Court Opinion

ID: 9926385
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-01-24 17:05:42.901508+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:22:44.012977
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                   No. 22-1807
                             Filed January 24, 2024

ANNIE LUKES,
     Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

THE BLUE IRIS, LLC., and JULIE WINTER-HAVEL,
     Defendants-Appellants.
________________________________________________________________

       Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Chickasaw County, John J. Sullivan,

Judge.

       A retailer appeals the district court’s decision finding she breached a

noncompete agreement and awarding damages. AFFIRMED.

       Laura L. Folkerts and Jackson C. Blais of Shuttleworth & Ingersoll, Cedar

Rapids, for appellants.

       Jeremy L. Thompson of Putnam, Thompson & Casper, P.L.L.C., Decorah,

for appellee.

       Considered by Tabor, P.J., Buller, J., and Gamble, S.J.*

       *Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206

(2024).
                                        2

TABOR, Presiding Judge.

      Once business associates, Julie Winter-Havel and Annie Lukes had a falling

out. Lukes bought retail assets from Winter-Havel, and Winter-Havel agreed not

to sell clothes in Chickasaw County for three years. But Lukes later discovered

that Winter-Havel was helping a competitor sell clothing. When Winter-Havel

ignored Lukes’s cease-and-desist letters, Lukes sued for injunctive relief. Lukes

then amended her petition to seek damages. The court found that Winter-Havel,

and her business, The Blue Iris, LLC, breached the noncompete clause and

awarded $26,625.49 in damages and attorney fees to Lukes.

      Winter-Havel appeals arguing that the court erred first in finding she

breached the agreement, and second in calculating damages.1 Lukes asks for

appellate attorney fees. Because the district court properly found a breach of the

noncompete clause and its damage assessment was sound, we affirm. We also

award Lukes reasonable appellate attorney fees.

   I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

      In 2012, Winter-Havel premiered The Bluetique—the only women’s clothing

store in New Hampton. Winter-Havel had been in the retail business for over

twenty years and also owned a floral and gift shop called The Blue Iris.2 The two

stores were just one block apart. In 2015, Winter-Havel hired Lukes to manage

The Bluetique. Lukes accepted the job intending to eventually buy the boutique.

1 We will use the name Winter-Havel when referring to the defendants-appellants.
2 Winter-Havel is the sole owner of The Blue Iris, LLC, under which both her

businesses were organized.
                                         3

As manager, Lukes received advice from Winter-Havel on how to choose inventory

by “going to market” several times a year.3

       In 2018, Lukes realized her goal, purchasing The Bluetique from Winter-

Havel for $49,500. Lukes renamed the store Threads. Under their purchase

agreement, Lukes took ownership of all business assets except an iPad and

laptop. The current inventory stayed, with Winter-Havel receiving eighty percent

of the price for each item sold while Lukes kept twenty percent. The agreement

also included a noncompete clause, which restricted Winter-Havel from marketing

women’s clothing in Chickasaw County for three years starting October 1, 2018.4

       Lukes and Winter-Havel worked amicably under this arrangement until

2020. That spring their business relationship deteriorated. In May 2020, Winter-

Havel let Lukes know that she would not be buying any new merchandise for the

store. Winter-Havel also told Lukes that Cindy Kotz, a local cosmetologist, wanted

to sell women’s clothing from her New Hampton salon and that “there was a few

lines that were being carried in Threads that [Kotz] was interested in.”5

3 At trial, Winter-Havel described different out-of-town markets where retailers
could buy gifts and clothing in a convention-like setting.
4 The full article states:

        Seller shall not, directly or indirectly, engage in any business which
        manufactures, distributes or markets women’s clothing in Chickasaw
        County. Seller agrees that in the event of the breach or imminent
        breach of this Section 8.1 by Seller, the Buyer will have no adequate
        remedy at law. Seller therefore agrees that Buyer’s remedies upon
        a breach or imminent breach of this section 8.1 by Seller include, but
        are not limited to, preliminary and permanent injunctive relief
        restraining Seller from any further breach of this section as well as
        an equitable accounting of all profits or benefits arising out of such
        breach, in addition to any other remedies available to Buyer at law or
        in equity.
5 Winter-Havel and Kotz were long-time close friends.
                                          4

       Lukes inquired whether Kotz asked Winter-Havel for help with the new

business venture. Winter-Havel said “yes” but told Lukes that “morally and legally

I can’t do that.” Yet by July, Lukes discovered promotions on Facebook for clothing

lines previously carried by Threads that were being sold at Expressions—Kotz’s

hair salon.   Winter-Havel claimed that she bought $18,000 worth of clothing

inventory for delivery in 2020 and—after ending her consignments at Threads—

gave it to Kotz.

       Lukes sent Winter-Havel a cease-and-desist letter. It did no good. Soon

Lukes again saw social media advertisements for Expressions showcasing Winter-

Havel’s inventory. Lukes sent another cease-and-desist letter.           Winter-Havel

called her, and they had a “sit-down conversation” in which Winter-Havel denied

any involvement in Kotz’s salon. But when Lukes realized that Winter-Havel

continued to help Kotz sell the clothing lines, Lukes petitioned the district court for

injunctive relief.   Lukes later moved to amend her petition to conform to the

evidence, seeking damages for Winter-Havel’s breach of the noncompete clause.

The court granted the motion.

       At trial, Winter-Havel admitted buying inventory and passing the invoices to

Kotz to pay. Still, Winter-Havel insisted that she did not violate the noncompete

clause because she did not profit from the sale of the inventory at Expressions.

She also testified that she followed the advice of her attorney. Both Winter-Havel

and Kotz denied that Winter-Havel helped Kotz enter the clothing business. But

the court did not find them to be credible witnesses.

       The court found that Winter-Havel’s actions “violated both the spirit and

letter of the parties’ non-competition clause.” It held that Winter-Havel “directly and
                                         5

indirectly distributed or marketed women’s clothing in Chickasaw County, Iowa,

through receiving new inventory at Blue Iris for [Kotz], for participating in paying

for shoes and clothing for [Kotz], for permitting her inventory to be marketed by

Expressions on social media,” and “for permitting the inventory to be sold at

Expressions Salon.” It awarded damages to Lukes in the amount of $5752.79 for

lost profits (the twenty percent Lukes could have made on the inventory Winter-

Havel removed in July 2020); $15,872.70 for loss of revenue, loss of potential

business, and loss of the benefit of the bargain (for the remaining fifteen months

of their noncompete); and $5000 in trial attorney fees. Winter-Havel appeals.

   II. Scope and Standard of Review

       The parties disagree on the standard of review. Winter-Havel contends that

this case was tried in equity and thus review is de novo. Lukes argues the case

was tried at law and review is for error correction. We agree with Lukes. This

action stems from the breach of a noncompete clause in a contract. We review

contract actions for the correction of legal error.    Iowa Mortg. Ctr., L.L.C. v.

Baccam, 841 N.W.2d 107, 110 (Iowa 2013). “We are bound by the district court’s

findings of fact if they are supported by substantial evidence.” Sutton v. Iowa

Trenchless, L.C., 808 N.W.2d 744, 749 (Iowa Ct. App. 2011).

   III. Analysis

   A. Did Winter-Havel breach the noncompete clause?

       Winter-Havel contends that she did not violate the noncompete clause

because the items she ordered for delivery in 2020 were not ordered for Kotz.

Winter-Havel also claims that, contrary to the district court’s findings, she did not

buy shoes and clothing for Kotz to sell. Rather, Kotz paid the vendor directly.
                                          6

Winter-Havel insists that the “the District Court’s finding of key facts is wholly

unsupported by the evidence presented at trial.”

       To show that Winter-Havel breached their noncompete clause, Lukes had

to prove: (1) a contract existed, (2) non-competition was a condition of the contract,

(3) Lukes performed all conditions of the contract, (4) Winter-Havel breached the

noncompete clause, and (5) Lukes suffered damages from Winter-Havel’s breach.

See Sutton, 808 N.W.2d at 753. Winter-Havel insists that Lukes did not prove the

last two elements because Winter-Havel did not profit from the sale of her inventory

at Expressions.

       In ruling against Winter-Havel, the district court relied on Uptown Food

Store, Inc. v. Ginsberg for the proposition that a party breaches a noncompete

agreement despite not deriving profit from the competing business. 123 N.W.2d

59, 65−66 (Iowa 1963). On appeal, Winter-Havel tries to distinguish Uptown,

where a father helped his son open a supermarket in violation of a negative

covenant in a lease. In that case, the court found that the elder Ginsberg, on top

of financing the operation, “performed substantially all of the services of a manager

or owner on a daily basis” at his son’s grocery business. Id. at 66. Winter-Havel

contends that unlike Ginsberg, she was not involved in financing or managing

Kotz’s business. Instead, Winter-Havel claims that she “simply gave her leftover

inventory” to Kotz.

       Winter-Havel insists that the facts of Thomas v. Thomas Truck & Caster

Co., 228 N.W.2d 52 (Iowa 1975), are more analogous.             There, a company’s

founder agreed “not to engage as consultant or otherwise to any competitor” of the

company. See Thomas, 228 N.W.2d at 54. The founder then loaned his son, the
                                         7

vice president of a direct competitor, money knowing the son would use it to

advance that business. See id. The court found that the language of the covenant

lent “no direct support to the theory Thomas contracted away his right to make

loans or gifts to his son.” Id. at 56.

         We believe that the district court properly relied on Uptown for the

proposition that Winter-Havel could breach the noncompete clause without proof

that she directly profited from Kotz’s sale of the merchandise at Expressions.

Substantial evidence supported the district court’s finding that Winter-Havel

permitted her inventory to be sold by Kotz. And whether Winter-Havel profited

from that arrangement was not relevant to the question of breach. As the court

explained in Uptown, the test for violating a noncompete clause “is mischief.” Id.

at 66 (citation omitted).     And the mischief begins when the party’s conduct

interferes with the business that is the subject of the contract. See id. The

reasonable and probable result of Winter-Havel’s actions was to take business

away from Lukes. By her efforts, Winter-Havel increased Threads’s competition,

which is what she agreed not to do. See id. Thomas does not stand for an opposite

proposition; it interprets a narrower noncompete clause. See Thomas, 228 N.W.2d

at 56.

         True, Winter-Havel may not have ordered the clothing inventory with Kotz

in mind. But facilitating Kotz’s access to the same product lines sold by Lukes—

knowing Kotz would sell them—counted as distributing or marketing women’s

clothing in Chickasaw County in violation of the noncompete clause. The court

also found Winter-Havel and Kotz were not credible witnesses. We are bound by

such findings. See Van Sloun v. Agans Bros., Inc., 778 N.W.2d 174, 182 (Iowa
                                         8

2010). Thus, we find no error in the court’s decision finding Winter-Havel breached

the noncompete clause.

   B. Did the court properly calculate damages?

      Expecting that we might uphold the district court’s finding of breach, Winter-

Havel argues in the alternative that the court’s damage award is not supported by

the evidence. She claims that Lukes did not offer proof that her business suffered

because of the breach. Winter-Havel next contests the court’s computation of

Lukes’s lost consignment income without any discount for out-of-date or unsold

inventory.   Winter-Havel also accuses the court of awarding “duplicative

damages”—compensating Lukes twice for the inventory in stock.

      Lukes counters that Winter-Havel’s inventory was not an “excluded asset”

in the purchase contract, and Lukes had a reasonable expectation that the

inventory would continue to be sold at Threads. She maintains that the district

court’s computation was within the range of evidence presented at trial.

      We find no error in the court’s award of damages. As a guiding principle,

we recognize “a distinction between proof of the fact that damages have been

sustained and proof of the amount of those damages.” Olson v. Nieman’s, Ltd.,

579 N.W.2d 299, 309 (Iowa 1998). “If the uncertainty lies only in the amount of

damages, recovery may be had if there is proof of a reasonable basis from which

the amount can be inferred or approximated.” Orkin Exterminating Co. v. Burnett,

160 N.W.2d 427, 430 (Iowa 1968). “While the measure of damages in an action

for the breach of an agreement by the seller not to re-enter business in competition

with the buyer is usually difficult of exact computation, [she] who is damaged will

not be precluded from recovering because of that fact.” Id. (citation omitted). The
                                           9

Orkin court explained that “[t]he measure of the damages resulting from the

wrongful breach of an agreement not to compete is the loss naturally resulting from

the breach, including loss of profits.” Id. at 429.

       The district court found that the value of the inventory Winter-Havel

removed from Threads in July 2020 was $28,763.95. It awarded $5752.79 in lost

profits based on the twenty percent Lukes could have earned if the inventory were

sold from Threads. It also found that Lukes should recover the loss of revenue,

potential business, and loss of benefit of the bargain. The court arrived at that

figure based—not on the value of the inventory removed—but on the average total

sales that Lukes made each month when Winter-Havel’s inventory was in the

store. Multiplying that number ($1058.18) by the fifteen-month (July 2020 through

September 2021) duration of the noncompete clause, the court calculated those

lost-opportunity damages at $15,872.70. Because those amounts cover different

losses, we see no duplication.

       Damages of this nature are difficult to calculate. Van Oort Constr. Co. v.

Nuckoll’s Concrete Serv., Inc., 599 N.W.2d 684, 693 (Iowa 1999). And the court

as fact finder has flexibility and considerable discretion when determining damages

“based upon a fair and impartial consideration of all the evidence.” Glascock v.

Covenant Med. Ctr., Inc., No. 21-0870, 2022 WL 2824734, at *4 (Iowa Ct. App.

July 20, 2022) (citation omitted). The district court made a thoughtful calculation

of Lukes’s losses based on the record before it. Thus, we find substantial evidence

supporting the damage award.
                                        10

   C. Is Lukes entitled to appellate attorney fees?

      Lastly, Lukes requests appellate attorney fees under Iowa Code section

625.22 (2023). That section provides, “When judgment is recovered upon a written

contract containing an agreement to pay an attorney fee, the court shall allow and

a tax as part of the costs a reasonable attorney fee to be determined by the court.”

Iowa Code § 625.22(1); see Bankers Tr. Co. v. Woltz, 326 N.W.2d 274, 278 (Iowa

1982) (noting statute that justifies awarding attorney fees in the trial court also

justifies awarding attorney fees on appeal).

      Winter-Havel agrees that if she violated the noncompete clause, Lukes is

entitled to reasonable appellate attorney fees under their contract. Counsel for

Lukes submitted an affidavit asserting that his post-trial and appeal fees add up to

$5175. Finding that amount reasonable, we order Winter-Havel to pay Lukes for

those appellate attorney fees.

      AFFIRMED.