Taylor Oil & Gas Co. v. Pierce-Fordyce Oil Ass'n

226 S.W. 467, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1156
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 22, 1920
DocketNo. 6249.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 226 S.W. 467 (Taylor Oil & Gas Co. v. Pierce-Fordyce Oil Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor Oil & Gas Co. v. Pierce-Fordyce Oil Ass'n, 226 S.W. 467, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1156 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

BRADY, J.

This suit was instituted by appellant, the Taylor Oil & Gas Company, against appellee, Pierce-Fordyce Oil Association, to recover a balance alleged to be due by the latter to the former upon a sale of oil under a written contract. Defendant denied any liability, and alleged in its answer that it had paid plaintiff the full contract price of all oil delivered by plaintiff to it under the contract. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence, the trial court peremptorily instructed the jury to return a verdict for the défendant, which was done, and judgment was entered thereon for defendant.

Opinion.

The first assignment of error is, in substance, that the trial court erred in' giving the peremptory instruction, because there was evidence introduced at the trial which would have warranted a jury in finding that the Dixie Oil Company, during the period covered by the contract, had posted in the Electra field prices which represented and were the regularly established and published market quotations for oil in that field, and because the evidence further showed that defendant had refused to pay plaintiff for crude oil furnished under the terms of the contract sued on, in accordance with said prices, and that, if such prices be accepted as the true basis of settlement for the oil, defendant was indebted to plaintiff for a large sum of money under the contract.

The proposition under this assignment is substantially the same and is to the effect that the trial court, under -the evidence, should not have held as a matter of law that the prices posted by the pipe line companies and published in oil journals should control.

The stipulation in the contract with relation to the price of the oil was as follows:

“The mutually agreed price of said oil for said period of twelve (12) months from this date, between the parties hereto, is and shall be the regularly established and published market quotations for the highest grade crude oil, as grades (quotations) are now established in. the Electra market, at Electra, Wichita county,. Tex., on the 1st and 16th day of each successive month during the life of his contract, said price being based upon the price per barrel of 42 U. S. gallons each; that is to say, that on the 1st day and on the 16th day of each month during the life of this contract, the number of barrels of oil furnished by the party of the first part to the party of the second part hereunder prior to such date and since the last settlement hereunder shall be ascertained, and the regularly established and published market quotations for the highest grade crude oil, as grades (quotations) are now established in said Electra oil field on said date shall be also ascertained, and the party of the second part shall pay to the party of the first part said price per barrel for each barrel of oil that has been furnished to the' party of the second part by the party of the first part between such date and the last settlement between the parties hereto.”

It appears from the evidence that at the time this contract was made there were certain pipe line companies which were posting *469 prices for crude oil at their offices in Electra field, and that the same prices were being published in oil journals as market quotations. At this time the Dixie Oil Company was not posting any prices. However, there was evidence that such posted prices at the time of the contract meant the same as market price to the oil trade, generally speaking.

The contract was executed January 21, 1916, and one of the officers of the Magnolia Petroleum Company, a pipe line company which was posting -prices in the Eleletra field, testified that at the date of the contract, and for a long period oí time prior thereto, the pipe line quotations at Electra represented substantially the price at which the bulk of oil produced at Electra was bought and sold in that field, as far as his company was concerned, and that it was his understanding that other companies were paying the same price, that about a month later, because of abnormal competitive conditions, the pipe line quotations which continued to be posted by the pipe line companies ceased to represent the market price or value of the oil, and that this condition continued for several months thereafter.

For about a month after the execution of the contract the price posted by the pipe line -companies and published by the oil journals was $1.30 a barrel, ahd thereafter, until .about the 1st of August of the same year, such posted and published price was $1.55 a barrel. However, shortly after the execution of this contract, the Dixie Oil & Refining Company, according to the evidence, posted a price at Electra of $1.75 a barrel, upon instructions and authority of the president and general manager of such company. There was evidence showing that this price was a bona fide one, and that the company was able and willing to buy the oil on the market at that price, and that such company bought all the oil it could get at this posted price and even at higher prices. The price posted by the Dixie Company was placed on a bulletin board in the lobby of the Denver Hotel, which was the largest hotel in Electra, and there was testimony showing it to be the most public place there. There was also testimony showing that this bulletin board was 2x3 or 4, and was similar to the bulletin boards in other offices, and the announcement read in substance: “Dixie Refining & ■Oil Company of San Antonio — We will pay $1.75 per barrel in the Electra field.”

In view of this and other evidence in the record, we have concluded that the first assignment should be sustained, and that the trial court erred in giving a peremptory instruction to the jury, because an issue of fact had been made for the determination of the jury under the standard fixed by the contract for determining the price. We do not agree to the contention of appellee that because, at the time of the contract, market quotations were regularly established by the posting of prices by certain pipe line companies and the publishing in the oil journals, as such companies continued to post prices, their prices must continue to be the standard to determine the price throughout the life of the contract. No language is used in the contract requiring the question to be determined by the prices quoted by the oil companies then buying oil at Electra — in other words, the pipe line companies then operating at Electra. There is nothing to indicate that the parties intended that the •quotations of any particular company or combination of companies should control, but it does provide that the governing quotations shall be the quotations “as now established at Electra.” The method of establishing the quotations is what the parties referred to, and not the person or com-' pany by which the quotations were made.

When the Dixie Oil Company afterwards entered that field and posted what were testified to as genuine bona fide market quotations at which they were able and willing to buy all the oil offered, and did in fact buy quantities of oil at that price and higher, we think these facts raised an issue foi the jury to determine whether they were, at the respective settlement dates, the regularly established market quotations. We think it is immaterial that at the time of the contract the Dixie Oil Company had not begun posting prices for oil at Electra.

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Bluebook (online)
226 S.W. 467, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-oil-gas-co-v-pierce-fordyce-oil-assn-texapp-1920.