Interstate Petroleum Distributors, Ltd. v. F & B Investments, Inc.

816 S.W.2d 263, 1991 Mo. App. LEXIS 1396, 1991 WL 173094
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 10, 1991
DocketNos. 16992, 17011
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 816 S.W.2d 263 (Interstate Petroleum Distributors, Ltd. v. F & B Investments, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Interstate Petroleum Distributors, Ltd. v. F & B Investments, Inc., 816 S.W.2d 263, 1991 Mo. App. LEXIS 1396, 1991 WL 173094 (Mo. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

FLANIGAN, Chief Judge.

Plaintiff Interstate Petroleum Distributors, Ltd., a “limited liability company” organized under the laws of Wyoming, (“Interstate”), brought this action against defendants F & B Investments, Inc., (“F & B”), Robert Betz, M.D., Betty Betz, Gerald Fagan and Linda Fagan.

Count I of the petition, directed against F & B, sought $44,562.67, later reduced to $43,857.34, which was the allegedly unpaid price of gasoline and diesel fuel furnished by Interstate to F & B from January 10, 1987, until January 20, 1987, at F & B’s Fast Stop service station near Neosho. F & B’s answer to Count I was a general denial.

Count II, directed against Gerald Fagan, sought $906.10, which was the allegedly unpaid price of petroleum products sold by Interstate to Gerald Fagan on December 31, 1986. Gerald Fagan’s answer to Count II was a general denial.

Count III, directed against the four individual defendants, was based upon a guaranty executed by the Betzes and a separate guaranty executed by the Fagans, whereby the guarantors assumed responsibility for the debts of F & B, including the debt alleged in Count I. The individual defendants filed a general denial to Count III and then pleaded the following: “Further answering, Defendants Robert Betz, Betty Betz, Gerald Davis Fagan and Linda Fagan state that the personal guaranty on their part, if any, was subsequently cancelled as a result of a satisfaction and accord reached between the parties.”

The case was tried to a jury. On the morning of the trial, defendant F & B received permission to amend its answer to Count I by pleading a “set-off.” The set-off, as submitted to the jury, was based on the claim that Interstate furnished “motor fuel” to F & B “during a period between the latter part of 1984 through January 20, 1987,” and Interstate did not deliver to F & B the amount of motor fuel as set forth in its invoices during such time period and Interstate charged F & B $44,217 for motor fuel not delivered.

Both sides filed motions for directed verdicts, the motions were denied, and the issues were submitted to the jury. The jury found in favor of Interstate on Count I and assessed the damages at $43,857.34. The jury also found in favor of Interstate on F & B’s claim of set-off. The jury found in favor of Interstate on Count II and assessed the damages at $907.52.1 On Count III the jury found in favor of the Betzes and the Fagans. Judgment was entered on the verdicts.

Post-trial motions filed by both sides were denied. Interstate appealed. Defendants F & B and Gerald Fagan joined in a separate appeal. The appeals were consolidated and will be treated separately in this opinion.

F & B claims that the trial court erred: (1) in failing to grant F & B judgment notwithstanding the verdict on Count I because the evidence was insufficient to support that verdict, (2) in failing to grant F & B judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the issue of set-off because there was no substantial evidence to support the verdict in favor of Interstate on F & B’s claim for set-off, and (3) in not directing a verdict in favor of F & B for a set-off for the value of 4,000 gallons of gas because the uncontro-verted evidence established F & B’s entitlement to that set-off.

Defendant Gerald Fagan claims that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict in favor of Interstate on Count II.

Interstate claims that the trial court erred in permitting the individual defen[266]*266dants to testify, over Interstate’s objection, to matters which conflicted with the written guaranties, including testimony that the liability of each set of spouses was limited to 50 percent of any indebtedness of P & B. Interstate also claims that it is entitled to relief on Count III as a matter of law.

In 1984 Interstate acquired the assets and liabilities of Ozark County Gas Company, which was a supplier of gasoline and diesel fuel to P & B’s service station in Neosho. Defendants Robert Betz and Betty Betz, husband and wife, owned 50 percent of F & B, and defendants Gerald Fa-gan and Linda Fagan, husband and wife, owned the other 50 percent. Interstate continued to supply F & B with the petroleum products through January 20, 1987. The deliveries which were not paid for by F & B, and which were represented by the invoices introduced into evidence by Interstate, took place between January 10 and January 20. The balance due on the unpaid account, according to Interstate’s evidence, was $43,857.34, which was the amount the jury awarded to Interstate on Count I.

Defendant Gerald Fagan testified that there was a discrepancy between the number of gallons of fuel billed by Interstate and the number of gallons actually received by F & B. Fagan and Betz attempted to determine the amount of the claimed shortage. Fagan testified that he and Betz determined that the shortage was 60,000 gallons, that is F & B had paid for but failed to receive that amount. Fagan calculated that overpayment at $44,217. This claim was based, at least in part, on so-called “stick readings” made by the delivery truck driver at the time the fuel was delivered to F & B’s tank.

Fagan testified that after he “went through these invoices” he talked to his attorney and that because of the “Interstate shortage I had uncovered, we began to pull loads of gas in and diesel fuel, six or seven loads, because I didn’t want to be doing this out in Denver where [Interstate’s] office is, trying to get my money back.”

Robert Betz testified that for 1986 the shortage amounted to 30,000 gallons, but also testified he would “accept” Fagan’s figure of 59,236 gallons.

Brian Snelson, a defense witness, testified that the shortage for 1986 was 30,169 gallons.

Leonard Cardwell, a witness for Interstate, testified that he examined the records of F & B to see if there was a variance between the invoices and the amount delivered to F & B. He used F & B records, which included readings from totalizers which are measuring devices on the fuel dispensers at F & B’s station. Readings from meters at the pipeline terminal at which the shipments originated were introduced into evidence. For 1986 Card-well found an overage of 773 gallons of regular gasoline, and shortages of 3,865 gallons of unleaded gasoline and 1,213 gallons of diesel fuel.

Cardwell also testified, without objection, that based upon his experience in the oil industry the variances he found at the Fast Stop Neosho store in 1986 were acceptable and that for other oil and gas customers of his CPA firm, he would “find a similar variance over a 12-month period as he found in this case.” There was also evidence that the shortage of 4,305 gallons found by Cardwell arose in total sales of 1,816,461 gallons.

F & B’s evidence concerning the shortages was based on stick readings. Interstate introduced evidence that stick readings were inaccurate and unreliable.

APPEAL OF DEFENDANTS F & B AND GERALD FAGAN

F & B contends that the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict in favor of Interstate on Count I.

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Related

Betz v. Fagan
962 S.W.2d 432 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1998)
Wetherill v. Hunt
834 S.W.2d 199 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1991)

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816 S.W.2d 263, 1991 Mo. App. LEXIS 1396, 1991 WL 173094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interstate-petroleum-distributors-ltd-v-f-b-investments-inc-moctapp-1991.