Opinion ID: 857463
Heading Depth: 4
Heading Rank: 2

Heading: Invoices #242380 and #242381

Text: On December 1, 2009, before the GPI load problems devolved into an invoice dispute, JE Beale emailed Laporta, placing two orders on Sunfresh’s behalf: one for 800 cases of “Silk” tomatoes (PO #17523), and a second for 400 cases of “Velvet” tomatoes (PO #17524). The salesmen’s email exchange did not include a pick-up date. Seven days later, JE Beale sent another email to Laporta, directing him to “keep [Sunfresh’s] orders cool” because his “original customer backed out today.” Two days later, Sunfresh picked up 240 of the 800 Silk cases and 160 of the 400 Velvet cases, paying Six L’s the December 8 price per case: $23.95 (Silk) and $21.95 (Velvet). Four days after the partial pick-up, Six L’s warned Sunfresh that it would hold the remaining 800 cases of tomatoes for two more days. When Sunfresh failed to pick up the produce, Six L’s resold the tomatoes at a case rate 12 dollars below the contract price (Silks at $11.95 and Velvets at $9.95 per case), billing Sunfresh for the difference. Invoices #242380 and #242381, charging Sunfresh $6,720 and $2,880 for the Silks and Velvets, reflect those charges.