Court Opinion

ID: 2644201
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-11-26 19:42:09.492156+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:28:41.423589
License: Public Domain

Filed 11/26/13 Arbabian v. ConocoPhillips Co. CA3
                                           NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

              IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
                                      THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
                                                    (San Joaquin)
                                                            ----

NICK ARBABIAN,                                                                               C069308

                   Plaintiff and Appellant,                                          (Super. Ct. No.
                                                                               39200900232054CUCLSTK)
         v.

CONOCOPHILLIPS COMPANY et al.,

                   Defendants and Respondents.

         In this state law tort and breach of contract action, plaintiff Nick Arbabian sought
damages on the ground that two employees of defendant ConocoPhillips Co. had misled
him into believing ConocoPhillips would not terminate his Union 76 service station
franchise, as the company had previously told him it was going to do, if he (belatedly)
complied with the company’s new image requirements. Arbabian commenced this action
after ConocoPhillips terminated his franchise anyway in the midst of his efforts to
comply with the new requirements.
         ConocoPhillips demurred on the ground the action was preempted by the
Petroleum Marketing Practices Act (15 U.S.C. § 2801 et seq.) (the Act), which governs
the termination and nonrenewal of petroleum marketing franchises and which forbids the

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states from adopting, enforcing, or continuing in effect any law with respect to the
termination or nonrenewal of such a franchise that is inconsistent with the Act. (15
U.S.C. § 2806(a).) The trial court sustained the demurrer, and Arbabian declined to
amend. The court thereafter awarded attorney fees to ConocoPhillips.
         On Arbabian’s appeal from the judgment of dismissal, we find no error in the trial
court’s determination that this action is preempted by the Act. In some way, each of
Arbabian’s seven causes of action is premised on the termination of his Union 76
franchise, and allowing Arbabian to recover damages on any of those causes of action
would allow ConocoPhillips to be penalized for terminating Arbabian’s franchise in a
manner inconsistent with the Act. The preemption provision in the Act precludes this.
Accordingly, we will affirm.
                    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
         We take the following facts from the first amended complaint:
         In January 2004, Arbabian and ConocoPhillips entered into a franchise agreement
for Arbabian to sell Union 76 branded gasoline at a service station in Lathrop. Among
other things, the agreement required Arbabian, at his expense, to comply with certain
“minimum image requirements” established by ConocoPhillips “as in effect from time to
time.”
         At some point, ConocoPhillips decided to modify the image requirements for
Union 76 stations. A dispute arose between Arbabian and ConocoPhillips over the
timing of the installation of the improvements necessary to meet the new requirements
and who was responsible for paying for those improvements. Eventually, ConocoPhillips
agreed to pay Arbabian two cents more per gallon to compensate him for the cost of
installing the improvements, but ConocoPhillips refused to reduce the agreement to
writing.
         In approximately April 2007, ConocoPhillips began sending Arbabian letters
“allegedly terminating his rights to be a reseller on behalf of [ConocoPhillips] based upon

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their dispute relating to the timing and compensation for the image requirements imposed
by [ConocoPhillips] and the resultant delay in installation.” Thereafter, in August 2007,
two account representatives employed by ConocoPhillips, Greg Pellegrino and William
Brasher, orally agreed with Arbabian that if he complied with the new image
requirements, the termination letters “would not be effective” and the franchise
agreement would not be terminated.
       In reliance on that oral agreement, Arbabian committed to have the improvements
installed by Sign Design, Inc., the local company that performed image makeovers for
ConocoPhillips. In late October 2007, a building permit was issued for installation of all
but one of the new signs. The remaining new sign was not included in the permit because
it violated the local municipal code.) It took approximately six to eight weeks from the
issuance of the permits to have the new signs delivered, and Pellegrino and Brasher either
knew or should have known this. By December 15, 2007, half of the price for installing
the new signs had been paid. Nevertheless, on December 21, ConocoPhillips terminated
the franchise agreement with Arbabian.
       Two years later, in December 2009, Arbabian commenced this action for damages
against ConocoPhillips, Brasher, and Pellegrino. ConocoPhillips and Brasher demurred,
and in response Arbabian filed an amended complaint alleging the facts set forth above.
In his amended complaint, Arbabian purported to assert causes of action for breach of
contract, promissory estoppel, waiver, negligent misrepresentation, fraud, failure to
disclose, and “excuse by the doctrine of commercial frustration.”
       Again, ConocoPhillips and Brasher demurred,1 asserting that all of Arbabian’s
causes of action were preempted by the Act because they were “predicated on the alleged

1      The parties later stipulated that the demurrer was as to Pellegrino also.

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wrongful termination of [his] reseller agreement with” ConocoPhillips. The trial court
agreed but gave Arbabian leave to amend his complaint in June 2010.
       A year later, Arbabian notified the court that he did not intend to amend his
complaint further. Accordingly, in August 2011, the court entered judgment against him.
Arbabian timely appealed from the judgment in September 2011. Thereafter,
ConocoPhillips moved for attorney fees under the franchise agreement. The trial court
granted that motion and awarded ConocoPhillips over $64,000 in attorney fees and costs.
The court entered an amended judgment including the fee award in December 2011.
Arbabian did not file a notice of appeal from the order granting the fee motion or from
the amended judgment.
                                       DISCUSSION
       On appeal from the judgment of dismissal, Arbabian contends the trial court erred
in concluding this state law damages action is preempted by the Act. We disagree.
       “The [Act] has two main objectives. The first is to protect petroleum marketing
franchisees against arbitrary or discriminatory terminations or nonrenewals of their
service station franchises. [Citations.] The second is to provide ‘ “adequate flexibility so
that franchisors may initiate changes in their marketing activities to respond to changing
market conditions and consumer preferences.” ’ [Citations.]
       “To accomplish these objectives, ‘Congress enacted a set of uniform rules to
govern the grounds, required notice, and procedures for termination or nonrenewal of
petroleum marketing franchises.’ [Citation.] To insure nationwide uniformity, Congress
explicitly included a preemption provision in the [Act], which provides:
       “To the extent that any provision [of the [Act]] applies to the termination . . . of
any franchise, or to the nonrenewal . . . of any franchise relationship, no state . . . may
adopt, enforce or continue in effect any provision of any law or regulation (including any
remedy or penalty applicable to any violation thereof) with respect to termination . . . of
any such franchise or to the nonrenewal . . . of any such franchise relationship unless

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such provision of such law or regulation is the same as the applicable provision of [the
[Act]].” (Arbabian v. BP America (N.D.Cal 1995) 898 F. Supp. 703, 707, quoting 15
U.S.C. § 2806(a).)
       As one California court has explained, “The courts have perceived, and the
language and legislative history of the [Act] support, a congressional intent that claims
which, in the last analysis, are for assertedly improper termination of a petroleum
franchise be brought only under the [Act] or local law which is ‘the same as’ the [Act].
Only in this way can some semblance of uniformity in the treatment of such claims be
assured.” (Mobil Oil Corp. v. Superior Court (1987) 189 Cal. App. 3d 485, 489.)
       A sampling of cases will help illustrate when a claim is, in the last analysis, for
assertedly improper termination of a petroleum franchise. In Mobil Oil Corp., Frank and
Joseph Benevento brought an action against Mobil for breach of the implied covenant of
good faith and fair dealing, fraud, and interference with prospective economic advantage
arising out of their loss of a Mobil service station lease, which terminated when Mobil
elected not to renew the underlying ground lease. (Mobil Oil Corp. v. Superior Court,
supra, 189 Cal.App.3d at p. 486.) “Among other things [the Beneventos] alleged that a
representative of Mobil had given them false assurances concerning the ground lease and
that with respect to the ground lease Mobil had acted fraudulently, in bad faith, and with
intent to disrupt the Beneventos’ economic relationships with their established customers.
The Beneventos sought relief including compensation for emotional distress and punitive
damages.” (Id. at p. 487.) On writ review from the denial of summary judgment in favor
of Mobil, the appellate court held that the Act “preempt[s] common law rights and
remedies” and, in particular, preempted the Beneventos’ claims because “[t]ermination of
the ground lease, for whatever purposes and with or without honest disclosure, was
significant to the Beneventos only because it worked a termination of the franchise” and
therefore “in essence each of their claims is for the termination of their franchise.” (Id. at
pp. 486, 489.)

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       In Consumers Petroleum Co. v. Texaco, Inc. (6th Cir. 1986) 804 F.2d 907, a
Texaco franchisee refrained from pursuing distributorship opportunities with other
petroleum suppliers based on the representation of a Texaco executive that Texaco would
never withdraw from Michigan. (Id. at p. 909.) After Texaco ultimately did withdraw
from Michigan, and as a result terminated the franchise, the franchisee brought claims
against Texaco under the Act and state law. (Consumers Petroleum, at pp. 909-910.) In
holding that the franchisee’s state law claims of fraud and misrepresentation were
preempted by the Act, the circuit court wrote as follows: “On its face, a claim for
misrepresentation or fraud does not appear to relate to the nonrenewal or notice
requirements of the Act. In our view, however, the claim as it arises in this case has the
direct effect of seeking to impose a longer notice requirement upon Texaco than that
required under the [Act]. No matter how the claim is characterized, [the franchisee] is
really contending that [the Texaco executive] should have given it notice in response to
its inquiry that Texaco planned to withdraw from the Michigan market and planned not to
renew the five-year franchise agreement three years in the future. This is not a situation
where the impact of state law has a tangential or speculative effect on the 180 day notice
requirement. If we were to hold that the state law claims could proceed, the impact of the
misrepresentation or fraud claims would produce a result in complete variance with what
the notice provision of the Act requires. A franchisee is presumed to be aware of the
notice requirements at the time it signs a franchise agreement. Congress has, therefore,
placed a responsibility on the franchisee to be prepared for notice of an impending
termination or nonrenewal that could come as late as 180 days before the agreement
expires. Even assuming [the franchisee’s] version of the Fisher-Feldman meeting to be
true, Congress did not intend for franchisors to be compelled to reveal any contemplated
or completed plans for termination or nonrenewal prior to the notification limits
mandated under the [Act]. Furthermore, even if the claims were somehow actionable,
they would be governed exclusively by the [Act], which provides remedies for disputes

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relating to the termination or nonrenewal of franchises.” (Consumers Petroleum, at
p. 915.)
       In Shukla v. BP Exploration & Oil, Inc. (11th Cir. 1997) 115 F.3d 849, the
franchisor (BP) sold all of its service stations in the Jacksonville area, including the one
leased by the plaintiff (Shukla), in the midst of his one-year trial lease period. (Id. at
p. 851.) When the buyer (Petro) refused to renew the lease, Shukla sued BP, alleging that
the sale of the stations constructively terminated his franchise agreement, in violation of
the Act and that BP had fraudulently induced him to enter into the lease (franchise
agreement). (Shukla, at p. 851.) In rejecting Shukla’s argument that his fraud claim was
“based not upon nonrenewal, but upon BP’s failure to disclose the fact that it intended to
sell [his] station and assign the [lease],” the circuit court wrote as follows: “The problem
with Shukla’s argument is that BP’s alleged failure to disclose is material only because
the new franchisor, Petro, refused to renew Shukla’s franchise. . . . The damages Shukla
allegedly suffered as a result of the fraud flowed directly from Petro’s failure to renew his
franchise. Moreover, the factual allegations supporting Shukla’s fraud claim are nearly
identical to the allegations supporting his . . . constructive termination claim [under the
Act]. [Citations.] Thus, Shukla’s fraud claim is intimately bound up with the
nonrenewal of his franchise. The [Act] provides exclusive remedies for disputes relating
to the nonrenewal of franchises and preempts state law claims based on nonrenewal, no
matter how such claims are characterized.” (Shukla, at pp. 855-856, fn. omitted.)
       With the foregoing examples in mind, we find no error in the trial court’s
determination that the present action is preempted by the Act because each and every
cause of action Arbabian alleged was inextricably bound up with, and based on,
ConocoPhillips’s termination of his franchise agreement and thus was, in the last
analysis, for assertedly improper termination of a petroleum franchise.
       Arbabian’s first cause of action alleged the breach of an oral agreement not to
terminate his franchise pursuant to the written notices of termination ConocoPhillips had

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already sent to Arbabian. Indeed, Arbabian specifically alleged that “[a]s a direct and
proximate result of [the] breach [of the oral contract] Conoco[Phillips] terminated the
dealer relationship and plaintiff has been damaged as will be shown according to proof.”
(Italics added.) This is just another way of asserting the wrongful termination of his
franchise agreement. In effect, Arbabian alleged that ConocoPhillips was not entitled to
rely on the termination notices it had issued to him. The Act provides, however, that a
franchisor may terminate a franchise if the notice requirements of the Act are met and if
the termination is based on a ground described in the Act. (15 U.S.C. § 2802(b)(1).) An
award of damages under state law for breach of an oral promise not to terminate would
conflict with this provision. At the very least, Arbabian has failed to show how a damage
remedy under state law based on an alleged promise not to terminate his franchise would
not be the same as a remedy available to him under the Act. Accordingly, this cause of
action is preempted.
       Similar conclusions apply with respect to Arbabian’s remaining causes of action
against ConocoPhillips. Arbabian’s second cause of action, for promissory estoppel,
alleged that ConocoPhillips “was estopped from terminating the dealer agreement.” Just
like the cause of action for breach of oral contract, this cause of action seeks damages for
the termination of the franchise and thus is, in effect, a cause of action for improper
termination of a petroleum franchise.
       To the extent Arbabian’s third cause of action -- “waiver” -- states a cause of
action at all, that cause of action is based on the assertion that ConocoPhillips “waived by
[its] acts and deeds any right it might have otherwise have had to terminate the dealer
agreement.” Again, this is nothing more than a different way of alleging a cause of
action for improper termination of a petroleum franchise.

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       Arbabian’s sixth cause of action, for failure to disclose, alleged that Pellegrino and
Brasher “failed to disclose . . . that Conoco[Phillips] was going to terminate Arbabian
whether or not he installed the image requirements as required by the corporation.” As in
Shukla, this alleged nondisclosure was material only because of its relationship to the
termination of the franchise agreement. Thus, the nondisclosure cause of action was
intimately bound up with the termination of Arbabian’s franchise and was preempted by
the Act.
       As for Arbabian’s seventh cause of action, there he alleged that because he could
not complete the improvements to comply with the new image requirements because one
of the signs violated the municipal code, “[b]y virtue of the doctrine of commercial
frustration it was improper and a breach of contract for Conoco[Phillips] to terminate the
agreement.” Thus, again Arbabian sought damages for the allegedly wrongful
termination of the franchise agreement, and again his cause of action was preempted by
the Act.
       Arbabian’s fourth and fifth causes of action, for negligent and intentional
misrepresentation as to Brasher and Pellegrino only, are subject to the same analysis and
conclusion. In essence, Arbabian alleged that he was entitled to rely on their
representations that ConocoPhillips would not terminate his franchise pursuant to the
termination notices previously sent if he (belatedly) complied with the new image
requirements. Just as with the alleged failure to disclose, these representations were
material only because of their relationship to the termination of the franchise agreement.
       Furthermore, it makes no difference that Arbabian asserted these causes of action
only against the individual defendants and not against ConocoPhillips directly. A
corporation can act only through its officers, agents, and employees. Given this fact, it
would be anomalous to conclude that a cause of action against a franchisor corporation is
preempted by the Act, but the very same cause of action is not preempted if asserted
against the individual who acted for the corporation. As Arbabian acknowledges, “under

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the doctrine of respondeat superior an employer is liable for the torts of the employee
committed while acting within the scope of employment.” Here, Arbabian’s complaint
alleged that Brasher and Pellegrino were “act[ing] within the course and scope of their
agency in doing the acts hereinafter alleged.” Thus, ConocoPhillips would be liable for
any misrepresentations Brasher and/or Pellegrino made about ConocoPhillips’s intent to
follow through with the termination of Arbabian’s franchise, and allowing Arbabian to
recover against them based on such misrepresentations would allow him to do an end run
around the preemption provision in the Act.
       For all of the foregoing reasons, we conclude the trial court did not err in
sustaining the demurrer on the ground of preemption.
       In his opening brief, Arbabian also sought to challenge the postjudgment award of
attorney fees on the ground that the award “was made premised on the idea that the
claims arose out of contract which they did not.” After ConocoPhillips pointed out that
Arbabian failed to appeal from the order granting the attorney fees motion, Arbabian
retreated in his reply brief, arguing only that “if this court reverses the [trial] court’s
decision on the merits, as a matter of law the attorney fee award must likewise be
extinguished.” At the same time, Arbabian conceded that “if this court affirms [the trial]
court in judgment then [he] . . . would have no basis to argue against the attorney fee
award.”
       Because we have determined the trial court did not err in sustaining the demurrer,
the judgment must be affirmed, and thus by his own concession Arbabian has no basis for
challenging the award of attorney fees and costs.

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                                     DISPOSITION
       The judgment is affirmed. ConocoPhillips shall recover its costs on appeal. (Cal.
Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a)(1).)

                                                  ROBIE        , J.

We concur:

      HULL          , Acting P. J.

      MURRAY           , J.

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