Ball v. Associated Oil Co.

50 P.2d 125, 151 Or. 383, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 25
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 50 P.2d 125 (Ball v. Associated Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ball v. Associated Oil Co., 50 P.2d 125, 151 Or. 383, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 25 (Or. 1935).

Opinion

BELT, J.

Plaintiffs, for several years, have owned and operated a gasoline service station at Turner, Oregon. On February 21, 1929, the plaintiffs leased the premises to the defendant Associated Oil Company for a term ending February 20, 1932, which rental was extended, under the right of option invested in the lessee, to February 20, 1934. Under the terms of this lease, the defendant oil company agreed to pay to plaintiffs as rental a sum equal to 3 cents for each gallon of gasoline sold to plaintiffs by defendant during the preceding month. On the same day, the parties entered into a license agreement whereby the defendant oil company, as licensor, granted to the plaintiffs, as licensees, the right to use such property solely for the purpose of reselling therefrom to consumers petroleum products purchased by plaintiffs from the defendant oil company. In this license agreement plaintiffs agreed to pay licensor for all gasoline the licensor’s “posted market price for gasoline (including tax), to consumers generally at place of delivery on the date of delivery (said posted price as of the date hereof *385 being. 19 cents for Associated gasoline and 22 cents for Associated Ethyl gasoline), less Licensor's posted differential to resellers generally at place of delivery on date of delivery (which differential on date hereof is four cents (4c) per gallon), it being agreed that said differential shall be not less than four cents (4c) during the period of this License”.

Plaintiffs allege that, pursuant to the terms of the lease and license agreements, they purchased from the defendant oil company between and including the 1st day of January, 1933, and the 31st day of December, 1933, 20,748 gallons of gasoline and resold the same from said service station and that the defendant oil company has failed and refused to pay the amount due plaintiffs, save and except the sum of $829.92, leaving a balance due and owing in the sum of $622.44.

There is no dispute between the parties as to the execution of the lease and license agreements, nor as to the amount of gasoline which plaintiffs purchased for resale. The controversy arose over a modification agreement alleged to have been executed on May 20, 1929, whereby the plaintiffs, commencing June 1, 1929, agreed to pay the oil company for all gasoline purchased at the “posted tank wagon price (including tax) as posted by the majority of the five principal marketing companies at their principal place of business, covering Gasoline for sale at place of delivery on date of delivery, on which basis as of date hereof you would pay 21 cents per gallon for Associated gasoline and 24 cents per gallon for Associated Ethyl gasoline”, and the defendant oil company, commencing on June 1, 1929, would pay as rental a sum equal to 4 cents for each gallon of gasoline sold by it to plaintiffs for resale from said premises.

Defendant alleges that, during the entire period referred to in plaintiffs’ complaint, it sold gasoline to *386 the plaintiffs on the basis of the posted tank' wagon price as defined in the modification agreement, and that it has paid as rental 4: cents on each gallon' of gasoline purchased by plaintiffs for resale, in accordance with the terms of the modified lease agreement. Hence, defendant avers that plaintiffs have been paid in full.

As a second affirmative defense, defendant, alleges in substance that, during the period in controversy, it paid to plaintiffs rentals in the form of credit allowances deducted from the posted tank wagon price of gasoline, the net resulting price being endorsed on invoices executed by plaintiffs and defendant at the time of delivery and that at said times there was full settlement, accord and satisfaction of all claims now made the basis of plaintiffs ’ action.

Plaintiffs, in their first, further, and separate réply, allege in substance that their signatures to the modification agreement were procured through the fraudulent representations of the defendant that, under the terms thereof, plaintiffs would obtain for the sale of gásoline 8 cents per gallon (4 cents per gallon under the leasing agreement and 4 cents per gallon under the license agreement) instead of 7 cents per gallon previously received under the original lease and license agreements; that these representations were false in that defendant never intended to pay 8 cents and that it in fact, under the pretense that the posted tank wagon price had been raised, reduced the amount which plaintiffs were receiving from 7 cents to 4 cents per gallon.

As a second, further, and separate reply, plaintiffs allege in substance that at the time the modification agreement was presented to plaintiffs it was not signed by the defendant and that it was not to become effective until signed by defendant and one of the triplicate *387 copies thereof returned to plaintiffs; that defendant has at all times refused’ and continues to refuse to sign or'return the alleged modification agreement, for which reason the alleged modification agreement has not become effective notwithstanding plaintiffs’ signatures thereon.

Plaintiffs, for a third and separate reply to the defense of settlement, accord and satisfaction, allege in substance that their signatures to delivery slips for gasoline were obtained as the result of a threat by defendant that, unless - plaintiffs signed the same, it would refuse to deliver any gasoline to plaintiffs and would not permit any other gasoline company to deliver gasoline to them.

On the issues thus briefly stated the cause was submitted to a jury and a verdict returned in favor of plaintiffs in the sum of $622.44. Defendant appeals.

The principal assignment of error is based upon the refusal of the trial court to allow defendant’s motions for nonsuit and directed verdict. Counsel for plaintiffs frankly concede that, if the modification agreement be given force and effect, no cause of action exists. The solution of our problem therefore depends upon the validity or invalidity of this agreement. Plaintiffs challenge it upon two grounds: (1) Fraud, and (2) failure of defendant to sign and deliver copy thereof to plaintiffs, thus rendering it ineffective.

Were plaintiffs induced to sign the modification agreement through the fraudulent representations of the defendant? It is observed that the modification agreement purports to change the rental paid to plaintiffs from a sum equal to 3 cents for every gallon purchased for resale to a sum equal to 4 cents for every gallon so purchased, and the original license agreement *388 was so changed that, instead of having a fonr-cent per gallon differential from the posted market price, plaintiffs were obliged to purchase gasoline at the posted tank wagon price as established by a majority: of..the five principal marketing gasoline companies. In other words, under the modification agreement plaintiffs received as rental an additional sum equal to 1 cent for every gallon of gasoline purchased and, in addition, plaintiffs were granted the right to purchase gasoline at the posted tank wagon price. At the effective date of the modification agreement the market price of Associated gasoline was 25 cents per gallon and the posted tank wagon price, as stated in the instrument itself, was 21 cents per gallon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 P.2d 125, 151 Or. 383, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-v-associated-oil-co-or-1935.