Sunline Commercial Carriers, Inc. v. Citgo Petroleum Corp., 206 A.3d 836 (2019)

March 7, 2019 · Delaware Court of Errors and Appeals · No. 185, 2018
206 A.3d 836

SUNLINE COMMERCIAL CARRIERS, INC., Plaintiff Below, Appellant,
v.
CITGO PETROLEUM CORPORATION, Defendants Below, Appellee.

No. 185, 2018

Supreme Court of Delaware.

Submitted: January 9, 2019
Decided: March 7, 2019

Michael F. Bonkowski, Esquire, Nicholas J. Brannick, Esquire, Cole Schotz P.C., Wilmington, Delaware; Ross A. Mortillaro, Esquire (Argued), Stinson Leonard Street LLP, Dallas, Texas, for Appellant, Sunline Commercial Carriers, Inc.

Mary F. Dugan, Esquire, Young Conaway Stargatt & Taylor, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; John Zavitsanos, Esquire, Debora Simon Pacholder, Esquire, and Edward Goolsby, Esquire (Argued), Ahmad, Zavitsanos, Anaipakos, Alavi & Mensing, P.C., Houston, Texas, for Appellees, Citgo Petroleum Corporation.

Before STRINE, Chief Justice; VALIHURA and VAUGHN, Justices.

STRINE, Chief Justice:

This litigation has lasted far longer than the contractual relationship that gave rise to it. In early 2013, an oil company, CITGO Petroleum Corp., engaged a trucking company, Sunline Commercial Carriers, Inc., to ship its product under what the parties call a Master Agreement, which was to be implemented by another agreement the parties call the Term Agreement, despite the fact that both contracts have the same title: Agreement for Motor Transportation Services.1 The Master Agreement was set to expire on December 31, 2014, but could be terminated by either party on 60 days' notice. The Term Agreement "remain[ed] in effect until the Master Agreement is expired or terminated" but also contained another sentence stating that it was a "1 Year agreement with a start date of April 1, 2013."2

The Term Agreement required that CITGO ship a monthly minimum to Sunline, or compensate Sunline for failing to do so. But not long into their relationship, CITGO breached the agreement by failing to ship the monthly minimum, creating what the parties call a "shortfall." After breaching, CITGO used its leverage to obtain concessions that allowed it to make up the shortfall at the end of the parties' contractual relationship. According to Sunline, these concessions were procured based on CITGO's assurances that it would continue the contractual relationship for another year.3

But on March 31, 2014, CITGO sent Sunline a termination notice, stating "CITGO gives Sunline 60 day [sic] notice to cancel Motor Transportation Services Agreement. The transportation services, therefore will continue thru the month of May, ending on May 31st 2014."4 Over the next two months, all of the Term Agreement's specific provisions-including price-seemed to govern the parties' relationship. During this time, CITGO shipped enough product to Sunline to meet its previously accrued shortfalls. But if the Term *839Agreement's minimum monthly requirement remained in place, CITGO failed meet the minimum and generated additional shortfalls. At the end of May, CITGO stopped using Sunline to ship oil.

Sunline sued and eventually moved for summary judgment, arguing that the Term Agreement remained in effect until May 31, 2014; CITGO was therefore still liable for the shortfalls generated before the termination notice; and CITGO generated shortfalls in April and May. In response, CITGO argued that the Term Agreement ended on March 31, 2014, the day CITGO sent its termination notice; that only the Master Agreement continued through May 31, 2014; and as a result, CITGO had no obligation to meet the Term Agreement's minimum barrel requirements.

On Sunline's summary judgment motion, the Superior Court held, as a matter of law, that the Term Agreement ended on March 31, 2014.5 But that holding did not end the parties' dispute. Under the Superior Court's logic, the Term Agreement ended on March 31, 2014, and therefore, the Term Agreement's monthly minimum provision had no effect during April and May 2014. Therefore, anything shipped after March 31, 2014 went towards satisfying CITGO's shortfall liability. And because CITGO shipped enough oil in April and May to satisfy its previously accumulated shortfalls, the Superior Court entered judgment in favor of CITGO.6

On appeal, Sunline challenges these rulings, arguing that the Superior Court's contractual interpretation is inconsistent with the Term Agreement's text, and that, in the alternative, the Term Agreement is ambiguous and parol evidence must be considered.

In this opinion, we reverse. The Superior Court's ruling-that the Term Agreement expired by its own terms on March 31, 2014-ignores the fact that the Term Agreement's text states that its "terms shall remain in effect until the Master Agreement is expired or terminated."7 As we have previously recognized, we must "give each provision and term effect, so as not to render any part of the contract mere surplusage."8 If that contractual provision was given its clear effect, then the Term Agreement remained in effect, under CITGO's own termination communication, until May 31, 2014.

To us, it seems more linguistically likely that the Term Agreement was meant to continue in force as long as the Master Agreement did. In the context of the entire relationship, the expiration date is more easily read as obligating the parties to try to refresh the agreement, and if they failed to do so, then either party could terminate the entire relationship-by terminating the Master Agreement-with 60 days' notice. CITGO's argument that a single sentence-that the Term Agreement is a "1 Year agreement with a start date of April 1, 2013"9 -read in isolation from the rest of the Term Agreement's terms terminated the entire agreement on March 31, 2014 is less textually reasonable. Nonetheless, the Term Agreement does contain conceivably conflicting *840terms, which cannot be indisputably reconciled on the face of the contract, and is therefore ambiguous.10

Because we reverse the Superior Court's finding that the Term Agreement expired on March 31, 2014, we must also reverse its holding that the oil shipped in April and May satisfied CITGO's shortfall liability.11 CITGO was to make up the shortfalls at the end of the contract.12 But whether the Term Agreement expired on March 31, 2014 is not clear on the contract's face, and parol evidence must be considered to determine the parties' intent.

The Superior Court, however, failed to consider parol evidence because of its earlier finding that the Term Agreement expired, as a matter of law, on March 31, 2014. The parol evidence makes summary judgment inappropriate as it supports the reasonableness of Sunline's interpretation. For instance, CITGO's termination notice suggests that the parties' entire contractual relationship-including the Term Agreement's terms-continued until May 31, 2014. In fact, the termination notice can be read to suggest that CITGO believed that the Term Agreement remained in effect until the Master Agreement expired, and that the termination notice served as the 60 days' notice under the terms of both the Term Agreement and the Master Agreement. For these reasons, a genuine dispute of material fact exists, summary judgment was therefore inappropriate, and Sunline is entitled to prove its claims at trial.

I.

CITGO sells petroleum.13 Sunline transports petroleum. And in 2012, the parties began discussing whether they could reach an agreement for Sunline to transport CITGO's petroleum. Having reached an agreement on the initial terms of their relationship, on January 9, 2013, CITGO and Sunline entered into an "Agreement for Motor Transportation Services" (the "Master Agreement").14 The Master Agreement expired on December 31, 2014, but either party could terminate the agreement on 60 days' notice.15 Although Sunline would provide petroleum transportation services to CITGO under the Master Agreement, that agreement set forth only the broad terms of the parties' relationship, such as the amount of insurance Sunline *841was required to maintain.16 It was silent on key commercial terms, including price and quantity.

Two months later, on March 18, 2013, those terms were filled in when Sunline and CITGO agreed to the "Agreement for Motor Transportation Service" (the "Term Agreement").17 The Term Agreement incorporated the Master Agreement by reference,18 but the Term Agreement controlled any inconsistency between the two contracts.19 As noted earlier, the formal name of both the Master Agreement and the Term Agreement is confusingly the same: "Agreement for Motor Transportation Services."20

The Term Agreement required CITGO to provide Sunline with a minimum amount of petroleum to transport each month. If CITGO delivered fewer barrels than the monthly minimum, then a "shortfall" was created, and CITGO would be obligated to pay Sunline about $4.26 per shortfall barrel.21 Otherwise, the price CITGO paid Sunline was based on the number of miles Sunline transported the petroleum.22 Critical to this dispute, the Term Agreement also provided various mechanisms to end the parties' relationship. Those terms were:23

Both parties, CITGO and Sunline, agree that the following terms shall remain in effect until the Master Agreement is expired or terminated.
Term of Agreement 1 Year agreement with a start date of April 1, 2013. Both parties agree to review terms 60 days prior to expiration date and review pricing and volumes. If both parties agree on terms and volumes, this Agreement will be renewed with the agreed upon start date and term of agreement.
...
Termination Termination of the Agreement by either party must be given at least 60 days prior to the expiration of the Agreement in writing.24

Things went smoothly until, in June 2013, CITGO failed to deliver the minimum monthly volume of petroleum to Sunline. Although the Term Agreement required CITGO to deliver at least 240,000 barrels to Sunline in June, CITGO delivered only 142,405 barrels, generating a 97,595-barrel shortfall.25

When Sunline invoiced CITGO for the June shortfall, CITGO asked if Sunline would "add" the shortfalls to "the end of the contract."26 During the negotiations *842about the June shortfalls, CITGO continued to accrue shortfalls in July, August, and September, and the parties continued to discuss how to handle them. In late September 2013, Sunline sent CITGO an invoice for the June, July, and August shortfalls, requesting 30% of the amount due immediately and moving 70% "to the end of the contract."27 Although CITGO acknowledged receipt of the invoice, by November 15, 2013 CITGO had still not paid any of the shortfall amount due to Sunline.28

In December 2013, Sunline sent another invoice to CITGO, requesting 20% of the shortfall for June, July, August, and September. According to Sunline's president, Sunline agreed to push out some of CITGO's payments because it wanted CITGO to renew the contract.29 CITGO paid 20% of the then outstanding shortfalls on December 26, 2013; the remaining shortfalls were to be satisfied at "the end of the Contract."30

CITGO nevertheless continued to generate shortfalls in December of 2013 and February of 2014. When Sunline began to discuss these shortfalls with CITGO, Sunline allegedly agreed that CITGO could pay 20% of the December shortfall now and 80% at the end of the contract, but Sunline required CITGO to pay the February shortfall in full.31 CITGO also generated a shortfall in March 2014, and Sunline required CITGO to pay it in full too.32 Ultimately, CITGO paid Sunline for 20% of the December shortfall and all of the February and March shortfalls.33

Shortcutting the parties' ongoing negotiations over the shortfalls, on March 31, 2014, CITGO sent Sunline a 60-day cancellation notice, stating that "CITGO Petroleum Corporation gives Sunline Commercial Carriers Inc. 60 day [sic] notice to cancel Motor Transportation Services Agreement. The transportation services, therefore will continue thru the month of May, ending on May 31st 2014."34 Although both contracts are titled "Agreement for Motor Transportation Services," the termination notice canceled the "Motor Transportation Services Agreement." Logically, this slight change appears to just be a way of referring to both the Term Agreement and the Master Agreement, and the next sentence's reference to the "transportation services" makes it reasonable to read the notice as applying to both of the contracts that were involved in the performance of these services. Therefore, at best for CITGO, its notice is unclear as to whether it was terminating both agreements or just one (and if just one which one). The termination notice also gave 60 days' notice, the time frame for terminating both the Term Agreement35 and the *843Master Agreement.36

At this point, CITGO had accumulated a 337,969 barrel shortfall.37 CITGO continued to ship oil through Sunline during both April and May, shipping 211,163 and 147,782 barrels, respectively, during those two months, over 20,000 barrels more than the previously accumulated shortfall.38 And CITGO paid Sunline for the April and May volumes based on the Term Agreement's pricing formula. At the end of May, CITGO stopped using Sunline to transport petroleum.

On August 11, 2014, Sunline sent CITGO a breach of contract notice, stating that "[i]n June, July, August, September and December 2013, as well as February, March, April and May 2014, Citgo failed to purchase the agreed minimum number of barrels, and has failed to fully compensate Sunline for the cumulative outstanding shortfall, thereby breaching the Contract."39 Sunline provided CITGO with the required 30 days to cure the breach by compensating Sunline for the shortfalls,40 but CITGO failed to cure.

Sunline then sued CITGO in the Superior Court on March 6, 2015 claiming breach of contract. CITGO answered and counter-claimed, requesting an accounting and alleging (i) breach of contract; (ii) breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing; and (iii) unjust enrichment.41 The Superior Court dismissed CITGO's request for an accounting, but not its other claims.42 After the completion of discovery, the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment.43 CITGO eventually abandoned its counterclaims against Sunline,44 leaving only the cross-motions for summary judgment on the breach of contract claim.45

In moving for summary judgment, Sunline argued that, during the last two months of the parties' relationship, the Term Agreement's terms remained in force. As such, CITGO was obligated to ship 240,000 barrels per month, and therefore CITGO generated shortfalls in April and May.46 Although CITGO paid for the volume it sent through Sunline in April and May, it did not pay Sunline's claimed April and May shortfalls and failed to pay *844the remaining 80% of the June, July, August, September, and December shortfalls, which would remain outstanding if CITGO was obligated to ship 240,000 barrels to Sunline in April and May.

In response, CITGO argued that the Term Agreement-by its own terms-expired on March 31, 2014, and only the Master Agreement continued in force through May 31, 2014. Thus, CITGO argued that it did not accumulate shortfalls in April and May, and satisfied the previously accumulated shortfalls during those months.

In its opinion denying Sunline's motion for summary judgment (and effectively granting CITGO summary judgment),47 the Superior Court reviewed the Term Agreement's text, determined that it was "not so ambiguous to require resorting to extrinsic evidence," and concluded that the Term Agreement expired on March 31, 2014.48 In its analysis, the Superior Court focused on the one-year term clause, and did not discuss the clause that kept the Term Agreement's terms in effect until the Master Agreement expired:

[T]he Court finds Plaintiff and Defendant had a one-year agreement from April 1, 2013 to March 31, 2014 for Plaintiff to provide transportation services for a guaranteed minimum amount of petroleum products which Defendant was obligated to provide. However, if there was no agreement to modify the Term Agreement before March 31, 2014, the Term Agreement by its own terms expired. Therefore, the Court finds that as of March 31, 2014, CITGO had no obligation to supply petroleum products to Plaintiff nor did Plaintiff have any obligation to provide transportation for those products. The Court finds the Plaintiff's 60-day notice argument from the "Termination" provision of the Term Agreement is simply unprevailing. Once the one-year term ended, so did any obligation under the Term Agreement. In this case, neither party "terminated" the Term Agreement, it simply ended by its own terms.49

Based on finding that the Term Agreement unambiguously ended on March 31, 2014, the Superior Court then concluded that "the 60 days' notice provided by CITGO ... only related to its continued relationship under the Master Agreement," and because the Master Agreement did not provide pricing terms, CITGO "was under no obligation to meet monthly minimum barrel requirements in April or May of 2014 pursuant to that document."50

But that did not end the Superior Court's inquiry. The Superior Court went on to find that "[b]ecause CITGO continually failed to meet minimum barrel requirements set forth in the Term Agreement[,] [i]t appears this caused the parties to orally agree to a continuation of the relationship for an additional two months."51 The terms of this apparent oral agreement also needed to be determined, but the Superior Court rejected Sunline's argument that the Term Agreement's shortfall requirements continued as part of the alleged oral agreement:

The only legal basis for Plaintiff arguing that Defendant had a continuing obligation in April and May of 2014 to continue to meet the minimum requirements was its interpretation of the Term Agreement and the 60-day notice language *845in the "Termination" provision. As mentioned previously, Plaintiff asserted that since the 60-day notice was not given until March 31, 2014, the minimum obligation set forth in the Term Agreement continued into April and May. Unfortunately for Plaintiff, that interpretation of the Term Agreement has been rejected by the Court. Since the Court has held the end of the Term Agreement to be March 31, 2014, all that remains is an undisputed agreement between the parties that during the months of April and May of 2014, CITGO would make up the shortage during these months either by providing petroleum products for Plaintiff to transport or monetarily making up the difference.52

According to the Superior Court, this was a sufficient basis to enter summary judgment because "ample correspondence between the parties ... demonstrate[s] a willingness and a mutual assent to move the 2013 shortages to the end of the Term Agreement."53 Thus, after the Superior Court's summary judgment ruling, the only remaining determination was "limited to the extent of the shortages and what monetary payments have been made to compensate Plaintiff for them."54

Both parties filed post-decision motions requesting clarification of the Superior Court's ruling.55 After a hearing, the Superior Court issued an order, finding that (i) CITGO was not obligated to deliver minimum monthly volume to Sunline for April and May; (ii) CITGO supplied Sunline with barrels in excess of the existing shortfall in April and May; and thus (iii) CITGO "made up" its shortfalls in April and May, "resolv[ing] the outstanding issues left from the Court's [summary judgment] decision."56 Based on that analysis, the Superior Court issued a final judgment in favor of CITGO on Sunline's claims, and Sunline timely appealed.

II.

"We review the Superior Court's grant of summary judgment de novo ."57 A grant of summary judgment is appropriate only when "there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law."58 Questions of contract interpretation are also reviewed de novo .59

III.

The key issue the parties dispute is when the Term Agreement ended. If, as the Superior Court found, there is no material dispute of fact that the Term Agreement ended on March 31, 2014, then the April and May oil shipments satisfied CITGO's previous shortfall liability. But if there is a triable question of fact as to whether the Term Agreement expired on May 31, 2014, as Sunline argues, then summary judgment was inappropriately entered, and Sunline is entitled to a trial. If Sunline is correct, then CITGO continued to accumulate shortfalls in April and May and failed to satisfy its previous shortfall liability.

*846On appeal, Sunline first challenges the Superior Court's interpretation of the Term Agreement, arguing that the Superior Court misinterpreted the Term Agreement by finding that it unambiguously terminated on March 31, 2014. We agree and reverse. The Term Agreement is ambiguous, and the parties are entitled to a trial where they can attempt to prove, using parol evidence, their interpretation of the contract.60

Sunline's second issue on appeal-that the Superior Court erred by finding that Sunline and CITGO had an undisputed agreement that permitted CITGO to make up the shortfalls in April and May 2014-is bound up in Sunline's first issue on appeal. The parties agreed that CITGO would make up the shortfalls at the end of the contract. Therefore, if the Term Agreement ended on March 31, 2014, as the Superior Court found, then any oil shipped during April and May would satisfy CITGO's shortfall liability. But the Term Agreement is ambiguous and might not have expired on March 31, 2014. Thus, the Superior Court also erred by holding that any oil shipped during April and May satisfied CITGO's shortfall liability and parol evidence must be considered to determine when the Term Agreement ended.

A.

To determine what contractual parties intended, Delaware courts start with the text.61 "When the contract is clear and unambiguous, we will give effect to the plain-meaning of the contract's terms and provisions," without resort to extrinsic evidence.62 To aid in the interpretation of the text's meaning, "Delaware adheres to the 'objective' theory of contracts, i.e. a contract's construction should be that which would be understood by an objective, reasonable third party."63 The contract must also be read as a whole, giving meaning to each term and avoiding an interpretation that would render any term "mere surplusage."64 But general terms of the contract must yield to more specific terms.65

*847If, after applying these canons of contract interpretation, the contract is nonetheless "reasonably susceptible [to] two or more interpretations or may have two or more different meanings,"66 then the contract is ambiguous and courts must resort to extrinsic evidence to determine the parties' contractual intent.67 Here, the contract's terms contradict each other, are susceptible to two meanings, and are thus ambiguous.68

The Term Agreement first states that "the following terms shall remain in effect until the Master Agreement is expired or terminated."69 Because the Master Agreement terminated on May 31, 2014,70 this clause suggests that the Term Agreement expired on May 31, 2014. But the Term Agreement's very next clause states that the Agreement is a "1 Year agreement with a start date of April 1, 2013," necessarily implying that the Term Agreement expires on March 31, 2014, one year after the start date.71 So which governs, which controls? Both terms are clear in isolation; neither is more general or specific than the other; and reading one to control would cause the other to be a mere surplusage. In isolation, they create an ambiguity.

But we must read the contract as a whole. Unfortunately, the rest of the Term Agreement does not definitively resolve this contradiction. After specifying a one-year term, the Term Agreement goes on to say that "[b]oth parties agree to review terms 60 days prior to expiration date and review pricing and volumes. If both parties agree on terms and volumes, this Agreement will be renewed with the agreed upon start date and term of agreement."72

To our minds, this language suggests that the one-year term is more of a nudge for the parties to reevaluate their relationship. That is, the 60-day provision suggests that the parties will review pricing terms 60 days before the Term Agreement's one-year anniversary. But if this pricing review breaks down, then based on the first clause-which keeps the Term Agreement's terms in effect so long as the Master Agreement was in effect-the parties can terminate the complete relationship upon 60 days' notice.

This reading of the Term Agreement is supplemented by another part of the Term Agreement, which states that "[t]ermination of the Agreement by either party must be given at least 60 days prior to the *848expiration of the Agreement in writing."73 That clause suggests that 60 days' notice is required to terminate and aligns the Term Agreement's termination notice-60 days-with the Master Agreement's termination provision, which also allows for the Master Agreement to be terminated on 60 days' notice.74 Put another way, if the parties cannot reach a mutually beneficial pricing agreement after the Term Agreement's first year of operation, then the Term Agreement is placed on "life support." The Term Agreement still remains in effect until the Master Agreement expires or is terminated, but the parties are on notice that they no longer have a mutually beneficial agreement and can thus terminate the entire arrangement by terminating the Master Agreement.

Not only is this interpretation supported by the text, but it makes commercial sense too. Arranging for the capacity to haul thousands of barrels of petroleum, as Sunline had to do, requires a substantial investment in shipping capacity, which would subject it to losses if the contract ended abruptly. Likewise, CITGO had to get its product to market, and an abrupt termination by Sunline could injure it for obvious reasons. Because both parties invested substantial time, assets, and logistical capacity in creating a mutually beneficial relationship, this reading, in which the Term Agreement and Master Agreement both end simultaneously after 60 days' notice, allows each party time to reallocate resources or find alternative arrangements in an orderly fashion. Therefore, the mix of practical and textual support also supports the reasonableness of Sunline's interpretation.

CITGO argues that although the Term Agreement must "remain in effect until the Master Agreement is expired or terminated,"75 that clause, along with the rest of the Term Agreement, nevertheless expires on March 31, 2014.76 To us, CITGO's argument relies on one clause read in isolation and seems strained. But we cannot rule it out as a possible reading of the Term Agreement's text because we must give credit to each clause in the contract.77 And although Sunline's reading is a reasonable one, it still is in arguable tension with the one-year term language. The Term Agreement is therefore ambiguous on its face, and parol evidence must be considered to determine the parties' intent.78

B.

Because the Superior Court found that the Term Agreement unambiguously terminated on March 31, 2014, it also held that CITGO satisfied its shortfall liability by making up the shortfalls during April and May.79 We also reverse that finding.

Both parties concede that CITGO was to make up the shortfalls at the end of their *849contractual relationship.80 But CITGO says the shortfalls were to be made up after the Term Agreement was terminated (on March 31, 2014, in its view), while the Master Agreement was still in effect (until May 31, 2014 under its interpretation). By contrast, Sunline says that shortfalls were to be made up after both the Term Agreement and the Master Agreement were terminated (on May 31, 2014). Whether CITGO could make up its shortfall liability in April and May then depends on when the Term Agreement terminated. Because the Superior Court found that, as a matter of law, the Term Agreement terminated on March 31, 2014, it naturally concluded that the oil shipped during April and May satisfied CITGO's shortfall liability under that expired contract. But the Term Agreement is ambiguous, and therefore parol evidence must be considered to determine when it terminated. The Superior Court, however, never considered parol evidence.

Summary judgment for CITGO might have been appropriate if all the parol evidence pointed in one direction and conclusively resolved the ambiguity in CITGO's favor, as a matter of law. That is, if the parol evidence left "no genuine issue as to any material fact," then this Court may still affirm the Superior Court.81 But parol evidence in the record supports Sunline's interpretation that the Term Agreement and the Master Agreement expire together, and creates an issue of fact to be resolved at trial.

First, CITGO's internal understanding of the Term Agreement's terms, while it was in place, supports Sunline's textual argument that 60 days' notice was required to terminate it. For instance, an internal CITGO presentation emphasized that CITGO must provide a "cancellation notice 60 days prior [to the termination of the Term Agreement] or agreement renews another year."82 Likewise, internal CITGO email correspondence suggested that they thought 60 days' notice was required to terminate the contract.83 This parol evidence suggests that before CITGO ever tried to terminate the Term Agreement, its internal understanding was that 60 days' notice was required.

But the most obvious piece of evidence suggesting that the Term Agreement and the Master Agreement expire together is the termination notice CITGO provided to Sunline on March 31, 2014, the day the Term Agreement was set to expire under CITGO's interpretation. CITGO's termination notice informed Sunline that "CITGO Petroleum Corporation gives Sunline Commercial Carriers Inc. 60 day [sic] notice to cancel Motor Transportation Services Agreement."84 This first clause is inherently ambiguous. For starters, neither the Master Agreement nor the Term Agreement is entitled the "Motor Transportation Services Agreement." In fact, both the Master Agreement and the Term Agreement are entitled the "Agreement *850for Motor Transportation Services,"85 a reality that by itself tends to support Sunline's argument that the Term Agreement was to remain in effect until the entire contractual relationship under that common name expired. Parties are unlikely to give two agreements the same name unless they intend for them to be substantially related to and dependent on one another.

To this point, CITGO's use of a proxy for the formal name of both the Term Agreement and the Master Agreement in the termination notice can be reasonably read as meaning that the termination notice applied to the parties' entire contractual relationship and therefore both contracts would terminate in 60 days on May 31, 2014. It may be that CITGO meant the termination notice to apply to only one of the agreements, that both have the same name, and that the missing "s" that would make "agreement" plural was intentional. But, if so, the notice is at best ambiguous because it does not specify which agreement it was terminating.

And importantly, the termination notice's next sentence states that, "[t]he transportation services[ ] therefore will continue thru the month of May, ending on May 31st 2014."86 This not only seems to imply that CITGO is terminating the parties' entire contractual relationship as of May 31, 2014, but can also be read as acknowledging the primacy of the first sentence in the Term Agreement, which states that the Term Agreement "remains in effect until the Master Agreement is expired or terminated."87

Alternatively, this last clause can also be reasonably read as an offer to extend the Term Agreement through May 31, 2014; an offer that Sunline accepted by performance.88 The Term Agreement allows for such an extension.89 And because the Master Agreement does not provide price terms for transportation services, the extension of those price terms would be necessary if the transportation services were to continue for another two months. Indeed, the Term Agreement's pricing terms continued to govern the parties' relationship in April and May, suggesting an extension of the Term Agreement. On a cold summary judgment record, it also must be deemed uncoincidental that CITGO sent this notice extending the parties' relationship to May 31, 2014 on March 31, 2014, the last day of the Term Agreement's existence under its interpretation. That timing suggests that even if CITGO believed that the Term Agreement was set to expire at day's end on March 31, 2014, it intended to extend the entire relationship-including the Term Agreement-until May 31, 2014.

Other parol evidence supports Sunline's contention that CITGO intended for both the Term Agreement and Master Agreement to end simultaneously on May 31, 2014. For example, contemporaneous correspondence suggests CITGO initially believed that it was subject to a monthly minimum volume requirement in April and May. For instance, in early April, Sunline sent CITGO a spreadsheet listing minimum *851amounts for April and May. Although CITGO challenged other aspects of the spreadsheet, CITGO was silent as to the minimum delivery amounts for both April and May.90 Not only did CITGO not acknowledge the minimum delivery requirement, but two days after it sent the termination notice, CITGO characterized its March 31, 2014 termination notice in an email to Sunline's president as "essentially an offer to extend the agreement for one more month to May 31, 2014."91 Such an extension would inherently apply to all of the Term Agreement's terms, including the minimum volume requirements.

Not only does CITGO's termination notice suggest that Sunline's interpretation is a reasonable one, but CITGO's behavior adds further credibility to Sunline's interpretation. First, even after CITGO sent its termination letter, CITGO's interactions with Sunline suggest that they thought the Term Agreement remained in effect, as suggested by Sunline's preferred reading. For instance, in a meeting with Sunline, CITGO allegedly acknowledged accruing a shortfall in April and that it would likely accrue one in May too.92

And the volume of oil CITGO shipped to Sunline during April and May can be viewed as suggesting that CITGO believed the Term Agreement's monthly minimum requirements remained in effect during April and May. On March 31, 2014, the end of the Term Agreement according to CITGO, CITGO's shortfall stood at 337,969 barrels. The Superior Court found that the parties' contemplated CITGO making up its shortfall requirement-337,969 barrels-during April and May.93 But CITGO actually sent 358,945 barrels to Sunline during the two-month extension.94 One reasonable inference to be drawn from CITGO sending Sunline petroleum in excess of its previously accumulated shortfalls, then, is that the Term Agreement was extended, and CITGO was attempting to send as much petroleum to Sunline as possible to minimize its April and May shortfalls, suggesting that CITGO understood that the Term Agreement remained in effect until the Master Agreement was terminated on May 31, 2014.95

IV.

In sum, both the text of the relevant contracts and the parol evidence suggest that Sunline's interpretation is a potentially *852viable one, and that it is entitled to a trial to determine whether its interpretation or CITGO's ultimately prevails. Because the Superior Court (and this Court) cannot weigh evidence at the summary judgment stage,96 a jury must evaluate this parol evidence to determine the parties' intent.97

The Superior Court's judgment is hereby reversed and remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.