41 A.L.R.Fed. 841, 1977-1 Trade Cases 61,401
CALL CARL, INC., a Delaware Corporation, et al., Appellants,
v.
BP OIL CORPORATION, a Delaware Corporation, and Standard Oil
Company (Ohio), an Ohio Corporation, Appellees.
CALL CARL, INC., a Delaware Corporation, et al., Appellees,
v.
BP OIL CORPORATION, a Delaware Corporation, and Standard Oil
Company (Ohio), an Ohio Corporation, Appellants.
Nos. 76-1345, 76-1346.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.
Argued Nov. 8, 1976.
Decided April 26, 1977.
John Henry Lewin, Jr., Baltimore, Md. (Benjamin R. Civiletti, Venable, Baetjer & Howard, Baltimore, Md., on brief) for appellees in No. 76-1345 and for appellants in No. 76-1346.
Jerry S. Cohen, Washington, D. C. (Michael D. Hausfeld, Washington, D. C., William C. Sammons, Tydings & Rosenberg, Baltimore, Md., on brief), for appellants in No. 76-1345 and for appellees in No. 76-1346.
Before BRYAN, Senior Circuit Judge, WIDENER and HALL, Circuit Judges.
WIDENER, Circuit Judge:
In late summer of 1973, the plaintiffs, ten independent service station operators doing business in Maryland as BP dealers, were notified by BP that their leases and franchise agreements would not be renewed when their current terms expired. Business expectations frustrated, litigation was not far behind. The operators charged BP along with its parent corporation, Standard Oil Co. of Ohio (SOHIO), with terminating their franchises as part of a price fixing conspiracy in violation of § 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1. State law claims for breach of contract and fraudulent misrepresentation were asserted as well.
Trial was held in the district court with a jury, and at the close of the plaintiffs' case defendants were granted a directed verdict on the count alleging violations of the Sherman Act. The other counts were submitted to the jury, which found that there had been no breach of contract by the defendants, but that BP and SOHIO were liable under the Maryland law of fraud and deceit. Damages of more than 1.2 million dollars were awarded by the jury, about half of which was ordered remitted by the court in lieu of a new trial on the issue of damages. The district court opinions are reported as
Appeals are taken by both sides. Plaintiffs claim the district court erred in directing a verdict on the antitrust count and in remitting approximately $600,000 of the jury's damage award. BP and SOHIO allege error in the district court's fraud and deceit damage charge, and assert that they are entitled to judgment on the merits of that count. We view plaintiffs' antitrust allegations as lacking in merit and affirm the district court's grant of a directed verdict in favor of the defendants. On the fraud and deceit count, however, we find ourselves in agreement with BP and SOHIO that the jury was erroneously instructed on the proper measure of damages in this case, and that under the evidence there should have been no award of damage on the fraud count. The district court's judgment for the plaintiffs on that count will therefore be reversed.
At the time of BP's incorporation in 1969, plaintiffs Call Carl, Inc., Gage, Smith, Luksenburg and DeLeonibus had operated their service stations under the Sinclair tradename pursuant to short-term, renewable leases. When BP acquired Sinclair properties on the East Coast in 1969, it took over these leases for the remainder of their terms and, as they expired, renewed them for additional periods, with the plaintiffs becoming BP dealers. In only one instance, that of the plaintiff Smith, was a lease renewed for a period longer than one year, in accordance with BP's policy of limiting franchise agreements to one year terms.
The years 1970-1972 witnessed the expansion of BP marketing in the Washington, D. C. area through traditional franchise arrangements. During this period, BP acquired the service stations later operated by the other five plaintiffs, Cochrane, Stickell, Loekle, Sherbert, and Diaz. These five were initially given six-month leases and supply contracts that could be, and in fact were, later renewed, but again never for longer than one-year terms. Each of the plaintiffs' agreements with BP specified that, after the expiration of an initial period of time, they would be renewed "thereafter for successive terms of one year each, provided, however, that either party may terminate the lease at the end of the first one-year or any successive yearly term on Thirty (30) days' written notice given prior to the end of any such term."
BP suffered substantial losses during the years 1970-72 and, by the fall of 1972, was re-evaluating its marketing program in the Washington, D. C. area. A tentative list of candidates for franchise non-renewal was prepared, and certain stations were identified as suitable for transition to no-frill Gas & Go stations, geared toward the provision of gasoline and oil cheaply and quickly, with no additional services provided. BP decided that the stations operated by the plaintiffs would be converted to the Gas & Go format, and in September 1973 gave timely notice to the plaintiffs that their dealerships would not be renewed at the expiration of their terms.1 Because of an injunction pendente lite issued by the district court, plaintiffs did not actually vacate the stations until February 1976.
A threshold issue is whether plaintiffs, having accepted a remittitur " under protest," may nevertheless contest the propriety of the remittitur on direct appeal, rather than having to seek such review after a new trial. This is an issue over which the circuits have divided at least three ways,2 though, somewhat anomalously, it seems to us it has long been settled by the Supreme Court against appealability. See Woodworth v. Chesbrough,
We find it necessary to discuss this issue despite our reversal of the district court on the merits of the fraud and deceit count because it implicates still a larger, related, threshold question of relevance to the remaining issues before us whether plaintiffs' attempted acceptance of the remittitur under protest, when direct appeal is not permitted, is in fact an acceptance for the purpose of rendering the district court's judgment a final, appealable order from which either side might appeal on other grounds. Once a remittitur is accepted, the reduced judgment achieves finality quite apart from whether the order of remittitur can then be appealed. But if the proper course for the district court in this case was to treat plaintiffs as having rejected the remittitur, then a new trial should have been ordered, and none of the issues in this case would properly be before us for review, for such orders are interlocutory in nature and leave no final judgment from which to appeal. Atlantic Coast R. R. Co. v. Sonenshine,
Again, we look to the Supreme Court's opinion in Woodworth for guidance. There, the Court of Appeals apparently treated the remittitur as having been accepted although it attempted to reserve a non-existing right of review. The Supreme Court did not indicate that the Court of Appeals acted properly in this regard, and indeed the effect of the Court's holding was to leave the plaintiff with his reduced judgment, which amounts to no less than treating the conditional acceptance as unconditional. If the district court treated plaintiff's response to its order of remittitur as an unconditional acceptance in the present case, we think it was correct in doing so. See Donovan v. Penn Shipping Co., Inc.,
As a final threshold matter, although plaintiffs are precluded from appealing the district court's order of remittitur on their fraud and deceit count, we see no reason why they should not be able to raise before this court the propriety of the directed verdict entered against them on the Sherman Act count. As we have said, the final judgment rule presents no bar, for, the acceptance being deemed unconditional, the order in fact is final, and we do not think that the reasons for prohibiting direct appeals from remittiturs require such a result with respect to entirely separate and distinct causes of action once a remittitur has been accepted on one count of a complaint. Whether phrased in terms of waiver or estoppel, the many cases prohibiting direct appeals from remittiturs base their preclusion on the idea that a plaintiff should not be able to appeal from a judgment to which he has consented and from which he has accepted benefits.3 But the mere acceptance of benefit in a case not involving remittitur from a judgment is not necessarily an absolute bar to appeal with respect to separate or divisible controversies. United States v. Newton Livestock Auction Mkt., Inc.,
We do not think that plaintiffs' action in accepting a remittitur to avoid a new trial on fraud and deceit damages indicates as a matter of law their assent to a directed verdict entered against them on the antitrust count of their complaint. We therefore conclude that plaintiffs are entitled to maintain this appeal on the antitrust count, but not as to the correctness of the remittitur, and we proceed to the merits.
* ANTITRUST COUNT
The thrust of plaintiffs' Sherman Act claim is that BP, in not renewing the leases and supply contracts, engaged in an unlawful refusal to deal with plaintiffs in furtherance of a scheme to fix the retail price of gasoline products. In Osborn v. Sinclair Refining Co.,
It is apparent that the determinative issue is whether Gas & Go stations are operated directly by BP through its own employees or, as plaintiffs urge, by independent operators. If the latter, then BP could be guilty of price fixing, which is per se violative of § 1 of the Sherman Act. Albrecht v. Herald Co.,
Each of the plaintiffs was offered the opportunity of becoming an "I-manager" of his converted station, as were all independent BP dealers whose stations were selected for Gas & Go. The plaintiffs, each of whom declined the offer, claim that the I-manager appellation is a mere subterfuge designed to enable BP to fix the prices of independent dealers, similar to the consignment practice condemned in Simpson v. Union Oil Co.,
While BP's I-manager scheme is not totally devoid of indicia of independent operation, in that the I-manager is paid by commission rather than salary, and is responsible for paying the salaries of subordinate employees and any cash shortages that may occur, the rights and responsibilities of an I-manager irrefutably place him in the category of a BP employee. In contrast to the situation in Simpson, BP pays all costs of station operation, except for the station payroll, and is responsible for accidental losses of gasoline on the station premises. BP pays all sums for Social Security, unemployment compensation and workmen's compensation with respect to the I-manager and his subordinates. Finally, an I-manager, unlike an independent operator, can be discharged like any employee on twenty-four hours notice. Had the judgment of the district court not held an I-manager to be in fact an employee, we would have been required to set it aside.
We therefore think that this antitrust complaint resolves itself into nothing more than an oil company, faced with severe losses, deciding to change its operations on the retail level to assume direct operation of its own stations rather than leasing them. The fact that a desire to control retail prices contributed to this decision, far from establishing the illegality of the scheme, requires utilization of the method chosen. Any other approach could have constituted unlawful price fixing. The district court was justified in concluding as a matter of law that the essential duality of parties required for an unlawful contract, combination or conspiracy was not proven in this case.
II
FRAUD AND DECEIT COUNT
At trial, plaintiffs contended that they were induced to enter into franchise agreements with BP by oral representations on the part of BP agents, known by the agents to be false, to the effect that the agreements, though of one-year duration, would be renewed annually as long as plaintiffs complied with their contractual obligations. Plaintiffs claimed that these representations, made at various times between 1971 and 1973 by three BP employees, Taggart, Southern, and Tousey, were made with deceptive intent, and that they were relied upon by the plaintiffs, who thereby refrained from seeking more advantageous business opportunities.
The district court correctly charged the jury on the five elements of legal fraud in Maryland: (1) a representation made by a party was false; (2) its falsity was either known to the party or made with such reckless indifference to the truth to impute knowledge; (3) the misrepresentation was made for the purpose of defrauding some other person; (4) that person reasonably acted in reliance upon the misrepresentation with full belief in its truth, and he would not have done the thing from which damage resulted had it not been made; and (5) the person so acting suffered damage directly resulting from the misrepresentation. See James v. Goldberg,
As related above, the thrust of plaintiffs' complaint is that they entered into franchise renewals with BP in reliance upon fraudulent assurances that BP would not exercise its contractual right of non-renewal at the end of successive yearly lease terms, and that they were damaged by reason of having foregone other business opportunities. The jury determined that the plaintiffs sustained their burden of proof on the five elements of actionable fraud. Out of an abundance of respect for its findings,5 we base our reversal only on the fifth the existence of damage. We think the jury was incorrectly instructed on the issue of damages, and that, in any event, the evidence of damage was insufficient to sustain the recovery.
The jury was instructed that if the defendants were found liable for either breach of contract or fraud, the measure of damages would be the same the plaintiffs would be entitled to the "benefit of their bargain." Then, in its application of the benefit of the bargain measure of damages, the district court essentially instructed the jury to consider the future profits plaintiffs would have earned had their leases been indefinitely renewed.
In recent years, Maryland has adopted a flexible approach to damage measurement in fraud and deceit actions and, in appropriate cases, the benefit of the bargain measurement may properly be applied. Hinkle v. Rockville Motor Co.,
In Hinkle, plaintiff purchased an automobile, represented to be new, which in fact had been driven over 2,000 miles and had been involved in an accident. The Maryland court permitted recovery of the difference in value between the car as represented at the time of its sale and its actual value, as measured by the repairs necessary to return it to its new condition, which the court held was the benefit of the plaintiff's bargain. Among the guidelines for application of this damage measurement, the court continued, "(2) if the fraudulent representation also amounted to a warranty, recovery may be had for loss of the bargain because a fraud accompanied by a broken promise should cost the wrongdoer as much as the latter alone."
We have found no case, however, in which the benefit of the bargain measurement has been applied to compensate a plaintiff for loss of an orally-created expectancy that is known to be directly contrary to the terms of a written agreement.6 The plaintiffs here claim entitlement to lost future profits although each one knew that his franchise agreement was by its provisions of limited duration and expressly non-renewable by either party on thirty days' notice. Indeed, plaintiffs assert it was in response to concerns expressed by them about the short terms of their agreements that the fraudulent assurances of perpetual terms were made. In such circumstances, damages for reliance on such assurances, as indicated by plaintiffs' complaint, may have been appropriate, if proved. Rescission or reformation might also have been appropriate avenues of pursuit. But damages for loss of an expectancy of profits created by prior or contemporaneous oral representations plainly contradictory with the terms of a written contract we believe to be non-recoverable if written contracts are to retain significance. See General Corp. v. General Motors Corp.,
It is true that the parol evidence rule presents no bar to proof of fraud in a fraud and deceit action, Standard Motor Co. v. Peltzer,
As an additional, though related, reason for not awarding benefit of the bargain damages in this case, we note that the guidelines set forth in Hinkle may well call for such a measurement only when the misrepresentation is akin to a breach of warranty, as in the sale of goods context. While we do not suggest that the rule can only apply in such a setting, we do not think that there can be a legitimate expectancy, or any cognizable bargain, when the plaintiff knows that the terms of his written agreements run contrary to that expectancy. Thus, this case is quite unlike those fraud cases in which the quality or quantity of goods is misrepresented to an unsuspecting buyer.
Finally, even applying the benefit of the bargain rule to these facts, the plaintiffs are not entitled to lost future profits, in effect contract damages. For this case differs from many fraud cases in still another respect it contains aspects of misrepresentation of future events, not only of past or existing fact. A fraud action can only be predicated on misrepresentation of past or existing fact; breach of future promises lies in the realm of contract. Blondes v. Hayes,
Ordinarily, when an erroneous damage charge is given, we should remand to the district court for a new trial on the issue of damages. Such a remand would not serve a useful purpose in this case, however, because plaintiffs either have not, or could not, introduce sufficient evidence of damage to justify an award on any permissible theory. They have failed to prove damage resulting from lost business opportunities, although alleged in the complaint. The jury was not instructed with respect to such damages, and plaintiffs did not object to the omission. The jury was instructed on other reliance damages loss from investment in inventory, stock and equipment but clearly no such damage could have occurred here as a result of BP's fraud. This is because, while plaintiffs may have made such investments as a result of 1973 lease renewals, they also operated their stations during those lease terms, as well as during the next two years because of the district court's injunction, and no evidence appears that any such initial investment lingered on until the dissolution of the injunction. Undoubtedly any investment made in reliance on BP's fraud in 1973 has long since been recouped by plaintiffs in normal operating, and sales, and profits, else evidence would have been offered to establish it.
As an alternate basis for the result we reach here, we do not think the plaintiffs could reasonably have relied upon the allegedly fraudulent statements made in the face of plainly contradictory contractual language. In James v. Goldberg, supra, the Maryland court upheld a directed verdict against a plaintiff in a fraud and deceit action, holding that he had no right to rely upon allegedly false oral statements that were clearly belied by the language of the written agreement between the parties. Just as strong is the opinion of this court in Holt v. Quaker Oil Refining Co.,
We find James, and perhaps Holt, quite persuasive, if not actually controlling, and denominate those cases an alternate ground only because it is difficult for us to say with assurance, in view of the seemingly endless number of fraud cases in Maryland that arise out of contractual dealings, that circumstances cannot exist in which the rule may be relaxed for limited purposes.
The judgment of the district court is accordingly affirmed as to the antitrust count and reversed as to the fraud count.
AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART.
Between March 22, 1973 and July 17, 1973 the leases and supply agreements for nine of the ten plaintiffs came up for renewal. Plaintiff Smith's two-year lease did not expire until August 31, 1974
Prior to BP's formal notification of non-renewal in September 1973, it had renewed the existing leases of Call Carl and Diaz for one more year, and had entered into new short-term leases embodying rental increases with Loekle, Luksenburg, Cochrane, Sherbert, DeLeonibus, and Gage. Stickell was notified in May 1973 that his lease would not be renewed when it expired on July 16, 1973. He accepted a month-to-month tenancy thereafter.
Compare Steinberg v. Indemnity Ins. Co.,
See Woodworth v. Chesbrough,
With respect to the existence of a horizontal conspiracy between BP and its parent, SOHIO, the district court held that the theory of intra-enterprise conspiracy exemplified by United States v. Yellow Cab Co.,
Notes
4a Phillips was vacated and remanded on other grounds in
Nevertheless, we cannot ignore the fact that two of the ten plaintiffs, Smith and Stickell, did absolutely nothing in reliance upon any false representations made prior to their lease expiration dates in 1973. This is because Smith did not have a renewal date for his two year lease until August 31, 1974, after he received his formal notification of non-renewal, and Stickell, unlike the remaining eight plaintiffs, was not offered the opportunity to renew his lease in 1973
While the complaint may be less than a model of clarity in defining exactly when the false statements relied upon were made, seeming to rely upon some representations made in 1971 and 1972, there is insufficient evidence from which the jury could have found that BP had knowledge of their falsity prior to the time the company started to re-evaluate its marketing practices in late 1972. See Bell v. Speed Queen,
In somewhat similar circumstances, it has been held that proof of promissory fraud, inducing a written contract, cannot be made by representations contradictory of the terms of the integration. Crosby v. Crescent Oil Co.,
In A. S. Rampell, Inc. v. Hyster Co.,
