Meritor Heavy Vehicle Systems, LLC v. Sistemas Automotrices de Mexico, S.A. de C.V. et al
Filing
272
MEMORANDUM Opinion and Order Signed by the Honorable Rebecca R. Pallmeyer on 2/7/2017. Mailed notice. (etv, )
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS
EASTERN DIVISION
SISTEMAS AUTOMOTRICES DE MEXICO,
S.A. DE C.V.,
Plaintiff,
v.
MERITOR HEAVY VEHICLE SYSTEMS,
LLC,
Defendant.
MERITOR HEAVY VEHICLE SYSTEMS,
LLC,
Plaintiff,
v.
QUIMMCO S.A. DE C.V. and SISTEMAS
AUTOMOTRICES DE MEXICO, S.A.,
DE C.V.,
Defendants.
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
No. 14 C 5289
Judge Rebecca R. Pallmeyer
No. 14 C 5319
Judge Rebecca R. Pallmeyer
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
This case involves a dispute regarding the interpretation of certain joint venture
agreements. Meritor Heavy Vehicle Systems, LLC ("Meritor") is a United States–based limited
liability company that supplies axles, brakes, and related Components for medium- and heavyduty trucks, trailers, and other commercial vehicles. Quimmco S.A. de C.V. ("Quimmco") is a
Mexico-based manufacturing group.
In 2002, the two companies formed Sistemas
Automotrices de Mexico, S.A. de C.V. ("SISAMEX"), a Mexico-based joint venture, and the
parties executed a Shareholders Agreement and three Supply Agreements that would govern
the relationships among Meritor, Quimmco, and SISAMEX. Pursuant to those agreements,
SISAMEX manufactures certain Meritor products and supplies them to Meritor for resale to
original equipment manufacturers ("OEMs") (that is, the manufacturers who assemble the
vehicles), and Meritor supplies SISAMEX with certain necessary Components for manufacture
of Meritor products. Although the parties had a successful working relationship for ten years,
they have been at odds since 2013 regarding the meaning of certain provisions in their joint
venture agreements.
Specifically, Meritor denies that SISAMEX has the right to decide,
unilaterally, to manufacture certain Components of the Meritor products it sells to Meritor;
SISAMEX and Quimmco contend that that one of the Supply Agreements does grant SISAMEX
that right.
The parties also disagree about whether Meritor has an obligation to provide
technical assistance to SISAMEX for the manufacturing of Meritor products.
Since the formation of the joint venture, one significant development has been the
migration to Mexico of OEMs hoping to capitalize on opportunities created by the North
American Free Trade Agreement ("NAFTA"). Because the joint venture agreements provide
that SISAMEX is Meritor's exclusive supplier for products sold to OEMs in Mexico, the OEMs'
Mexican migration is undoubtedly a welcome development for SISAMEX.
At its core, the
central dispute between the parties is about how much SISAMEX stands to benefit from that
migration at the expense of Meritor.
If Meritor holds the right to manufacture certain
components of Meritor products sold to OEMs in Mexico, it will continue to receive considerable
manufacturing margins for the sale of such products. But if SISAMEX has the right to "insource"
those components—that is, to manufacture them itself—the manufacturing returns on those
sales would go to SISAMEX instead and would thus be shared between Quimmco and Meritor
as SISAMEX's shareholders.
SISAMEX brought suit against Meritor in July 2014 seeking a declaration that (1)
SISAMEX has the exclusive right to manufacture Meritor products and their component parts,
(2) SISAMEX has the right to source materials from third parties without Meritor's prior approval,
and (3) Meritor has a duty to provide free technical assistance to SISAMEX for the production of
Meritor products. SISAMEX's initial complaint also sought damages for breach of contract and
breach of certain implied warranties. Days after SISAMEX filed its complaint, Meritor brought a
2
parallel action against SISAMEX and Quimmco seeking declaratory relief and damages for
breach of contract. In addition to addressing issues raised in SISAMEX's complaint, Meritor's
complaint alleges that SISAMEX has an obligation to purchase from Meritor certain so-called
"Core Components" of Meritor products. 1
Both SISAMEX and Meritor filed motions to dismiss the complaints against them. In
January 2015, the court granted Meritor's motion to dismiss with respect to SISAMEX's claim for
a declaratory judgment that SISAMEX could source materials from third-party vendors without
Meritor's approval. The court concluded that the plain terms of two of the Supply Agreements
made clear that Meritor's pre-approval is required.
Regarding the other counts in the two
complaints, however, the court determined that the relevant contractual provisions were
ambiguous and could not be interpreted without the aid of extrinsic evidence. Thus the court
denied the motions to dismiss with respect to those counts. Following the court's ruling on the
motion to dismiss, SISAMEX amended its complaint, paring its asserted claims for relief down to
three counts: two counts seeking a declaratory judgment about the parties' respective rights
under the agreements and one count alleging breach of contract.
After months of discovery, SISAMEX has moved for partial summary judgment [228]
([191] in Case No. 14 C 5319) on all counts in its amended complaint and in Meritor's complaint.
SISAMEX argues that the extrinsic evidence conclusively demonstrates that it has the exclusive
right to manufacture Meritor products sold to OEMs in Mexico and that although it may not
purchase Core Components of Meritor products from third parties, SISAMEX may elect to
manufacture such components itself rather than purchase them from Meritor. Meritor disagrees,
but for a different reason than the one it advanced at the motion-to-dismiss stage. Meritor
argued previously that although SISAMEX had the contractual right to manufacture Meritor
products, it lacked the right to manufacture Components of Meritor products without Meritor's
1
"Core Components" are those components of Meritor Products listed in Schedule
1 in the parties' agreements known as "Supply Agreement B" and "Supply Agreement C."
3
approval.
Meritor also argued that Meritor's approval was required to allow SISAMEX to
manufacture Core Components of Meritor products instead of purchasing them from Meritor.
Now, Meritor appears to concede that the parties' supply agreements permit SISAMEX to
manufacture Components of Meritor products, including Core Components, but Meritor insists
that SISAMEX can only do so with the approval of a supermajority of SISAMEX's Board of
Directors, half of whom are appointed by Meritor. That is, Meritor contends that it has the
power, through its appointed Directors, to veto SISAMEX's choice to manufacture components
of Meritor's products.
For the reasons discussed below, SISAMEX's motion is granted in part and denied in
part. The court agrees with SISAMEX that the extrinsic evidence in the record supports its
interpretation of the agreements and concludes that Meritor has not offered evidence that
creates a genuine issue of material fact regarding its newly-advanced argument. The court also
concludes that Meritor's argument regarding its obligation to provide technical assistance to
SISAMEX is a different argument from the one it made at the motion-to-dismiss stage, and this
new argument is also not supported by sufficient evidence to create a genuine issue of material
fact.
Finally, the court concludes that, given the court's interpretations of the parties’
agreements and the undisputed facts, Meritor is in breach of the parties' agreements by refusing
to purchase certain Meritor products from SISAMEX. Because there are genuine issues of
material fact concerning matters relating to third-party vendors, however, the court cannot
determine at this stage that Meritor has breached the parties' agreements with regard to those
matters.
BACKGROUND
I.
Pre-Agreement History
The parties had a business relationship well before negotiation of the agreements at
issue here, and both sides have presented evidence about the history of that relationship, which
sheds some light on the meaning of the joint venture agreements. Before forming SISAMEX,
4
Meritor and Quimmco were parties to another Mexico-based joint venture named Dirona, S.A.
("Dirona"). (Quimmco and SISAMEX's Rule 56.1 Stmt. of Undisputed Facts (hereinafter "SMX
56.1 Stmt.") [231] ¶ 3.) Quimmco held a 60% stake in Dirona, while Meritor's predecessor in
interest, Rockwell, held a 40% minority share. (Meritor's Resp. to SISAMEX's and Quimmco's
Rule 56.1 Stmt. of Undisputed Facts (hereinafter "Meritor 56.1 Resp.") [249] ¶ 3a.) A "Technical
Licenses and Non-Compete" agreement between Dirona and Rockwell provided that Rockwell
would grant Dirona access to its intellectual property to allow Dirona to manufacture Rockwell
products for Mexico-based OEMs. (Id. ¶ 3b.) Despite attempts to renew the agreement, it
expired in 1998. (Id. ¶ 3c.) Though the joint venture persisted and the parties maintained a
peaceful coexistence for some time, Meritor entered a more aggressive phase of its relationship
with Dirona in 2000 and was competing globally with the joint venture by June of that year. (Id.
¶¶ 3c–3d, 6d.) In October 2002, Quimmco and Meritor executed the Shareholders Agreement,
which restructured Dirona into SISAMEX, a joint venture in which Meritor held a 50%-minusone-share ownership stake and Quimmco held the remaining 50% plus one share. (SMX 56.1
Stmt. ¶ 18.)
The two sides present different accounts of the parties' motivations for restructuring
Dirona.
It is undisputed that in 2000, Meritor planned to terminate the supply of certain
Components it had been selling to Dirona, to raise prices on certain Components it did provide
to Dirona, and to launch more aggressive sales efforts to "go-after" some of Dirona's customers.
(Id. ¶ 3; Internal Meritor Letter from B.A. Arnold, 5/3/00, Ex. 8 to SISAMEX's Mot. for Partial
Summ. J. [232-8], at-93.) 2 It is also undisputed that Quimmco entered into negotiations with
Daimler Chrysler Aktiengesellschaft ("Daimler"), one of Meritor's largest OEM customers, and
executed a Memorandum of Understanding in April 10, 2000 concerning the establishment of a
2
In the remainder of the opinion, the court will refer to exhibits attached to
SISAMEX's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment as "SMX Ex. __" and to exhibits attached to
Meritor's Opposition as "Meritor Ex. __." Citations of page numbers in exhibits will be to the
final two numbers in the Bates Number provided on the page—for example, "-01."
5
joint venture between Quimmco and Daimler.
(SMX 56.1 Stmt. ¶¶ 4–5.)
As part of the
agreement between Quimmco and Daimler, Quimmco would seek to acquire Meritor's minority
share in Dirona. (Id. ¶ 5.) According to SISAMEX, Meritor also determined to prevent Quimmco
from forming a partnership with Daimler. (See, e.g., Internal Meritor Letter from B.A. Arnold,
6/9/00, SMX Ex. 13 [232-13], at -28 ("Blocking the [Daimler] outcome is very important and
worth a significant amount.").)
SISAMEX contends that, in order to deter Quimmco from
entering into such a partnership, Meritor offered to restructure Dirona to provide the restructured
entity with exclusive rights to manufacture Meritor products for OEMs located in Mexico. (SMX
56.1 Stmt. ¶ 8.)
Meritor denies that its motivation in restructuring Dirona was to block the QuimmcoDaimler partnership or that it offered exclusive manufacturing rights to the restructured entity.
Meritor insists that SISAMEX overstates the extent to which Meritor was concerned about a
potential Quimmco-Daimler partnership because Meritor had the ability to block the sale of
Dirona to Quimmco and Daimler by refusing to sell its shares. (Id. ¶ 6d.; Internal Meritor Letter
from B.A. Arnold, 6/9/00, SMX Ex. 11 [232-11], at -61 ("[A]s a shareholder, [Meritor] would
prevent any agreement of any sort in this regard . . . . Meritor would not sell its shares.").)
Meritor contends it was motivated to restructure Dirona in order to enhance Meritor's control
over the joint venture. (Meritor's Local Rule 56.1(b)(3)(C) Stmt. of Add'l Facts (hereinafter
"Meritor 56.1 Stmt. Add'l Facts) [249], ¶ 1.)
Regardless of the parties' reasons for doing so, representatives from Quimmco and
Meritor met to discuss the terms of agreements to restructure Dirona into the joint venture that
would become SISAMEX (referred to at the negotiation stage as "NewCo"). Through the course
of the parties' negotiations, Brad Arnold acted as lead negotiator for Meritor, and Jesus Barrera
acted as lead negotiator for Quimmco. (SMX 56.1 Stmt. ¶ 13.) According to Meritor employee
Thomas Gosnell, the other Meritor employees responsible for negotiating the Dirona
restructuring were Larry Burgin and Larry Dowers. (Decl. of Thomas Gosnell, Meritor Ex. 8
6
[250-8], ¶ 1.)
Both Meritor and SISAMEX cite to pre-agreement notes of the negotiators,
communications between the negotiators themselves, internal communications between the
negotiators and the parties they represented, as well as a Memorandum of Understanding
("MOU") Quimmco and Meritor executed in September 2000. Predictably, the parties highlight
different aspects of those documents. SISAMEX points to those materials to emphasize that it
negotiated for the exclusive right to manufacture Meritor products sold to OEMs in Mexico. To
support this assertion, for example, SISAMEX notes that section 2(c) of the MOU provides that
"NewCo [SISAMEX] would be the exclusive manufacturer of and shipping point for Meritor
Products and Dirona Products sold by Meritor to OEM's plants located in Mexico" and also
states that Meritor would receive a "5% margin . . . to reflect administrative, sales, marketing,
and engineering expenses incurred by Meritor." 3 (Mem. of Understanding, 9/5/00 (hereinafter
"September 2000 MOU"), SMX Ex. 16 [232-17], § 2(c).)
As another example, SISAMEX cites
to a business plan outline, forwarded by Arnold, reflecting that the joint venture's operations
would include manufacturing—and developing
the capacity for manufacturing—"core
component[s]" of Meritor products. (Business Plan Outline, 11/7/00, SMX Ex. 20 [232-21], at 29.)
Meritor emphasizes different portions of the parties' pre-agreement negotiations and
documents. It points to evidence that Meritor wanted equal control over the management of the
joint venture, including control and veto rights over the joint venture's "key activities," such as its
annual operating plan and capital expenditures. Evidence that Meritor sought such control, and
that Quimmco agreed to grant it, includes reports, emails, and presentations from Arnold to
Meritor management regarding the negotiations. (See, e.g., Internal Meritor Letter from B.A.
Arnold, 4/27/00, Meritor Ex. 4 [250-4], at -60 (relaying conversation about reformulating Dirona
as a "50/50 arrangement"); Internal Meritor Letter from B.A. Arnold, 5/3/00, SMX Ex. 8 [232-8],
3
SISAMEX notes that the parties specifically revised the MOU's final terms to
make clear that SISAMEX would be the "exclusive," rather than merely the "primary,"
manufacturer. (SMX 56.1 ¶ 9; Meritor 56.1 Resp. ¶ 9c.)
7
at -94 (same); Email from Bradley Arnold, 8/21/01, Meritor Ex. 16 [250-16], at -05 (listing
imperatives in the negotiations, including "that these documents allow veto rights for certain
critical matters such as annual operating p[l]ans, capital expenditures and the like").) Meritor
also highlights references to the parties' intention to restructure Dirona to become a "Tier 2"
supplier to Meritor.
(See, e.g., Arnold Report, 8/11/01, SMX Ex. 35 [232-36] (indicating
Quimmco agreed that Dirona would become a joint venture "with a new Tier 2 mission").) A Tier
2 supplier, Meritor explains (and SISAMEX does not dispute), is "a manufacturing entity that
enters an agreement with a Tier 1 supplier to make whatever Components or products the Tier
1 requests." (Meritor Stmt. Add'l Facts ¶ 12.)
II.
The Agreements
Quimmco and Meritor officially executed a Shareholders Agreement for the restructuring
of Dirona on October 25, 2002. (Shareholders Agreement, SMX Ex. 1 [232-1], at -14.) Under
that agreement, Dirona was restructured into SISAMEX, and the scope of its business would be
as follows:
(i)
to manufacture for, and sell exclusively to, [Meritor], Meritor Products,
Dirona Products and Sudisa [SISAMEX's subsidiary 4] Products for sale to OEM
Customers in Mexico;
(ii)
to manufacture for, and sell exclusively to [Meritor] and its Affiliates, Core
Components and Non-Core Components 5 for use by them worldwide;
(iii)
to manufacture and sell Company [that is, SISAMEX] Products to any
customer worldwide.
(Id. at "Where as" Clause(g)(6).) The Shareholders Agreement also provides that SISAMEX's
business must be conducted according to a Business Plan developed by SISAMEX's Director
4
"Sudisa" refers to Super Diesel, S.A. de C.V., a Mexican corporation and whollyowned subsidiary of Dirona that became a wholly-owned subsidiary of SISAMEX upon the joint
venture's restructuring. (See Shareholders Agreement at Whereas Clause (e).)
5
A "Non-Core Component" is (a) any Meritor Component or a Meritor Product that
is not listed as a "Core Component" in Schedule 1 of Supply Agreement B or (b) any Dirona
Component, Dirona Product, Sudisa Component, or Sudisa Product. (See Shareholders
Agreement at -28; Supply Agreement B, SMX Ex. 55 [233-5] at -95–96.)
8
General and approved by the company's board of directors. (Id. § 2.3(a).) The initial Business
Plan would cover SISAMEX's first five years of operations and would thereafter by updated at
least once a year by the Director General and presented to the Board of Directors for approval.
(Id.) Under the Shareholders Agreement, Quimmco nominates the Director General, subject to
Meritor's approval, which Meritor may not unreasonably withhold, and the Director General
serves for a two-year term, subject to renewal for additional one-year terms. (Id. ¶ 3.5.3(b).) In
addition to the initial Business Plan, the Shareholders Agreement calls for the execution of three
Supply Agreements (Supply Agreements A, B, and C) between SISAMEX and Meritor. (Id. §
7.3(k)-m).) The parties executed the initial Business Plan and the three Supply Agreements on
January 14, 2003.
(Business Plan 2003–2007, SMX Ex. 68 [233-18], at -08; Supply
Agreement A, SMX Ex. 36 [232-37], at -30; Supply Agreement B, SMX Ex. 55 [233-5], at -93;
Supply Agreement C, SMX Ex. 56 [233-6], at -79.) In ruling on the parties' motions to dismiss,
this court has already discussed extensively the provisions of the three supply agreements.
See, e.g., Sistemas Automotrices de Mexico, S.A. de C.V., v. Meritor Heavy Vehicle Sys., LLC,
No. 14 C 5289, 2015 WL 390790 (hereinafter "MTD Opinion"), at *3–4 (N.D. Ill. Jan. 28, 2015).
At this point, the court need only summarize and highlight certain key provisions of the Business
Plan and the Supply Agreements.
The initial Business Plan outlines SISAMEX's objectives, structure, and business
strategy, and discusses the products in its portfolio, projected market volumes, competing firms,
operations, financial statements, the company's capital plan, and a time schedule for the
company's restructuring. (See generally Business Plan 2003–2007.) In describing SISAMEX's
primary function, the plan says that SISAMEX's business scope will "be primarily the
manufacturing of axles, brakes, related Components and assemblies for medium and heavyduty commercial vehicles."
(Id. at -10.)
SISAMEX will, the plan continues, "produce all
[Meritor's] products supplied to OEM plants located in Mexico, as well as manufacturing
Components for [Meritor's] global axle and brake business." (Id.)
9
The Supply Agreements elaborate on the scope of the relationship between SISAMEX
and Meritor. Supply Agreement A concerns Meritor Products that Meritor sells to OEMs in
Mexico; the agreement provides that SISAMEX will supply Meritor with all such Products that
Meritor requires.
(Supply Agreement A § 2.1.)
The agreement establishes an exclusive
purchasing arrangement: SISAMEX may not sell Meritor Products to anyone else but must
provide Meritor with all the Products it requires for resale to Mexican OEMs, and Meritor must
purchase all of the Products it sells to Mexican OEMs from SISAMEX and not from anyone else.
(Id. §§ 2.1–2.2.)
Supply Agreement B concerns Products Meritor sells worldwide; the
agreement provides that SISAMEX will supply Meritor with certain Components of those
Products, based on Meritor's orders. (Supply Agreement B § 2.2(a).) Specifically, Meritor
agreed to purchase, and SISAMEX agreed to supply, "a percentage of [Meritor's] requirements
for Core Components for original equipment use in products for OEM Customers in the United
States and Canada" as provided in a schedule attached to the agreement." (Id. § 2.2(b).)
Whereas Supply Agreements A and B require SISAMEX to supply Products and Components to
Meritor, Supply Agreement C concerns Components that SISAMEX must purchase from
Meritor. Specifically, the agreement requires SISAMEX to purchase from Meritor the "Core
Components" it requires to fulfill its obligations under Supply Agreements A and B, although
SISAMEX is only required to purchase from Meritor the Core Components that SISAMEX "does
not manufacture itself." (Supply Agreement C § 2.2(a).) In addition, Supply Agreement C
provides the following exceptions from SISAMEX's purchasing obligation:
(a)
Core Components for which [Meritor] is unable or unwilling to supply to
[SISAMEX] to meet the delivery, quality or other terms and conditions of this
Agreement or [Meritor's] customers.
(b)
Core Components which [SISAMEX] and [Meritor] have agreed to be an
exception to the purchase commitments of this Agreement.
(c)
Core Components during a Force Majeure Event . . . .
(Id. § 2.4.) Under any of those three circumstances, SISAMEX "shall be entitled to manufacture
10
such Components itself and/or to source such Components from [other suppliers.]" (Id.)
III.
History of Performance
For several years, the parties had a good working relationship. As SISAMEX built up its
manufacturing capacity, Meritor acknowledged that it needed to commit to transferring its
manufacturing business for the Mexican OEM market to SISAMEX. (See SMX Stmt. ¶ 39;
Meritor 56.1 Resp. ¶ 39a.) Because SISAMEX would "get to make [the Meritor] products as
soon as [SISAMEX] c[ould] tool and integrate," Larry Burgin arranged for Meritor to provide
SISAMEX with technical specifications for all of Meritor's products and Components that Meritor
sold to OEMs in Mexico. (Email from Larry Burgin, 11/18/2002, SMX Ex. 81 [233-31], at -65.)
Initially, SISAMEX purchased from Meritor, under Supply Agreement C, the Core Components
required to assemble Meritor's "160 axle," which it sold to Meritor pursuant to Supply
Agreement A.
(SMX 56.1 Stmt ¶ 42; Meritor 56.1 Resp. ¶ 42b.)
Eventually, however,
SISAMEX developed the capacity to "insource" (that is, manufacture itself) the Core
Components of the 160 axle. (Id.) And by 2004, SISAMEX had integrated or insourced most of
the Core Components of that product. (Id.) In 2003, SISAMEX also began insourcing "145
housings," a Core Component of the "145 axle." (SMX 56.1 ¶ 45; Meritor 56.1 Resp. ¶¶ 45a45b.)
By 2009, in the midst of the global financial crisis and recession, both SISAMEX and
Meritor faced business concerns. In February 2009, SISAMEX informed Meritor that it was
nearly out of cash and risked breaching financial covenants with its creditor banks. (Meritor
56.1 Stmt. of Add'l Facts ¶ 33.) And as of May 2009, Meritor was concerned that migration of
NAFTA truck manufacturers (that is, OEMs) from the United States and Canada to Mexico
would be harmful to Meritor, especially if SISAMEX began insourcing additional Components of
Meritor products, thus eating into Meritor's manufacturing margin for sales to those OEMs. In a
Meritor report on SISAMEX strategy, for example, Meritor observed that expected OEM
migration to Mexico would expose Meritor to a $10 million annual adverse impact on earnings
11
"assuming SMX fully integrates the manufacturing content of all products (e.g. [the so-called "14_ series" products and Components])." (Meritor Axle Business Unit Review, 5/4/09, SMX Ex.
127 [234-27], at -62.)
Around that time, Meritor approached SISAMEX to propose amending the Supply
Agreements to require SISAMEX to purchase the "14_ series" Core Components from Meritor
instead of insourcing them. (SMX 56.1 Stmt. ¶ 60; Meritor 56.1 Resp. 60b-60c.) In exchange,
Meritor proposed, it would purchase additional Components from SISAMEX under Supply
Agreement B. (SMX 56.1 Stmt. ¶ 60; Meritor 56.1 Resp. 60c.). In November 2010, following
months of negotiations between the parties, SISAMEX and Meritor executed a temporary
agreement, the Interim Purchasing Commitments Agreement ("IPCA"). (See IPCA, SMX Ex.
151 [235-1].) Under the IPCA, SISAMEX agreed not to insource 14_ series carriers and to
waive Meritor's obligation under Supply Agreement B to purchase "16_ series" housings from
SISAMEX, and in exchange, Meritor agreed to purchase additional Components under Supply
Agreement B and to decrease the cost of 14_ series carrier assemblies it would provide to
SISAMEX by moving production of those assemblies from the United States to Mexico. (Id.)
The IPCA provided expressly that it would expire at the end of 2013 and that it did not modify or
replace the terms of the Supply Agreements. (Id.)
In October 2012, SISAMEX's Director General informed SISAMEX's Board of Directors,
including Directors appointed by both Quimmco and Meritor, that upon expiration of the IPCA at
the end of 2013, SISAMEX planned to manufacture 14_ series carrier assemblies and gear
sets, which are considered Core Components under Supply Agreement C. (SMX 56.1 Stmt. 64;
Meritor 56.1 Resp. ¶ 64a.)
As reflected in emails between Meritor employees during that
month, the announcement was not welcome. Meritor was concerned about the financial harm
that would result from SISAMEX's insourcing of those Components and tried to find alternatives
to avoid losing the 14_ business. (See, e.g., Email from Gallegos Osvaldo, 10/16/12, SMX Ex.
158 [235-8], at -43 ("We discussed [SISAMEX's] intentions to industrialize the 14x carrier
12
assembly and gear cutting; as a result we are looking into several options in order to maintain
that business in our plants."); Email from Osvaldo Gallegos, 10/18/12, SMX Ex. 160 [235-10], at
-66 ("I believe [SISAMEX's] threat [to insource the 14x Components] is real, so we must find
alternatives to this situation.").)
In November 2013, SISAMEX's Director General presented the 2014 Business Plan to
the Board of Directors for approval. The Business Plan formally revealed SISAMEX's intention
to insource the 14_ Components. (Meritor Letter from Timothy P. Burns, 12/2/13, Meritor Ex. 63
[250-63], at -45.) Tim Burns, one of the Meritor-appointed Directors of SISAMEX, wrote to
Quimmco and the SISAMEX Director General to inform them that Meritor was exercising its
right to elect that the 2014 Business Plan be presented to the SISAMEX Shareholders. (Id.)
Shareholder approval was required, according to Burns, because SISAMEX's insourcing of
Components (including the 14_ Components) represented "a change in the business of
SISAMEX and . . . a proposed manufacturing activity which is not contemplated by" the
Shareholders Agreement. (Id. at -46.) Burns noted that Section 3.5.2.(f) of the Shareholders
Agreement allowed any Director of SISAMEX "to elect at any time that any matter which would
otherwise require approval of the Board of Directors . . . shall instead by submitted for approval
by the Shareholders . . . ." (Id.; Shareholders Agreement § 3.5.2(f).) He also noted that under
Section 3.5.1(a)(viii) of the Shareholders Agreement, approval of the Shareholders is required
for any "change in the business of the Company or any manufacture or sale of any products
other than as contemplated in Section 2.1(b)." (Shareholders Agreement § 3.5.1(a)(viii).) At the
December meeting of the Board of Directors, the Meritor-appointed members of the Board of
Directors declined to approve the 2014 Business Plan (SMX. 56.1 Stmt. ¶ 69; Meritor 56.1
Resp. ¶ 69c), and Meritor asserts that SISAMEX did not separately present the Business Plan
to the Shareholders for their approval. (Meritor's Mem. in Opp'n to Mot. for Partial Summ. J.
(hereinafter "Meritor Resp.") [248] at 2.)
As a result, Meritor contends, SISAMEX is not
authorized to manufacture the 14_ series axles or Components (or to assemble the 185 axle,
13
which SISAMEX had previously purchased as a completed product).
IV.
This Action
After exhausting the dispute resolution process set forth in the parties' agreements,
SISAMEX brought this suit on July 10, 2014. SISAMEX's complaint sought (1) a declaration
that SISAMEX has the exclusive right under Section 2.2 of Supply Agreement A to manufacture
Meritor Products, including all component parts thereof, for sale by Meritor to Mexican OEMs;
(2) a declaration that SISAMEX has the right under Supply Agreements A and B to obtain
production materials from third-party vendors without Meritor's pre-approval; (3) a declaration
that the Shareholders Agreement obligates Meritor to provide requisite technical assistance to
SISAMEX for the manufacture of Meritor Products; and (4) damages arising from various claims
for breach of contract and other statutory and common law duties. Three days after SISAMEX
brought suit, Meritor filed its complaint against SISAMEX and Quimmco. Meritor's complaint
seeks (1) a declaration that SISAMEX may not insource or outsource the production of any
Meritor component without the consent of both Meritor and Quimmco as Shareholders, and
damages for SISAMEX's breach of that prohibition; and (2) a declaration that SISAMEX must
purchase all of its requirements for Core Components from Meritor unless the Shareholders
have mutually agreed otherwise, and damages for SISAMEX's breach of that obligation. In
August 2014, both sides moved to dismiss the other's complaint.
On all but one count in SISAMEX's complaint, 6 the court denied the parties' motions to
dismiss. In its briefing on the motions and in its complaint, SISAMEX relied in part on Section
2.2 of Supply Agreement A to argue that it had the right to insource Components of Meritor
products. That section states that Meritor "shall purchase exclusively" from SISAMEX and
SISAMEX "shall supply" to Meritor, "all of [Meritor's] requirements" for Meritor Products sold by
6
The court concluded that under Supply Agreements A and B, SISAMEX's
purchasing of materials from third-party vendors may be subject to Meritor's approval, and thus
SISAMEX could not state a claim entitling the company to a declaration that it could obtain such
materials without Meritor's pre-approval. See MTD Opinion, 2015 WL 390790, at *12–13.
14
Meritor to OEMs in Mexico. (Supply Agreement A § 2.2(a).) The section also provides that
SISAMEX "shall be the exclusive importers, manufacturers, assemblers, and/or shipping points
of" Meritor Products sold by Meritor to OEMs in Mexico. (Id. § 2.2(b).) According to SISAMEX,
these provisions make clear that SISAMEX has the exclusive right to manufacture Meritor
Products, which implies the exclusive right to manufacture the Components of those Products.
Meritor, however, insisted that although Section 2.2 of Supply Agreement A grants SISAMEX
the right to manufacture Meritor Products, it says nothing about the right to manufacture
Components of those products and thus does not grant any such right.
In briefing the motions to dismiss, Meritor argued that Supply Agreement C confirms that
SISAMEX lacks the unilateral right to manufacture, or insource, Components of Meritor
Products. Section 2.2 of that agreement obligates SISAMEX to purchase its requirements for
"Core Components" of Meritor Products "exclusively from [Meritor]" (Supply Agreement C
§ 2.2(a)), and SISAMEX is only released from its purchasing obligation where (a) Meritor is
unable or unwilling to supply the Components, (b) the parties have agreed that certain
Components will be excepted from the Agreement, or (c) there is a force majeure event. (Id.
§ 2.4.)
Thus, according to Meritor, SISAMEX may not unilaterally decide to insource
Components of Meritor products; rather, it must purchase them from Meritor unless one of the
three exceptions from Section 2.4 of Supply Agreement C applies, such as an agreement
between the parties.
SISAMEX, for its part, pointed out that Section 2.2(a) of Supply
Agreement C actually says that SISAMEX must purchase its requirements for Core
Components from Meritor only for those Components "that [SISAMEX] does not manufacture
itself," implying that SISAMEX can decide for itself whether it will manufacture Components of
Meritor Products or purchase them from Meritor. (Id. § 2.2(a).) Meritor responded to that
argument in the motion-to-dismiss briefing by noting that where one of the three exceptions to
the purchasing requirements applies, SISAMEX "shall be entitled to manufacture" the
Components itself or to source them from other providers, implying that SISAMEX is not entitled
15
to manufacture the Components itself unless one of the three exceptions listed in Section 2.4
applies. (Id. § 2.4.)
The court opined that the text of the agreements suggests SISAMEX has the right to
manufacture some component parts of Meritor products, but the court ultimately concluded that
without extrinsic evidence to assist in the interpretation of Supply Agreements A and C, the
agreements were ambiguous with respect to the "central question" of "which party has the
authority to decide which Core Components SISAMEX may manufacture." MTD Opinion, 2015
WL 390790, at *9. The court also denied Meritor's motion to dismiss with respect to SISAMEX's
claim that Section 2.2(e) obligates Meritor to provide technical assistance to SISAMEX for the
manufacture of Meritor Products. As a third-party beneficiary to the Shareholders Agreement,
SISAMEX has standing to bring that claim, the court ruled, see id. at *13, and Meritor's practice
of providing assistance supported SISAMEX's allegation that Meritor had an obligation to do so.
(Tr. of Proceedings for Oral Arg. on Mot. to Reconsider, 3/2/15 [102], at 3:7–14.)
SISAMEX amended its complaint after the court ruled on the motions to dismiss. In the
new complaint, SISAMEX seeks (1) a declaration that "SISAMEX has the exclusive right under
Section 2.2 of Supply Agreement A to manufacture Meritor Products, including all Components
thereof, for sale by Meritor to OEM customers in Mexico" (SISAMEX's Second Am. Compl. [109]
¶ 69); (2) a declaration that Meritor is "obligated under the Shareholders Agreement to provide
requisite technical assistance to SISAMEX for the manufacturing of Meritor Products" (id. ¶ 78);
and (3) damages for Meritor's purported breach of its obligations under Supply Agreements A
and B. SISAMEX now seeks partial summary judgment on all three counts in its complaint, as
well as the four counts in Meritor's complaint. SISAMEX contends that the evidence uncovered
during discovery unequivocally shows that the parties intended to grant SISAMEX the right to be
the exclusive manufacturer of Meritor Products, including Components thereof, and that Meritor
assumed the obligations to provide SISAMEX with the technical engineering support necessary
to manufacture Meritor Products. Meritor insists that there are genuine disputes of material fact
16
concerning these issues and that summary judgment would therefore be inappropriate.
The court has subject matter jurisdiction over the case because the parties are diverse
and the matter in controversy exceeds $75,000. See 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a). Although the parties
do not rely heavily on case law to support their arguments, it is undisputed that Michigan law
governs the interpretation of the contracts.
(Shareholders Agreement § 9.11(b); Supply
Agreement A § 13.15(b); Supply Agreement B § 13.15; Supply Agreement C § 11.5(b).) The
court addresses the parties' arguments below.
DISCUSSION
Courts grant summary judgment where the moving party "shows that there is no genuine
dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." FED.
R. CIV. P. 56(a). With the court viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, the moving party "must make an initial showing that the agreed-upon facts
support a judgment in its favor." Hotel 71 Mezz Lender LLC v. Nat'l Ret. Fund, 778 F.3d 593,
601 (7th Cir. 2015). Once the moving party makes such a showing, "the burden shifts to the
non-moving party to provide evidence of specific facts creating a genuine dispute." Carroll v.
Lynch, 698 F.3d 561, 564 (7th Cir. 2012). A factual dispute is genuine if the evidence would
allow a reasonable jury to return a verdict for the non-moving party. Id. "Mere metaphysical
doubt as to the material facts is not enough." Id. In the context of interpreting a contract, for
example, the mere fact that the contract's language is ambiguous is not sufficient to establish a
genuine issue of material fact. Hickey v. A.E. Staley Mfg., 995 F.2d 1385, 1391 (7th Cir. 1993).
If a contract is ambiguous, the court still must determine "whether after consideration of the
extrinsic evidence, there are any triable issues of fact." Id. at 1389.
The court ruled earlier that the relevant contractual provisions are ambiguous with
respect to the "central question" of who decides which Core Components SISAMEX may
produce. MTD Opinion, 2015 WL 390790, at *9. In considering whether the extrinsic evidence
in the record reveals any disputes of fact on that issue, the court notes at the outset that the
17
overwhelming bulk of the evidence in this case is documentary: in connection with the summary
judgment briefs and statements of fact, the parties have submitted a total of more than 250
exhibits including the agreements, written communications between the parties, internal
communications and admissions, and other documentary evidence of the parties' course of
performance. Only a handful of those exhibits make reference to any matter that would be the
subject of trial testimony. Were this case to proceed to a trial by jury or to the bench, therefore,
the trier of fact would base its findings on largely the same documentary evidence that is before
the court now.
As discussed more fully in Section I below, the court believes the only
reasonable conclusion that can be drawn from that evidence—in particular, the evidence of the
parties' history of performance and Meritor's own admissions about the agreements' meaning—
is that SISAMEX has the contractual right to decide unilaterally to insource Components of
Meritor Products that Meritor sells to OEMs in Mexico. Meritor insists that there are genuine
issues of material fact on this point and offers testimony to dispute SISAMEX's evidence. But,
as the court discusses more fully below, the testimony Meritor offers does not create a genuine
issue of fact, or require a credibility determination, because the testimony contains "[c]onclusory
allegations, unsupported by specific facts," Payne v. Pauley, 337 F.3d 767, 773 (7th Cir. 2003),
or because the testimony constitutes a "one-sided, self-serving interpretation by one party" that
is irrelevant to a jury's or a court's interpretation of a contract, Davis v. Kramer Bros. Freight
Lines, 361 Mich. 371, 376, 105 N.W.2d 29, 31–32 (1960).
I.
SISAMEX's Right to Manufacture Components of Meritor Products without
Meritor's Consent (SISAMEX's Count I and Meritor's Count I)
SISAMEX's position is that Section 2.2 of Supply Agreement A grants SISAMEX the
right to be the exclusive manufacturer of Meritor Products, including Components thereof, that
are sold by Meritor to OEMs in Mexico. There is considerable evidentiary support for that
position. The parties' pre-contractual MOU, for example, stated expressly that "[SISAMEX]
would be the exclusive manufacturer of and shipping point for Meritor Products and Dirona
18
Products sold by Meritor to OEM plans located in Mexico." (September 2000 MOU § 2(c)
(emphasis added).) In 2002, to take another example, Quimmco's CEO Jesus Barrera made a
speech to the media, attended by Brad Arnold and other Meritor executives, announcing the
Dirona restructuring. (SMX 56.1 Stmt. ¶ 34.) In his description of the restructuring, Barrera
explained that the new joint venture "will have the right to manufacture on an exclusive basis,
among other products, Meritor axles and brakes for Mexico." (Ing. Jesus L. Barrera Lozano,
"Announcement to the Press and Media of the Dirona Restructuring," SMX Ex. 73 [233-23], at 29.) The text of Supply Agreement A supports SISAMEX's position, as well: That agreement
provides that for Meritor Products sold to OEM customers in Mexico, "[Meritor] shall purchase
[all of its requirements] exclusively from [SISAMEX]" (Supply Agreement A § 2.2(a)), and that
"[SISAMEX] shall be the exclusive importers, manufacturers, assemblers and/or shipping points
of" Meritor Products sold by Meritor to OEM customers in Mexico. (Id. § 2.2.(b).) Under Section
2.3 of that Agreement, Meritor is entitled to manufacture such Products itself or to source them
from other suppliers if SISAMEX is unable or unwilling to supply the Products to meet the terms
of the Agreement (id. § 2.3(a)), or where Meritor and SISAMEX agree that certain Products will
be an exception to the Agreement's purchasing commitments. (Id. § 2.3(b).)
At the motion-to-dismiss stage, Meritor argued that SISAMEX's reading of Supply
Agreement A was mistaken because although Section 2.2 grants SISAMEX the right to
manufacture Meritor Products, it says nothing about whether SISAMEX has the right to
manufacture component parts of those Products. (See Meritor's Mem. in Supp. of Mot. to
Dismiss [25] at 4.) In addition, Meritor argued that the use of the "and/or" phrase in Section
2.2.(b) indicates that "exclusive manufacturer" is just one of the possible roles that SISAMEX
could play, in addition to the possible roles of exclusive importer, exclusive assembler, or
exclusive shipping point. (Meritor's Reply Mem. in Supp. of its Mot. to Dismiss [66] at 9.)
In response to SISAMEX's motion for summary judgment, Meritor has attempted to
present evidence to support its reading of section 2.2. Meritor argues, for example, that Brad
19
Arnold's testimony regarding the interpretation of Section 2.2(b) creates a question of fact
regarding what that section means. (Meritor Resp. at 8.) In a discussion of section 2.2(b)
during his deposition, Arnold explained that he believes that language to mean "[t]hat the joint
venture has the exclusive right for the delivery of the products to OEMs in Mexico" (Dep. of
Bradley Arnold (hereinafter "Arnold Dep."), SMX Ex. 14 [232-14], 78:15–19:8), and continued
that "this language doesn't have anything to do with the manufacturing content of the product, I
don't believe." (Id. 79:16–18.) Arnold, however, did not provide specific facts on which he
based this interpretation or even suggest that his understanding of the provision at issue was
informed by his memory of the negotiations. He stated expressly that "again, I'm giving you my
interpretation." (Id. 80:2–3.) Such a "one-sided, self-serving interpretation by one party" is not
appropriate evidence to consider in interpreting a contract and is certainly inadequate to create
a genuine issue of fact for a jury. Davis, 361 Mich. at 376, 105 N.W.2d at 31–32. Were such an
interpretation sufficient to defeat summary judgment, every contract dispute would go to trial
because every party could create a question of material fact by offering its preferred
interpretation as evidence.
And, as discussed below, Arnold's proposed interpretation is
contradicted by his own internal admissions and admissions of other Meritor employees.
In addition to Arnold's testimony, Meritor attempts to support its argument that "exclusive
manufacturer" was merely a potential role that SISAMEX could play by citing to numerous
examples of communications between the parties confirming that SISAMEX would act as the
exclusive delivery or shipping point for Meritor Products sold by Meritor to OEMs in Mexico.
(See, e.g., Meritor 56.1 Stmt. Add'l Facts ¶ 7.)
Meritor suggests that because the parties
emphasized SISAMEX's role as shipping point, they did not envision that SISAMEX would also
play the role of exclusive manufacturer. Meritor also emphasizes terms in numerous documents
that, Meritor contends, show that the parties intended the joint venture to function as a "Tier 2"
supplier.
(See, e.g., id. ¶¶ 12–13.) But none of this evidence creates a genuine issue of
material fact for trial. Whether the parties understood SISAMEX to be the exclusive shipping or
20
delivery point, or whether SISAMEX was established as a Tier 2 supplier, is immaterial to the
question of whether SISAMEX has the exclusive right to manufacture Meritor Products and the
Components thereof.
Nothing, for example, in the definition of "Tier 2 supplier" that Meritor has provided
establishes that such a supplier could not also be the exclusive manufacturer of the products it
supplies. (See id.) Indeed, SISAMEX concedes that it is a Tier 2 supplier but points out that the
joint venture's manufacturing rights "are determined by the Agreements, not labels such as 'Tier
2' or 'contract manufacturer.'" (SISAMEX's Resp. to Meritor's 56.1 Stmt. Add'l Facts (hereinafter
"SISAMEX 56.1 Resp.") [268] ¶ 13.) Regarding the issue of SISAMEX's role as exclusive
shipping or delivery point, SISAMEX's acting as the exclusive shipping point for Meritor Product
sold to OEMs in Mexico does not preclude the possibility that it would also act as the exclusive
manufacturer of those products. Notably, Meritor's recognition that SISAMEX had the right to
act as the exclusive shipping point appears to rest on in Section 2.2 of Supply Agreement A,
which states that SISAMEX "shall be the exclusive importers, manufacturers, assemblers and/or
shipping points of Meritor Products . . . ." (Supply Agreement A § 2.2.(b).) In that section, both
"shipping points" and "manufacturers" are modified by the adjective "exclusive." Cf. Porto Rico
Ry., Light & Power Co. v. Mor, 253 U.S. 345, 348 (1920) ("When several words are followed by
a clause which is applicable as much to the first and other words as to the last, the natural
construction of the language demands that the clause be read as applicable to all."). As Meritor
concedes that Supply Agreement A grants SISAMEX the right to be the exclusive shipping
point, it is not clear why the provision establishing that right would not also grant SISAMEX the
right to be the exclusive manufacturer of those products.
As noted, Meritor earlier argued that SISAMEX has the right to manufacture Meritor
Products, but not their component parts. In response to that contention, SISAMEX presents
evidence that it did in fact manufacture Components of Meritor Products over the course of the
parties' dealings and that the parties understood SISAMEX's exclusive manufacturing rights to
21
include the right to manufacture such Components. (See, e.g., Arnold Dep. 106:12–20 (Arnold
agreeing "generally" that "when Supply Agreement A grants SISAMEX the right to manufacture
[a Meritor Product], it is granting SISAMEX the right to manufacture [that Product's component
parts]"); Email from Larry Burgin, 11/18/2002, at -65 (discussing "logistics of [SISAMEX's]
making all housing, carriers, shafts, etc. [Components of Meritor Products] and indicating that
SISAMEX would need specifications for all Meritor Products, and Components thereof, sold to
OEMs in Mexico because "SISAMEX will get to make these products as soon as they can tool
and integrate").)
Perhaps recognizing the strength of the evidence against the position it has taken
throughout this litigation, Meritor now appears to abandon its argument that SISAMEX lacks a
contractual right to manufacture Components of Meritor Products without Meritor's approval.
Thus, in Meritor's response brief, it concedes that "[s]ome of [Meritor's internal documents]
acknowledge that SISAMEX has the right to insource Components of Meritor Products, which
Meritor does not dispute . . . ." (Meritor Resp. at 2.) But SISAMEX only has that insourcing
right, Meritor now insists, "so long as such insourcing is pursuant to a Board-approved Business
Plan or agreed by the parties." (Id.) Thus Meritor takes the court's framing of the central issue
in this case (see MTD Opinion, 2015 WL 390790, at *9 ("[Which party [that is, SISAMEX or
Meritor] has the authority to decide which Core Components SISAMEX may manufacture.")),
and reformulates the question as "who decides? SISAMEX's Board of Directors or its Director
General without Board approval?" (Meritor Resp. at 1.)
The court concludes that Meritor's new "Board approval" argument fails because it (1) is
not supported by specific facts, (2) is contradicted by the plain text of the parties' agreements,
and (3) is irreconcilably inconsistent with the parties' history of performance and the history of
this litigation. Ultimately, no reasonable fact finder could credit Meritor's position based on the
evidence in the case. Meritor devotes considerable space in its response brief, for example, to
showing that Meritor bargained for equal or joint control over management of the joint venture
22
through the company's Board of Directors. (See, e.g., Meritor Resp. at 3–6, 9–11.) Some
evidence in the record suggests that Meritor does not control SISAMEX's operations to the
extent it desires. (See, e.g., SISAMEX 56.1 Stmt. ¶ 37.) But even if the court credits Meritor's
position and assumes that Meritor shares equal control with Quimmco over SISAMEX's Board
of Directors and that the Board of Directors has authority over certain key strategic decisions, it
does not immediately follow that the Board of Directors has the authority to veto decisions about
what Meritor Products and Components SISAMEX manufactures.
Whether the Board of
Directors has that authority is determined by the language of the Agreements, and the court can
only speculate that Meritor's equal control over key strategic decisions includes the ability to
determine whether SISAMEX could insource Meritor products and Components. Speculation is
"insufficient to withstand summary judgment." Hart v. Mannina, 798 F.3d 578, 588 (7th Cir.
2015).
The best evidence Meritor has to support its new "Board approval" theory appears to be
certain favorable language in the pre-agreement MOU, as well as post hoc testimony and
declarations from Meritor employees about Meritor's contractual intent. As Meritor emphasizes,
in the September MOU between Quimmco and Meritor, the parties memorialized their
expectations about SISAMEX's ability to develop capacity for the insourcing Meritor products
and Components.
Section 2(d) of the MOU is titled "Tooling and Capital Investment" and
states:
Decisions with respect to creating capacity for NewCo [SISAMEX] to
manufacture Meritor designed products would be based on acceptable economic
returns and 'paybacks' driven by market volumes as agreed by the Board of
Directors. Subject to the completion of the Business Plan referenced in section
10, it is currently envisioned that NewCo’s [SISAMEX's] initial role will be to
manufacture the -16x family of Components. Additional roles will be added based
on economic ‘paybacks’ as agreed by the Board of Directors on a case by case
basis.
(September 2000 MOU § 2(d).) This language does appear to support Meritor's contention that
the parties intended to give the Board of Directors the power to determine what SISAMEX could
23
make by controlling the joint venture's ability to make capital expenditures that would create
manufacturing capacity. That is not how the language was interpreted at the time, however: A
description of the MOU from an internal audit of Meritor's controls and procedures prepared in
advance of Dirona's potential restructuring explains that Meritor agreed to "cease manufacturing
OEM and replacement parts in Mexico and cease selling replacement parts in Mexico,
relinquishing these opportunities to Dirona." (Meritor Internal Controls Audit, SMX Ex. 17 [23218], at -38.) That description suggests that even if the Board of Directors had the ability to
control the joint venture's ability to create manufacturing capacity, the parties still understood
that SISAMEX had the exclusive right (over Meritor) to manufacture Meritor Products and parts
sold to OEMs in Mexico.
But the more significant difficulty with relying on the language from the MOU is that it
appears to be in direct conflict with the language of the Shareholders Agreement that the parties
ultimately adopted and executed a little over two years after the MOU. In the section of that
agreement dealing with matters requiring Board approval, the Agreement provides expressly
that "approval by the Board of Directors shall not be required . . . [for] capital or other
expenditures as to Meritor Products, Dirona Products, Sudisa [SISAMEX's subsidiary] Products
or Core Components as contemplated by Section 3.4(a)."
(Shareholders Agreement §
3.5.2(e)(vi).) The referenced section, section 3.4(a), states as follows:
[SISAMEX] and Sudisa are required to make all required capital and other
expenditures for [SISAMEX] and Sudisa related to establishing capacity or
acquiring tooling for the manufacture of any Meritor Products, Dirona Products,
Sudisa Products or Core Components to meet the forecasts (as updated from
time to time) for such products and Components delivered to [SISAMEX] and/or
Sudisa [as contemplated in Supply Agreements A and B] and otherwise for
[SISAMEX] and Sudisa to be able to satisfy their obligations under those
agreements. [SISAMEX] is authorized, without further approval of the Board of
Directors or Shareholders, to borrow from one or more unaffiliated financial
institution lenders on market terms, all such sums as may be necessary to
finance the capital and other expenditures required under [this section].
(Id. § 3.4(a).) The plain reading of these two sections is that SISAMEX is obligated to make
capital expenditures to establish capacity for the manufacture of Meritor Products, and Board
24
approval is not required for SISAMEX to make such expenditures or to borrow funds to finance
such expenditures. Thus, the language of the agreements directly refutes Meritor's suggestion
that the Board of Directors may thwart SISAMEX's ability to develop manufacturing capacity by
withholding approval for capital expenditures to develop that capacity.
Meritor responds to this text-based argument by asserting that the provisions at issue
should not be read the way SISAMEX contends because it was Meritor who added the relevant
language in section 3.4(a) granting SISAMEX flexibility to make capital expenditures. (Meritor
56.1 Stmt. Add'l Facts ¶ 14; SISAMEX and Quimmco's Resp. to Meritor's 56.1 Stmt. Add'l Facts
(hereinafter "SISAMEX 56.1 Resp.") [268] ¶ 14.) It would not have added language, Meritor
argues, the effect of which would be to reduce its own authority over the joint venture's
decisions. Meritor insists that SISAMEX's Director General was granted this authority to make
capital expenditures only in the "specific instances where there was a Board-approved Business
Plan but no capacity in Meritor’s network for meeting the forecast and obligations to meet
customer demand, not instances where capacity already existed in Meritor’s supply chain but
the Director General no longer wanted to purchase from Meritor or those other suppliers’
existing capacity." (Decl. of Larry Dowers (hereinafter "Dowers Decl."), Meritor Ex. 19 [250-19],
¶ 26.)
The only support Meritor provides for this assertion is a declaration from Meritor
employee Larry Dowers, a declaration which Dowers prepared for the purposes of this litigation.
Dowers' restricted reading of section 3.4(a) is not supported by the text of the
agreements or by the extrinsic evidence in the record. As SISAMEX points out, the "forecasts"
Meritor provides to SISAMEX cover all Meritor Products that Meritor expects to sell to OEMs in
Mexico over a five-year period. The forecasts are not limited to Products (or Components
thereof) that SISAMEX would be manufacturing pursuant to a Board-approved Business Plan.
(See SISAMEX and Quimmco's Smt. of Add'l Facts [268] ¶ 4; see generally SMX Ex. 199 [2647].)
Thus, section 3.4(a) of the Shareholders Agreement requires SISAMEX to make the
capital expenditures necessary to manufacture, for example, products that Meritor "may" order
25
pursuant to section 4.4(b) of Supply Agreement A.
(See Supply Agreement A § 4.4(b)
([SISAMEX and Sudisa] agree that they will install all required capacity and/or take all other
required actions so that they will be able to supply to [Meritor] . . . all Products that may be
ordered by [Meritor] within the then current forecast.").) If SISAMEX decides to expend capital
to allow it to manufacture products contained in Meritor's forecasts and which Meritor may order,
nothing in section 3.4(a) of the Shareholders Agreement appears to limit SISAMEX's ability to
do so.
And indeed, as discussed, section 3.5.2(e) of that agreement indicates that Board
approval is not required for such expenditures.
Despite the language of the agreements, Meritor insists that though the SISAMEX
Director General has the authority to request capital to insource the manufacturing of Meritor
products, Board approval is required for such expenditures. In support of this claim, Meritor
relies on Dowers's declaration and the testimony Larry Burgin, another Meritor employee. (See,
e.g., Dep. of Larry Burgin (hereinafter "Burgin Dep."), SMX Ex. 6 [232-6], 75:23–76:2 ("The
director general had the ability to request, of the board, capital to manufacture anything that was
on that list [of Meritor Products]. The board then had the obligation to approve or disapprove.");
Dowers Decl. ¶ 14 ("Of course, the parties did intend that the joint venture would make some
Components and products, but they also intended that decisions about which products or
Components it made (as opposed to imported or assembled) would be subject to approval by
the joint venture Board of Directors by way of the Business Plan and capital expenditure
approvals. No one knew what the future would require, so the Shareholders wanted to be
flexible as conditions changed subject to Board approval.").)
Dowers's declaration and Burgin's testimony, like that of Arnold, comes after the onset of
litigation, is "one-sided and self-serving," Davis, 361 Mich. at 376, 105 N.W.2d at 31–32, and is
not supported by the text of the agreements or any contemporaneous extrinsic evidence. Their
position is also inconsistent with the parties' history of performance and Meritor's internal
admissions, and is undermined by Meritor's failure to press this position at any previous stage of
26
this litigation. Apart from the actions that gave rise to this case, Meritor has not provided
evidence of any previous instance in which Meritor or SISAMEX's Board of Directors blocked
SISAMEX from insourcing a Meritor Product by withholding approval for a Business Plan or
capital expenditures. This is particularly damaging for Meritor's argument because SISAMEX
has produced evidence that Meritor officials, at various points, explicitly shared their concerns
about SISAMEX's plans and ability to insource and their belief that such insourcing would be
harmful to Meritor's business. In an email from Burgin to Arnold in June 2003, for example,
Burgin warned that SISAMEX "could internally tool 145 [Components]," which would most likely
leave Meritor with "excess capacity" because it would no longer be manufacturing the
Components. (Email from Larry Burgin, 6/11/03, SMX Ex. 86 [233-36], at -30.) 7 Yet despite
Meritor's concerns, by 2004, SISAMEX had insourced most of the Core Components of the 160
axle and had begun insourcing a Core Component of the 145 axle (SMX 56.1 Stmt ¶¶ 42, 45;
Meritor 56.1 Resp. ¶¶ 42b, 45a–45b), and Meritor has not presented any evidence that it
attempted to block such insourcing through the Board of Directors.
SISAMEX has also
demonstrated that by 2007, Meritor was distressed about SISAMEX's potential insourcing of
Components of the 14_series of axles. (See, e.g., Internal Meritor Presentation, SMX Ex. 41
[232-42], at -80 ("[Meritor] sells significant value to Sisamex in 145 carriers and some housings.
They could chose [sic] to localize this and if they did so we would lose the sales.").) Rather than
exercise its purported right to block such insourcing through SISAMEX's Board of Directors,
however, Meritor proceeded to enter into the 2009 Interim Purchasing Commitments
Agreement with SISAMEX, offering valuable consideration in exchange for SISAMEX's
temporary agreement not to insource certain 14_ series Core Components. (SMX 56.1 ¶¶ 61,
63; Meritor 56.1 Resp. ¶¶ 61a, 63a.) Meritor's actions suggest, therefore, that prior to 2013 it
believed it lacked contractual authority to block SISAMEX's decisions to insource Components
7
Meritor insists that the email also says that any capacity needed to insource the
Components would need to be approved by the SISAMEX Board (Meritor 56.1 Resp. ¶ 41a),
but the court has reviewed the email and has not found any such statement.
27
of Meritor Products.
Not only were Meritor's actions inconsistent with its purported understanding that it could
block SISAMEX from insourcing Components of Meritor Products, but SISAMEX has also
presented numerous examples of internal statements from Meritor employees expressing their
understanding that SISAMEX had the right unilaterally to insource Components. For example,
in an internal memorandum to its auditors, Meritor acknowledged that SISAMEX purchased
40% of the Components used in its manufacturing process from Meritor "but is not contractually
obligated to do so." (Internal Memo from Greg Glaza, 1/28/11, SMX Ex. 79 [233-29], at -56.)
Rather, Meritor conceded, SISAMEX's Director General "has control to make purchasing
decisions" and has "discretion in selecting the suppliers."
(Id.)
The memorandum also
explained that the Director General "has the oversight over the manufacturing process and
general operations at Sisamex." (Id.) 8 In an internal email from April 2003, Meritor employee
Joe Panella recognized that "[SISAMEX] ultimately decides what products will be localized in
Mexico and the associated timing." (Email from Joe Panella, 4/15/03, SMX Ex. 84 [233-34], at 81.) In another internal email from March 2010, Meritor executive Joseph Plomin explained that
Meritor was "selling direct to [SISAMEX] but they have the right to insource that supply at any
time." (Email from Joseph Plomin, 3/6/10, SMX Ex. 117 [234-17], at -45.) And while Meritor
was considering entering into the IPCA, Arnold—Meritor's lead negotiator of the joint venture
agreements—admitted that Meritor did not have the power to block SISAMEX from making
investments in its manufacturing capacity and thus believed its best option was to negotiate a
change in the agreements to prevent such investment. (See Email from Bradley Arnold, SMX
Ex. 147 [234-47], at -36 ("[SISAMEX] is required to meet any committed volumes in the supply
8
Meritor disputes the relevance of these admissions because they were made
strictly for financial accounting purposes to determine whether Meritor was required to
consolidate its interest in SISAMEX. (See, e.g., Meritor 56.1 Resp. ¶ 37d.) The court does not
understand how the purpose for which the statements were offered undermines their relevance.
Indeed, the fact that the admissions were made to its auditors only hurts Meritor's position
because it indicates that the statements were part of a "careful analysis" of the joint venture
agreements. (See id. ¶ 37a.)
28
agreement for Components or for meeting supply to Mexican OEM[.] Board approval is not
required for such investment[.] We cannot block per se[.] We can influence[.] Hence the
rationale of negotiating an agreement change.").)
In sum, the language of the agreements, the parties' history of performance, and
Meritor's admissions weigh heavily in SISAMEX's favor. And even if this were not the case,
Meritor would still be unable to create a genuine issue of material fact on the basis of language
in the pre-contractual MOU or the post hoc testimony of its employees: Meritor's failure to raise
its "Board approval" position at any prior point in this litigation renders wholly implausible the
assertion that the new interpretation represents the agreed intentions of the parties. See Detroit
Greyhound Emp. Fed. Credit Union v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., 381 Mich. 683, 690, 167 N.W.2d 274,
278 (1969) (meaning of contract is "settled conclusively by mutually agreeable performance
long before new and technical interpretive thoughts reared themselves for litigatory
controversy"). Meritor now asserts that it has the authority to block SISAMEX's insourcing of
Meritor Products, or Components thereof, by directing the Meritor-appointed members of
SISAMEX's Board of Directors to withhold approval of SISAMEX's capital expenditures or of
SISAMEX's Director General's proposed Business Plan. But Meritor did not assert this position
during the course of performance, in its formal notice to SISAMEX in 2013 indicating its
opposition to SISAMEX's proposed insourcing, or in its pre-litigation dispute notice. Nor did
Meritor raise this argument in its complaint (Meritor Compl. ([1] in Case No. 14 C 5319)), in its
answer to SISAMEX's complaint (Def. Meritor's Answer and Affirmative Defenses [101]), or in its
motion-to-dismiss briefing (Meritor's Mem. in Supp. of Mot. to Dismiss [25]). Meritor offers no
plausible explanation for its failure to raise this argument until its response to SISAMEX's motion
for summary judgment. No reasonable fact finder could believe that the parties agreed Meritor
could veto SISAMEX's insourcing decisions through its appointed members of the Board of
Directors but that Meritor's representatives forgot to raise this point or intentionally withheld it
29
until litigation reached this late stage. 9
Thus the court must grant summary judgment for
SISAMEX on count I of SISAMEX's complaint and count I of Meritor's complaint.
II.
SISAMEX's Obligation to Purchase from Meritor All Requirements for Core
Components Unless SISAMEX's Shareholders Change SISAMEX's
Business (Meritor's Count III)
In its own complaint, Meritor asserts that sections 2.1 and 2.2 of Supply Agreement C
obligate SISAMEX to purchase from Meritor all of its requirements for "Core Components"
unless the Shareholders of SISAMEX (including Meritor) have mutually agreed to a change in
SISAMEX's business. (Meritor Compl. ¶ 87.) Section 2.2(a) provides that SISAMEX must
purchase from Meritor all of its requirements for Core Components that "[SISAMEX] does not
manufacture itself." (Supply Agreement C § 2.2.(a).) In its prior opinion, the court concluded
that the agreement was ambiguous with respect to whether the reference to Components that
SISAMEX "does not manufacture itself" meant that there were Components that SISAMEX
could unilaterally decide to manufacture itself. As discussed in the above section, the court now
concludes SISAMEX does have the contractual right to decide unilaterally to manufacture
Components of Meritor Products, and thus section 2.2(a) of Supply Agreement C is best read to
mean that SISAMEX must purchase from Meritor those Core Components that SISAMEX has
not chosen to manufacture itself.
This interpretation of Supply Agreement C is supported by Meritor's own admissions.
(See Arnold Dep. 132:7–14 ("Q. So basically what Supply Agreement C was intended to do was
to give SISAMEX the ability to get a source of core Components to the extent that it didn't
manufacture itself.
And if it elected not to or could not manufacture them, those core
Components itself, it could get them from Meritor, or in a vendor that Meritor approved, right?
9
For the reasons just discussed—including the belatedness of Meritor's argument
and its apparent conflict with the parties' past practice, Meritor's own admissions, and clear
language in the Shareholders Agreement—the court rejects Meritor's arguments that the
language in SISAMEX's bylaws and the language in Table 2.3 of Supply Agreement A create a
genuine issue of material fact regarding SISAMEX's ability to insource Meritor Products and
Components unilaterally. The court discusses these arguments in greater detail, however, in
the sections below.
30
A. Correct."); id. at 91:14–92:16 ("Generally, SISAMEX could make or buy the Components that
go into assemblies that are delivered to Meritor for shipment to the OEMs."); Internal Meritor
Presentation, 8/6/13, SMX Ex. 65 [233-15], at -38 (explaining that under the original agreement
SISAMEX has the option to purchase the 14_ series Core Components or manufacture them
itself); Meritor Presentation "Supply Agreements with Quimmco," 1/16/13, SMX Ex. 171 [23221], at -21 (stating that under Supply Agreement C, "Sisamex not obligated to buy any % of
requirements for [Mexican] market from [Meritor]."). Evidently to minimize the significance of
these admissions, Meritor now adopts the new position that SISAMEX may manufacture Core
Components itself, but only pursuant to the SISAMEX Board's approval of a Business Plan and
capital expenditures, or if Meritor provides express approval under section 2.4 of the agreement.
(See, e.g., Meritor 56.1 Resp. ¶ 30b.) This interpretation is not supported by the language of
the agreement or the parties' history of performance, however, and the court rejects this novel
argument for the same reasons it rejected Meritor's new argument above.
Meritor argues that because it was Meritor who added the "does not manufacture itself"
language to Supply Agreement C, it would not make sense to interpret the phrase in a manner
adverse to Meritor. The court is not convinced, however, that just because Meritor inserted the
phrase, it should be interpreted the way Meritor prefers. Meritor added "does not manufacture
itself" as part of a larger edit clarifying that Meritor would be the exclusive supplier of
Components SISAMEX purchases—that is, to prohibit SISAMEX from purchasing from third
parties. As Meritor explains, in the drafting process, it removed SISAMEX's language that
would allow SISAMEX to purchase from Meritor on a non-exclusive basis. (Meritor Resp. at
13.) It would be entirely reasonable for Meritor to insist on exclusivity in purchasing while also
proposing that its joint venture (SISAMEX) could manufacture those Components it did not wish
to purchase from Meritor.
That reading of the agreement is consistent with the extrinsic
evidence in the record, regardless of which party inserted the language at issue.
Meritor also relies on Table 2.3 from Supply Agreement A as support for its reading of
31
Supply Agreement C. The court's prior opinion observed that Table 2.3 to Supply Agreement A
discusses which types of brakes constitute "Meritor Products" and identifies air and hydraulic
brakes as Meritor Products that are also "considered Core Components under SUPPLY
AGREEMENT C (COMPONENTS FOR [Meritor] SALE TO [SISAMEX]), and are not to be
manufactured by [SISAMEX] until otherwise agreed by [Meritor]." (Supply Agreement A at -76.)
The court explained that this provision supported the position SISAMEX took during the motionto-dismiss briefing—namely, that under the agreements, Components can also be products,
such that SISAMEX's right to manufacture Meritor products would include the right to
manufacture Components. MTD Opinion, 2015 WL 390790, at *11. But the court also noted
that the language in Table 2.3 might undermine SISAMEX's contention that it can decide to
insource Core Components at any time because it suggests that Core Components under
Supply Agreement C are not to be manufactured by SISAMEX without Meritor's agreement. Id.
SISAMEX has now explained, and Meritor does not dispute, that air and hydraulic brakes were
originally excluded from the scope of the joint venture's supply agreements because Meritor had
already committed to manufacturing those suspensions through other joint ventures. (SMX 56.1
¶ 26.)
SISAMEX insists that Table 2.3 confirms SISAMEX's interpretation; it sets out an
exception to the general rule that SISAMEX may decide whether it will manufacture Core
Components of Meritor Products. (Id.)
Meritor's response to this argument relies on Larry Dowers' declaration.
In that
declaration, Dowers explains that at the time the parties were drafting the agreements, Meritor's
"brakes division" was concerned that the joint venture might begin making air and hydraulic
brakes because they were listed both as Products under Supply Agreement A and as Core
Components under Supply Agreement C. (Dowers Decl. ¶ 18.) Dowers says that, to address
the concern of the brakes division, he drafted the language requiring SISAMEX to obtain
Meritor's agreement in order to manufacture air and hydraulic brakes. (Id. ¶ 19.) That is,
Dowers contends that the SISAMEX Board of Directors could have blocked SISAMEX's
32
insourcing of these brakes by withholding approval of the Business Plan, but he added an
additional requirement so that even if it obtained Board approval, SISAMEX would be prohibited
from manufacturing the brakes without also obtaining Meritor's agreement. (Id.) One might
wonder why such additional protection against insourcing brakes was required. To address this
question, Meritor and Dowers point to an email Dowers sent to the brakes division, in response
to the division's concern about SISAMEX's potential manufacturing of brakes. In the email,
Dowers explains that Board approval is required for capital investments over $1 million, which
would provide a way for Meritor to block SISAMEX's manufacture of the brakes. (Id. ¶ 20.) At
oral argument, Meritor's counsel explained that Dowers and the Meritor brakes division were
concerned that SISAMEX might be able to develop capacity to manufacture brakes for less than
$1 million, and so Dowers added the language in Table 2.3 to provide the brakes division with
additional protection in case the Board of Directors could not block SISAMEX from "tooling up"
to manufacture the brakes. (Tr. Of Proceedings, Oral Argument, 8/14/16, at 88.)
Respectfully, that position is simply not plausible. If, as Dowers and Meritor contend,
Meritor could have blocked SISAMEX from manufacturing the brakes by withholding Board
approval of a Business Plan or capital expenditures, then the language in Table 2.3 would be
unnecessary. And the explanation for this "additional protection" that Dowers and Meritor offer
is contrary to the plain language of the Shareholders Agreement. Although they contend that
Board approval was required for capital investments over $1 million, the Shareholders
Agreement is clear that the limit on capital investments without Board approval applies only for
"Company Products"—that is, SISAMEX's own products that it manufactures and sells from time
to time. (See Shareholders Agreement §§ 3.4(b), 1.1.) 10 When it comes to capital expenditures
necessary for the manufacture of Meritor Products, Board approval is not required under the
Agreement.
(Id. § 3.5.2(e)(vi).)
Meritor's reading of Supply Agreement C is thus just as
10
As SISAMEX explains, the $1 million cap to which Dowers refers in his email was
eventually raised to $5 million in the final agreement. (See Shareholders Agreement § 1.1., at 6.)
33
implausible as its reading of Supply Agreement A, and no reasonable trier of fact could credit its
position.
III.
Meritor's Obligation to Provide Technical Assistance to SISAMEX for the
Manufacture of Meritor Products (SISAMEX's Count II)
Section 2.2(e) of the Shareholders Agreement requires Meritor "to provide [SISAMEX]
with technical assistance for the manufacture of the Meritor Products as provided in the
Technical Assistance and Management Agreement." (Shareholders Agreement § 2.2(e).) In
December 2002, the parties executed the First Amendment to the Shareholders Agreement,
which provided that all references in the Shareholders Agreement to "Technical Assistance and
Management Agreement" shall be changed to "Management Services Agreement." (First
Amendment to Shareholders Agreement, SMX Ex. 44 [232-45], ¶¶ 16–17.) The Management
Services Agreement that the parties then executed in January 2003 does not obligate Meritor to
provide technical assistance.
(Management Services Agreement, SMX Ex. 45 [232-46].)
Meritor argues, therefore, that it has no obligation to provide technical assistance to SISAMEX.
(Meritor Resp. at 14.)
SISAMEX insists that the parties determined that a separate technical assistance
agreement was unnecessary because Meritor would be compensated for that assistance
through commissions on sales and not from any additional fees that SISAMEX would pay
Meritor for such assistance. (SISAMEX 56.1 Resp. ¶ 24.) That this was in fact the parties'
understanding is confirmed by a December 2002 email from Arnold to other Meritor employees.
(See Email from Bradley Arnold, 12/8/02, SMX Ex. 43 [232-44], at -81 ("I do not believe we will
be billing routine support to the JV[.] We are getting major mgt fee in another manner that
covers our [engineering support] expenses as well as receiving a major carve out of sales for
our Mexican company[.]").) And in response to SISAMEX's evidence that Meritor provided
technical assistance at no additional fee for the first ten years of the joint venture, Meritor
acknowledges that it "has repeatedly provided routine product design engineering support to the
34
joint venture in order to make sure that the joint venture succeeds in supporting Meritor's
business in Mexico." (Meritor 56.1 Resp. ¶ 23.) Meritor now asserts, however, that if a Product
or Component that SISAMEX intends to manufacture has not been included in a Boardapproved SISAMEX Business Plan, Meritor needs not, and does not, provide technical
assistance for that product or component. (Meritor Resp. at 15.) In addition, Meritor draws a
distinction between "product engineering"—that is, the product design drawings and necessary
Bill of Materials—and "manufacturing process engineering," and insists that Meritor is required
only to provide the former, but not the latter. (Id.; see also Burgin Dep. 119:9–120:18 (Meritor
provided "[p]roduct engineering only" to SISAMEX).)
As SISAMEX correctly notes, Meritor has never before distinguished between product
engineering and manufacturing process engineering, either in this litigation or in its history of
dealings with SISAMEX and Quimmco. Nor has Meritor previously asserted that it will only
provide technical assistance with respect to products or Components that were included in a
Board-approved Business Plan.
The only support Meritor provides for this new position is
Burgin's deposition testimony and Dowers' declaration. (See Dowers Decl. ¶¶ 31–32.) As
explained earlier, such self-serving post hoc testimony is insufficient to defeat summary
judgment, especially when it finds no support in the language of the agreements or the history of
the parties' performance and was not raised in prior stages of this litigation.
The court
concludes that pursuant to section 2.2(e) of the Shareholders Agreement, as clarified by the
parties' history of performance for the first ten years after the Agreement, Meritor is obligated to
provide necessary technical assistance to SISAMEX for the manufacture of Meritor Products.
IV.
Whether SISAMEX or Meritor has Breached the Parties' Agreements
(SISAMEX'S Count III and Meritor's Counts II and IV)
The court has determined that the parties' agreements grant SISAMEX the right to
decide unilaterally to manufacture Meritor Products, and Components thereof, for sale by
Meritor to OEMs in Mexico, and that Meritor must provide technical engineering assistance for
35
such manufacturing. Because the parties do not dispute that Meritor has refused to purchase
certain Meritor Products that SISAMEX intends to insource and do not dispute that Meritor has
refused to provide technical assistance for the manufacturing of such Products, the court
concludes that Meritor is in breach of the parties' agreements.
The court ruled in its prior opinion that Meritor may not unreasonably withhold its
approval of SISAMEX's sourcing of production materials from third-party vendors.
MTD
Opinion, 2015 WL 390790, at *13; (see also (Supply Agreement A § 8.1; Supply Agreement B §
8.1.) SISAMEX asserts that Meritor has breached this obligation as well. It is undisputed that
Meritor withheld approval of SISAMEX's sourcing certain production materials from third-party
vendors Ramkrishna Forgings Limited ("Ramkrishna") and Zhuzhou Gear Co. ("Zhuzhou").
(SMX 56.1 Stmt. ¶¶ 72, 74; Meritor 56.1 Resp. ¶¶ 72, 74b.) Meritor argues, however, that it had
concerns about the quality and reliability of those vendors and thus had a reasonable basis to
withhold approval of SISAMEX's sourcing from them. (Meritor Resp. at 19–20, 25.) SISAMEX
responds that Meritor never raised concerns about the vendors' quality and reliability at the time
that it withheld its approval of them. Meritor's real concern with SISAMEX's use of the thirdparty vendors, it argues, was the resulting loss of revenue for Meritor.
(SISAMEX and
Quimmco's Reply Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for Partial Summ. J. (hereinafter "SISAMEX Reply")
[263] at 24–25.) Meritor, however, has produced some evidence, including contemporaneous
documents, reflecting its concerns about the reliability of Ramrkishna and Zhuzhou as vendors
(see Meritor Resp. at 19–20), and the court ultimately believes that the determination of whether
Meritor's withholding or approval was "reasonable" is simply too fact-bound to be decided on
summary judgment.
Whether or not Meritor's withholding of approval for third-party vendors constitutes a
breach of the parties' agreements, however, the court agrees with SISAMEX that Meritor's
failure to provide technical assistance and failure to purchase Meritor Products that SISAMEX
has opted to manufacture does constitute a breach of the agreements. Meritor insists that it
36
cannot be in breach of the agreements because it simply followed the procedures outlined in
those agreements. It points to SISAMEX's bylaws, which provide that "[a]ll business of the
Company shall be conducted according to a Business Plan of the Company developed by the
Director General and approved by the Board of Directors of the Company. The Company shall
only manufacture, sell and commercialize those products and Components provided for in the
Business Plan." (Second Amendment to Shareholders Agreement, Bylaws, Meritor Ex. 21 [25021], Art. 32, at -66.) The Shareholders Agreement similarly states that "all business of the
Company will be conducted according to a Business Plan of the Company." (Shareholders
Agreement § 2.3(a).) As Meritor notes, although that Plan is developed by the Director General,
it must be "approved by the Board of Directors of the Company." (Id.; see also id. § 3.5.2.(e)
(Business Plan "may not be approved by . . . the Director General . . .").) The Shareholders
Agreement also allows any Director to "elect at any time that any matter which would otherwise
require approval of the Board of Directors . . . shall instead be submitted for approval by the
Shareholders . . . ." (Id. § 3.5.2.(f).)
Meritor emphasizes that the Board of Directors did not approve the 2014 Business Plan
proposed by the Director General, and instead elected to have the Plan submitted to the
Shareholders (which was not done).
SISAMEX's Bylaws and the Shareholder Agreement
prohibit SISAMEX from engaging in business (like the insourcing at issue) that is not listed in an
approved Business Plan, Meritor argues. Thus,Meritor insists, it is SISAMEX and not Meritor
that is in breach of the Agreements. (See, e.g., Meritor Resp. at 2.) SISAMEX responds that it
would be a breach of a Director's fiduciary duty to withhold approval of a Business Plan, even
though that Plan serves SISAMEX's best interests, merely to further the interests of one of the
Shareholders (Meritor).
(SISAMEX Reply at 21.)
The court need not decide whether a
Director's withholding of support under these circumstances would constitute a breach of the
Director's fiduciary duty. Rather, the court rejects Meritor's argument because it proves too
much.
If Meritor's position were correct, it would follow that Meritor could shut down the
37
operation of SISAMEX's business for any reason simply by refusing to approve the Business
Plan. The Bylaws and Shareholders Agreement state that all business must be conducted
according to an approved Business Plan. But the Shareholders Agreement contemplates that
at least some matters, such as the commitment of capital expenditures for the manufacture of
Meritor Products (Shareholders Agreement § 3.5.2(e)(vi)), will be committed to the sole
discretion of the Director General. Meritor's argument suggests that SISAMEX Directors could
override such discretion by withholding approval of the annual Business Plan.
Meritor has
produced no evidence that the parties intended to give the Board of Directors such broad
authority, and no reasonable jury could conclude that the Meritor-appointed members of the
Board of Directors possess the power to shut down SISAMEX's operations on an annual basis
for any reason.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, the court grants SISAMEX's motion for partial
summary judgment [228] ([191] in Case No. 14 C 5319) on all counts except for the issue of
whether Meritor breached the parties' agreements by unreasonably withholding approval of
third-party vendors. As the court concludes a trial will not likely be necessary, the motion to
strike the trial testimony of Meritor's expert [223] ([186] in Case No. 14 C 5319) is stricken as
moot.
ENTER:
Dated: February 7, 2017
_________________________________________
REBECCA R. PALLMEYER
United States District Judge
38
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?