Willibald Schaefer Co. v. Blanton Co.

264 S.W.2d 920, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 221
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 16, 1954
Docket28793
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 264 S.W.2d 920 (Willibald Schaefer Co. v. Blanton Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willibald Schaefer Co. v. Blanton Co., 264 S.W.2d 920, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 221 (Mo. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

BENNICK, Judge.

This is an action for damages for breach •of contract. Suit was instituted in September, 1942, but by reason of the nonaction of the-parties was not brought to trial •until February, 1952.

Plaintiff, Willibald Schaefer Company, .and defendant, the Blanton Company, are local corporations engaged in the business of buying, selling, and refining both vegetable and animal oils. A third corporation engaged in the same general business is the Western Vegetable Oils Company, which has its place of business in San Francisco, 'California. • , .

On September 2&, 1941, plaintiff entered into a written contract with the Western Vegetable Oils Company for the purchase of ten tank cars of crude coconut oil, five of which were to be shipped during January, 1942, and the remaining five during February, 1942, with specific shipping instructions to follow.

■ While shipment of the ten cars was guaranteed by the Western Vegetable Oils Company, the contract contained a condition excusing the shipper from responsibility for delay or nondelivery resulting, among other things, from restrictions imposed by any governmental authority.

After the execution of such contract, and on December 12, 1941, plaintiff entered into a written contract for the resale of such ten tank cars of crude coconut oil to defendant, with shipment to be made by the Western Vegetable Oils Company in ac-' cordance with such company’s contract with plaintiff. The contract specifically mentioned that five tank cars were to be shipped in January, 1942, and five in February, 1942, with shipment guaranteed, but did not recite the condition incorporated in plaintiff’s contract with the Western Vegetable Oils Company excusing liability for nondelivery resulting from restrictions imposed by any governmental authority. Although it was agreed that shipment- was to be made by the Western Vegetable Oils Company in accordance with such company’s contract with plaintiff, a copy of such contract was neither attached to the contract between plaintiff and defendant, nor was it otherwise referred to than in the manner indicated.

, At the time of. its entry into the contract with plaintiff, defendant was already under contract to sell various amounts of refined oil to other companies at their respective addresses and intended to allocate five of the tank cars to such use. On December 12, 1941, the same day upon which it entered into its contract with plaintiff, it agreed to sell and deliver the remaining five tank cars to still another customer, with delivery to be made in February, 1942. Defendant’s purpose in purchasing the crude coconut oil was to refine the same at its plant in St, *922 Louis'and then resell the oil fo its customers in an edible condition. .

The Western Vegetable Oils Company was duly advised by plaintiff that the ten tank cars of oil contracted for on September 26, 1941, had been resold to defendant; and during the period from January 12, 1942, to February 9, 1942, five of such cars were received and paid for by. defendant, and are not in dispute in the present case,. On the contrary, the only dispute is over the nondelivery of the remaining five cars, shipment of which was withheld by the Western Vegetable Oils Company due to a controversy between the several companies over the effect of certain governmental regulations respecting priority status and the use for which the oil was intended.

On August 28, 1941, a month before the execution of the contract 'between plaintiff and the Western Vegetable Oils Company, the federal government, through its Office of Production Management, had issued Priority Regulation No. 1 (6 F.R. 4489), which provided, in substance, that defense orders for any material were to be accepted and filled in preference to any other contracts or purchase orders for such material, even if such acceptance would render impossible or result in deferment of deliveries under nondefense orders previously accepted.

As a matter of fact, not only was defendant to receive the ten cars of oil that plaintiff had purchased from the Western Vegetable Oils Company under its contract of September 26, 1941, but it had also dealt directly with the Western Vegetable Oils Company on other purchases, and had had extensive correspondence with such company in relation to the substitution in some instances of babassu oil for coconut oil under contracts for January, 1942, delivery. .

On February 10, 1942, the Western Vegetable Oils Company advised defendant that it would be in a position to ship five cars of coconut oil at the end of the month, and inquired if such cars might not be applied to the performance of its contract with plaintiff. The suggestion was agreed to, subject to the condition that defendant should supply the empty cars to receive the oil, which was done, with all five cars leaving St. .Louis ..for San Francisco between February 10th and February.14th.

On February 24, 1942, the Western Vég-etable Oils Company gave the first indication in a letter to plaintiff that it was not permitted to dispose of coconut oil unless it was given a release by the Office of Production Management, which in some instances had only been forthcoming where the oil was to be used in the manufacture, of soap and glycerin.

On February 25, 1942, the Western Vegetable Oils Company wired defendant that it expected to be called upon to inform the Office of Production Management of the use to be made of coconut oil sold defendant under a contract other than the one involved in this proceeding, and that it desired immediate advice from defendant upon the question of intended use. On the following day the Western Vegetable Oils Company again wired defendant to the same effect, but in greater detail; and on February 28, 1942, defendant wired the Western Vegetable Oils Company that inasmuch as it had already substituted other oils for its edible trade, it would certify that any coconut oil thereafter shipped it would be used for soap and glycerin manufacture. However on the same day it also wrote Western Vegetable Oils Company expressing the hope that such company would substitute babassu oil on the shipment of five cars under its contract with plaintiff.

Additional correspondence followed on the part of both plaintiff and defendant demanding that the Western Vegetable Oils Company make shipment under its contract with plaintiff, but all to no avail; and so the matter stood on March 20, 1942, when the War Production Board (the successor to the Office of Production Management) issued General Preference Order M-60 (7 F.R. 2185), by which it prohibited the further use of either coconut oil or babasstt oil in any process in which glycerin was not produced.

Plaintiff had been equally insistent with defendant that the Western Vegetable Oils Company should make delivery of the final *923 five cars in accordance with its contract, and on March 23, 1942, the Western Vegetable Oils Company wrote plaintiff advising that it had at all times had the oils on hand to make delivery under its contract, but that it would not make any shipment until it received releases from the War Production Board.

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Bluebook (online)
264 S.W.2d 920, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willibald-schaefer-co-v-blanton-co-moctapp-1954.