Reconstruction Finance Corp. v. United Distillers Products Corp.

113 F. Supp. 468
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedJuly 25, 1952
DocketCiv. A. 2338
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 113 F. Supp. 468 (Reconstruction Finance Corp. v. United Distillers Products Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reconstruction Finance Corp. v. United Distillers Products Corp., 113 F. Supp. 468 (D. Conn. 1952).

Opinion

HINCKS, Chief Judge.

This is an action for breach of contract brought by the Reconstruction Finance Corp. (hereinafter called “R.F.C.”), as successor in interest of the Defense Supplies Corporation (hereinafter called “D.S.C.”), the buyer under the contracts in question, against the United Distillers Products Corp. (hereinafter called “Distillers”), a New Jersey corpoi'ation. The matter is now before the court on plaintiff’s motion for sximmary judgmexrt.

D.S.C. was an agency of the government which entered into the contracts now in suit as a means to acquire for wartime purposes ethyl alcohol, then a strategic material, from the defendant which had a plant for its production in Amston, Connecticut. The contracts were four in number, all in writing. The first, dated December 28, 1942, was in effect during the first quarter of 1943; the second, dated March 31, 1943, contx-olled the relations of the parties during the balance of 1943; a third was substituted on January 1, 1944 and this remained in effect until July 1, 1944 when the final contract was executed. Although the third and fourth contracts are entitled variously “Amendment” and “Amendatory Agreement”, they appear each to embody *475 all the provisions which are relevant to the decision of this case so they may most conveniently be treated as separate contracts.

The first contract provided that the purchase price was “not to exceed the maximum price for the Processor’s alcohol * * * as determined in accordance with Office of Price Administration procedure under the O.P.A. General Maximum Price Regulations,” etc. The successive contracts each contained a provision that “the purchase price shall be the maximum price for the Distiller’s alcohol established or determined in accordance with the appropriate regulation of the Office of Price Administration,” etc.

The appropriate Maximum Price Regulation provided that the price should be determined on the basis of a formula depending on actual costs of raw materials, direct labor, other conversion costs, plant overhead, and general administrative expense not in excess of 3‡ per gallon: plus a profit to the distiller of per gallon above the costs thus computed. And the regulation set forth a procedure whereby the price for each quarter should be determined on the basis of actual production ■costs as thereafter ascertained. Each contract also contained a provision that in event of a revision by O.P.A. of defendant’s ceiling price the purchase price was to be adjusted accordingly.

On October 25, 1946, O.P.A. issued a series of amendatory price orders purporting to change the ceiling prices of alcohol theretofore sold to D.S.C. by the defendant for the entire period covered by said four contracts, except for the third quarter of 1945. And on the basis of these amendatory orders of O.P.A. the plaintiff by this action seeks to recover of the defendant so much of the consideration previously paid by D.S.C. as exceeded the price determined on the basis of these amendatory orders, this excess amounting to $82,215.27.

The plaintiff’s present right to recover must necessarily depend upon the proper interpretation of these contracts. The plaintiff contends that the plain meaning of the contracts is such that the purchase price should be the defendant’s ceiling price as fixed by O.P.A. And the defendant contends that the contracts should be interpreted to mean that the parties shall be bound only by a purchase price which is actually in accordance with the formula of the O.P.A. Regulations, referred to above. The defendant’s contention as to the construction of the contract is basic to its further claim that the prices as set in the O.P.A. orders of October 25, 1946 are without binding effect because not in conformity with the stipulated formula. The dispute as to the proper interpretation of the contracts lies at the heart of the controversy and to this problem I now turn.

Are the contracts here involved ambiguous? As to this, the interpretation for which the defendant contends certainly is not plainly required from the face of the writings. And I incline to the view that neither is the plaintiff’s interpretation so required. If as to this latter conclusion there be any doubt, the benefit thereof for all purposes of this memorandum I give to the defendant and treat the writings as ambiguous. Cf. Boro Hall Corp. v. General Motors Corp., 2 Cir., 1947, 164 F.2d 770. I thus take the case as a proper one for application of the doctrine that “when the parties to a contract of doubtful meaning, guided by self-interest, enforce it for a long time by a consistent and uniform course of conduct, so as to give it a practical meaning, the courts will treat it as having that meaning, even if as an original proposition they might have given it a different one.” Brooklyn Public Library v. City of New York, 1929, 250 N.Y. 495, 166 N.E. 179, 181.

Did Contracts Contemplate Price-Fixing Orders. Which Were Retroactive?

In support of its position as to the point of interpretation the defendant points to the undisputed fact that the O.P.A. orders of October 26, 1946, on which plaintiff now counts, as to the transactions involved were retroactive and argues that the contracts should not be so interpreted as to make the final purchase price depend upon a retroactive order. And if I understand the defendant’s position aright, it argues further that, even if the price might be fixed by orders having some, “reason *476 able”, retroactive effect, the contracts may not be so interpreted as to give price-determinative effect to the orders of October, 1946, the issuance of which was so long deferred after the final shipment under the contracts as to be “unreasonably” retroactive.

This interpretation, however, is in direct conflict with express language contained in the contracts. The price terms, and other relevant sections, of the contracts are set forth in an accompanying footnote. 1 The first and second contracts, it will be observed, expressly mention retroactive price changes. And none of the contracts expressly negatives the possibility of retroactive price changes. And all the contracts expressly set as the limiting factor the maximum price as determined under the O.P.A. regulations. All of the O.P.A. orders to Distillers were issued under Maximum Price Regulation 28, issued originally on September 15, 1941, 6 F.R. 4761; 32 C.F.R., 1941 Supp. 3265-7, Secs. 1335.-150-1335.159. The defendant has quoted parts of Regulation 28 in an appendix to its first affidavit and there is no dispute as to the fact that this is the regulation which the parties had in mind in executing the various contracts. On September 17, 1942, prior to the execution of the first contract, Appendix A to Regulation 28 was amended by the addition of new subparagraphs (e) , (f) and (g). 7 F.R. 7401. These sub-paragraphs, which are set out in part in an accompanying footnote, were intended to establish a special formula to be used in computing the ceiling price for ethyl alcohol sold to the United States. The formula embodied in these subparagraphs, as amended, is the one actually used by the O.P.A. in computing Distillers’ ceiling prices on the alcohol which was sold under the contracts here. Subparagraphs (e), (f) and (g) were later amended and consolidated into new subparagraph' (h) of Appendix A. 8 F.R.

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