Shell Oil Co. v. Cy Miller, Inc.

53 F.2d 74, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2624
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 13, 1931
DocketNo. 6473
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 53 F.2d 74 (Shell Oil Co. v. Cy Miller, Inc.) 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
Shell Oil Co. v. Cy Miller, Inc., 53 F.2d 74, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2624 (9th Cir. 1931).

Opinion

SAWTELLE, Circuit Judge.

The controlling question in this appeal is whether or not the payments made to the appellant by the appellee were voluntary and with full knowledge of the facts." If no fraud, duress, or mistake of fact is shown, the amount of such payments cannot be recovered, and consideration of the other issues raised becomes unnecessary.

Appellee operated a gasoline service station in Seattle. On May 28, 1928, it entered into an agreement with the appellant whereby the appellee leased to the appellant the service station and facilities, and also agreed to buy certain products of the appellant. The lease contained the following provisions, among other things:

“4. The price of gasoline purchased by the lessor as hereinabove provided, shall be (4e) four cents less than the Shell Company of California’s full market price in Seattle, Washington, which full market price is understood to be no cents higher than Shell Company of California’s posted full market price at its bulk depot at Seattle, Washington.

“5. The lessor will not at any time during the term hereof exhibit or display on said premises or in close proximity thereto, any sign fixing and/or offering gasoline for sale at a price less than Shell Company of California’s full market price as described above.”

The rental to be paid the appellee by the appellant was to be $100 per month. From the time of the execution of the contract until August, 1928, the appellee was allowed 4 eents from the pl.evailing market price of gagoline ^ S0attUj> eredit was aUowed to the appellee at the time of the delivery of eae]l order 0f gasoline. The rental of $100 was paid by eilee]!. or by eredit memorandum allowed to the appellee some time after the first 0f each'month. At about that time the appellant commenced to allow the appellee, pursuant to an oral agreement later confirmed in writing, 2 cents a gallon on gasoline purchased during the month, as lease rent, instead of the $100. The method of making this allowance was by giving the appellee a eredffi memorandum, or, occasionally, a cheek for $200 and an.additional eredit memorandtlm for a glim sufficient to make np the two cents a gallon, inelnding the $100. These credits were allowed once a month. Later, the appellee was allowed an additional cent, matmg his total “commission” 7 cents,

During this period, the appellant operated retail service stations in Seattle and vieinity, and the prevailing retail-price of Shell Sasoliaeh) S®a^tle and the Shell Company of California’s full market price winch was used as a basis fte the price charged the appellee were identical-

Some time in March, 1929, the appellant commenced disposing- of its distributing stations; the process being completed in May, 1929. During that period, according to the [75]*75appellee', the appellant’s posted price, used as a basis for charges to the appellee, no longer corresponded to the actual market priee of the appellant’s gasoline in Seattle, but was consistently 3 cents higher. Tho practice of the appellant in thus raising its posted priee above the actual market price of its gasoline thus, according io tho appellee, depraved the latter of 3 cents a gallon of the commission to which it was entitled under the contract and which had been allowed to it during the summer and fall of 1928.

During this latter period, according to'tho appellee, the only place at which gasoline was sold at the appellant’s posted price was at tho appellant’s hulk depot in Seattle, where from 150' to 200 gallons were sold per month. Tho prevailing priee of appellant’s gasoline, according to the appellee, was consistently 3 cents lower than the posted price, which never appeared on the invoices delivered to the appellee. It is claimed that the appellant “instructed” the appellee at what prices tho latter should sell the gasoline.

At the close of the testimony, the court denied tho defendant’s motion for a directed verdict, and granted the plaintiff’s motion for a directed verdict for $2,016.33. Judgment was "rendered accordingly, and from that judgment tho defendant appealed.

Tho foregoing statement of facts represents the axrpellee’s view of the evidence, and, for the purpose of this opinion, it may be taken as undisputed, except as otherwise indicated by quotation.

The appellee stoutly denies that the dealings between the parties constituted an account stated. Its own pleadings and brief, however, would indicate that a 'balance, if any, was struck at the end of each month, at the latest.

The dosing paragraph of plaintiff-appellee’s reply in the court below alleges “that as a matter of fact no gasoline was delivered to the plaintiff by the defendant at any time unless cash was paid at the same time it was delivered into the tanks of the plaintiff.”

In its opening brief, the appellee assorts that, the method of dealing between the parties “shows that appellee was charged in some instances tho full market priee of g'asoline at tlie time of delivery, and that the credit upon the said purchase was not allowed until the end of the month.” (Italics our own.) A fair implication from this statement is, as we have said, that a balance was struck between the parties at the end of the month, at the latest.

Be that as it may, it is not necessary to rest this decision upon the theory of accounts stated. For several months, during the period when tho alleged overcharge of 3 cents a gallon was being made, the plaintiff-appellee was voluntarily paying the amounts of the invoices, less the credits allowed, without a word of question, complaint, or protest, so far as the record shows. . At this present stage of the proceedings, however, the appellee does assert that, had it refused to pay ihe priee demanded, no gasoline would have been sold to it, its lease would have been forfeited, and 1he Miller Company’s capital investment in its plant would have been gone before it had any opportunity to recover. In support of these dire predictions, the appellee cites certain provisions in the lease, relative to cancellation of the bailment of the pumps and tho appellant's right to re-enter the premises upon twenty-four hours’ notice if any of the covenants should be breached.

But there is not a scintilla of evidence that any such threats were made by the appellant. Nor did tho appellee, so far as the j'eeord shows, once inquire about or question any of the charges appearing on the invoices. Such inquiries or complaints, at least, might have been made by the appellee with safety, without bringing down upon its head the possible tragic consequences depicted in its brief.

Yet for months the appellee said nothing, but paid its bills. Finally, the conviction seemed to have dawned that there was an unwarranted difference between the “full market price” and tho “posted full market price” —and this suit was brought for “credits” that should have been given but were not, according to appellee’s theory.

We cannot agree with the appellee’s attempted distinction between “payments” sought to be recovered and “credits upon purchases” which were not allowed. The distinction seems to he without a difference. The plaintiff-appellee is seeking the refund of sums paid by it — that is, “payments”— which sums should have been deducted from its invoices, but were not.

By the overwhelming weight of authority, recovery cannot be had under such circumstances.

The Supreme Court of Washington has declared its adherence to the general principle of law that we have just stated. In White v. Little Co., 118 Wash.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 F.2d 74, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shell-oil-co-v-cy-miller-inc-ca9-1931.