Industry Coalition Obtains Preliminary Injunction Against Enforcement of North Dakota Dealer Statute
On December 14, 2017, the U.S. District Court in Bismarck, North Dakota issued a preliminary injunction preventing the enforcement of recently enacted amendments to the North Dakota Farm Equipment Dealership Statute known as âSenate Bill 2289.â The decision is significant because Senate Bill 2289 is arguably the most restrictive state law affecting franchise and dealer relationships ever enacted. As enacted, Senate Bill 2289 applies only to farm equipment dealership agreements. If it withstands constitutional challenge, however, Senate Bill 2289 could serve as a model for other industry-specific dealer protection statutes and state laws that regulate distribution and franchise relationships generally.
Enacted in the spring of 2017, Senate Bill 2289 was scheduled to become effective on August 1, 2017. On July 25, 2017, however, an industry coalition consisting of the Association of Equipment Manufacturers (âAEMâ) and four manufacturers of agricultural equipment that are members of AEM (collectively, the âManufacturersâ)1 filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the District of North Dakota challenging the constitutionality of Senate Bill 2289.2 The original named defendants were the Governor and Attorney General of North Dakota (the âStateâ). The dealersâ association that had successfully lobbied for Senate Bill 2289âs enactment, the North Dakota Implement Dealers Association (âNDIDAâ), sought and obtained the right to intervene as a defendant in support of what it called âone [of] the most comprehensive and impactful pieces of legislation that the NDIDA has ever introduced in our 117 year history.â In addition, the national Equipment Dealers Association and eight of its regional affiliates also filed an amicus brief in defense of the North Dakota statute. After filing suit, the Manufacturers sought preliminary injunctive relief to prevent enforcement of Senate Bill 2289 pending final judgment on the merits. Thereafter, the State agreed not to enforce Senate Bill 2289 until the Manufacturersâ preliminary injunction motion was fully briefed, argued, and decided.
The so-called âOffending Provisionsâ of Senate Bill 2289 challenged by the Manufacturers, as described more fully in the Complaint,3 include the âNo Enforcement of Performance Standardsâ Provisions whereby the courts of North Dakota could invalidate any performance standards in farm equipment dealer agreements as âunreasonable,â âarbitrary,â or âunfair.â Certain types of dealer performance standards are singled out in Senate Bill 2289 for even more restrictive regulations. Dealership appearance standards and location requirements are among those specifically targeted. Senate Bill 2289âs âNo Enforcement of Appearance Standardsâ Provision prevents manufacturers from requiring the dealer to âunreasonably remodel, renovate, or recondition the dealerâs facilities, change the location of the facilities, or make unreasonable alterations to the dealership facilities.â The statute does not define what is âunreasonableââexcept to say that it is automatically unreasonable to require any change within seven years of a dealerâs most recent facility remodel, renovation, or reconditioning.
Senate Bill 2289 also contains provisions that prohibit manufacturers whose trademarks are licensed to farm equipment dealers from requiring a dealer to focus on the products bearing the trademark used to identify the dealership. Besides prohibiting exclusivity provisions in farm equipment dealer agreements, Senate Bill 2289 prohibits requiring farm equipment dealers to stock and display any quantity of equipment and parts supplied by the manufacturer whose trademark identifies the dealership or to have separate facilities, display areas, and personnel for the sale of competing products.4 In the words of one of the sponsors of Senate Bill 2289: âIf thereâs a building and it says âJohn Deereâ on it, now they (could) sell anything out of that particular building.â As the Manufacturers later observed in support of their preliminary injunction motion:
If S.B. 2289 applied to McDonaldâs, the iconic hamburger chain would lose the ability to require its North Dakota franchisees to actually sell any of McDonaldâs signature items like the Big MacÂź or Happy Meal.Âź Instead, McDonaldâs franchised restaurants across North Dakota could sell, for example, the Burger King Whopper,Âź the Taco Bell Crunchwrap Supreme,Âź or the Starbucks Frappuccino.Âź
Other provisions of Senate Bill 2289 challenged by the Manufacturers include the:
- âForced Transfer of Trademark Licenseâ Provision, which permits a dealer to transfer its dealer agreement (including the license to use the manufacturerâs trademark) so long as the transferee meets the manufacturerâs âwritten, reasonable, and uniformly applied standards of qualification,â which are limited to the proposed transfereeâs âfinancial qualifications and business experience;â
- âNo Control Over Dealer Locationâ Provision, which restricts a manufacturerâs right to remove a dealerâs authorization to operate at a location where it is currently operating and also prohibits requiring dealer to change the location of its facilities and âunreasonablyâ preventing a dealer from relocating to another site within its relevant market area;
- âEnabling Warranty and Incentive Payment Fraudâ Provision, which prohibits a manufacturer from conducting a warranty or incentive audit or seeking a charge-back on a warranty or incentive payment more than one year after the date of the warranty or incentive payment, while also prohibiting any charge-back unless the manufacturer can prove that the dealerâs claim was false or fraudulent, or that the dealer did not substantially comply with the âreasonableâ written procedures of the manufacturer;
- âRetroactive Impairment of Existing Warrantiesâ Provision, which expressly applies to pre-existing contracts and requires farm equipment manufacturers to reimburse dealers for labor, diagnostic, transportation, and travel costs incurred in performing warranty service;
- âNo Arbitrationâ Provision, which prohibits the enforcement of arbitration clauses in farm equipment dealership agreements and specifically prohibits the enforcement of agreements to arbitrate outside North Dakota;
- âNo Market Withdrawalâ Provision, which defines a âsubstantial changeâ in competitive circumstances to include âthe unreasonable removal of a product line or segment;â and
- âRetroactive Impairment of Existing Contractsâ Provision, which makes each of the provisions of Senate Bill 2289 applicable retroactively ânotwithstanding the terms of any contract.â
Of the various constitutional and statutory bases for the Manufacturerâs challenge to Senate Bill 2289, only three were specifically briefed at the preliminary injunction stage. The first was the Manufacturersâ claim that Senate Bill 2289 violates the Contracts Clause of the U.S. Constitution because it substantially impairs existing contracts and serves no legitimate public purpose. The second was that Senate Bill 2289 violates the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution because of inconsistency with the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq. The third was that, under the Supremacy Clause, Senate Bill 2289 is preempted because it deprives the Manufacturers of their rights under the Trademark Act of 1946, 15 U.S.C. § 1051 et seq. (the âLanham Actâ).
With respect to each of the necessary elements for preliminary injunctive reliefâthe most important of which is likelihood of success on the meritsâthe District Court found that the Manufacturers had met their burden of proof. The court found that Senate Bill 2289 âis special interest legislation unsupported by a legitimate public interest which clearly violates the Contracts Clause because it impairs pre-existing contracts.â The court also found âas a matter of law that because SB 2289 prohibits arbitration clauses altogether and also requires that arbitrations be held in North Dakota, it is unquestionably preempted by the Federal Arbitration Act.â Having found that the Manufacturers were likely to succeed on the merits of their Contracts Clause and Federal Arbitration Act claims, the court found it unnecessary to address the merits of the Lanham Act claim. Still, the basis on which the court found irreparable harm included the statement thatâby impairing the Manufacturersâ trademark rightsâSenate Bill 2289 âharms the Plaintiffsâ reputations and customer relationships in ways that are hard to define and which cannot be easily remedied with money damages.â
At this juncture, it is unclear whether the State will appeal the grant of preliminary injunctive relief. What is clear, however, is that the focus of the litigation going forward will be the Manufacturersâ Lanham Act claims. The reason is that a âvictoryâ under the Contracts Clause might still make Senate Bill 2289 applicable to new or even renewed farm equipment dealership agreements in North Dakota. In contrast, the Manufacturersâ Lanham Act preemption argument would invalidate Senate Bill 2289 altogether.
The Manufacturersâ Lanham Act claim is based on the assertion that Section 45 of the Lanham Act expresses congressional intent âto protect registered marks used in interstate commerce from interference by State, or territorial legislation.â 15 U.S.C. § 1127. The Manufacturers cite authority that Section 45 of the Lanham Act permits the Manufacturers to control the quality of goods and services provided by North Dakota farm equipment dealers that have been licensed to use the Manufacturersâ trademarks to identify their dealerships. Based on such authority, the Manufacturers assert that Senate Bill 2289 is preempted by the Lanham Act because it deprives the Manufacturers of their right to control the appearance, performance, level of service, and other aspects of North Dakota farm equipment dealerships identified with their trademarks.
The legal team representing the Manufacturers in North Dakota is led by Michael J. Lockerby, a partner in the Washington, D.C. office of Âé¶čŽ«Ăœ who is national co-chair of the firmâs Distribution & Franchise Practice Group, and Benjamin R. Dryden, senior counsel, who is also resident in Âé¶čŽ«Ăœâs Washington, D.C. office. Other members of the Âé¶čŽ«Ăœ team include associate Connor A. Sabatino in Âé¶čŽ«Ăœâs office in Madison, Wisconsin and associates Lauren A. Champaign, and Jarren Ginsburg in the Washington, D.C. office. The firmâs co-counsel in Bismarck is Timothy Q. Purdon, former U.S. Attorney for the District of North Dakota.
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1 The individual manufactures named as plaintiffs are AGCO Corporation, CNH Industrial America LLC (the manufacturer of Case IH and New Holland agricultural equipment), Deere & Company (a/k/a John Deere), and Kubota Tractor Corporation.
2 The Complaint and other court papers in the case of Association of Equipment Manufacturers, et al. v. Burgum, et al., Case 1:17-cv-00151-DLH-CSM, are posted on the Distribution & Franchise Practice Group website here.
3 A copy of the Complaint is available at /files/uploads/Distribution%20&%20Franchise/2017.07.24%20[001]%20Complaint.pdf.
4 These provisions of Senate Bill 2289 are referred to in the Complaint as the âNo Exclusivity Requirements,â âNo Minimum Inventory or Order Requirements,â and âNo Required Separation of Trademarksâ Provisions.