Searl v. Shell Oil Company

21 P.2d 249, 172 Wash. 621, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 577
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1933
DocketNo. 24231. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 21 P.2d 249 (Searl v. Shell Oil Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Searl v. Shell Oil Company, 21 P.2d 249, 172 Wash. 621, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 577 (Wash. 1933).

Opinions

Steinert, J.

The complaint herein seeks recovery upon two causes of action: (1) for an amount representing rebates or loss of profits alleged to have been earned on the purchase of certain quantities of gaso *622 line; and (2) for rentals alleged to be due and owing under a lease of a gasoline station. By its cross-complaint, defendant seeks recovery of a small balance owing for gasoline sold and delivered. Issues having been joined between the parties, the action was tried before the court, sitting without a jury, and resulted in finding’s and conclusions favorable to defendant, upon which judgment was entered dismissing the complaint and awarding defendant recovery upon its cross-complaint. Plaintiffs have appealed.

A summary of the facts is as follows: On March 5, 1929, appellants leased to respondent certain land, together with their service station equipment thereon, for a period of five years. The lease contained the following provision with reference to rental:

“Rental: The rental for said premises shall be a sum equivalent to three (3) cents per gallon for each gallon of Shell Gasoline purchased by the Lessor from the Lessee herein, during the term of this agreement; the Lessor to be credited on each month’s merchandise statement for the previous month’s purchases.”

Coincident with the execution of the lease, respondent, in turn, sublet, by written sublease, the same premises back to appellants for the same period of time. Under the terms of the sublease, appellants were to maintain and conduct an automobile supply or service station on the premises and to handle exclusively respondent’s petroleum products, including’ gasoline. The sublease contained the following provision with reference to the sale and delivery of gasoline by respondent to appellants:

“As a further consideration for this covenant and agreement, the sublessor promises and agrees at all times while this agreement shall be and remain in full forcé and effect to sell and deliver to the sublessee for resale from the demised premises gasoline at a price to sublessee not greater than the tank wagon price for *623 commercial gasoline effective date of sale at Castle Rock, Wash., said tank wagon price being no cents per gallon less [than] the sublessor’s tank wagon price for commercial gasoline as determined and posted at sublessor’s depot at Kelso, Wash., including Wash. State Motor Vehicle Tax.”

Taking the lease and the sublease together as forming the contract between the parties, it will be seen that appellants were to receive as rental for their premises an amount represented by three cents per gallon of g’asoline purchased by them, and were to pay to the respondent for the gasoline so purchased the tank wagon price posted by the latter at its depot in Kelso, Washington. Abbreviating the contract still further, according to its effect, appellants were to receive the gasoline at three cents per gallon less than the tank wagon price posted at Kelso.

Pursuant to the agreement thus entered into, deliveries of gasoline were made to appellants from March 9,1929, until shortly before this action was commenced. As each delivery was made by the respondent’s truck driver, appellants were given an invoice which showed on its face that it was on the basis of the posted tank wagon price. Receipt of delivery was acknowledged by the appellants by signing the invoice. It is admitted that respondent regularly posted its tank wagon price at its depot in Kelso, in accordance with the “refined oil price sheets” sent out from headquarters.

Although the lease provided that the payment of rental to appellants by the respondent was to be made by monthly credits on the preceding month’s merchandise statement, this was in fact never done. Whether the rental was paid in some other manner, or at all, is the principal fact in dispute. For the period of time up to and including March 9, 1929, appellants were *624 given a credit memorandum in the sum of $30.30, representing three cents per gallon on 1,010 gallons. After that date, respondent claims that it made the deduction for rent on each invoice as the gasoline was delivered. These invoices, with the memoranda thereon and the interpretation placed upon them by the parties, furnish the crux of the dispute in this case. The invoices were on the company’s printed forms. With one or two exceptions, evidently occasioned by mistake or oversight, they all had stamped upon their faces the words “posted tank wagon price.” Opposite the stamp-mark was written in the number of gallons delivered, and following that, on the same line, the price per gallon with the total amount extended.

At this point, the difficulty begins. It seems that, from March 9, 1929, to about November 1 of the same year, the truck driver, in making up the respective invoices on deliveries of gasoline, would first insert the price per gallon with the extended total, and then immediately draw a line through those figures and place beneath them a reduced price and amount. Sometimes, even, he would reduce the figures several times by the same process, leaving a final computation without the line drawn through it. The total deduction, however, always equalled, or was in excess of, three cents per gallon. As a regular rule after November 1, 1929, and at times, even, before that date, the original entry of price and amount on the invoices was left unchanged, but beneath it appeared the deduction of certain credits indicated variously by the words “less,” “less discount allowance,” “less contract” and “less verbal agreement.” These credits, wherever single, were in the sum of four cents per gallon; where double or treble, they totaled six cents per gallon.

*625 It is admitted by both parties that, from time to time, the respondent voluntarily allowed certain deductions from the posted tank wagon price to meet competition. The appellants contend that the entire deductions on the invoices were of that nature. Respondent contends that the deductions to the extent of three cents per gallon were in payment of rent, and that only the excess above three cents per gallon was accorded to meet competitive prices. Upon each delivery of gasoline, accompanied by an invoice, made out as above explained, appellants would pay to the truck driver, in cash, the net amount shown on the invoice.

A short time before the commencement of this action, appellants, claiming that they had not received their rent, made demand upon respondent for the accumulated rental based on a total purchase of approximately eighty thousand gallons of gasoline, or an amount of twenty-four hundred dollars. Appellants also demanded the sum of three hundred and ninety dollars for expenditures made by them for heat, water and electric current used by them in operating the station, which, under the original lease to respondent, it agreed to pay. Respondent refused to pay the rent demanded, on the ground that it had already been paid under the method just outlined. It also refused to pay the heat, water and electricity bills, for the reason that, in the sublease, these were obligations reassumed by the appellants. This suit then followed.

Upon the first cause of action, which is the claim for rebates, or loss of profits, little need be said.

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Related

Bond v. Wiegardt
216 P.2d 196 (Washington Supreme Court, 1950)
Johnson v. Shell Oil Co. of California
55 P.2d 609 (Washington Supreme Court, 1936)
Shell Oil Co. v. Henry
27 P.2d 582 (Washington Supreme Court, 1933)
Ferguson v. Associated Oil Co.
24 P.2d 82 (Washington Supreme Court, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
21 P.2d 249, 172 Wash. 621, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/searl-v-shell-oil-company-wash-1933.