Murray E. Gildersleeve Logging Co. v. Northern Timber Corp.

670 P.2d 372, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 480
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 16, 1983
Docket6519
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 670 P.2d 372 (Murray E. Gildersleeve Logging Co. v. Northern Timber Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murray E. Gildersleeve Logging Co. v. Northern Timber Corp., 670 P.2d 372, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 480 (Ala. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

COMPTON, Justice.

This is an appeal from a jury verdict rendered in favor of Northern Timber Corporation (“NTC”) on a breach of contract suit against Murray E. Gildersleeve Logging Co. (“MEG”). The jury found MEG liable for damages totalling $213,640.51. Interest, costs and attorney’s fees were added. This appeal concerns only the jury instructions given at trial. For the reasons set forth below, we find that the jury was correctly instructed as to all issues except the measure of damages. On remand, the jury must be instructed on the proper measure of damages and permitted to decide the factual disputes surrounding the damages issue.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On June 20, 1979, MEG entered into a logging agreement with NTC to log 4.5 million board feet (MMBF) of timber at Shakan Bay on Kosciusko Island near Ket-chikan,' Alaska. NTC had obtained the rights to log timber located on two parcels of private property at Shakan Bay. Wedged in between these two parcels were fourteen acres of land owned by the United States Forest Service.

The crux of this dispute concerns the Forest Service’s decision, in August 1979, not to make a “green sheet sale” of the Forest Service parcel to MEG. A green sheet sale refers to a negotiated sale of small parcels of Forest Service timber having an appraised value of less than $2,000.00. Green sheeting is quicker than the usual process of advertisement and bidding, and by Forest Service regulations, may only be used on small parcels in which only one party is interested. MEG contended at trial that the Forest Service’s decision not to green sheet the Forest Service parcel was a result of NTC’s interference. NTC answered this argument by saying that it did not make any objections to the green sheeting, and that the Forest Service’s decision was mandated in any event by government regulations respecting timber sales.

*375 Since the Forest Service parcel was not quickly sold to MEG as the company had anticipated, MEG was not able to harvest the Forest Service timber, although the company had been given permission to build access roads through that parcel and truck logs from the other properties through it. MEG believed that without the revenue from the timber on the Forest Service parcel and without the easier access through the fully cleared property, it was impossible to fulfill the terms of the logging agreement. As a result, MEG abandoned the Shakan Bay operation in November of 1979, after having produced 1.5 MMBF of export timber for NTC.

NTC moved in to complete the logging itself in the spring of 1980. After advertisements and bidding, the Forest Service parcel was sold to NTC, which logged a small portion of it and extended the access roads begun by MEG through the rest.

Using the extended access roads, NTC logged 2.2 MMBF of export timber, which was enough to satisfy NTC’s buyer, the Three M Co., Ltd. (3-M). 3-M, however, was not satisfied with the quality of the logs rafted by MEG, and assessed a penalty on NTC in the form of a fifteen percent discount on the price it paid for those logs. This penalty amounted to approximately $26,000.00.

After completing the work at Shakan Bay, NTC sued MEG for the excess cost of logging the 2.2 MMBF in 1980. In its complaint against MEG, NTC also demanded repayment of the unpaid portion of a $125,-000.00 advance which NTC had made to MEG at the beginning of the 1979 season, and an additional $26,211.50 for breach of the log specification provisions of the logging agreement, based on the penalty assessed by 3-M.

MEG responded to NTC’s suit by filing an answer and a counterclaim for damages in excess of $100,000.00. NTC moved for partial summary judgment, which was denied. A jury trial in superior court followed, in which the jury returned a verdict in favor of NTC, awarding it all the damages it had requested. MEG moved for a new trial and the trial court denied the motion. This appeal followed.

II. IMPOSSIBILITY OF PERFORMANCE

MEG’s primary contention on appeal is that the superior court erred in its disposition of the issue of impossibility. Impossibility of performance is recognized as a valid defense to an action for breach of contract when the promissor’s performance becomes commercially impracticable as a result of the frustration of a mutual expectation of the contracting parties. Northern Corp. v. Chugach Electric Association, 518 P.2d 76, 80-82 (Alaska 1974). Commercial impracticability is demonstrated when performance “ ‘can only be done at an excessive and unreasonable cost.’ ” Id. at 81, quoting Natus v. United States, 371 F.2d 450, 456 (Ct.Cl.1967). While an explicit agreement is not necessary to establish a mutual expectation, there must be an assumption on both sides that an event will occur for its non-occurrence to excuse a breach. Northern Corp. v. Chugach Electric Association, 518 P.2d at 81, 82. See also Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 261 comment b (1979).

The superior court could find no credible evidence to support MEG’s claim that the Forest Service’s decision made the performance of the logging agreement commercially impracticable. The court ruled as a matter of law that the performance was not rendered impossible by the Forest Service’s decision. We agree.

There was no showing by MEG that the cost of performance without the use of the Forest Service parcel would have been much greater than the cost of performance with it. As the court below noted:

That is probably the critical factor is what’s the difference. The closest I could get to anything on it was when Mrs. Gildersleeve testified that she was concerned about making it to begin with, and that the sale would have helped with the cost on that road construction. And *376 that didn’t sound like much of a difference.

In addition, the testimony of witnesses for NTC and the language of the logging agreement itself suggest that the green sheet sale was not a mutual assumption of the parties. Paragraph 5 of the agreement states:

In the event that MEG obtains the right to cut timber on Forest Service property or private property adjoining the property described in paragraph 1 above, MEG shall provide NTC with timber cruises on said Forest Service property ....

(Emphasis added.)

None of the prerequisites for a defense of impossibility are present here. Performance was not rendered impracticable, or even particularly difficult, by the Forest Service’s decision, and there was no mutual expectation by MEG and NTC that the Forest Service parcel would be green sheeted to MEG. Accordingly, the superior court instructed the jury as follows:

It is, therefore, up to the court, and not to the jury, to decide whether the Forest Service’s decision to sell the timber on the fourteen-acre tract by competitive bid, rather than by negotiation to MEG frustrated the contract between MEG and NTC.

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Bluebook (online)
670 P.2d 372, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-e-gildersleeve-logging-co-v-northern-timber-corp-alaska-1983.