Elephant Butte Alfalfa Ass'n. v. Rouault

262 P. 185, 33 N.M. 136
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1926
DocketNo. 2906.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 262 P. 185 (Elephant Butte Alfalfa Ass'n. v. Rouault) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elephant Butte Alfalfa Ass'n. v. Rouault, 262 P. 185, 33 N.M. 136 (N.M. 1926).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

BICKLEY, J.

The plaintiff, Elephant Butte Alfalfa Association, is a corporation organized under the laws of Texas known as the Co-operative Marketing Act, and, by compliance with the laws of New Mexico, authorized to do business therein.

Plaintiff brought suit against the defendant, T. Rouault, for the specific performance of a contract entered into between the plaintiff and defendant, in May, 1921, and for an injunction enjoining him from selling' any of the alfalfa mentioned and described in the contract to any one other than the plaintiff, and'for $300 damages for the alleged breach of said contract, and for expenses, attorneys’ fees, and costs. The plaintiff is a co-operative marketing association, formed for the purpose of engaging in any activity in connection with the marketing and selling of alfalfa, including alfalfa nurse crops, alfalfa products, and alfalfa by-products of its members, and for the purpose of engaging in any activity in connection with the harvesting, preserving, drying, processing, packing, storing, handling, shipping, and utilization of the alfalfa, alfalfa products, and alfalfa by-products, and the manufacturing of alfalfa by-products, of its members, and for the purpose of engaging in any activity in connection with the manufacturing, selling, or supplying, to ■ its members, of machinery, equipment, and supplies, and for the purposes of engaging in any activity in connection with the financing of the above-enumerated activities, and, so far as is authorized by said Co-operative Marketing Act, for the purpose of promoting, fostering, and encouraging the business of producing and marketing alfalfa, alfalfa products, and alfalfa by-products of its members, co-operatively, and for reducing speculation in, and for stabilizing alfalfa markets, and for co-operatively and collectively handling the problems of alfalfa growers, and for all purposes pertilient and incident thereto, and for the purposes of having and exercising all the rights, privileges, and powers granted to corporations organized under said Co-operative Marketing Act.

The Texas Co-operative Marketing Act was passed by the Legislature of the state of Texas in 1921, and is chapter 22 of the General Laws of Texas passed by the Thirty-Seventh Legislature. It is also compiled in Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. Supp. 1922, arts. 14½k-14½yy. The declaration of policy of the act is as follows:

“Section 1. Declaration of Policy. In order to promote, foster and encourage the intelligent and orderly marketing of agricultural products through co-operation and to eliminate speculation and waste; and to make the distribution of agricultural products as direct as can be efficiently done between producer and consumer; and to stabilize the marketing problems of agricultural products, this act is passed.” Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. Supp. 1922, art. 14j4k.

It is alleged that the association is composed of persons who are actual and individual farmers producing alfalfa, operating individual small farms, and actually and principally engaged in the production of alfalfa thereon, in large part by their own labors, untrained in the methods of commercial business, and without ability, means, or facilities for getting or keeping in touch with general market or production conditions, or for obtaining the full market value of their product, and thus, in their divided and unassociated, condition ■ at the mercy of speculative dealers in such products; and said individual farmers producing alfalfa have organized, and are operating, the said plaintiff association as a nonprofit co-operative association without capital stock,, for the purpose of promoting, fostering, and encouraging the business of producing and marketing alfalfa, alfalfa products, and alfalfa by-products of its members, co-operatively, and for reducing speculation in, and for stablizing alfalfa markets, and for co-operatively and collectively handling the problems of alfalfa growers, and for all purposes pertinent and incident thereto, such as procuring facilities for co-operative storage of their alfalfa at reasonable expense, and obtaining advances on their several crops co-operatively, cheaply, and safely, and that said individual farmers producing alfalfa have organized, and are operating, the said plaintiff association for no other purpose, and that all the members of said plaintiff association are such individual small farmers so producing alfalfa, and no corporation or other combination is a member thereof.

The contract itself purports to be an agency contract, and appoints plaintiff as agent of the defendant to market his product for his benefit, and without profit to the association. The periods covered by the contract include 1921 to 1925. The subject-matter of the contract is the sale and disposal of the alfalfa grown by and for the defendant. The complaint alleges that the defendant is a grower of alfalfa, and is a member of the association; that he entered into a contract with the plaintiff that he would consign or deliver to plaintiff or to plaintiff’s order all of the alfalfa produced by or for defendant during the term of the contract for the co-operative marketing and handling thereof by plaintiff and the return to defendant of all his proportionate share of the proceeds of such cooperative marketing and handling, less his proportionate share of the actual expenses of such co-operative marketing and handling, and whereby the defendant also agreed to and with plaintiff to pay to plaintiff for all such alfalfa delivered, consigned, withheld, or marketed by or for defendant otherwise than to or through plaintiff the sum of $5 per ton as liquidated damages for such breach of said written agreement, the plaintiff and defendant agreeing that the said written agreement is one of a series dependent for its true value upon the adherence by defendant to said agreement. It is alleged that defendant has failed and refused to perform said contract, and that said defendant threatens to continue to disregard the obligation of his said agreement, and to deliver, sell, and consign alfalfa produced by him and for him to persons other than plaintiff, and otherwise than by marketing same through plaintiff, to plaintiff’s great and irreparable injury and damage, by reason of the fact that the obligation of all similar contracts between plaintiff association and its members will thereby be relaxed, and the business of co-operative marketing involved in the organization and operation of said plaintiff will be totally destroyed, and by reason of the fact that the damages resulting therefrom to the plaintiff association and its several members will be practically undeterminable in money value, and that plaintiff has no adequate remedy at law in the premises.

The complaint sets forth in verbatim a copy of the contract, which is essentially the same as co-operative marketing contracts usually employed.

The defendant demurred to the complaint upon the grounds “that same does not set forth allegations sufficient to1 constitute a cause of action.” Several alleged defects are set forth, and those which are argued in the briefs appear in the course of this opinion. The trial court sustained the demurrer, and, plaintiff electing not to plead further, the court rendered judgment dismissing the cause.

The appeal from this judgment involves but a single question — whether or not the complaint states a cause of action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
262 P. 185, 33 N.M. 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elephant-butte-alfalfa-assn-v-rouault-nm-1926.