Wescold, Inc. v. Logan International, Ltd.

852 P.2d 960, 120 Or. App. 512, 1993 Ore. App. LEXIS 786
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMay 19, 1993
DocketA8911-06866; CA A68883
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 852 P.2d 960 (Wescold, Inc. v. Logan International, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wescold, Inc. v. Logan International, Ltd., 852 P.2d 960, 120 Or. App. 512, 1993 Ore. App. LEXIS 786 (Or. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

LEESON, J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment for payment due on a contract for the sale of goods. It assigns error to the trial court for (1) striking its defense and counterclaim for breach of implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose; (2) instructing the jury that, as a matter of law, three particular documents constituted a fully integrated contract; and (3) not allowing one of its witnesses to testify about his understanding of one of the terms of the agreement. We affirm.

Defendant is in the business of producing frozen french fries. After potatoes are washed, peeled, cut, dried, and fried, they are frozen and packaged. The freezing process includes placing fries in a “freeze tunnel” on a perforated conveyor belt. Fans force air to circulate through freezer coils, then the cold air passes through the perforations in the conveyor and freezes the fries. The air heated by that process returns to the freezer coils to complete the cycle.

Sometime in 1988, defendant’s general manager, Eatinger, contacted plaintiff s sales representative, Ristau, to determine whether defendant’s freeze tunnel could be upgraded to freeze 10,000 pounds of fries per hour, even during summer. On November 1,1988, Ristau transmitted to Eatinger a facsimile (fax) of a one-page letter in which he recommended adding three banks of freezer coils to the system for a certain price and specified payment terms. The proposal excluded “wiring, insulation, added valves for the existing coils, or any service work on the existing system.” The letter had been typed on plaintiffs stationery. Preprinted at the bottom were the words, “Warranty, Terms and Conditions Shown on Reverse Side.” Ristau did not send a fax of the reverse side.

Eatinger and Ristau discussed the proposal on the telephone on November 2. Eatinger asked Ristau to provide something in writing to say that adding the coils would enable defendant to freeze 10,000 pounds of fries per hour. Later that day, Ristau transmitted to Eatinger a fax of a handwritten letter explaining what he expected the new coils to accomplish. It said:

“Assuming these coils are added and based on the book rating of your existing compressor system, I believe this [515]*515addition would allow you to consistently run at the 10,000 #/hr level without excessive defrosting. I qualify this by saying that I have no knowledge of the current compressor maintenance condition and no knowledge of excessive outside air leaks into the freezer tunnel if they exist. * * * In working up this proposal a further assumption on my part was that your operating problem is due to coil frosting and subsequent loss of coil capacity, not excessive frost build-up that cuts off air flow to the coils and product.
“This may sound somewhat vague. However, for the money involved, I believe this quoted arrangement will provide you with the best approach to achieving a consistent 10,000 #/hr production rate. If you need anything more concrete than this, we would need to have our chief engineer from Seattle visit the jobsite.”

The handwritten version was on plain paper but, later that day, the letter was typed on plaintiffs stationery — complete with the warranty, terms and conditions printed on the back — and mailed. At the bottom of the back page, in bold letters, was a disclaimer that expressly excluded any implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. Eatinger received the typed version and placed it in his files. He testified that he did not read it.

Defendant originally hoped to upgrade its freeze tunnel during the holiday shutdown between Christmas and New Year’s Day, but was unable to obtain financing. Nevertheless, discussions continued. On April 21,1989, at defendant’s request, plaintiff sent another letter to “requote” a price for adding 2200 linear feet of coil to defendant’s freeze tunnel and to quote the per unit price for valves that defendant had asked about. That letter was printed on plaintiffs new stationery, which was blank on the back and disclosed nothing about additional terms. Defendant, through Eatinger, agreed to the proposal by telephone on May 1, and ordered three of the valves. On the same day, defendant’s vice-president prepared a check for $17,000 as a down payment on its purchases of approximately $68,000. On May 2, plaintiff sent a letter to confirm the agreement. The letter included the same terms that the April 21 letter contained, added the price for three valves, and incorporated by reference an attachment that contained the same terms that had been printed on the back of the November 2 letter. At the end [516]*516of the letter was a line for defendant’s signature, but defendant did not sign it. Plaintiff also sent an invoice, the front of which again referred to the reverse side containing those terms. Eatinger testified that he did not receive those writings before the down payment check was mailed and that he never read the “warranties, terms and conditions.”

After installation of the new coils, defendant’s freeze tunnel still did not reliably freeze 10,000 pounds of fries per hour.1 Defendant refused to pay any more on the contract.

Plaintiff brought this action to collect the balance due or, in the alternative, to recover in quantum meruit. Defendant raised several defenses and counterclaims. Plaintiff moved to strike the defense and counterclaim for breach of implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose, because both were precluded by the disclaimer that appeared in bold type on the backs of the November 2 and May 2 letters. Defendant filed a motion in limine, asking the court to exclude evidence of all the terms on the backs of those letters, because the April 21 letter was a fully integrated contract and, therefore, any evidence of prior agreements was inadmissible under the parol evidence rule. The court concluded that those terms were part of the contract, and that the parties’ fully integrated contract consisted of the three letters that plaintiff sent to defendant on November 1 and 2 and April 21. Therefore, it granted plaintiffs motion to strike. The case went to trial, and the judge instructed the jury that the terms of the three letters were the parties’ entire contract. The jury found for plaintiff on its contract claim and against defendant on all of its counterclaims.

Defendant first argues that the court erred by concluding that the three letters were a fully integrated contract, because neither party presented that theory. It argues that plaintiffs trial memorandum alleged only that the May 2 letter was the parties’ integrated contract.2 Plaintiffs trial memorandum, however, did not contain all of plaintiffs arguments. At the pretrial hearing, plaintiff also argued that, [517]*517even if the contract was formed on May 1, the “November 2, 1988 letter, in its entirety, [was] part of the contract.” Defendant cites no authority, and we find none, that the trial court was bound to decide the issue of integration on a theory advocated by the parties. All of the documents the court concluded were part of the contract were offered as such by one party or the other during the pretrial hearing. There was no error.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
852 P.2d 960, 120 Or. App. 512, 1993 Ore. App. LEXIS 786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wescold-inc-v-logan-international-ltd-orctapp-1993.