Telxon Corp. v. Smart Media, Unpublished Decision (9-21-2005)

2005 Ohio 4931
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 21, 2005
DocketNos. 22098, 22099.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 2005 Ohio 4931 (Telxon Corp. v. Smart Media, Unpublished Decision (9-21-2005)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
Telxon Corp. v. Smart Media, Unpublished Decision (9-21-2005), 2005 Ohio 4931 (Ohio Ct. App. 2005).

Opinions

DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY
{¶ 1} Appellants, Telxon Corp. and Symbol Technologies, Inc., appeal from the Summit County Court of Common Pleas, which entered judgment on a jury award of over $218 million to appellees, Smart Media of Delaware, Inc. (SMI) and William Dupre, for a breach of contract and various tort claims. Mr. Dupre also cross-appeals against Telxon. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

I.
{¶ 2} In 1996, Telxon was engaged in the design, manufacture and marketing of wireless computerized devices, which included hand-held bar-code scanners used by grocery store employees to scan merchandise and monitor inventory. This capability made Telxon a potentially ideal partner for SMI, a start-up company seeking to develop a product called Smart Handle. Smart Handle was envisioned as a computer device mounted on a shopping cart for checkout-at-the-cart convenience through immediate self-scanning of products by the shopper, as well as on-cart advertising, including full-motion videos, price comparisons, electronic coupons, and targeting of specific products based on the shopper's location in the store. While the seed for this idea had originated in the 1970's, and similar ventures had failed in the 1980's, SMI offered a novel approach that was enticing to Telxon: advertisers would commit up-front capital to fund the product rollout, making the otherwise prohibitively expensive device affordable to the grocery stores.

{¶ 3} From March 1996 to March 1997, SMI and Telxon discussed a proposed joint venture to bring Smart Handle to market, in which SMI would provide the Smart Handle concept and Telxon would provide engineering expertise, funding for a prototype, and marketing for the final product. The parties signed mutual non-disclosure agreements1 at the outset of these negotiations, but no further written agreements were ever signed. SMI contends that Telxon made numerous verbal promises and that the parties reached verbal agreements during these negotiations, including a commitment by Telxon to invest approximately $3.73 million to the joint venture. Telxon insists that no verbal agreement ever arose from these negotiations, as evidenced by a lack of any written agreement and the contents of the parties' correspondences, which contradict the occurrence of an agreement. According to Telxon, it ultimately declined the Smart Handle joint venture due to SMI's failure to produce the committed advertisers, its perceived product drawbacks, and a rejection of the concept in the marketplace.

{¶ 4} In 1996, William Dupre was a Vice President with Information Resources, Inc. (IRI), a company that specialized in market analysis of the retail grocery industry. Beginning in May 1996, SMI invited Mr. Dupre to the discussions with Telxon regarding the Smart Handle joint venture. According to Dupre, part of Telxon's verbal agreement with SMI required that he leave IRI to join SMI full time, which he did. Mr. Dupre resigned from IRI and a $150,000 annual salary in exchange for a promised 20% stake in the start-up SMI and a position as Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer. While at SMI, Dupre engaged in the further negotiations with Telxon, conducted road-shows for Telxon's clients, and incurred enormous personal debt by forgoing an income for over a year. By 1998, his purported 20% stake was reduced to 1.67% as SMI increasingly sacrificed ownership in exchange for outside investment.

{¶ 5} During 1996-1997, SMI had simultaneously pursued investors other than Telxon, including Telxon's competitors Symbol Technologies, Inc. and Fujitsu-ICL Retail Systems, Inc. In fact, shortly after ending relations with Telxon in 1997, SMI partnered with Fujitsu to build the prototype. At the same time, SMI obtained $7.8 million in venture capital from outside investors. Bob McCann became CEO of SMI in 1999, and according to his testimony, raised another $12 to $15 million in venture capital over the next year and a half. By September 2003, SMI founder Dennis Blaeuer testified that although SMI had never made a profit they were in the process of raising another $10 to $15 million in a further effort to get to market. Despite these efforts, the Smart Handle product (later renamed Snap Shopper) has yet to emerge in the market, even as of the present date. And, as demonstrated at trial, by September 2003 SMI had failed to obtain any contract with any retailer to bring this product to market.

{¶ 6} In 1996, however, SMI projected an unwavering belief in its Smart Handle concept, which it prophesied would revolutionize shopping if only a prototype could be revealed to the mass of grocery stores eager for such technology. SMI insists that Telxon, as the reigning leader in such grocery store technology, was equally enamored with its concept, but that Telxon was secretly determined to create its own competing device. According to Telxon, even a perfectly functional product was simply too expensive to profitably install in grocery stores — the real attractiveness of SMI was not so much its concept, which was not at all new, but rather its promise that it had advertisers committed to providing the up-front capital necessary to install the devices. Otherwise, the concept was a nonstarter. Even if the product drawbacks could be overcome and consumer demand incubated; without significant advertiser investment as a catalyst, installation and maintenance of the device was simply too expensive for the competitive grocery store market. By March 1997, the parties had conducted protracted negotiations and attended numerous meetings, but when Telxon indicated that it would need more time, SMI finally grew impatient and chose to pursue a partnership elsewhere.

{¶ 7} From SMI's perspective, Telxon entered negotiations in March 1996 solely to frustrate SMI's negotiations with other investors, such as its competitor Symbol, and to stall the Smart Handle development. SMI also accused Telxon of using the negotiations as a ruse to obtain SMI's technology and win the race to the market. However, as demonstrated during the extensive trial testimony, SMI's management was unanimous and unequivocal in rejecting any partnership with Symbol, and candidly admitted that negotiations with Symbol were used for its own ruse to spur Telxon into action. Similarly important is that Telxon was not in fact racing to market. As of the present date almost nine years later, Telxon has never produced or marketed a similar device, and Symbol's equivalent device remains at best an exploratory and inchoate concept which has neither attained widespread acceptance in the market nor revolutionized shopping.

{¶ 8} Although Telxon and SMI seemed to part amicably in March 1997, SMI contacted Telxon again in October 1998, demanding money and threatening legal action, based on promises and oral agreements allegedly made during their 1996 discussions. In response, Telxon filed suit seeking a declaratory judgment that it had never entered any agreement, had never promised any funding, and had never induced SMI in any way. SMI joined several others as defendants, including Mr. Dupre, who collectively counter-claimed for negligent misrepresentation, estoppel, tortious interference with a business relationship, intentional misrepresentation, breach of contract, and fraud. Discovery ensued and the case proceeded to trial.

{¶ 9} Also during late 1998, Symbol initiated a hostile takeover of Telxon and began to acquire Telxon shares through stock-for-stock transactions with Telxon's shareholders.

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Bluebook (online)
2005 Ohio 4931, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/telxon-corp-v-smart-media-unpublished-decision-9-21-2005-ohioctapp-2005.