Eggleston v. Humble Pipe Line Company

482 S.W.2d 909, 1972 Tex. App. LEXIS 2153
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 14, 1972
Docket501
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 482 S.W.2d 909 (Eggleston v. Humble Pipe Line Company) 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
Eggleston v. Humble Pipe Line Company, 482 S.W.2d 909, 1972 Tex. App. LEXIS 2153 (Tex. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinions

SAM D. JOHNSON, Justice.

Jack Eggleston, as successor to Vapor Honing Company, Inc., brought this suit [912]*912seeking damages on the theories of breach of contract or quantum meruit, and exemplary damages and attorney’s fees. Defendants in the trial court were Humble Pipe Line Company and its inspector, F. S. Parsons. A take nothing judgment was rendered as to both defendants and Eggle-ston, as appellant, now complains only of Humble Pipe Line’s exoneration.

In March of 1961 appellant Vapor Honing, as lowest bidder, was awarded a contract by Humble Pipe Line to sandblast and apply a protective coating to nineteen storage tanks located at its Satsuma, Sugarland and Webster tank farms. Work on nine of the tanks was to be performed on a contract or turn-key basis. Work on the balance of the tanks was to be performed on a time and material or force account basis. This suit focuses upon the contract or turnkey portion of the agreement between the parties. Under the contract Humble’s inspector Parsons was clothed with rather broad authority, a part of which was the right to inspect the appellant’s equipment and to approve all blasting and the thickness of the coats applied to the tanks.

It was Vapor Honing’s contention in the trial court that Parsons, from the inception of the contract, commenced a course of interference, harassment, arbitrary rejection of work and other capricious action which was calculated to — and did — make it impossible to complete the work. Vapor Honing contended that Parsons virtually took over the entire operation and ultimately forced Vapor Honing to terminate its endeavor.

Appellant commenced operations on the job March 30, 1961, beginning at the Satsuma farm. Work soon fell behind schedule and on May 13, 1961, a meeting was held which was attended by Vapor Honing officials, Parsons, and two Humble Pipe Line officials. At this meeting a new job superintendent designated by Parsons was chosen from among the workmen and installed. This individual and others subsequently hired were usual employees of Vapor Honing’s chief competitor. The work continued to progress badly. When Vapor Honing’s former superintendent later came to the Webster jobsite, there is evidence that Parsons, on July 15, 1961, ordered Vapor Honing’s men and equipment off the job, saying that the contract was cancelled. On the following day appellant began moving off its equipment. The parties’ working association culminated when Parsons and his superior, W. D. Price, met with Vapor Honing officials in Vapor Honing’s office to discuss the various difficulties which had arisen. At that meeting it was agreed that Vapor Honing would discontinue the contract and accept 15% of the contract price for work then completed at the Webster farm. Price testified that George Moss, general manager and vice-president of Vapor Honing, agreed to give Humble Pipe Line a letter indicating that Vapor Honing was “giving up” the contract.

On Monday or Tuesday of the following week Price called Moss in regard to the letter Moss was to give to Humble. The letter from Moss bearing a date of July 18, 1961, was sent to' Humble Pipe Line. In a subsequent call Price informed Moss that Humble Pipe Line would require a similar letter from Vapor Honing’s chief executive officer. Still another individual representing Humble Pipe Line called Jack Eggleston, Vapor Honing’s president and principal stockholder, regarding the additional letter. Some two to three weeks after Moss’s letter Eggleston sent Humble Pipe Line a letter identical to Moss’s. Both letters stated as follows:

“Gentlemen:
Our Company has contracted to perform certain work for you which is fully described and set out in the contract which you have styled ETA-8.
We have pursued this contract diligently thus far, although in our performance, we have incurred a very substantial loss.
In conference on Saturday, July 15, 1961, your Mr. W. D. Price and Mr. F. S. Parsons suggested that we surrender the [913]*913unfulfilled portion of this contract and accept 15% of the contract price for the work completed as of July 15th on Tank No. 118 at Webster.
This letter is to advise you that we concur with their request and suggestion. Please be advised, therefore, that we are hereby surrendering Contract No. ETA-8 without additional penalty other than that which may be incurred by our accepting 15% completion on Tank No. 118.
We regret our inability to consummate this work on an economically sound basis.”

A few days after the events of July 15 appellant Jack Eggleston and George Moss met with the president of Humble Pipe Line, W. S. Spangler, to voice complaints as to Vapor Honing’s treatment at the hands of Humble Pipe Line. Spangler ordered an investigation. A second meeting was held approximately a week after the first. In early August, 1961, a third meeting was held at which Humble Pipe Line was represented by W. A. Castille, vice-president of operations. At this meeting Humble Pipe Line expressed its satisfaction with the performance by Humble Pipe Line personnel and declined to pay approximately $10,000 in retainage.

Mounting costs, enforcement of a federal tax lien and foreclosure on promissory notes given for loans to meet payrolls ultimately proved too burdensome and Vapor Honing went bankrupt within a few months of termination of the Humble Pipe Line contract.

This suit was filed in March, 1965. Plaintiff’s case focused upon alleged harassment and interference with its enterprise by Humble Pipe Line’s employee Parsons, which conduct Humble Pipe Line allegedly ratified, and Humble Pipe Line’s takeover of Vapor Honing’s labor, materials and equipment on the job. On these bases plaintiff alleged a right to recover damages for breach of contract, in quantum meruit and punitive damages. Defendant Humble Pipe Line responded with the defenses of rescission, abandonment of the contract, payment, accord and satisfaction, and estoppel, most of which were based upon the letter sent by Eggleston to Humble Pipe Line. Plaintiff countered with the contention that Eggleston’s letter was the product of duress.

In reply to special issues the jury found, inter alia, that Parsons had interfered with Vapor Honing’s work, proximately causing damage to Vapor Honing; that Humble Pipe Line ratified such conduct although Parsons’ conduct was beyond the course and scope of his duties; that Humble Pipe Line, after May 17, 1961, took over Vapor Honing’s men, materials and equipment, for which reasonable compensation would be $46,016; that in view of Humble Pipe Line’s ratification of Parsons’ conduct, exemplary damages in the sum of $500,000 were justified; that recovery of $45,000 as attorney’s fees on the basis of the quantum meruit plea was proper; that Vapor Honing did rescind the contract; that Vapor Honing did not abandon the contract; that Humble Pipe Line still owed certain sums under the contract but that Vapor Honing had agreed to accept a lesser sum in satisfaction of its rights pertaining to the contract; that Vapor Honing had represented that it was surrendering its rights, and that Humble Pipe Line had relied upon that representation and but for that reliance would not have contracted with a third party for completion of the job at Webster. The jury failed to find that Humble Pipe Line’s recontracting was a detriment to it, but did find that Vapor Honing had acted under duress when Eggleston’s letter of July 18, 1961, was signed.

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482 S.W.2d 909, 1972 Tex. App. LEXIS 2153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eggleston-v-humble-pipe-line-company-texapp-1972.