Louis Dreyfus Corp. v. Continental Grain Co.

395 So. 2d 442
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 27, 1981
Docket11392
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 395 So. 2d 442 (Louis Dreyfus Corp. v. Continental Grain Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louis Dreyfus Corp. v. Continental Grain Co., 395 So. 2d 442 (La. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

395 So.2d 442 (1981)

LOUIS DREYFUS CORPORATION
v.
CONTINENTAL GRAIN COMPANY.

No. 11392.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

February 5, 1981.
Writ Refused April 27, 1981.

Monroe & Lemann, W. Malcolm Stevenson and Michael R. O'Keefe, III, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.

Lemle, Kelleher, Kohlmeyer & Matthews, Charles Kohlmeyer, Jr., Alan H. Goodman, and Peter L. Koerber, New Orleans, for defendant-appellee.

*443 Before SAMUEL, BARRY and SARTAIN, JJ.

SAMUEL, Judge.

This proceeding arises out of the alleged breach by the defendant of its April 8, 1971 six year contract with the plaintiff. As will be seen below, the contract provided in part for defendant to load grain aboard ocean-going vessels for plaintiff for export at defendant's grain elevator located in Westwego, Louisiana. The alleged breach is represented to be a telex dated January 17, 1977 from defendant to plaintiff by which defendant cautioned plaintiff it could not guarantee availability in February, 1977 of suitable grain to load a vessel nominated by plaintiff because of ice jams in the upper Mississippi River and invoked the contract's force majeure clause.

Plaintiff previously had filed a suit for specific performance and damages, but the requested relief was denied on the ground that plaintiff had an adequate remedy at law.[1]

On remand, plaintiff amended its petition to seek damages of $1,735,000 for losses sustained by defendant's actions. Defendant answered, denied plaintiff's allegations, and reconvened for a declaration of impossibility of performance, damages for unpaid interest under the contract, and other matters not pertinent here. In due course, the pleadings were amended to raise the issue of plaintiff's liability to defendant for "elevation charges" pursuant to increases in defendant's grain handling tariffs.

After an extensive trial on the merits, judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff and against defendant for $15,354.77, representing a finding of damages in favor of plaintiff for defendant's breach in the amount of $97,988.77, offset by interest due defendant by plaintiff in the amount of $82,634. Plaintiff has appealed from this judgment, and defendant has answered the appeal seeking reversal of the judgment in favor of Dreyfus and also seeking damages in addition to the $82,634 awarded it by way of setoff.[2]

Both plaintiff and defendant are dealers and exporters of grain and participate in national and international trade. Both are large corporations with a great deal of experience in the grain handling business. Both own grain elevators, and both are fully cognizant of the problems inherent in the gathering, purchase, delivery, loading, and export of grain. During the negotiation and confection of the contract in suit, as well as during the years of its execution, both companies were represented by able executives, employees, and legal counsel. Consequently, the record reflects no evidence of any error or mistake on the part of either party in the incidents leading to the present dispute.

In December, 1976 and January, 1977, the central portion of the United States experienced a severe winter. The Mississippi River froze between St. Louis, Missouri and Cairo, Illinois, bringing river traffic to a virtual standstill. This situation was made official by the closing of the river to navigation by the United States Coast Guard between January 14 and February 17, 1977.[3]

Simply stated, the contract between plaintiff and defendant on its face called for plaintiff to sell various quantities of grain in the form of corn or soybeans to defendant C.I.F. barge or rail Westwego.[4] Defendant then sold like quantities and qualities of grain back to plaintiff F.O.B. plaintiff's designated vessel at Westwego. Defendant charged plaintiff the exact price *444 it originally had paid plaintiff for the grain plus a charge per bushel for using its elevator to load the ships (elevation charge), and interest at the rate of 1% over the prime rate at First National City Bank in New York for a period between the payment by defendant to purchase the grain and the payment back to plaintiff to repurchase it.[5]

While the river was frozen, plaintiff took the necessary steps under the contract to sell 20 or 21 barges of grain to defendant in anticipation of exporting a like quantity from defendant's grain elevator at Westwego in February. When plaintiff made the sale, its executives and employees knew the barges containing the grain thus sold were icebound and could not reach New Orleans in the normal period of time.

In addition, the executives and employees of both companies knew sufficient quantities and qualities of grain to load the vessels to be nominated by plaintiff were available in the New Orleans area by rail or barge in the spot market.[6] However, both parties also knew that the relative scarcity of grain caused by the freezing of the river called for a spot market price of $0.30 over the future's contract price for March delivery grain of $7.45 per bushel.[7] Neither plaintiff nor defendant wanted to bear the burden of paying the $0.30 per bushel premium price in order to fulfill its obligations under the contract. Consequently, defendant sent the telex mentioned above warning of the potential impossibility of loading plaintiff's ship in February and invoking the force majeure clause in the contract. On January 18, representatives of plaintiff and defendant discussed the possibility of providing defendant with sufficient quantity of grain from other sources, but plaintiff chose not to take such action because it felt it was not obligated to do so under the contract.

Instead, plaintiff diverted the M/V Ogden Importer, originally scheduled to be loaded in February at the Westwego elevator, to a grain elevator in Mobile, Alabama. Plaintiff had already scheduled loading of the M/V World Ares for that period in Mobile, and the diversion of the Ogden Importer to take the place in line at the elevator of the World Ares in Mobile required diversion of the World Ares to a grain elevator in Baltimore, Maryland. The arrival of the World Ares in Baltimore likewise caused the diversion of plaintiff's M/V Lucy, which in turn displaced the M/V Stream Dolphin to another grain elevator, which in turn displaced the M/V Tete Oldendorff to another elevator, which in turn displaced the M/V Fadura to another elevator, which in turn displaced plaintiff's M/V Marco Verde to still another elevator. Plaintiff claims that each of these diversions resulted in delays, demurrage, extra stevedoring fees, cleaning fees, and a host of other items of damage for each displacement.

Both parties attempt to justify their respective positions and actions (and thus pass the loss for the price differential between icebound and free grain to the other) by characterizing the contract of April 8, 1971 in different ways. Plaintiff contends the 1971 agreement merely established the framework for a series of separate and independent purchase and sales transactions which are totally unrelated to each other. Based on this hypothesis it argues the purchase by defendant of icebound grain prior to the scheduled February F.O.B. shipment period in Westwego was totally unrelated to defendant's obligation to load vessels nominated by plaintiff for loading in February. Consequently, plaintiff argues defendant was obligated to procure the necessary grain from whatever source was available *445

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Related

Louis Dreyfus Corp. v. Continental Grain Co.
399 So. 2d 608 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1981)

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Bluebook (online)
395 So. 2d 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louis-dreyfus-corp-v-continental-grain-co-lactapp-1981.