Porter v. Tankar Gas, Inc.

68 F. Supp. 103, 1946 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2102
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedSeptember 6, 1946
DocketCivil Action No. 1149
StatusPublished

This text of 68 F. Supp. 103 (Porter v. Tankar Gas, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Porter v. Tankar Gas, Inc., 68 F. Supp. 103, 1946 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2102 (mnd 1946).

Opinion

NORDBYE, District Judge.

To obtain an understanding of the specific question presented, it would seem that a somewhat detailed recital of the history of the proceedings is necessary. This action was commenced in June, 1944. The complaint alleged that between June 26, 1943, and April 28, 1944, at various places in the middle section of the United States, including Minnesota, from its bulk distributing plants located therein, defendant sold 1,196,887 gallons of “stove and light gas” in excess of the ceiling price established by Maximum Price Regulation 88, as amended. It was alleged that the over-ceiling price extracted by the defendant totaled some $60,000, and treble damages in the sum of $180,000 were sought. Maximum Price Regulation 88 in general covers petroleum and petroleum products, including industrial naphtha and solvents derived from petroleum. After receiving a bill of particulars from the plaintiff which set forth the sales allegedly made at over-ceiling prices, defendant’s counsel wrote the District Enforcement Attorney of the Office of Price Administration as to which cate[104]*104gory or categories of the definition, of petroleum products contained in Maximum Price Regulation 88 the product covered by the bill of particulars fell within. Apparently, this inquiry, was prompted by the fact that the complaint referred to the product as “stove and light gas,” and such descriptive words used with reference to any petroleum product were not to be found in the regulations. In response to the letter, the Enforcement Attorney replied on August 30, 1944, in part:

“ * * * y0U qUery as to what category or categories of the definition of petroleum products contained in Maximum Price Regulation No. 88 do the products covered. by the Schedule which we furnished you fall within. Please be advised that it is our contention that the commodity sold by Tankar Gas, Inc., was in fact a grade of gasoline and as such is covered in the Regulations under Article 1, Section 1.1, entitled ‘To What Products This Regulation is Applicable,’ covering all grades of gasoline including natural gasoline and blending naphtha.”

After receiving this letter, the defendant assumed that the plaintiff intended to establish at the trial of the case that the product sold by it was in fact a gasoline, and hence covered by the regulation governing natural gasoline and blending naphtha. But it insisted that the naphtha product sold by it was not a gasoline or covered by the regulation covering gasoline and blending naphtha, but, on the contrary, the naphtha sold as stove and light naphtha, or stove and light gas, was in fact a general utility naphtha, and hence, if covered by any regulation, came under the category of an industrial naphtha or solvent derived from petroleum, which product was likewise covered by Maximum Price Regulation 88.

Thereafter, in January, 1946, plaintiff petitioned this Court for leave to amend his complaint, leaving the original complaint as stated, but adding Count Two which alleged that the sales under Count One were sales of an industrial naphtha and solvent product, and that Revised Price Schedule 88 and Maximum Price Regulations 88 and 510 included provisions for the determination of maximum prices for such petroleum product and further provided that, if a seller was unable to determine a maximum price for any product subject to said regulations, the seller might determine his maximum price in the manner provided therein and then file the same for approval with the Petroleum Branch of the Office of Price Administration in Washington, D. C. The proposed Count Two then alleged that defendant not only was unable to determine the maximum price in the manner provided in the applicable sections of the regulation covering industrial naphtha and solvents derived from petroleum, but had failed to file its maximum selling price for approval with the Office of Price Administration. Plaintiff therefore sought under Count Two a mandatory injunction compelling defendant to apply for a ceiling price, and under Count Three of the amended complaint plaintiff sought treble damages by virtue of the Administrator’s anticipated ceiling price established under Count Two and which plaintiff apparently assumed would be lower than the price at which the product was sold by the defendant, and hence permit the recovery of treble damages on the excess. While Count One as originally framed, and as retained, was broad enough to include within its allegations petroleum products other than gasoline, in. that the alleged violation was stated in general terms as coming within the purview of Maximum Price Regulation 88, it was apparently recognized by all parties, and so understood by the Court when the application for the amendment to the complaint was submitted, that the plaintiff would contend that the product sold, if not a type of gasoline, came within the category of industrial naphtha or solvents derived from petroleum. Plaintiff recognized, of course, that he was pleading two inconsistent causes of action, but under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S. C.A. following section 723c, such pleading is permitted. In considering the requested amendment, this Court did not purport to pass finally on the right of the Administrator to promulgate a ceiling price retroactively, but on April 12, 1946, did allow the amendment as plaintiff requested. However, when the matter was called for trial on June 4, 1946, there had been a [105]*105change of attorneys representing plaintiff, and the attorneys who then represented him took the position for the first time that the product sold by the defendant during the period of alleged price violation was not a gasoline or blending naphtha and was not an industrial naphtha or a solvent derived from petroleum, but was a “distillate burning, heating or fuel oil” within the regulations involved, stating that “the category of petroleum products, which includes stove and light naphtha, is specifically spelled out in the regulation under the nomenclature of ‘distillate burning, heating or fuel oil.’ ” Not only did plaintiff limit the case to the portion of the regulation covering distillate burning, heating or fuel oil, but he voluntarily dismissed Counts Two and Three of the amended complaint and relied exclusively on the contention that the stove and light naphtha sold by defendant falls under the designation of a distillate fuel oil.

Moreover, it may be pointed out that on February 20, 1945, plaintiff brought in a separate proceeding an injunction suit against this defendant, claiming that the naphtha product sold by defendant since November, 1944, as unrationed naphtha (which is the same product referred to herein as stove and light naphtha) was not sold by defendant in March, 1942, and that, therefore, the maximum price could not be determined by the applicable regulations, making it necessary for defendant to apply to the Office of Price Administration for the approval of a maximum price. The action sought a mandatory injunction requiring defendant to apply to the Office of Price Administration for the approval of a maximum price and restraining it from any further sales pending such application. However, the motion for temporary injunction as requested was denied on April 6, 1945, and the suit has not progressed further.

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Bluebook (online)
68 F. Supp. 103, 1946 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-tankar-gas-inc-mnd-1946.