Sweet Additions Ingredient Processors, LLC v. Meelunie America, Inc.

139 F.4th 1217
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJune 2, 2025
Docket24-10335
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 139 F.4th 1217 (Sweet Additions Ingredient Processors, LLC v. Meelunie America, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sweet Additions Ingredient Processors, LLC v. Meelunie America, Inc., 139 F.4th 1217 (11th Cir. 2025).

Opinion

USCA11 Case: 24-10335 Document: 50-1 Date Filed: 06/02/2025 Page: 1 of 35

[PUBLISH] In the United States Court of Appeals For the Eleventh Circuit

____________________

No. 24-10335 ____________________

SWEET ADDITIONS INGREDIENT PROCESSORS, LLC, Plaintiff-Counter Defendant-Appellant, versus MEELUNIE AMERICA, INC.,

Defendant-Counter Claimant-Appellee.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida D.C. Docket No. 9:21-cv-81141-AHS ____________________ USCA11 Case: 24-10335 Document: 50-1 Date Filed: 06/02/2025 Page: 2 of 35

2 Opinion of the Court 24-10335

Before ROSENBAUM, NEWSOM, and MARCUS, Circuit Judges. PER CURIAM: First-year law students might want to take note: this dispute may resemble a question on an upcoming contracts exam. In September 2019, Defendant-Appellee Meelunie America, Inc. (“Meelunie”), and Plaintiff-Appellant Sweet Additions Ingredi- ent Processors, LLC (“Sweet Additions”), agreed to a fixed-price sales contract. In that contract, Meelunie agreed to supply Sweet Additions with organic tapioca starch 1 for the 2020 calendar year. Shortly into the deal’s term, the COVID-19 pandemic started to interrupt global supply lines. And although the parties worked through some initial performance difficulties, by the begin- ning of 2021, Sweet Additions had yet to receive the full quantity of tapioca starch Meelunie agreed to provide under the contract. Meelunie represented that supply difficulties were likely to last through the next several months but that, potentially, it could de- liver the remaining tapioca starch under the contract if Sweet Ad- ditions would shoulder higher shipping costs. Sweet Additions de- clined, contracted with an alternative tapioca starch provider, and declared that Meelunie materially breached the contract.

1 Tapioca is the starch extracted from dried yuca (or cassava) plants and is a

popular ingredient in dishes, desserts, and even drinks—like boba (or bubble tea)—across the world. See Melissa Clark, Tapioca Moves Beyond Its Pudding Phase, N.Y. Times, Mar. 3, 1999, at F3. USCA11 Case: 24-10335 Document: 50-1 Date Filed: 06/02/2025 Page: 3 of 35

24-10335 Opinion of the Court 3

Then Sweet Additions filed this lawsuit to recover the ben- efit of its bargain. During the litigation, Meelunie leveled counter- claims. The parties proceeded to a bench trial. In the end, the dis- trict court entered a $1,409,490.61 judgment in Meelunie’s favor for the outstanding invoices that Sweet Additions had not yet paid. The district court also rejected Sweet Additions’s claims. The court concluded the parties’ contract precluded Sweet Additions from re- covering damages, even if Meelunie in fact breached. Specifically, it held the parties’ contract incorporated Meelunie’s generic terms and conditions. And from those terms and conditions, it relied on a limitation of liability that it interpreted to bar the cover costs Sweet Additions hoped to recover. So now, on appeal, we must decide two issues: (1) whether the sales contract incorporates Meelunie’s generic terms and con- ditions and (2), if so, whether the terms and conditions’ limitation of liability precludes Sweet Additions from recovering any dam- ages. After careful review, and with the benefit of oral argument, we conclude the parties’ contract incorporates the terms and con- ditions. But we hold that the limitation of liability does not pre- clude Sweet Additions from recovering any damages in this suit. Instead, it bars recovery of only special consequential, incidental, or exemplary damages. So we vacate the district court’s judgment and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. USCA11 Case: 24-10335 Document: 50-1 Date Filed: 06/02/2025 Page: 4 of 35

4 Opinion of the Court 24-10335

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

On September 16, 2019, the parties entered a single-page sales contract. See App’x A (“Sales Contract”). Meelunie agreed to supply Sweet Additions with nearly 20 million pounds of organic tapioca starch (“tapioca starch” or “product”) in the 2020 calendar year. Id. This, however, was not the first contract between the par- ties; Meelunie began supplying product to Sweet Additions about seven years earlier, in around 2012. The Sales Contract required Meelunie to load the tapioca starch into 360 containers weighing 55,115 pounds each. It also specified the price: $40.80 per 100 pounds, for a total value of the contract at around $8 million. See id. The contract prescribed sev- eral other terms as well: delivery was to be made in Minneapolis, Minnesota; the shipments were to be made between January and December 2020; and payment was to be made within forty-five days of invoice, which Meelunie typically included with each ship- ment. But perhaps most importantly for this dispute, the contract also “confirm[ed]” that Meelunie “SOLD to [Sweet Additions] on [its] general conditions,” that “[o]n all [Meelunie’s] Sales contracts, [Meelunie’s] General Sales conditions apply,” and that “[a] copy of these conditions can be obtained upon request.” Id. Although the Sales Contract called for payment within forty- five days of an invoice, Meelunie extended Sweet Additions credit for its purchases. Over the course of the parties’ relationship, USCA11 Case: 24-10335 Document: 50-1 Date Filed: 06/02/2025 Page: 5 of 35

24-10335 Opinion of the Court 5

Sweet Additions enjoyed a $1 million credit limit, which repre- sented the total amount of exposure at any one time that Meelunie would allow Sweet Additions’s accounts receivable to reach. The limit began in February 2019. Insurance backed it. And so did Mee- lunie’s general terms and conditions. See App’x B (“T&Cs”). Under the T&Cs, Meelunie could charge buyers who had not timely paid an interest rate of 1.5% per month (18% per year) or the maximum lawful rate, whichever was less. Id. § 3. So when, under a prior contract, Sweet Additions used the credit Meelunie extended, Meelunie informed Sweet Additions of impending inter- est charges. In May 2019, Meelunie emailed Ken Valdivia, Sweet Addi- tions’s president and CEO, and Deborah Higgs, Sweet Additions’s controller and head of accounting, warning that Meelunie would soon start charging interest on past-due invoices under its “sales terms and conditions,” which it attached to the email. Meelunie began charging Sweet Additions interest for overdue payments. And continuing into 2020, Meelunie emailed Higgs or her accounting assistant, Samatha Swiderski (with a copy to Valdivia), with interest invoices, attaching the T&Cs to those messages, too. Sweet Additions paid those interest invoices at the rate that the T&Cs contained, so Meelunie kept delivering tapioca starch to Sweet Additions. The parties contemplated delivery of eight containers of tapioca starch per week over the course of 2020. But Meelunie USCA11 Case: 24-10335 Document: 50-1 Date Filed: 06/02/2025 Page: 6 of 35

6 Opinion of the Court 24-10335

struggled to adhere to that schedule. And several shipping delays throughout 2020 and 2021 soured the parties’ relationship. The struggles began in early 2020. In all of February, Sweet Additions received only seven containers, well short of the eight per week it anticipated. Meelunie attributed these delays to a fac- tory shutdown in Taiwan and a labor strike at the port in Vancou- ver. All in all, the product shortfall amounted to about 1.3 million pounds in February and March 2020. Sweet Additions contended that these delays harmed its fixed costs, profits, and deliveries to its customers. Valdivia esti- mated the company lost $450,000 in February 2020 because of non- delivery. So in March 2020, he emailed Meelunie his concern that Thailand was “imposing [a] broad lock down” because of COVID- 19.

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139 F.4th 1217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweet-additions-ingredient-processors-llc-v-meelunie-america-inc-ca11-2025.