Bright Belt Warehouse Ass'n v. Tobacco Planters Warehouse, Inc.

56 S.E.2d 391, 231 N.C. 142, 1949 N.C. LEXIS 490
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 23, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 56 S.E.2d 391 (Bright Belt Warehouse Ass'n v. Tobacco Planters Warehouse, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bright Belt Warehouse Ass'n v. Tobacco Planters Warehouse, Inc., 56 S.E.2d 391, 231 N.C. 142, 1949 N.C. LEXIS 490 (N.C. 1949).

Opinion

Devin, J.

The plaintiff bases its right to enjoin the defendants from violating rules promulgated by plaintiff’s Board of Governors upon allegations that defendants are tobacco warehousemen engaged in the business of conducting sales of leaf tobacco by auction, and that this business has grown to such an extent that it became necessary that rules and regulations be established to prevent disorder and injury to growers and warehousemen alike; that to effectuate this purpose and to encourage fair trade practices plaintiff Corporation was organized. It was alleged that the defendants who operate fourteen warehouses in Rocky Mount, North Carolina, are members of or affiliated with plaintiff Association, and are under obligation to comply with all its reasonable rules and regulations.

It was stated in the complaint that in 1948 growers in North Carolina produced 750,000,000 pounds of flue cured bright-leaf tobacco wbicb was sold under the auction system on warehouse floors for approximately $375,000,000, and it is alleged that in view of the expanded proportions of the industry and the keen competition between warehousemen and markets for the patronage of growers, and in order to carry out plaintiff’s declared purpose of promoting the orderly marketing of tobacco and encouraging fair practices in the conduct of auction sales in the interest of growers, warehousemen and buyers, the plaintiff Association at its annual meeting June 6-8, 1949, adopted a resolution authorizing its Board of Governors to determine not later than July 1st market open *144 ing dates, and “to announce and publish such rules and regulations as may in the opinion of the Board best provide for the proper and orderly marketing and handling of tobacco on auction warehouse floors.” Pursuant to this delegation of authority the Board of Governors met June 30, 1949, and announced and published the opening dates of markets, and rules and regulations for “orderly marketing and handling tobacco on warehouse floors,” which related to the speed of sales, the size of piles, and selling hours. On July 20 the Board of Governors again met and adopted the following resolution:

“1. That an essential element of a bona fide sale of tobacco at auction is that there shall be assigned to such sale an adequate set of buyers prepared to bid at the competitive sale. The minimum requirement of an adequate set of buyers is the following :
“(a) Buyers for each of the three major domestic tobacco companies (Reynolds Tobacco Company, American Tobacco Company, and Liggett & Myers Tobacco Company), and
“(b) Buyers of at least three other recognized companies purchasing tobacco for export or for export and domestic consumption.
“2. No warehouse should offer tobacco for sale at auction unless and until an adequate set of buyers as defined above has been assigned to and secured for such sale.”

It was alleged that defendants have complied with all rules and regulations promulgated by plaintiff’s Board of Governors except those referring to sales made in absence of an adequate set of buyers as defined by the plaintiff’s Board of Governors; that four sets of buyers are assigned by the three major domestic companies to the Rocky Mount market, permitting four simultaneous sales on that market, but the defendants in addition thereto have conducted and continue to conduct an additional or fifth sale of tobacco on the floors of defendants’ warehouses when the buyers present do not include representatives from each of the three major domestic companies; that notwithstanding requests from plaintiff and farm organizations to discontinue this practice the defendants have refused and have announced their purpose to continue such sales.

Plaintiff further alleges that defendants’ failure to discontinue these additional sales will result in injury to the growers of tobacco in deficiency of price, and to the plaintiff and other members of plaintiff Association who are abiding by plaintiff’s reasonable marketing regulations, and will cause dissatisfaction with the auction system of marketing tobacco; that such injury cannot be readily calculated in money, and is irreparable.

The defendants, answering, admit that they are proprietors of warehouses in Rocky Mount wherein auction sales of leaf tobacco are conducted, and that plaintiff Association has been incorporated for the purposes therein declared, but defendants say the plaintiff has no capital *145 stock and it has set up no definite procedure to determine membership; that it is merely a loose organization of warehousemen on a voluntary basis co-operating for a common end; that the defendants have not joined the plaintiff in any formal way, but they admit they are members of Eastern North Carolina Warehouse Association, and that with their knowledge a portion of the dues paid by defendants is allocated to plaintiff.

Defendants set out in their answer that on the Eocky Mount market, on defendants’ floors, each season, for past five years, have been sold approximately 60,000,000 pounds of leaf tobacco; that this market has grown until on the basis of number of pounds sold it is second in size in Eastern North Carolina; that only four sets of buyers embracing representatives of each of the leading manufacturers have been assigned to this market, which under plaintiff’s rule would have permitted only four simultaneous sales; that for the convenience and accommodation of the growers, and to handle the increasing volume of tobacco brought there for sale by growers, it was deemed necessary by defendants that an additional or fifth sale be conducted; that on this fifth sale representatives of American Tobacco Company and Liggett & Myers Tobacco Company have not been bidders, but it is denied the sales are conducted without substantial and competitive bidding, and it is denied that any injury has been caused or threatened to the tobacco farmers; that under the rule any grower may, if the price bid is not satisfactory, “turn his tag,” decline to sell, and remove his tobacco elsewhere for sale; that on these additional sales the small proportion of tags turned is no greater than on other sales.

Defendants further allege that the action of plaintiff’s Board of Governors in declaring that “no warehouse should offer tobacco for sale at auction until ‘an adequate set of buyers’ as defined above has been assigned to and secured for such sale,” if intended to prohibit sales without the presence of such buyers, is beyond the power and authority of such Board, and in excess of the authority conferred on said Board by plaintiff corporation, and that the action of the Board in so declaring was ultra vires,

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Bluebook (online)
56 S.E.2d 391, 231 N.C. 142, 1949 N.C. LEXIS 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bright-belt-warehouse-assn-v-tobacco-planters-warehouse-inc-nc-1949.