World's Garden, Ltd. v. Calavo Growers, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedMay 18, 2022
Docket4:17-cv-01022
StatusUnknown

This text of World's Garden, Ltd. v. Calavo Growers, Inc. (World's Garden, Ltd. v. Calavo Growers, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
World's Garden, Ltd. v. Calavo Growers, Inc., (S.D. Tex. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT ObinlidGtefes District Cot Southern District of Texas □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□ esse eS SSS —SENTERED World’s Garden, LTD., § May 20, 2022 § Nathan Ochsner, Clerk Plaintiff, § § versus § Civil Action H-17-1022 Calavo Growers, Inc., § Defendant. § Opinion on Partial Summary Judgement

I. Introduction. World’s Garden, LTD., and Calavo Grower’s, Inc., had a contract. World’s Garden would buy Calavo’s products and Calavo would give it the best price compared with other distributors and customers. [he relationship between the companies faltered when World’s Garden suspected that Calavo was treating it unfairly in comparison with other distributors. This case ensued.

2. Facts. . Calavo sells avocado based products to World’s Garden. In 2005, Calavo signed a distribution agreement with World’s Garden to sell select avocado products in Europe. World’s Garden would send a purchase order with the type of product it wanted to. buy from Calavo, the quantity, and the price. IfCalavo agreed, it would send a written confirmation of the order. Calavo coordinated with World’s Garden to ship its products to the specified location. Calavo would send World’s Garden an invoice for the cost of shipping. Based on consumer demand, World’s Garden asked Calavo to expedite _ shipment of an order. Sometimes, it requested that Calavo pay air freight to expedite delivery. World’s Garden would reimburse Calavo for the cost of the shipment.

In 2014, World’s Garden says that Calavo violated the distribution agreement. It says that Calavo did not honor the agreement’s most favored customer pricing clause. It says that Calavo cut back on shipments and ignored lead time obligations. Calavo says that World’s Garden fell behind on payments for products. It says that World’s Garden did not reimburse Calavo for the cost of shipping. World’s Garden sued Calavo for breach of contract and fraudulent inducement. It also seeks a declaration of rights under the agreement that: (a) Calavo must offér World’s Garden the best pricing; (b) Calavo is prohibited from adjusting prices without notice; (c) Calavo must make its “best-effort” to promote World’s Garden brand and market share; (d) Calavo must honor delivery lead-time of no more than 30 days from the date that World’s Garden submits an order request; and (e) World’s Garden is not obligated to pay for expedited shipping costs when Calavo violates lead-time obligations. On March 29, 2018, Calavo moved for partial summary judgment on the pricing provision in the agreement and the declaratory relief claims.

3. Pricing Provision. The agreement said that Calvo would give World’s Garden the best price for products that it sells to other distributors or customers. Paragraph 8 of the agreement says: Payment: Producer [Calavo} and Distributor [WGL} shall agree, in writing, to the purchase price and terms of payment prior to each sale and shipment of Products. The purchase price shall be the Producer’s current product prices charged to its best distributors, or customers, on the day of Producer’s receipt of Distributor’s order, plus shipping costs, taxes and duties incurred by Producer in shipment of the Product FOB Distributor’s -designated point of destination, in U.S. Dollars. The terms of payment shall not be less than thirty (30) days after the date of such Products’ receipt by Distributor, or by if received by Distributor’s designated recipient Distributor’s receipt of proof of such delivery. At Producer’s election, and upon thirty (30) days written notice to Distributor, past due sums may . accrue interest at the rate of six percent (6%) per annum, commencing the date of delinquency.

Calavo says that this paragraph is unenforceable because ‘it does not contain material terms of a contract. It says that this is an agreement to agree. It insists that World’s Garden should not be able to revisit pricing of past orders because the purchase orders were a separate contract. World’s Garden says that this paragraph does contain material terms. It says the Court should look at the purchase orders and the agreement together. It says that the price is based on a most-favored customer price. A. — Agreement to Agree. The law has found an “agreement to agree” is an enforceable contract if it contains material terms.* “Material” means terms essential to the agreement.” If a price is not specified in the agreement, the contract is still enforceable if it can be ascertained by a clear formula or measurable standard} The pricing provision in this contract gave Calavo a measurable standard based on the best price it charged to other customers. Calavo says that this standard is still insufficient based on a case that relied on an oral agreement.* Calavo and World’s Garden had a written contract. The contract defined how prices would be determined. Calavo reinforced its intent to be bound by this pricing provision through emails that confirmed it was the best price. Because the contract contained the material terms and an intent to be bound, it is enforceable. B. Products Comparison. The distinction between products makes it difficult to draw similar price comparisons sold under the most favored customer clause. Calavo says that it cannot draw a products comparison to other distributors and customers because World’s Garden orders personalized products. It says that it be impossible to account for adjustments made for

' Fort Worth Independent School District v. City of Fort Worth, 22 5.W. 3d 831, 846 (Tex. 2000). * McCalla v. Baker’s Campground, Inc., 416 S.W.3d 416, 418 (Tex. 2013). * Fischer v. CTMI, LLC, 479 S.W. 3d 231, 24x (Tex. 2016). * Playoff Corp. v. Blackwell, 300 S.W. 34 451, 456 ( Tex. App. — Fort Worth 2009). 3°

customers in the United States to determine whether it is giving World’s Garden the best price. It insists that World’s Garden wants a price comparison for different products with different ingredients. World’s Garden says that its products use standard packaging. The only difference, it says, is a printed label sticker, which Calavo is required to create under paragraph rz of the contract. It also says that the product prices charged to other distributors should be adjusted to account for differences in products on the day that Calavo receives receipt of a purchase order. The paragraph says that World’s Garden should receive the best price from the day of the receipt of the purchase order. The contract does not say that the price should be adjusted. It allows the parties to negotiate price prior to each sale. Calavo has a price sheet. It accounts for costs daily. It does not need extensive resources to decide if World’s Garden received the best price. The adjustments proposed by World’s Garden were not in the contract text. Calavo must charge World’s Garden the best price based on a product-to-product comparison — not raw ingredients. World’s Garden said it obtained raw price information that showed other distributors were charged lower prices. Whether Calavo gave World’s Garden the best price under the contract is not the subject of this motion. C. — Ratification. - Ratification is a defense to a breach of contract. Ratification occurs when a party accepts the benefits of a contract and continues to perform under it with knowledge of the breach.’ If so, the party waives the right to rescind the contract. Calavo says that World’s Garden ratified the orders by accepting the products. It says that it cannot retroactively challenge purchase orders it accepted. It says that World’s Garden knowingly negotiated prices with Calavo and formed a separate contract.

* Solvex Sales Corp. v.

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Bluebook (online)
World's Garden, Ltd. v. Calavo Growers, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worlds-garden-ltd-v-calavo-growers-inc-txsd-2022.