NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-6598-00T1
CUMBERLAND COUNTY
IMPROVEMENT AUTHORITY,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
GSP RECYCLING CO., INC. d/b/a
BURNO & D'ELIA, INC.,
Defendant-RespondentSee footnote 11.
______________________________
GSP RECYCLING CO., INC.,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
CUMBERLAND COUNTY IMPROVEMENT
AUTHORITY,
Defendant-Appellant.
______________________________
Argued January 28, 2003 - Decided March 12,
2003
Before Judges Skillman, Lefelt and
Winkelstein.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Chancery Division, Cumberland County,
C-35-96.
Todd W. Heck argued the cause for appellant
(Basile & Testa, attorneys; Frank G. Basile
and Mr. Heck, on the brief).
Joel B. Korin argued the cause for respondent
(Kenney & Kearney, attorneys; Joseph T.
Ciampoli, Roger Lai and Mr. Korin, on the
brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
WINKELSTEIN, J.A.D.
Plaintiff Cumberland County Improvement Authority had an
agreement with defendant GSP Recycling Co., a newspaper recycler,
to supply GSP with newspapers plaintiff collected from the
municipalities within the County. The materials plaintiff supplied
to defendant failed to meet the agreement's quality specifications
and defendant stopped paying plaintiff for the deliveries. Each
party claimed the other breached the agreement. Following a bench
trial, the trial judge dismissed plaintiff's claim against
defendant, found that plaintiff breached the agreement, and awarded
defendant $256,319.42 in damages. Plaintiff appeals. In applying
the facts to the applicable provisions of the Uniform Commercial
Code (U.C.C.), we affirm that portion of the judgment dismissing
plaintiff's claim against defendant, but because defendant failed
to establish that it sustained damages as a result of plaintiff's
actions, we reverse the judgment in favor of defendant.
I
Due to the unique nature of the parties' agreement, a detailed
recitation of the facts is necessary to place the issues in
context. Plaintiff is an independent county authority responsible
for recycling the newspaper generated by businesses and residences
in Cumberland County. Defendant is engaged in the business of
recycling old newsprint (ONP) to supply fiber to the Garden State
Paper Mill, which produces recycled newsprint that is sold to major
newspapers.
Because the recycled paper market is extremely volatile, long-
term contracts are not atypical. They generally allow governmental
entities to receive revenue for their recycled newspaper, rather
than having to pay for its disposal, or look for a buyer on the
spot market, while providing the purchasers with a stable source of
paper.
In December 1991, the parties entered into a five-year
contract (the agreement). Under its terms, plaintiff agreed to
deliver to defendant a minimum of ten tons of ONP per month, and
defendant agreed to purchase all of the newspaper plaintiff made
available up to a maximum of fifty tons per month. At the
beginning of each calendar year the parties could, "if mutually
agreeable . . . increase or decrease the contractual tonnage
obligation."
Defendant would pay $20 per ton for the ONP, with the proviso
that the price would be increased to $25 if plaintiff consistently
delivered over 100 tons for a minimum of four months. The price
would be adjusted at the end of each calendar year based on the
Consumer Price Index.
The agreement addressed the quality of the newspaper:
6. All ONP shall be unbaled special
news deink quality. . . . ONP shall
contain no prohibitive materials and
not more than one Percent (1.0%)
outthrows. Failure to conform shall
result in punitive deductions or
total load rejections. In the event
of a total load rejection, the
county shall pay to GSP a charge of
not more than thirty dollars
($30.00) per ton for the rejected
load, and GSP shall dispose of the
load.
Special news deink quality ONP is known as "#8" or "grade 8"
ONP. "Prohibitives" include aluminum cans, cardboard, garbage,
glass, phone books, plastic bags and other non-newsprint materials.
"Outthrows" include newspapers bundled with brown paper, or plastic
straps, junk mail, magazines, and grocery bags. According to John
Stanton, defendant's production manager, all of defendant's
contracts gave defendant the right to take punitive deductions and
collect payment for load rejections. The punitive deduction
compensated defendant for its additional sorting and transportation
costs when it received lower quality material, while the $30 total
load rejection charge covered the cost to dump it in a landfill if
the load was completely unusable. Stanton testified, however, that
defendant never directly assessed these charges. Instead, when the
quality of the materials became "too dirty," defendant "[tried] to
work with the community to get their quality up" because defendant
wanted to encourage recycling programs. When the quality did not
improve, "at worst case" defendant did not "pay for the fiber and
. . . absorb[ed] any additional cost in sorting until it [became]
so contaminated" that it was cost prohibitive. In other words,
when the quality of ONP was below that which was called for in the
agreement, instead of charging the supplier the $30 load rejection
charge, or assessing a specific punitive deduction, defendant
simply did not pay for the materials.
Under the Cumberland County recycling program, plaintiff
lacked authority to refuse materials that were delivered by the
municipalities _ it merely acted as a transfer station. Once the
municipalities delivered the materials to plaintiff's facility,
they were immediately loaded onto trucks and removed. Plaintiff
had no sorting facility or storage capability.
From the outset, plaintiff failed to meet the agreement's
restrictions on prohibitives and outthrows. The percentage of
prohibitives and outthrows delivered to plaintiff by the
municipalities, and then delivered to defendant, was consistently
higher than permitted under the agreement.
To help address plaintiff's problem meeting quality standards,
the parties executed an addendum to the agreement on July 6, 1993,
(the addendum). In the addendum, paragraph 6 of the agreement was
replaced by Items 6A and 6B, which read as follows:
ITEM 6 A
All ONP delivered to our Garfield mill shall
be unbaled Special News Deink Quality . . . .
ONP shall contain no prohibitive materials and
not more than one percent (1.0%) outthrows.
Failure to conform shall result in punitive
deductions or total load rejections. In the
event of a total load rejection, the county
shall pay to GSP a charge of not more than
thirty dollars ($30.00) per ton for the
rejected load, and GSP shall dispose of the
load.
ITEM 6 B
All ONP delivered to our Carteret facility
shall be unbaled GSP Mixed News conforming to
the attached GSP Service Requirements. ONP
shall contain no more than one-half percent
(0.5%) prohibitive materials and not more than
eight percent (8.0%) outthrows.
Under the terms of the addendum, plaintiff had a choice of
delivering two different qualities of ONP. According to Item 6A,
defendant's Garfield mill would accept deliveries of #8 ONP, also
known as "clean news," and pay $25 per ton. The remaining
provisions of Item 6A were identical to those of paragraph 6 of the
agreement. Item 6B was new. It provided plaintiff with the option
of delivering to defendant's Carteret facility "mixed news" ONP,
known as "#6" or "grade 6" ONP. Defendant's payment to plaintiff
for #6 would be $15 per ton, recognizing a forty-percent price
reduction from grade 8 ONP to account for defendant's increased
sorting expenses due to the higher percentage (eight percent) of
outthrows contained in grade 6.
The amount of tonnage to be delivered was also changed in the
addendum. Plaintiff was to deliver a minimum of 200 tons of ONP
per month; and defendant's obligation was "to purchase all of the
newspaper," not to "exceed a maximum of 300 tons per month," with
a right of first refusal on the excess. The addendum did not
require that the minimum tonnage to be provided by plaintiff be a
specific grade of ONP. In other words, plaintiff had the option of
providing either #6 or #8 ONP.
After the addendum was signed, plaintiff sent all of its ONP
. between 200 and 300 tons per month . to the Carteret mill.
Beginning on August 24, 1993, however, defendant stopped paying for
the deliveries. On September 8, 1993, Stanton wrote to Rick
Mather, plaintiff's facilities manager, that the quality of the ONP
was below an acceptable level because the ONP contained a high
percentage of outthrows. He did not, however, request an
adjustment in price, or mention his company's failure to pay the
outstanding invoices. At about that time, plaintiff sent Stanton
a letter demanding payment of invoices from deliveries on August
24, 25, 27, and 31, 1993, but plaintiff continued to make
deliveries to defendant through January 1994 despite defendant's
failure to pay for the deliveries.
Ultimately, GSP paid for only eight of 105 loads that
plaintiff delivered to Carteret between August 24, 1993, and
January 28, 1994. The total amount due for the unpaid invoices was
$17,035.83. Stanton took the position that defendant expected
plaintiff to continue to send the loads, without being paid.
Plaintiff disagreed, claiming it should be paid. The parties do
not dispute, however, that despite the lack of payment for the
deliveries, defendant continued to supply fiber from the deliveries
to the Garden State Paper Mill.
The quality of the newspaper continued to be "a consistent
problem," and the parties continued to discuss alternatives. In
January 1994, Stanton offered to pay $2 per ton, down from $15 per
ton, for plaintiff's ONP, which was found to contain outthrows up
to twelve percent. He also offered to terminate the agreement. He
said: "If you find this offer to be non-acceptable we will allow a
release from our Agreement. We would mutually agree to dissolve
our Contract. You would therefore be free to utilize any other
markets you desire." Plaintiff did not respond to defendant's
offer. Instead, the following month, plaintiff launched "an
aggressive educational and public relations campaign" to help
correct the quality problems. Mather requested that the contract
be put "on hold" for six months while plaintiff sent the newspaper
to local brokers, where the quality of the newspaper was not a
material problem, because plaintiff expected the education campaign
to "take some time to achieve satisfactory results."
As part of its attempt to improve quality, plaintiff hired a
full-time recycling coordinator. Despite his efforts, the quality
of the product remained essentially unchanged. Plaintiff also
considered upgrading the facility's equipment to include machinery
which would sort the ONP, but the cost of the machinery was
prohibitive.
By June 1994, plaintiff began to send its materials to other
recyclers. Although the parties continued to discuss alternate
prices for the materials, plaintiff sent no further deliveries to
defendant after May 1994. The undisputed testimony of plaintiff's
executive director was that the ONP sent to the other recyclers
never even met the quality standards for #6 ONP, let alone for #8
ONP.
Allegedly to replace the paper plaintiff failed to deliver, in
May or June 1994, defendant began to purchase #8 ONP in the spot
market. Stanton explained that at that time the difference between
#8 ONP and #6 ONP "was not significant so it was just as easy for
us to buy the number eight." Because the usual spot market price
difference between #6 ONP and #8 ONP was insufficient to offset
defendant's costs to process #6 ONP into #8 ONP, it preferred just
to purchase #8 ONP. Beginning in February 1996, defendant,
pursuant to a contract, obtained #8 ONP from Fairfield County
(Tennessee) Redemption (FCR) "partially to replace the tonnage that
[defendant was not] getting from [plaintiff]."
At trial, defendant's damages expert, Donald DiGrazia, based
his calculations on the price defendant paid to spot market vendors
for #8 ONP, from which he subtracted the $25 per ton contract price
for #8 ONP, and multiplied the difference by plaintiff's actual
total monthly output from June 1994 through December 1996. He
assumed that plaintiff's output for that time met the agreement's
quality standards for #8 ONP. Using this method, DiGrazia
concluded that defendant's damages were $417,325. Based on
alternate calculations, he computed defendant's damages at
$665,257, or $713,370 if transportation costs to Tennessee for the
FCR deliveries were included.
Not surprisingly, plaintiff's expert, Raymond Ciccone, had a
different take on damages. He concluded that defendant had no
damages. He reasoned that defendant had no need to resort to the
spot market because defendant purchased more than was needed to
satisfy the agreement's requirements from "walk-ins," allowing
defendant to pay an average price for these materials which was
less than defendant was obligated to pay plaintiff under the
addendum for #6 ONP.
II
The trial court rejected plaintiff's contention that defendant
had breached the agreement when it refused to pay plaintiff for the
deliveries. Rather, it determined that plaintiff breached the
agreement, and as a result, defendant was entitled to "cover"
damages under
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-712. Because the judge found that the
agreement was a "five-year continuing supply contract," he also
rejected plaintiff's assertion that the damages should be fixed at
the time of the initial breach, May or June 1994. The court agreed
with defendant's expert that spot market prices were the proper
measure of damages, but rejected the expert's methodology which
relied upon the spot market price for #8 ONP. Instead, finding
that plaintiff was required to supply only #6 ONP, at a contract
price of $15 per ton, forty percent less than the contract price of
$25 per ton for #8 ONP, the judge concluded that the proper price
for defendant's cover costs was the median spot market price for #8
ONP for each month that remained for the duration of the agreement,
reduced by forty percent (representing sorting costs), less the $15
per ton contract price for #6 ONP. He multiplied that figure by
plaintiff's actual total monthly ONP output between June 1994 and
December 1996, fixing damages at $256,319.42. The judge rejected
defendant's claim for transportation costs.
III
We first address plaintiff's affirmative claim that defendant
breached the agreement. We agree with the trial judge that
defendant did not breach the agreement when it failed to pay for
the deliveries plaintiff made between August 1993 and January 1994.
A significant issue at trial was whether the punitive
deductions and total load rejection charges included in paragraph
6 of the agreement, and in Item 6A of the addendum, which
contemplated delivery of #8 ONP only, also applied to deliveries of
#6 ONP under the terms of Item 6B of the addendum. Plaintiff
claims the punitive deductions and total load rejection charges
applied only to #8 ONP, while defendant asserts the charges apply
to both #8 and #6 ONP. Thus, plaintiff claims the addendum did not
give defendant the right to take punitive deductions against
nonconforming #6 ONP. When read literally, the language of the
addendum supports plaintiff's position. The addendum does not
specifically say that for deliveries of #6 ONP defendant had the
option not to pay for nonconforming loads, or to charge for total
load rejections.
Where the terms of a contract are clear, the court must
enforce the contract as written.
Morris County v. Fauver,
153 N.J. 80, 103 (1998);
City of Orange Tp. v. Empire Mortgage Servs., Inc.,
341 N.J. Super. 216, 224 (App. Div. 2001). However, the terms of
the parties' written agreement may be explained or supplemented by
evidence of their course of dealing.
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-202(a);
N.J.S.A. 12A:1-205.
Here, defendant argues that despite the failure to include the
punitive load deduction and load rejection clauses in Item 6B, both
parties understood that defendant had the right to take punitive
deductions for below standard #6 ONP. Without this reservation .
the ability to take deductions for nonconforming goods . defendant
points out that the quality standards set forth in the addendum
would have been meaningless.
Defendant is correct. Under Item 6B, the ONP was to contain
no more than eight percent outthrows. Without dispute, the
materials exceeded those levels. In September 1993 they averaged
over twelve percent, and continued above ten percent throughout the
duration of the deliveries. Unless the parties intended to allow
defendant the right to impose punitive deductions if the quality of
the #6 ONP was below what the agreement required, the language in
Item 6B restricting the percentage of outthrows to eight percent
would have no meaning. Said another way, to interpret the addendum
in the manner suggested by plaintiff would give meaning to the
outthrow limitation in Item 6A, but render hollow the outthrow
limitation in Item 6B.
We are guided in our determination by basic precepts of
contract construction. The document must be read as a whole, in
"accord with justice and common sense."
Krosnowski v. Krosnowski
and Garford Trucking, Inc.,
22 N.J. 376, 387 (1956). It should not
be interpreted to render one of its terms meaningless. "Literalism
must give way to context."
Borough of Princeton v. Bd. of Chosen
Freeholders of County of Mercer,
333 N.J. Super. 310, 325 (App.
Div.),
aff'd,
169 N.J. 135 (2000). Having reviewed the evidence in
light of these principles, we conclude that the parties intended to
apply the punitive deductions and total load rejection charges to
both #6 and #8 ONP.
The parties' course of dealing during the period of continued
deliveries supports this interpretation. Plaintiff never informed
defendant that it considered defendant's practice of not paying for
the materials, which did not meet the quality standards for either
#6 or #8 ONP, to be contrary to the parties' agreement. Even while
sending several loads a week to defendant between August 1993 and
January 1994 for which it received no payment, plaintiff never
questioned defendant's right to take punitive deductions. Nor did
plaintiff make payment of the unpaid invoices a condition of
resuming deliveries. Not until it filed the lawsuit, did plaintiff
dispute defendant's right to take the deductions. Consequently,
the parties' course of dealing supports defendant's position that
its failure to pay the invoices for the nonconforming #6 ONP was
not a breach of the parties' agreement.
We next turn to plaintiff's claim that defendant's conduct
constituted "acceptance" of the nonconforming ONP within the
meaning of
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-606, which requires a buyer to pay the
contract price for the goods it accepts or be in breach. To
support its argument, plaintiff submits that defendant's actual use
of the goods was "inconsistent with [plaintiff's] ownership of
those shipments." Plaintiff asserts that
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-607(1),
which states that "[t]he buyer must pay at the contract rate for
any goods accepted," required defendant to make payment. This
argument fails, however, because, as we just explained, the
agreement contemplates that when the goods did not meet quality
standards, which plaintiff concedes they did not, defendant had
both the right to retain them and to take a punitive deduction as
compensation for the additional costs it would incur for sorting
and transportation. It was not required to pay the contract price
for the goods that did not meet quality standards. The terms of the
agreement render
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-607(1) inapplicable under these
circumstances.
Nonetheless, because the parties' agreement constituted an
installment contract pursuant to
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-612(1) . it
"require[d] or authorize[d] the delivery of goods in separate lots
to be separately accepted," plaintiff contends that defendant's
failure to pay the invoices for the ninety-seven loads that
defendant had "accepted," substantially impaired the value of the
entire agreement. See
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-612(3), which provides that
"[w]henever non-conformity or default with respect to one or more
installments substantially impairs the value of the whole contract
there is a breach of the whole." Yet, for the same reasons
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-607(1) did not apply, neither does
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-
612. The delivered goods did not conform to the agreement's
specifications, which permitted defendant to deny payment. Said
another way, the agreement anticipated nonpayment for nonconforming
goods.
Next, plaintiff argues that it was entitled to treat defendant
as being in breach of the agreement based on the right to adequate
assurance of performance afforded by
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-609. Under
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-609(1):
A contract for sale imposes an obligation on
each party that the other's expectation of
receiving due performance will not be
impaired. When reasonable grounds for
insecurity arise with respect to the
performance of either party the other may in
writing demand adequate assurance of due
performance and until he receives such
assurance may if commercially reasonable
suspend any performance for which he has not
already received the agreed return.
The statute further provides that "[a]fter receipt of a justified
demand failure to provide within a reasonable time not exceeding
thirty days such assurance of due performance as is adequate under
the circumstances of the particular case is a repudiation of the
contract."
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-609(4). Specifically, plaintiff argues
that defendant's failure to provide adequate assurances within
thirty days after plaintiff's demand for assurances constituted a
repudiation of the contract. However, although plaintiff sent
invoices to defendant every two weeks, the record does not show
that plaintiff, either verbally or in writing, demanded assurances.
Whether a demand for assurances may be made verbally or needs
to be in writing is unsettled. Comment (1) to
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-609,
and the language of
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-609(1) (when grounds for
insecurity arise, either party "may in writing demand adequate
assurance of due performance"), appear to indicate that the demand
needs to be in writing.
See also Simcala, Inc. v. Am. Coal Trade,
Inc.,
821 So.2d 197, 204 (Ala. 2001);
S & S, Inc. v. Meyer,
478 N.W.2d 857, 862-63 (Iowa Ct. App. 1991). Other courts have found
verbal demands are sufficient so long as the demand clearly conveys
the insecure party's intent to suspend performance in the absence
of adequate assurances.
Diskmakers, Inc. v. DeWitt Equip. Corp.,
555 F.2d 1177, 1180 (3d Cir. 1977) (applying New Jersey law);
Scott
v. Crown,
765 P.2d 1043, 1046-47 (Colo. Ct. App. 1988)
;
Atwood-Kellogg, Inc. v. Nickeson Farms,
602 N.W.2d 749, 753 (S.D.
1999)
. But, here, we need not resolve that issue because plaintiff
is unable to point to any written or verbal demand that conveyed
plaintiff's intent to terminate deliveries if defendant either
refused to pay the past-due invoices, or refused to pay for future
deliveries. On the contrary, for more than five months plaintiff
continued to make deliveries without receiving payment. Thus,
plaintiff is unable to establish that it was entitled to treat
defendant as having breached the parties' agreement due to
defendant's failure to provide adequate assurances.
IV
Having concluded that plaintiff failed to prove that defendant
breached the agreement, we turn to plaintiff's alternative
argument, that defendant failed to prove damages. Because we agree
with plaintiff's position on this issue, we will assume, for
purposes of this discussion, that plaintiff breached the
agreement.See footnote 22
In arriving at our conclusion, we are mindful that an
appellate court is directed to be deferential to a trial court's
factual findings and uphold its conclusions of law, so long as they
are supported by adequate, substantial, credible evidence in the
record.
Rova Farms Resort, Inc. v. Investors Ins. Co. of Am.,
65 N.J. 474, 483-84 (1974). Here, the evidence does not support the
judge's conclusions.
The U.C.C. provides a buyer with alternative remedies in the
event of a seller's breach.
See N.J.S.A. 12A:2-711. As a general
rule, "the U.C.C.'s remedies are to be 'liberally administered to
the end that the aggrieved party may be put in as good a position
as if the other party had fully performed.'"
Sons of Thunder, Inc.
v. Borden, Inc.,
148 N.J. 396, 426 (1997);
N.J.S.A. 12A:1-106(1).
Here, the trial court found that defendant "covered" the
shortfall from plaintiff's breach by its spot market purchases
throughout the period remaining in the parties' contract. We
disagree. Under
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-712:
(1) After a breach within [
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-
711] the buyer may "cover" by making in good
faith and without unreasonable delay any
reasonable purchase of or contract to purchase
goods in substitution for those due from the
seller.
(2) The buyer may recover from the seller as
damages the difference between the cost of
cover and the contract price together with any
incidental or consequential damages as
hereinafter defined (12A:2-715), but less
expenses saved in consequence of the seller's
breach.
(3) Failure of the buyer to effect cover
within this section does not bar him from any
other remedy.
As the accompanying New Jersey Study Comment (1) makes clear, the
purpose of
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-712 is to permit an aggrieved buyer who
"needs goods for himself or for resale purposes" to purchase goods
as a substitute for those due from the seller. Goods purchased in
the open market to meet the buyer's own needs, as distinguished
from goods purchased specifically for the
seller's account, do not
constitute "cover."
Jamestown Farmers Elevator, Inc. v. Gen'l
Mills, Inc.,
552 F.2d 1285, 1293 (8th Cir. 1977); 4A
Anderson on
The Uniform Commercial Code § 2-712:37 (3d Ed. 1997). A buyer does
not cover unless it makes an actual purchase to take the place of
the goods it expected from the seller under the contract.
Ralston
Purina Co. v. McFarland,
550 F.2d 967, 971 (4th Cir. 1977);
Anderson,
supra, at § 2-712:44.
In this case, the parties agreed plaintiff would supply a
minimum of 200 tons of ONP to defendant on a monthly basis for a
five-year period, until December 1996. Contrary to
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-
712(1), defendant offered no evidence that in May or June 1994,
when the court assumed the breach occurred, defendant made any
attempt to secure a contract to purchase goods specifically to take
the place of those not delivered by plaintiff. Defendant did not
secure the FCR contract until February 1996, almost two years after
plaintiff's deliveries to defendant ceased. DiGrazia's damages
estimate was not based on any contract that defendant secured to
replace the ONP that remained undelivered from plaintiff. He gave
no consideration to whether the purchases actually were made to
cover plaintiff's breach, or whether they would have occurred
anyway.
See Ralston Purina,
supra, 550
F 2d. at 971-74.
If a buyer does not cover, it can claim damages under
N.J.S.A.
12A:2-713, which provides:
(1) Subject to the provisions of this Chapter
with respect to proof of market price
(12A:2-723), the measure of damages for
non-delivery or repudiation by the seller is
the difference between the market price at the
time when the buyer learned of the breach and
the contract price together with any
incidental and consequential damages provided
in this Chapter (12A:2-715), but less expenses
saved in consequence of the seller's breach.
Although
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-713 measures damages on the basis of
market price, it specifies that the calculation must be measured
"at the time when the buyer learned of the breach." Nothing in
this statute supports the trial court's method of calculating
damages based on successive market prices. Said differently, there
was no legal or factual basis for the trial court's decision to
allow defendant "cover" damages at the spot market rate for each
month that remained under the contract. Neither
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-712
nor
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-713 provides for such a remedy.
Additionally, the trial judge's formula to calculate the price
of ONP to be used for damages lacked evidential support in the
record. He based his calculations on a hypothetical market price
for #6 ONP, and deducted the forty-percent price differential
between the contract prices of #6 ONP and #8 ONP from the
fluctuating spot market price for #8 ONP. By doing so, he
necessarily presumed, without factual support, that the sorting
costs associated with the processing of #6 ONP, which had justified
the forty-percent lower contract price, would remain at forty
percent notwithstanding the fluctuations of the market price for #8
ONP. This was error. The following example shows why. In June
1994 the spot market price for #8 ONP was $26. The judge deducted
forty percent, or $11, for sorting costs. In December 1994, when
the spot market price for #8 ONP rose to $100, the judge again
deducted forty percent, which is $40, for the cost of sorting the
prohibitives and outthrows. In other words, the judge found that
to sort one ton of #8 ONP when it sold for $26 per ton would be
$11, while performing the same tasks to sort one ton of #8 ONP when
its market price was $100 per ton, would be $40. The record simply
does not contain any evidence to support a conclusion that it would
take more time or more labor to sort one ton of ONP when it cost
$100 per ton than when it cost $26 per ton.
Defendant had the burden of proof to establish all elements of
its cause of action, including damages.
Snyder v. I. Jay Realty
Co.,
53 N.J. Super. 336, 347 (App. Div. 1958),
aff'd in part, rev'd
in part on other grounds,
30 N.J. 303 (1959). As to damages for
nondelivery pursuant to
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-713(1), the injured party
must prove "the difference between the market price at the time
when the buyer learned of the breach and the contract price
together with any incidental and consequential damages provided in
[
N.J.S.A. 12A:2-715], but less expenses saved in consequence of the
seller's breach."
Gulf Chem. & Metallurgical Corp. v. Sylvan Chem.
Corp.,
122 N.J. Super. 499, 505 (Law. Div.) (quoting
N.J.S.A.
12A:2-713(1)),
aff'd,
126 N.J. Super. 261 (App. Div. 1973),
certif.
denied,
64 N.J. 507 (1974);
see also Three-Seventy Leasing Corp. v.
Ampex Corp.,
528 F.2d 993, 997-98 (5th Cir. 1976) (noting that
damages for nondelivery by seller is difference between market
price at time of breach and contract price, together with
incidental or consequential damages);
Burgess v. Curley Olney's,
Inc.,
251 N.W.2d 888, 891 (Neb. 1977) (same).
Here, defendant did not offer evidence to show what the market
price for #6 ONP was at the time plaintiff ceased its deliveries.
The only product cost evidence was for #8 ONP. Without evidence of
the cost for #6 ONP, the trial judge was left to speculate on the
extent of defendant's damages.
Additionally, when the judge calculated damages, he assumed
that plaintiff's ONP output met defendant's quality requirements
for #6 ONP. The record does not support such a conclusion; to the
contrary, plaintiff's materials had never complied with that
standard in the past, and plaintiff's executive director's
uncontradicted testimony was that the product plaintiff sold to
other recyclers between June 1994 and December 1996 did not meet
the agreement's standards for #6 ONP.
Plaintiff is also correct that no basis existed for the
court's decision to use the entire amount of plaintiff's output
rather than the agreement's 200-ton minimum. Nothing in the
addendum required plaintiff to provide defendant with all of its
output, regardless of quality. Plaintiff cannot be held liable for
failing to send defendant material that the agreement did not
require it to send.
Given the court's flawed analysis and defendant's failure to
offer evidence of the market price for #6 ONP at the time of
plaintiff's alleged breach of the agreement, the judgment against
plaintiff cannot stand. Defendant's claims are dismissed with
prejudice.
We affirm the judgment dismissing plaintiff's claim against
defendant and reverse the judgment in favor of defendant.
Footnote: 1 1This case, with Cumberland County Improvement Authority as
a plaintiff, was filed in the Law Division in Cumberland County,
docket no. L-844-95. The second action, with GSP Recycling as
the plaintiff, was filed in the Chancery Division in Bergen
County, docket no. CH-311-95. By order of October 17, 1995, they
were consolidated in the Chancery Division in Cumberland County,
docket no. C-35-96. For purposes of this opinion, Cumberland
County Improvement Authority is referred to as "plaintiff" and
GSP Recycling is referred to as "defendant."
Footnote: 2 2We therefore find it unnecessary to address plaintiff's
arguments that it did not breach the agreement because its
performance was excused under 1) the UCC doctrine of "commercial
frustration," N.J.S.A. 12A:2-615, and 2) the language of the
agreement's force majeure clause.