Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Steamboat Springs, a Corporation v. The Coca-Cola Company, a Corporation
This text of 447 F.2d 635 (Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Steamboat Springs, a Corporation v. The Coca-Cola Company, a Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
This damage action for breach of contract was brought by the appellant corporation which held a franchise from the defendant, The Coca-Cola Company. The case was tried to the court which found for the defendant.
On this appeal the plaintiff urges that the evidence does not support the finding of the trial court that there was a mutual cancellation of the bottling contract and the contract covering the purchase and handling of pre-mix Coca-Cola syrup. Plaintiff also argues that the defendant wrongfully breached the contracts by terminating shipments to it of Coca-Cola syrup.
The record shows that plaintiff and its predecessor for many years had operated a bottling plant for soft drinks at Steamboat Springs, Colorado. It held an exclusive franchise to bottle and distribute Coca-Cola in certain counties in Colorado, and to distribute Coca-Cola in pre-mix vending machines in the same area. Other brands of soft drinks were bottled in its plant, and distributed in the local market area. The president of the corporation at the time in question had been in such capacity since 1960 and he and his family owned all the corporate stock. An expansion of the bottling plant was undertaken in 1960 and financial problems thereupon arose. The records of inspections made by the Quality Control Department of The Coca-Cola Company during the period 1960-1963 showed deficiencies in the bottled product, including foreign material; they also described unsanitary and unsightly conditions in and around the plant.
[637]*637In the summer of 1963 the quality control reports showed no improvement in conditions at the plant or of the product, and by September there was found foreign material in about one-third of the bottled samples examined. The financial problems of plaintiff continued, and the record shows that plaintiff was not paying on a regular basis for syrup purchased from defendant. The account became delinquent, and at least one insufficient fund cheek was sent in payment of the account. On September 17, 1963, the defendant refused to make any further shipments of syrup to plaintiff, and so advised its president. Several discussions were had about the matters over the telephone between plaintiff’s president and the officials of defendant. A meeting was then arranged for October 3,1963.
At the October 3d meeting two representatives of defendant went to Steamboat Springs and met with the president of the plaintiff. At this meeting the quality deficiencies, the delinquent syrup account, and plaintiff’s general financial problems were discussed. They also discussed who would serve the territory if the franchise contracts were terminated. Plaintiff’s president said he would like to see it served by one of his two brothers who had bottling plants in adjoining areas. The representatives of defendant suggested that the franchise contracts be surrendered to them by plaintiff in order that the transfer of the territory to one of the brothers could be facilitated. The president of plaintiff then handed the contracts to the representatives of defendant. The contracts were sent to defendant’s home office, marked “cancelled,” and returned to plaintiff on October 7th. There was no further correspondence about them by either party. Plaintiff’s president testified that he did not intend to cancel the agreements at the October 3d meeting, and there was no such mutual understanding.
The territory of plaintiff was soon after the meeting transferred by defendant to the brother of plaintiff’s president who had a plant at Vernal, Utah. This transferee assumed liability for the unpaid syrup account of plaintiff, and ultimately paid it.
By an entry of October 11, 1963, on the books of plaintiff the unpaid syrup account owing defendant was closed with the notation: “Liability for Coke syrup assumed by Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Vernal, Utah in consideration of transfer of the Coca-Cola Franchise.” At about this same time the plaintiff wrote to defendant about the syrup account indicating that the Vernal company was to pay it.
On the day of the meeting between the parties, after consultation by its president with its attorney, the plaintiff corporation executed conveyances of most of the corporate property to the wife, sons, and daughter of the president. The plaintiff continued to bottle other soft drinks for some eighteen months after the October 3d meeting, but the plant was taken over by creditors under a writ of attachment.
The trial court found that the franchise contracts between the parties were mutually cancelled on October 3, 1963. This finding is supported by the record which shows the discussion about cancellation; about who would serve the territory; about the desire that the Vernal company serve it, and about the physical surrender of the documents with their subsequent return marked “cancelled” without further comment. This was followed by the granting of the territory to the Vernal company, its payment of the delinquent syrup account, and plaintiff’s inaction for an extended period of time. A suit was filed a year later in a Colorado State court, and later dismissed. Thus the record supports the trial court’s finding of mutual termination of the contracts on October 3, 1963. See Glens Falls Ins. Co. v. Newton Lumber & Mfg. Co., 388 F.2d 66 (10th Cir.).
The party asserting mutual termination has the burden of proof in Colorado, Western Air Lines v. Hollen-[638]*638beck, 124 Colo. 130, 235 P.2d 792, and defendant met this burden. The evidence brings the case within Equitable Life Ins. Co. v. Verploeg, 123 Colo. 246, 227 P.2d 333, which recognizes the right to initiate a mutual rescission even wrongfully and holds it to be effective if the other party agrees. See also, Wallick v. Eaton, 110 Colo. 358, 134 P.2d 727.
The plaintiff urges that the contracts had previously been wrongfully breached by defendant on September 17, 1963, when it discontinued shipments of Coca-Cola syrup to plaintiff. As to this point the trial court found that this action by defendant did not give rise to any liability; that the termination of shipments was by reason of plaintiff’s failure to pay its syrup account which was then delinquent. The record also supports this finding. The testimony of the witnesses for defendant was that shipments were stopped by reason of the failure to meet the sanitary or quality standards and also by reason of the delinquent account. We hold that the trial court’s conclusion was correct that shipments could be stopped when the account was past due.
The contract contained no particular provision for a remedy if the syrup account was unpaid. Nor did it say when the syrup was to be paid for other than by cash or bill of lading attached. The termination provision was a general one providing for thirty and sixty day notices of breach of contract. The trial court’s conclusion of law that the shipments were stopped for non-payment, and by inference could properly be so stopped, is in accordance with the authorities from other jurisdictions. These hold that this is an available remedy which may be used by the vendor under such circumstances. There appear to be no Colorado authorities in point, and we hold that the trial court’s determination of State law on this subject is well within the general authorities and not clearly erroneous.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
447 F.2d 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coca-cola-bottling-company-of-steamboat-springs-a-corporation-v-the-ca10-1971.