Colorado County Oil Company, Inc., Day & Night, Inc., and SNP Business, Inc. v. Star Tex Distributors, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 10, 2016
Docket14-14-00905-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Colorado County Oil Company, Inc., Day & Night, Inc., and SNP Business, Inc. v. Star Tex Distributors, Inc. (Colorado County Oil Company, Inc., Day & Night, Inc., and SNP Business, Inc. v. Star Tex Distributors, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colorado County Oil Company, Inc., Day & Night, Inc., and SNP Business, Inc. v. Star Tex Distributors, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed May 10, 2016.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-14-00905-CV

COLORADO COUNTY OIL COMPANY, INC., DAY & NIGHT, INC., AND SNP BUSINESS, INC., Appellants V.

STAR TEX DISTRIBUTORS, INC., Appellee

On Appeal from the 281st District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 2012-43621

MEMORANDUM OPINION Day & Night, Inc., SNP Business, Inc., and Colorado County Oil Company, Inc. appeal from a final judgment awarding damages to Star Tex Distributors, Inc. in connection with a commercial dispute involving gasoline sales to a convenience store. We affirm the trial court’s judgment. BACKGROUND

Star Tex and Colorado County are competing “jobbers” that distribute gasoline. Both purchase gasoline from refiners for sale to gas stations and convenience stores; these retailers resell the gasoline to motorists under various brand names including Shell, Citgo, Valero, and Chevron. Star Tex contends it had an exclusive contract in place to supply gasoline from April 2011 through April 2012 to a Houston convenience store located at 10103 Bammel North Houston Road. Colorado County contends it had the contractual right to supply gasoline at the same location after the convenience store voluntarily switched distributors.

I. The Star Tex Contract

Star Tex supplied gasoline to the convenience store from April 2001 until May 2011. Star Tex entered a Dealer Franchise Agreement for this location with Day & Night on November 20, 2000. Day & Night owned the convenience store and the real property on which the store was located.

Pursuant to the Dealer Franchise Agreement, Star Tex agreed to sell and Day & Night as “Dealer” agreed to buy 60,000 gallons of Citgo-branded gasoline per month for 10 years. The agreement became effective in April 2001 when Day & Night began retail sales of gasoline supplied by Star Tex. After the initial 10-year term, the contract automatically renewed on a year-to-year basis unless terminated.

Under “DUTIES AND OBLIGATIONS OF DEALER,” paragraph 3(H)(14) of the agreement states as follows: “Dealer agrees to purchase all gasoline and diesel fuel from Star Tex for the term of this Agreement.” Paragraph 18, entitled “AMENDMENT,” states as follows: “This Agreement can only be amended by an agreement in writing which is [signed] . . . by both parties.” Paragraph 21, entitled

2 “BINDING EFFECT,” states as follows: “This Agreement extend[s] to any party buying, purchasing, leasing, renting or otherwise having control of the branded outlet so long as this Agreement is in effect.”

Day & Night’s president, Nizar Ali, signed the agreement. The convenience store’s operations were managed from 2001 until 2009 by Nizar Ali’s cousin, Shokat Ali, who was a Day & Night employee.1 Shokat Ali created and became president of a separate entity, SNP, in 2009. According to Shokat Ali, Day & Night leased the convenience store to SNP on May 1, 2009, while continuing to own the real property.

Shokat Ali purchased Nizar Ali’s shares of Day & Night in 2011 and became that entity’s president, secretary, and director. Shokat Ali testified that he became responsible for Day & Night’s liabilities and contracts based on this transaction. Shokat Ali simultaneously served as SNP’s president. Both entities operated the convenience store under the d/b/a “Dee Best.” Star Tex Vice President Feroz Momin testified that Star Tex did not learn of SNP’s creation, the 2009 SNP lease, or Shokat Ali’s 2011 purchase of Day & Night’s shares until after litigation began.

According to Momin, Star Tex dealt primarily with Shokat Ali; Momin thought Shokat Ali was Nizar Ali’s partner in the convenience store. Shokat Ali characterized his cousin Nizar Ali as an absentee landlord.

The Dealer Franchise Agreement specified that Star Tex would provide Citgo-branded gasoline to Day & Night, but Star Tex did not do so. A December 8, 2000 letter from Momin to Nizar Ali states as follows: “As per our telephone conversation, we are going to brand your location to Phillips, instead of Citgo.

1 His name appears in the record as both “Shokat” and “Shoukat.”

3 Agreement we have [signed] dated November 20, 2000 will remain the same; however effective date of the agreement may change to somewhere March or April 2001 or upon completion of Phillips Branding.” Nizar Ali testified that he never received this letter.

Momin testified that Nizar Ali asked to switch to Phillips-branded gasoline within two or three weeks after signing the Dealer Franchise Agreement, and Star Tex complied with his request. Nizar Ali testified that Star Tex initiated the brand change to Phillips without his request or agreement. According to Nizar Ali, he acquiesced only because the brand change was announced shortly before the convenience store was to begin operations and he wanted to avoid delay; furthermore, Nizar Ali testified that Star Tex said the brand would be changed to Citgo within two years. On direct examination, Nizar Ali testified that he preferred Citgo to Phillips because “Citgo is a better brand than Phillips.” Nizar Ali was asked this question during cross-examination: “So really at the end of the day, you know, 2004, 2005, 2006, you didn’t really care whether or not it was branded Phillips, Chevron, or Citgo so long as it was making money and sending it over to you; isn’t that right?” He answered: “Right.”

Day & Night never signed a written amendment agreeing to accept Phillips- branded gasoline from Star Tex. After the 2002 merger of Conoco Inc. and Phillips Petroleum Co., Star Tex paid the expenses necessary to change the convenience store’s signage to read “ConocoPhillips.” The convenience store never was branded as a Citgo retail outlet.

Momin testified that Day & Night accepted Star Tex’s gasoline deliveries under the Dealer Franchise Agreement for 10 years without complaint about the brand designation. Shokat Ali testified that Nizar Ali never complained to him about the Phillips branding. Shokat Ali also testified that he encountered repeated

4 problems with Star Tex’s service including overcharges, shorted gasoline deliveries, and deliveries of other gasoline brands at higher prices. Momin testified that he received no complaints from Nizar Ali or Shokat Ali regarding the quality of Star Tex’s services.

Upon completion of the initial 10-year term in April 2011, Star Tex contends the Dealer Franchise Agreement automatically renewed for another year and continued in effect until April 2012. A dispute arose in May 2011 when gasoline purchases from Star Tex ceased and Colorado County began supplying Valero- branded gasoline to the same convenience store location under a different contract.

II. The Colorado County Contract

Colorado County began negotiating with Shokat Ali in December 2010 about switching gasoline distributors and rebranding the convenience store. Colorado County and “SNP Business, Inc., Shoukat Najar Ali, President and d/b/a/ Dee Best Food Mart” entered into a 10-year Branded Supply Contract on January 25, 2011.

The Branded Supply Contract identified Colorado County as “Seller” and SNP as “Buyer.” This contract obligated SNP to buy Valero-branded gasoline from Colorado County for the same convenience store Star Tex had supplied since 2001. Colorado County agreed to pay a $50,000 “signing bonus” to SNP in connection with this contract.

According to Shokat Ali, in January 2011, Nizar Ali told him that no prior gasoline distribution contract was in place for the convenience store. In turn, Shokat Ali testified that he told Star Tex’s representative “this location has no contract.”

Momin visited the convenience story in February 2011 after hearing rumors

5 it was changing gasoline brands.

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Colorado County Oil Company, Inc., Day & Night, Inc., and SNP Business, Inc. v. Star Tex Distributors, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colorado-county-oil-company-inc-day-night-inc-and-snp-business-texapp-2016.