Clark v. Crown Drug Co.

146 S.W.2d 98, 236 Mo. App. 206, 1940 Mo. App. LEXIS 107
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 14, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 146 S.W.2d 98 (Clark v. Crown Drug 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
Clark v. Crown Drug Co., 146 S.W.2d 98, 236 Mo. App. 206, 1940 Mo. App. LEXIS 107 (Mo. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinions

*208 TATLOW, P. J.

The parties will be referred to in this opinion as plaintiff and defendants.

The learned trial judge rendered a memorandum opinion in which ■he stated the issues and found the facts, which we approve, as follows:

“Plaintiffs in this case seek to enjoin the defendant from so conducting its business, that is making illegal sales of liquor, so as to create unfair and illegal competition against the plaintiffs; plaintiff suing for himself and practically all of the other tap room operators in the City of Springfield.
‘1 The evidence shows that the defendant has sold liquor on telephone orders and that the title to the property sold did not pass until the liquor was delivered to the purchaser at the purchaser’s home or at a place other than defendant’s store. This is established by the testimony of defendant’s manager. Defendant’s manager testified that in cases where liquor has been ordered over the telephone, to be delivered to the purchaser not at defendant’s store, the instructions to the messenger or agent of the defendant who delivered the liquor, were not, to deliver it unless paid for. This to the Court’s mind was a passing of the title, in other words, a'sale at a place other than defendant’s store and in contravention of the law. Nor could the legal effect of this fact established by the manager’s’ testimony be destroyed or circumvented by the written agreement between the purchaser and the defendant .that the sale should be considered as having taken place at the store. As the Court views it, that -would be an attempt to circumvent the fact and the plain law as based on the fact that the title to the liquor' was’ to pass at the place of delivery, for the defendant now to say that he and his customers had agreed that a different interpretation should be given to the transaction.

We adopt the finding of the trial court, and also make the following additional, findings of fact.

The suit was'filéd on the,12th day of August,' 1939; from February 20, 1940, to April 20, 1940, the defendants adopted the method of requiring each purchaser of liquor, ordered over the telephone, to agree -as- follows:

‘1 May we at this time consider the sale of the intoxicating beverage *209 just ordered as a completed transaction and that delivery of this product is not a condition precedent to the completed sale ?
“Are you 21 years of age or older?”

A customer ordering liquor over the telephone was required to give affirmative answers to the above questions, and, when the delivery was made, defendants’ employee who was making the delivery, would have the purchaser sign a slip containing the above questions, which slip was then returned to the defendants.

The slip also contained the following: “I hereby certify that, when this intoxicating beverage was purchased, I asked the purchaser the two questions printed above, and that I received affirmative answers to both questions.”

This was signed by the employee receiving the order over the telephone.

Defendants’ evidence developed the fact that the plaintiff was unable to give the names or addresses of his customers; and that there was no testimony to indicate that any one who purchased liquor from plaintiff’s tap room ever purchased any liquor from the defendants’ drug store, either over the telephone or otherwise. Nor was there any evidence to the effect that if á person had been unable to purchase liquor from the Crown Drug Store, over the telephone, such person would have gone to .plaintiff’s tap room, some seven blocks away, and purchased the liquor there. In other words, there was no direct evidence that the plaintiff ever lost any customers or the, sale of liquor by reason of the fact that the defendants were selling such intoxicating beverages over the telephone. The defendants offered considerable evidence to develop and support this contention. Neither was there any direct evidence that any of the tap rooms not selling intoxicating beverages over the telephone lost the sale of any such beverages by reason of the fact that the defendants were selling liquor on telephone orders. Defendants’ manager testified: “The amount of liquor sold and delivered daily varies a lot. I would , say that we sell and deliver between $5.00 and $7.00 worth of liquor a day.”:

The section of the statute relating to this matter (Sec. 5, Laws of Missouri, Extra Session, 1933-1934, p. 80), is as follows: “No person, agent or employee of any person in any capacity shall sell intoxicating liquor in any other place than that designated in the license, or at any other time or otherwise than is authorized by this act and the regulations herein provided for.”

It is alleged in the petition and admitted in the answer that the defendants were licensed to sell intoxicating beverages at their place of business at the northeast corner of St. Louis and Jefferson Streets, in Springfield, Missouri, in the original packages. It is also alleged in the petition and shown by the evidence that plaintiff was licensed to sell liquor by the drink and in bottles, half pints and quarts, at his place of business in the City of Springfield.

*210 • The first question for decision is whether the sale of liquor on orders over the telephone, and the subsequent delivery thereof, and the collection of the purchase price at the time and place of the delivery, is a violation of Section 5, supra. The Missouri decisions dealing with this question are: State v. Young, 70 Mo. App. 52; State v. Houts, 36 Mo. App. 265; State v. Wingfield, 115 Mo. 428, 22 S. W. 363; Canton v. McDaniel, 188 Mo. 207, 86 S. W. 1092; State v. Rosenberger, 212 Mo. 648, 111 S. W. 509; State v. Swift & Co., 273 Mo. 462, 200 S. W. 1066.

The case of State v. Young, supra, is very short and directly in point. It is there said: “Defendant was indicted, tried and convicted for selling intoxicating liquor in less quantities than three gallons without a license. The facts were these: Defendant was a licensed saloon keeper and having closed his saloon between 7 and 8 o’clock for the evening, was walking down the street, and at a point half a block away, in front of a livery barn, he met some parties, one of whom wanted a quart of whisky; asking defendant why his saloon was not open, defendant told him he would get the whisky for him and for him to go into the barn and wait. He waited in the barn a few moments when defendant returned with a quart bottle of whisky and delivered it to him, receiving from him $1 in payment.

“We must hold the defendant properly convicted. The sale was not at, or in, the licensed place. He perhaps did not intend to violate the law and may have thought his license protected him, but the fact remains that he sold and delivered the liquor at a place where he had no license to sell.”

This meets with our approval unless it is inferentially overruled by the decisions of our Supreme Court in the cases cited supra; we do not think that it has been overruled. ,

The ease of State v. Wingfield, supra, was one in which the defendant was indicted and convicted for selling beer in the City of Fayette, in violation of the ‘ ‘local option law.

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Related

Clark v. Crown Drug Co.
152 S.W.2d 145 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
146 S.W.2d 98, 236 Mo. App. 206, 1940 Mo. App. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-crown-drug-co-moctapp-1940.