Garden City Sand Co. v. Southern Fire Brick & Clay Co.

103 N.E. 207, 260 Ill. 231
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 103 N.E. 207 (Garden City Sand Co. v. Southern Fire Brick & Clay Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garden City Sand Co. v. Southern Fire Brick & Clay Co., 103 N.E. 207, 260 Ill. 231 (Ill. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

Plaintiffs in error (hereafter referred to as complainants) filed their bill in chancery in the superior court of Cook county praying ah injunction restraining the Southern Fire Brick and Clay Company, its officers, agents and employees, from selling or delivering any fire clay mined on lands described-in the bill, located in Vermilion .county, Indiana, except to complainants, at any time prior to September 10, 1909, and restraining said Southern Fire Brick and Clay Company from manufacturing any fire clay from said lands into fire brick or any other fire clay product during said period. The bill also prayed that Dick N. Lanyon, James A. Heber and Willis S. Bonebrake be restrained by writ of injunction from selling, using, delivering or manufacturing into fire brick, or any other product, any fire clay mined in the State of Indiana, to or for anyone except complainants, at any time prior to September 10, 1909. The bill also prayed that defendants be decreed to account to the complainants for fire clay that had been, or might after filing the bill be, taken out of the lands mentioned, and for general relief. The superior court dismissed the bill for want of equity. Complainants appealed from that decree to the Appellate Court for the First District. That court held complainants were entitled to the injunction prayed for in the bill and reversed the decree and remanded the cause .to the superior court, with directions to enter a decree for an injunction as prayed. (Southern Fire Brick and Clay Co. v. Garden City Sand Co. 124 Ill. App. 599.) An appeal was prosecuted by the defendants, or some of them, from the judgment of the Appellate Court to this court, where the judgment-of the Appellate Court was affirmed. (Southern Fire Brick and Clay Co. v. Garden City Sand Co. 223 Ill. 616.) Complainants’ right to the fire clay, brick and other products manufactured therefrom, and to the relief prayed in the bill, was based upon a contract' entered into between them and'Danyon, the owner of the land and fire clay, and Heber &: Bonebrake, who were to operate a plant to be erected by Lanyon on the land for the mining and grinding of fire clay. The contract between the parties is set out, in substance, in the opinions of the Appellate Court and this court above referred to. It was to continue in force eight years after the date of its execution, October 26, 1901, and during that period Lanyon agreed not to work, lease or operate any other fire clay plant on any lands he owned or was interested in in the State of Indiana, and he agreed not to sell fire clay to any other persons than complainants during the life of the contract. Complainants agreed to buy no fire clay produced in Indiana except that produced under the contract, and agreed to take and pay for a minimum of 1040 tons of fire clay per month at 77 1/2 cents per ton, and to make the greatest possible effort to sell all the fire clay produced under the contract. In September, 1902, the Southern Fire Brick and Clay Company, with both actual and constructive knowledge of the contract between complainants and Lanyon and Heber & Bonebrake, bought about ninety-three acres of the land from Canyon covered by the contract, and at once erected a large plant for the mining, grinding and manufacturing of fire clay upon said land, and in March, 1903, began to put its product on the market. The injunction was sought to prevent the continuance of the work. The relief prayed was resisted upon the ground that the contract was in unlawful restraint' of trade and therefore invalid, also that complainants had an adequate remedy at law. These defenses were not sustained by this court and the Appellate Court. The contract was held to be a valid contract and not in unlawful restraint of trade, and it was held that complainants were entitled to the writ of injunction. Upon the case being re-instated in the superior court a decree was entered January 3, 1907, vacating the former order and decree and ordering a writ of injunction to issue against defendants, substantially as prayed for in the bill. On the 5th of March, 1907, the chancellor sustained exceptions to supplemental answers of the Southern Fire Brick and Clay Company and Eanyon, filed September 31, 1906, and entered a decree that the defendants account to complainants for all the fire clay they, or either of them, had taken from the lands described in the bill since the date it was filed, April 4, 1903, or which they might thereafter take. The cause was ordered referred to a master in chancery for the purpose of ascertaining the amount of fire clay, if any, that had been so taken, and in what amount, if any, complainants had been damaged or injured by reason of the taking of clay from the premises. The case was pending before the master nearly three and one-half years, during which time a vast amount of evidence was heard by him. In a lengthy and exhaustive report reviewing the testimony the master found complainants had sustained damages to the extent of $56,557.98, and recommended that a decree be entered therefor. Exceptions of defendants were sustained to the report on the grotlnd that complainants were not entitled to damages, and a decree was entered to that effect. On appeal by complainants to the Appellate Court for the First District the decree of the superior court was affirmed, and upon the petition of complainants for writ of certiorari the record is brought to this court for review.

A brief statement of some of the important facts will aid in a better understanding of the situation.

The fire clay accessible to the markets of Chicago and its vicinity is found in Vermilion county, Indiana, and at Utica and Ottawa, in LaSalle county, Illinois. Freight rates for transportation of the clay and its products form a considerable part of the cost to the consumer. The rates from the plants in Illinois and Indiana to Chicago were about the same, so that plants in both places could compete with each other in the Chicago market and had an advantage in freight rates in that market over plants located in other States at more distant points. For points in the territory supplied from the plants in Illinois and Indiana, the plants nearest the consumer, because of the reduced freight rates, practically controlled the market for their product in that immediate vicinity. Complainant the Hillsdale Fire Brick and Clay Company- was a producing company organized in 1900 for the mining, grinding and manufacturing of fire clay in Vermilion county, Indiana. Complainants J. B. and Maria Warner owned one-half the stock in that corporation, and complainant the Garden City Sand Company, a selling company,. owned the other half. The entire product of the Hillsdale Fire Brick and Clay Company was sold to the Warners and the Garden City Sand Company. The territory was divided between them until 1902, when the Warners turned the whole territory over to the Garden City Sand Company under an agreement whereby the Warners were to be paid a commission upon all sales in the territory which had formerly been theirs. After purchasing the land from Lanyon the Southern Fire Brick and Clay Company erected a plant at a cost of about $250,000, with about three times the capacity of the Hillsdale company or the Utica and Ottawa plants.

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Bluebook (online)
103 N.E. 207, 260 Ill. 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garden-city-sand-co-v-southern-fire-brick-clay-co-ill-1913.