This сase arises from the district court’s denial of a motion by Tropicana Products Sales, Inc. (“Tropicana”), for a preliminary injunction enjoining Phillips Brokerаge Co. (“Phillips”) from representing the products of Dole Packaged Foods Co. (“Dole”) based on Phillips’ alleged breach of an exclusive distribution contrаct. We dismiss the appeal as moot.
*1582 I. FACTS
Phillips distributes various products to Alabama supermarkets, including A-l Steak Sauce, Ortega Mexican food, Welch's juices, V-8 juices, and Tropicana juices. In 1986, Tropicana and Phillips signed a distributorship contract that provided in part:
[Phillips] agrees it shall not represent directly or indirectly, or have any interest in, any entity which represents any products which compete with or are substitutes for [Tropicana’s] Products. Products which compete with or are substitutes for the Products include but are not limited to, all 100% juice products whether frozen, ready to serve or in any other form, and any other products generally recognized by consumers to be alternatives to the Products.
The contract also provided that Phillips could be discharged without notiсe for breaching the agreement. The parties agreed that Phillips “shall not, directly or indirectly, in any form whatsoever, represent any products which cоmpete with or are substitutes for the [Tropicana] Products for a ninety-day period commencing on the date [Phillips] is discharged.”
On November 15,1988, Phillips agreed tо represent Dole juice products. Tropicana considered this a breach of the agreement. On December 20, 1988, Tropicana brought this actiоn seeking to enjoin Phillips’ representation of Dole until February 13, 1989. 1 Dole was allowed to intervene. The district court heard testimony and arguments of counsel on December 30, and ruled against Tropicana from the bench at the end of the hearing.
II. DISCUSSION
Tropicana’s Complaint for Injunctive Relief “seeks to enjoin dеfendant, Phillips, from promoting or representing any products which compete with or constitute a substitute for plaintiff’s products for a limited period commencing December 22, 1988 and ending February 13, 1989” (emphasis added). 2 The only issue litigated below was Tropicana’s motion for a preliminary injunction to expire on February 13. Phillips and Dole аrgue that because this appeal was heard on March 21, 1989, more than five weeks after the end-date of the requested injunction, this appeal is moot.
Article III of the Constitution requires that a federal court decide only a dispute which constitutes a “Case or Controversy.” This Court has recognized that “[a] case is moot when the issues are no longer ‘live’ or when the parties have no ‘legally cognizable interest’ in the outcome of the litigation.”
Westmoreland v. National Trans. Safety Bd.,
Tropicana argues that the appeal is not moot because effective relief could be granted by this Cоurt. In support it submits the Florida case of
Xerographies, Inc.
*1583
v. Thomas,
As in
Xerographies,
this Court has been willing after a trial on the merits to extend injunctive relief beyond the period of time which might be established under the literal terms of a disputed contract. In
Premier Indus. Corp. v. Texas Indus. Fastener Co.,
Tropicana tries to shoehorn this case into the “capable of repetition and yet evading review” exception to the mootness doctrine.
See Nebraska Press Ass’n v. Stuart,
III. CONCLUSION
While noting we take no position on the merits of Tropicana’s case, for the foregoing reasons we must DISMISS this appeal as moot.
Notes
. February 13, 1989, is 90 days after Phillips’ November 15, 1988, breach of the contract. The contract provided that Phillips need refrain only for 90 days after termination from representing competing products.
. The complaint also asks that Phillips be enjoined from disclosing confidential information. Phillips agreed not to disclose any of Tropicana's proprietary information to Dole, so that issue was not litigated. The complaint does not seek money damages or a permanent injunction, although it does ask the сourt to "grant such further and additional relief as this Court deems just and meet in the premises.”
. Although Florida law does not control the federal constitutional question of mootness, Tropicana asserts that Florida law grants it a substantive right to relief which presents a “live” controversy to this Court.
. Tropicana did not ask for a 90-day preliminary injunction; it asked for a preliminary injunction to end February 13, 1989.
