Daily Monument Co. v. Crown Hill Cemetery Ass'n

176 N.E.2d 268, 114 Ohio App. 143, 18 Ohio Op. 2d 343, 1961 Ohio App. LEXIS 725
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 13, 1961
Docket5130
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 176 N.E.2d 268 (Daily Monument Co. v. Crown Hill Cemetery Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daily Monument Co. v. Crown Hill Cemetery Ass'n, 176 N.E.2d 268, 114 Ohio App. 143, 18 Ohio Op. 2d 343, 1961 Ohio App. LEXIS 725 (Ohio Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

Skeel, J.

This appeal comes to this court on questions of law and fact from a judgment and decree entered for the plaintiff by the Court of Common Pleas of Summit County. The action is one seeking to enjoin the cemetery association from charging its burial lot holders, and the plaintiff, alleged excessive charges for installation and maintenance care of memorials placed on graves in the cemetery; to fix the amount of money that the defendant may lawfully charge for such services to be considered in relation to similar charges made by other cemeteries in the area; to enjoin the defendant from enforcing its rules and regulations requiring installation of marker foundations “only by it”; to enjoin the defendant association from selling grave markers; to determine that the defendant association’s rules and regulations complained of and the sale of grave markers or memorials by defendant are unlawful and contrary to public policy; to enjoin the defendants from doing, directing *145 or participating in any unlawful acts complained of by the plaintiff; and the granting of such other relief as the court deems advisable and proper, including an allowance of attorney’s fees to counsel for plaintiff.

In this action, as originally filed, only the Crown Hill Cemetery Association was made defendant. The petition was filed November 24,1958. It contained or had attached thereto fifteen interrogatories, which were answered by a pleading filed December 20, 1958. Thereafter, new parties defendant were named and an amended petition was filed, the new parties defendant being the trustees, who were also the officers of the cemetery association. They entered their appearance on June 27, 1959. Before trial, the defendant John L. Johnson was dismissed from the case.

The amended petition alleges that the plaintiff is an Ohio corporation organized for profit, having its office and place of business in Akron, Ohio, and is in the business of selling cemetery markers and monuments; that the defendant, Crown Hill Cemetery Association, is an incorporated nonprofit cemetery association, having been organized pursuant to Chapter 1721 of the Revised Code, and enjoying all the immunities and freedom from taxation therein provided; and that the remaining defendants are the trustees and officers of the association. It is alleged that the assoeiátion operates Crown Hill Cemetery. Such cemetery consists of about two hundred fifty acres located in Twinsburg Township, Summit County, wherein it sells lots for burial purposes.

It is alleged also that the association is engaged in selling cemetery markers or memorials to lot owners in the cemetery in competition with the plaintiff and others in like business, and that because of the number of parties in like business in the area, it is not practical to bring all of them in as plaintiffs and for that reason it is alleged that this action is brought on behalf of all others engaged in selling markers in the area. The plaintiff’s evidence shows that of twenty-five monument dealers in Summit, Cuyahoga, and Stark Counties, only five are located in Summit County, so that plaintiff’s claim of the right to maintain a representative suit is not supported by the evidence.

It is alleged that the cemetery association enforces certain rules which, among other things, require that all installation of *146 markers or memorials be done by the association “and not by others”; that since August 14, 1958, by written notice to plaintiff, the price for such services, including maintenance fees for a single bronze marker was fixed at $65; and that by verbal notice the price for installing a double bronze marker and its maintenance fee was increased to $125, which increase in charges have since been required by the association. It is alleged that such increase in charges bears no reasonable relation to the actual cost and expense and also bears no reasonable relation to charges made by other cemeteries in Summit and Cuyahoga Counties which have comparable costs.

It is alleged that the cemetery association, acting through its board of trustees and its officers, ‘ ‘ and each of the other defendants herein [there are no other defendants], acting in combination and concert” with the cemetery association, “have combined in the doing of certain acts for the following purposes :

“A. To create or carry out a restriction in trade or commerce relating to sale of cemetery markers ;

“B. To increase the price of said markers to persons purchasing markers for installation in Crown Hill Cemetery;

“C. To prevent competition in the sale of markers for installation in Crown Hill Cemetery;

“D. To make, execute or carry out a contract so as to preclude free and unrestricted competition among the defendant Crown Hill Cemetery Association and purchasers in the sale of markers for said cemetery;

“E. To promote the sale by said defendant association of its own markers (meaning the markers it purchases for resale) and to discourage and discriminate against the purchase of such markers from plaintiff and others similarly situated.”

It is alleged that a substantial part of the fees charged for installation and maintenance of markers is not required for that purpose but is used by the association for the benefit of persons and parties with whom it is associated in the acts complained of; that the tendency and object of such excessive charges and fees is to establish a monoply in Crown Hill Cemetery in respect to the sale of markers, in violation of the statutes of Ohio controlling and restricting monoplies and to obtain an excessive price for markers under the guise of installation and maintenance charges.

*147 It is alleged also that the rules and regulations of the association, requiring that it make all installations of markers, are arbitrary, unreasonable, contrary to public policy, against the interests of the public, and unlawful. It is alleged further that the sale of markers is in violation of the association’s purposes, that such sales constitute unfair competition with others in said business which do not have a tax-exempt status, and that such activity is therefore contrary to public policy and constitutes a wrongful interference with plaintiff’s and other monument dealers’ business and creates an undue economic advantage for the defendant association. Moreover, it is alleged that all the defendants have participated and are participating in the unlawful acts complained of by the plaintiff in its amended petition, that the plaintiff has been damaged by the acts complained of, that it has no adequate remedy at law, and that it is necessary that the defendants be enjoined from continuing so to act to plaintiff’s damage.

Separate answers were filed on behalf of the cemetery association and the other defendants. In both answers, the corporate capacity of the plaintiff is admitted. It is admitted also that the defendant association is a nonprofit corporation,' that the defendant cemetery association is the owner of and operates Crown Hill Cemetery, that it duly adopted regulations, which among other things provide that only the cemetery association can install and maintain markers in its cemetery, that a charge of $65 is made for the installation and maintenance of a single bronze marker, and that the suppliers of markers, including the plaintiff, were notified of this charge.

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Bluebook (online)
176 N.E.2d 268, 114 Ohio App. 143, 18 Ohio Op. 2d 343, 1961 Ohio App. LEXIS 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daily-monument-co-v-crown-hill-cemetery-assn-ohioctapp-1961.