Larry Golden, D/B/A Golden Mobil, Cross-Appellant v. Mobil Oil Corporation, a New York Corporation, Cross-Appellee

882 F.2d 490, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 13403, 1989 WL 92167
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 5, 1989
Docket88-3517
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 882 F.2d 490 (Larry Golden, D/B/A Golden Mobil, Cross-Appellant v. Mobil Oil Corporation, a New York Corporation, Cross-Appellee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larry Golden, D/B/A Golden Mobil, Cross-Appellant v. Mobil Oil Corporation, a New York Corporation, Cross-Appellee, 882 F.2d 490, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 13403, 1989 WL 92167 (11th Cir. 1989).

Opinion

VANCE, Circuit Judge:

In this diversity case, the defendant appeals the district court’s denial of judgment notwithstanding the verdict for plaintiff on his breach of contract claim. On cross-appeal, the plaintiff challenges the court’s directed verdict for the defendant on the plaintiff’s fraud claim. We conclude that the court erred in both instances.

I. BACKGROUND

Plaintiff Larry Golden leased and operated a Sun Oil Company (“Sunoco”) service station located on South Orange Blossom Trail in Orlando, Florida. The station had three pumps at the full service island and two pumps at the self service island, all of which dispensed gasoline in liters. Two of the full service pumps and one of the self service pumps contained blenders, devices unique to Sunoco stations. The blenders allowed the pumps to dispense three types of unleaded gasoline from the same hose: regular unleaded, super unleaded, and a blend of regular and super unleaded. A customer could choose the desired type of unleaded gasoline by turning a switch on the pump. The configuration of the pumps at Golden’s Sunoco station was as follows:

Full Service Self Service
Pump 1 Super Unleaded Pump 2 Leaded
Pump 4 Regular Unleaded Pump 3 Super Unleaded
Pump 5 Leaded

Golden’s lease with Sunoco gave the company the right to terminate the agreement *492 in the event the station was sold. In the spring of 1984, defendant Mobil Oil Corporation purchased Golden’s station and eighty-six other Sunoco stations in Florida. Mobil notified Golden of the purchase and gave him the option of buying the station for $200,000 or entering into a new lease as a Mobil dealer. Golden was interested in the possibility of purchasing the station, but was concerned that he would not be able to obtain financing. On July 11-12, 1984, therefore, he attended two meetings held by Mobil to promote the advantages of becoming a Mobil dealer. The first was held on July 11 in Orlando and the second on July 12 in Tampa. Golden testified that at the Orlando meeting a Mobil representative told him that it was the policy of the company to give customers a four cent per gallon discount for cash purchases. When Golden inquired as to the company’s cash discount policy for gasoline purchased in liters, the representative responded that “it’s not a problem because Mobil doesn’t have gas pumps that work in liters so you won’t have a problem with that.”

Golden also testified that between the Tampa meeting and the date he signed the lease, Mobil representatives Dennis O’Brien and J.J. Moore promised that he would receive new gallon pumps:

[O’Brien, Moore, and I] were talking about the transition period and they were kind of telling me what would occur and I asked well, you know, when are we going to get the [new Mobil sign], when are we going to get the pumps. That was important to me. And I was told that they were starting near the end of the county or end that I was up on to put on signs and nearer the ends of the county there I gathered north or northwest and working kind of toward one another and, you know, I would get the sign and then I would get the pumps, the regular type Mobil pumps.

The Tampa meeting, which Golden’s wife also attended, was entitled “Welcome Aboard.” All Sunoco dealers, their spouses, and key employees were invited. The agenda included a period for viewing exhibits, a presentation, cocktails, and dinner. Golden later testified that the Tampa meeting was a

[political rally kind of thing. At the very first going in it’s hey, how [sic] you doing? Everything is going to be great for you. [Dennis O’Brien, a Mobil representative,] was taking me and I believe part of the time my wife and introducing me to just various people were [sic] there. I guess other people at his level and other people from Mobil and say [sic] hey, have you signed yet? I said, no. Well, you should sign. And things along that line.

Golden also testified that a Mobil representative told the Sunoco dealers that if they agreed to become Mobil dealers their relationship with the company “would be just like a marriage that was just going to get stronger.”

On their way home from the Tampa meeting, Golden and his wife discussed their options and decided, based on Mobil’s presentations, that becoming a Mobil dealer would be a good career opportunity. The company thereafter provided Golden with a proposed lease agreement and Golden sent it to his attorney for review. The attorney informed Mobil that many of the provisions of the lease were unsatisfactory, including the following limitation of liability clause:

In no event shall Landlord be liable for prospective profits or special, indirect, or consequential damages.

The company replied that the proposed agreement was its standard service station lease contract and the terms were not negotiable. Golden decided to enter into the lease anyway and signed it on July 25, 1984. The lease became effective on August 1, 1984, with a term of three years.

Golden’s relationship with Mobil started to sour soon after he began operating as a Mobil dealer. Many of his requests to the company for the repair of the pumps, lighting, and pavement at his station went unheeded. The company replaced one of his liter pumps with a new gallon pump, but refused to replace others. This left Golden in the position of having to sell some gasoline in liters and some in gallons. The company also removed the blender from *493 Pump 3 without Golden’s permission and replaced it with a regular nozzle. As a result, Golden could sell only two types of gasoline at the self service island. The configuration of the pumps after the removal of the blender was as follows:

Full Service Self Service
Pump 1 Regular Unleaded Pump 2 Leaded
Super Unleaded
Blend
Pump 4 Regular Unleaded Pump 3 Unleaded
Super Unleaded Super Unleaded
Blend Blend
Pump 5 Leaded

Mobil did not renew the lease at the end of its three-year term and Golden brought suit against the company in Florida state court. Mobil removed the case to federal court and Golden filed an amended complaint that alleged breach of contract and fraud. At the ensuing jury trial, Golden presented evidence of two types of damages, lost profits and lost rental rebates. Both were related to his inability to sell three types of gasoline at the self service island. The lost rental rebates were those that Golden would have received under a rental incentive program Mobil had offered to encourage dealers to sell more gasoline.

At the close of trial, the court granted Mobil’s motion for directed verdict on the fraud claim, but denied its motion for directed verdict on the breach of contract claim. The jury subsequently returned an $83,000 verdict for Golden on the breach of contract claim and the court denied Mobil’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

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Bluebook (online)
882 F.2d 490, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 13403, 1989 WL 92167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larry-golden-dba-golden-mobil-cross-appellant-v-mobil-oil-corporation-ca11-1989.