Aoude v. Mobil Oil Corp.

USCA1 Opinion









May 24, 1995 [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT



____________________

No. 94-2096

NABIH AOUDE,

Plaintiff, Appellant,

v.

MOBIL OIL CORPORATION,

Defendant, Appellee.

____________________

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

[Hon. Richard G. Stearns, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

____________________

Before

Boudin, Circuit Judge, _____________

Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

and Stahl, Circuit Judge. _____________

____________________

Jeffrey A. Gorlick with whom Law Offices of Robert E. Weiner was __________________ _______________________________
on brief for appellant.
Edward C. Duckers with whom Lowell R. Stern, Hogan & Hartson, __________________ ________________ ________________
Thomas J. Sartory and Goulston & Storrs, P.C. were on brief for __________________ _________________________
appellee.

____________________


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Per Curiam. This case arises because Mobil Oil ___________

Corporation sought to terminate the franchise of its

distributor Nabih Aoude. Aoude had for a number of years

operated Aoude Mobil as a retail gasoline station in Medway,

Massachusetts; the agreement between Aoude and Mobil forbade

Aoude from using Mobil's name in connection with the sale of

any other brand of gasoline. On February 28, 1992, Mobil

proposed to terminate Aoude's franchise for violation of this

restriction and Aoude immediately filed suit in district

court. After staying the termination, the district court

granted summary judgment in favor of Mobil. On Aoude's

appeal we consider the propriety of summary judgment de novo, _______

drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of Aoude.

Maldonado-Denis v. Castillo-Rodriquez, 23 F.3d 576, 581 (1st _______________ __________________

Cir. 1994).

Under the Petroleum Marketing Practices Act, 15 U.S.C.

2801 et seq., Mobil was entitled to terminate the ________

franchise for "willful" mislabeling or misbranding of motor

fuel. 15 U.S.C. 2802(c)(10). Based on the record before

it, the district court ruled that it was beyond reasonable

dispute that on February 6, 1992, somewhere between 200 and

300 gallons of non-Mobil gasoline were diverted from another

nearby station (controlled by Aoude and managed by his

brother) and deposited in one of the tanks at Aoude's Mobil





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station. The gasoline in the tank was subsequently offered

for sale through Mobil-labeled facilities.

On this appeal, Aoude purports to dispute the

determination that the 200 plus gallons were deposited in the

Aoude Mobil station tank, but this claim is frivolous. The

driver who delivered the gasoline gave uncontradicted

testimony that he had deposited the gasoline in the Aoude

Mobil tank. This direct testimony was supported by two

eyewitnesses, who saw the truck parked at the Mobil Station

apparently unloading, and by Aoude's own tank measurements,

which showed that on February 7 one of his tanks had an

unexplained surplus of about 275 gallons. Based on the

evidence, no reasonable juror could doubt that 200 plus

gallons were delivered to Aoude, stored in one of his tanks,

and ultimately sold to the public.1

It is also irrelevant under the law that samples of the

gasoline, collected by Mobil representatives on the day of

the misdelivery, showed no insufficient concentration of

Mobil additives: it would not be a defense to misbranding or

mislabeling that the non-Mobil gasoline delivered by the

truck was too small an amount to dilute seriously the Mobil

gasoline in the tank. "Misbranding occurs when a franchisee

____________________

1Given the uncontradicted testimony that the gasoline
was deposited in Aoude's tank, we do not think that a
material factual dispute is created by some confusion as to
which of Aoude's several tanks was thus filled. Aoude has _____
offered nothing else to contradict the driver's testimony.

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passes off other gasoline as that of the franchisor's by

dispensing the gasoline through pumps and at stations bearing

the franchisor's logo." Dandy Oil, Inc. v. Knight _________________ ______

Enterprises, Inc., 654 F. Supp. 1265, 1270 (E.D. Mich.), __________________

appeal dismissed, 830 F.2d 193 (6th Cir. 1987). ______ _________

Aoude's only serious claim on appeal is that the

requirement of willfulness in the statute presents an issue

of material fact in this case. Although this requirement has

not been widely parsed, both Aoude and Mobil cite us to the

Ninth Circuit's decision in Retsieg Corp. v. ARCO Petroleum _____________ ______________

Prods., 870 F.2d 1495 (9th Cir. 1988), as reflecting a proper ______

standard. There, the Ninth Circuit said that to be willful

the dealer's act must be done "either with an intentional

disregard of, or plain indifference to, the requirements of

the franchise agreement." Id. at 1498. This appears to us ___

to be a plausible gloss of the statute and, in the absence of

any developed argument for a different legal standard, we

follow this aspect of Retsieg in this case. _______

There is no reason to describe the somewhat unusual

events surrounding the diversion of the gasoline to Aoude's

Mobil station because the district court rested its judgment

of willfulness on events occurring after the delivery. The _____

district court determined that Aoude was given notice on

February 6 that he likely had received a delivery of non-

Mobil gas; that this was confirmed by his own measurements on



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February 7; and that his failure either to halt sales or make

a serious investigation of the matter amounted to plain

indifference to his obligation to avoid the sale of

misbranded gasoline.

What the record shows is that on February 6 Mobil was

tipped off by a telephone call from an Aoude competitor

(located across the street from Aoude's station) that a

delivery had been made to Aoude Mobil from a non-Mobil tank

truck. Representatives from Mobil visited Aoude later that

same day and told him that they had information indicating

that he had received the improper delivery. Although Aoude

offered some evidence that he had told an employee to make

some inquiries that same day, he did little to investigate

the matter seriously or to halt sales when, on the following

day, his own measurements confirmed that a significant amount

of unaccounted for gasoline was contained in his station

tank. He could easily have investigated since he knew the

name of the company that had dispatched the tanker and

apparently knew that it had made its main delivery at his own

non-Mobil station down the road.

Although Aoude says that willfulness is not normally a

matter to be resolved on summary judgment, we have no

difficulty concluding that his objective behavior from

February 7 onward--given what he was admittedly told by the

Mobil representatives and what he learned from his own



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measurements--constituted plain indifference to his

obligations. Aoude further objects that the Mobil

representatives told him only that non-Mobil gasoline "may"

have been deposited in his tank; but Aoude was also told by

his own employee that the non-Mobil truck had been at his

station, and his own measurements on the following day

confirmed that such a delivery had occurred.

Under these circumstances, we need not rely upon other

evidence suggesting that Aoude had earlier engaged in selling

non-Mobil gasoline from the same Mobil station. Accordingly,

there is no need to resolve the question raised by Aoude

whether such evidence was presented to the district court in

an admissible form and whether any such objection to

admissibility has been waived.

Affirmed. ________























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