Malakoff Gin Co. v. Riddlesperger

133 S.W. 519, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 888
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 10, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 133 S.W. 519 (Malakoff Gin Co. v. Riddlesperger) 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
Malakoff Gin Co. v. Riddlesperger, 133 S.W. 519, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 888 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

This suit was instituted by the appellant, Malakoff Gin Company, against the appellees, O. A. Riddlesperger and S. J. Riddlesperger, alleging, in substance, that on July 9, 1907, the plaintiff was a copartnership composed of Harry Flagg and others; that on said date the defendants sold and delivered to said copart-nership their entire gin plant mill and machinery, consisting of a cotton gin, gristmill, and other machinery attached to the same situated in the town of Malakoff, Henderson county, Tex.; that as an inducement to the said purchase and sale the defendants also sold and conveyed to said copartnership, under its firm name of Malakoff Gin Company and their successors, their good will in the ginning business in the town of Malakoff, and obligated themselves in writing not to engage, either directly or indirectly, in the business of ginning or milling, nor become interested in any other gin and mill in the Malakoff community so long as the said purchasers might operate said gin or mill in the community of Malakoff; that thereafter, in the year 1908, the copartnership, Malakoff Gin Company, by that name, was duly incorporated und,er the laws of Texas, the same parties who composed the said copartnership firm becoming the stockholders and officers of the said corporation, the plaintiff herein; that the corporation Malakoff Gin Company succeeded to and had [520]*520transferred to it all the gin and mill property and good will, purchased by the Mala-koff Qin Company as a copartnership from the defendants, and has continued to run the same since the date of their said purchase; that, in violation of their agreement not to engage in the business of ginning or milling, the defendants, on the 15th day of August, 1908, procured the erection of another gin and mill in the Malakoff community, and from that date up to the time of the institution of this suit have engaged in the operation of said gin in said community, ginning much cotton, to plaintiff’s damage $3,500, for which it prayed judgment. The defendants answered by general and special demurrers, a general denial and special plea. These demurrers were, among other things, to the effect: (1) That plaintiff’s petition showed no cause of aetion; (2) that the agreement alleged by plaintiff to have been made by the defendants with the Malakoff Gin 'Company as a copartnership not to engage in the business of ginning in the Malakoff community so long as said copartnership operated the gin or mill purchased from defendants in said community, the breach of which is the basis of this suit, was void because in violation of section 7 of the anti-trust law of this state, passed in 1903 (Laws 1903, c. 94), prohibiting a combination of capital, skill, or acts By two or more persons, firms, or corporations to abstain from engaging in or continuing business, etc., partially or entirely within this state or any portion thereof; (3) that said contract is void because it is contrary to the anti-trust law, in that it creates or tends to create and carry out restrictions in trade or commerce or aids to commerce, and creates and tends to create and carry out restrictions in the preparation of cotton and cotton seed for market or transportation, and creates or tends to create and carry out restrictions in the free pursuit of ginning and preparing cotton and cotton seed for market or transportation, a business permitted and authorized by law. These special demurrers, as well as the defendants’ general demurrer, were overruled, a jury impaneled, and, at the conclusion of the evidence, the court directed the jury to return a verdict for the defendants, which was done, and judgment entered in accordance therewith. From this judgment the plaintiff appealed.

The record does not affirmatively disclose the ground upon which the court’s action in directing a verdict for the defendants was based; but the appellant assumes in its assignments of error and complains that the court erroneously construed the contract, upon which it relies for a recovery to mean that, in order to constitute a violation of the stipulation therein to the effect that defendants would not, so long as the Malakoff Gin Company, as a copartnership firm, operated the gin or mill in question in the Malakoff community, engage in or become interested in any other gin or mill in that community, said firm must continue to run and operate said gin and mill, and that the change of the firm to a corporation and the succession and operation by it of said gin and mill, even though the members of said firm became the stockholders and officers of the corporation, would avoid that provision of the contract. This assumption on the part of the appellant is justified in view of the fact that the court overruled the defendants’ exceptions to plaintiff’s petition, and the question presented is: Was such construction of the contract erroneous? We have reached the conclusion that it was. There is practically no dispute about the facts. The Malakoff Gin Company was originally a copartnership composed of H. L. Flagg, J. A. Bartlett, and T. A. Bartlett. As such copartnership, on July 9, 1907, they purchased from the appellees the gin and mill property described in the petition. The sale and purchase of the property is evidenced by a bill of sale executed by the ap-pellees expressing a consideration of $4,000 cash, and reciting, in substance, that, as a further inducement to the purchase by the gin company, the appellees covenanted and agreed with said company that, “during the time they operated the said gin or mill in the community in which Malakoff is situated, they would not directly or indirectly engage in or be interested in any other gin or mill in said community.” The Malakoff Gin Company as a copartnership took possession of the gin and mill and operated it during the fall and winter of 1907-08. In February or March, 1908, a Mr. Gilmore of Athens, Tex., bought a third interest in the copartnership business, and in April or May thereafter the copartnership was converted into a corporation under the laws of Texas; the corporate name being the same as the firm or copartnership name. The members of the copartnership became and were the stockholders of the corporation, and all the assets of the copartnership were transferred to the corporation. After the incorporation was perfected, the gin stand and boiler purchased from the appellees were moved to Ellis county, and another gin stand and boiler substituted therefor; but the gristmill and a part of the machinery or attachments used in operating the gin was retained at Malakoff, and the gristmill operated as it had been theretofore, and the ginning of cotton also continued. About six months after the incorporation of the company, the appellees put up a gin in Malakoff and have operated the same since that time in the ginning of cotton. It thus appears, we think, that the dominant thought and purpose of the parties, in consummating the sale and purchase of the property in question with the stipulation in the bill of sale, for the alleged breach of which on the part of the appel-lees appellant relies for a recovery, was that [521]*521appellees should abstain from engaging in the operation of a cotton gin or gristmill in the Malakoff community during the time the purchasers of the gin or mill sold, or either of them, operated the same in that community, and that whether they operated as a copartnership or a corporation was of no concern to appellees.

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.W. 519, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malakoff-gin-co-v-riddlesperger-texapp-1910.