Presta Oil, Inc. v. Van Waters & Rogers Corp.

276 F. Supp. 2d 1128, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14003, 2003 WL 21920912
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedJune 20, 2003
Docket02-1217-WEB
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 276 F. Supp. 2d 1128 (Presta Oil, Inc. v. Van Waters & Rogers Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Presta Oil, Inc. v. Van Waters & Rogers Corp., 276 F. Supp. 2d 1128, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14003, 2003 WL 21920912 (D. Kan. 2003).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

BROWN, Senior District Judge.

In this diversity action Plaintiff Presta Oil, Inc. (Presta), which operates a “Phillips 66” brand store, argues it has third-party beneficiary status under a credit card contract between Defendant Van Waters & Rogers Corporation (Van Waters) and Phillips 66 Company (Phillips). Van Waters, however, denies it is liable under any contract theory. Both parties move for summary judgment.

I. FACTS

Based on the submissions of the parties and for purposes of summary judgment, the Court finds that the following facts are uncontroverted. Van Waters entered a retail charge agreement (Charge Agreement) with Phillips for the use a “Phillips 66” credit card. Van Waters was identified on the card as the sole cardholder. Van Waters employed Robert Pemberton (Pemberton) as a warehouse worker and Tammy Sutherland (Sutherland) as an administrative worker at its Liberal, Kansas, location. Sutherland gave the card to Pemberton, who was instructed to use it for business purposes only, primarily to purchase gasoline for his personal vehicle when he was on deliveries. Pemberton cannot recall that he or anyone else signed the back of the credit card.

Pemberton made a habit of playing the “Keno” game of the Kansas Lottery. Keno players may learn if they have won or lost within a few minutes of buying their ticket by watching a screen where the tickets are sold. Presta offered the Keno game at its store under a contract with the Kansas Lottery which gave Pres-ta approximately 5% of the ticket sales.

In June 2000, Pemberton filled his vehicle with gasoline at Presta’s store while in the course of his employment. He also placed some Keno bets, and when Pember-ton presented Van Waters’ credit card as payment for the gasoline, Presta’s employee asked Pemberton if he also wished to pay for the Keno tickets with the card. Pemberton inquired if this was acceptable, and Presta’s employee told him it was. 1 Around this time Presta’s employees were accepting credit cards as payment for lottery tickets from other individuals as well.

Pemberton used Van Waters’ credit card for the entire purchase. The receipt generated bore the legend, “customer agrees to pay the above total amount according to the card issuer agreement. Phillips 66 Co.” The signature line was labeled “cardholder’s signature,” and Pemberton signed his own name for this and every subsequent purchase. Presta’s employees did not then, or at any other time, ever examine the card, notice the name of the cardholder, compare the named cardholder to Pemberton’s name, or otherwise question Pemberton’s use of the card. According to Presta’s employees, they thought the card was Pemberton’s.

The credit card stated on the back that it was to be used for “purchases of petroleum products ... and other authorized merchandise and services which dealers of *1130 Phillips 66 company ... are authorized to sell on this card.” Presta’s store operated under a “Branded Marketer Sales Contract” (Brand Contract) with Phillips. The Brand Contract recited that Phillips “refines and markets gasolines and distillates,” and that Phillips was “willing to sell to [Presta] and [Presta was] willing to buy such products for resale,” subject to the terms of the Brand Contract.

Phillips did more than sell gasoline and distillates to Presta for resale, however. The Brand Contract specified that Phillips would “accept credit card charges made in accordance with the terms of Phillips’ Credit Card Directory by authorized holders of credit cards approved by [Phillips] at retail units authorized to accept such charges.” Phillips would, in other words, process credit card transactions made at Presta’s store as long as those transactions conformed to Phillips’ Credit Card Directory (Credit Directory). 2

Under the Credit Directory, Phillips’s own credit cards were authorized for products and services such as gasoline, tires, batteries, motor oil, and vehicle repairs. Other merchandise could be purchased with a Phillips 66 credit card, but only up to $50.00 per day. Cards such as VISA, MasterCard, and American Express could be used for any sales or services. The Credit Directory specified, however, that no credit card, whether issued by Phillips or by any other entity, could be used to purchase state lottery tickets, and that “[a]ny and all lottery ticket transactions are subject to chargeback.. ”

The Credit Directory contained a variety of other restrictions, and Phillips reserved the right to “reassign (chargeback) credit card invoices prepared or submitted improperly or in violation of the terms or conditions of this [Credit Directory] .... ” The Credit Directory required Presta to “[b]e sure the credit card is approved for acceptance by Phillips,” to “[s]ell only authorized products and services,” and to not “make multiple invoices for a single sale.”

The parties have stipulated that Presta’s employees should have known of these restrictions. The employees did not know, and they did not tell Pemberton about the restrictions. When Presta’s employees entered Pemberton’s Keno purchases into the electronic credit card system, they simply identified the purchases as “miscellaneous.”

Pemberton knew that his Keno purchases were against Van Waters’ policies, however. When the June 2000 credit card statement from Phillips arrived at Van Waters’ place of business, it included $684.57 for Pemberton’s personal expenditures. The evidence does not show the precise amount attributable to Keno purchases, but it is uncontroverted that most of the total was for lottery tickets. Pem-berton told Sutherland that he had made some personal charges on Van Waters’ credit card, but he did not mention the nature of the purchases. Pemberton said that he would pay the statement, Sutherland agreed, and she gave the statement to him without opening it. Pemberton eventually paid June 2000 statement.

His gambling continued, however, and in July 2000 Pemberton purchased $27,833.47 worth of Keno tickets at Presta’s store with Van Waters’ credit card. Pemberton testified that he removed the July invoice *1131 from Sutherland’s desk after the mail was delivered. According to Sutherland, the invoice was not missed because credit card use was intermittent and in some months no invoice was received. Pemberton could not pay the July 2000 bill, however, so he began betting more in an attempt to cover his losses.

In August 2000, Pemberton purchased $140,972.00 worth of Keno tickets at Pres-ta’s store with Van Waters’ credit card. By that point he was purchasing thousands of dollars worth of tickets at a time. The credit card system would not process purchases this large, so Presta’s employees made multiple entries for each purchase in amounts in the system would accept. 3 Presta’s lottery sales increased so much with Pemberton’s gambling that the Kansas Lottery gave Presta a new big-screen Keno monitor.

Pemberton’s actions were eventually discovered, and Van Waters suspended him. Phillips made demand of $168,805.47 upon Van Waters, but Van Waters refused to pay. 4

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Bluebook (online)
276 F. Supp. 2d 1128, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14003, 2003 WL 21920912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/presta-oil-inc-v-van-waters-rogers-corp-ksd-2003.