Sunshine Traders of El Paso, Inc. v. Dolgencorp, Inc.

219 F. App'x 375
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 22, 2007
Docket05-51669
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 219 F. App'x 375 (Sunshine Traders of El Paso, Inc. v. Dolgencorp, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sunshine Traders of El Paso, Inc. v. Dolgencorp, Inc., 219 F. App'x 375 (5th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

The plaintiff in this case, Sunshine Traders of El Paso (Sunshine), appeals the district court’s summary judgment for defendant Dolgencorp on a number of claims. We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.

Dolgencorp contracted with Sunshine to manufacture various styles of jeans to be sold in its Dollar General stores. Following a number of disagreements over the style and color of the jeans, Dolgencorp refused to pay Sunshine for some of the jeans, and Sunshine sued Dolgencorp.

The district court granted summary judgment for Dolgencorp on Sunshine’s breach of contract claim for invoices 334 and 335 due to a limitations bar, breach of contract claim for boys’ jeans due to a statute of frauds defense against an oral contract, and breach of contract claim for men’s black jeans due to a limitations bar. Sunshine now appeals.

We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, considering all evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. 1 Summary judgment is appropriate when the movant can demonstrate that there is no genuine issue of material fact. 2

Sunshine first asserts that the district court incorrectly calculated the statute of limitations regarding its claim for invoices 334 and 335. Sunshine argues that it is making an “open account” claim under Texas law and that the statute of limitations should therefore run from the point at which the two parties ceased doing business in June 2000 instead of from the time of the breach in July 1998. 3

The district court held that the open account statute of limitations was not available in federal court. It held that open accounts are governed by Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 185, which “is not a rule of substantive law but is a rule of procedure stating the evidence necessary to establish a prima facie right of recovery or defense ... [and] cannot be the basis for any cause or causes of action.” 4 The district court held that Rule 185 is a procedural rule that cannot be applied in federal court under the Erie doctrine and that Texas’s statute *377 of limitations for open accounts is therefore unavailable as well. The district court granted summary judgment for Dolgen-corp because the breach occurred in July 1998, and Sunshine filed suit on August 7, 2002, past the four-year statute of limitations.

Though Rule 185 is a procedural rule and does not apply under Ene, open accounts are a common law cause of action in Texas. Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code § 16.004(c) creates a separate statute of limitations for open accounts and is available under the Erie doctrine because it is substantive law. 5 In an open account, the cause of action does not accrue until the parties cease dealing with each other. 6

Under Texas common law, the plaintiff must establish the following elements for a cause of action on an account: “(1) a sale and delivery of the goods; (2) ... the amount of the account is just ...; and (3) that ... amount is unpaid.” 7 An account is open “when there have been running or current dealings between the parties, and the account is kept open with the expectation of further dealings.” 8 This allows for parties with frequent dealings to credit and debit the account without settling it.

Sunshine argues that the account was an open account because Dolgencorp submitted purchase orders that Sunshine subsequently split into separate invoices based on where Dolgencorp required Sunshine to ship the products. Payment for the invoices was due thirty days after they were issued. Dolgencorp did not pay invoices separately; rather it submitted payments to Sunshine based on the initial purchase orders, so a number of invoices would be satisfied through a single purchase order payment. These purchase orders were paid after delivery. Even after delivery and payment in full, Dolgencorp had the opportunity to “charge back” a portion of the invoiced price if it later determined that the jeans did not meet its specifications. The charge back was not an automatic debit; instead, Dolgencorp would subtract the amount from a payment on a subsequent purchase order. Sunshine then had the opportunity to present evidence to Dolgencorp that the jeans were within Dolgencorp’s specifications. If Dol-gencorp accepted this refutation, it would credit the amount to Sunshine on a future purchase order payment.

Invoices 334 and 335 were initially paid in full, but the disputed portions were charged back due to “incorrect carton mfo[rmation].” Dolgencorp subtracted the disputed amount from its next payment to Sunshine on later purchase orders. Dol-gencorp did not accept Sunshine’s refutation, and the charged back amount remains unpaid.

The account between Sunshine and Dolgencorp was an open account because it allowed for crediting and debiting through multiple transactions, extending over a period of time. 9 The account facilitated the on-going business relationship *378 between the two companies by allowing delivery before payment, charge backs for one purchase to be debited from future payments for another purchase order, and the ability to refute the charge backs and have the amount credited in a future payment. Because it is an open account, the statute of limitations did not begin to run until the parties ceased doing business, which was in June 2000. 10 Sunshine filed its original complaint on August 7, 2002, well within the four-year statute of limitations. The district court’s summary judgment as to the claims based on invoices 334 and 335 is therefore reversed and remanded.

Sunshine also argues that an oral contract regarding boys’ jeans should be enforceable despite the statute of frauds under the “merchant exception” or “specially manufactured goods” exception. The merchant exception allows a writing in confirmation to be used against merchants if it is for the sale of goods, is signed, and specifies a quantity. 11 Because Sunshine fails to show a writing in confirmation and instead presents evidence of on-going negotiations, the merchant exception does not apply.

The specially manufactured goods exception allows for enforcement of an oral contract “if the goods are to be specially manufactured for the buyer and are not suitable for sale to others in the ordinary course of the seller’s business____” 12 Sunshine was able to sell 72,316 pairs of the jeans in question with minor alterations to remove Dolgencorp’s trademark. Thus the specially manufactured goods exception does not apply and the district court properly applied the statute of frauds defense.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
219 F. App'x 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sunshine-traders-of-el-paso-inc-v-dolgencorp-inc-ca5-2007.