Cotton Lumber Co. v. La Crosse Lumber Co.

204 S.W. 957, 200 Mo. App. 7, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 130
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 12, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 204 S.W. 957 (Cotton Lumber Co. v. La Crosse Lumber 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
Cotton Lumber Co. v. La Crosse Lumber Co., 204 S.W. 957, 200 Mo. App. 7, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 130 (Mo. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

ALLEN, J.

— This is an action for libel. The trial below resulted in a verdict in plaintiff’s favor for $300 compensatory damages and $5000 punitive damages. From a judgment duly entered thereon the defendant prosecutes this appeal.

Plaintiff is a corporation under the laws of Missouri engaged in the lumber business, having its chief office and principal place of business in Shelby County, Missouri. The defendant is likewise a corporation under the laws of Missouri engaged in the lumber [16]*16business, with its chief office and principal place of business in Pike County, Missouri. The suit' was instituted, on April 28, 1915, in Shelby County, hut the summons was directed to the sheriff of Pike County by whom it was served upon the defendant in that county. On June 7, 1915, defendant filed in the circuit court of Shelby county .a motion to dismiss the action, the motion being one in the nature of a plea to the jurisdiction on the ground that by the service of summons aforesaid the court acquired no jurisdiction over defendant. This motion was overruled, defendant excepting; and thereupon defendant applied for and was granted a change of venue, and the cause was transferred to the circuit court of Monroe county. Thereafter, to-wit, on July 21, 19.15, defendant filed its answer, and the case proceeded to trial, in the circuit court of Monroe county, on December 2, 1915, resulting in the verdict and judgment mentioned above.

The petition is in three counts. The first count, after making certain prefatory averments regarding the two corporations, alleges, in substance, that both plaintiff and defendant are engaged in the retail and wholesale lumber business, and that each have an office in Bowling Green, Pike County, Missouri; that prior to the time of the alleged libel plaintiff, as a retailer, maintained a good reputation and credit; and that on the-day of-, 1914, at its office in Bowling Green, defendant wrote and signed by its agent. Hugh Monroe, who was then manager and in charge of defendant’s office at Bowling Green, certain letters which were addressed and mailed to persons in Pike County who were customers of plaintiff, “falsely, maliciously and wrongfully with the intent to cause the said customers to believe that the plaintiff kept inferior, rotted, knotty, cheap lumber, laths, lime, cement and plastering and other building material and had for sale and sold said inferior, rotted, knotty, cheap lumber, laths, lime, cement and plastering as first class lumber, and said laths, lime, cement and plastering as first class materials and represented them to be of grades superior to the [17]*17real grades of such materials, and that the plastering material it sold was of inferior quality and that defendant fraudulently represented said materials to he .of poor quality and that the plaintiff was dishonest and would deceive said parties.”

The two letters in question, of date. March 21st and March 26, 1914, respectively, thus charged to have been written and published by defendant, are set out in this count of the petition. Omitting the printed heading of defendant’s stationery upon which they were written, they are as follows:
Bowling Green, Mo.
3/21/14.
“Mr. H. Muhlert,
“BG. R. F. D.
“Dear Sir:
“I do not propose to have any competitor undersell me, I know what my competitor has in stock as I have seen most of it, and I know that his qualities are not good. He probably showed you some good boards, but I invite you to compare his grades carefully with mine, go right down into the piles and see what is below the first lair or two. I know they cannot be better than mine because mine are straight grades. Ask him why he piles his lumber in the drive way instead of unloading from the wagon into his bins. Another thing I want to call your attention to the quality of his lath. They are so hard and brittle that you cannot get a good wall if you use them, again he has no Acme cement plaster. Ask any plasterer what is the best plastering material he will tell you Acme, he cannot get a bag of it. Again I’ll bet he did not show you his 6 inch flooring, compare it with ours and judge for yourself.
“I saw his so called Fir Drop Siding, and call it by another name. I call it Western Hemlock, and will leave it to any competent judge if correct or not. Again — did he give you a list of items he agrees to furnish and sign up same if so, compare items with our contract and see if he has left off [18]*18anything, and if he specifies the grades. If he does not furnish yon a -list of items written by himself and duly signed, look ont for a trap. I will furnish yon a piece of genuine fir, compare this with his so-called fir, and judge for yourself. Now Mr. Muh-lert after you have satisfied yourself regarding these remarks bear in mind that I am very anxious to sell you this bill and-will let all grades I have figured stand as they are and offer the bill for $115.
“Yours truly, H. G. Moteoe.”
“Bowling Green, Mo.
3/26/14.
“Mr. H. Muhlert,
“BG. R. F. D.
“Dear Sir:
“I figured a bill of lumber for Williams a few days ago for a chicken house. I figured everything on the bill of No. 1 quality, excepting sheathing to nail the shingles to which was No. 2 quality, I figured the bill for less money than it could possibly be sold for by any other company, but Mr. Cotton’s manager talked him into buying the bill from him. I saw the material Cotton furnished to him and if it wouldn’t be too much trouble to you I wish you could see it too. The barn boards he furnished were number 3 two grades below what I figured and the boards are rotten, have rotten streaks full length that I showed William I could poke my lead pencil through.
“The 'flooring same quality of 6 inch is full of black loose knots and is blackened by sap stains.
“Now, Mr. Muhlert, we are treating you honestly, we furnish exactly what we figure, but I ask you confidentially what show has a man got to get business when people will tolerate and accept this kind of material in contrast to honest treatment and honest figures and qualities.
“I have been manager here for 18 years and the people always got a square deal and they know it. [19]*19So far as I know my honesty has never been questioned.
“When I tell yon I am offering yon a bill for less money than yon can get it for anywhere else, I mean exactly what I say — I defy any company to furnish your hill same quality as I figured for the amount of money, and you can send the bill anywhere you please and you will find that I am correct. We can and will beat any company anywhere on the same quality of material.
“Please investigate and find out if I am right.
“Yours very truly,
MuNboe, Manager. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
204 S.W. 957, 200 Mo. App. 7, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cotton-lumber-co-v-la-crosse-lumber-co-moctapp-1918.