Northern Propane Gas Company v. Mike Cole

395 F.2d 1, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 7070
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 6, 1968
Docket24623
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 395 F.2d 1 (Northern Propane Gas Company v. Mike Cole) 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
Northern Propane Gas Company v. Mike Cole, 395 F.2d 1, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 7070 (5th Cir. 1968).

Opinion

JOHN R. BROWN, Chief Judge:

This is a sort of man-bites-dog situation. Instead of the usual situation in which the author, confector and instigator of a boiler plate adhesion-type contract seeks to hold the weaker, pliant, submissive, unequal acceptor to the literal pound of flesh, the reverse is here claimed. Asserting with dead earnestness that its own form contract, filled in by its own responsible and presumably articulate representative of considerable responsibility, is ambiguous in its reference to the identity of all the parties to be bound by it, the contention is made that the Trial Court erroneously granted summary judgment since a question of fact existed as to the intention of the parties on which extrinsic evidence was admissible. In this setting in which there is not a single identifiable new question of law, or for that matter, much of a dispute as to what the law is, we agree with the Trial Court and affirm.

What is specifically at issue is the convenant not to compete contained in a buy-out contract between the acquirer, Northern, 1 and Economy, 2 the local deal *2 er being bought out. More specifically the question is whether in addition to binding Economy, the corporation, the covenant also bound Mike Cole, its President and 99i4/ioo% sole stock holder. What launched the controversy was the unabashed re-entrance into the LP-gas business in the trade territory prescribed by Mike Cole within a couple of months after the execution of the contract, triggered presumably because Northern decided to terminate the employment of Mike Cole’s wife. To make an ambiguity takes a lot of doing in this simple contract. 3

In its formidable undertaking Northern insists that there was a genuine material issue of fact as to the intention of the parties concerning whether Mike Cole intended to bind himself in his individual capacity as well as in his capacity as agent (President) for the corporate transferor. Its attack is anchored on Cavaness v. General Corp., 1955, 155 Tex. 69, 283 S.W.2d 33, principally because the Supreme Court there approved § 323 of *3 the Restatement of the Law of Agency. Subdivision (1) of that section provides in substance that if it appears unambiguously in a contract that a party who executes a contract as an agent is or is not a party to the contract, extrinsic evidence is not admissible to show a contrary intent, except for the purpose of reforming the contract. On the other hand, subdivision (2) permits extrinsic evidence where “there is no unambiguous expression of an intention.” 4 These not surprising principles find general acceptance in Texas and elsewhere. 5 These principles, Northern asserts, have been given application by the Texas Courts in cases 6 which call for a reversal here.

The problem under this boiler plate contract boils down to the simple question of whether there is really any doubt on the face of this contract that the party sought to be bound by the covenant not to compete (paragraph 4) was other than the admitted corporate transferor. To overcome the surface tension against extrinsic evidence stress is laid, not on the obligation in dispute (paragraph 4), but rather it is directed toward paragraph 3 covering a matter nowhere in dispute. Thus Northern insists that where, in the warranty of title and ownership, paragraph 3 speaks in terms of “Seller, for himself and for his heirs, successors and assigns, * * * ” this indicates either as a matter of law that it was the purpose of the corporate agent to bind himself in his individual capacity or at least to raise a substantial question of fact on which extrinsic evidence would be admissible. 7

*4 But to us this asserted ambiguity of paragraph 3 is but a ripple, considering that it is uncontradicted that Northern knew the business being acquired was conducted in the form of a corporation, which the formal contract (note 3 supra) very precisely reflected. The contract gave its own definition of “Seller.” Typed into the form contract was the corporate name “Economy Gas & Supply Co.” It was this concern, and no other that the contract declared was “(hereinafter referred to as ‘Seller’).” That this was no inadvertent slip of the typist’s finger is reflected further by the repetition of the corporate title “Economy Gas & Supply Co.” immediately below the contract term “Seller” in the signature clause. And to cap it all there was typed in under the line for signature the significant corporate title, “President.” Moreover, although one can imagine that this was wholly accidental and just one of the perils that comes from form agreements that reflect the likelihood that the first and only time the writing came close to a lawyer was in the litigation seeking to enforce or defend it, when Northern intended to depart from the structured definition of “Seller” it did so in precise terms by adding, for example, “for himself and for his heirs, successors and assigns” in paragraph 3. Elsewhere, in paragraph 1, paragraph 2, and paragraph 4 the contract definition of “Seller” was thought to be adequate. Structured as the contract was with the purposeful tyepwritten insertion of the corporate name and the corporate title of the signatory agent 8 there is no basis whatsoever for holding that there was either an intention to hold Mike Cole personally responsible or any basis for any genuine doubt thereon. This makes it unnecessary for us to discuss in detail the cases stressed by Northern, none of which require a different result here.

Only a tag end remains, Langford v. Shamburger, 5 Cir., 1968, 392 F.2d 939 (1968). Northern insists that Mike Cole is bound personally because he is the alter ego of the wholly-owned corporation which may be disregarded. No possible showing of a question of fact under accepted Texas principles appears in this record to rescue Northern from its undeniable knowledge that the enterprise was in a corporate form being transferred to it in the corporate name through a corporate officer. 9

Affirmed.

1

. Northern Propane Gas Company, the Appellant, a Delaware corporation with its principal offices in Omaha, Nebraska.

2

. Economy Gas & Supply Company, a Texas corporation.

3

. This contract form was on a typewritten form. The matter interlined by typewriter is shown in italics. Handwritten signatures are shown as “/S/ Mike Cole,” etc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
395 F.2d 1, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 7070, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-propane-gas-company-v-mike-cole-ca5-1968.