Willamette Western Corp. v. Lowry

568 P.2d 1339, 279 Or. 525, 22 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 882, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 858
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 1977
DocketTC 411 604, SC 24494
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 568 P.2d 1339 (Willamette Western Corp. v. Lowry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willamette Western Corp. v. Lowry, 568 P.2d 1339, 279 Or. 525, 22 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 882, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 858 (Or. 1977).

Opinion

*527 CAMPBELL, J.,

Pro Tempore.

The plaintiff filed this action seeking to recover damages caused by the defendant’s refusal to sell the plaintiff a used Drott 1500 Cruz Crane with a 61-foot Power Boom pursuant to an alleged rental-purchase agreement entered into between the parties on June 26, 1972. Although Edward J. Lowry is named as defendant both as an individual and as Ed Lowry Construction Co., we will refer to defendant as Lowry.

In 1971 Lowry purchased the crane in question for approximately $65,000, intending to use it in connection with two United States Forest Service projects. When these projects did not materialize, Lowry placed the crane for rent.

During early 1972, plaintiff, Willamette-Western, had several large construction projects in progress and had a specific long-term need for a Drott crane. Jack Kaady, who was primarily responsible for procuring construction equipment for the plaintiff, contacted several equipment suppliers in the Portland area. One of the suppliers Kaady contacted was Case Power & Equipment Company, whose representative, Roy McKenney, had sold the Drott crane to the defendant.

The evidence concerning the negotiations and agreement for the rental of the crane with an option to purchase was in dispute, but the jury could have found the following:

The negotiations were conducted solely by telephone with Kaady representing the plaintiff and McKenney representing the defendant. Lowiy was in McKenney’s office during the telephone conference. During the telephone conversation Kaady told McKen-ney that Willamette-Western wanted an option to purchase the crane at any time during the rental term. Lowry objected to an any time option and wanted to limit the option to a six-month period. The inference is that McKenney relayed Lowry’s objection to Kaady.

*528 On June 26, 1972, Kaady prepared, signed, and forwarded to Lowry a completed "Rental Agreement” form which described the crane and set out the details of the lease arrangement. The agreement form was designated as Order No. R.A. 0110. It contained the following provision, in which the blanks had been filled in by typewriter:

"OPTION TO PURCHASE: WILLAMETTE-WESTERN CORPORATION HAS THE OPTION TO PURCHASE AT Anytime WHILE RENTED TO WILLAMETTE FOR THE PURCHASE OPTION PRICE OF $ 64,381.50_WITH TERMS TO APPLY AS FOLLOWS: 89 % OF ALL RENTALS TO APPLY TO THE PURCHASE PRICE WITH INTEREST FIGURED AT 0 j

Kaady had signed the form on behalf of Willamette-Western. Provision was made for the lessor’s signature as follows:

"COMPLETE AGREEMENT: This rental agreement and any attachments hereto constitute the entire agreement superseding all prior proposals and agreements between the parties, and any changes hereto must be in writing and signed by both parties.
"LESSOR: by_”

Lowry received the rental order from Kaady and read it but did not sign it. On June 28, 1972, he prepared, signed and sent to plaintiff an invoice for $1,500 for the first month’s rent for the crane. The invoice contained the following notation: ¡

"Your Order RA 0110
******
"Agreement 6-26-72
if: sf: sf: * »

The plaintiff took possession of the crane and started making the rental payments of $1,500 per month.

In November 1972, Lowry called Kaady "to fihd out what they was going to do with the crane after the six months was up.” Kaady told Lowry that he did not *529 have time to talk to him. Kaady was going out of town and when he got back he would contact Lowry and they "would have lunch and discuss it.” Kaady did not contact Lowry.

There was no further contact between the plaintiff and the defendant except for the monthly invoices and rental checks until the summer of 1974. Each month the defendant sent to the plaintiff an invoice identical, except as to date, to the first one. The checks sent by the plaintiff in payment of the invoices were designated for the "rental” of the crane until August 1974 when the designation was changed to "rental purchase payment.”

In the summer of 1974 the plaintiff asserted that it had an option to purchase the crane under the rental order of June 26, 1972. The defendant responded that there was no option. Negotiations failed and the complaint in this case was filed.

The plaintiffs amended complaint alleged that the parties, on June 26, 1972, entered into a lease-purchase agreement relative to one used Drott 1500 Cruz Crane (the rental order of June 26, 1972, was attached as an exhibit), that the plaintiff exercised its option to purchase the equipment, that the defendant refused to proceed with the sale, and that the plaintiff had been damaged in a specified sum. The defendant filed an answer in the form of a general denial. The jury returned a verdict in favor of defendant, and plaintiff appeals.

Plaintiff, at trial, raised by a motion for a directed verdict and by various requested jury instructions the contention that the rental order of June 26 and the invoice of June 28, taken together, constituted as a matter of law a contract under which plaintiff was entitled to exercise its option to purchase the crane at any time during the term of the lease. The trial court, however, submitted the issue of liability to the jury, which found for defendant. By sundry assignments of *530 error, plaintiff raises the same issue on appeal: whether there was any evidence which would permit the jury to find for defendant on the issue of liability. We hold that there was.

There was evidence from which the jury could find that the parties made an agreement during the telephone conversation between Kaady and McKenney, and that their agreement did not include an option to purchase at "any time” during the term of the lease, but only during the first six months. If the jury so found, it could also find that the later exchange of documents — the rental order and the initial invoice— did not accomplish a modification of the original oral contract. Although plaintiff clearly inserted the "any time” option term in the rental order form, defendant never signed that document. Defendant’s invoice did not refer directly to that provision or expressly indicate acceptance. Although reference on the invoice was made to plaintiff’s "Order RA 0110,” the jury was not bound to find that reference necessarily constituted agreement to a proposed modification of the prior oral agreement. The body of the invoice, which was a billing for the first month’s rental in the agreed-upon amount, was entirely consistent with defendant’s version of that prior agreement.

There was, then, a question of fact for the jury on the issue of liability, and the trial court did not err in refusing to direct a verdict for plaintiff, or in refusing to instruct the jury that the two documents which we have described, taken together, themselves constituted the contract between the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
568 P.2d 1339, 279 Or. 525, 22 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 882, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willamette-western-corp-v-lowry-or-1977.