Baltimore Process Co. v. My-Coca Co.

125 A. 179, 144 Md. 439, 1924 Md. LEXIS 26
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 17, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 125 A. 179 (Baltimore Process Co. v. My-Coca Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore Process Co. v. My-Coca Co., 125 A. 179, 144 Md. 439, 1924 Md. LEXIS 26 (Md. 1924).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an .appeal from an order overruling a demurrer of the Baltimore Process Company to a bill of complaint filed by My-Coca Company, Robert D. Johnston, R. S. Scott and Maude Marvin against the defendant. The bill prays for the specific performance of an agreement of February 19th, 1920, and that a decree may be' passed directing the respondent to pay to the complainants the purchase price agreed upon, with all arrears of interest accrued thereon, .and to accept from the complainants a conveyance and transfer of all the property and rights agreed to be transferred to the respondent under the said contract, and for general relief. It alleges that My-Coca Company is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Alabama, and that the individual complainants are citizens and residents of Alabama, and the owners of all the stock issued and outstanding of that company; that the respondent is a corporation organized under the laws of the *441 State of Delaware, with an office in Baltimore, where the business of the corporation is regularly carried on. A contract filed with the bill is in part as follows:

“R. D. Johnston, as president of My-Ooca Company, an Alabama corporation, and as attorney and agent for the holders of all the capital stock of said corporation, hereby agrees to sell and transfer to tbe Baltimore Process Company all said capital stock of My-Ooca Company, together with the good will, formula and trade-mark of the My-Ooca Company and the note book with formula purchased by said My-Coea Company from Mrs. Diva Brown, nee Mayfield as tbe original Coca-Cola formula in the handwriting of Dr. Pemberton, who invented it.
“The Baltimore Process Company hereby agrees to purchase said stock, formula and good will at and for the sum of fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000), payable as follows:
“Sixty days after date $5,000.00 in cash, and monthly thereafter $1,000.00 until a total of $15,000.00 shall have been paid.
“It is agreed the undersigned My-Ooca stockholders shall retain title to all physical assets of the My-Ooca Company; that is to say, its fixtures, merchandise, containers, accounts, truck and cash, hut all advertising, crowns and labels shall be turned over to tbe Baltimore Process Company, and said stockholders shall satisfy all outstanding accounts, debts, and liabilities of every character of said My-Ooca Company, so that tbe Baltimore Process Company shall take over its stock and business free of all liens and incumbrances.
“Tbe undersigned agree to instruct a representative sent by the Baltimore Process Company to the MyOoca plant in the proper method of compounding My-Ooca, and will turn over its books and accounts so that the business can be carried on by tbe Baltimore Process Company as fully and completely as it is now carried on by My-Ooca Company.”

*442 The stockholders agreed to withdraw from the Cola business, and to refrain from engaging in said business in anyway while said Baltimore Process Company, its successors or assigns, or the My-Ooca Company, its successors or assigns, are engaged in the Oola business, and the complainants agreed to keep> no copies of the formula and never to disclose it to anyone. It was further agreed that W. S'. Stoott, treasurer of the company, would furnish an affidavit that no reproduction had ever been made of the original formula in the Pemberton note hook, and that none would he made prior to turning it over to the Baltimore Process Company, and that it had been preserved in total secrecy in the company’s safety deposit box since he and his. associates purchased the company seven years ago, and that the same was the true and original note hook and formula, as secured from Diva Brown, née Mayfield. The contract is dated the 19th day of February, 1920, and is signed by My-Ooca Company, by R. D. Johnston, president, and by the individual stockholders', by R. D. Johnston, attorney-in-fact, and by the Baltimore Process Company, by John Luntz, vice-president.

The hill alleges that, upon the execution of the contract, the complainant proceeded to take steps to carry out the contract, dose down the business conducted by them, and in pursuance of that policy, the complainant corporation did not renew its .advertising contracts, did not buy any new raw materials, disposed of large quantities of raw materials then on hand, did not renew contracts with bottlers, and in good faith performed all the requirements of the agreement on their part to he performed, prior to> the time set for the first payment on account of the purchase price and the taking over of the business by the respondent.

It is further alleged that on April 19th, 1920, being the date fixed to make' the payment of $5,000 in cash, the respondent failed to make payment and, on May 17th, 1920, definitely refused to carry out the terms of the. contract and repudiated the same, and has never paid to the complainants, or any of them, .any of the purchase price as set forth in the *443 contract. It. alleges that in addition to the acts, performed by the complainants, as hereinbefore set forth, constituting part performance of the contract by them, they have always, at all times been ready and willing to carry out in full all the terms of the said contract, hut the respondent has at no' time been ready or willing to accept the transfer of the stock, good will, formula and trademark and pay for the same in accordance with, the contract. It is further alleged that the subject matter of the contract is. made up of a number of unique and irreplaceable articles, including one hundred per cent, of the capital stock of the company, which was, at the time of the contract, closely held in the hands, of three persons, who are the three individual complainants in this suit, and the said stock was not available- for purchase or sale upon any stock exchange; that the value of the shares of stock was very great, and by reason of the facts .aforesaid, had and has no definitely ascertainable market value; the good will of My-Ooaa Company, the registered trademark of the company, and the secret formula, are' articles which could not and cannot he duplicated or replaced, and have a unique and peculiar value which cannot be measured adequately in any assessment of damages. Tbe complainants therefore' show that they have no adequate' remedy at law for the enforcement of their rights under- the contract.

The complainants further allege that the respondent instituted proceedings in the Circuit City Tenth Judicial Circuit of Alabama, in equity, .against the My-Ooaa Company, and on the 11th of June, 1920, an injunction was issued in said proceedings against it, enjoining it and its officers, agents or employees and restraining them from 'prosecuting suits which the company had caused to he brought in the States of New York and Indiana, and restraining the company from instituting, or causing to he instituted any further suits seeking to enforce the contract of February 19th, 1920, or to collect any indebtedness created thereunder, which injunction remained in force until February 5th, 1923, when the pro *444 ceedings above referred to in Alabama against tbe Mv-Coca Company were dismissed.

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Bluebook (online)
125 A. 179, 144 Md. 439, 1924 Md. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-process-co-v-my-coca-co-md-1924.