Interamerican Refining Corp. v. Texaco Maracaibo, Inc.

307 F. Supp. 1291
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJanuary 7, 1970
DocketCiv. A. 2808
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 307 F. Supp. 1291 (Interamerican Refining Corp. v. Texaco Maracaibo, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Interamerican Refining Corp. v. Texaco Maracaibo, Inc., 307 F. Supp. 1291 (D. Del. 1970).

Opinion

OPINION

CALEB M. WRIGHT, Chief Judge.

This is an action arising under the United States antitrust laws, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1, 2, 15, commonly known as the Sherman and Clayton Acts. Plaintiff Interamerican Refining Corporation (Interamerican) alleges that defendants Texaco Maracaibo Inc., formerly the Superior Oil Company of Venezuela (Supven), Monsanto Company (Monsanto), Monsanto Venezuela, Inc. (Monven), wholly owned subsidiary of Monsanto, and Amoco Trading Corporation (Amoco), now survived by American International Oil Company, engaged in a concerted boycott designed to deny Interamerican Venezuelan crude oil required for its operations. Plaintiff seeks a judgment in treble the amount of damages suffered. Defendants have moved for summary judgment. 1

Interamerican was incorporated in October, 1959. The principal stockholders were Mr. Yervant Maxudian, Dr. Miguel Moreno, General Felix Roman Moreno, and later Mr. José Marcano. Mr. Maxudian was the principal executive officer. Interamerican planned to process low-cost Venezuelan crude oil in a bonded refinery in Bayonne, New Jersey, and to export the products or sell them as ship’s bunker in New York harbor, thus avoiding United States import quota and tariff restrictions. 2 Interamerican rented the Bayonne refinery *1293 from its owner, Petroleum Separating Company (Separating). One of the principal terms of the rental contract was a force majeure clause, designed to protect Interamerican, in the words of Mr. Maxudian, “if there was any interference, a change of administration in Venezuela where we couldn’t get oil.” The refinery was modified, at considerable cost to Interamerican, to meet its expected needs.

Defendants Supven and Monven held concessions from the Venezuelan government to explore for and produce crude oil. They were suppliers of crude oil, potential sellers to Amoco, a finding and trading company, and through Amoco to Interamerican. Defendant Monsanto neither produced nor traded crude oil and played no part in the events giving rise to this litigation. Plaintiff considers it responsible for the conduct of its subsidiary Monven. 3

Interamerican completed modification of the Bayonne refinery on January 18, 1960. It received its first shipment of crude oil from Amoco on January 26, pursuant to a contract executed the preceding day. Amoco had obtained that shipment from Monven and diverted it from its intended destination. Amoco delivered two additional shipments, pursuant to contracts dated February 4, 1960, and February 16, 1960, the oil for which was supplied by Supven. Contrary to earlier assurances of a willingness to supply Interameriean’s long-term needs, Amoco informed Interamerican on March 15, 1960, that it could make no further shipments of Venezuelan crude oil. Amoco was unable to obtain oil from its suppliers, it said, because the Venezuelan government had forbidden further sales which, directly or indirectly, reached Interamerican. Operations at Bayonne were temporarily suspended on March 19, when processing of the last shipment was completed. Amoco tried without success to secure other supplies of suitable crude oil, and Interamerican attempted itself to obtain Venezuelan crude oil from other sources, both directly and with the aid of a shell corporation as purchasing agent. All suppliers refused to sell without the explicit permission of the Venezuelan government. 4 Interamerican finally obtained one more cargo of Supven oil, but on August 15, 1960, it terminated operations.

Interamerican had notified Separating in April, 1960, of its difficulties and of its intent to invoke the force majeure clause in the rental contract. Arbitration on the contract commenced before a panel of the American Arbitration Association in September, 1960, and an award was made to Separating in December of that year. The award was confirmed by the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in November, 1961. 296 F.2d 124.

Plaintiff commenced this action against Supven and Monsanto by complaint dated March 6, 1964. The complaint was amended on July 22, 1964, to add Monven and Amoco. 5

*1294 The preceding are the basic facts on which plaintiff grounds its claim for treble damages. Suppliers Supven and Monven, trader Amoco, and unknown others are alleged to have conspired to destroy Interamerican’s potentially profitable business. Plaintiff relies on the refusals to deal to establish a violation of the antitrust laws 6 and on the undeniable damages sustained as a result of inability to obtain oil.

Defendants do not deny the refusals to deal nor the fact of damage. They base their defense on the statute of limitations and on the fact that the Venezuelan government forbade them to deal with Interamerican. They ask the Court to hold that compulsion by a foreign sovereign is a complete defense to a claim under the antitrust laws, and that the uncontroverted facts establish that defense as a matter of law.

The events on which defendants rely must be understood against the background of several conditions. Dr. Moreno and Mr. Maxudian both had histories of political activity in Venezuela. Neither considered himself friendly to or befriended by the Betancourt regime which had come to power in 1959. Dr. Moreno testified that Betancourt represented a continuation of the Larrazabal regime under whose auspices he had spent some unhappy moments in jail. It is not clear that Moreno was a persona non grata in the official sense, but the Venezuelan press remembered him unfavorably as “a chief conspirator in the 1948 coup. * * * ”

Mr. Maxudian had served as oil consultant to two presidents between 1937 and 1945, and had refused to continue in that capacity under Betancourt. He admits having refused to work for Betancourt and having referred to him as “the Lenin of Latin America.” According to the then president of Interamerican, both Mr. Maxudian and Dr. Moreno anticipated a change in the administration in Venezuela, that change being the reinstatement of Dr. Moreno.

The second condition is the relationship of the Venezuelan government to foreign oil concerns doing business there. These concerns hold their concessions subject to regulation by the government through the Ministry of Mines and Hydrocarbons. In April, 1959, that ministry established the Coordinating Commission for the Conservation of Commerce and Hydrocarbons (Coordinating Commission). The Coordinating Commission supervised concessionaires rigorously and conducted regular reviews of their sales policies. It also promulgated rules regarding the sale of oil extracted there. Those rules constituted “conditions for any shipment of Venezuelan petroleum to be made abroad.” 7

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307 F. Supp. 1291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interamerican-refining-corp-v-texaco-maracaibo-inc-ded-1970.