J. C. Millett Co., a Corporation Doing Business as Key Distributing Co. v. Distillers Distributing Corporation

258 F.2d 139, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 4601
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 10, 1958
Docket15480_1
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 258 F.2d 139 (J. C. Millett Co., a Corporation Doing Business as Key Distributing Co. v. Distillers Distributing Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. C. Millett Co., a Corporation Doing Business as Key Distributing Co. v. Distillers Distributing Corporation, 258 F.2d 139, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 4601 (9th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

DENMAN, Circuit Judge.

Appellant, a wholesale distributor to retailers of alcoholic beverages in the State of California, hereafter Distributor, appeals from a judgment of the *141 District Court in a court-tried diversity suit denying it relief for three claimed breaches of a written contract it had with Calvert Distillers and Carstairs Brothers Distilling Corporation, 1 importers and manufacturers’ agents for such beverages, hereafter Importer, and from the denial of Distributor’s motion to amend the pleadings to conform to the proof of another violation of the contract.

The contract provides that its agreements shall be construed under the law of the State of California and the parties do not question that it is the applicable law.

A. The contract provides that the Distributor was not the sole agent for the Importer in selling the alcoholic liquors to retailers in Alameda and Contra Costa Counties and Importer violated no agreement in soliciting orders for another distributor there.

The provision of the agreement first alleged to be violated is paragraph 6 providing:

“6. Calvert agrees to promote the sales of its products and to advertise its products in a manner consistent with the type of merchandise and the cases sold. Calvert shall have the sole right to determine the amount of sales promotion and advertising and the media used for advertising.”

The violation contended is that in the alcoholic beverages business the words “promote the sales” mean, inter alia, the employment by the Importer of so-called “specialty men” to solicit the business of retailers and thus promote distributors’ businesses by enabling them to obtain orders. Of this the complaint alleges:

“On and after March 14th, 1952, when the said written agreement was executed between the parties hereto, the defendants did continue to employ such salesmen, and said salesmen continued to solicit and obtain orders in purported support of the sales of defendants’ products, but failed, neglected and refused to submit all such orders to the Key Distributing Co. for delivery, but submitted a substantial portion thereof to other competing wholesale distributors of defendants in the said two counties for delivery.” [Emphasis supplied.]

It is obvious that this aid to other distributors violates clause 6 of the contract only if the plaintiff-appellant was the sole distributor of the Importer for the two counties. The contract cannot be given this interpretation.

The first provision of the contract makes the Distributor but one of the Importer’s distributors of Importer’s goods to retailers in Alameda and Contra Costa Counties of California in the following language:

“1. Calvert hereby appoints Distributor as a distributor of such of the alcoholic beverages produced by The Calvert Distilling Co., and Car-stairs Bros. Distilling Co., Inc., as are listed on Exhibit A attached hereto within the following territory in the state of California, Alameda and Contra Costa Counties.” [Emphasis supplied.]

The Distributor itself in its brief recognizes the use of the article “a” as distinguished from the article “the” which would have made it the sole distributor for the Importer in the following language:

“The stated and principal purposes [sic] of the contract was to provide for the appointment of plaintiff as a Calvert distributor in the Counties of Alameda and Contra Costa in the state, for the purchase by plaintiff for resale, from Calvert of the products of Calvert Distillers Co. and Carstairs Distilling Co., Inc., within said areas and to control the method of conducting these operations.” [Emphasis supplied.]

*142 While it is true that questions of doubt in the interpretation of the words of a written contract are resolved against the party which prepared it, 2 here the words of appointment “as a distributor” are exactly contrary to the words “as the sole distributor” as contended by the Distributor.

Paragraph 2 of the contract emphasizes that the first paragraph did not create appellant as the sole distributor. It provides that Distributor need give not more “than 23% of its time and effort in the sale of Calvert products nor spend more than 23% of its money in advertising and sales promotion of its products.” It is irrational to suppose that the Importer would seek to expand its business in the million odd inhabitants of Oakland and Alameda Counties to a company that is to devote such a small part of its time, energy and funds to such a purpose. There is no error in the District Court’s decision on this contention.

B. The Distributor has not sustained its burden of proof that the Importer breached the contract by failure to supply a certain order.

For another cause of action the Distributor contends that the Importer breached the written contract by failure to deliver on a written purchase order dated December 15, 1952 for 900 cases of Calvert products. The Importer admits that it received the order and did not fill it but argues that the trial court was correct in its finding that there was no lawful requirement for the Importer to ship the 900 cases to the Distributor. The basis for this conclusion is the following clause of the contract:

“5. * * * Calvert reserves the right not to ship any orders received where such orders would result in an inventory in the hands of Distributor greater than a 45-day inventory, based on the rate of sales of Calvert products by Distributor for the six months prior to the date of this contract.”

The difficulty with this contract provision is that there are two variable factors which prevent its accurate application. The first of these is the date upon which the inventory of the Distributor is tested. This is obviously the date of delivery of the ordered goods because of the wording “result in an inventory in the hands of Distributor.” The date of delivery of a particular order is, of course, uncertain. The second variable occurs from the sales made by the Distributor between the date of the order and the date of its arrival. The amount of these sales is unknown at the time the Importer' contemplates exercising its right not to supply the Distributor with over a 45-day stock.

The argument is made that the inventory figures as of the date of the Distributor’s order were meant to be used by the parties in making the decision as to whether a 45-day inventory would be exceeded. This argument must be rejected because of the plain meaning of the clause and also because it would result in the contract being illusory and unenforceable. This last result follows from clause 8 of the contract which reads:

“Distributor agrees that it will maintain an inventory of Calvert products at all times equal to Distributor’s average sales for 45 days.”

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Bluebook (online)
258 F.2d 139, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 4601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-c-millett-co-a-corporation-doing-business-as-key-distributing-co-v-ca9-1958.