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

177 Ill. App. 280, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1175
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 29, 1913
DocketGen. No. 16,963
StatusPublished

This text of 177 Ill. App. 280 (Garden City Sand Co. v. Southern Fire Brick & Clay Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois 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., 177 Ill. App. 280, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1175 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Graves

delivered the opinion of the court.

In September, A. D. 1901, Dick N. Lanyon, as party of the first part, James A. Heber and Willis S. Bone-brake, partners under the name of Heber and Bone-brake, as parties of the second part, The Garden City Sand Company, an Illinois corporation, as party of the third part, Hillsdale Fire Brick and Clay Company, an Hlinois corporation, as party of the fourth part, an J. B. and Mrs. Maria Warner, as parties of the fifth part, entered into a quintilateral contract to continue in force for the period of eight years, in which it was, among other things, agreed, in substance, that Lanyon, the party of the first part, should open and maintain on certain lands owned by him at Hills-dale, Indiana, and therein described, a mine and plant for producing fire clay, the same to have a sufficient capacity to supply all the fire clay required by the business done under the contract, and should not work, lease or operate any other plant on any land owned by him in Indiana, during the life of the contract; that the second party should operate the plant; that the first and second parties should mine, grind, screen and load on cars and deliver to the third, fourth and fifth parties clay for 77% cents per ton in such quantities and at such times as the third, fourth and fifth parties should from time to time order, not less than 1,040 tons of clay per month, and not to sell fire clay to any other persons or corporations than the third, fourth and fifth parties to the contract; that the third, fourth and fifth parties should buy no fire clay produced in Indiana except such as is produced by the first and second parties; “that they will make the greatest possible endeavor to sell all clay produced” by the first and second parties, and should “jointly but not severally” order and pay for not less than an average of 1,040 tons of clay per month and pay therefor 77% cents per ton, and that they will enter into no combination or trust to limit the output of the plants of the first and second parties; that the contract should be binding on all the parties and on the heirs, executors, administrators and assigns of the first, second and fifth parties,' and on the successors of the third and fourth parties. This contract was recorded in the recorder’s office in the county where the lands described in it lies. Lanyon began the erection of a plant in accordance with the terms of the contract, but never finished it. In the spring of 1902 the appellee corporation, The Southern Fire Brick and Clay Company, was formed, and with full knowledge, not only of the existence of the contract, but also of its terms, bought the land from Lanyon, on which the partially erected plant stood, the same being part of the premises described in the contract above mentioned. It pulled down so much of the plant as Lanyon had erected and built in its place a much more extensive plant, which was completed by the spring of 1903, wb,e.n appellee began to put on the market clay, both raw and manufactured, from the part of the land purchased by it from Lanyon, at a price low enough “to move its products,” as low in some instances as 90 cents per ton, which it continued to do until enjoined from so doing at the instance of appellant. After appellee had purchased the land and before the Lanyon plant was pulled down and while appellee was building its new plant, appellants notified appellee in writing of their contract and their intention to insist upon all their rights under it. To these notices and to the rights of appellants, appellee paid no heed. On April 4, 1903, after the parties of the third, fourth and fifth part to this contract, the appellants here, learned that appellee was mining and disposing of fire clay from the .lands covered by the contract, filed their bill in chancery in the Superior Court, praying for an injunction restraining the appellee from continuing to mine and sell.the clay, and that appellee be required to account to appellants for all the clay mined from the Lanyon lands in violation of the contract. To this bill appellee and the parties of the first and second part to the contract were all eventually made defendants. Both the Appellate and-Supreme Courts in due course determined the rights of the parties to the bill, so far as the question of injunction was concerned, and held that the complainants in the bill were entitled to the relief sought and remanded the cause to the Superior Court for further proceedings not inconsistent with the opinion of the Appellate Court. See Garden City Sand Co. v. Southern Fire Brick & Clay Co., 124 Ill. App. 599, aff’d 223 Ill. 616. In pursuance to the mandate of the Appellate Court, the injunction prayed for in the bill was, on March 5, 1907, ordered and the writ was thereafter issued, and the cause was referred to a master in chancery to hear evidence and take testimony to ascertain what amount of damage, if any, the complainants or either of them had sustained by reason of the removal of the clay, and whether or not and to what amount, if any, either of appellants had been damaged by the failure of Lanyon to complete his contract, and to report his conclusions of law and fact. After taking the evidence the master reported his conclusion to be that appellee had mined and sold fire clay from the premises in question and had made and sold brick from the same between April 3, 1903, and September, 1906, to complainants’ customers in competition with complainants and at reduced prices; that complainants had been damaged thereby and that appellee should respond in damages to appellants “for their loss of business occasioned by said competition and reduced prices;” that prior to April 3,1903, appellants were in the business of selling and sold at a profit fire clay and brick which they obtained from the Hillsdale Fire Brick & Clay Company at a uniform price of $1.00 per ton for fire clay and $9.00 per thousand for brick, and that there was a market for substantially all the fire brick and clay the Hillsdale Company could produce; that after appellee began to market the clay from the Lanyon lands the business of appellants began to fall off and by the time appellee was enjoined from mining the clay on the Lanyon lands, appellants were doing business at a loss and did not renew the lease of the lands from which they were mining the clay marketed by them, but went out of business and that appellants had lost in profits for the years 1903, 1904, 1905 and 1906, the total of $44,070.26, from what they would have made if the profits for each of those years had equaled the amount made by them for the year 1902. The master further found that appellee during the four years above mentioned, mined 55,501 tons of clay; that the average market price of that period was $1.00 per ton; that if the 55,501 tons of clay mined and marketed by appellee had been delivered to appellants and marketed by them they would have made a profit of 22% cents per ton thereon, that being the difference between the contract price of 77% cents per ton and $1.00 per ton, the market price, or a total of $12,487.72, and that appellants were entitled to a decree against appellee for the total of $44,070.26, and $12,487-72, or $56,557.98. Objections and exceptions were duly filed by appellee to the master’s report and on a hearing those exceptions relating to appellants’ right to recover damages from appellee, and the amount thereof, were sustained by the court and a decree was entered denying appellants’ right to such damages.

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Related

Southern Fire Brick & Cray Co. v. Garden City Sand Co.
223 Ill. 616 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1906)
Garden City Sand Co. v. Southern Fire Brick & Clay Co.
124 Ill. App. 599 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 Ill. App. 280, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garden-city-sand-co-v-southern-fire-brick-clay-co-illappct-1913.