Sound of Music Co. v. Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co.

389 F. Supp. 2d 988, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21532, 2005 WL 2387645
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedSeptember 27, 2005
Docket99 C 0639
StatusPublished

This text of 389 F. Supp. 2d 988 (Sound of Music Co. v. Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sound of Music Co. v. Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co., 389 F. Supp. 2d 988, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21532, 2005 WL 2387645 (N.D. Ill. 2005).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

NORDBERG, Senior District Judge.

This parties in this case worked together for over two decades until their relationship ended in November 1997 when Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Company (“3M”) announced that it was exiting the background music business because of a “change in strategic business direction” and was therefore terminating its 1995 contract with all of its dealers based on a clause that allowed for termination in such circumstances. Sound of Music Company (“Sound of Music”), which was 3M’s largest dealer of background music, was upset by this decision. It filed this lawsuit claiming that 3M was obligated under various implied and statutory duties to continue performing for a longer period of time.

Sound of Music also alleged that it had been enticed into signing the 1995 contract by promotional statements that supposedly gave the impression that 3M was committed to staying in this business until at least sometime around the year 2005. Although this enticement theory was featured prominently in the original and subsequent complaints, it was never incorporated into a specific cause of action. In discovery, Sound of Music claims to have uncovered evidence linking these promotional statements to a larger fraudulent scheme. Specifically, when 3M issued these promotional statements, it supposedly had already decided that it would be exiting the business and intentionally kept this fact secret to lure Sound of Music and other dealers into signing the 1995 contract and purchasing expensive downlink equipment. Then, after the final payments on this equipment were made in 1997, it terminated the contract and then came up with a cover-up story, which was that its business was no longer profitable.

Before the Court is 3M’s motion for summary judgment on the four counts in the current amended complaint as well as Sound of Music’s motion for leave to file a second amended complaint adding a fifth count that seeks to incorporate this enticement theory into a fraud-based claim under the Illinois Consumer Fraud Act. This opinion will address both motions.

BACKGROUND 1

Founded in 1902 by five men who had a single idea for starting a company, 3M is today a highly-diversified technology corporation with 20 billion in worldwide sales, over 67,000 employees, and more than 55,-000 products. 3M has succeeded over the years by constantly developing new products. Some of these products, like Post-it notes and Scotch tape, are well-known to consumers today. But not all of its products have been as successful or as long-lasting. This dispute is about one of 3M’s lesser known ventures.

Sometime in the 1960s, 3M decided to enter the background music business. This business involves selling pre-recorded music to businesses that play the music in their stores. 3M decided to enter this business because, at that time, music was distributed on magnetic tapes, which was an area in which it had expertise. Although 3M reserved the right to sell this music directly to end users, it primarily relied on a network of non-exclusive dealers.

*991 In 1973, Richard Cushing, who was then working for 3M, decided to leave the company and become one of these dealers. He founded Sound of Music and located it in Mundelein, Illinois. Much like 3M, albeit on a lesser scale, Sound of Music grew over the years from a small venture employing two people into a successful company employing 26 people and occupying five buildings. Its customers included Sears and True Value hardware stores. Cushing’s two sons worked with him in this business, and he eventually hoped to hand it over to them. Unlike 3M, however, Sound of Music focused its energies primarily on one product and did not make significant efforts to diversify into other industries.

Over the next two decades, the technology in the background music business would change several times, forcing the parties to adapt and to make choices. The first of these changes occurred in the late 1980s when the technology changed from magnetic tapes to an analog satellite signal. This change forced 3M and its dealers to restructure their distributional system. On the front end, 3M had to find a way to send out a satellite signal, which it did by entering into an agreement leasing satellite space from a North Carolina company. On the back end, 3M had to provide a way for stores to receive this signal, which it did by distributing equipment, known as downlink equipment, that allowed end users to convert the analog signal into music that could be played in their stores.

The 1988 Agreement

These technological changes led to legal changes. 3M entered into a new dealer agreement with Sound of Music and the other dealers in 1988. The 1988 agreement, though not directly at issue here, is nonetheless important in understanding the parties’ concerns regarding the later 1995 agreement, which is the focal point of this lawsuit.

In the 1988 agreement, 3M agreed to lease this downlink equipment to dealers who would in turn sub-lease it to end users. (Ex. 3 at § I.) The price of the equipment was set forth on Schedule A that was attached to the agreement and included a one-time “entry fee” of $2,400 as well as other fees. These fees will become important later to the question of when the statute of limitations on the Illinois franchise act claim began to run.

This agreement did not contain a specific termination date, but it did allow for termination under four possible scenarios. (Section XIV.a-d.) Subsection “c” provided that 3M could terminate “immediately” upon written notice if “3M’s Satellite Business is discontinued.” Subsection “d” gave either party the option to terminate “regardless of cause” upon 90 days advance written notice. Although the agreement provided that 3M would lease the downlink equipment, the parties entered into a separate lease agreement. This agreement, unlike the 1988 agreement, had a specific termination date of 60 months from its inception.

In 1991, Sound of Music became concerned about whether the 1988 agreement gave it an exclusive right to sell in the six-county area identified in the contract as its primary selling area. Cushing asked Edwin Josephson, a partner in the Chicago law firm Chuhak & Tecson, to review the 1988 agreement and analyze this issue. Josephson informed Cushing that it was his opinion after reviewing the agreement that 3M did have an explicit right to sell directly to end users in Sound of Music’s selling area. (Ex. W.) This conclusion was based on a review of the agreement as well as Schedules B and C that were attached to the it. Although Sound of Music apparently did not pursue this issue with 3M, we *992 mention it because it shows that both Cushing and Josephson were familiar with the terms of this agreement.

3M Terminates the 1988 Agreement

In 1993, dealers became concerned about what would happen with the down-link equipment given that the 60-month lease agreements would expire later that year. (Ex. C.) 3M then decided (for reasons that are not clear) to shift to a system whereby dealers would purchase, rather than lease, the equipment. (Id.) To implement this change, 3M terminated the 1988 agreement in a letter dated October 14, 1993. (Ex.

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Bluebook (online)
389 F. Supp. 2d 988, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21532, 2005 WL 2387645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sound-of-music-co-v-minnesota-mining-manufacturing-co-ilnd-2005.