Kroger Grocery & Baking Co. v. Butchers Hide Ass'n

8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 222, 20 Ohio Dec. 33, 1909 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 68
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedApril 13, 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 222 (Kroger Grocery & Baking Co. v. Butchers Hide Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kroger Grocery & Baking Co. v. Butchers Hide Ass'n, 8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 222, 20 Ohio Dec. 33, 1909 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 68 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

Hunt, J.

This is -an action to recover the sum of $1,500 alleged to be due plaintiff by the defendant as an unpaid balance for certain hides alleged to have been delivered by the plaintiff to the defendant and sold by the defendant' for plaintiff during the months of January, February, March and part of April, 1905.

The pleadings and evidence establish the following facts: The defendant corporation is a corporation organized for the purpose of curing, selling and marketing the beef hides of its customers. Section 8 of the constitution, regulations and by[223]*223laws of the defendant company duly adopted, was and is as follows:

‘ ‘ The proceeds of the sales of hides, after deducting all the ' expenses of the association and such further sum as the board of directors may think proper to reserve for the payment of dividends on capital stock, shall be divided among the members who have delivered their hides to the association, in proportion to the number of pounds of hides contributed by each respectively. Such settlement or division shall be made semiannually or oftener, as the board of directors, may, from time to time, determine.
“Any member of the association, who shall be desirous of receiving cash for his hides on delivery to the association, shall receive such price for his hides at the time of their delivery as may be fixed by the board of directors from time to time.
“Such member as shall take advantage of this provision, shall also be entitled to share in the dividends of his proceeds of the sales of hides- as -above provided — provided, if he has contributed all his hides to the association from the time of the next preceding division, but not otherwise.
‘ ‘ In making such division, the cash received from time to time, on delivery of hides, shall be deducted from the sum such member otherwise would have received.”

It is further established that under said by-law the defendant company conducted its business by receiving hides from its various stockholders, giving each stockholder a book in which such hides would be receipted for, and at the end of each month the directors of the defendant company would meet and after taking into consideration the Chicago and local market prices of hides, would fix a fair market price for the hides- received during the preceding month, which would be credited in the book of the stockholders delivering the hides, and for which a check would be delivered or mailed to such stockholders, and that at the end of each six months the profits of the company would be estimated and, after deducting an amount for dividends to all the stockholders, the balance would be divided among the stockholders who had delivered all their hides during such six months to the defendant company in proportion to the amount of hides furnished. The defendant after receiving the hides from its customers, would sort, scrape, cure and [224]*224prepare them for the market. The hides of the several stockholders were not separately prepared and sold.

The firm of Shappel, Nagel, & Yingling were butchers and had been stockholders of the defendant company, delivering all their hides to the defendant and receiving pay therefor as above described. They knew of the by-law above mentioned and of defendant’s method of doing business thereunder. ' Some time prior to January 1, 1905, the Kroger Grocery & Baking Company bought out the business and assets of Shappel, Nagel & Yingling and thereby became a stockholder in the defendant company. Mr. Nagel became vice-president of the Kroger Company and Mi?’ Yingling the manager of the packing house and butchering ..department of such company. As such manager Mr. Yingling sent the hides of the plaintiff company to the defendant company during the' months above mentioned. The plaintiff company was credited therefor and paid the prices fixed monthly by. the directors of the defendant company, amounting to $8,279.47, but in April, Mr. Kroger, the president of the plaintiff company, ordered no further hides to be delivered to the defendant. At the end of six months he demanded what he claimed to be his company’s proportion of the profits distributable under the by-law to all stockholders who ■ had delivered all their hides, which demand was refused because the plaintiff company had not delivered all its hides to .the defendant during such six months.

The evidence further shows that the stockholders who had delivered all their hides to the defendant during the six months ending July 1st, 1905, were awarded .a dividend under the by-law of $1.20 per hundred pounds, and that plaintiff had delivered up to the time when he refused to make.further deliveries, 107,465 pounds of hides. If the plaintiff had been included in the number of stockholders-to whom this dividend was paid, such.dividend would necessarily have been less than $1.20 per hundred, but the evidence does mot disclose how much less.

Plaintiff claims that even if-the by-law was valid, under a proper construction thereof the defendant was simply plaintiff’s agent in the sale.of its hides and that, after deducting certain charges, the amount, thereof the plaintiff neither alleges or es[225]*225tablishes by evidence, the plaintiff is entitled to the pro rata share of what the hides were sold for by the defendant, offering, however, no evidence as to what the hides wer sold for, except inferentially by the amount paid to. plaintiff in connection with the $1.20 per hundred dividend. Plaintiff claims that the monthly amounts received by the plaintiff were simply payments on account.

The plaintiff as a stockholder in the defendant company is chargeable with knowledge of the by-law, and through Mr. Nagel and Mr. Tingling is charged with actual knowledge thereof, and of the defendants method of doing business and of the defendant’s method of fixing the amount paid to its shareholders for hides. It therefore had notice of the actual construction of such by-law by the defendant company. It made no objection thereto, and therefore knew that the hides delivered by it to the defendant were received by the defendant to be paid for under such by-law and method of doing business and no other.

■ Where parties to a written agreement have by their own acts, placed a practical construction thereon, unless such construction is manifestly contrary to the terms of such agreement, it will be followed, especially where there is any ambiguity. Examining, however, the by-law as a whole and giving effect to all its parts, it seems that the monthly payments made by the order of the board of directors, where such board has acted in good faith, is as set forth specifically in the by-law the “price” of the hides, and that under the by-law the plaintiff has no further claim against the defendant, except as for dividends under the conditions of such by-law. The plaintiff arbitrarily refused to comply with such conditions.

Plaintiff further claims that such by-law is illegal as being unreasonable and involving a forfeiture of property or property rights.

There is nothing in the present case showing such by-law to be unreasonable. The defendant company has been doing business in this manner for many years with satisfaction to its stockholders, and the hypothetical cases, referred to by the plaintiff seem to have never occurred. There is no claim or evidence of [226]

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Bluebook (online)
8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 222, 20 Ohio Dec. 33, 1909 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kroger-grocery-baking-co-v-butchers-hide-assn-ohctcomplhamilt-1909.