American Commercial Lines, LL v. The Lubrizol Corporation

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 25, 2016
Docket15-3242
StatusPublished

This text of American Commercial Lines, LL v. The Lubrizol Corporation (American Commercial Lines, LL v. The Lubrizol Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Commercial Lines, LL v. The Lubrizol Corporation, (7th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 15‐3242 AMERICAN COMMERCIAL LINES, LLC, Plaintiff‐Appellant,

v.

THE LUBRIZOL CORP., Defendant‐Appellee. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, New Albany Division. No. 12 C 135 — Sarah Evans Barker, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED FEBRUARY 26, 2016 — DECIDED MARCH 25, 2016 ____________________ Before POSNER, FLAUM, and EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judges. POSNER, Circuit Judge. The plaintiff and appellant in this commercial suit, American Commercial Lines (ACL), manu‐ factures and operates tow boats and barges that ply the na‐ tion’s inland waterways. The defendant, Lubrizol, manufac‐ tures industrial lubricants and additives, including a diesel‐ fuel additive that it calls LZ8411A. A company named VCS Chemical Corp. distributed the additive, and Lubrizol and VCS jointly persuaded ACL to buy it from VCS. Before de‐ 2 No. 15‐3242

livery began, however, Lubrizol terminated VCS as a dis‐ tributor because of suspicion that it was engaging in unethi‐ cal conduct—one of Lubrizol’s employees had failed to dis‐ close to his employer that he was also a principal of VCS. But Lubrizol did not inform ACL that VCS was no longer its distributor. No longer able to supply ACL with LZ8411A, VCS sub‐ stituted an additive that ACL contends is inferior to LZ8411A. At least some of this other additive (which both Lubrizol and ACL call the “Counterfeit Additive”) was pro‐ duced by Afton Chemical Corp. VCS didn’t inform ACL of the substitution. According to ACL’s complaint, Lubrizol learned of the substitution too but also didn’t inform ACL, which when it discovered the substitution brought the pre‐ sent suit—a diversity suit alleging a variety of violations of Indiana common law—against VCS, VCS’s principal owner (who is also its CEO), and Lubrizol. ACL settled with VCS and its owner, leaving Lubrizol as the only defendant. The district judge dismissed part of the remaining suit on Lubri‐ zol’s motion to dismiss and the rest on its motion for sum‐ mary judgment. VCS is a small company, which is probably why ACL wasn’t content with the size of the settlement with it and so has persisted in suing Lubrizol, making multiple claims. One is that VCS was an agent, and alternatively an apparent agent, of Lubrizol, see Gallant Ins. Co. v. Isaac, 751 N.E.2d 672, 675–77 (Ind. 2001); Leon v. Caterpillar Industrial, Inc., 69 F.3d 1326, 1336–37 (7th Cir. 1995) (Indiana law), and so VCS’s substitution of the inferior additive should be imput‐ ed to Lubrizol as VCS’s principal, making Lubrizol liable for VCS’s fraud and breach of contract. ACL further argues that No. 15‐3242 3

Lubrizol had, and broke, a contract with VCS to supply LZ8411A to ACL, and that ACL was a third‐party benefi‐ ciary of the contract. Another claim is that Lubrizol had a quasi‐contract with ACL stemming from earlier work the two firms had done jointly in testing the quality of the LZ8411A additive and its suitability for ACL’s needs. Still another charge made in the complaint is that Lubrizol was guilty of constructive fraud because it had breached a duty to notify ACL of the break with VCS and the substitution of the inferior additive, and alternatively that Lubrizol commit‐ ted “civil deception” by not notifying ACL. But at least ACL has abandoned an absurd claim of tortious interference with contract; it had claimed that Lubrizol’s decision to terminate VCS as a distributor of Lubrizol products and thus cause VCS to breach its contracts with ACL had been motivated by “disinterested malevolence” toward ACL, “meaning that … the defendant’s conduct was not only harmful, but done with the sole intent to harm.” Twin Laboratories, Inc. v. Weider Health & Fitness, 900 F.2d 566, 571 (2d Cir. 1990) (New York law). A manufacturer has no duty at common law to protect the customers of its distributors from misconduct by a dis‐ tributor. ACL could have asked Lubrizol, which it knew to be VCS’s supplier, for a contractual guaranty against VCS’s failing to perform its contract with ACL. It didn’t ask for a guaranty, apparently trusting VCS. ACL is not some helpless consumer, at the mercy of the companies it does business with; its estimated value in 2010 was $800 million. See Plati‐ num Equity, “American Commercial Lines,” www.platin umequity.com/american_commercial_lines (visited March 24, 2016). ACL argues that by helping VCS land the LZ8411A contract with it, Lubrizol became a de facto party to the con‐ 4 No. 15‐3242

tract. But that would imply that a real estate agent who suc‐ cessfully brokers the sale of a house thereby becomes a seller of the house along with its client, the owner. It was natural for ACL, before deciding to buy LZ8411A from VCS, to con‐ sult the manufacturer of the additive (Lubrizol), who would be able to give more authoritative answers to questions about its quality and its suitability for use in ACL’s tow boats than a distributor could give. That consultation did not create a contract between Lubrizol and ACL. Although as the ultimate consumer ACL could expect to benefit from Lubrizol’s sale of the additive to its distributor, that expectation did not make ACL a third‐party beneficiary of the contract between VCS and Lubrizol. More was re‐ quired. See, e.g., Luhnow v. Horn, 760 N.E.2d 621, 628–29 (Ind. App. 2001). Otherwise a consumer would be a third‐ party beneficiary of any sales contract between a supplier of a good and a distributor of the good to the consumer. Nor was VCS, by virtue of being a distributor of Lubri‐ zol’s product, an agent of Lubrizol. “Every bar which adver‐ tises that they sell a particular brand of beer is not the agent of the brewery whose name they advertise.” Leon v. Caterpil‐ lar Industrial, Inc., supra, 69 F.3d at 1336. A distributor buys from his supplier and resells; an agent works on behalf of a principal and if he acts within the actual or apparent scope of the agency binds the principal. If you hire a real estate broker to sell your house, authorizing him to sell it for no less than a price you specify, and he complies with your di‐ rections, you are bound by the sale. Likewise if you said something to a prospective buyer of property from you that was likely to convince him that you had authorized a real estate broker to make the sale, you’d be bound even if you No. 15‐3242 5

hadn’t actually intended to sell the property. It would be a case of “apparent agency”—you had created the appearance that the broker was your agent, and that made him your agent in the eyes of the law. There is nothing like that in this case, any more than there was in Leon v. Caterpillar Industrial, Inc., supra, 69 F.3d at 1333–37, which held that a manufacturer was not liable on grounds of either actual or apparent agency despite having actively promoted its distributor to the distributor’s custom‐ ers. The harm of which ACL complains began when VCS substituted the inferior additive, and no one suggests that by doing that VCS was benefiting Lubrizol or acting at its direc‐ tion—Lubrizol had severed its relations with VCS. ACL claims that Lubrizol held VCS out as its agent, but apparent‐ agency claims turn on what the alleged principal told the third party, and ACL has disclosed no statement by Lubrizol to it that made VCS out to be more than a distributor.

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American Commercial Lines, LL v. The Lubrizol Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-commercial-lines-ll-v-the-lubrizol-corporation-ca7-2016.