 Agreement, and Mr. Sokol signed and returned the 1999 Agreement on February 25, 2000. SA Inc. notes that at the time Mr. Sokol executed the 1999 Agreement, the exhibits were not attached. SA Inc. does not contest, however, that Mr. Sokol received the exhibits attached to Douglass’s letter or that the main text of the 1999 Agreement referenced exhibits.

On April 24, 2000, S&A assigned the 1997 Agreement to SA Inc., a newly formed corporate entity. Techsonic agreed to the assignment. S&A did not assign the 1999 Agreement. Thus, none of the parties to this case — SA Inc., Johnson, or Techsonic — are parties to the 1999 Agreement between S&A and Teleflex. 3

As of 2002, Techsonic had discontinued both Fisheye and Zercom product lines. SA Inc. has not alleged bad faith in those discontinuations and has not pursued claims for breach of contract on those grounds. SA Inc. continued to sell Hum-minbird products and to receive commissions from Techsonic until July 2004.

On May 6, 2004, Johnson acquired Tech-sonic from Teleflex. The Stock Purchase Agreement finalizing the transaction specifically listed the 1997 Agreement as part of the purchase, describing the contract as “Sales Representative Agreement dated December 12, 1997 between [Techsonic] and Sokol and Associates — Sokol and Associates territories were changed in 1999.”

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Bluebook (online)
495 F.3d 605, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 17796, 2007 WL 2127349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sokol-associates-inc-v-techsonic-industries-inc-ca8-2007.