Weaver v. Burger King Corp. (In Re Weaver)

219 B.R. 890, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 418, 1998 WL 164340
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Montana
DecidedMarch 30, 1998
Docket19-60123
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 219 B.R. 890 (Weaver v. Burger King Corp. (In Re Weaver)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Montana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weaver v. Burger King Corp. (In Re Weaver), 219 B.R. 890, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 418, 1998 WL 164340 (Mont. 1998).

Opinion

ORDER

JOHN L. PETERSON, Bankruptcy Judge.

In this Chapter 11 ease, the Debtor Weaver 1 seeks confirmation of an Amended Chapter 11 plan which Debtor concedes cannot be confirmed unless the Debtor’s Objection to the amount of the Proof of Claim of Burger King Corporation (“BKC”) is sustained, so that such claim is reduced by over one million dollars. Toward that confirmation goal, the Debtor Weaver filed Adversary Proceeding 97/00104 seeking an independent determination by the Court under F.R.B.P. 9034, which incorporates (with exceptions not applicable to this proceeding) Fed. R.Civ.P. 60(b). After the adversary proceeding was placed at issue, trial of the matter was held on January 6, 1998, with each party represented by respective counsel of record. Testimony was taken from Weaver, accountant Guy LaVoie and BKC counsel Howard Wolf-som. Plaintiffs Exhibits 1 and 2 and Defendant’s Exhibits A through F were admitted without objection. At the conclusion of the evidence, the record was kept open to allow further testimony of Robert M. Einhorn, Weaver and LaVoie, and exhibits to be submitted by deposition. The record now having been completed and the parties having *893 submitted briefs in support of their respective positions, 2 the matter is ripe for decision. Since it is clear from the transcript of record made at the January 6, 1998, hearing that the confirmation of a plan of reorganization in the consolidated cases depends entirely on the final decision in the adversary proceeding contesting the amount of BKC’s Proof of Claim, 3 the Court will thus decide the merits of the adversary proceedings in this order, from which will follow a separate Order on the confirmation of the Amended Chapter 11 plan of reorganization. The BKC amended Proof of Claim, as filed, is unsecured in the sum of $8,280,789.84. The Debtor seeks a reduction in the sum of $1,267,293.90.

BACKGROUND

This background is taken from two Orders entered on September 4, 1996, and October 23,1996, by the United States District Court, Southern District of Florida, in Case No. 90-2191-CIV-Marcus, entitled “Burger King Corporation, Plaintiff v. C.R. Weaver and MWM, Inc., Defendants” (the “Florida case”). That action arose out of franchise agreements between BKC and the defendants involving two Burger King restaurants in Great Falls, Montana, denoted as restaurant # 1666 and restaurant # 6158.

The restaurant agreement for # 1666 was executed May 24, 1976, and then assigned, with consent of BKC in August of 1976, to MWM, Inc., a corporation in which Weaver, the Debtor here, owned 80% of the outstanding stock. Under the assignment, Weaver guaranteed the performance of the terms of the agreement, thereby remaining jointly and severally liable with MWM, Inc. The franchise agreement for restaurant #6158 was executed September of 1988. A dispute arose between the parties over the location by BKC of another Burger King franchise in Great Falls in 1989, whereby starting in the fall of 1989, the Debtor withheld making royalty, franchise fees and rent payments to BKC for the two restaurants — # 1666 and # 6158 — which constituted a default under each franchise agreement. Thereupon, on September 10,1990, BKC advised Weaver in writing demanding full payment, and when no payment was made, in separate written notices dated December 7,, 1990, BKC informed Weaver it had terminated both franchise agreements. By the date of September 4, 1996, Order of the Florida District Court, Weaver had continued to operate “purported” BKC franchises at the sites of restaurants # 1666 and # 6158.

BKC sued Weaver on September 21, 1990, asserting claims for breach of contract, violation of the Lanham Act, common law trademark infringement and common law unfair competition. BKC sought not only injunctive relief but also money damages from Weaver and MWM, Inc. Weaver answered and filed a sixteen count counterclaim asserting BKC breached each franchise agreement by allowing the placement of a new restaurant in the same market at Malmstrom Air Force base, which was opened pursuant to BKC’s national contract with the United States Armed Forces. Weaver asserted compensation for “encroachment” of the new restaurant on Weaver’s businesses.

After procedural skirmishes in the Florida federal action, the matter finally resulted in á grant of summary judgment for BKC, and dismissal of all of Weaver’s claims in a detailed Order filed September 4, 1996. The District Court then scheduled a pre-trial conference for September 18, 1996, to discuss the issue of damages. While the parties at that conference, with Weaver in attendance, *894 agreed that the calculation of damages were a matter Of mathematics based on. the sales figures of each restaurant, the crux of the damage issue evolved around a legal issue as to whether BKC was entitled to an accounting of the profits of each restaurant. After the filing of proposed findings of facts and conclusions of law by each party, the Florida District Court then issued the Order filed October 23, 1996. After reciting the pertinent facts, the District Court concluded:

For all of the foregoing reasons, BKC is entitled to an accounting of Weaver’s profits between December, 1990 and the present. As noted above, both the language of section 1117(a) 4 and the case law of this Circuit makes clear that courts are vested with considerable equitable discretion in determining the measure of damages for trademark infringement. See Ramada Inns [v. Gadsden Motel Co.], 804 F.2d [1562] at 1564 [(11th Cir.1986)] (noting that “[g]reat latitude is given the trial judge in awarding damages, and his judgment will not be set aside unless the award is clearly inadequate,” and adding that “[t]his is especially true of an award fashioned pursuant to the Lanham Act which expressly confers upon district judges wide discretion in determining a just amount of recovery for trademark infringement”). Exercising our discretion to order an accounting of profits is appropriate based on Weaver’s unjust enrichment, the necessity of deterrence and persuasive evidence that Weaver’s infringement qualifies as willful and deliberate. The Defendants offer no compelling factual or legal grounds to support their argument that an accounting of profits would be an abuse of discretion under these circumstances.

However, in the Florida case, the record is clear that the Court never tried the issue as to the amount of the damages. Rather, a final judgment was submitted to the District Court based upon stipulation of the parties as to' the amount of damages. That matter was entered by Order dated October 22, 1996, reciting “the parties having agreed to the amount and computation of Plaintiffs damages under Counts I through VI of its Amended Complaint and the amount of Defendant’s profits to be awarded to Plaintiff as an accounting under 15 U.S.C. § 1117

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219 B.R. 890, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 418, 1998 WL 164340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weaver-v-burger-king-corp-in-re-weaver-mtb-1998.