Shaw v. Mobil Oil Corporation

535 P.2d 756, 272 Or. 109, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 407
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 22, 1975
StatusPublished

This text of 535 P.2d 756 (Shaw v. Mobil Oil Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shaw v. Mobil Oil Corporation, 535 P.2d 756, 272 Or. 109, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 407 (Or. 1975).

Opinion

DENECKE, J.

The question is, what is the obligation of the plaintiff, a service station lessee and operator, to pay rent to the defendant, Mobil Oil Corporation, the lessor and gasoline supplier of plaintiff?

In 1972 the parties entered into a service station lease and a retail dealer contract. The contract required the dealer to purchase not less than 200,000 *111 gallons of gasoline per year and Mobil to sell to the dealer the amount of gasoline ordered by the dealer, but not more than 500,000 gallons per year.

The lease required the dealer to pay as rent, 1.4 cents per gallon of gasoline delivered, but “no less than the minimum amount * * * specified in said schedule for a calendar month.” The schedule specified a minimum rental of $470 per month. The lease further provided: “If at the end of a month, the gallonage payments are less than the minimum rental, Tenant shall pay the deficiency promptly. * * *.”

In order for the rent per gallon to equal the minimum rental per month, Mobil was required to deliver 33,572 gallons per month. In July 1973 the dealer ordered 34,000 gallons, but Mobile delivered only 25,678 gallons. The reason for Mobil’s delivery of less than the gallonage ordered was that it was complying with a request by the Federal Energy office that it allocate its existing gasoline supply among its dealers. Mobil demanded that the plaintiff dealer pay the minimum rental for July as specified in the lease. Plaintiff brought this declaratory judgment proceeding to have determined its obligation to pay the minimum rental under the circumstances stated. The trial court decided the dealer had to pay the minimum rental.

The retail dealer contract provided: “[T]he amounts so sold and purchased within such limits [minimum of 200,000 and maximum of 500,000 gallons per year] to be those ordered by Buyer [lessee].”

Mobil’s District Sales Manager and the trial court both interpreted this clause to mean what it appears to state; that is, that Mobil had a duty to deliver to the dealer as much as the dealer ordered. This duty is at least partially subject to an excuse clause which will be discussed later.

*112 The trial court found that the service station lease and the retail dealer contract “were executed contemporaneously, constituted an integrated contract and are to be construed together.” We agree.

The dealer contended in the trial court and contends here that his promise to pay the minimum rental is a dependent promise; that is, it is conditioned upon Mobil’s performing its, obligation to deliver the quantities of gasoline ordered by the dealer.

The law in Oregon on dependent promises, which is similar to the law in other jurisdictions, is stated in First Nat. Bank v. Morgan, 132 Or 515, 528-529, 284 P 582, 286 P 558 (1930):

“Whether covenants are dependent or independent is a question of the intention of the parties as deduced from the terms of the contract. If the parties intend that performance by each of them is in no way conditioned upon performance by the other, the covenants are independent, but if they intend performance by one to be conditioned upon performance by the other, the covenants are mutually dependent: 5 Page on Contracts, §§ 2941-2951, et seq.; Williston on Contracts, § 824; Burkhart v. Hart, 36 Or. 586 (60 P. 205).
“* * * While there is no fixed definite rule of law by which the intention in all cases can be determined, yet we must remember, as stated by Professor Williston, that, since concurrent conditions protect both parties, courts endeavor so far as is not inconsistent with the expressed intention to construe performances as concurrent conditions. 2 Williston on Contracts, § 835. See also 5 Page on Contracts, § 2948. The necessity of construing these covenants as concurrent in order to avoid gross injustice in the instant ease is apparent for without a delivery of the stock the whole consideration for which the note was given must of necessity fail. * * Accord, R. C. A. Photo-Phone v. Sinnott, 146 Or 456, 459, 30 P2d 761 (1934).

*113 Corbin prefers to label the promise “conditional,” rather than “dependent.” 3 A Corbin, Contracts 46, § 637 (1960).

In Associated Oil Co. v. Myers, 217 Cal 297, 18 P2d 668, 670 (1933), the defendants leased their property to the plaintiff, Associated Oil Co. The lease provided for a rent of 4 cents per gallon of gasoline sold to defendants for resale with a minimum rental of $10 per month. The parties simultaneously entered into a licensing agreement whereby defendants agreed to sell the oil company’s products exclusively. The oil company brought this suit to enjoin the defendants from selling other brands of petroleum products from the station. The court held the promises of the parties were dependent and one party’s obligation to perform was conditional upon the other party’s performance.

In Rosenthal Paper Co. v. National Folding Box & Paper Co., 226 NY 313, 123 NE 766 (1919), the court held a promise to pay a minimum royalty was conditioned upon the performance of another promise by the other contracting party. Seligstein held a patent on a type of box and assigned the exclusive right to manufacture this type of box to the defendant. The agreement provided the manufacturer would pay Seligstein a royalty of $1 per thousand boxes manufactured. The royalty agreement further provided, “ ‘* * * it is expressly understood that the payment by the said # * * [manufacturer] to said Seligstein for the right to manufacture and sell boxes under said letters patent shall not be less than the sum of five hundred dollars ($500.00) for each and every year during the life of this contract.’ ” 123 NE at 767.

The manufacturer paid Seligstein $1 per thous- and boxes manufactured; however, this was not suf *114 ficient to equal the minimum, rental. Seligstein’s assignee brought this action for the difference between the amount paid per thousand boxes sold and the minimum rental. The manufacturer contended it had no obligation to pay the minimum rental because that obligation was conditioned upon Seligstein performing other promises which Seligstein failed to perform.

The court stated the issue:

“We take up first the question whether or not the agreement of the defendant to pay the minimum royalty and the agreements of Seligstein to protect the letters patent from substantial infringement, and to refrain from selling, within the designated territory, any box manufactured under the patent, or any rights for any clothing, millinery, or suit box to any one for the territory were dependent or independent of each other. * * 123 NE at 767-768.

The court held the promises were “dependent.” It reasoned that the parties must have intended that the manufacturer undertook an obligation to pay a miuimuTri royalty for the exclusive right to manufacture in reliance on Seligstein’s promise to maintain the exclusiveness of manufacturer’s right by not licensing any one else to manufacture and by not selling such boxes.

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Related

Lindsey v. Normet
405 U.S. 56 (Supreme Court, 1972)
Wright v. Baumann
398 P.2d 119 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1965)
Eggen Et Ux. v. Wetterborg
237 P.2d 970 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1951)
Associated Oil Co. v. Myers
18 P.2d 668 (California Supreme Court, 1933)
Rosenthal Paper Co. v. National Folding Box & Paper Co.
123 N.E. 766 (New York Court of Appeals, 1919)
First National Bank v. Morgan
286 P. 558 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1929)
R. C. A. Photophone, Inc. v. Sinnott
30 P.2d 761 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1934)
Burkhart v. Hart
60 P. 205 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
535 P.2d 756, 272 Or. 109, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaw-v-mobil-oil-corporation-or-1975.