Taylor Box Co. v. Sar Group Limited, 2002-1033 (r.I.super. 2005)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 25, 2005
DocketNo. C.A. 2002-1033
StatusUnpublished

This text of Taylor Box Co. v. Sar Group Limited, 2002-1033 (r.I.super. 2005) (Taylor Box Co. v. Sar Group Limited, 2002-1033 (r.I.super. 2005)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor Box Co. v. Sar Group Limited, 2002-1033 (r.I.super. 2005), (R.I. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

DECISION
This contract case is before the Court for decision following a non-jury trial on a one count complaint brought by Taylor Box Company (Taylor) against SAR Group, Ltd., D/B/A Raymond Audette Associates (Audette). Plaintiff seeks to recover damages from Audette relative to an order he placed with Taylor for the manufacture of 2,000 specialty DVD boxes. Jurisdiction is pursuant to General Law 1956, § 8-2-14.

Facts
Taylor is a custom box manufacturing company which has been owned and operated by the family of Daniel J. Shedd for nearly one hundred (100) years. Located in Rhode Island, it employs between forty five (45) and eighty (80) employees. Taylor asserts that it has suffered damages as a result of a breach of a contract by Audette. Specifically, Taylor claims that in the spring of 2001, Audette entered into a binding contract with Taylor for the manufacture of two thousand (2,000) specialty order boxes designed to store DVD's utilized in corporate training kits.

The Plaintiff's case was in large part presented through the testimony of Daniel J. Shedd, the President and sole owner of Taylor. Shedd testified that on April 7, 2001, Defendant Audette came to the Taylor manufacturing facility for a meeting. The prearranged meeting was intended to further discussion concerning a project which Audette wished to discuss with the hierarchy of Taylor. Audette sat down with Shedd, Kenneth Burns, (Taylor's senior designer), Gene LaPlante, (a sales representative of Taylor), and perhaps a fourth individual. Audette brought to the meeting a box which was then being utilized by his customer for the transportation and storage of DVD recordings utilized for corporate training. Audette explained that he wished Taylor to design a replacement box which would be cheaper. A sample box which was then in use by Audette's client was provided to Burns to enable him to build a prototype replacement box that could be manufactured by Taylor.

As related by Shedd, Audette indicated that he was looking for "better value" in a DVD box and that he needed the product by mid-June. It is clear from this very first conversation that urgency was a central aspect of the project.

Over the next week, Taylor constructed a prototype replacement box which was given to Audette. (Exhibit 3). Following construction of the prototype, Taylor conducted a price analysis so as to determine cost, markup and Taylor's profit should a contract be finalized. In response to Audette's request, Taylor provided a quote (Exhibit 5) for certain quantities of the box. Subsequently, Taylor provided additional quotes relative to various other quantities pursuant to the request of Audette.

As had been previously discussed, the quotation for 2,000 boxes indicated that a $730 charge would be made for the creation of unique dies which would be needed to manufacture this particular box. After having received the prototype so that it could be shown to his customer, Audette submitted an order on May 15, 2001. That order (Exhibit 6) referenced Taylor's quotation, stated a 2,000 count production at $14.129 each, agreed to a $730 one-time set up charge, and indicated that there would be a lead time of approximately four to six weeks, a reference to the time period during which Taylor was expected to deliver the units. The order form, signed by Audette, indicated "order subject to approval of sample provided." Shedd testified that Audette subsequently advised Taylor that Audette's client had approved the prototype.

From the foregoing facts it might appear that a meeting of minds (and a contract) had been reached as represented by the quotation and order forms. Shedd and Taylor personnel believed that they had received a firm order from Audette. Accordingly, during the week of May 24, 2001, Taylor ordered the material needed to manufacture the two thousand (2,000) boxes. Shedd testified that he was aware of the time constraints placed on Taylor by Audette, that Audette had indicated his customer had approved the design, and that around May 20, 2001, Shedd had specifically advised Audette that the materials for the job "would be ordered." These materials are represented by the order forms and invoices contained in Exhibit 7.

The Defendant's testimony as to these events was substantially different. And, in sharp contrast to the direct and convincing testimony given by Shedd, this Court found the somewhat evasive and vague testimony of Audette to be highly suspect with respect to numerous points in contention.

Raymond Audette has been in the business of distributing recognition products for the past twenty-five (25) years. Although an apparently seasoned businessman, he has little if any background relative to the manufacture of specialty boxes. Audette testified that his introduction to Taylor was through LaPlante, a sales representative for Taylor. It was because of his contact with LaPlante that he met with Taylor officials in early April, 2001. Audette testified that he advised Taylor that he was looking to have a replacement box manufactured, similar to that which was introduced as Plaintiff's Exhibit 1. However, Audette (and apparently his client) needed one which was more affordable. In his initial meeting with Taylor, Audette explained that he wished Taylor to come up with a solution to his need for a less expensive box to be utilized for the storage and transportation of DVD's used for training programs sponsored for employees of Dunkin Brands, Inc., his long time customer.

At his second meeting at Taylor, Audette was provided with a prototype which had been manufactured by hand by the Taylor design staff headed by Kenneth Burns. Audette took custody of the prototype purportedly to show it to his customer for approval in order to move forward with the project. At that second meeting there was a discussion relative to the art work to be displayed on the exterior of the training kit box. Contrary to the testimony given by Shedd and Burns, Audette testified that it was his understanding that the project would go forward only after his customer received and approved a preproduction sample, not the hand-crafted prototype which had been produced by Burns.1 Likewise, Audette testified that based upon a facsimile message which he had received from a Taylor employee (Exhibit A), he understood that nothing would be done on the project until (1) he provided Taylor with a 50% deposit for the production and (2) he had given "final approvals."2 (Exhibit A). Audette testified that he never forwarded a check for 50% of the contract amount which he understood to be a requirement for a go-ahead of the project. (Exhibit C). Audette further testified that his customer never entered into contract with him for the production of boxes, a fact which he readily admitted he never disclosed to Taylor.

Despite his stated desire to move the project forward before the end of June 2001, Audette testified that he told LaPlante that the project was not going forward "at this time" when LaPlante made inquiry of him during the summer of 2001. The Court found this testimony somewhat perplexing in light of the fact that when billed for the $730 setup fee involving the production of special order dies, Audette readily paid the invoice. (Exhibits 9,10). Audette claimed at trial that approval of the project would only occur after his customer had approved art work to be displayed on the exterior of the training kit box.

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Bluebook (online)
Taylor Box Co. v. Sar Group Limited, 2002-1033 (r.I.super. 2005), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-box-co-v-sar-group-limited-2002-1033-risuper-2005-risuperct-2005.