Huber v. Ed Taussig, Inc.

84 So. 2d 806, 228 La. 1018, 1955 La. LEXIS 1449
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 7, 1955
DocketNo. 42391
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 84 So. 2d 806 (Huber v. Ed Taussig, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huber v. Ed Taussig, Inc., 84 So. 2d 806, 228 La. 1018, 1955 La. LEXIS 1449 (La. 1955).

Opinion

SIMON, Justice.

Plaintiffs, Mrs. Susan Huber, Thomas L. Huber, Jr., and Quality Oil Co., Inc., instituted this suit against Ed Taussig and Ed Taussig, Inc., seeking primarily a judgment cancelling and terminating a contract of commercial lease dated June 5, 1946, and to recover damages in favor of Quality Oil Co., Inc., (hereinafter referred to as Qual[1021]*1021ity) resulting from an alleged breach of said lease in the sum of $830 per month beginning November 1, 1950, and ending on the date of final judgment cancelling said lease. In the alternative, should said lease not be cancelled, plaintiffs seek judgment condemning defendant to pay to Quality the sum of $830 per month beginning November 1, 1950 and ending on the date of the final termination of said lease in accordance with its terms and provisions.

Exceptions of no right and no cause of action were filed. Judgment was rendered maintaining said exception and dismissing the suit, for the written reason assigned by the trial judge that “under the provisions of Paragraph 9 of the exclusive purchase agreement Taussig could arbitrarily refuse to accept any other petroleum products from Quality Oil Company in the event its jobber’s contract with Pan-American Petroleum Corporation should be cancelled”.

Plaintiffs appealed from said judgment, and in a reversal thereof we said: that defendants did not have the right to arbitrarily refuse to accept another product but that such refusal must depend upon a bona fide exercise of judgment and not on defendant’s mere pleasure or caprice.1

We further said:

“Defendant may have a good and valid reason for considering the products of Skelly Oil Company unsatisfactory, and he may be fully justified in his refusal to accept these products for sale. If so, his refusal to accept these products would not constitute a breach of the purchase agreement which would entitle plaintiffs to a cancellation of the lease contract. This is a question of fact, however, which will have to be determined on the trial of this case on its merits.”

Accordingly, we remanded the matter to the district court for further proceedings consistent with the views expressed by us.

At a pretrial conference the trial court ruled that plaintiffs would not be permitted to introduce evidence of legal fraud but would be confined to proof warranting the cancellation of the contracts, of their dependency one on the other, of their alleged breach, and of alleged damages resulting from said breach.

The chronological events culminating in this suit are as follows:

On June 5, 1946, Mrs. Susan Huber and Thomas L. Huber, Jr., leased to Ed Taussig property located in Lake Charles, for the purpose of operating an automobile dealership and repair and service station, for a period of six years, beginning November 1, 1946, at a monthly rental of $1,400 for the first five years and $800 per month for the remaining period. It also contained a renewal option for an additional four-year period at a monthly rental of $800. It is also observed that from the year 1926 to 1941 plaintiffs, as owners, used said prop[1023]*1023erty to conduct the business of selling and servicing cars under an exclusive Ford franchise. In 1941 defendant acquired the Ford Company franchise from plaintiffs and leased said property from the Lake Charles Investment Company, Inc., then owned by plaintiffs, at which time defendant had also signed an agreement with Quality, owned by plaintiffs, to buy gasoline, motor oils and related products distributed by Quality under an exclusive sales franchise with Pan-American Petroleum Company (hereinafter referred to as Pan-Am).

On June 25, 1946, defendant entered into an “exclusive purchase agreement” with Quality as part of the consideration for the lease execution by them on June 5, 1946, to purchase exclusively from Quality all gasoline, oil and other petroleum products retailed on the leased premises. Paragraph 9 of this “exclusive purchase agreement” provides:

“It is recognized that the Quality Oil Company has a jobber’s contract with the Pan-Am Petroleum Company and that should the Pan-Am Petroleum Company cancel the contract with the Quality Oil Company and the Quality Oil Company does not secure a jobber’s contract from some major oil company satisfactory to Taussig, in order to carry out the terms of this exclusive sales agreement, then the agreement shall terminate at such time, at the option of Taussig.”

Subsequently the legal status of the parties changed both incorporating their respective businesses, which, however, did ■not affect the lease and purchase agreements heretofore entered into by them.

It appears that though Quality enjoyed an exclusive franchise from Pan-Am for many years prior to the execution of the contracts herein involved, their business relationship lacked harmony, being threatened by personality clashes between T. L. Huber, Jr., and the officials of Pan-Am to such an extent that in 1946 T. L. Huber, Jr., ceased active participation in the affairs of Quality to avoid cancellation by Pan-Am of that exclusive franchise. Albeit, in the summer of 1950, T. L. Huber, Jr., decided to resume active participation in Quality; and, anticipating that his re-entry would incur repercussions on the part of Pan-Am, he proceeded to obtain a franchise or jobber’s agreement with some other oil company which would be satisfactory to Taussig. It is undisputed that Huber, Jr., contacted Cities Service Company, Magnolia Petroleum Company, Texas Company and Continental Oil Company. Apparently none of these oil companies agreed to grant to Quality, acting through Huber, Jr., an exclusive sales franchise. The record further discloses that Taussig was acutely aware of the dissention between Pan-Am and Huber, Jr. His apprehension of the ever-present threat of cancellation by Pan-Am of its exclusive franchise to Quality unquestionably accounts for the inclusion of the conditional option clause con[1025]*1025tained in paragraph 9 of the purchase agreement of June 25, 1946.

It is significant that a few months prior to the cancellation of Pan-Am’s exclusive franchise, Huber, Jr., undoubtedly anticipating the loss of this franchise, inquired of Taussig whether Cities Service oil products would be satisfactory. Taussig then advised Huber that in view of the extensive operation and large refinery of Cities Service in the Lake Charles area, the number of its employees residing therein, and the fact that the quality of its products was well known and generally accepted, this major oil company would be acceptable and satisfactory to him.

On September 20, 1950, Pan-Am notified Quality by letter that its exclusive franchise was cancelled effective October 31, 1950. On the next day, September 21, 1950, Quality, acting through Huber, Jr., consummated a written contract to sell exclusively the products of Skelly Oil Company in the Lake Charles area effective November 1, 1950.

The record discloses that during October, 1950, Huber, Jr., and Mr. Fritts, a representative of Skelly Oil Company, called on Taussig to inform him that effective November 1, 1950, Quality would deliver Skelly Oil products instead of Pan-Am products.

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Bluebook (online)
84 So. 2d 806, 228 La. 1018, 1955 La. LEXIS 1449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huber-v-ed-taussig-inc-la-1955.