Kentucky Utilities Co. v. Carlisle Ice Co.

131 S.W.2d 499, 279 Ky. 585, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 320
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 16, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 131 S.W.2d 499 (Kentucky Utilities Co. v. Carlisle Ice Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kentucky Utilities Co. v. Carlisle Ice Co., 131 S.W.2d 499, 279 Ky. 585, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 320 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion oe the Court by

Morris, Commissioner—

Reversing.

Appellant, among other activities engaged in the manufacture and sale of ice, operating one of its plants in Clinton, Hickman County. It sells its products to wholesale dealers and peddlers, who in turn sell at retail in the town, neighboring towns and adjacent territory. Appellee operated a plant in Bardwell, Carlisle County, and since 1927 had been selling its output in Bardwell; Wickliffe, in Ballard County, and neighboring towns where it had established a trade.

It appears from the record that the usual customary neighborhood price for ice, at wholesale, delivered at the plant, was $4 per ton. In lesser quantities, 50c per cwt. when delivered. One Cosby was selling ice in Bardwell and vicinity prior to and in 1935 and 1936. He was a retailer and peddler. In 1933 the mayor of the town complained that the price of ice was too high. Cosby was paying as he says, sixty and seventy cents per cwt. Some arrangement was made whereby Cosby was enabled to sell at forty and fifty cents per cwt.

Appellee was a competitor, selling in Bardwell and vicinity; in some neighboring villages in the same and adjoining counties. Cosby, prior to 1936, did not buy ice from either appellant or appellee. The mayor loaned him an old hearse, which he rigged up as a truck, and he hauled his wares from a Paducah plant. In March 1936 Cosby entered into a written contract with appellant whereby it was to sell him ice during the year 1936, at the plant for the sum of $2.50 per ton. The only conditions in the contract were that he should sell in cer *588 tain territory, and"was to purchase in sufficient quantities to supply his customers.

In the latter part of 1935, and the early- -part of 1936, Cosby sold his ice at 40c per cwt. which appears to have been the price maintained by appellee. Early in the 1936 season Cosby learned that Hayden, who was dealing in appellee’s'product, had reduced his price to 30c per cwt. Cosby approached Hayden, who told him he was selling “third grade” ice at-20c. Cosby then reduced his price to 30c per cwt. and this price was maintained until the contract with appellant expired in December 1936.

As a result appellee claims that he lost many of its former customers in the territory theretofore served by it and Cosby; that in 1936 it suffered a loss in profits, all due to the activities of Cosby and the appellant. In July, 1936, before the season closed, appellee filed a petition (later transferred to the equity docket) in which it plead substantially the facts above set out, and others. The petition in form and substance was sufficient to entitle it to the relief sought, damages in treble of $3,000, the amount of alleged actual monetary loss, and an injunction against appellant. It was alleged that the acts of appellant were performed for the purpose of driving appellee out of business. •

Appellee denied the allegations of the petition and asserted that its sale to Cosby was in good faith, and in order to meet competition from another point; that it was in no wise responsible for Cosby’s retail sales. It plead that its sale to Cosby in March, 1936, was by written contract entered into prior to the effective date of Chapter 109, Acts of the General Assembly, regular 1936 session. (Now Section 4748h-l et seq., 1936 Kentucky Statutes.) That the law was enacted in February, 1936, and did not become operative until May 16, 1936, and it is plead and argued, that to apply the provisions of the Act to this sale would be in violation of both federal and state constitutions, which prohibit the passing of any law interfering with the freedom of contracts. U. S. C. A. Constitution, Article 1, Section 10; Constitution of Kentucky, Section 19. An amended answer was filed, but it in no sense made affirmative defensive plea.

A reply denied the affirmative allegations of the answer and plead that if the court should hold that the arrangement between appellant and Cosby constituted him *589 an independent dealer, then such sales at $2.50 per ton was below production cost during the year 1936, and likewise "below the price at which appellant sold ice to other independent dealers; that these acts in violation of law, contributed to bring about the injuries. The issues were completed by appellant’s rejoinder. Proof was taken and upon submission the court adjudged substantially as follows:

That the Act of 1936, Chapter 129-A, Kentucky Statutes, is a valid legislative enactment, and not violative of any provision of the state or federal constitution. The court found that previous to, and at the time of the passage of the Act, appellee was engaged in distributing ice in Barclwell, Wickliffe and adjacent territory, and that defendant was not then so engaged; the established and customary prices for ice were 50c per cwt., delivered, and 40c per cwt. at platform.

_ Appellant was engaged in the manufacture and sale of ice at Clinton, where the established prices were $4 per ton to dealers and peddlers at platform and 50c delivered at retail. The court then says: “ It is therefore found and adjudged that by selling ice” during the season of 1936 “to H. E. Cosby at $2.50' per ton, to be sold and delivered in the towns * * * and permitting the resale by Cosby at prices below those theretofore established, appellant has violated the provisions of said Act, and that as a direct and proximate result of such violation the plaintiff has sustained actual damages amounting to $688, and is entitled to recover of. defendant under the provisions of said act the sum of' $2,064.00” which was adjudged.

The court also, “Perpetually enjoined appellant from selling or delivering, or permitting to be sold or delivered in (the towns named) ice manufactured or sold by it at a price below the reasonable cost of production and a legitimate profit at the dealers place of business, and that delivered to customers by retail — and is further enjoined from unfair and discriminatory practices by which fair and honest competition is destroyed or prevented.”

From the judgment defendant has appealed and appellee is cross-appealing on the ground of inadequacy of damages and because the injunction is not sufficiently restrictive.

Turning now to the Act, we find that it prohibits the *590 sale or furnishing of any commodity at a lower rate in the same, or in one territory than in another. In a separate section the sale or distribution of commodities at less than cost of production or replacement is prohibited. As indicated by the chancellor, a violation of the terms of the Act visits upon the offender treble the amount of actual damage suffered. Injunctive relief is also provided. The Act provides also that the offender, in addition to the damages in treble, and an order restraining, may upon conviction be fined or imprisoned, or both. Upon a third conviction of violating any of the denounced acts, offender may, under quo warranto proceedings by the Attorney General, be barred from engaging in business forever, or for a lesser period, in the discretion of the court.- The Act is not “sans teeth.”

There is one provision of the Act to which the court did not advert in his opinion or judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
131 S.W.2d 499, 279 Ky. 585, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-utilities-co-v-carlisle-ice-co-kyctapphigh-1939.