Th Corporation v. Starter Corporation, No. Cv 98-0416094 S (Jan. 11, 1999)

1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 539
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1999
DocketNo. CV 98-0416094 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 539 (Th Corporation v. Starter Corporation, No. Cv 98-0416094 S (Jan. 11, 1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Th Corporation v. Starter Corporation, No. Cv 98-0416094 S (Jan. 11, 1999), 1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 539 (Colo. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON PLAINTIFF'S APPLICATION TO COMPEL ARBITRATION CT Page 540
This is an application to compel arbitration of a commercial dispute pursuant to Conn. General Statutes § 52-410.

The plaintiff TH Corporation is a business enterprise based in Seoul, Korea. For years, the plaintiff has transacted business with the defendant Starter Corporation, a clothing company incorporated in Delaware and based in New Haven, and Starter Far East Ltd., a subsidiary of Starter Corporation. The Starter companies use TH to find factories in Korea and the Philippines that can manufacture articles of clothing that Starter purchases and imports into the United States. TH is compensated for its work on a commission basis.

On February 25, 1993, the plaintiff and Starter Corporation entered into a written Commission Agreement. The Commission Agreement contains an arbitration clause.

During 1993, the plaintiff located manufacturers for a type of water-resistant jacket to the specifications required by Starter Corporation, and Starter placed substantial orders with the manufacturers so identified.

In July of 1993, during the process if importing the jackets into this country, U.S. customs officials notified Starter that several of the garments had failed a laboratory test for water-resistance. Because the tariff provisions for non-water-resistant garments are higher than for water-resistant garments, Starter was required to tender an additional duty to U.S. Customs of about $2 million. U.S. Customs further notified Starter that an investigation of the incorrect classification would continue and might result in further monetary penalties.

Starter notified TH Corporation and the manufacturers of the problem. As a result of negotiations with the manufacturers and with TH, an agreement was reached to "chargeback" a portion of the Customs fees and penalties to each manufacturer involved. The chargeback agreement with each manufacturer was to be fulfilled either by a direct payment from each manufacturer to Starter, or by Starter withholding portions of monies due each manufacturer on subsequent shipments from that manufacturer.

Starter and TH also entered into a chargeback agreement. It is a simple, one page agreement dated November 1, 1993. CT Page 541 Essentially in return for Starter's agreement to continue over four years to do business with TH as its agent at a minimum of the same volume as in 1993, TH agreed to guarantee the chargeback of each manufacturer to Starter up to a total of $4,000,000. In the TH chargeback agreement, however, it is specified that Starter is not entitled to withhold any commission payments to TH in relation to the chargeback arrangement.

The written agreement contains no arbitration clause.

Meanwhile on September 9, 1993, Starter Far East Ltd., formerly called Fair Stock Limited, was incorporated as a Hong Kong Corporation. Starter Far East Ltd. is a subsidiary of Starter Corporation. TH Corporation alleges that Starter Corporation does business as Starter Far East Ltd. and that the two corporations have acted interchangeably in dealing with the plaintiff.1

Subsequent to the signing of the chargeback agreement between the plaintiff and Starter, the defendants and the plaintiff continued to do business with one another, most recently under a written agency contract dated January 1, 1996.2 The written agency contract states that it is between TH Corporation and Starter Far East Ltd, but it is signed by Gary S. Letendre, Vice-President, on behalf of Starter Corporation. This court finds that both Starter Corporation and Starter Far East Ltd. are bound by the 1996 agency contract with TH Corporation.

The 1996 agency contract calls for TH to act as the agent of the defendants for the purchase and shipment of clothing from Asia. Compensation for TH is by commission on the f.o.b. price of the product shipped. The contract contains an arbitration clause that states:

Any controversy or claim arising out of or relating to this agreement or its breach which does not result amicably by mutual agreement between Starter and Agent shall be exclusively resolved by submission by either party to the American Arbitration Association in the City of New Haven, Connecticut U.S.A. in accordance with the then obtaining rules of the American Arbitration Association, and any judgment rendered by the arbitrators shall be entered in any court having jurisdiction. (Emphasis supplied.)

After the contract was entered into on January 1, 1996, the CT Page 542 parties renegotiated their chargeback arrangement. In a written agreement dated February 15, 1996, the parties extended the payment schedule under the previous chargeback agreement into 1998. The agreement is signed by the President of TH Corporation and by Gary Letendre on behalf of Starter Corporation. Once again, there is no arbitration clause in the renegotiated chargeback agreement.

Both the 1993 and the 1996 chargeback agreements contain no specific references to any written agency contracts between the parties. Both chargeback agreements do contain the following language, related to their continuing business relationship:

2) Starter must not hold payment for the agreed agency commission to TH Corporation in relation to this chargeback compensation

On January 29, 1998, Starter Corporation advised TH that it was terminating the agency relationship, effective April 29, 1998. Thereafter TH demanded that Starter Corporation d/b/a Starter Far East Ltd. participate in the arbitration of certain outstanding disputes pursuant to the arbitration clause in the 1996 agency contract. When Starter resisted the demand, TH filed this application to compel arbitration.

In describing the dispute in its demand for arbitration, TH summarizes it as follows:

TH has 1. Paid to Starter $1.1 million in excess of money Starter actually paid U.S. Customs.

2. Paid $3.042 million to Starter, under the Chargeback Agreements despite Starter's breach of conditions precedent for said payment.

3. Lost business volumes assured by Starter Corp. in both the November 1993 and February 1996 Chargeback Agreements.

4. Lost the value of its time and materials invested in the 1998 product as well as the opportunity to market other distributors of product 1998.

The plaintiff argues that the dispute over payments under the chargeback agreement of 1993 is a "claim arising out of or CT Page 543 relating to" the ongoing agency relationship that TH and Starter had over the years that was embodied in the 1996 agency contract and thus is subject to arbitration.

The defendant claims that all of the dispute for which the plaintiff demands arbitration arises out of the Customs duty issue and the chargeback agreements. Since those agreements contain no arbitration clause, the dispute is not arbitrable.

The court finds that neither of these positions is entirely correct.

DETERMINATION OF ARBITRABILITY

In determining whether the arbitration clause in the 1996 agency contract applies to all of this dispute, some of it, or none of it, the court is first presented with the question of whether state or federal law applies. If federal law applies, the court must look to a body of federal substantive law concerning arbitrability, rather than the state law of Connecticut.3

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Bluebook (online)
1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/th-corporation-v-starter-corporation-no-cv-98-0416094-s-jan-11-1999-connsuperct-1999.