R.P. Porter International, Inc. v. Pacific International Engineering, Ltd.

11 Am. Samoa 2d 124
CourtHigh Court of American Samoa
DecidedJune 19, 1989
DocketCA No. 117-88
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Am. Samoa 2d 124 (R.P. Porter International, Inc. v. Pacific International Engineering, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering High Court of American Samoa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R.P. Porter International, Inc. v. Pacific International Engineering, Ltd., 11 Am. Samoa 2d 124 (amsamoa 1989).

Opinion

Plaintiff and defendant are both closely held corporations. Plaintiff corporation is owned and operated by Robert Porter and defendant corporation by Warren Fisher. Prior to the incidents that gave rise to the present action Porter and Fisher had enjoyed a close and friendly business relationship. Each was the principal witness for his company at trial.

Porter claims that Fisher agreed to purchase $30,000 worth of aggregate (crushed rock); that Fisher received 612 cubic yards of aggregate before wrongfully terminating the contract; and that Fisher's company still owes $5602 on the purchase price of the aggregate it received.

Part of the amount claimed by Porter is for aggregate said to have been received by Fisher in excess of the amount reflected by Porter's invoices. The invoices are said to have understated the amount because Fisher had misrepresented the size of the dump trucks in which his company hauled the aggregate. Fisher told Porter that each of his trucks holds seven cubic yards, whereas Porter says he later discovered that the two trucks hold 7.8 and 9.07 cubic yards respectively.

Fisher counterclaims for damages said to have been suffered by Porter's failure to perform his contractual obligations. His story is that Porter never delivered the amount of aggregate he had promised to deliver, and that it therefore became necessary to make the aggregate out of cinders. Although cinders are substantially less expensive than crushed rock, Fisher says the costs of processing make the cinder aggregate more expensive than crushed rock aggregate. Fisher claims his company was damaged in the amount of $27,287.36 by Porter's failure to deliver the promised rock. He also claims that Porter's company breached its obligation to load the aggregate onto Fisher's trucks and that Fisher was thereby injured by having to use his own loader. Fisher further [126]*126contends, contrary to Porter, that neither of his dump trucks holds more than seven cubic yards.

Each of the two principal witnesses attempted to convince the Court that the other could not be trusted. Both were in some measure successful. Each man testified to specific and detailed conversations of which the other professed to have no recollection. Porter said Fisher had left his loading machine on Porter's lot for his own convenience for some months, whereas Fisher said the loader had been specially diverted from other important but unspecified tasks because of Porter's inability to fulfil his obligation to load the aggregate. Porter was shown to have altered invoices so as to bill Fisher for aggregate in amounts greater than those Porter's employees had certified as the amounts Fisher had picked up. (These alterations happened before Porter claims to have discovered the alleged excess capacity of Fisher's trucks.) Fisher submitted, what the Court finds to be a grossly misleading estimate of what it cost him to process the cinders he ultimately used instead of Porter's crushed rock. Each side attempted to portray an incident early in the contractual relationship, wherein it seems to have been contemplated to bill Fisher's customer (the American Samoa Government) for aggregate that had not yet been produced by Porter, as the suggestion of the other.

I. Facts

Because each party relied heavily on the largely uncorroborated testimony of its owner/operator, and because the Court finds the testimony of these two witnesses to be about equally believable, neither side succeeded in proving very much of its case. We find the material facts to be as follows:

1) The parties did have a contract whereby plaintiff (hereinafter, for convenience, Porter) was to supply . defendant (hereinafter Fisher) with 1500 cubic yards of crushed rock at a price of $30,000. Delivery was to be "F.O.B. our [Porter's] plant at Tafuna." Porter was to "start stockpiling by April 4, 1988" an initial quantity of 1000 yards. The parties did not agree on a date by which any particular amount had to be delivered. Fisher made an advance payment of $500.

[127]*1272) Neither side was initially in a great hurry. Porter did stockpile an unspecified quantity of rock within a few weeks, but Fisher had experienced some unrelated delays in his contract with the government, took a trip off-island for a few weeks, and did not attempt to pick up any rock until mid-June. By then Porter had sold some of the stockpiled rock to other customers.

3) Between June and September Fisher picked up 462 cubic yards of rock from Porter. Throughout this time Porter was experiencing problems with his rock-crushing machine and was under pressure from other customers to supply them with rock. Consequently, he did not always supply Fisher with rock at such times and in such quantities as Fisher desired.

4) The figure of 462 yards for the aggregate received by Fisher is based on the records made by Porter's employees at the time of each delivery. These records reflect that some of the loads picked up by Fisher's trucks were partial rather than full truck loads. Porter's revised estimate of 483 yards, reflected in the invoices he sent to Fisher, was based on the assumption that all loads received by Fisher were in fact full loads. This assumption is not supported by the preponderance of the evidence.

5) On September 21, 1988, Porter yet again revised his estimate of the size of each load. The new estimate---9.02 cubic yards for one truck, 7.8 for the other---was based on the assumption that each load was "heaped up to (4) four feet in the middle" --- about two feet higher than the side1 panels placed around the bed of the truck to prevent spillage.

6) Meanwhile, on September 20, Fisher wrote a letter to the effect that he viewed the amount of rock thus far delivered to be insufficient to "honor [Porter's] contract obligation." The letter added that if Porter would be "unable to do so [i.e., to produce an unspecified but presumably greater amount of crushed rock] by September 23rd we will be forced to look to alternative sources in order to meet our construction schedule." Neither this letter nor Porter's September 21 letter appears to have been a response to the other; the two letters apparently crossed in the mail.

[128]*1287) Fisher's September 21 letter also stated that Porter's company had "failed to meet [its] F.O.B. obligations." This was a reference to the fact that the aggregate had been loaded onto Fisher's trueles by Fisher's own loading machine. Fisher estimated that his "actual loading costs" were $2.50 per cubic yard. He also claimed to have incurred $581.25 in "truck standby time" (46V2 hours at $12.50 per hour) and "loader standby.time" of $10,043.25 (105 days at $95.65 per day).

8) It appears that Fisher had been seeking an alternative source of aggregate prior to the September 20 and 21 letters. On September 27 he sought and received the approval of the government's project engineer for the use of cinders rather than crushed rock on most of the project. Fisher did use the crushed rock aggregate obtained from Porter for certain parts of the project. At the time of trial the project had not yet been completed --- Fisher's deadline having been extended for reasons not shown to have been related to Porter's failure to deliver more aggregate --- and Fisher still had a substantial supply of the crushed rock on hand.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Am. Samoa 2d 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rp-porter-international-inc-v-pacific-international-engineering-ltd-amsamoa-1989.