Penn Oil Co. v. Triangle Petroleum & Gasoline Co.

111 A. 482, 136 Md. 559, 1920 Md. LEXIS 92
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 17, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 111 A. 482 (Penn Oil Co. v. Triangle Petroleum & Gasoline Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Penn Oil Co. v. Triangle Petroleum & Gasoline Co., 111 A. 482, 136 Md. 559, 1920 Md. LEXIS 92 (Md. 1920).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the op,inion of the Court.

The judgment from which the appeal in this case was taken was entered on a verdict in favor of the appellee, returned by the- Court, sitting as a jury in the Superior Court of Baltimore City, in an action in‘assumpsit- for the breach ■of several contracts! for the sale of gasoline to the appellant.

The appellant is a corporation, having its: office and plant .at Roslyn, Virginia, near the City of Washington, and is. -engaged in the business of distributing gasoline. In the operation of its business it maintains, a number of tank wagons or filling stations in the City of Washington, and .also supplies gasoline to individuals and various public institutions and to departments of the United States Government.

The gasoline which thei appellant so distributes is delivered to it at its Roslyn plant, and there stored until drawn ■out for distribution.

The appellee is an Oklahoma corporation engaged at Tulsa, Oklahoma, in the sale of petroleum products, including gaso line. As the railroad companies do not furnish ears for the ■shipment of gasoline, it is usually shipped in private tank cars furnished by the shippers. The appellee owned no tank •cars, but rented such as were needed for the transportation ■of the products sold by it.

On April 10, 1918, April 15, 1918, and May 3, 1918, respectively, the appellee sold the appellant three lots of gas *564 oline to be delivered at Roslyn, Virginia. Shortly after shipments under these contracts beg'an, differences arose between the parties to them, as to the terms of the contracts of sale-. The main points of difference were, the time at which shipments were to be- made, and when payment was to* be made for the gasoline shipped. In consequence of these differences, or for other reasons, there was a considerable delay on the part of the appellant in unloading some of the cars of gasoline shipped to it by the appellee; some it refused to accept or unload at all, and others were not even shipped because the appellant had refused to accept oars which had been shipped to it. As a result of this conduct on the part of the appellant, the appellee claimed that it suffered substantial loss in several ways. One was that, because of the appellant’s unreasonable delay in unloading some of the cars, the appellee was required to pay more rent for them than would have been necessary had they been unloaded promptly; another was that when the appellant refused to accept and unload the cars shipped to it, the appellee was obliged to sell the gasoline contained in them at a, loss-, and was also subjected to the payment of demurrage and storage charges and expenses incident to such sale; and finally, that as the appellant had refused to accept a part of the gasoline shipped to it under one of the contracts, it thereby violated the contract and made any further shipments under it unnecessary, and became responsible for any loss which the appellee suffered because of such breach, which as to the cars not shipped consisted of the loss of certain profits which the appellee would have realized had the appellant taken the cars at the price agreed on.

The appellee demanded that the appellant reimburse it- for these losses, and upon its refusal, this suit was brought.

The declaration contains four counts, to each of which the appellant (defendant below) demurred. The demurrer to the fourth count appears to have been abandoned, and the demurrers to each of the other counts were overruled, and the general issue plea filed by the defendant. The objections *565 urged to the declaration in the lower Court were not pressed here in the brief or the oral argument of counsel, and in disposing of them this Court deems it sufficient to say that no error was committed in overruling the demurrer to the declaration, and the respective counts thereof, because each contains a statement of facts which, if true, constitutes a valid cause of action, and nothing further is required. Art. 75, Code Pub. Gen. Laws, Sec. 3.

In the first count it is stated that the defendant, on April 10th, 1918, ordered from the plaintiff four tank cars of gasoline to be shipped from Oklahoma to Noslyn, Virginia, for which the defendant agreed to pay 21% cents per gallon, and that this gasoline was shipped the defendant in cars rented for the purpose, and that while it was received and accepted by the defendant, yet it permitted it to remain in the ears “for a long and unreasonable length'of time,” as a result of which the plaintiff was damaged. It further stated that the plaintiff was. required to pay $5.00 a day rental for these cars. This count does not gratify the technical rules of pleading, hut as a mere narrative of the complaint it states facts which, if true, warrant a recovery.

In the second count the plaintiff declares that, on April loth, 1918, the defendant ordered ten oars of gasoline to he shipped from Oklahoma to Noslyn, Virginia, for which it agreed to pay 21% cents, per gallon, and to unload the cars within forty eight hours after their arrival at Noslyn; that the ears arrived in accordance with the terms of the order in good condition, and that the defendant was notified of their arrival, but it without reasonable or just cause refused to accept the gasoline contained in six of them, in consequence whereof the plaintiff, as the agent of the defendant, and after due notice to it, resold the gasoline contained in these cars at the highest market price; which was less than the contract price, and that in making; this sale it incurred vario-us. expenses incident thereto.. It is further stated that because of the defendant’s refusal to accept the gasoline the plaintiff was compelled to pay demurrage and storage charges to the *566 railroad company, and also a rental of five dollar's per day for the use of the oars for each day they remained unloaded after the fourth day from the time of their arrival.

In the third count the plaintiff says that, on May 3rd, 1918, it contracted -with the defendant to ship' to it at Roslyn, Virginia, from Oklahoma, “twenty (20) cars of gasoline over twenty (20) days” for which it was to pay 21% cents per gallon subject to tank wagon changes date of shipment, and that it had shipped seventeen of these cars when the defendant claimed that the cars had not been shipped in accordance with the agreement, but nevertheless agreed to accept them if the plaintiff would “draw a draft for each car,” which proposal the plaintiff accepted, and drew! the drafts accordingly, but upon arrival of the cars the defendant refused to accept them, although notified of their arrival, and that in consequence of this refusal the plaintiff, as defendant’s agent, after due notice to it, resold the gasoline in the seventeen cars at the highest market price, which was less than the contract price, and incurred various items of expense incident to the resale, and was compelled to pay storage and demurrage charges to1 the railroad company and also a rental of five dollars per day for each day the cars remained unloaded after the fourth day of their arrival. It is also stated that because of the defendant’s failure to carry out the contract, the plaintiff lost the profits it would otherwise have made on the remaining three cars of the twenty car shipment.

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Bluebook (online)
111 A. 482, 136 Md. 559, 1920 Md. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penn-oil-co-v-triangle-petroleum-gasoline-co-md-1920.