Union Carbide Corporation v. Oscar Mayer Foods Corporation

947 F.2d 1333, 16 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 46, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 26907, 1991 WL 236680
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 15, 1991
Docket90-3470
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 947 F.2d 1333 (Union Carbide Corporation v. Oscar Mayer Foods Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Carbide Corporation v. Oscar Mayer Foods Corporation, 947 F.2d 1333, 16 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 46, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 26907, 1991 WL 236680 (7th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

POSNER, Circuit Judge.

This is a diversity suit for breach of contract, brought by Union Carbide against Oscar Mayer and resolved in the defendant’s favor on summary judgment. Union Carbide sold Oscar Mayer plastic casings that Oscar Mayer uses in manufacturing sausages. The prices in Union Carbide’s invoices to Oscar Mayer included two 1 percent sales taxes that are applicable to sales which originate in Chicago. Another supplier of plastic sausage casings to Oscar Mayer began charging a price that was 1 percent lower than Union Carbide’s. This supplier had begun accepting orders at an office outside of Chicago and had decided that therefore it didn’t have to pay one of the sales taxes (why one but not both is unclear). When Oscar Mayer informed Union Carbide of this, Union Carbide instructed its customers likewise to send their orders to an address, outside Chicago, and it stopped paying both sales taxes and therefore deleted them from the invoices it sent Oscar Mayer. Thus Union Carbide had met and indeed beat the other supplier’s discount by lowering its price 2 percent compared to the other supplier’s reduction of 1 percent.

All this was in 1980. Eight years later the Illinois tax authorities decided that the two sales taxes were due notwithstanding the change of address and assessed Union Carbide $88,000 in back taxes on sales to Oscar Mayer and $55,000 in interest thereon. Union Carbide paid and then turned around and brought this suit to recover what it had paid from Oscar Mayer, claiming that Oscar Mayer had agreed to indemnify it for all sales tax liability. It relied on the following provision printed on the back of its invoices to Oscar Mayer and also in a “price book” that it sent its customers: “In addition to the purchase price, Buyer shall pay Seller the amount of all governmental taxes ... that Seller may be required to pay with respect to the production, sale or transportation of any materials delivered hereunder.” (Emphasis added.)

Union Carbide’s claim nestles comfortably within this language, but that is only the beginning of analysis. The language is equally comfortably read to mean simply that the seller shall be permitted to add on to the agreed purchase price the amount of whatever sales tax is applicable to the purchase — which is a quite different reading from supposing that it imposes on the buyer an open-ended liability to pay back taxes, interest, and even fraud penalties (though an attempt to shift the last might be forbidden as contrary to public policy, cf. Zuckerman-Vernon Corp. v. Rosen, 361 So.2d 804, 806 (Fla.App.1978); 2 E. Allan Farnsworth, Farnsworth on Contracts § 5.2, at p. 12 (1990)), perhaps many years after taking delivery, because the seller blundered in computing its tax liability. That may be a semantically permissible, but it is an economically implausible, reading. Contracts and contract law normally seek to impose liability for a mistake on the party to the contract who is in the better position either to prevent the mistake, or to reduce its disutility by means of market insurance or self-insurance. Argonaut Ins. Co. v. Town of Cloverdale, 699 F.2d 417, 420 (7th Cir.1983); Northern Indiana Public Service Co. v. Carbon County Coal Co., 799 F.2d 265, 278 (7th Cir.1986); Spartech Corp. v. Opper, 890 F.2d 949, 955 (7th Cir.1989); Anthony T. Kronman, “Mistake, Disclosure, Information, and the Law of Contracts,” 7 J. Legal Stud. 1, 4 (1978). The party better able to prevent a mistake about how much tax is owed is surely the taxpayer rather than the taxpayer’s customer. We don’t know whether Oscar Mayer pays any sales taxes in Illinois. We do know it was not dunned for the two taxes in issue; as to them the taxing authorities dealt exclusively with Union Carbide. There is no suggestion *1335 that, should the mistake be treated as unavoidable, either party was the superior insurer.

The background to the dispute also makes Union Carbide’s reading implausible. Oscar Mayer was asking Union Carbide to match a competitor’s price reduction. That reduction, as far as we can tell, was unconditional. The competitor wasn’t saying to Oscar Mayer, “We’ll give you a discount but maybe a few years from now we’ll ask for it back — with interest and maybe a penalty.” (At argument one of the lawyers told us that he thought the competitor had also been assessed back taxes by Illinois, just like Union Carbide, though he wasn’t sure — but that unlike Union Carbide the competitor did not try to obtain indemnity from Oscar Mayer.) Why should Oscar Mayer accept an open-ended contingent liability, which would require it to establish on its books a reserve against the possibility of being forced years later to bail Union Carbide out of a tax dispute with the state, when another supplier was offering it the same price without the liability? Well, but it wasn’t the same price; the other supplier was offering a 1 percent discount, and Union Carbide offered 2 percent. Maybe the extra 1 percent was compensation for bearing the risk of having to repay the discount — with interest — later on. But Union Carbide doesn’t even argue this. It does argue that a tax-indemnity provision is not so unusual as we imagine, because the record contains an invoice from still another supplier of sausage casings which states that “if the sale merchandise listed herein is or hereafter becomes subject to sales, or use or processing tax, buyer shall be liable for same” (emphasis added). But this may not be an indemnity provision either. It could just mean that if, after the mailing of the invoice, a tax is imposed and is applicable to the sale, the buyer agrees to pay it. Anyway the language is different from that of Union Carbide’s invoices.

We think that Union Carbide has misread the contract and that this is clear enough to be determined without a trial, as in Schulze & Burch Biscuit Co. v. Tree Top, Inc., 831 F.2d 709 (7th Cir.1987). It used to be that the meaning of a written contract was in almost all cases a question to be decided by the judge and without resort to evidence outside the contract itself. Today, however, “the jury decides the meaning of the contract in all cases in which that meaning has for any reason been fairly drawn into doubt.” Agfa-Gevaert, A.G. v. A.B. Dick Co., 879 F.2d 1518, 1522 (7th Cir.1989). But it hasn’t been here.

We also agree with the district judge that if read as an indemnity clause the quoted provision is a material alteration in the parties’ contract and is therefore unenforceable against Oscar Mayer because not agreed to. The common law rule was that if the purported acceptance of an offer was not identical to the offer, the acceptance was a fresh offer and had to be expressly accepted by the original offeror for the parties to have a contract. Step-Saver Data Systems, Inc. v. Wyse Technology,

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947 F.2d 1333, 16 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 46, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 26907, 1991 WL 236680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-carbide-corporation-v-oscar-mayer-foods-corporation-ca7-1991.