Romano Pagnan & f.lli v. Mississippi River Grain Elevator, Inc.

700 F.2d 149, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 30907, 1983 A.M.C. 2465
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 31, 1983
Docket82-3145
StatusPublished

This text of 700 F.2d 149 (Romano Pagnan & f.lli v. Mississippi River Grain Elevator, Inc.) 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
Romano Pagnan & f.lli v. Mississippi River Grain Elevator, Inc., 700 F.2d 149, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 30907, 1983 A.M.C. 2465 (5th Cir. 1983).

Opinion

TATE, Circuit Judge:

In this suit, the plaintiff (“Pagnan”) sought damages from the defendant (“Grain Elevator”) for breach of a contract between the parties. Pagnan, a grain dealer of Italy, claims damages for Grain Elevator’s delay in loading corn onto its time-chartered vessel the BRUSSEL. On a jury trial of liability alone, the jury found (a) that Grain Elevator had breached its contract to load vessels on a first-come, first-served basis, and (b) that Grain Elevator had thereby committed a “willful act or a grossly] negligent act” in calling another vessel of lower priority, the NOPAL JAPANA, to berth ahead of the BRUSSEL. However, the district court granted Grain Elevator’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(b), finding no substantial evidence that the bypassing was other than a valid business judgment and thus could be neither a breach of the contract nor a “willful” nor a “grossly negligent” act. We reverse, finding that substantial evidence before the jury permitted it to find the breach of the contract and that such breach was willful or grossly negligent.

(D

The following is the undisputed factual context out of which this litigation arises:

Grain Elevator was notified on July 11, 1975, by Mitsui, the owner and prospective shipper, that it had purchased some one million bushels of “No. 3” yellow corn that would be shipped for loading from the elevator at some time between August 5 and August 25 onto the BRUSSEL, and that vessel would arrive in the area about July 20. The BRUSSEL arrived at Grain Elevator’s facility on July 21 and filed for and was accepted for berth to load on that same day. According to Grain Elevator’s tariff (see below), it was thereby entitled to be assigned a berth ahead of vessels that arrived subsequently. However, no loading could commence until Mitsui shipped the corn (in barges) to Grain Elevator’s facility, which order is shown (see note 8 infra) to have occurred by August 5. There was no obligation of Grain Elevator to berth the loading vessel until the shipper Mitsui had confirmed by written telex its order that the elevator deliver the corn in question to the BRUSSEL — and this confirmation order was not received by Grain Elevator until 10:20 a.m. on August 6.
Over the protests of its agent, the BRUSSEL was first bypassed by a later-arriving vessel (the MEXICAN GULF), which was called to berth and started loading on August 6, 1975 at 6:00 p.m. — the jury, however, found this bypassing not to have been a breach of the contract, apparently because of the belated confirmation order. The BRUSSEL was not called to berth by Grain Elevator to begin loading until 6:54 p.m., August 11. The BRUSSEL had again been bypassed at 6:00 p.m. on August 8, 1975, by the NOPAL JAP ANA, which had not filed for berth until August 4 (about two weeks after the BRUSSEL). The trial jury found that this second bypassing was a willful and grossly negligent violation of the contract that caused delay damages (of three days and fifty-four minutes) to the BRUSSEL.

(2)

Both parties agree that the law between the parties is established by a contract resulting from Pagnan’s acceptance of the conditions of Grain Elevator’s tariff per *151 taining to grain shipments. Pagnan relies upon a provision of the tariff that “vessels shall be assigned berth in [the] chronological order in which they file for berth.” 1 In claiming a nonbreach of the contract despite its bypassing of the BRUSSEL, Grain Elevator relies upon a provision of the contract allowing it discretion to alter the turn of the vessel under certain conditions, pertinently whether “in its judgment” the bypass was “in the best interest of the elevator operations” and also when there was a “nonavailability in the elevator” of grain of adequate grade or quantity. 2 The defendant Grain Elevator also relies upon a provision of the contract that, even though there was a breach, it could not be liable for delay damages unless its breach was a “willful” or a “gross[ly] negligent” act. 3

We should note: In terms, the deviation clause permits Grain Elevator “in its sole discretion” to determine the “best interest of the elevator operations.” See full deviation clause quoted in note 2, supra. However, the evidence suggests that in the custom of the trade the discretion so exercised must be in the course of “sound business management,” (cf. Tr. 101, 107.) In determining whether the discretion was properly exercised, the district court’s test was whether the deviation decision ivas a “valid business judgment”, Tr. 154-165. No serious contention seems to be advanced to contradict that this was the nature of the discretion intended by the meaning of the terms under the custom of the trade. 4

(3)

The issues posed to the jury were: (a) whether Grain Elevator’s bypassing of the BRUSSEL in favor of the subsequently arriving NOPAL JAPANA was a breach of the contract — i.e., whether it exercised its discretion to do so on the basis of a valid business judgment, rather than simply because its manager may have preferred to do so; and (b) whether, if so, this breach was the result of a “willful act” or a “grossly negligent act” 5 — in the absence of which, *152 under the contract Grain Elevator would not be liable for the delay damages sought. Answering interrogatories submitted to it, the trial jury found that the bypass was a breach of the contract and also that it was “a willful act or a grossly negligent act”.

To anticipate the subsequent discussion, the apparent basis on the record for the jury’s determinations is evidence from which the jury could reasonably have found: The barges containing the Mitsui corn had arrived at Grain Elevator’s facilities by August 5 (see note 8 infra). Although Grain Elevator had no obligation to commence unloading grain into the elevator until receiving Mitsui’s confirmation order at 10:20 a.m. on August 6, under the custom of the trade — knowing that the BRUSSEL was next in line for berthing and loading— the elevator’s failure to commence unloading the Mitsui-corn barges soon after the confirmation order in preparation to load them onto the BRUSSEL, next at berth, see note 8 infra, was- grossly negligent or a deliberate disregard of the BRUSSEL’s first-come, first-served rights, since instead Grain Elevator unloaded three or four barges (containing about 50,000 bushels each) into the elevator to complete the NO-PAL JAPANA’s loading cargo after the elevator had taken the vessel into berth out of turn at 6:00 p.m. on August 8. (The defendant had previously already bypassed the BRUSSEL in favor of the later-arriving MEXICAN GULP at 6:00 p.m. on August 6.) Further, there was already in the elevator storage some 350,000 bushels of corn of the right grade that were available for loading onto the BRUSSEL on August 6, 6

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Bluebook (online)
700 F.2d 149, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 30907, 1983 A.M.C. 2465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/romano-pagnan-flli-v-mississippi-river-grain-elevator-inc-ca5-1983.