Nobs Chemical, U.S.A., Inc. And Calmon-Hill Trading Corp., Cross-Appellees v. Koppers Co., Inc., Cross-Appellant, Schenectady Chemicals, Inc.

616 F.2d 212, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 17920, 28 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1039
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 2, 1980
Docket77-3202
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 616 F.2d 212 (Nobs Chemical, U.S.A., Inc. And Calmon-Hill Trading Corp., Cross-Appellees v. Koppers Co., Inc., Cross-Appellant, Schenectady Chemicals, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nobs Chemical, U.S.A., Inc. And Calmon-Hill Trading Corp., Cross-Appellees v. Koppers Co., Inc., Cross-Appellant, Schenectady Chemicals, Inc., 616 F.2d 212, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 17920, 28 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1039 (5th Cir. 1980).

Opinion

*214 HENDERSON, Circuit Judge:

Koppers Company contracted with the plaintiffs, Nobs Chemical, U.S.A., Inc. (hereinafter referred to as “Nobs”) and Calmon-Hill Trading Corporation (hereinafter referred to as “Calmon-Hill”) to purchase 1000 metric tons of cumene. 1 Koppers breached the contract. Nobs and CalmonHill brought suit in United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas, and the case was tried before the court sitting without a jury.

The district court found that the plaintiffs had arranged to purchase the cumene in Brazil for $400.00 a ton and to expend $45.00 per ton for the cost of transporting the cumene to the defendant, for a total expense of $445,000.00. Koppers agreed to buy the cumene for $540,000.00. The court applied Tex.Bus. & Com.Code § 2.708(b) (Vernon), 2 and determined that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover their lost profits, $95,000.00 ($540,000.00 minus $445,-000. 00). The district court ruled that the plaintiffs could not recover the extra $25.00 per ton they allegedly were forced to pay their Brazilian supplier when the price per ton increased because their total order with the supplier was reduced from 4,000 metric tons to 3,000 metric tons because of Koppers’ breach. The court decided this lost quantity discount amounted to consequential damages and was, therefore, not recoverable.

Nobs and Calmon-Hill appeal the measure of damages applied by the district court, and, assuming it is correct, they challenge the computation of those damages. The defendant, Koppers, cross-appeals, also claiming that the district court’s calculation of damages under the lost profits method was incorrect.

We first turn to the issue of whether the district court was correct in applying the lost profits measure of damages to the plaintiffs’ loss.

According to Tex.Bus. & Com.Code Ann. § 2.708 (Vernon)

(a) . . . the measure of damages for non-acceptance or repudiation by the buyer is the difference between the market price at the time and place for tender and the unpaid contract price together with any incidental damages provided in this chapter (Section 2.710), but less expenses saved in consequence of the buyer’s breach.
(b) If the measure of damages provided in Subsection (a) is inadequate to put the seller in as good a position as performance would have done then the measure of damages is the profit (including reasonable overhead) which the seller would have made from full performance by the buyer, together with any incidental damages provided in this chapter (Section 2.710), due allowance for costs reasonably incurred and due credit for payments or proceeds of resale.

The plaintiffs urge that subsection (a) should govern in this case. Because the market value of cumene dropped to between $220.40 and $264.48 a metric ton at the time of the breach, the plaintiffs contend that they should recover the difference between the contract price ($540,000.00) and the market price (between $220,400.00 and $264,480.00), substantially more than the $95,000.00 awarded them under subsection (b).

There appears to be no Texas, nor any other state’s, law directly on point. Under Erie R. R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64, 58 S.Ct. 817, 82 L.Ed. 1188 (1938), a federal court must follow state law in a diversity case. Where no state court has decided the issue a federal court must “make an educated guess as to how that state’s supreme court would rule.” Benante v. Allstate Ins. Co., 477 F.2d 553, 554 (5th Cir. 1973); Smoot v. State Farm Mut. *215 Auto. Ins. Co., 299 F.2d 525, 529 (5th Cir. 1962).

Because there does not appear to be any law directly on point, we take the liberty of looking to those more learned on the subject of the Uniform Commercial Code. Professors White and Summers, recognizing that § 2.708(b) is not the most lucid or best-drafted of the sales article sections, decided that the drafters of the Uniform Commercial Code intended subsection (b) to apply to certain sellers whose losses would rarely be compensated by the subsection (a) market price-contract price measure of damages, and for these sellers the lost profit formula was added in subsection (b). One such type of seller is a “jobber,” who, according to the treatise writers, must satisfy two conditions: “[f]irst, he is a seller who never acquires the contract goods. Second, his decision not to acquire those goods after learning of the breach was not commercially unreasonable. . . . ” J. White & R. Summers, Uniform Commercial Code § 7-10, at 228 (1972) (hereinafter cited as “White & Summers”). Nobs and Calmon-Hill clearly fit this description. The plaintiffs never acquired the goods from their Brazilian supplier, and, as White and Summers point out, an action for the purchase price or resale was therefore unavailable. See, Tex.Bus. & Com.Code Ann. §§ 2.703, 2.704, 2.706, 2.709 (Vernon). See also, American Metal Climax, Inc. v. Essex International, Inc., 16 U.C.C.Rep. 101, 115 (S.D.N.Y.1974) (“[CJompensatory damages as provided in the contract-market formula of § 2-708(1) [§ 2.708(a)] are realistic only where the seller continues t,o be in a position to sell the product to other customers in the market.”).

The plaintiffs argue, however, that in this case the measure of damages under subsection (a) would adequately compensate them and therefore, according to the terms of subsection (a), subsection (b) does not control. This is an intriguing argument. It appears that the drafters of § 2.708(a) did not consider the possibility that recovery under that section may be more than adequate. White & Summers, supra, § 7-12, at 232-233.

It is possible that the code, drafters intended subsection (a) as a liquidated damage clause available to a plaintiff-seller regardless of his actual damages. There have been some commentators who agree with this philosophy. See, C. Goetz & R. Scott, Measuring Sellers’ Damages: the Lost-Profits Puzzle, 31 Stan.L.Rev. 323, 323-324 n. 2 (1979); E. Peters, Remedies for Breach of Contracts Relating to the Sale of Goods Under the Uniform Commercial Code: A Roadmap for Article Two, 73 Yale L.J. 199, 259 (1963).. But, this construction is inconsistent with the code’s basic philosophy, announced in Tex.Bus. & Com.Code Ann. § 1.106(a) (Vernon), which provides “that the aggrieved party may be put in as good a position as if the other party had fully performed” but not in a better posture. White & Summers, supra, § 7-12, at 232. This philosophy is echoed in Texas case law. “The measure of damages for breach of contract is the amount necessary to place plaintiffs in a financial position equivalent to that in which it would have had [sic] if the contract had been fully performed by both parties.”

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Bluebook (online)
616 F.2d 212, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 17920, 28 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1039, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nobs-chemical-usa-inc-and-calmon-hill-trading-corp-cross-appellees-ca5-1980.