Hollingsworth v. Texas Hay Ass'n.

246 S.W. 1068
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 19, 1922
DocketNo. 8423. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 246 S.W. 1068 (Hollingsworth v. Texas Hay Ass'n.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hollingsworth v. Texas Hay Ass'n., 246 S.W. 1068 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

This appeal is from an order of the court below refusing to dissolve a temporary injunction it had theretofore issued in the case of Texas Hay Association v. L. D. Hollingsworth and Others.

The hay association, a corporation organized under our new Co-operative Marketing Act of 1921 (General Laws 37th Leg. c. 22, p. 45 [Vernon’s Sayles’ Statutes, 1922 Supplement, c. 7A, art. Lff^k et seq.]), sued Hollingsworth and wife, Edwards, Jockusch, and Stansel, alleging that Hollingsworth was a member of the association and as such had contracted with it to sell and market all hay produced or acquired by him only to and through it; fhat, having become dissatisfied with the contract, he was _ attempting to breach it by selling and delivering in the name of his wife different quantities of his hay to Edwards and to Jockusch, and to the latter’s agent, Stansel; that Edwards and Jockusch were hay dealers, had already, received or contraeted to receive through Mrs. Hollingsworth as a medium amounts of hay which to their knowledge Hollingsworth had so agreed to handle exclusively through the hay association, and were inducing and attempting to induce him to break his contract with it, advising, aiding, and abetting him with that purpose and object in view.

It was further averred that the membership of the association comprised a very large majority of the producers of prairie hay throughout South Texas, that it was organized without capital stock for the purpose “of promoting, fostering, and encouraging the intelligent and orderly marketing of agricultural products through co-operation and to eliminate speculation and waste and for the purpose of making distribution of agricultural products as direct as can be efficiently done between producer and consumer, and to stabilize the marketing problems of agricultural products,” and that it could not succeed against such acts as the defendants were charged with so co-operating in committing, nor unless its members delivered to it as contracted all hay produced by them.

Damages against all defendants according to certain schedules provided in the act were sought, and then followed this prayer for injunction:

“Wherefore this plaintiff prays that it be granted a temporary writ of injunction restraining the defendant L. D. Hollingsworth from breaching his contract with this plaintiff *1069 and the marketing and delivering hay to others than to this plaintiff, and from seeking to evade and avoid the terms of his said contract with this association and compelling him to deliver all hay made and saved by him to this association under the terms of his contract with this association, and likewise enjoining him from marketing any hay in and through the name of his wife, Mrs. L. D. Hollingsworth, and through her instrumentality, and enjoining Mrs. Hollingsworth from marketing any hay of the said L. D. Hollingsworth in her name contrary to the terms of this contract with this association, and likewise restraining the defendants Thomas O. Edwards, Julius W. Jockusch, and C. A. Stansel from receiving hay from the said L. D. Hollingsworth, in his own name or in the name of Mrs. L. D. Hol-lingsworth, or from any other member of this association, and from inducing or attempting to induce the defendant L. D. Hollingsworth or any member of this association to sell and deliver hay made by them to said defendants Edwards, Jockusch, and Stansel, and not to this plaintiff, and inducing the defendant L. D. Hollingsworth to evade and avoid the terms of his contract with this association, and from aiding, conspiring, and abetting the said L. D. Hollingsworth in his attempt to evade and avoid said contract, and restraining said Hol-lingsworth from delivering said car No. 61881 with hay to the defendant Edwards and the defendant Edwards from receiving same.”

On hearing the plaintiff’s petition, the1 court granted the writ in all things as prayed for, and later refused, on motion, to dissolve it, from which decree the defendants L. D. Hollingsworth and T. O. Edwards have appealed.

Jockusch, Stansel, and Mrs. Hollingsworth have not complained here; so, as concerns them, the trial court’s action is not challenged.

Neither side to the appeal has filed briefs in this court; merely a memorandum of authorities in its own behalf having been presented by the appellee.

It is accordingly not entirely clear on just what grounds appellants base their attack upon the order, but, if their motions in the lower court to dissolve it are to be considered as embodying their objections, they are these:

(1) The contract ' between Hollingsworth and the association fbr exclusive marketing through it is in violation of article 1, § 26, of our Constitution and of chapter 1, tit. 130, of our Revised Statutes, in that it so stifles competition, restricts trade and commerce, and endeavors to control prices in the hay business in Texas as to constitute a monopoly and a trust.

(2) The contract is in derogation of the law under which the association was organized — that is, article 14^A of Vernon’s Sayles’ Civil Statutes — in that through it the association is not confining its membership and business operations to the community in which it is domiciled, to wit, Houston, Harris county, Tex., as such statute requires, but is attempting to operate at Pearland, in Brazoria county, Tex., the home of Hollings-worth.

(3) The contract is ' unilateral and not binding on Hollingsworth, in that it seeks to obligate him to sell and deliver to the association all hay produced or acquired by him during the years 1921. to 1925, inclusive, whereas by its terms the association, is not bound to buy any of such hay, but merely undertakes to act as Hollingsworth’s agent to sell the same in such manner as in its discretion it deems best.

(4) That, even if originally valid, the contract was subsequently breached by the association in a number of particulars: (a) Although therein agreeing to handle and sell the hay of members only, it in fact bought and handled hay from others; (b) while it so contracted to buy all Hollingsworth’s hay, it bought none, but merely received and held it for marketing purposes, in some instances advancing money on it; (c) in not accepting and in good faith endeavoring to market all of Hollingsworth’s product, but in fact limiting the amount it would handle, then refusing to sell much of what it had on hand when there was a good market price obtainable; and, finally, in charging such grossly excessive . expenses for handling against what it did sell as to reduce his returns far below what he could have individually obtained in the open market, thereby in effect confiscating his property.

On the record presented here we cannot say that any of these defensive matters should have prevailed. In so far as they involve fact issues, the statement of facts discloses sufficient evidence to support the trial court’s judgment refusing to sustain them. Appellant Hollingsworth admitted being a member of the association and that he had made the contract it declared on.

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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W. 1068, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hollingsworth-v-texas-hay-assn-texapp-1922.