Western Industries Co. v. Mason Malt Whiskey Distilling Co.

205 P. 466, 56 Cal. App. 355
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 1922
DocketCiv. No. 3934.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 205 P. 466 (Western Industries Co. v. Mason Malt Whiskey Distilling Co.) 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
Western Industries Co. v. Mason Malt Whiskey Distilling Co., 205 P. 466, 56 Cal. App. 355 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

TYLER, P. J.

This action was brought to recover damages against defendant company for breach of contract. By a separate count plaintiff has joined as codefendants the stockholders of defendant company. Trial was had by jury and a verdict in the sum of $300,000 was rendered in favor of plaintiff. From the judgment entered thereon this appeal is taken.

The contract sued upon was entered into by and between defendant Mason Malt Whiskey Distilling Company (hereafter referred to as the Mason Company) and the Western Grain and Sugar Products Company, the plaintiff’s predecessor in interest. The contract was made on November 10, 1916, and was assigned to plaintiff on April 26, 1917, this company having succeeded to the business of the Western Grain Company. Both parties operated plants for the manufacture of alcohol, plaintiff’s works being located at Agnew, Santa Clara County, and the defendant’s near Sausalito, in Marin County. The process of manufacture at both plants involved the distillation of molasses from which alcohol was extracted. From this process there resulted a *357 certain waste or residuum commonly called slops. These slops contained a certain percentage of potash. Prior to the time the contract was entered into defendant company had been discharging this residuum through a pipe-line into Richardson’s Bay. Plaintiff’s assignor had developed a process for the incineration of such slops and the extraction of potash therefrom, and was desirous of obtaining those of defendant company to be used for this purpose. A contract was accordingly entered into by the parties for the sale of the same. The contract provided that the slops from defendant’s plant up to 70,000 gallonsi per day and any amount in excess thereof that plaintiff could receive up to 100,000 gallons per day should be delivered by defendants to plaintiff at its plant at Agnew. The gravity was provided for and it was stipulated that the slops shpuld contain not less than 1.25 units of soluble KsO (potash) per ton of 2,000 pounds. The price was fixed at fifty cents per unit of potash contained in a ton plus freight at the rate of 85 cents per ton, this combination of prices being equivalent to $1.18 per unit of soluble potash contained in the slops per ton, net, f. o. b. cars at Agnew. Any reduction in freight rates was to be shared equally between the seller and buyer, and any profits arising in freight on account of concentration of the slops at plant of seller should belong to the seller. For the purpose of determining the potash content it was provided that a sample of each carload shipment was to be drawn by both parties, by the seller at point of loading cars, and by the buyer at point of emptying cars. The contract contained a clause that in the event of strikes or for any other cause- interfering with transportation or production of' the goods, seller might suspend deliveries during actual time of such delay or interference, and a similar provision protected buyers against receipt of deliveries. The contract was to remain in force until July 15, 1917, with renewal options to extend as long as the buyer might see fit, under the same terms and conditions, such renewals, however, not to extend for a period thereafter longer than two years. Performance of the contract was entered upon, and, subsequently, on April 26, 1917, it was assigned to plaintiff, the successor of the original company, and after this date all slops were billed by defendant to the new company and paid for by it. Plaintiff renewed the *358 contract pursuant to the option at various times and for stated periods, until finally renewal was requested for the full remaining period of one year. This final election of renewal was made on March 21, 1918, and after defendants had notified plaintiff that they would make no further deliveries, for the reason, as they stated, that they lacked suitable transportation facilities, and no further deliveries were made, notwithstanding that the contract provided that in the event of means of transportation failing that deliveries might be suspended, not terminated. Thereafter this action was brought. The complaint alleges the making of the contract on November 10, 1916, with plaintiff’s assignor, the assignment and ownership by plaintiff of the contract, and the breach thereof, and concludes with a prayer for damages. The answer of defendants denied that the Mason Company failed or refused to make deliveries contrary to the terms of their contract, and alleged in substance that transportation was interfered with, and that the only possible means of delivery was by barges in conjunction with tank cars, and that for various reasons defendants were unable to obtain the same. About a year after the complaint was filed and after the trial had commenced, defendants asked for and obtained permission from the court to file an amendment to their answer, under which a special defense was interposed. The amendment alleged that it was impossible for defendants to make deliveries without a material quantity of slops flowing into waters of the state, and that criminal proceedings had been instituted against defendants for violation of the state laws, and that the board of supervisors of the county of Marin had notified the defendant company that if it continued to pollute the waters of the state proceedings would be instituted to abate its business as a nuisance. That by reason thereof it is alleged defendant was forced and compelled to cease making deliveries. At the trial, and for the purpose of proving that lack of means of transportation did not prevent deliveries, and that the refusal of defendant company to make the same was willful and deliberate, and was occasioned by its desire to utilize plaintiff’s process and to reap greater profits by manufacturing the potash for itself, plaintiff offered, arid there was received in evidence, testimony to show that prior to the time that defendant company notified plaintiff that deliveries could no longer *359 be had, that the former engineer of plaintiff was employed by defendant, who erected a plant similar to that of plaintiff’s, and that immediately thereafter shipment of slops declined, and that defendant itself produced during the life of the contract a large quantity of potash salts for which they received a sum greatly in excess of the amount of damages here recovered. Further testimony was introduced to show that an officer of defendant company admitted to the general manager of plaintiff that the reason for failure to make deliveries was that defendants desired to extract the potash themselves so as to make more money. It also appears from evidence offered by plaintiff and received by the court, that defendant company made no effort to obtain towboats, tank cars, or barges after it ceased to make deliveries, and that both tank cars or barges were readily obtainable, and that shipment without the use of barges could have been made by tank cars at Waldo shipped to Agnew. Evidence on this subject is abundant, but we do not deem a recital thereof necessary. [1] It is sufficient to say that it is ample to support the contention that transportation was possible even with the elimination of barges. It was appellant’s contention below, and is here, that it was not obliged to transport the slops by any other method that would subject it to higher expense than that which it incurred by shipment in barges.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
205 P. 466, 56 Cal. App. 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-industries-co-v-mason-malt-whiskey-distilling-co-calctapp-1922.