Cooperative Refinery Ass'n v. Consumers Public Power Dist. Consumers Public Power Dist. v. Cooperative Refinery Ass'n

190 F.2d 852
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 7, 1951
Docket14152_1
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 190 F.2d 852 (Cooperative Refinery Ass'n v. Consumers Public Power Dist. Consumers Public Power Dist. v. Cooperative Refinery Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooperative Refinery Ass'n v. Consumers Public Power Dist. Consumers Public Power Dist. v. Cooperative Refinery Ass'n, 190 F.2d 852 (8th Cir. 1951).

Opinion

JOHNSEN, Circuit Judge.

The action is one brought by Consumers Public Power District against Cooperative Refinery Association, to recover damages, *854 under Nebraska law, for breach of a contract to sell fuel oil. On a trial without a jury, the court awarded damages for a part of the contract term but not for the full remaining period covered by the contract. Cooperative has appealed from the recovery allowed against it, and Consumers has cross-appealed from the limiting of its damages to the partial period.

Cooperative’s appeal covers also the trial court’s dismissal of a third-party complaint filed by Cooperative against Terry Carpenter and Hazeldeane Carpenter as indemni-tors of any liability on the part of Cooperative to Consumers. The contract which was the basis of Consumers’ suit against Cooperative had been made between the predecessor of Consumers and a refinery corporation whose capital stock was owned by Terry Carpenter. Cooperative bought all of the capital stock from Carpenter and then had the refinery plant and the other assets of the corporation transferred to itself in a distributive liquidation. Carpenter and his wife had executed an indemnity agreement in favor of Cooperative as to some of the liabilities of the refinery corporation. It was Cooperative’s contention that, if any obligation existed against it by operation of law on Consumers’ contract, such liability was within the protection of the indemnity agreement. In dismissing the third-party complaint, the trial court held that, as to the liability imposed by it upon Cooperative on Consumers’ contract, the indemnitors were entitled to exoneration on principles of estoppel.

The primary question for our consideration is whether Consumers’ contract had been so superseded as to be terminated and, if so, whether in all its rights or in its ex-’ ecutory operation alone, by a subsequent “arrangement” agreed upon between Cooperative and 'Consumers, under which Consumers had thereafter made its purchases of fuel oil from Cooperative during the remaining period covered by the contract on a different basis as to price, billing and discount than was provided in the original contract. The parties are in accord that the subsequent arrangement was a legally separate one from the original contract, so that the issue involved is not one of modification but of co-existence or exclusion.

The original contract was one by which the refinery corporation had agreed to furnish the fuel oil requirements of the electric power plants operated at the time by Consumers’ predecessor in Sidney and Og-allala, Nebraska, at a base price, with adjustment on differential to any increase in the market price of crude oil, for a term of five years from May 4, 1939. Cooperative' acquired the capital stock of the refinery corporation and took over the operation of the refinery plant in December, 1941. In its transaction with Carpenter and in relation to its dissolution of the refinery corporation, Cooperative had refused to make any assumption of the fuel oil contract and had given notice to Consumers’ predecessor that it recognized no obligation on its part as to the contract. It indicated its willingness, however, to sell oil for the power plants on the basis of its own prices and terms.

Consumers’ predecessor had contended that Cooperative owed the obligation of performing the contract, but it entered into negotiation with Cooperative and the parties orally agreed upon a price, billing and discount basis for the current supplying of oil. The dealings of the parties thereafter, in the ordering, supplying and payment for oil, were had under this arrangement, until Cooperative gave notice to Consumers that, as of October 1, 1942, it would no longer supply oil “on the present basis.” The price, billing and discount basis under the arrangement had so operated that Consumers’ predecessor and Consumers had sustained no pecuniary loss during this nine-months period from Cooperative’s refusal to recognize and perform the 1939 contract. The suit therefore does not involve any claim of damages for breach as to this period, nor has Cooperative made any contention that this arrangement had operated to affect the original contract in any way as of that time.

From October, 1942, to May, 1943, without engaging in further negotiation with Cooperative, Consumers, purchased its oil requirements from another refinery, but at a cost to it for the period of $9,672.31 in. *855 excess of what would have been the price under the 1939 contract. It was for breach of the contract as to this period and in this amount that the trial court allowed Consumers a recovery.

In May, 1943, Consumers and Cooperative again entered into negotiation and orally agreed upon an arrangement for a resumption of the supplying of oil to Consumers by Cooperative. Cooperative made confirmation of the price aspect of this arrangement in a letter stating that it would deliver “heavy gas oil” to Consumers on the basis of “the low of ordinary industrial gas oil” plus “.026 freight and differential” per gallon to the Sidney plant and “.029 freight and differential” per gallon to the Ogallala plant. The market “low” as of the date of the letter was set out therein, and the letter further contained a request that “In giving us your orders we would like to have you give them two days in advance for the reason that our trucks might be busy * * Consumers made use of the arrangement and its terms to purchase its oil needs through the remaining period covered by the 1939 contract- — although other sources of supply also were available to it. It made payment to Cooperative for these purchases, in regular course, of the sum of $8,785.16 in excess of what the price would have been under the original contract. The trial court refused to allow a recovery in damages for these excess payments, and it is this denial which is the subject of Consumers’ cross-appeal.

The court rested its denial of such damages upon the ground, not that the original contract had been so superseded by the 1943 arrangement or the performance under it as to leave nothing subject to breach, but that, while the contract should be recognized as having continued in all its rights, the excess paid under the arrangement was in legal effect a voluntary payment by Consumers and that to allow damages therefor would be equivalent to permitting Consumers to recover money voluntarily paid.

It was the court’s view that under Nebraska law no superseding, rescinding or abandoning of the contract could properly be held to have occurred, from the making of the 1943 arrangement or the performance under it, because “there was no meeting of the minds” as to any such object or result, in that Consumers had never, either expressly or by reasonable inference, agreed in fact to a termination or to an abandonment of the contract in any respect. There was a finding to the effect that, although the subsequent arrangement was the product of mutual negotiation and had been utilized by Consumers throughout the remaining year of the contract term, Consumers at all times intended the original contract to remain in force and to require Cooperative to reimburse it for such financial injury as it sustained, both in the purchases earlier made from another refinery and in those made from Cooperative under the 1943 arrangement.

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Bluebook (online)
190 F.2d 852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooperative-refinery-assn-v-consumers-public-power-dist-consumers-public-ca8-1951.