Takahashi v. Pepper Tank & Contracting Co.

131 P.2d 339, 58 Wyo. 330, 1942 Wyo. LEXIS 25
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1942
Docket2218
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 131 P.2d 339 (Takahashi v. Pepper Tank & Contracting Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Takahashi v. Pepper Tank & Contracting Co., 131 P.2d 339, 58 Wyo. 330, 1942 Wyo. LEXIS 25 (Wyo. 1942).

Opinion

*343 Blume, Justice.

This is an action, commenced April 15, 1941, for specific performance of a contract for the sale of personal property. A demurrer to the amended petition on the ground that the latter fails to state a cause of action was sustained, and plaintiff standing on his amended petition, judgment was entered against him, from which he has appealed to this court. A preliminary injunction issued herein was dissolved, and the action of the court in that connection, too, has been brought to this court. For convenience the parties will be referred to as seller and buyer, or, as in the court below, as plaintiff and defendant, and as though Joseph E. Pepper were the only defendant, since he appears to be in control of his co-defendant company, and transacted all of its business..

The contract in question, leaving out some minor provisions not material herein, is as follows:

“C. T. Takahashi & Company, Importers and Exporters, Seattle, U. S. A. November 7, 1940. Export Purchase for shipment to Japan. Seller: Joseph E. Pepper and/or Pepper Tank and Contracting Company of Denver, Colorado. Commodity: Eight (8) dismantled 80,000 barrel steel storage tanks, suitable for reassembling, complete with accessories including 100 foot outside swing and one valve leading to tank, except steel supports are not included. All of above to be in good condition. Specification: as provided in blue prints of American Bridge Company. Quantity: As above stated. Packing: Loose. Shipment per: By railroad cars from Casper, Wyoming, during November, December 1940, January 1941, at buyers call from Casper, Wyoming. Price $7450 per tank f.o.b. railroad cars, Casper, Wyoming. Payment: Sight draft against order bill of lading as previously. Inspection: Buyer’s inspection governs. Weights: Railroad weight certifi *344 cate. This contract shall be effective if ratified in writing by buyer on or before Dec. 10, 1940. Otherwise the same may be deemed cancelled. (Signed) Pepper Tank & Contracting Company, Joseph E. Pepper, President, Seller. (Signed) C. T. Takahashi & Company, Edward T. Osawa, Buyer.” Then follows below: “This contract is contingent upon all governmental regulations prohibiting fulfillment hereof and other causes beyond our control.”

The amended petition herein, filed June 7, 1941, states, in brief, as follows:

Plaintiff, C. T. Takahashi, is a citizen of the United States, residing at Seattle, Washington, and operating under the trade name of C. T. Takahashi & Company. Standard Oil Company announced to the trade that 14 of its 80,000 barrel tanks at Casper, Wyoming, were for sale. Plaintiff and defendant agreed, at the latter’s solicitation, that the former should not bid thereon, but let the defendant bid, who would, thereupon, sell the material of these tanks to the plaintiff for an advanced price. That defendant, accordingly, purchased the tanks, and thereupon sold six of these tanks to the plaintiff under a contract not in controversy, and thereafter sold to plaintiff the remaining eight tanks, dismantled, under the contract dated November 7, 1940, hereinabove set out, the contract having been ratified by the plaintiff prior to December 10, 1940, the date specified for ratification in the contract. The parties entered into the performance thereof, and defendant delivered to plaintiff, according to the terms of the contract, five of the tanks, leaving only three, mutually mentioned as tanks 12, 13 and 14, for delivery. The call for these tanks was, by mutual agreement of the parties, postponed to April 10, 1941. On April 9, 1941, plaintiff asked for the delivery thereof, but, as shown by letter of April 10, 1941, defendant refused. Plaintiff is ready, able and willing to seasonably pay the defendant for these tanks in tender of a bill of lading *345 according to the terms of the contract. (Par. 7) : “That subsequent to the effective date of the contract aforesaid, in reliance thereon, and prior to defendant’s said breach thereof, plaintiff entered into contractual commitments for his own disposition of said specific and ascertained material from said tanks 12, 13 and 14 following his receipt thereof, to other purchasers thereof and that if plaintiff is unable to comply with such commitments, he will be rendered liable to resulting claims by and multiplicity of suits with, said purchasers of said specific and ascertained material from him, the exact nature and extent of which claims and litigation cannot be presently pleaded, because unknown.” Said tanks were of specifically fabricated and riveted material and of a pattern designed by American Bridge and Iron Works Company for the Standard Oil Company. The sale of the material thereof by plaintiff to other purchasers (as above mentioned) has been made so that the dismantled material of these tanks could be restored and reconstructed substantially according to the original plans and specifications of the Standard Oil Company. Plaintiff is unable to now secure substitute material of like kind and quality, for the reason that such has not been readily obtainable upon the market since execution of said sales contract between the parties hereto, and has not been obtainable upon the market since April 10, 1941. Defendant has threatened to dispose of these tanks to other parties, is rapidly shipping it out of Wyoming, and unless enjoined, a decree of specific performance will be of no avail and plaintiff will incur irreparable damage, and he cannot be adequately compensated in damages “in that the nature and extent of plaintiff’s resultant damages, incident to fluctuating steel markets, rapidly changing economic, legislative, administrative and political conditions, also multiplicity of suits, consequent upon any failure by plaintiff to comply *346 with his commitments aforesaid, of said material, cannot be ascertained,” and, in that, as plaintiff is reliably informed, defendant is unable to respond in damages, and plaintiff is, accordingly, without plain, adequate and speedy remedy at law. Plaintiff accordingly prays for a decree of specific performance of the contract and for an injunction.

The plaintiff did not call for the property in controversy here during November or December, 1940, or January, 1941, and so, apparently, defendant sent a telegram to plaintiff about February 19, 1941, asking about it. On that date plaintiff wired to the defendant to “defer loading tank number 12 until United States Export License received. Application filed last week. Osawa now in Washington awaiting action this application.” On February 20, 1941, plaintiff, by W. S. Shenker, wrote to the defendant “I am in Seattle visiting our home office and note your latest wire to us relative to tank No. 12 and balance of tanks on hand. You undoubtedly are aware of the fact that the embargo was ordered effective midnight last Friday on steel tanks. This necessitated a new license covering the balance of our purchases. In anticipation of this difficulty, we filed our license even before the embargo went into effect, and Mr. Osawa is now in the East awaiting action on our application.

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Bluebook (online)
131 P.2d 339, 58 Wyo. 330, 1942 Wyo. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/takahashi-v-pepper-tank-contracting-co-wyo-1942.