State Fuel Co. v. Gulf Oil Corporation

179 F.2d 390, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3736
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 18, 1950
Docket4443
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 179 F.2d 390 (State Fuel Co. v. Gulf Oil Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Fuel Co. v. Gulf Oil Corporation, 179 F.2d 390, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3736 (1st Cir. 1950).

Opinion

MAGRUDER, Chief Judge.

Gulf Oil Corporation, a Pennsylvania corporation, brought suit in the district court against State Fuel Company, a Massachusetts corporation, on a complaint which, as far as is material at the present stage of the case, alleged that the parties had agreed on a contract for the shipment of kerosene in drums in box cars by Gulf to State; that the costs to be incurred by State in unloading the kerosene so shipped were to be compensated for by the Defense Supplies Corporation (hereinafter DSC) *392 under provisions of Petroleum Compensatory Adjustments Regulation No. 1, but only up to a maximum of two cents per gallon; that State was to accumulate these costs and “send them to the plaintiff supported by proper evidence for the purpose of being included in the claim” to be filed by Gulf with DSC under the said regulation; that shipments under this agreement were made; and that, State having “sent invoices to the plaintiff for the costs alleged to have been incurred by it in handling and unloading”, Gulf filed claim with DSC “in behalf of the defendant for reimbursement”, submitted the invoices to Price, Waterhouse & Co., accountants acting for DSC, and informed State that it had credited State’s merchandise account with the sum claimed “subject, however, to later adjustment if Price, Waterhouse & Co. audit did not verify the claim in full”; that subsequently DSC in fact allowed only a fraction of State’s claim; that Gulf notified State of this action and demanded payment of the difference between the ' amount claimed by State and previously credited to the latter’s account by Gulf, and the amount in fact allowed by DSC; and that State “has neglected and refused to pay said sum of $56,521.” Wherefore Gulf demanded judgment against State in that amount together with interest.

State in its answer admitted the contract for the shipment of kerosene by Gulf, the receipt of such kerosene, and that State forwarded to Gulf invoices supporting State’s claim for compensable unloading costs, but denied any agreement that Gulf was to act in State’s behalf in submitting a claim to DSC, or that State had any rights against DSC. State denied also that Gulf’s action in crediting State’s account with the full amount claimed by it to represent unloading costs was understood to be subject to any later adjustment, and it professed to have no knowledge of how much of the claim was eventually in fact allowed by DSC. Rather, State alleged, Gulf had unqualifiedly agreed to pay to State any amount claimed by the latter for unloading costs, as long as the claim did not exceed two cents per gallon of kerosene shipped; and further, by way of a separate defense, State alleged that, even if the contract could be read to bind Gulf to pay State only so much of the costs claimed as would be finally allowed by DSC, Gulf was nevertheless under an obligation to “use all possible means to collect” from DSC any claim forwarded by State, as a “prerequisite” to being reimbursed in the event such a claim was partially disallowed, and that Gulf not only did not discharge this obligation but rather prejudiced State’s position as against DSC by summarily settling with the latter without contest.

The case was tried before a jury whioh returned a verdict for Gulf in the amount prayed for, plus interest. From the judgment entered on this verdict State appeals.

The sizable record before us discloses the circumstances constituting the background of the dealings between these parties. The country in general and the New England area in particular suffered, during the wartime winter of 1942-1943, from an acute shortage of kerosene caused in part by a lack of sufficient tankers and tank cars. The oil industry, mindful of the national interest in effecting an equitable allocation of the scarce fuel supplies available for areas far removed from centers of production, organized a Supply and Distribution Committee to cope with the problem. State was represented on the New England branch of this Committee and in December, 1942, State became aware through its vice president of a plan which the Committee had in contemplation, proposing that kerosene be shipped into this area in drums in box cars. This was an extraordinary method of bringing kerosene to New England, involving substantial additional expense over the more usual methods of shipment, since drums have to be individually unloaded and emptied. What precisely would be the additional cost to be incurred nobody at the time appeared to know, New England concerns having had no experience with unloading drums. Nevertheless the operation was agreed to, albeit reluctantly, under stress of the crisis. The expectation, however, was that the additional cost would be borne by the government, which had in recent months been reimbursing the New England companies for *393 other extra, wartime costs incurred in shipping oil. And, indeed, on January 14, 1943, Jesse Jones, then Secretary of Commerce, stated officially that Petroleum Compensatory Adjustments Regulation No. 1 (7 F.R. 6993), under which DSC had compensated generally for “Wartime Increases in Costs of Supplying Petroleum and Petroleum Products for Use in Eastern United States”, would be amended to provide compensation specifically for shipments in drums in box cars, as recommended by the New England Supply and Distribution Committee. Mr. Jones added that in order to obtain compensation “suppliers will be required to secure, in connection with each such movement, a prior written authorization from the Petroleum Administration for War, approved by Defense Supplies Corporation.” Following this announcement, of which State was aware, the Committee formally issued its recommendation. This document, noting that costs were highly uncertain, requested that the companies be guaranteed a minimum of two cents per gallon for gasoline shipped in drums for the first sixty days; and it recommended that “all charges for drummed kerosene in box cars, which are to be refunded by the Defense Supplies Corporation, be billed to the major oil company”.

Pursuant to the, announcement by the Secretary of Commerce, applications were filed by many companies, and they were authorized to make specific shipments in drums. One such authorization, dated January 23, 1943, which is an exhibit in the case, contains the only formula then available indicating how the government would compute compensable extra costs. It recited that upon application by the supplier compensation would be allowed for: “The excess cost at destination, the handling in marketing channels including unloading freight cars, truckage on the drums, unloading at actual point of delivery whether bulk station, retail stores or into consumers’ tanks, and returning the empty drums and loading on box cars, in no event to exceed 2{S per gallon.” This formula was, at the time, known to State, which did business with other companies besides Gulf. State’s vice president so testified. State knew, then, that the Committee’s recommendation of a minimum subsidy of two cents per gallon was not accepted by the government.

Such was the situation, with which both parties were intimately acquainted, when on February 2, 1943, Gulf despatched to State the following telegram: “As per request of Kittinger [of the New England Committee] we are arranging to ship to you five box cars of kerosene in drums at Revere, Massachusetts, delivery to be made by B & M Railroad. Each one of these cars will contain approximately 196 drums.

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Bluebook (online)
179 F.2d 390, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-fuel-co-v-gulf-oil-corporation-ca1-1950.