Gender Machine Works, Inc. v. Eidal International Sales Corp.

929 P.2d 1033, 145 Or. App. 198, 1996 Ore. App. LEXIS 1883
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 11, 1996
Docket9210-07025 and 9212-08741; CA A87470
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 929 P.2d 1033 (Gender Machine Works, Inc. v. Eidal International Sales Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gender Machine Works, Inc. v. Eidal International Sales Corp., 929 P.2d 1033, 145 Or. App. 198, 1996 Ore. App. LEXIS 1883 (Or. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

HASELTON, J.

Defendant Archer Daniels Midland Company (ADM) appeals a summary judgment in favor of plaintiff Gender Machine Works (Gender) in an action for breach of contract. Gender cross-appeals from those aspects of the judgment that reduced its recovery through various offsets. We affirm on the appeal and affirm in part and reverse in part on the cross-appeal.

This case arises from ADM’s purchase of an industrial shredding machine and its alleged erroneous or misdirected payment for that machine. There are three “players”: plaintiff Gender, which was primarily responsible for building the shredder; defendant ADM, the purchaser; and Eidal International Sales Corporation (Eidal), which performed some work on the shredder and sold the shredder.1

For the most part, the facts are not in dispute: In late 1991, ADM contacted Eidal about buying a shredder to shred scrap tires for use as fuel at a cogeneration plant at one of ADM’s manufacturing facilities. ADM had previously purchased such shredders from Eidal. After some negotiation and discussion, on March 12,1992, Eidal sent ADM a written offer to sell ADM an Eidal 96-58E shredder for $225,000. Eidal’s offer asked ADM to submit a written purchase order for the machine. On March 13, Ron Peterson, an ADM representative, called Eidal and accepted Eidal’s offer orally. On April 2, ADM submitted the requested purchase-order to Eidal; that purchase order, No. B89-109200083-RP identified Eidal as the vendor. Some time before April 2, and without ADM’s knowledge, Eidal and Gender entered into an agreement whereby Gender would complete most of the work on the shredder and would receive the full $225,000 purchase price for its work.2

[202]*202On April 3, Eidal faxed ADM the letter that is the focus of the dispute in this case. That letter, addressed to Peterson, read as follows:

“Eidal’s joint venture manufacturing partner, Gender Machine is processing a substantial amount of work on this project (Purchase Order B89109200083RP) and this letter is sent to your group informing you that they are authorized by Eidal to submit an invoice with Eidal allowing them to collect the sum of $225,000.00 for work performed by their group on this project.
“Eidal and Gender will invoice jointly with one invoice with payment to be made by ADM in both Gender’s and Eidal’s names.
“Due to our financing needs, we are requesting this acknowledgment by your group today so that we can get started on this expedited project. We would like to start today.
“If you have any questions regarding this Invoice Request please contact my office. A verbal confirmation would be fine to expedite matters.
“Acknowledgment of Invoice Conditions outlined above:
“Please sign both copies and retain one for your records.
“Hard copies in mail.”

It is undisputed that, before its receipt of the April 3 letter, ADM had no knowledge of Gender’s involvement in the project.

Peterson signed the April 3 letter and returned it to Eidal. In so doing, he handwrote the following notation on the letter:

“As I understand this you want me to pay one amount of $225,000 for my equipment bought against P.O. #B89-1092-00083R.P. and this check should be payable to Eidal/ Gender.”

On July 3, 1992, the completed shredder was shipped to ADM. On July 6, Eidal sent ADM a standard Eidal [203]*203invoice for $225,000, which did not refer to Gender or to the April 3 letter, and simply referred to customer order number B89-1092-00083RP. Eidal then sent the same invoice to Gender with one significant change: On Gender’s copy of the invoice, Eidal typed, “make check payable to Eidal and Gender Machine.” On August 14, ADM sent Eidal a check for $225,000, made payable to Eidal only. On August 17, Eidal deposited the check into its account.

Shortly after receiving ADM’s check, Eidal issued a back-dated check to Gender for $105,000. Although Gender had been working with Eidal on several projects in addition to the ADM shredder and there were open accounts as to those transactions, Eidal did not specify the account to which the $105,000 payment should be applied. Gender cashed the check. By early September, Gender realized that ADM had sent full payment solely to Eidal, rather than to Eidal and Gender jointly, and that Eidal had not passed the entire amount through to Gender.

In October 1992, Gender brought this action, which ultimately raised claims against ADM, Eidal, Eidal’s principals, Dan and Ursula Burda, and other defendants who are immaterial to this appeal. Gender’s complaint alleged, inter alia, claims for breach of contract and fraud against Eidal and the Burdas3 and breach of contract, including a third-party beneficiary breach of contract claim, against ADM. The thrust of Gender’s contractual claims against ADM was that (1) ADM’s execution of the April 3 letter gave rise to an enforceable contract by which ADM was obligated to issue a single check jointly payable to Gender and Eidal; (2) Gender was either a “first part/’ to that contract or a third-party beneficiary of the contract; (3) ADM breached that contract by issuing the August 13 check to Eidal alone, rather than to Eidal and Gender jointly; and (4) Gender had suffered damages of $225,000 because of that breach. In December 1992, Gender filed a parallel action against various participants in a transaction in which the Boeing Corporation purchased an industrial shredder, produced by Gender, from Eidal. In the [204]*204Boeing litigation, Gender alleged, inter alia, that Boeing had breached a contractual obligation by failing to secure an authorized endorsement on Gender’s behalf of its joint check drawn to Eidal and Gender, and that Gender had suffered damages of $281,917.95 as a result of that breach.4

In November 1994, before the entry of the summary judgment that is the subject of this appeal, Gender settled or obtained default judgments on all claims in this action and the Boeing litigation, except for its claims against ADM. In particular, Gender entered into a settlement with Eidal’s principals, the Burdas, by which the Burdas agreed to pay Gender $51,250 in return for a release of all claims against them, including claims relating to the Boeing shredder.5 Although that settlement, as initially proposed, did not release the Burdas from liability for claims relating to the ADM shredder, the final settlement did effect such a release and was structured so that all of the monies the Burdas paid were attributed to the Boeing litigation and none were attributed to the ADM litigation.6

After the other claims were settled, Gender moved, and ADM cross-moved, for summary judgment. Gender asserted, inter alia, that the April 3 letter, with ADM’s confirmation, gave rise to a “first-party” contract between Gender and ADM and that ADM had breached that contract by sending a single-payee check to Eidal rather than a joint check to Gender and Eidal. Alternatively, Gender asserted a parallel third-party contract theory of recovery.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lee Pacific Properties, Inc. v. Century Pacific Equity Corp.
356 P.3d 1137 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2015)
Blosch v. Natixis Real Estate Capital, Inc.
2013 UT App 214 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
929 P.2d 1033, 145 Or. App. 198, 1996 Ore. App. LEXIS 1883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gender-machine-works-inc-v-eidal-international-sales-corp-orctapp-1996.