Bahr v. Miller Brothers Creamery

112 N.W.2d 463, 365 Mich. 415, 1961 Mich. LEXIS 340
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1961
DocketDocket 29, Calendar 48,507
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 112 N.W.2d 463 (Bahr v. Miller Brothers Creamery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bahr v. Miller Brothers Creamery, 112 N.W.2d 463, 365 Mich. 415, 1961 Mich. LEXIS 340 (Mich. 1961).

Opinion

Edwards, J.

This is a suit in tort for damage claimed to result from an illegal conspiracy betwixt the Miller Brothers Creamery, a corporation, and 3 individual defendants (Marriott, Aschliman, and Kleinhans) who previously had been milk route drivers handling the products supplied by plaintiff Bahr doing business as the Utica Dairy.

On trial of this matter before a jury in the circuit court of Macomb county, a jury verdict of $40,000 was brought in in favor of plaintiff and against all the defendants.

It appears that plaintiff’s counsel conceded before the trial judge that this verdict was in excess of the damages which had been proved since, in argument over a motion filed by defendants for judgment non obstante veredicto, the plaintiff responded in part that the verdict “indicates a mathematical miscalculation which can be adjusted with justice and certainty by reducing the judgment to the sum of $30,290.”

The trial judge, however, on motion for judgment non obstante veredicto, granted the motion and entered judgment of no cause for action. He wrote an opinion in which he contended that all that defendants had done was to exercise their rights under our system of competitive enterprise to change their contractual relationships with each other. The trial judge said in part:

“There is absolutely no evidence of any fraud or misrepresentation on the part of any of the defend *418 ants, no force or no coercion, no inducements of any kind other than those held out to all other Miller Brothers distributors. No special inducements were-held out to the drivers in question. The fact that Miller Brothers arrangements with their independent drivers was more favorable to the drivers than was given by the Utica Dairy to their drivers might be an inducement, but a perfectly legal one and open to all drivers.”

The record on appeal before us shows that plaintiff Bahr, doing business under the name of Utica Dairy, took over a milk route in 1944 in the Utica area for which he purchased all of his creamery supplies from defendant Miller Brothers Creamery. The growth in population of the Utica area in the 10 years subsequent to 1944 resulted in such expansion of plaintiff’s business that by September of 1954 he had 7 retail milk routes, 1 wholesale milk route, and 1 school milk route, handled by different drivers-under individual contracts or understandings between him and the individual concerned. During this period all of the supplies for all of the routes-were purchased from defendant Miller Brothers Creamery, and it appears that plaintiff’s business in the Utica area represented about 25% of the total sales of defendant Miller Brothers Creamery.

During all of this period it appears that actually plaintiff received a discount of 3/4$ per point (a point apparently is the equivalent of the price of 1 quart of milk) which he retained. The trial judge found that this discount as remitted by Miller Brothers amounted to $800 to $900 per month. It appears that other independent route drivers not affiliated with the Utica Dairy received the same discount individually. The individual drivers also paid 1$ per point to plaintiff under the terms of their lease.

Some time in the summer of 1954 plaintiff began contemplating the possibility -of switching his source *419 of supply from Miller Brothers Creamery to Twin Pines Dairy, one of the principal competitors in the area. Having received an indication of inore favorable terms from Twin Pines, plaintiff on September 16th gave written notice to Miller Brothers that at the end of 30 days he would cease taking any supplies from them. Shortly thereafter, on September 23d, plaintiff circulated a notice amongst his drivers for them to sign their consent to handle Twin Pines products in' lieu of Miller Brothers, and the 3 individual defendants named herein refused to sign this paper and refused to handle Twin Pine products. Actually, the break-off of the Utica Dairy-Miller Brothers relationship occurred on September 28, 1954. Each side claims that the other was responsible for the stopping of the arrangement. It appears that subsequent thereto the 3 individual defendants continued their routes by forming a direct relationship with Miller Brothers and by continuing to service the routes in question.

Plaintiff’s basic contention is that by written lease as to 1 defendant, and oral leases with the other 2 defendants, he had leased to them valuable property in the nature of routes, route lists, trucks, and supplies. It is also plaintiff’s contention that the written lease with Marriott, and the oral leases with the other 2 individual defendants, provided that none of the 3 of them would directly or indirectly engage in the dairy business within the territories which had been leased to them, for a period of 1 year after date of termination of their lease.

Since State law limits such an arrangement to 90 days, * it is plaintiff’s contention that it was the understanding of the parties that the limitation of 90 days would apply. Hé contends that controversies arose in 1954 between himself and Miller Brothers *420 relating to price-cutting activities in relation to wholesale stops adjacent to Bahr’s territory. Plaintiff claims that he had specifically instructed Miller Brothers and their agents not to inform plaintiff’s drivers about the rebate which Bahr received from Miller Brothers, but, in fact, in September, 1954, Miller Brothers’ sales manager, Anthony Prins, met with the 3 individual defendants and informed them of the Miller Brothers rebate arrangements with Bahr and told them that they were individually entitled to the rebate instead of Bahr. Plaintiff claims that the testimony in the record also warranted the jury finding that Prins told the individual defendants that Miller Brothers would supply them with milk if they came over to Miller Brothers directly, and that they would be getting the “bonus” previously paid to Bahr. On or about Monday, September 27th, the 3 individual defendants came in, turned in their route books to Bahr, and 2 of them turned in their trucks — defendant Marriott being the owner of his. Thereafter they immediately went to work as independent dealers with Miller Brothers, being supplied the nest day by Miller Brothers with a line of credit for creamery supplies and 2 of them with trucks.

It appears that in fact the 3 individual defendants continued to service the routes they had previously leased from Bahr, although 2 of them switched routes for a 90-day period. Bahr claims that the testimony allowed the jury to find that all 3 men had substantially prejudiced their customers against him prior to the change-over and that as a result the value of the routes to him after their individual competition had been established was diminished by the total sum of $30,290.

The trial judge, in his opinion granting the motion non obstante veredicto, said:

*421 “Plaintiff’s remedy, if any, rests in an individual assumpsit action for breach of contract, against each of the defendants severally or such ones he claims breached some existing contract.

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Bluebook (online)
112 N.W.2d 463, 365 Mich. 415, 1961 Mich. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bahr-v-miller-brothers-creamery-mich-1961.