R. W. Norris, Jr., Plainitff-Appellee-Cross v. Bovina Feeders, Inc., Defendant-Appellant-Cross

492 F.2d 502, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9225
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 10, 1974
Docket73-2125
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 492 F.2d 502 (R. W. Norris, Jr., Plainitff-Appellee-Cross v. Bovina Feeders, Inc., Defendant-Appellant-Cross) 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
R. W. Norris, Jr., Plainitff-Appellee-Cross v. Bovina Feeders, Inc., Defendant-Appellant-Cross, 492 F.2d 502, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9225 (5th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

GEE, Circuit Judge:

In this Texas diversity case, plaintiff R. W. Norris recovered, on jury findings, damages representing lost business profits for wrongful detention of an expensive and highly productive machine, a grain grinder capable of producing 100 tons of ground feed per hour. Norris’ judgment is attacked here by defendant Bovina Feeders, Inc. (Bovina), as awarding damages which are as a matter of law too speculative and uncertain to be proved to that degree of certainty which the law demands, as well as on other grounds. Though the appeal presents close questions, and though the evidence is meager on several significant points, we affirm.

In 1969 R. W. Norris and his brother, Morgan, formed a partnership and went into the business of preparing feed for livestock. Their specialty was grinding grain and hay and cubing alfalfa. This required the use of a large and expensive machine, which we will call Grinder X and which they acquired at some point during the overture to the actions which chiefly concern us. The process which they employed was the grinding of high-moisture grain, either so because green or because reconstituted by the addition of water. During these times, the steam-flaking process, a competitive method for processing grain, was finding increasing favor in the Panhandle of Texas and in adjacent areas of New Mexico where the Norris brothers operated, to such a degree as to threaten the grinding method with obsolescence.

Against this background, word reached the Norrises in 1970 that defendant Bovina, a large feedlot operation located in the Texas-New Mexico border area between Farwell and Bovina, 1 Texas, had decided to contract out its feed-grinding on the stated rationale that cowboys were not grain grinders and experience was needed. They approached Bovina’s then manager and offered their services. After consultation with his board of directors and further negotiations, a verbal bargain was struck under which the Norris brothers were to grind Bovina’s feed requirements for four years, anticipated to exceed fifty thousand tons annually. In consideration of the sixe and duration of the arrangement, the Norris partnership agreed to do the work for a substandard *504 unit price of six cents per hundredweight of feed ground and to purchase Bovina’s feed grinding machine (the Grain King) for twenty thousand dollars. There was testimony that at the time and in the area this was a handsome price indeed for the machine, in view of the inroads being made by the steam-flaking process. Terms of payment were lenient; the price was to be paid in four equal annual increments, without interest, and the Grain King was to remain on Bovina’s premises until paid out. As noted, the agreement was oral. 2 This was, R. W. Norris testified, a large and important job for the partnership, since they had not been in business very long. To be sure to do “the right kind of job” they bought a twenty-thousand-dollar front-end loader, which they had no other use for and would not otherwise have purchased.

Thus'equipped, they fell to and completed the fall grinding season on green grain to the apparent satisfaction of all hands. From there, they took Grinder X with them to Hobbs, New Mexico, to do cubing of hay, leaving the Grain King with Bovina as agreed.

In February, we find them again in the Bovina-Farwell area, preparing to take Grinder X to Washington State to grind and cube alfalfa for export. At this time, Bovina’s manager told them the grain for the spring season was already on contract and would be ready sometime in April. Nothing was said about Bovina’s backing down on the word it had out to the Norrises.

Bovina had decided, however, or decided very quickly after their departure for Washington, to install its own steam-flaking process. About the same time, Bovina engaged a new general manager, Franz Lee Hicks. Hicks located R. W. Norris in Washington State and, according to Norris, gave him to understand that they were through and should come down, pay for the Grain King and get it off Bovina’s premises. Norris personally appealed over Hicks’ head to the president of Bovina but was advised that Hicks was the manager and matters would have to be worked out with him. Financially unable to respond to Hicks’ demand, R. W. Norris returned to work in Washington State and hoped for the best. About this time, Morgan Norris chose his family over the nomadic life dictated by the work of the partnership, which was dissolved. Morgan continued for a time as an employee, and R. W. Norris took over the partnership’s assets and liabilities.

Meanwhile, back at the feedlot, matters with the new steam-flaking installation had gone more slowly than expected. Swallowing hard (presumably), Hicks again located R. W. Norris in Washington, asking him to return to Texas and grind for Bovina temporarily until the new process came on stream. Norris agreed to do so. Nothing was said about the old agreement, and R. W. Norris simply reported to Bovina’s yard ready to go to work, Morgan and another employee accompanying him.

And at this juncture, Norris’ apparently supremely accommodating nature received another test: Hicks told him that Bovina would not allow him to use the Grain King grinder on the temporary job he had returned to do until he obtained and presented for Bovina’s inspection a written “release” from his brother Morgan. What sort of release was envisioned by Hicks’ diktat is the subject of confusion in the record. Morgan Norris testified that he understood Hicks to be demanding that he release Bovina from its four-year contract. 2 3 *505 And since there was no evidence that Hicks’ demand was made to anyone but R. W. Norris, it being undisputed that Hicks never mentioned it to Morgan directly or asked him to sign any kind of instrument, presumably this represented R. W. Norris’ belief also, communicated to Morgan. Hicks testified, on the other hand, that he merely meant a release from Morgan, a former partner, for the use of the machine by R. W. in his new capacity as sole proprietor. Hicks explained that in requiring the release he was prompted by his concern that Morgan be treated fairly by his brother, and that Morgan could not “come back against” Bovina for letting R. W. use property of the former partnership in fulfilling his temporary grinding contract. At any rate, the release was not forthcoming, the Grain King sat idle, and Norris did the job with Grinder X.

By so doing, he testified, he lost a job which he had in New Mexico, which would have required the use of Grinder X in conjunction with his cubing machine. On his evidence, at this work he would have produced eight to twelve thousand tons of cubes at a profit, according to his cubing experience, of about $3.83 per ton. A choice between the jobs was forced on him by Bovina’s refusal to let him use the Grain King since he did not have the economic resources to acquire a third grinder: “ . . .we was already fully loaded.” Hicks admitted that Norris complained and asked several times to be allowed to use the Grain King, but was refused each time because he did not have Morgan Norris’ written release. In late August of 1971, after he had finished the job with Grinder X, Norris filed this action.

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Bluebook (online)
492 F.2d 502, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-w-norris-jr-plainitff-appellee-cross-v-bovina-feeders-inc-ca5-1974.