Lees v. Churchill Distilling Co.

73 F. Supp. 543, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2341
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Kentucky
DecidedOctober 7, 1947
DocketCivil Action No. 699
StatusPublished

This text of 73 F. Supp. 543 (Lees v. Churchill Distilling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lees v. Churchill Distilling Co., 73 F. Supp. 543, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2341 (W.D. Ky. 1947).

Opinion

SHELBOURNE, District Judge.

In the original complaint, filed in this action, M. H. Lees and Jack R. Clumeck, doing business as partners under the name of Westco Liquor Products Company, sued to recover from defendant Churchill Distilling Company $142,500 for the alleged breach of a contract evidenced by two letters, written in May 1941, providing for the sale of whiskey over the period from May 10, 1941, to May 10, 1943.

Subsequently, M. H. Lees, Jr., came into the plaintiff partnership and was made a party plaintiff in this action.

[544]*544Plaintiff will hereafter be referred to as “Westco” and the defendant as “Churchill.”

The original complaint was filed May 4, 1944. By an amended complaint, filed May 3, 1946, plaintiff increased the amount sought to be recovered to $222,793.

A motion to dismiss the complaint was considered by Judge Shackelford Miller, Jr., then Judge of this Court. It was alleged by defendant, in support of that motion, that the alleged contract required nothing of Westco; was indefinite as to quantity and price of whiskey to be furnished; was not supported by a consideration and was unilateral in that Westco could terminate the contract by failure to place orders and was, given an express right to terminate the contract, with no corresponding right of termination being given Churchill.

Defendant’s motion to dismiss was overruled January 3, 1945, and, in the memorandum filed by Judge Miller, it was determined that the contract in the first paragraph provided for the sale of 850 barrels of whiskey, which contemplated sale was fully consumated; that the following paragraphs of the contract dealt with the appointment of plaintiffs by the defendant as exclusive distributor of defendant’s whiskey in the territory defined in the letter.

Judge Miller held that if the two matters — sale of the 850 barrels of whiskey and appointment of plaintiffs as distributor— constituted separate parts of one entire contract, then the sale of the 850 barrels of whiskey furnished the consideration for the entire contract, but, that if the matters of the sale of whiskey and the appointment as distributor, were separate and independent transactions, then the distributorship contract was unilateral and therefore void and that the complaint was sufficient in its allegations that on June 15, 1942, the plaintiffs placed an order with the defendant for 300 barrels of whiskey, which the defendant refused to deliver, in compliance with the contract, on the grounds that defendant was maintaining an open and continuous offer to sell under the terms of the contract and that the placing of the order constituted an acceptance.

The case was tried to the Court without a jury on May 3, 1946.

Findings of Fact.

1. Plaintiffs, Milton H. Lees and Jack R. Clumeck, are citizens and residents of San Francisco, California.

2. Defendant, Churchill Distilling Company, was formerly a Kentucky corporation, engaged in the business of distilling and selling whiskey, with offices at Louisville, Kentucky. The corporation was dissolved on April 30, 1944, prior to the institution of this action. In December 1942, I. Strouse of Baltimore, Maryland, purchased all of the outstanding capital stock of Churchill. Prior to that time, Sidney L. Frentz was Vice President of Churchill and his brother, Milton H. Frentz, was Secretary and Treasurer of Churchill and manager of its distillery at Boston, Nelson County, Kentucky.

3. Early in May 1941, Milton Lees conferred with Sidney Frentz regarding the purchase of Churchill whiskey by Westco and discussed the terms of a proposed agreement which would give Westco an exclusive agency to sell Churchill whiskey in California, Nevada, Alaska and the Hawaiian Islands.

4. By a writing dated May 8, 1941, Westco ordered 800 barrels of Churchill whiskey, the sale of which was confirmed by a letter date May 10, 1941.

5. On May 9, 1941, Sidney Frentz mailed to Milton Lees, at New York, draft of the letter dated May 10, 1941.

6. On May 14, 1941, Milton Lees, after revising the letter of May 10, 1941 from Sidney Frentz, returned it. The revised copy is as follows:

“May 10, 1941
“Mr. Milton Lees
“Westco Liquor Products Company
“222 Front Street
“San Francisco, California
“Dear Mr. Lees:
“We are 'herewith confirming our arrangements with you regarding your purchase from us of the following Churchill whiskey:
“300-barrels Churchill Spring 1940 January through June át 62^4^ intax, less charges
“200-barrels Churchill Fall 1940 July through December at 57^40 intax, less charges
[545]*545“50-barrels per month Churchill Spring 1941, January through June at 52t/£ intax, charges from date of inspection.
“Approximately 300-barrels Churchill Fall 1941, Quantity and price to be determined later.
“The warehouse receipts are to be issued in the name of the Westco Liquor Products Company, San Francisco, in 5-barrel denominations. Draft to be forwarded through the Anglo California National Bank, San Francisco, California.
“We have appointed you exclusive distributor for California, Nevada, Alaska and the Hawaiian Islands on Churchill Bottled in Bond or free bottling under the Churchill Brands, and we agree not to ship any case goods irrespective of brands whether Bottled in Bond or free bottling to anyone or any firm in the territory referred to and we give you the privilege of using the Cyrus Frazier legal ‘distilled by the Churchill Distilling Company and bottled by Westco Products Company’ to be used on Churchill, bottled at the plant of the Westco Liquor Products Company, San Francisco, California. It is also agreed that Churchill whiskey may be Bottled in Bond on the Pacific Coast under the Cyrus Frazier Label or some other Churchill brands to be selected by Westco Liquor Products Company.
“We agree to furnish you with the labels you require.
“This agreement will be in effect as long as the Westco Liquor Products Company continues to place orders with us for contract whiskey, minimum 50-barrels per month, prices to be determined at each season with the understanding that should conditions arise beyond our control whereby we are unable to distill whiskey, then in that event, we are not required to make further deliveries of contract whiskey.
“It is also agreed that in the event the Westco Liquor Products Company wishes to terminate this arrangement at any time, it is understood that the Westco Liquor Products Company will give the Churchill Distilling Company first refusal of warehouse receipts owned and controlled by the Westco Liquor Products Company at an agreed price before offering them on the open market.
“This agreement is on the basis of a bottling arrangement covering Churchill whiskey to be bottled at our distillery.

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Bluebook (online)
73 F. Supp. 543, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lees-v-churchill-distilling-co-kywd-1947.