Jack Edwards v. Wurster Oil Co Inc

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1993
Docket93-CA-00334-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Jack Edwards v. Wurster Oil Co Inc (Jack Edwards v. Wurster Oil Co Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jack Edwards v. Wurster Oil Co Inc, (Mich. 1993).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI NO. 93-CA-00334-SCT JACK EDWARDS AND DOT EDWARDS v. WURSTER OIL CO., INC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/01/93 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. EDWARD G. CORTRIGHT JR. COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: LEAKE COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANTS: JOHN W. CHRISTOPHER ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: KENNETH WATTS NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - CONTRACT DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 2/13/97 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED: 3/6/97

EN BANC.

BANKS, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Here we are called upon to determine whether the compliance with the terms of a contract constitutes acceptance of such contract, resulting in the waiver of all claims thereunder. We conclude that the chancellor's finding that plaintiffs' performance under the terms of its contract with Wurster Oil constituted acceptance or ratification of the contract is not manifestly erroneous. We, therefore, affirm.

I.

¶2. In the fall of 1990, the plaintiffs, Jack and Dot Edwards (hereinafter, the Edwardses), had been engaged in the operation of a convenience store in Walnut Grove, Mississippi, for approximately two years. They had decided to find a supplier for petroleum products in order to sell gasoline at their store. During the latter part of November or early December 1990, Pat Thaggard, a friend of the Edwardses, introduced them to David Knapp, a representative of Wurster Oil Company, which was headquartered in Louisiana, but had been doing business in Mississippi. Knapp met with the Edwardses to survey their property and discuss the possibility of Wurster Oil supplying them with gasoline.

¶3. A couple of days later, Knapp met with the Edwardses again, discussing the process of installing the equipment necessary to sell the gasoline. Jack and Dot Edwards, as well as their daughter and son-in-law, Sandra and Delbert Lathem, were present during the meeting. Knapp presented the Edwardses with a copy of the Gasoline Sales Lease and the Gasoline Sales Agreement, both of which contained several blank spaces. The Edwardses signed the documents, while David Knapp, Delbert Lathem and Sandra Lathem witnessed them. However, the documents were not signed by any representative of Wurster Oil which would bind Wurster to the contract.

¶4. After the documents were signed by the Edwardses, they were delivered to Jim Thornton, secretary-treasurer and part owner of Wurster Oil Company. After receiving the documents, Thornton visited Walnut Grove to determine whether the Edwardses had an acceptable location which fit the company's criteria. Thornton discussed with the Edwardses and the Lathems the improvements necessary to be made to the land for the sale of gasoline. After meeting with the Edwardses, Thornton decided to approve the contract and notified Petron, Inc. of Alexandria, Louisiana, an oil services construction company, to make the improvements and install the equipment on the Edwardses' property. On January 15, 1991, Petron made an initial bid of $105,238.39.

¶5. The improvements were made and the Edwardses had begun selling Wurster Oil products by February 1991. Under the terms of the Gasoline Sales Agreement, the Edwardses were to be compensated on a split-the-profits basis and receive a commission equal to half of the profits for all gasoline and petroleum products sold by them for Wurster Oil. However, the agreement referenced an Exhibit "B", which states that the Edwardses were to be held responsible for half of the cost of the improvements through the withholding of half of their commission. Thus, they would effectively receive one-fourth of the profits from the sale of the gasoline.

¶6. The major dispute in this case arises from the portion of Exhibit "B" that was left blank when signed by the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs assert that the entire section of the agreement was blank, except for the signature lines. The defendants, however, assert that the entire section was filled in, except for the signatures of the parties and the amount of the cost of the improvements. The final cost of the improvements was $122,913.91 as submitted by Petron to Wurster Oil on April 25, 1991.

¶7. In March of 1991, after receiving two or three commission checks from Wurster Oil, Mrs. Edwards informed Jim Thornton of her dissatisfaction with the amount that they were receiving, after realizing that they were only receiving half of the commission they thought they were due. She also requested a copy of the contract they had signed, a copy of the cost of the installation of the equipment, and a calculation of the deductions that were made from their checks. All were received in the latter part of April, 1991, after Thornton had obtained the total cost from Petron. After Mrs. Edwards initially voiced her dissatisfaction with the deductions from their commission, Jim Thornton discussed the contract with her on several other occasions and offered to allow the Edwardses to pay for the installation of the equipment themselves, at a price of $122,913.91, or find another company which would do so.

¶8. On January 10, 1992, the Edwardses filed suit against Wurster Oil in chancery court, alleging that Exhibit "B" was "hopelessly contradictory" to the terms of the Gasoline Sales Lease and the Gasoline Sales Agreement, and therefore should be declared void. They further requested an accounting for the method used in calculating the per-gallon charge for the gasoline sold by the Edwardses on behalf of Wurster and a judgment against Wurster Oil for all commissions unlawfully withheld by Wurster Oil, as well as punitive damages, attorney's fees, and costs of court.

¶9. In the disposition of the lawsuit, the Chancellor held that the agreements completed by Wurster Oil "made material additions to the agreements as signed by the Edwardses and constituted a counteroffer." These material additions included the insertion of a detailed description of the equipment to be installed at the bottom of the first page of the Gasoline Sales Lease, the insertion of the date and length of time of the lease, as well as the insertion of the renewal terms of the lease by Wurster Oil. The Chancellor further noted that "[u]pon receiving the final agreements, the Edwardses had the right to reject them or accept them as they were."

¶10. The Chancellor then held:

[b]y thereafter permitting the defendant to continue to deduct from their share one- half of the cost of the improvements [from May to the time of suit], the Edwardses accepted the counteroffer. . . [T]he actions of the Edwardses have been consistent with their having a subsisting contract with Wurster Oil Company. . . Pertinent in this regard is the fact that the plaintiffs waited until January 10, 1992 (over eight months), after receiving a copy of the contract before filing suit.

The Chancellor also held that the Edwardses were entitled to recover the amounts owed to them as a result of an audit that was to be conducted to determine whether the plaintiffs had been underpaid under the contract. The court denied the plaintiffs' request for attorney's fees and costs of court, and failed to make any finding regarding whether Exhibit "B" existed as the plaintiffs assert at the time they signed it or as the defendants assert.

¶11. The Edwardses appeal to this Court to consider whether the chancellor erred in ruling that they had accepted the counteroffer of Wurster Oil as evidenced by the Gasoline Sales Lease and the Gasoline Sales Agreement.

II.

¶12. Whether the chancellor properly concluded that the Edwardses made an "offer" to which Wurster Oil replied with a "counteroffer" is of little consequence to the disposition of this case.

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Jack Edwards v. Wurster Oil Co Inc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jack-edwards-v-wurster-oil-co-inc-miss-1993.