Raymond v. Shell Oil Co.

103 P.2d 745, 165 Or. 11, 1940 Ore. LEXIS 4
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 103 P.2d 745 (Raymond v. Shell Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raymond v. Shell Oil Co., 103 P.2d 745, 165 Or. 11, 1940 Ore. LEXIS 4 (Or. 1940).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment of the circuit court in favor of the plaintiffs, based upon a jury’s verdict and entered in an action instituted by the plaintiffs to recover damages resulting from the defendant’s alleged wrongful interference with a contract which the plaintiffs allege existed between them and one O. L. Hammond. The plaintiffs are George A. Raymond and his wife, Thelma M. Raymond. They were the owners of the automobile service station which we shall shortly describe. The former was its manager and we shall refer to him as the plaintiff. The plaintiffs contend that the *13 alleged contract bound Hammond to supply their service station with gasoline.

The defendant’s (appellant’s) brief submits and argues ten assignments of error. We shall now dispose of the first two. They are based, respectively, upon the denials of the defendant’s motions for a nonsuit and a directed verdict. The defendant called no witnesses. The two motions just mentioned were based largely upon contentions that the alleged contract never existed and that, if there ever was such a contract, the defendant had no knowledge of it.

The plaintiffs, in March, 1938, and for six years prior thereto were engaged in business in Salem in the sale of gasoline, tires, batteries, etc., and in the repair of automobiles. Their place was equipped with four gasoline pumps. Beginning in March, 1937, they sold the brands of gasoline produced by the defendant. The price which they paid was four cents per gallon less than the prevailing retail price. However, they allowed all customers who bought first-grade gasoline and paid cash or possessed credit cards a discount of two cents per gallon. The defendant, through its local officials, objected to this practice and endeavored to persuade the plaintiffs to abandon it. Their efforts were unsuccessful.

The plaintiff swore that in the early part of March, 1938, J. E. Puhlman, the defendant’s local manager, again sought to persuade him to forego the use of cash discounts, and “told me ‘you better get on the line.’ ” In the gasoline trade, so the plaintiff said, the expression “on the line” means “You have to get on the line and stay there and do as they want you to do.” He swore that Puhlman also told him that he “would have to either get on the line, or else * * * or else no *14 more gas.” Puhlman told him further that unless he abandoned his discount practice “We will have to dry you up, George, that’s all.” Being asked what was meant by the expression “dry you up”, the plaintiff replied, “In the terms of a service station, if they say they are going to ‘dry you up’ that means you aren’t to get any more gas.”

The plaintiffs refused to comply with Puhlman’s demands, and after March 15, 1938, the defendant delivered no more gasoline to them. The plaintiffs concede that since they had no contract with the defendant, the latter violated no rights belonging to them when it severed its relations with them. The complaint alleges, in the words which we shall now quote from it, what happened after the defendant’s deliveries ceased:

“Following said time of refusal of defendants so to deliver gasoline plaintiffs entered into an arrangement and agreement with one O. L. Hammond, doing business as the Salem-Tillamook Oil Company of Salem, Oregon, whereby and by the terms whereof said Hammond agreed for the period of one year from that time to sell to plaintiffs, and plaintiffs agreed to purchase from said Hammond, at wholesale, plaintiffs’ requirements of gasoline, and the various grades thereof, at prices equivalent to the customary retail prices for such gasoline prevailing at Salem, Oregon, and the vicinity thereof, less four cents per gallon, and that pursuant to said arrangement gasoline was purchased by plaintiffs from said Hammond for the period of March 18, 1938, to March 23, 1938; that said Hammond was during all said time, and for a long time theretofore and thereafter, a distributor of, ‘Richfield’ gasoline at Salem, Oregon, and the vicinity thereof.
“Thereafter, and at a time or times between March 18, 1938, and March 23, 1938, the exact time being to plaintiffs unknown, defendants wrongfully, knowingly, unlawfully and maliciously, and by means to plaintiffs *15 not fully known, did prevail on, cause and induce said Hammond to refuse to make further sales or deliveries of gasoline to plaintiffs, and the said Hammond did, on or about March 23,1938, notify and inform plaintiffs that he, the said Hammond, would make no further sales of gasoline to them, and then refused and at all times thereafter continued to refuse to make any such sales; that said breach by said Hammond of said agreement with plaintiffs for the furnishing of gasoline to plaintiffs, as aforesaid, was caused solely and entirely by said acts and wrongful conduct of defendant; * # * ”

The plaintiffs quote the following from IY, Restatement of the Law, Torts, Section 766, as a statement of the principle which governs this case:

“Except as stated in Section 698, one who, without a privilege to do so, induces or otherwise purposely causes a third person not to
“ (a) perform a contract with another, or
“ (b) enter into or continue a business relation with another is liable to - the other for the harm caused thereby.”

We observe that statement is followed on page 56 with the following comment:

“To be subject to liability under the rule stated in this Section, the actor must have knowledge of the business expectancy with which he is interfering. This is true whether the expectancy is one described in Clause (a) or in Clause (b). Thus, although the actor’s conduct is in fact the cause of another’s’failure to perform a contract, the actor does not induce or otherwise purposely cause that failure if he has no knowledge of the contract.”

It will be observed that the thing with which the plaintiffs say the defendant interfered was a contract between the plaintiffs and the aforementioned Hammond. We deem that fact important, and in order to *16 be sure revert to the complaint. Its averments quoted above say that the plaintiffs had “an arrangement and agreement with” Hammond. It should be noted that they use the conjunctive “and” and not the alternative “or”. The quoted expression is shortly followed by other language obviously intended to clarify and make certain the meaning intended. Thus, they say: “Hammond agreed for the period of one year from that time to sell to plaintiffs, and plaintiffs agreed to purchase from said Hammond, at wholesale, plaintiffs’ requirements of gasoline.” Still later, after the complaint averred the defendant’s purported wrongful conduct, it says: “Said breach by said Hammond of said agreement with plaintiffs for the furnishing of gasoline to plaintiffs, as aforesaid, was caused solely and entirely by said acts and wrongful conduct of defendant.” Hence, it is clear that this case falls within subdivision (a) of the legal principle expressed in the Restatement.

But the plaintiffs now seek to place this case within subdivision (b) of the Restatement.

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Related

State v. O'BRIEN
485 P.2d 434 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1971)
Luisi v. Bank of Commerce
449 P.2d 441 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1969)

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Bluebook (online)
103 P.2d 745, 165 Or. 11, 1940 Ore. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-v-shell-oil-co-or-1940.