659 N.Y.S.2d 426 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1997
The action arises out of a sale of 210,000 barrels of Algerian number two gasoil, sometimes referred to as home heating oil, in December 1989 for delivery in January 1990. The parties agreed to a fixed price of $.9770 per gallon during this period of severe cold temperature. Soon thereafter there was a precipitous change in the weather and the demand for heating oil dropped as did the price. The plaintiff claims that defendant breached the contract by failing to timely deliver. Defendant claims timely delivery.
The parties have stipulated to undisputed facts. In brief, the initial agreement of sale (Agreement) was entered on or about December 22, 1989 between Clark Oil Trading Company (Clark), the buyer, and J. Aron and Company (Aron), the seller. The terms of the Agreement were drafted and confirmed by Aron’s broker, Petroder (U.S.A.) Limited (Petroder). Pursuant to its terms, payment would be made either upon presentment of an invoice or under a letter of credit (LC), the latter was drafted by Clark and presented to its bank, Bank Paribas (BP). Both the Agreement and LC provided for the delivery date of the cargo to take place between January 10 to 15, 1990. Timely delivery would take place upon the tender of notice of readiness (NOR).
In the interim, Aron nominated the vessel, The Zina (The Zina), a Boston-size vessel carrying 210,000 barrels of gasoil. Clark accepted the nomination and designated Albany, New York, as the discharge port. Aron, however, informed Clark that The Zina could not go north of the George Washington Bridge because the owner would not permit it. Aron blamed Petroder for the error in not restricting the vessel north of the George Washington Bridge. In a separate action Aron settled with Petroder for the sum of $150,000. Ultimately, Clark accepted Aron’s offer, at its expense, to provide a larger vessel, The Maersk Mostoles (The Maersk), which was carrying over 400,000 barrels of gasoil. The Maersk was to lighter 150,000 barrels of gasoil on to a smaller vessel, The Patricia (The Patricia), a Boston-size vessel. The Patricia would then make its way to Albany. In addition, Clark agreed at its expense to lighter 60,000 barrels off The Maersk or The Zina, which ever came first. If Clark had no barge available, then Aron would discharge the 60,000 barrels at the IMTT oil-storage facility based in Bayonne, New Jersey (IMTT). In turn, Clark agreed to
During the weekend of January 12 to 14, 1990, the Master of The Patricia and/or The Maersk attempted, but failed, to lighter. The operation was to take place in international waters off Delaware, but was discontinued due to weather conditions. Aron had to make another delivery with The Maersk on or before January 15, in Riverhead, Long Island. Aron directed that The Maersk leave for Riverhead to discharge that particular cargo. Aron contemplated that it would be able to perform its delivery with Clark on or before January 17.
On the morning of January 15, Aron’s oil scheduler informed his counterpart at Clark of the problems it had with regard to lightering the subject cargo. He informed Clark that Aron would complete the lightering of the 150,000 barrels by early January 16, with The Maersk arriving in New York harbor on January 17, to lighter or discharge the 60,000 barrels. Instead, on or about January 15, 1990, at the close of business day, Clark served Aron with a notice of breach of contract. But, Aron complained that there was no breach and that it had until January 17 to deliver the cargo. Aron also informed Clark that the LC had not yet expired and that it intended to perform and discharge the cargo at IMTT. Clark refused to perform any further. The Maersk tendered NOR in the late hours of January 16, and discharged approximately 197,000 barrels of gasoil to the order of Clark at IMTT before midnight January 17. Aron served an invoice upon Clark. Clark refused to pay. Aron served notice on Clark that it would draw on the LC. Clark objected to the draw on the LC, but Aron presented documents to BP on or about January 25, 1990, and received payment of approximately $8.09 million. On or about January 26, 1990, Clark demanded the issuance of tank warrants from IMTT. After they were received, Clark sold the gasoil to third parties. Between February 1 through March 20, 1990, Clark received a total of approximately $4.9 million.
Clark commenced the instant action to recover the difference between the amount it received in sales and the amount paid to Aron under the LC. It interposes two causes of action. First, that Aron breached the Agreement. Second, that Aron
The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) and the principles of law and equity are applicable to the instant transaction because it involved the sale of goods between merchants (UCC 1- 103; T. W. Oil v Consolidated Edison Co., 57 NY2d 574). It is noted that the Agreement and the first LC contained mutual dates of delivery and the LC provided for the method of payment. Although the Agreement’s date of delivery was not revised, the amended LC modified and controlled the date of delivery because Clark’s obligation to pay Aron under the Agreement was suspended as long as there was a LC (UCC 2- 325). It is noted that the LC constituted a separate contract between BP and Aron (United Bank v Cambridge Sporting Goods Corp., 41 NY2d 254), but the LC was drafted by Clark and the method of payment was intertwined with the date of delivery. Aron could only be paid if it tendered NOR within the delivery date of the LC, which was at one time the exact date set out in the Agreement. Hence, delivery of the cargo and entitlement to payment were intended to be simultaneous events. Had the delivery date of the Agreement been amended to postdate the delivery date of the LC and Aron delivered timely under the Agreement, BP would not have been obligated to honor Aron’s presentment of documents. Aron had to obtain payment directly from Clark under the Agreement, but that would have been inconsistent with Clark’s initial intent of suspending its obligation to pay Aron as long as there was a LC.
The amendment of the LC provided for partial shipment, but did not state that 150,000 barrels must be delivered on or before January 15, 1990. The Agreement did not provide that a partial delivery must be completed by January 15. Had Clark intended that there be a specific partial delivery on January 15, 1990, it would have sought to modify the Agreement and provided same in the amended LC, which it drafted. The fact that the amended LC allowed for partial delivery and partial withdrawal does not, without more, support the finding that failure to partially deliver on or before January 15, constituted a breach of the Agreement. The application of the parol evidence rule (W.W.W. Assocs. v Giancontieri, 77 NY2d 157) to explain what Clark intended when it agreed to amend the LC is of no benefit to Clark. Clark’s witness, Steven Wirkus,
The testimony of Clark’s witnesses was neither credible nor supported by the record. The parties’ course of conduct demonstrates that there was a modification of the delivery date, but that failure to deliver 150,000 barrels by January 15, 1990 was not a breach of the Agreement.
It is clear from the evidence that Clark agreed that upon tendering NOR the same constituted delivery within the delivery date. Clark complains that Aron did not tender proper NOR because it was not tendered directly to Clark. The Agreement and LC are silent as to how NOR is tendered from and to whom. The testimony, evidence, and the UCC provide guidance. The course of performance, as well as any course of dealing and usage of trade, shall be construed whenever reasonable as consistent with each other (UCC 2-208 [2]), and evidence of the course of dealing and performance and usage of trade may be employed to explain or supplement provisions of a
Clark’s conduct after declaring breach constituted an absolute renunciation of the Agreement and a breach of contract for which Clark is liable in damages (MK W. St. Co. v Meridien Hotels, 184 AD2d 312). Aron was entitled to treat the Agreement as terminated and then seek to mitigate its damages by arranging a substitute transaction with another entity promptly after repudiation (see, Wilmot v State of New York, 32 NY2d 164; Saboundjian v Bank Audi [USA], 157 AD2d 278; O’Hare v General Mar. Transp. Corp., 564 F Supp 1064, affd 740 F2d 160, cert denied 469 US 1212 [when a party to a contract has repudiated the agreement then the other party need no longer satisfy conditions that might otherwise be required of it]). While the LC was contemplated by the Agreement, it was an independent contract (Foreign Venture Ltd. Partnership v Chemical Bank, 59 AD2d 352, 355). The repudiation of the Agreement did not work to repudiate the LC (UCC 5-106 [2] [once LC is established as regards the beneficiary it can be modified or revoked only with his or her consent]). It is a separate agreement between the issuing bank, BP and the beneficiary, Aron (Royal Bank v Weiss, 172 AD2d 167; Phibro Distribs. Corp. v Fidelity Intl. Bank, 175 AD2d 777, lv denied 79 NY2d 755). Under the doctrine of independent contracts, BP’s obligation to honor the LC is separate and independent from BP’s obligations to Clark under the reimbursement agreement, and separate and independent from any obligation of Aron to Clark under the Agreement. Unless Clark moved for injunctive relief (but cf., UCC 5-114), which it did not do, BP was not required to resolve the disputes or questions of fact concerning the underlying transaction (First Commercial Bank v Gotham Originals, 64 NY2d 287; see also, United Bank v
Both parties sought to demonstrate at trial that the other acted in bad faith. Clark condemns Aron for drawing down on the LC claiming it had properly declared a breach and did not have to cooperate thereafter. Aron denounces Clark in its failed attempt to engineer a cancellation based on untimely delivery and walking away from the Agreement that was very profitable for the defendant, but a bad bargain for the plaintiff. Here, the Agreement was repudiated by Clark and yet it seeks to hold Aron in breach of the Agreement it repudiated on the ground that the draw on the LC was wrongful. Clark’s expert witness’s position at trial was that Aron had no right to discharge the cargo and draw on the LC and that the proper way to have handled the situation, if Clark improperly declared a breach, was for Aron to hold on to the cargo and dispose of it on the market. Aron then could have commenced litigation seeking damages from Clark, but Aron should not have forced the oil in IMTT then draw down on LC.
When there has been a breach of a contract, the law imposes a duty on the nondefaulting party to make reasonable efforts to reduce or extinguish the damage (see, e.g., Losei Realty Corp. v City of New York, 254 NY 41). Had Aron, after discharging the cargo and demanding payment from Clark, elected to sell the cargo to third parties it would have been able to seek damages from Clark for the difference between what it received as the resale price and what it would have received as the contract price (UCC 2-708 [seller’s damages for nonacceptance or repudiation]; see also, Fertico Belgium v Phosphate Chems. Export Assn., 120 AD2d 401, affd as mod 70 NY2d 76; Tesoro Petroleum Corp. v Holborn Oil Co., 145 Misc 2d 715). Aron, however, decided to perform after Clark declared a breach. Aron’s expert testified that drawing on a LC, although the underlying agreement was repudiated by Clark, was commercially reasonable. In essence, Aron argues why should a merchant wait the result of future litigation after a breach by the other merchant if he or she can obtain a similar, if not, exact result soon after the breach by drawing on a separate letter of credit. Aron argues that drawing on the LC was a reasonable remedy.
"Remedy” is broadly defined under the UCC to mean "any remedial right to which an aggrieved party is entitled with or
When Clark breached the Agreement, Aron was entitled to damages. Until the time Aron decided to draw on the LC it acted reasonably in discharging the cargo and storing it at IMTT and then presenting an invoice to Clark for payment. Had Aron litigated Clark’s breach and not drawn on the LC it would have been entitled to recover the entire contract price because it would have been able to discharge the entire 210,000 barrels without the time limitation imposed under the LC. Because of Aron’s decision to discharge the cargo on the assumption that it had the right to continue performance under the Agreement, but collect only under the LC, it cannot now reap the benefit of recovery of the balance of the unpaid contract price under the Agreement. Aron’s decision to draw on the LC works to bar it from collecting the contract price, less the amount received under the LC, because it did not elect to mitigate under the Agreement.
Aron’s breach did not waive Clark’s breach. This is not an instance where Clark subsequently rejected its repudiation and decided to perform under the Agreement. Moreover, Aron’s efforts proved unsuccessful in convincing Clark to perform and the benefit Aron received was not from the Agreement, but
Aron’s first counterclaim seeks to recover the deviation costs incurred by The Zina and the freight differential from Boston to New York. The deviation of The Zina was a contract right and the result of the initial restriction on The Zina. Aron is not entitled to those costs. Under the Agreement Aron is entitled to recover $29,585.06 for the additional freight costs. The second counterclaim for costs to charter The Patricia, plus lighterage fees is not recoverable. Aron volunteered to facilitate delivery to Albany by agreeing to charter The Patricia and the costs were not incidental to Clark’s breach, but would have been incurred had Clark performed. The third counterclaim for costs in deviating The Maersk to Delaware is also not recoverable for the same reason as the second counterclaim. The fourth counterclaim for costs incurred at IMTT were incidental to Clark’s breach and Aron is entitled to recover $63,866.67. The fifth counterclaim for storage costs incurred at IMTT from January 18 until February 3, 1990 is not recoverable. Aron notified Clark that it would begin to charge storage costs effective January 29, 1990, and failed to set forth the exact costs incurred between January 29 and February 3, 1990. Nevertheless, in view of the $150,000 setoff it is a moot issue. Lastly, the sixth counterclaim to recover the difference between the contract price and the market price for the gasoil that Aron claims it could have delivered, but for Clark’s breach is not recoverable where, as here, Aron drew on the LC to mitigate its injury rather than mitigate its injury under the Agreement.
Accordingly, Clark has failed to prove its case. Defendant’s counterclaims are granted in part, but in view of the $150,000 setoff a balance of zero remains.