Gray v. Central Warehouse Co.

106 S.E. 657, 181 N.C. 166, 1921 N.C. LEXIS 37
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 6, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 106 S.E. 657 (Gray v. Central Warehouse Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gray v. Central Warehouse Co., 106 S.E. 657, 181 N.C. 166, 1921 N.C. LEXIS 37 (N.C. 1921).

Opinions

HOKE and STACY, JJ., concurring in opinion upon grounds briefly outlined, and WALKER and ALLEN, JJ., concurring in result. This is an action by George W. Gray, alleging that since 1914 he has been engaged in the business of buying tobacco sold on the floors of the tobacco warehouses located in Kinston, N.C. and up to 1920 had bought large quantities of tobacco, and that the buying of leaf tobacco upon warehouse floors is the principal business and occupation of the plaintiff, who has a license from the U.S. Government to buy leaf tobacco; that the persons, firms, and corporations named as defendants compose a voluntary association known as the Kinston Tobacco Board of Trade, which consists of several warehouses doing business respectively in said town as the Central Warehouse Company, Farmers Warehouse Company, Atlantic Warehouse, Knott Brothers Warehouse, Eagle Warehouse Company, and the New Brick Warehouse Company; that under a rule *Page 167 of the said board of trade no person could buy tobacco on said warehouse floors unless he were a member of the Kinston Tobacco Board of Trade; that heretofore and up to 1920 the membership fee of the said Kinston Tobacco Board of Trade was $25, which sum was so small that any person desiring to buy tobacco could easily become a member of the board of trade with the right and privilege of buying tobacco, but on 23 August, 1920, the said board of trade, the plaintiff not being present and having no notice, adopted a rule fixing the membership fee at $500 and raising the annual dues from $18.50 to $49.50, and also adopted a rule that failure to pay within ten days after notice would forfeit membership. The plaintiff further averred that though a member of the board of trade he was not present at said meeting, and had no notice thereof, and the board of trade, composed of 34 members, increased the membership fee to $500, which was exorbitant and excessive, was intended to reduce competition among the buyers by limiting the number of competing bidders; that the dominant and controlling members of the said Kinston Board of Trade are the representatives of the Imperial Tobacco Company, Export Tobacco Company, Liggett Myers Tobacco Company, and the American Tobacco Company, and the warehouses in said town, and that the purpose of the said tobacco companies was, by diminishing competition among buyers, to purchase the tobacco upon the warehouse floors at the lowest possible price with the result that said tobacco companies would obtain tobacco at a less price than it was reasonably worth, and in this way the tobacco growers in that section of the State are compelled to take less for their tobacco than the same is fairly worth, it being the purpose and object of said combination of manufacturers to purchase the tobacco at the lowest possible price by eliminating the independent buyer or reducing the strength and number of the independent buyers, and that for that purpose said companies gave notice through the President of the Kinston Tobacco Board of Trade, he being one of the buyers for the Export Tobacco Company, to each of the said warehouses that if any of the said warehouses accepted any bid from the plaintiff for tobacco on the said warehouse floor, then the said tobacco companies, i. e., the Imperial Tobacco Company, the Export Tobacco Company, Liggett Myers Tobacco Company, the American Tobacco Company, and the other companies above named, would withdraw their buyers from said market and the floors of said warehouse offending, and not buy any tobacco offered for sale thereon, and he avers that the reason assigned for refusing the plaintiff's membership which was that he had "nested" tobacco, was a pretext and he was found guilty without giving the plaintiff an opportunity to be heard or requesting him to give information though the charge was untrue and false; whereupon the plaintiff brought this action for damages to his *Page 168 reputation and character and humiliation for such unjust expulsion, and denies that the defendants had the right to exclude him from buying on the floors of said warehouses, and asked for an injunction to compel them to accept bids made by him for tobacco sold upon their said warehouse floors, and deliver upon payment therefor. The defendants answered, denying some of the allegations and admitting others, and the court in its judgment granted an injunction to the hearing, finding as facts that "the defendants, Central Warehouse Company, Farmers Warehouse Company, Atlantic Warehouse Company, Knott Brothers Warehouse, Eagle Warehouse Company, and the New Brick Warehouse, are each and all public tobacco warehouses, doing business as warehousemen in the city of Kinston, and that each and every one of the said warehouses declined and refused to admit the plaintiff, George W. Gray, dealer in leaf tobacco, holding registration under United States statute, marked Exhibit `A,' and filed in the record, to purchase or bid for tobacco upon the warehouse floors of the said respective warehouses for the reason that the said George W. Gray was not a member of the Kinston Tobacco Board of Trade, the plaintiff having been expelled upon the charge of nesting tobacco, and the court being of the opinion that the said defendant warehouses above named cannot refuse to permit plaintiff to bid whether the allegations of their answers are true or not," and restrained the above named warehouse companies and other persons named in the complaint from preventing "the said George W. Gray, the plaintiff, to bid for tobacco offered for sale upon the floors of the said respective warehouses at public auction, and to buy the same when his said bid is the highest bid therefor, and to deliver the same to him upon the payment therefor," and "consideration of the issues raised by the pleadings is continued to be heard and to be determined in due course and practice of this court and the cause is retained for further orders." From this order continuing this restraining order to the hearing the defendants appealed. The only question presented is whether under the allegations of the complaint and admissions in the answer, and on the facts found by him, his Honor was justified in entering the order appealed from.

The Kinston Board of Trade is a voluntary organization, and they had the right to exclude or expel the plaintiff from membership therein with or without cause, and his Honor properly held that he did not pass upon that question, but inasmuch as the defendant warehouse companies *Page 169 were operating their property "affected with the public use," he rightly held that they had no power to exclude the plaintiff from buying because he was or was not a member of that organization.

The plaintiff's cause of action is not because of his exclusion from the board of trade, but because he was forbidden to buy on the floor of the warehouses, and damages for such interference with his business and because of the humiliation and damages to his business by the publicity given to the allegation that he had been expelled for improper conduct. This raises issues of fact for the jury on the question of damages, and whether the allegation by the board of trade that he had been guilty of "nesting" tobacco was truthful or not. These issues were continued to the trial to be passed on by the jury. But the court held that whether he was a member of the board of trade or not did not entitle the defendants to exclude him as a buyer, and his Honor properly continued the order restraining the defendants from excluding the plaintiff as a buyer until the hearing. The order appealed from provides that "the plaintiff is to be accepted as a buyer only when his is the highest bid and on payment."

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.E. 657, 181 N.C. 166, 1921 N.C. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-central-warehouse-co-nc-1921.