The Original Bobble Babes, LLC v. Dedicated Logistics, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 21, 2016
DocketA16-496
StatusUnpublished

This text of The Original Bobble Babes, LLC v. Dedicated Logistics, Inc. (The Original Bobble Babes, LLC v. Dedicated Logistics, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Original Bobble Babes, LLC v. Dedicated Logistics, Inc., (Mich. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

This opinion will be unpublished and may not be cited except as provided by Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A16-0496

The Original Bobble Babes, LLC, Appellant,

vs.

Dedicated Logistics, Inc., Respondent.

Filed November 21, 2016 Affirmed Smith, Tracy M., Judge

Hennepin County District Court File No. 27-CV-14-14069

Richard S. Eskola, Columbia Heights, Minnesota (for appellant)

Charles F. Webber, Blake J. Lindevig, Faegre Baker Daniels LLP, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for respondent)

Considered and decided by Smith, Tracy M., Presiding Judge; Larkin, Judge; and

Rodenberg, Judge.

UNPUBLISHED OPINION

SMITH, TRACY M., Judge

Appellant The Original Bobble Babes, LLC (Bobble Babes), stored its product with

respondent Dedicated Logistics, Inc. (DLI), a warehouse owner. Following Bobble Babes’

nonpayment of warehouse fees, DLI sold Bobble Babes’ product to enforce its warehouse

lien. Bobble Babes sued, and the case was tried to the district court. Bobble Babes appeals from the district court’s judgment, arguing that the district court erred in determining that

(1) DLI’s violation of the notice requirements of Minn. Stat. § 336.7-210(a) (2012) did not

entitle Bobble Babes to relief; (2) DLI’s failure to return excess funds to Bobble Babes did

not violate section 336.7-210(f); (3) DLI sold the goods in a commercially reasonable

manner; (4) DLI did not willfully violate the lien-enforcement requirements of

section 336.7-210(a), giving rise to a conversion claim; (5) DLI did not convert Bobble

Babes’ goods; (6) Bobble Babes abandoned the goods; (7) Bobble Babes failed to prove

that it suffered damages; and (8) Bobble Babes was bound by the limitation-of-damages

language on the back of DLI’s invoices. Because the district court did not clearly err in

finding that Bobble Babes did not prove it suffered damages as a result of DLI’s sale of its

goods, we affirm.

FACTS

Bobble Babes sells novelty products depicting women’s breasts. Bobble Babes

began storing its goods at DLI’s warehouse in 2010. In August 2012, Bobble Babes fell

“60 to 90+” days late on warehouse fee payments, and one attempt to pay by check was

rejected due to insufficient funds. Bobble Babes missed a payment again in March 2013

and promised to pay within the week when confronted by DLI but failed to pay by the

promised date. Bobble Babes ceased making payments altogether after March 2013. In a

June 10, 2013 e-mail, DLI notified Bobble Babes that continued failure to pay “may result

in [DLI] taking ownership of [Bobble Babes’] inventory.” Bobble Babes replied that it

would send a check within the week, but DLI never received a check.

2 DLI also mailed a certified letter to Bobble Babes on June 10, which included the

statement, “Please consider this your 30 day notice of termination. All products must be

removed from our warehouse no later than Wednesday July 10, 2013.” The letter was

returned to DLI as “unclaimed” because Bobble Babes did not sign for it. On July 12, DLI

called, left a voicemail, and sent an e-mail to Bobble Babes, attaching a copy of the June 10

letter and stating that the inventory would “be disposed of” if the fees remained unpaid by

July 19. Bobble Babes did not respond. On July 18, DLI sent another e-mail stating that

it would dispose of the inventory if it did not hear from Bobble Babes by July 19.

Bobble Babes e-mailed DLI on July 18 disputing the amount of fees owed. The

next day, DLI denied that it had overbilled, asked for payment, and asked that the inventory

be removed from the warehouse “today.” Bobble Babes did not pay DLI or pick up its

goods. Bobble Babes e-mailed DLI on July 22, again contesting the fee calculation. DLI

sent Bobble Babes an accounting of its billing history and invited Bobble Babes to come

the warehouse and confirm the pallet count in person. Bobble Babes’ vice president visited

the warehouse on July 24; he raised no issue with DLI regarding the pallet count, although

later at trial he claimed that DLI’s count was too high.

DLI e-mailed Bobble Babes on July 30 asking, “Will you be picking up your product

by the end of the day tomorrow? If no then we will dispose of the product. This has gone

on long enough and requires closure.” Bobble Babes did not respond.

In early August, Bobble Babes and DLI agreed that Bobble Babes would pay the

outstanding fees and remove its inventory from the warehouse by the end of that month.

3 DLI e-mailed Bobble Babes on August 12, 23, 27, 28, 29, and 30 asking for updates.

Bobble Babes did not pay, remove its inventory, or respond to DLI’s communications.

In October DLI sold the inventory, consisting of 83,200 units, to a liquidator for

$1,000. At that time, Bobble Babes owed DLI $777.50 in warehouse fees. DLI did not

send Bobble Babes the excess $222.50 from the sale. DLI did not consult with a lawyer or

research the law on warehouse-lien enforcement before selling the inventory.

On April 10, 2014, about six months after the goods were sold, Bobble Babes sent

an e-mail to DLI stating, “I need my product right away. If you disposed of it I’m owed

$104000 minus the money owed to you.” DLI replied, “Too late. You were given more

than sufficient notice as to the status of the account and what would happen if you did not

respond as requested.”

Bobble Babes sued DLI, claiming that DLI owed Bobble Babes $242,000 in lost

profits and $150,000 in production costs. Bobble Babes asserted four causes of action:

(1) breach of contract, (2) conversion, (3) breach of bailment obligations, and (4) violations

of Minn. Stat. §§ 336.7-206 to -210 (2014). The alleged statutory violations consisted of

failure to provide notice prior to the lien enforcement sale, failure to deliver the sale

proceeds in excess of the lien amount, failure to sell the goods in a commercially reasonable

manner, and willful violations giving rise to liability for conversion. Following a two-day

bench trial, the district court issued its findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order

dismissing all of Bobble Babes’ claims with prejudice and ordering judgment for DLI.

The district court found that Bobble Babes failed to prove damages, specifically

because Bobble Babes failed to prove that it lost any profits as a result of the sale and failed

4 to present credible evidence of its alleged replacement or production costs. The district

court also found that DLI failed to notify Bobble Babes of the sale pursuant to section

336.7-210(a) notice requirements but that this violation was not willful and, in any event,

did not entitle Bobble Babes to relief because no damages were proven. The district court

also found that DLI sold the goods in a commercially reasonable manner. Although Bobble

Babes may have been entitled to the $222.50 in excess sale proceeds under section 336.7-

210(f), the district court concluded that DLI’s failure to deliver that amount to Bobble

Babes was not a statutory violation because Bobble Babes never demanded that payment

prior to the lawsuit. The district court dismissed the breach-of-contract and breach-of-

bailment-obligation claims because DLI acquired a valid warehouse lien on the goods and

was entitled to sell the goods to recover the $777.50 it was owed in warehouse fees.

Finally, the district court concluded that, even if Bobble Babes were entitled to damages

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