Breimeyer v. Star Bottling Co.

117 S.W. 119, 136 Mo. App. 84, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 11
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 9, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 117 S.W. 119 (Breimeyer v. Star Bottling Co.) 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
Breimeyer v. Star Bottling Co., 117 S.W. 119, 136 Mo. App. 84, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 11 (Mo. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

Suit in equity by Breimeyer and some ten other plaintiffs, individuals, corporation» and partnerships, against the defendant to enjoin it from further taking or using plaintiffs’ respective bottles and siphons. The amended petition on which the-case was tried alleges, that plaintiffs place their beverages upon the market in glass bottles and siphons upon each of which their respective names are distinctly and indelibly blown; that these names have been adopted and used by plaintiffs as trade names, and are of value to plaintiffs in the sale of their goods; that it is a custom of the trade, and as such well known to-defendant, that the branded bottles used by plaintiffs-are not sold, but only the contents thereof, and the-packages returned to the manufacturer to be by hinN refilled and again delivered to the dealer.

[86]*86The petition further alleges that defendant repeatedly, knowingly, wilfully and continuously has gathered up and collected together the bottles and siphons of the various plaintiffs, without their consent and against their remonstrances; that it has filled the same with beverages of its own manufacture, inferior to those made by the respective plaintiffs, and has sold and delivered, and is selling and delivering some to the trade at prices less than those charged by the different plaintiffs, thereby inducing and making it possible for defendant’s dealers to sell its inferior beverages in the packages of the plaintiffs to the public as and for the goods of the various plaintiffs.

The petition further alleges that defendant has taken possession of and converted to its own use many thousands of bottles and siphons belonging to the plaintiffs, and has sold large quantities of its goods therein, thereby damaging the respective plaintiffs by depriving them of the use of their property, and also injuring the reputation of the beverages of the respective plaintiffs by selling its own inferior and cheaper goods in the branded packages of plaintiffs.

The petition further alleges that because of the large number of dealers purchasing goods from defendant, and because of the extent of territory covered by plaintiffs and defendant, it would require innumerable actions at law on the part of each plaintiff to recover possession of his bottles, or damages for their wrongful taking and use, and would subject each plaintiff to great expense to conduct such lawsuits; that the injury to each plaintiff is and will continue to be irreparable, and that plaintiffs are without adequate remedy at law.

Defendant demurred to the petition on the ground that it was multifarious and improperly united parties plaintiff, who were not jointly interested, and that the petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The demurrer was overruled and [87]*87defendant answered. After a general denial, the answer avers:

“That at the time of defendant’s organization, defendant acquired for a valuable consideration the established trade and good will of some fourteen bottlers of carbonated beverages, including some 100,000 bottles having the names of said bottlers blown in them; that for the purpose of advertising the fact that defendant was manufacturing the product it was selling, defendant placed on such bottles filled and sold by defendant a label containing the name of defendant; that it was then an established custom to sell beverages with case and bottles and pay a consideration for the return of the cases and bottles — and defendant says that retail dealers frequently buy from two or more manufacturers regularly and that it may happen that empty bottles of one manufacturer are placed in the case of another manufacturer and accepted by the latter in lieu of one of his own bottles.
“And defendant says that carbonated beverages are frequently sold by the retail dealers to persons who take them to picnic groves and other places away from, the dealer’s establishment, and become lost to the dealers as well as the manufacturer.
“That plaintiffs charge their customers for said lost bottles directly or indirectly, and by their course of business, acquiesce in the abandonment of said bottles and their interest therein.
“And defendant says that for the purpose of obtaining bottles plaintiffs have established a market price for the same and have established and maintained an agency for the purchase and sale of second-hand bottles of all kinds.
“And further answering defendant says that defendant also purchased empty second-hand bottles, regardless of the names blown in said bottles, fills such bottles with their products and for the purpose of designating the manufacturer of the beverage contained [88]*88therein and of obtaining the benefit of its reputation as the manufacturer of superior goods, defendant places upon such bottles — so filled and sold — a conspicuous label containing defendant’s name and the beverage therein contained, and place such bottles in a case containing as well the name of defendant in prominent letters, all of which is well known to the plaintiffs herein.
“And further answering, defendant says that the course adopted by defendant in the use of bottles and the sale of beverages as stated last aforesaid, is almost universally adopted by bottlers of beer and carbonated beverages, and the practice of buying or having made bottles with the names of manufacturers bloAvn in the same, is being abandoned.
“Further ansAvering, defendant says that each of the plaintiffs has been in habit of accepting from his customers empty bottles not containing their names in lieu of bottles delivered with contents to such customers and disposing of such bottles to an association knoAvn as the Missouri Bottlers’ Association and have not offered to exchange bottles with defendant, but have refused to do so; that by the aforesaid conduct of plaintiffs they have lost title to their own bottles, and have made it possible and necessary for defendant to use bottles exchanged in manner aforesaid, and that but for the said misconduct of plaintiffs, defendant would have no occasion to use any bottles bearing the brands of the plaintiffs respectively.
“Further answering, defendant says that the interest of the several plaintiffs is separate and distinct from each other — that the plaintiffs have no interest in common, and that there is a misjoinder of the plaintiffs in this action.
“And for another and further defense, defendant says that the plaintiffs have united together in the name of the 'Missouri Bottlers’ Association,’ for the purpose of fixing and maintaining prices for carbonated beverages in the city of St. Louis and vicinity, and pre[89]*89venting competition in the sale of such beverages, and that by reason of such fact, the plaintiffs should not be permitted to maintain this action.”

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Bluebook (online)
117 S.W. 119, 136 Mo. App. 84, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breimeyer-v-star-bottling-co-moctapp-1909.