Bagby v. Blackwell

211 S.W.2d 69, 240 Mo. App. 574, 1948 Mo. App. LEXIS 292
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 211 S.W.2d 69 (Bagby v. Blackwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bagby v. Blackwell, 211 S.W.2d 69, 240 Mo. App. 574, 1948 Mo. App. LEXIS 292 (Mo. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

*578 DEW, J.

Appellants, as plaintiffs below, brought suit against respondent, defendant below, to enjoin defendant .from using, and carrying on his furniture business under the name previously adopted and in use by plaintiffs, “Associated Furniture Distributors”, or any name similar to or in imitation thereof, and defendant filed answer, claiming superior and exclusive right to the use of such firm name, and a cross-petition to enjoin the plaintiffs from the use of same, or similar name in imitation thereof. Upon trial, the court dismissed both the plaintiffs’ petition and'defendant’s cross-petition. The plaintiffs have appealed.

The appellants, hereinafter referred to. as the plaintiffs, are some 19 in number, consisting of some partnership firms and some corporations, doing business as a voluntary association under the name of Associated Furniture Distributors. The substance of all of plaintiffs ’ points of error is that the decree dismissing- plaintiffs’ petition was against'the evidence and the law, and against the weight of the evidence.

*579 Plaintiffs’ evidence tended to prove that Myron A. Loewen is and has from-its inception, been secretary and treasurer of plaintiffs’ association, known as Associated Furniture Distributors, organized in January, 1927. He is also president of a local furniture establishment in Kansas City, which firm is also a member of plaintiffs’ association. His office is also the office of the association. It was first organized under the name of Associated Furniture Jobbers, which was changed in 1928 to Associated Furniture Distributors, which name it has continuously used since that date. The original members were ten wholesale furniture dealers, and there have since been changes in the personnel due to death, firm dissolutions and for other causes. Formal written Articles of Association were entered into in 1927. The Articles declared,' in part, that the members were to consist of individuals, firms and corporations engaged in purchasing goods in bulk or quantity for resale or distribution to retailers who shall assent to the Articles and By-laws, and pay the prescribed dues; that only one such furniture dealer from each trade territory shall be eligible for membership; that the association, organized for a term of 50 years, shall have no capital stock, but members shall be acquired by voluntary application and represented by a certificate nonnegotiable and nontransferable; that its affairs should be conducted by its selected officers and agents; that it is formed solely to unite its members for better conduct and protection of their mutual business interests; to furnish its members information as to trade conditions; to promote advertising of their products; to exchange information regarding purchase of needed merchandise; to obtain better terms of purchase from manufacturers and dealers; to obtain the advantages to wholesale furniture dealers possible only through concerted action, and that it is not intended that the association engage in business for itself or to buy or sell merchandise, or contract therefor in its own name, or in the name of its members, nor to assume any liability or responsibility for the acts of its members, or to contract liabilities on its own account. Authority was given to obtain headquarters and provide for operation thereof.

The By-laws were thereupon entered into providing for the details of the association’s operation and governing its membership. Among the policies of the association therein stated it is provided that the individual 'members assume no liability or responsibility for the association, or of any other members thereof; that the association, through its members, may act for the members in buying merchandise, but such purchases shall be at the direction of the association and invoiced to the vendee direct, and by him paid; that all commitments for purchases shall be fully performed by the member, and that such purchases through the association shall be for the membership only. There were also provided printed applications for membership, some of which, executed in 1929, were in evidence. Since 1928, each member *580 was furnished with a membership certificate, signed by the president and secretary.

Plaintiffs’ evidence further tended to prove that it is customary for the members to display their certificates of membership in a prominent location in their places of business. Stationery was also adopted containing the name of the association in distinctive lettering, containing on the left margin thereof the names and locations of the dealers who are members of the association, and, also, containing the words “Office of the Secretary, 706-14 Washington Street, Kansas City, Missouri”. There was also adopted and used a sign, containing the name of the association, followed by the names of the members, prominently displayed in their places of business, and reproduced in the catalogs issued by the various member organizations. In a conspicuous place on this sign are the words “A Buying Power of $15,000,000.”

Plaintiffs’ witness Loewen stated that the association was not incorporated because they did not wish the membership to be represented by transferable certificates of stock which could not be canceled if the member was unsatisfactory; also certain individual time and services were required of each member which would be impossible if the association were in corporate form. The name of the association had never been registered. Loewen explained that the way the association works in connection with the furniture trade is that the members meet at the furniture mart in Chicago, Illinois, and Grand Rapids, Michigan, and several other places where, at stated times during the year, large displays are made by the manufacturers of furniture for the inspection of dealers and other purchasers; that the association is divided into committees which give their entire time for the first three days of the display to examining certain lines of furniture, and each evening meetings are held by the members to receive reports from the committees, and after all the reports are in, discussion is had regarding* the merchandise, how many of the members would desire to purchase any of the same, and in what quantities. Through the efforts of the combined membership, exclusive patterns are obtainable from the factories, desired changes made without cost to the members, manufacture during off-season can be arranged, and entire outputs can be obtained. These objectives are finally accomplished through the secretary of the association who represents the membership at the factories. Each member is then individually invoiced and pays for what he contracts for. Only in two instances did the association assume any direct responsibility for purchases. Once it bought medicine cabinets from surplus war stock, and redistributed the same to the membership in proportion. On another occasion the association purchased radios directly for $700,000, which were later distributed to the members. Witness said that manufacturers can not afford to make exclusive cuttings of furniture in the quantity desired by the *581 ordinary individual wholesaler. At the meetings held at the furniture marts each member of the association has a card containing its name and the name and location- of the secretary, and, also, the names and locations of all of the members.

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Bluebook (online)
211 S.W.2d 69, 240 Mo. App. 574, 1948 Mo. App. LEXIS 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bagby-v-blackwell-moctapp-1948.