Farmer v. Board of Trade

78 Mo. App. 557, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 90
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 6, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 78 Mo. App. 557 (Farmer v. Board of Trade) 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
Farmer v. Board of Trade, 78 Mo. App. 557, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 90 (Mo. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

Plaintiff is a member of the board of trade of Kansas City, Missouri, an unincorporated voluntary association. One of the defendants is the Board of Trade and the other defendants are the directors thereof. The object of plaintiff’s petition is to restrain the defendants from suspending or expelling him from his membership, on charges preferred by Perine Brothers, as he alleges they are about to do. A temporary restraining order was issued by the circuit court which was afterwards dissolved and plaintiff has brought the case here.

Statement. The association is governed by a constitution and rules thereunder. The constitution is contractual in form, being signed by the members and is, in effect, a contract between them to act and conduct themselves under its provisions. It provided, among many other things, for the prompt and equitable settlement of claims; for the arbitration of disputes; for the suppression of boisterous or indecorous conduct; against extortion, deception or false and fraudulent practices in business dealings; against false or slanderous reports relative to the [562]*562business affairs of other members, or relative to the committees or officers of the association; against the bringing of suits on account of any act of the officers or committeemen of the association; and providing that if the member did so he should be taken to have thereby resigned his membership.

It appears that Perine Brothers were also members of the board of trade and that they sold to plaintiff a lot of wheat amounting in price to the sum of $2,172.41. It further appears that plaintiff held a note for $1,000 and interest, dated December 15, 1888, given by one Chas. II. Comstock to Perine & Hall and by them indorsed in blank, protest waived, of which he claimed to be the innocent purchaser, for value, before due, which he claimed as a set-off to- the purchase price of the wheat. Perine Brothers refused to allow it as a set-off, or to admit any liability thereon and claimed that the wheat deal was a cash transaction and so understood between the parties. In this state of the difficulty, Perine Brothers made complaint to the directory of the board affirming their claim against plaintiff on account of the sale of the wheat and demanded an arbitration as is provided by the constitution of the association on disputes between members. An arbitration was ordered by the board. Plaintiff was notified of this and answered that he admitted the claim for the wheat and that there was nothing to arbitrate, but that he claimed the set-off aforesaid. Whereupon the directory rescinded the order to arbitrate and passed a resolution requiring plaintiff within two days to pay to the secretary of the board for the use of Perine Brothers, the amount of the wheat deal aforesaid, and that the secretary should pay over said sum to Perine Brothers upon their executing a bond in such form, amount and security as was satisfactory to the president of the board, conditioned to refund to plaintiff, “so much of the sum so paid by it to the secretary, as may, in a suit in court to be begun by it on said bond on or before the twenty-fifth [563]*563day of February, 1898, be determined it had an offset to by virtue of any claim held by it on the twenty-fifth day of February, 1898, against Perine Brothers, which was not connected with or did not arise from any matter referred to in the constitution, rules and regulations of this association. Such bond shall contain a provision that Perine Brothers, by executing the same, do not admit that there is any liability on their part to said commission company.

“If either party refuses, within the time fixed herein, to comply with any provisions of this resolution, or refuses to submit to arbitrate under the constitution, rules and regulations of this association, then, upon charges being preferred of a violation of any provision of such constitution, rules or regulations, the board shall hear and determine the same.”

Plaintiff was notified of such action of the board and having refused to comply with the resolution, Perine Brothers made complaint against him as having violated section 1, rule 9, of the constitution of the association in relation to the prompt settlement of claims and submission of disputes to arbitration. He was notified to appear before the directory on February 15 to answer the charge. Before the directory acted plaintiff had obtained the temporary injunction herein.

Thereafter one of Perine Brothers made what is termed an amended complaint against plaintiff, in which he set forth with some degree of particularity his charges against plaintiff. He charged, first, that plaintiff failed to pay the price for the wheat. Second, that he refused to submit any dispute as to such demand, or an offset thereto, to arbitration. Third, that he purchased the wheat leading the Perines to believe it was a cash transaction, when he fraudulently had the concealed purpose of using a disputed demand against one of the members of the firm of Perine Brothers, as an offset. Fourth, that he had made and circulated false reports against the officers, appointees and committees of.the association. Fifth, that by instituting the injunction pro[564]*564ceedings herein and prosecuting the same, he has, by virtue of article 22 of the constitution, resigned and surrendered his membership in the association. Plaintiff was likewise notified of this complaint and directed to appear before the board of directors for trial on March 1, 1898. The continuation of this cause in the circuit court and here on appeal, has prevented any further proceeding by the board of directors.

The contention of the directors is that the board of trade being a voluntary association of individuals bound together by rules and regulations which the members have adopted by subscribing their names thereto is an organization based on the contract of the parties, whereby they have each agreed to surrender many rights, legal and otherwise; that a violation of this agreement dissolves the connection of the offender with the association, and authorizes the directory, in the manner provided by the rules, to so declare; that a member is confined to the procedure named in the rules for a redress of any grievance and is altogether precluded from a resort to the courts of the country. The logical result of this contention, as elaborated in the brief and argument of counsel, is that such association is omnipotent.

Voluntary associations: board of trade: authirity over member. This, we think, is going too far. The association, though voluntary, can not violate the law of the land. It can not transcend the limits of natural justice, or the public policy of the state. It can not violate 7 its own rules, or the mutual contract of the _ parties and put an end to a member’s membership merely at the caprice of the directory, or without notice to him, or by fraudulent devices and pretenses. This will be found to be the direct or implied concession of the authorities hereinafter cited as well as of Dawkins v. Antrobus, L. R. 17 Ch. Div. 615; Labouchere v. Earl of Warncliffe, L. R. 13 Ch. Div. 346; Sperry’s Appeal, 116 Pa. St. 391; People v. Union, 118 N. Y. 101; Commonwealth v. Union League, 135 Pa. St. 325 ; Connelly [565]*565v. Masonic M. B. Ass’n, 58 Conn. 552; Houston v. Rentlinger, 91 Ky. 333; State v. Williams, 16 N. C. 134.

—:—:— On the other hand, there is no doubt but that one becoming a member of such association may surrender many rights.

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Related

Beall v. Board of Trade
148 S.W. 386 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1912)
Evans v. Chamber of Commerce of Minneapolis
91 N.W. 8 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1902)
State ex rel. Mayfield v. St. Louis Medical Society
91 Mo. App. 76 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1901)
Brandenburger v. Jefferson Club Ass'n
88 Mo. App. 148 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 Mo. App. 557, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmer-v-board-of-trade-moctapp-1899.