Speedway/SuperAmerica, LLC v. Phillips Truck Stop, Inc.
This text of 782 So. 2d 255 (Speedway/SuperAmerica, LLC v. Phillips Truck Stop, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
SPEEDWAY/SuperAMERICA, L.L.C.
v.
PHILLIPS TRUCK STOP, INC.
Supreme Court of Alabama.
Edward S. Sledge III, Russel Myles, and Jason S. McCormick of McDowell, Knight, Roedder & Sledge, L.L.C., Mobile, for appellant.
Thomas M. Galloway, Jr., of Galloway, Smith, Wettermark & Everest, L.L.P., Mobile, for appellee.
MADDOX, Justice.
This appeal requires an interpretation of the Alabama Motor Fuel Marketing *256 Act, §§ 8-22-1 to -18, Ala.Code 1975 ("AMFMA"), and the specific question presented is whether a truck stop located 80 miles away, on an interstate highway, is "a competitor in the same market area" as the defendant's business, so as to permit the defendant to price its fuel "below cost," allegedly to meet competition. The trial court, after having determined that the truck stop located 80 miles away was not a competitor in the same market area, issued a preliminary injunction against the defendant. We reverse and remand.
Facts
Speedway/SuperAmerica, L.L.C. ("Speedway"), built a Travel Center truckstop facility at the I-65/Highway 43 interchange located in Satsuma. This facility has 10 fueling lanes with 20 diesel pumps, and it also has 150 parking slots, truck scales, 8 showers, a Hardee's restaurant, and a laundromat. It opened for business on May 20, 1999.
Phillips Truck Stop, Inc. ("Phillips"), operates a truck-stop facility on Highway 43, about three and a half miles north of the I-65/Highway 43 interchange where the Speedway facility is located. The Phillips facility has six diesel pumps, a convenience store, a restaurant, and some showers.
Phillips filed this action against Speedway, seeking a preliminary injunction to prevent Speedway from pricing its diesel fuel "below cost," as that phrase is used in the AMFMA. At the preliminary-injunction hearing, the parties stipulated, and the trial court agreed, that the hearing would focus on whether Speedway was, in fact, pricing its diesel fuel to "meet competition" of the Flying J truck stop located approximately 80 miles west on I-10 in Gulfport, Mississippi. See § 8-22-8(b), which provides, in part, that "[i]t is not a violation of [the AMFMA] if any price is established in good faith to meet an equally low price of a competitor in the same market area on the same level of distribution selling the same or a similar product of like grade and quality." Even though Speedway agreed that the issue was whether it was meeting the competition of Flying J, it nevertheless expressly reserved the right to challenge the constitutionality of the AMFMA's definition of "cost," inasmuch as the definition of "cost of doing business or overhead expenses" requires fuel retailers to establish a price floor that includes "all costs incurred in the conduct of business." See § 8-22-4(17). Speedway also filed a "Notice of Constitutional Challenge" and served a copy of that notice on the attorney general. The trial court did not specifically address the issue relating to the constitutionality of the AMFMA's definition of "cost of doing business," and neither do we.[1]
The trial court conducted a hearing and, after the hearing, granted a preliminary injunction requiring Speedway to refrain from engaging in price competition with the Gulfport Flying J. The court stated that "whether [the phrase] `a competitor in the same market area' [AMFMA language] in this case includes the Flying J[in] Mississippi [on] I-10 is yet to be definitively determined but at this stage it appears not to be such." The trial court also required Speedway to incorporate a 10-cent-per-gallon "cost-of-doing-business" charge into the price of all the diesel fuel it sold for a period of seven days. The trial court further held that at the end of the seven-day period, Speedway could *257 meet the price of a competitor, but the court restricted Speedway to competing with "local" truck stops, not the Gulfport Flying J. The court issued the preliminary injunction until a hearing on the merits could be held to definitively determine if, in fact, the Gulfport Flying J was a "competitor in the same market area" as the Speedway facility. Speedway appeals.
I.
We first set out our scope of review and why we believe Speedway's arguments are meritorious.
A preliminary injunction is reviewed under an abuse-of-discretion standard. TFT, Inc. v. Warning Systems, Inc., 751 So.2d 1238, 1241 (Ala.1999). We apply that standard of review to the facts presented in this case.
To sustain its argument that it was not violating the AMFMA, Speedway claims that although it was selling its diesel fuel "below cost," as that phrase is used in the AMFMA, it did so "in good faith to meet an equally low price of a competitor in the same market area," within the meaning of that phrase as it is used in § 8-22-8(b); that competitor, it contends, is the Gulfport Flying J. Consequently, Speedway argues that the trial court abused its discretion by issuing the preliminary injunction, given the testimony of three persons, namely Glenn Plumby, Dewey Clower, and Wayne Kittle, who each testified, in effect, that the Gulfport Flying J is within the same "market area" as the Satsuma Speedway truck stop. They stated that, based on the fuel range of essentially all long-haul trucks, any truck stop offering the same or similar amenities within a 100- to 200-mile-range along a route on the Interstate highway system would be operating in competition for the business of those long-haul trucks.
In support of its argument, Speedway cites Tennessean Truckstop, Inc. v. MAPCO Petroleum, Inc., 728 F.Supp. 489 (M.D.Tenn.1990). In Tennessean Truckstop, the plaintiff operated an independently owned truck stop adjacent to I-65 in Giles County, Tennessee. The defendant, Mapco Petroleum, Inc., operated a "Delta Express" truck stop at the same intersection. Mapco's truck stop sold diesel fuel at a price several cents per gallon lower than the plaintiff's truck stop. The plaintiff filed an action alleging a violation of the Tennessee Petroleum Trade Protection Act, an act similar to the AMFMA. Mapco presented evidence indicating that other truck stops within 200 miles of the intersection where its store was located sold diesel fuel at the same price or at lower prices. The federal district court held that the plaintiff's argument that the only market relevant to the lawsuit was the local market at the plaintiff's particular intersection ignored the "commercial realities" of the long-haul-trucking market. It held that the relevant geographic market area for the truck stops in that case extended up to 200 miles in either direction.
Phillips counters Speedway's argument by basically adopting the reasoning of the trial court's order granting the preliminary injunction, wherein the trial court stated that Speedway's claim that it was meeting the competition of the Gulfport Flying J was "tantamount to `manufacturing competition' for purposes of the AMFMA." Phillips contends that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in finding that Speedway was not in competition with the Gulfport Flying J, because the Flying J was located over 80 miles away and on a different Interstate highway. Phillips also points out that Speedway has another facility at the intersection of Moffett Road and I-65 and that that facility does not price its diesel fuel as low as the Satsuma Speedway facility does, although the Moffett *258 Road Speedway facility is closer to the Gulfport Flying J than the Satsuma Speedway facility is.
II.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
782 So. 2d 255, 2000 Ala. LEXIS 453, 2000 WL 1603726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/speedwaysuperamerica-llc-v-phillips-truck-stop-inc-ala-2000.