257 Mass. 135 | Mass. | 1926
The plaintiffs are copartners and bring this suit to recover money alleged to have been paid by them for petroleum which the Boston Mexican Petroleum Trustees (hereinafter called the defendants) failed to deliver because of exhaustion of the Harmon well in Mexico, and to reach and apply certain stock held by them. The suit was begun June 30, 1922.
The defendants pleaded in bar the award of an arbitrator, filed in court May 13,1922. The report remained unopened until the hearing of this suit on the merits in the Superior Court and no judgment has been entered thereon. The plea that the award is a bar to the suit was overruled, and the appeal by the defendants from this order raises the first question to be decided.
The arbitrator expressly excluded from his findings the plaintiffs’ claim for money advanced for undelivered oil, upon the ground that the question was not before him. He ruled in substance that because of the provision in the contract relating to the failure of the well there could be no
The judge who heard the case on the merits reported it for determination by this court upon the pleadings, findings and order for a decree, statement of exceptions and errors claimed, supplementary findings and interlocutory decree. This decree provides “that the plaintiffs may rescind the contracts set out in their bill of complaint, and recover the sum paid by them for petroleum which the defendants have failed to deliver to them, upon condition that they credit to the defendants against said sum the difference, if any, between the market value of the oil which the defendants have' delivered to them, taking such value at the time and place of such delivery, and the price paid for such oil,” and leaves
After the report of the arbitrator was filed, the plaintiffs notified the defendants, by letter dated May 20, 1922, that “Inasmuch as the Harmon Well has become unproductive and been abandoned, and further performance of our contracts of December 20, 1918 with the Boston-Mexican Leasing Company and of November 19, 1919 and July 22, 1920 with yourselves has become impossible upon your part, please take notice that said contracts are terminated.” In the letter reference was made to the fact that demand had been made for the repayment of sums aggregating $234,104.12 for petroleum which the defendants were unable to deliver, and the demand was repeated.
In December, 1918, the plaintiffs made a written contract with a corporation called the Boston Mexican Leasing Company (hereinafter called the Leasing Company) for the sale and delivery of petroleum produced from the Harmon well at Panuco, Mexico, in quantities not less than one hundred and fifty thousand barrels nor more than three hundred and thirty thousand barrels a month for five years from July 1, 1919, with the right on the part of the plaintiffs to call for certain quantities of oil in April, May and June, 1919. The well was represented by the Leasing Company to have a proved production of about fifty thousand barrels a day.. The oil was to be delivered, on barges at the terminals to be constructed and provided by the Leasing Company near the well on the Panuco River, at the Leasing Company’s “expense, risk and peril,” title to the petroleum was to pass to the plaintiffs upon such delivery and payment for each month’s deliveries was to be made by the twentieth of the month following. The contract was to bind and inure to the benefit of the parties and their assigns. In April, 1919, the plaintiffs assigned their interest in the contract to the Foreign Development Company, and two days later that company assigned this interest to the Canada Mexico Oil Company, Ltd. (hereinafter called the Canada Company).
The suit is brought by the plaintiffs in their own behalf and in behalf of and as trustees for the Canada Company whose counsel appeared at the trial and stated that the suit was brought with the approval of that company which was prepared to become a party plaintiff if necessary. The second contract provided that a corporation might be substituted for the plaintiffs with the written consent of the defendants.
Before any oil was delivered a reorganization and consolidation of the Leasing Company and other corporations associated with it took place and the assets of the Leasing Company, including the contract for the sale of oil, were assigned to the defendants. The assignment was made with the approval of the plaintiffs. Certificates were issued to . the shareholders of the consolidated companies, among whom were the plaintiffs, who held shares in the Leasing Company and thus became shareholders in the trust. One of the plaintiffs, Harper, became one of the trustees and continued as such until he resigned, November 5, 1920.
The defendants were ready to make deliveries July 1,1919. The plaintiffs paid for the minimum amount of oil which was to be taken in July and August, but took less than that amount. In September, 1919, the parties agreed that the plaintiffs were to have the right to defer the taking of one million barrels of oil and to take that oil as called for at later periods, in addition to the current requirements of the contract, provided the postponed oil be paid for at the times originally fixed for its delivery.
In November, 1919, in a new contract between the plaintiffs and the defendants for an additional amount of oil during the five years covered by the first contract and for the delivery of oil during the succeeding five years, the state
In the early part of 1920 the price of oil rose, and in July, 1920, the parties modified their contracts by providing that after January 1, 1921, there should be no maximum and minimum quantities to be delivered but a definite monthly amount, and increasing the aggregate amount of deliveries which the plaintiffs were entitled to postpone during the first five years of the contract.
Shortly after the third contract was made, salt water began to appear in the Panuco oil field in various wells which had previously been good producers. The appearance of such water in a well is a sign that the supply of oil is approaching exhaustion, and the appearance of sediment indicates a like condition.
On August 19, 1920, the plaintiffs gave the defendants notice that they desired to take the maximum quantity as set forth in the last modification of the contract, and also wrote, “We have at the present time approximately 1,600,000 barrels of back oil paid for but not taken and desire to take this up at the rate of 100,000 to 150,000 barrels per month.” The trustees were bound under their contract to deliver the back oil as and when they were requested in writing so to do by the plaintiffs, subject to the provision that they were not required to make such deliveries “in such manner or at such times as . . . [should] interfere with the performance of other contracts for the sale of petroleum which . . . [might] have then been entered into.” The defendants had then made other contracts for the sale of oil from the Harmon well, which, with the plaintiffs’ orders, would take about twenty-nine thousand eight hundred barrels a day for current requirements.
On September 21, 1920, the defendants received a telegram from their local agent in Panuco stating that the production of the Harmon well had been reduced to ten thousand barrels daily on account of sediment showing in the flow. This reduction was made September 11, and the trial judge found that the sediment must have made its appearance before that date. The defendants immediately wrote the Canada Company giving notice of the reduction and, on September 27, 1920, wrote the plaintiffs that they had been notified that it had become “necessary to reduce the production of the well to 10,000 barrels a day.” It did not appear that any notice of the appearance of sediment was given to the plaintiffs or to the Canada Company before September 21, 1920.
The flow of oil from the Harmon well after September 11 diminished through September and October, and on November 30,1920, the trustees notified the Canada Company that their agent telegraphed them that the Harmon well had been “shut down indefinitely.” The well has not since the latter date been operated by the defendants or the Leasing Company. On January 23, 1922, the defendants sold their interest in the well and the entire plant in Panuco. The plaintiffs received in all one million one hundred sixty-three thousand three hundred and fifteen barrels of oil which at the contract price would amount to $168,680.70. They paid under the contracts $383,866.19. The difference between these sums, $215,185.49, represents the contract price for one million four hundred eighty-four thousand and thirty-seven and seventy-three hundredths barrels of oil
The defendants contend that if any one has the right to maintain this suit it is the Canada Company and not the plaintiffs.
After the defendants had succeeded to the rights of the Leasing Company, the only contracting parties were the plaintiffs and defendants, and all payments were made when they alone were bound by the contractual obligations. The defendants knew of the assignment to the Canada Company but never gave the consent which was required by the contract to make an assignee a party to it. Upon the facts appearing of record, we cannot say that the finding that payments for oil were made by the plaintiffs was not justified. The assignment to the Canada Company, the delivery of oil to it, and the fact that some payments were made by checks of the Canada Company, when considered with all of the other facts do not require this court .as a matter of law to say that the conclusion that the plaintiffs may maintain this suit was wrong. We are not now concerned with the question whether the Canada Company may" require an accounting from the plaintiffs. This suit is not for breach of contract but the obligations of the contracts at the time when the money was paid may be considered. In legal effect, while the contracts were in force the deliveries were to the plaintiffs and payments were made by them. Their arrangements with other parties did not affect the defendants’ rights. The plaintiffs alone could require deliveries. The defendants are fully protected by the record from liability to the Canada Company in another proceeding upon the matters now in issue.
The contracts were made upon the express representation that the well had a proved capacity of fifty thousand barrels of petroleum a day, and the first contract for five years was within a year extended for a further period of five years. The later contracts increased the quantity of oil to be sold from the well, and all of them were for definite quantities of oil at fixed prices. When the first contract was made there was no way of getting oil from the well to the barges.
In the next agreement, made between the plaintiffs and the defendants, paragraphs 13 and 14 are substantially identical with paragraphs 10 and 11 of the earlier one, except
Paragraph 11 of the first agreement and paragraph 14 of the second provide in effect that if the well should fail and the defendants should not therefore be able to meet their contract obligations, then upon giving notice they should be excused from these obligations and should not be answerable in damages because of their inability to deliver oil. But the contracts do not provide in these sections or elsewhere that the defendants should not be bound to return money paid in advance for oil which they were excused from delivering. The contracts did not impose upon the plaintiffs the risk of losing the payments if the postponed oil could not be delivered because of exhaustion of the well. The obligation to return these payments is created by the law and not by the contract.
The prevailing rule in Massachusetts seems to be that, when the contract is terminated because performance has become impossible, a party who has made payments under it for which no consideration has been given may recover them if there is no provision in the contract precluding such recovery; and, if a party has furnished materials or rendered services or delivered goods the law creates a liability to pay their value “to be determined by the price stipulated in the contract, or in some other way if the contract price cannot be made applicable.” Butterfield v. Byron, 153 Mass. 517, 523. See Willington v. West Boylston, 4 Pick. 101, 103; Thompson v. Gould, 20 Pick. 134; Harrison v. Conlan, 10 Allen, 85, 86, 87; Johnson v. Walker, 155 Mass. 253; Angus v. Scully, 176 Mass. 357, 358; Young v. Chicopee, 186 Mass. 518, 520; Hawkes v. Kehoe, 193 Mass. 419, 423, 425; Tucker v. Boston, 223 Mass. 478, 481; Libman v. Levenson, 236 Mass. 221. In the case at bar the contract price for oil delivered can be made applicable and no sufficient reason appears for applying any other standard.
In Vickery v. Ritchie, 202 Mass. 247, it was decided that the parties never made a contract. And in Putnam v. Bolster, 216 Mass. 367, the contract price could not be made applicable.
The contention of the defendants that the plaintiffs are not
The words, "as if deliveries had been accepted,” were intended to fix the times and amounts of the payments to be made as set forth in clause 1 of the contract. They did not
The defendants also contend that rescission is necessary to recovery and that there has been no rescission. On November 30, 1920, the defendants gave notice that the Harmon well had been shut down indefinitely. The plaintiffs, in December, 1920, made demand for return of the money paid for oil not delivered. They pressed this claim before the arbitrator, and on May 20, 1922, before this suit was begun, they gave the notice hereinbefore quoted. This notice was sufficient to terminate the contract if notice for that purpose were required. The notice which by the terms of the contracts the plaintiffs were to give if they decided to terminate or suspend them was dependent upon receipt of a notice from the defendants within a specified time giving the cause and probable duration of their inability to deliver petroleum. The notice sent by the defendants did not comply with these requirements. In Johnson v. Walker, supra, page 255, the court said in regard to a contract for personal services of the plaintiff: “The right of the defendants to terminate the contract did not depend on giving notice to the plaintiff, but on the fact that he had become unable to render the services on whose continuance the contract depended.” See Butler v. Gleason, 214 Mass. 248; Butterfield v. Byron, 153 Mass. 517, 519, 520. In the case at bar it had become impossible for the defendants to fulfil their contract because of exhaustion of the well, and notice from the plaintiffs that they would terminate the contract would not affect the rights of either party.
The plaintiffs have not lost their right to maintain this suit by presenting claims under the contracts to the arbitrator.
The interlocutory decree is to be modified by declaring that the contracts are terminated and that in so far as payments have been made thereunder at the contract price for oil delivered there is to be no further accounting, and ordering that the plaintiffs recover from the defendants the amounts paid for oil not delivered after deducting such sum, if any, as may be shown to have been paid the plaintiffs as shareholders with money received for oil not delivered. The decree is further to provide that the question whether the defendants are personally liable for any sum in excess of the trust property is left undecided, and that the case is to stand for further hearing.
Ordered accordingly.