In the Trenches
OPEC, Gas Lines, and the Wisconsin Fair Dealership Law
The story of the 1974 retail gas dealers' march on the State
Capitol is a true legend of the birth of the Wisconsin Fair Dealership
Law. The WFDL no longer protects gasoline dealers - their rights as
state "dealers" having been preempted by the Federal Petroleum Marketing
Practices Act - but the origin of the WFDL may be relevant to defining
who is a dealer.
By Robert B. Corris
Paul Bunyan and John Henry are mythological legends - the stuff of
folklore and folksong. Emory T. Clark, on the other hand, was the real
deal. According to our sources, he was one of the last of a breed - a
self-made millionaire who had begun as a roughneck in the Texas oil
fields and had risen to prominence in the petroleum industry. Mr. Clark,
we had been told by other Clark employees, could drink men 40 years
younger under the table. He could close the bar, being the last to
leave, but the first to rise, often by 6 a.m. Woe be to the subordinates
who did not match his pace - and few could. So we had been told.
"We" were Raymond R. Krueger, now the cochair of Michael, Best &
Friedrich's environmental practice area and still a franchise lawyer on
the side, and me - both of us then, in 1974, associates at Charne,
Glassner, Tehan, Clancy & Taitelman S.C.
Early one Friday evening, Ray and I stood outside the John Ernst
cafe, armed only with process for which there was some urgency of
service. Our efforts to serve the company that bore Mr. Clark's name -
Clark Oil & Refining Corporation - had failed when we arrived at
Clark's West Allis headquarters a few minutes past the 4:30 p.m. closing
time. No one answered the door. Plan B, hastily formed, was to retreat
to our offices on the top floor of the Midland Bank Building, where,
after a few well-placed telephone calls, we were able to identify Emory
Clark's favorite "watering hole." Within the hour, our senses heightened
by competing emotions of trepidation and excitement, we strode into the
John Ernst cafe and inquired whether Mr. Clark was present. A
white-haired gentlemen, square-jawed and field-hardened, promptly
identified himself, courteously accepted our process, and graciously
bought us a round of drinks.1
The process we served that night on Emory Clark, and others like it -
primarily a series of temporary restraining orders that U.S. District
Court Judge John W. Reynolds had issued to prevent Clark from cutting
off supplies of gasoline to our clients - were precursors of the passage
of the Wisconsin Fair Dealership Law (WFDL). In October 1973 the Oil
Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) had imposed an embargo. Retail
gasoline prices climbed by 40 percent in a matter of months; prices at
the pump could and did rise on a daily basis, and in some parts of the
country, stations ran out of gas.2 Motorists
endured lengthening "gas lines" that wound into the streets in order to
top off their tanks, even if only for a $1 purchase.3
It was Clark's misfortune to have had bad timing. Earlier in 1973,
Clark had wanted to change its distribution practices and sought to
impose new terms and conditions upon its dealers. It should have been
easy to do so. Most dealers enjoyed possession of their stations
pursuant to one-year leases. According to standard practice, the
representative would show up annually with a new lease and present it on
a take-it-or-leave-it basis - sign the lease or be terminated.
Clark, however, hadn't counted on William E. Glassner Jr. - "Wild
Bill" as we associates affectionately called him behind his back - the
Arab oil embargo, and a few very courageous Clark dealers. In the days
before Continental TV Inc. v. GTE Sylvania Inc.,4 Bill successfully challenged intrabrand
restrictions in the pizza (Shakey's), fast food (Golden Chicken), and
oil (Clark) industries. After the dealers rejected Clark's new leases
and commenced a class action antitrust lawsuit, Clark responded with a
series of eviction actions. It found some success in the state court
system,5 but the dealers were able to block
the evictions with restraining orders obtained in their federal class
action.6 By the time the court issued its
injunctions and, thereafter, the Wisconsin Legislature considered the
WFDL, the public had begun to view the oil companies as avaricious
villains who had been using the embargo as an excuse to gouge the public
with skyrocketing prices.
How many young associates would get to handle a class action lawsuit
today like we did then? Bill was the general; Ray, F. Thomas Olson (now
of Hall, Patterson & Charne), and I were the foot soldiers. Bill
permitted us to do most of the day-to-day work. We took the depositions,
obtained the restraining orders, wrote the briefs, argued the class
motion, negotiated the settlement, conducted the settlement hearing, and
- with Bill as our leader - participated in two extraordinary lawyering
activities.
As the relationship between Clark and its dealers deteriorated during
the litigation, Bill located an alternative supply of gasoline - no mean
feat in those days of shortage. After an all-night covert operation, a
good number of Clark dealerships in the greater Milwaukee area opened
for business one morning sporting new trademarks and offering a new
brand of gasoline - "TRO GAS" - named in honor of Judge Reynolds'
protectionist orders. The traditional Clark orange and white colors had
disappeared. TRO GAS signs adorned the globes and pumps with bright
yellow lettering on a field of emerald green.
The second extraordinary activity was the drafting of legislation to
protect gasoline dealers. Early in 1974 gasoline dealers from around the
state packed the galleries of the Capitol in Madison. Clark dealers had
sought support from the state petroleum dealers association, and the
small business owners who petitioned the government that day represented
a wide array of brands. Bill, Ray, and I had originally drafted an
industry-specific bill for gasoline dealers, but our version was soon
replaced by one of more generic application.
Taking advantage of the gasoline dealers' presence, later-to-be Gov.
Tony Earl, then Assembly majority leader, revived a long languishing
fair franchise law, which - once resurrected and amended to protect
"dealers," instead of "franchisees" - passed through the Legislature.
Gov. Earl recalls how U.S. District Judge John C. Shabaz, then Assembly
minority leader, looking at the dealers in the gallery and, with a
smile, telling Earl what a "lucky s.o.b." Earl was.
In the state senate, however, the bill ran into procedural
difficulties. Bill Nelson, who represented the liquor wholesalers,
provides the following account: The bill could not be voted on unless a
two-thirds majority agreed to suspend the rules to advance it ahead of
all then-pending bills. Nelson and Tom Coenen, executive director of the
gasoline dealers association, deliberately announced to the dealers, in
very loud voices, that the bill could not be advanced and would not be
voted on. The dealers, they said, should go home. Then the proponents of
the legislation undertook an effort to convince the senate members who
were opposed to the bill to suspend the rules to put the WFDL bill at
the bottom of the contest calendar. The senate was about to adjourn, and
the WFDL, being at the bottom of a long list of bills, would never be
reached for a vote. This, Nelson and Coenen argued, would appease the
dealers and send them home thinking they had accomplished something. The
opponents agreed.
Their votes provided the two-thirds majority necessary to suspend the
rules. Lieutenant Governor Martin J. Schrieber, in his capacity as
senate president, then cited a precedent from the 1930s and held that
the suspension of the rules for any purpose was a suspension for all and
every purpose. Immediately, a proponent offered a motion to take the
bill out of order - which only required a simple majority to pass. The
opposition, which before the suspension had had the requisite numbers to
keep the bill from coming to a vote, could not defeat the motion, and
the bill passed the senate. Thus, according to legend, did the Wisconsin
Fair Dealership Law come into existence.7
The efforts of the gasoline dealers - spearheaded by the Clark dealers -
provided the impetus for passage of a bill whose original beneficiaries,
according to the drafters of the fair "franchise" legislation, were
intended to be farm implement dealers and liquor wholesalers.
A declaration of the Legislature's intended beneficiaries is found in
Foerster Inc. v. Atlas Metal Parts Co.,8 which quotes a press release issued by the
Governor's Office immediately after the passage of the law:
"This bill is intended to protect the thousands of small businessmen
in Wisconsin who are franchisees. These businessmen operate filling
stations, building materials and supply houses, lumber yards, sports
equipment stores, motels, hotels, and restaurant chains. They sell farm
implements, clothing, furniture, and many other types of goods under a
franchise system. The intent in this legislation is to protect these
Wisconsin businessmen from pressure from a franchisor which is not in
their best interest."9
Foerster relates that the WFDL was originally entitled the "Wisconsin
Fair Franchising Law."10 The bill
subsequently was amended to refer to the protected business
relationships as "dealerships" rather than "franchises."11 A letter referred to as an interdepartmental
correspondence found in the drafting file of the Wisconsin Legislative
Reference Bureau relating to 1973 Assembly Bill 837 indicates that this
amendment to the bill was made only to avoid a possible conflict between
the bill and the Wisconsin Franchise Investment Law.12
|
Robert B. Corris, Boalt Hall School of Law
1970 (U.C. Berkeley), is a solo practitioner in Milwaukee. He is a
co-editor of the Business Torts Newsletter of the ABA
Litigation Section, a frequent lecturer on business torts issues
(including fair dealership), and a mediator with Resolute Systems
Inc. |
Why this story? Of what interest is it, almost 25 years later, to
retell this story? Gasoline dealers are no longer protected by the WFDL,
their rights as state "dealers" having been preempted more than 20 years
ago by the federal Petroleum Marketing Practices Act.13 Liquor wholesalers have been construed more
often than not to not be dealers.14 Farm
implement dealers have fared better.15
The WFDL, according to its terms, was enacted to "promote the
compelling interest of the public in fair business relations between
dealers and grantors, and in the continuation of dealerships on a fair
basis."16 A threshold question is whether
the person claiming WFDL protection is a "dealer" or, more precisely,
whether the agreement between a "grantor" and a "dealer" is a
"dealership" agreement.
This author suggests that standards currently employed in the state
and federal courts should be tested against the agreements and practices
imposed on gasoline dealers in the early 1970s - particularly Clark
dealers. It is also fair, this author submits, to consider "sweat
equity," a facet to which the courts apparently give little attention or
value.17
In the context of that April day in Madison, 1974, it was the
American Dream that was being protected - the sweat of the small
business owners who churned their livelihoods out of 12-hour days and
70-hour weeks. The story of the dealers' march on the Capitol is a true
legend of the birth of the Wisconsin Fair Dealership Law.
Endnotes
1 Although we found Mr. Clark to be
a perfect gentleman that night, attorney William F. Nelson relates a
story of when Mr. Clark was a dinner guest at the governor's mansion
around the time of the passage of the Wisconsin Fair Dealership Law. Mr.
Clark, despite Gov. Patrick Lucey's repeated admonition that dinner was
an inappropriate occasion for lobbying, repeatedly tried to convince the
governor of the evils of a dealership law. Finally, Gov. Lucey stood up,
walked to Mr. Clark's seat, took him by the elbow, and escorted him from
the room.
2 D. Yergin, The Prize,
616-17 (New York, NY: Simon & Schuster, 1991).
3 Id.
4 433 U.S. 36 (1977).
5 See Clark Oil &
Refining Corp. v. Leistikow, 69 Wis. 2d 226, 230 N.W.2d 736
(1975).
6 See In re Clark Oil
& Refining Corp. Antitrust Litigation, 391 F. Supp. 1057 (E.D.
Wis. 1975) (denying in part a restraining order, but restraining Clark
from terminating the dealer who was the subject of the motion without
good cause, and continuing restraining orders previously entered).
7 According to Nelson, the law was
taken directly to the governor and an immediate signing ceremony
occurred. The next day, the new law was walked over to the Wisconsin
State Journal for publication.
8 105 Wis. 2d 17, 24, 313 N.W.2d 60
(1981).
9 Press Release, Office of
Governor, April 6, 1973. Former Gov. Earl remembers that the bill was
always intended to be generic and that one of the practices that led to
its drafting was the use by "grantors" of superior bargaining power to
force dealers to buy products the dealers did not want to purchase. He
recalls one instance in which a noted liquor company required its
wholesalers to take unwanted brands if they wanted the premium label
product. Another time, a certain manufacturer made its farm implement
dealers buy snowmobiles. Gov. Earl also states that gasoline dealers
were always intended to be covered because of a similar abuse, the
requirement that dealers buy certain quantitites of "TBA" (tires,
batteries, and accessories). Bill Nelson attributes the birth of the
concept of a "fair franchise" law to when Lawrence Weinstein's father
died. Weinstein's father owned General Beverage Sales, which had had a
long and successful relationship with a certain liquor manufacturer.
According to Nelson, when Weinstein grieved at his father's funeral, the
manufacturer thought his tears were not manly and terminated its
relationship with the wholesaler.
10 1973 Assembly Bill 837A, 105
Wis. 2d at 23.
11 Assembly Substitute Amendment
1 to 1973 Assembly Bill 837. Id.
12 Id.
13 15 U.S.C. §§ 2601
et seq.
14 See Beloit
Beverage Co. v. Winterbrook Corp., 900 F. Supp. 1097 (E.D. Wis.
1995); Kenosha Liquor Co. v. Heublein Inc., 895 F.2d 418 (7th
Cir. 1990).
15 See Frieburg Farm
Equip. Inc. v. Van Dale Inc., 978 F.2d 395 (7th Cir. 1992); JPM
Inc. v. John Deere Indus. Equip. Co., 94 F.3d 270 (7th Cir.
1996).
16 Wis. Stat. §
135.025(2)(a).
17 See the discussion of
"human capital" as a nonfinancial investment in M.A. Bowen and B.E.
Butler, The Wisconsin Fair Dealership Law, § 4.28.
Wisconsin Lawyer