Co-operative Live Stock Commission Co. v. Browning

168 S.W. 934, 260 Mo. 324, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 120
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 2, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 168 S.W. 934 (Co-operative Live Stock Commission Co. v. Browning) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Co-operative Live Stock Commission Co. v. Browning, 168 S.W. 934, 260 Mo. 324, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 120 (Mo. 1914).

Opinion

WOODSON, J.

— The plaintiff instituted this suit November 5,1907, in the circuit court of Jackson county against the .defendants, to recover $96,000, actual and treble damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of a pool, trust, combination 'and agreement made and entered into by and between them and others, to destroy the plaintiff’s business — live stock commission business — at Kansas City, Missouri, in violation of the statutes hereinafter mentioned.

A trial was had which resulted in a verdict of $19,500, in favor of the plaintiff, and under the statute the court trebled that sum and rendered judgment for the plaintiff and against the defendants for the sum of $57,500.

This suit is novel, in that it differs from all others growing out of pools, trusts and combines, with which I am familiar, and is a fight between agents or the so-called middle men, and not between the State or her officers against manufacturers aiid carriers or financial or industrial institutions for conspiring to control commerce, prices, etc., except in an incidental manner, if at all, which will be presently stated, coupled with the earnest insistence of counsel for defendants that the petition does not ’state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the defendants, and these facts necessitate a reproduction of it here, formal parts being omitted:

[332]*332PETITION.

“Plaintiff states that it is, and at all the times hereinafter mentioned, was a corporation dnly organized under the laws of the State of Colorado, and duly authorized and licensed to do business in the State of Missouri.

“That at all such times the plaintiff was and still is empowered and authorized to carry on, and actually engaged in, the business of a live stock commission merchant, buying and selling cattle, hogs, sheep and liye stock of all kinds, on commission, for its patrons and customers, at the Kansas City stockyards, in Kansas City, Jackson county, Missouri; and that the defendants and others are and were at all such times traders and speculators engaged in buying and selling cattle, hogs, sheep and other live stock, and especially live stock known as ‘stockers’ and ‘feeders’ hereinafter mentioned, at said stockyards, and were and are members of a voluntary association known as the Traders Live Stock Exchange.

‘ ‘ The Kansas City Stockyards Company is and for many years has been a corporation owning and conducting said stockyards at said Kansas City, for the purpose of affording a market for the buying and selling of live stoek produced in the State of Missouri, and other States and Territories; and that by its charter said, company is required to keep said market open and free for the'use of all persons and corporations desiring to trade thereat, and for that purpose it has at all times owned and maintained large yards and pens, together with the necessary driveways, troughs, buildings and equipment for the care, handling and sale of such live' stoek.

“That at all such times and .at the present time large numbers of cattle, hogs, sheep and other live stock have been and are daily shipped and transported from said State of Missouri, and other States and Ter[333]*333ritories to said Kansas City stockyards, and are bought and sold upon said market. That said market is the second largest live stock market in the United States.

“That the live stock so sold upon said market is divided into two general classes; fat stock, or stock fit to be slaughtered, which is nearly all purchased by the packers and order buyers (said order buyers being perT sons who purchase such stock on orders for dealers at other localities), and ‘stockers’ or ‘feeders,’ which, for the most part, consist of cattle not fitted or ready for slaughter, and which are bought at said market by the defendants and other members of said Traders Live Stock Exchange, who, as aforesaid, are and were traders and speculators upon said market, and who, in turn, resell the same to farmers and cattle feeders, to be taken to the country to be fed and fattened, and ultimately returned to the market as fat cattle, to be sold for slaughter. ■

‘ ‘ That a greater number of such stockers and feeders are and have, for many years past, been bought and sold in said Kansas City stockyards than at any other market in the United States; and that such stockers and feeders constitute a very large part of the cattle received at said market, more than seven hundred thousand such stockers and feeders being annually received and sold thereat.

“That besides the plaintiff, there are and at all such times were a large number of other persons and corporations doing business at said Kansas City stockyards, as live stock commission merchants, all, or practically all, of whom, except the plaintiff, are and were at all such times members of a voluntary association known as the Kansas City Live Stock Exchange. That the plaintiff never was a member of said association, and during the times herein mentioned has been the only commission merchant doing business at said stockyards not a member of said Kansas City Live Stock Exchange. That at all such times the plaintiff has [334]*334charged less commissions for buying and selling cattle, hogs, sheep and other live stock for its patrons and customers, than were charged and collected for buying and selling such live stock by the other commission merchants at said stockyards, who, as aforesaid, were and are all members of said Kansas City Live Stock Exchange, and that plaintiff has sold large numbers of fat cattle for its patrons and customers.

“That at all times herein mentioned the plaintiff has had and still has a very large number of patrons and customers, raisers and feeders of live stock, who were and are desirous of buying and selling their stockers and feeders through the plaintiff, as such commission merchant, and would have done so and would do so now but for the combination and conspiracy against the plaintiff entered into and maintained by the defendants, as hereinafter stated.

“Plaintiff states that it commenced its said business as a commission merchant at said stockyards on the first day of September, 1906, and ever since said time has been and still is engaged in such business at said stockyards, as hereinbefore stated.

‘ ‘ Plaintiff further states that at the time- of and immediately before the date of the commencement of business by the plaintiff, the defendants, as such traders and speculators, buyers and sellers, of live stock, and especially of stockers and feeders at said stockyards in Kansas- City, Jackson county, Missouri, created, entered into and became members of and participated in a pool, trust, agreement, combination, confederation and understanding among and between themselves and each other and between themselves and other members of said Traders Live Stock Exchange, in restraint of trade and competition in the importation, transportation, purchase and sale of such stockers and feeders at said Kansas City stockyards, in this State, by agreeing among and between themselves and with each other, and between them[335]

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Bluebook (online)
168 S.W. 934, 260 Mo. 324, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/co-operative-live-stock-commission-co-v-browning-mo-1914.