Malatt v. C & R REFRIGERATION

179 S.W.3d 152, 2005 Tex. App. LEXIS 10720, 2005 WL 2653650
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 12, 2005
Docket12-04-00302-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 179 S.W.3d 152 (Malatt v. C & R REFRIGERATION) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Malatt v. C & R REFRIGERATION, 179 S.W.3d 152, 2005 Tex. App. LEXIS 10720, 2005 WL 2653650 (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

JAMES T. WORTHEN, Chief Justice.

Richard Malatt appeals the trial court’s take-nothing judgment entered in favor of *155 Appellees, C & R Refrigeration and Robert Reeves. Malatt raises five issues on appeal. 1 We affirm.

Background

Appellees are the manufacturers of industrial freezers. Two Ecuadorian corporations, Mundi Hielo, S.A. 2 and Pesquería Progalca, S.A. (collectively “Mundi Hielo”) purchased from Appellees an Individual Quick Freeze (“IQF”) machine, which is designed to freeze individual pieces of food very rapidly. The terms of purchase required Mundi Hielo to make a $62,500 deposit on the machine prior to its construction, an additional payment when construction was half completed, and a final payment prior to Appellees’ shipping the machine to Mundi Hielo. Mundi Hielo paid the initial deposit to Appellees, who began to construct the IQF machine. However, Mundi Hielo failed to make any further payments. Appellees ceased production on the machine and refused to return the initial deposit to Mundi Hielo. Subsequently, Appellees and Mundi Hielo entered into a settlement agreement. Mundi Hielo assigned Malatt its interest in the $62,500 deposit being held by Appel-lees.

The instant lawsuit arises from a dispute concerning a provision in the settlement agreement. The settlement agreement states, in pertinent part, as follows:

3. C & R’s Performance Obligations
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(c) C & R shall use its best efforts to market and sell, in an expeditious and commercially reasonable manner, the IQF Machine currently located in the C & R facility in Center, Texas, and for which Mundi has paid to C & R a deposit of $62,500. C & R shall refund the deposit to Mundi, or its nominee, net any offsets, immediately upon sale of the IQF Machine to a third party.

After the agreement was reached, the shrimp market collapsed. 3 Over the next three years, Appellees were unable to sell the IQF Machine. On January 22, 2003, Appellees sued Malatt for breach of contract and sought to rescind the settlement agreement. Malatt filed a counterclaim, alleging, among other things, breach of contract on Appellees’ part, and sought attorney’s fees.

Following a bench trial, the trial court entered a final judgment in favor of Appel-lees, ordering that C & R be discharged from its obligation to use its best efforts to sell the IQF machine. The trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law state, in pertinent part, as follows:

Findings of Fact

The court makes the following findings of fact in this case:

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8. The Settlement Agreement called for a best effort on behalf of C & R and/or Reeves to sell the subject IQF System in a commercially reasonable and expeditious manner; further, if the IQF Machine were *156 sold, C & R was to pay the deposit, net any offsets, to Malatt.
9.The Settlement Agreement did not require C & R and Reeves to actually sell the IQF.
10. Due to the unique nature of the IQF, combined with the current state of the shrimp market to which C & R sells, there is simply no buyer for the IQF.
11. The IQF has not been sold; it remains at C & R’s facilities.
12. Under the Settlement Agreement, Malatt was entitled to the deposit only when the IQF was sold.
13. C & R and Reeves are not obligated to refund the deposit to Malatt.
14. Since entering into the Settlement Agreement, in attempting to sell the IQF, C & R and Reeves over a period of three plus years did the following:
(1) bought advertising in shrimp and seafood publications;
(2) called on numerous contacts in the shrimping industry from a listing known as the Shrimp Directory to market IQF Machines;
(3) made numerous quotes concerning IQF Machines to many potential buyers;
(4) made trips to direct market in person IQF Machines, including the subject IQF; and
(5) put IQF Machines on its website.
15. Such efforts were sufficient to satisfy the best efforts obligation of C & R and Reeves in the Settlement Agreement.
16. C & R and Reeves in fact used their best efforts to sell the subject IQF.
17. C & R and Reeves have fulfilled their obligation to use their best efforts to sell the subject IQF machine.
18. Moreover, due to market forces which were not predictable at the time and were beyond the control of either party to the Settlement Agreement, the provisions calling for the effort to sell the subject IQF System became unduly burdensome and in fact unworkable, despite due diligence on behalf o[f] C & R and Reeves.
19. For example, although manufactured for use in Latin America, the un-marketability of a product whose components can no longer be warranted is not peculiar to Latin America and would be universally the case. This put everyone in the position of wanting the deposit but no one wanting the partially built IQF System.
20. C & R and Reeves fulfilled the best efforts obligation of the Settlement Agreement and they are discharged from their obligations under the Settlement Agreement.

Conclusions of Law

The court makes the following conclusions of law in this case:

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3. C & R and Reeves did not breach the Settlement Agreement.
4. C & R’s and Reeves’ efforts over a three year plus period to sell the IQF were sufficient to satisfy the best efforts obligation under the Settlement Agreement.
5. C & R and Reeves have discharged their obligation to use their best efforts to sell the subject IQF.

This appeal followed.

Contractual Construction

In his first issue, Malatt argues that the sale of the IQF machine was not a condition precedent to Appellees’ obligation to return the deposit, but rather, related sole *157 ly to the timing of Appellees’ obligation to refund the deposit.

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.W.3d 152, 2005 Tex. App. LEXIS 10720, 2005 WL 2653650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malatt-v-c-r-refrigeration-texapp-2005.