Rennie & Laughlin, Inc., a Corporation v. Chrysler Corporation, a Corporation

242 F.2d 208, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 2781
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 8, 1957
Docket15210_1
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 242 F.2d 208 (Rennie & Laughlin, Inc., a Corporation v. Chrysler Corporation, a Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rennie & Laughlin, Inc., a Corporation v. Chrysler Corporation, a Corporation, 242 F.2d 208, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 2781 (9th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

BARNES, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff appeals from an Order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of California, Central Division, dismissing its amended complaint and cause of action, for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Rule 12(b) (6), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A.

The sole question presented by this appeal is whether the amended complaint, assuming all well-pleaded facts to be true and indulging in all inferences which reasonably may be drawn therefrom, 1 sets forth facts sufficient to state a legal claim.

The original complaint purported to allege a cause of action based on breach of contract and was filed on August 8, 1955. Thereafter, an amended complaint, reasserting fundamentally the same claim, was filed on April 5,1956. It is this latter and superseding pleading which is now before this Court.

We first consider the amended complaint. It appears therefrom that the plaintiff and the De Soto Division of the defendant corporation entered into a written agreement in December 1949, whereby plaintiff became an authorized and direct dealer for De Soto and Plymouth motor vehicles, with the non-exclusive right to purchase said vehicles for resale, in the Los Angeles, California area. 2 The contract provided inter alia that it “shall terminate immediately by its own force without notice from either party in the event of (1) an attempted assignment of this agreement without De Soto’s written consent.” In September of 1951, following economic setbacks and a heart attack suffered by plaintiff’s president and general manager, plaintiff advised defendant of its desire to sell its business. This information was conveyed to A. H. Langridge, defendant’s Regional Manager. He, in turn, told plaintiff that the defendant corporation would procure a buyer for plaintiff’s business “acceptable” to defendant. Subsequently, on or about October 1, 1951, negotiations for the sale of plaintiff’s business were commenced with one Darwin C. McCredie and one George Peck, these prospective purchasers having been referred to plaintiff by Mr. Lang-ridge. These negotiations culminated, according to the amended complaint, “in a final sale being made of Plaintiff’s business to said prospective buyers on October 26,1951,” although “it was further agreed, on said date, that the formal contract of sale would be made on the 27th day of October, 1951, and the purchase price paid at that time.” Prior to the execution of the written agreement of purchase, the defendant, through Mr. *210 Langridge, advised the buyers that it would not give its written consent to the sale. Thereupon, McCredie and Peck “refused” to consummate the sale. As a consequence of defendant’s refusal to approve the sale transaction, a new contract with defendant was executed on February 20th, 1952, by which plaintiff continued to represent defendant, and plaintiff entered into a management contract with McCredie and Peck by which the latter operated the auto agency, Continued financial losses finally forced plaintiff to terminate its franchise agreement and close down its business operations on March 31, 1954.

Plaintiff sought recovery in its amended complaint for the following damages sustained as a result of defendant’s alleged breach of contract: $77,921.69, being the agreed price for the sale of plaintiff’s business to McCredie and Peck; $102,686.64, being the losses incurred between October 27, 1951 and March 31, 1954; and $300,000,00, for injury to its reputation- as an automobile dealer.

, , , . , , [2] The amended complaint purports to ground plaintiff s action on the doctrine of waiver It avers That having consented to the aforesaid sale to said purchasers, Defendant s subsequent revocation of said consent constituted a , , „ ., , , , ,, „ „ ,, breach of said sales contract * _ if m fact that were the only basis upon which plaintiff could conceivably proceed further discussion would be unnecessary, .....• , for it is settled that waiver can be employed only for defensive purposes. 3 It can preclude the assertion of legal rights but it cannot be used to impose legal duties. The shield cannot serve as a sword.

However, giving the facts alleged in the complaint their most liberal import and disregarding the semantic deficiencies, there does appear one possible theory for an action, which is not totally devoid of merit, and requires discussion.

In substance, the theory is this. The 1949 agreement created rights and duties in both parties. Since, in the absence of an express and clear provision to the contrary, contract rights are generally assignable, 4 it follows that an implied term of the agreement was that plaintiff could assign its rights thereunder and defendant was obligated to perform to the assignee. But a limitation on the right to assign had been included in the contract: the provision that the written consent of the defendant first be obtained. This protective condition, like other defenses, was waivable. 5 Defendant, by reason of the conduct of its agent, Mr. Langridge, in securing and orally approving the prospective buyers, may have waived its right to require written consent. Accordingly, if the restrictive condition was waived, defendant was under a duty to render performance to the assignee, and its refusal to recognize this duty constituted a breach of contract.

Do the alleged facts sustain such a claim? It is of importance to a thorough understanding of the problem and itg regolution that the uni context in which thig issue ¡s d be fully ceiyed_ We are not deaIing with the ugual gituation in which this quegtion arig where the aggignee after ^ ag_ , , ,, signment has been completed sues the obligor for failure to perform. There the r getg ^ defenge of lack o£ written congent The j is that writ_ , , , ten consent was waived. In the instant cage nQ aggignment came into being> or wag effectuated or if one were mad it wag vitiated and ^ ig an action be. ^ contracting parties. The con. .. ... ,, , , siderations which govern the determina^on ordinary type of assignments case no^ necessar^y 3-PP^y to the case ^ar-

The gravamen of plaintiff’s grievance is the effect defendant’s conduct had on plaintiff’s contractual relations with Mc *211 Credie and Peck. What then was the status of these relations at the time defendant informed plaintiff that it would not consent to the sale?

Two different interpretations of the amended complaint are possible. The first is that the oral agreement between plaintiff and McCredie and Peck represented the final and fixed expression of the mutual assent of those parties to all material terms of the contract; the parties contemplating that the “formal contract” would be only a written memorial of their prior binding agreement. 6

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
242 F.2d 208, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 2781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rennie-laughlin-inc-a-corporation-v-chrysler-corporation-a-ca9-1957.