Alabama Great Southern R. Co. v. McVay
This text of 381 So. 2d 607 (Alabama Great Southern R. Co. v. McVay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
ALABAMA GREAT SOUTHERN RAILROAD COMPANY and the Southern Railway Company
v.
Burl H. McVAY, d/b/a McVay Oil Company.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*608 Roberts & Easterling, M.M. Roberts, Hattiesburg, for defendants-appellants.
Zachary & Gillespie, Dave A. Matison, III, Hattiesburg, for plaintiff-appellee.
Before PATTERSON, C.J., and BROOM and COFER, JJ.
PATTERSON, Chief Justice, for the Court:
Burl McVay obtained a verdict in the Circuit Court of Forrest County for $9,196.86 against the Alabama Great Southern Railroad Company and the Southern Railway Company for diesel fuel he had delivered to them. The Court entered a $9,196.86 judgment for McVay. However, when Southern thereafter moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, the court, upon reconsidering its previous denial of a peremptory instruction in favor of McVay, entered on its own motion a reduced judgment of $8,916.04 for McVay.
The railroad companies (hereinafter Southern) appeal, contending (1) there was no enforceable contract between Southern and McVay, (2) Southern purchased in good faith from Bonanza Oil Company, not McVay, (3) McVay's conduct estops him to deny that he was an agent of Bonanza, and (4) various procedural errors vitiate the judgment. We reverse and remand to the Chancery Court of Forrest County.
The scarcity of fuel resulting from the OPEC cartel embargo prompted Southern to seek additional sources of diesel fuel to augment supplies under long-term contracts with large oil companies. Neil Coggins, the assistant vice-president for Southern in Washington, received a letter from Bonanza Oil Company of Mobile, Alabama suggesting the availability of diesel fuel. Coggins flew to Mobile to discuss the matter with one Whitehead who had contacted him on behalf of Bonanza. He concluded that Bonanza Oil Company was credible inasmuch as Whitehead had assured him "eyeball to eyeball that he knew the market place." Coggins agreed that Southern would purchase a large quantity of diesel fuel with *609 Whitehead of Bonanza acting "kind of like a broker" for supply.
Thereafter, Southern purchased approximately 2,000,000 gallons of diesel fuel from Bonanza in two transactions, approximately 300,000 gallons of which were to be delivered in Mississippi, a state in which Bonanza had no tax number. Coggins indicated he neither knew the significance of the tax number nor whether Bonanza had one, testifying he was satisfied with Whitehead's assurances and what he described as the "good price" asked by Bonanza. (Bonanza's price, 27 1/2¢ per gallon, did not exceed that charged by Southern's major oil suppliers on long-term contracts for delivery of 100,000,000 gallons or more per year, fifty times the quantity to be supplied by Bonanza on "spot transactions" negotiated during the oil embargo.)
Unfortunately, Bonanza went out of business, Whitehead went to jail, and McVay, who delivered 28,082 gallons of fuel to Southern, met its defense that it had paid Bonanza $7,722.55 for the same oil and would not pay again. McVay spoke with Whitehead only twice, each time by telephone. The first conversation was on December 16, 1974, when Whitehead contacted McVay and indicated Southern needed diesel fuel at its Meridian yard. McVay did not commit himself to deliver the fuel and upon investigating Bonanza discovered it had no Mississippi tax number or permit. McVay then called Whitehead and declined to deal with him, giving as his reason the "unacceptable price" asked and the lack of a Bonanza tax number in this state. McVay explained the absence of a tax number required a higher price to be charged to an unbonded out-of-state distributor.
Through these conversations McVay undoubtedly discovered that Bonanza had some arrangement with Southern to supply it with fuel, but nothing indicates he knew the aggregate needed in Meridian for December delivery. The quantity delivered does not appear in Southern's purchase order to Bonanza, nor in any writing prior to December 19, 1974.
Aware of the need and unwilling to do business with Bonanza, McVay delivered 28,082 gallons of diesel fuel to Southern in Meridian without contacting Southern. Remarkably, no evidence indicates whether this unarranged delivery by McVay would have been considered unorthodox among fuel jobbers during the 1974 fuel crunch.
McVay's driver tendered a delivery ticket to Southern concurrent with the delivery.[1] It bears the name "McVay Oil Company" and is dated December 19, 1974, with an acknowledgment of delivery by Southern through S.P. Hicks, Jr. and Johnny Brown. Hicks, foreman of car repairs for Southern at Meridian, described himself as their "number one man" in the area, and Johnny Brown appears to be their storehouse clerk in that city. Above Brown's signature on the ticket there is written "Southern Railroad Company reg. mat. mgr." (regional material manager). Brown described his duties, saying, "I'm the one that's more or less in charge of shipping and receiving... ." He explained he used the Southern material manager stamp frequently and forwarded stamped documents to Southern's Birmingham, Alabama office.
McVay testified he mailed an "extended invoice"[2] to the Southern Railroad yard, 38th Avenue and Railroad Street, Meridian, Mississippi, on December 19, 1974. The invoice added the price to the bare quantity exhibited on the delivery ticket previously tendered to Southern agents. Identical to the original ticket except for the added figures, it was composed upon one of the copies obtained by McVay following delivery of the fuel.
*610 Apparently, the extended invoice never reached Southern although it was correctly addressed to Southern's Meridian yard where it had done business for seventy-five years. It seems the "extended invoice" may have gone undelivered because Southern's post office box number was not included. The evidence is uncontradicted that the invoice was mailed by McVay as it is also uncontradicted by Southern's agents that it was never received. Be this as it may, McVay testified he for several days did nothing further toward renewing his demand, because he didn't expect payment until some thirty days or so after delivery. He added that before sending a letter of January 29[3], which Coggins construed as a demand for payment, he spoke with Hicks, asking why payment had not been made and then referred to Brown, who referred him to Sitton, another Southern agent, who acknowledged "somebody ought to pay" and promised to get back in touch with him. However, Sitton died before he did so, and eventually McVay was referred to Coggins.
In the course of these events, McVay learned the post office box number of Southern's Meridian yard and mailed his letter of January 29 to that address. After it was received, he again talked with Southern representatives. Coggins then learned of McVay's plight and assured him that he would intercede on his behalf in an attempt to persuade Bonanza to make payment. McVay however, sought more than intercession, claiming then as now, without contradiction, that he never became an agent for Bonanza, because he had declined to engage in the oil transaction with it.
Southern defended against McVay's suit by introducing a copy of the Bonanza invoice[4] of December 20, 1974, to Southern which refers to the fuel delivered on December 19, 1974, including the exact quantity and delivery ticket number.
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381 So. 2d 607, 29 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 767, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alabama-great-southern-r-co-v-mcvay-miss-1980.