The Knowles Co. v. N.E. Harbor Insurers

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 15, 2003
DocketHANcv-97-12
StatusUnpublished

This text of The Knowles Co. v. N.E. Harbor Insurers (The Knowles Co. v. N.E. Harbor Insurers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Knowles Co. v. N.E. Harbor Insurers, (Me. Super. Ct. 2003).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT

HANCOCK, SS. CIVIL ACTION Docket No. CV-97-12 SL HAR pap ee FILED & ENTERED The Knowles Company, Plaintiff DEC 15 2003 SUPERIOR COURT v. Decision and Judgment HANCOCK COUNTY SONAL © sere Northeast Harbor Insurers, Leh

Defendant

Following remand from the Law Court, the retrial of this case was held on April 23 and 24, 2003. On both trial dates, representatives of the parties were present with counsel of record. Following the trial, counsel filed written summations and replies that the court has considered. The essence of the plaintiff’s claims is that, to the exclusion of the defendant, it has title to and the right to use the name, “Knowles.” From this argument arise various causes of action based on allegations that the defendant has misappropriated and otherwise improperly used that trade name. The plaintiff seeks injunctive relief and money damages.

In the late nineteenth century, Belle Smallidge Knowles, a local librarian, founded a business on Mount Desert Island that specialized in developing and marketing rental properties in the area. The business evolved to include and then focus on the sale of real estate, on real estate appraisals and on insurance. The insurance aspect of the business had developed by the 1930’s. The company was called, “The Knowles Company,” and the building housing the business came to be known as the “Knowles Building.” Several generations of Belle’s family were centrally involved in the business. In 1949, it was incorporated under the name, “The Knowles Company.” Belle’s granddaughter, Katherine, married Robert Suminsby in 1957, and Robert became affiliated with the business within a year of their marriage. By the 1970’s, the Suminsbys owned the business as shareholders, and Robert served as its manager. The location of the business

has not changed since its inception in 1898. By 1987, one Jack Wright had become a shareholder of The Knowles Company. The relationship between Suminsby and Wright, however, had become difficult, and in late 1987, they decided to part ways. That separation was embodied in an agreement that they reached in 1987 and that became effective in January 1988. See defendant’s exhibit 24.’ In its substance, Wright and The Knowles Company purchased Suminsby’s shares of The Knowles Company. Wright ended up with the insurance component of the business and initially operated it under the name, “The Knowles Company,” see id., [ 7, and Suminsby retained the real estate and appraisal arms. They entered into covenants not to compete with the other’s area of practice. /d., 9. Thus, Suminsby agreed not to engage in an insurance business. Both Suminsby and Wright reserved the right to use the name, “Knowles,” and the associated logo in their separate businesses. Jd., J 6. However, the corporate entity and Wright both agreed “to change the corporate name of the Company from its present name ‘The Knowles Company’, to some other corporate name” within one year following the execution of the agreement. Id., 7. This was accomplished, and the new corporate name was “The Knowles Corporation.” See Suminsby deposition exhibit 13 (part of plaintiff’s trial exhibit 1) at { 4(a); defendant’s exhibit 1.

Suminsby, Wright and the corporation entered into another agreement in May 1989. Pursuant to that agreement, Wright and the corporation agreed that, no later than October 1, 1990, the corporate name would be changed again, this time to “The Knowles- Wright Company,” and they also agreed that “the word ‘Knowles’ will not be used by Wright or the Corporation without the use of the word ‘Wright’ in conjunction therewith.” See Suminsby deposition exhibit 13 (part of plaintiff’s trial exhibit 1) at J 4(c). Further, under the agreement, by October 1, 1992, the corporation’s name would be changed so eliminate the inclusion of the word, “Knowles,” altogether. This progression in the degree of separation between Suminsby and Wright resulted, at least in part, from Suminsby’s dissatisfaction with Wright’s business practices. As part of this, Suminsby

was unhappy that those practices would reflect badly on the Knowles name, and the

’ The history of the transactions between Suminsby and Wright is also set out in a preamble to an agreement they executed in May 1989. See Suminsby deposition exhibit 13 (part of plaintiffs trial exhibit 1). portion of the agreement noted here was designed to prevent Wright from carrying on under the Knowles name.

By 1992, Wright’s insurance business was failing, and he sold at least some of the corporate assets, including the “book of business” (essentially, the client accounts), to David Granston and Eric Swanson. It appears that the corporate entity itself, The Knowles Corporation, became defunct. Granston and Swanson incorporated their new business under the corporate name, “Northeast Harbor Insurers” (NHI) and registered the trade name, “The Knowles Company Insurance,” with the Maine Secretary of State. See defendant’s exhibit 2. From the outset, NHI operated as “The Knowles Company Insurance.” Its business was located in the Knowles real estate building, pursuant to the lease noted below. (The insurance business operated downstairs, and the real estate business was upstairs.) Indeed, after Wright’s business failed, Swanson and Granston felt a successor business’ best chance to survive would be to return to the Knowles real estate office and use the Knowles name. Randy Merchant and Terry Pinkham, now the principals of the defendant, worked for the company at that time. Several years later, when Swanson left the business, Merchant acquired shares of the corporation.

Previously, Wright had relocated his insurance business to a different building

than the one where he had worked in concert with Suminsby’s real estate practice. When, however, NHI succeeded Wright’s company, Suminsby entered into a lease agreement under which NHI would use a portion of the real estate office as its place of business. See plaintiff's exhibit 3A (same as Suminsby deposition exhibit 14 (part of plaintiff's trial exhibit 1)). Although the lease instrument is not signed, it reflects the parties’ agreement. The lease agreement covered the period between January 1992 and January 1997. One provision of the writing relates to the use of the name, “Knowles.” See id. at {17. That term authorized NHI, “[dJuring the term of this lease,” to use both the name “The Knowles Company — Insurance” and the associated logo. The document also acknowledged that NHI had requested the right to purchase the right to use that name after the lease expired and that Suminsby agreed “to consider this request and to notify the Lessee of his acceptance by December 31, 1994.” Id.

While the two businesses occupied the same building, the relationship between

David Granston and Suminsby deteriorated. In December 1996, NHI moved its place of business to a location roughly one-quarter mile from the building where it had leased space from Suminsby. Prior to the physical separation of the businesses, Suminsby and Granston were overheard engaging in loud arguments. During some of these arguments, Suminsby accused Granston of stealing the Knowles name. After the move, NHI continued to use the name, “Knowles,” but it discontinued ‘its use of the traditional logo. For the next year or so, Needham and Merchant continued to work for NHI (by this time, Merchant owned a minority of the corporation’s shares of stock), but both left in 1997. Later in 1997, several insurance carriers whose coverage was sold through NHI approached Merchant and Needham in an effort to get NHI into new hands. As a result of this initiative, the two acquired all of NHI’s corporate shares, and they presently own those shares equally.

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