Texas Company v. Todd

64 P.2d 1180, 19 Cal. App. 2d 174, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 395
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 9, 1937
DocketCiv. 5642
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 64 P.2d 1180 (Texas Company v. Todd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Company v. Todd, 64 P.2d 1180, 19 Cal. App. 2d 174, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 395 (Cal. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The plaintiff has appealed from a judgment which was rendered in its favor for the sum of $8,762.73, as the contract price of gasoline sold to the defendant. The appellant contends the judgment should have been rendered for the sum of $14,835.15, pursuant to the price which was established for the sale of a new and cheaper brand of gasoline which was not on the market in California at the time the contract was executed, and which was therefore not contemplated by the parties in the execution of the original contract, but which price was established by subsequent telegrams modifying the original contract. A controversy exists over the discount to which the defendant, as sole distributor of the Texas Company, is entitled upon the purchase of the new brand of gasoline. It is stipulated that if the defendant is not entitled to credit for money overpaid on the basis of 2% cents per gallon discount pursuant to the terms of the original contract the plaintiff will then be entitled to judgment for the additional sum of $6,072.42 and interest as prayed for.

June 1, 1931, The Texas Company, a California corporation, executed a written agreement to sell gasoline to the defendant as its exclusive distributor of petroleum products in Tulare County, for a period of three years, in consideration of a discount from the wholesale price thereof of 2% cents per gallon for “Auto Gasoline and Ethyl Gasoline”. The contract reads in part:

‘ ‘ Contract ... of sale made on the first day of June, 1931, between" The Texas Company, . . . hereinafter caller Seller, and Bartell Todd, hereafter allotted Tulare county as his exclusive territory, . . . hereinafter called Purchaser.
*177 “2. Products and Quantity. A quantity of gasoline, kerosene, lubricating oils, greases and other petroleum products equal to the entire requirements of purchaser in his business of distributing petroleum products for the period and at the distribution points shown below, but not to exceed in any one year, except by mutual consent: . . .
“5. Prices. For Auto Gasoline, Ethyl Gasolme in tank ear lot, the Seller’s respective tank wagon marketing prices in effect at the respective points of distribution at the time of shipment. ■
“(a) less 2%c per gallon for Auto Gasoline on purchases up to and including 100,000 gallons during one calendar month, and 2c per gallon for all purchases in excess of this amount during said month. . . .
“(e) . . . Should any question arise as to any such tank wagon market price, Seller, at its option, nmy suspend all shipments of the product involved until the question is settled and shall not be obliged to make up the shipments so suspended.
‘‘ For all other products the regular schedule price of Seller in effect at time of shipment as listed in Seller’s regular selling schedule in effect at its Los Angeles District: . . .
“Prices are F.O.B. Seller’s shipping point with freight allowed to point of destination.
“6. Terms and places of payment.
“Gasoline and Kerosene: Net 15th proximo or less 1% for cash in 10 days. . . .
“A failure to pay any amount when due may at the option of the seller terminate the contract as to further deliveries and no forbearance, course of dealings, or prior payment, shall affect this right of the Seller..”

No petroleum products are involved in this suit except gasoline. The price of no gasoline is questioned except that of a cheaper, third grade product called Calpet Greenlite Gasoline, which was produced and marketed in California after the contract was executed to meet the competition of a similar cheaper product which was being sold by other major companies. At the time of the execution of the contract with the respondent, The Texas Company possessed and marketed in California only two grades of gasoline. These two grades are referred to in the contract as “Auto Gasoline” and “Ethyl Gasoline”. The latter contains tetraethyl lead. *178 It has a higher octane rating, combustion occurs with less heat and it is considered a higher grade of gasoline which will start an engine easier in cold weather and will furnish better mileage than ordinary gasoline. It is referred to as “premium gasoline”. The only other grade of gasoline marketed by The Texas Company in California at the time the contract was executed was referred to as “Auto Gasoline”. It is contended it had no specific trade name. It may be assumed it required no trade name, since the only other grade of gasoline which the appellant then marketed was distinguished from its ordinary- or standard grade by the use of the term “Ethyl Gasoline”. By the terms of the contract this standard grade of gasoline was sold to the respondent for a discount of 2y2 cents per gallon from the regular tank wagon market price of that commodity. There is no controversy regarding that fact. No dispute arose over the price to the respondent of this standard grade until a cheaper grade was marketed in Tulare County.

The respondent had a large number of customers in Tulare County to whom he regularly sold the Texas petroleum products. Soon after the execution of the contract he began to urge The Texas Company to supply him with a cheaper grade of gasoline to enable him to compete with the products of other gasoline companies. Small companies were selling a cheap gasoline which was commonly termed “bootleg gasoline”. It was inferior to standard grades supplied by the major companies. To meet this competition other major companies also manufactured and sold in that territory cheaper grades of gasoline. There is some evidence that The Texas Company sold a lower grade of gasoline in the eastern states before the contract was executed. The evidence is uncontradicted that it did not market a third grade gasoline in California until December, 1931, about six months after the contract was executed. It then began to supply the market and sell an inferior, third grade gasoline, called “Calpet Greenlite” gasoline in and about San Diego. The process for producing this inferior gasoline enabled the company to manufacture it for three-fom*ths of a cent per gallon less than its standard gasoline. The profit to The Texas Company on sale of this third grade gasoline was less than that which was derived from higher grades. This third grade gasoline remained the same during all the time in *179 volved in this controversy except that its color was changed from green to white, and it was sometimes called “Calpet”, sometimes “Greenlite” and sometimes “Calpet Greenlite”. At his urgent request the third grade gasoline was first supplied to the respondent for sale in his territory April 19, 1932. While Mr. Todd testified that prior to the execution of the contract he talked with some of the officers of The Texas Company regarding the previous marketing of a cheaper grade of gasoline in the eastern states, there is no evidence indicating that the parties to this contract ever discussed or considered the price at which that third grade gasoline would be furnished to the respondent in the event that it should ever thereafter be introduced for sale in California.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 P.2d 1180, 19 Cal. App. 2d 174, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-company-v-todd-calctapp-1937.