McLain v. Oklahoma Cotton Growers' Ass'n

1927 OK 188, 258 P. 269, 125 Okla. 264, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 28, 1927
Docket16981
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1927 OK 188 (McLain v. Oklahoma Cotton Growers' Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLain v. Oklahoma Cotton Growers' Ass'n, 1927 OK 188, 258 P. 269, 125 Okla. 264, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 52 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

TEEHEE, C.

This was an action of covenant brought October 24, 1924 by the' Oklahoma Cotton Growers’ Association, a domestic! corporation, as plaintiff, defendant in error here, aga.nst R. E. McLain, a member of the association, as defendant, plaintiff in error here, to recover the sum of $245.96 as liquidated damages, and an additional sum of $75 as attorney’s fees, for specific performance and for injunctive relief according to the terms of the ássociation agreement, hereafter referred to as the contract, entered into and executed by the parties on January 7, 1921, which contract is set forth in full by exhibit in the petition. The parties will hereinafter he referred to as they thus appeared in the trial court.

Plaintiff was organized pursuant to the provisions of chapter 22, S. L. 1917, now article 16, ch. 34, C. O. S. 1921, as thereunder authorized, to promote, foster, encourage, and stabilize the cotton industry of the state in its varied phases. To that end it entered. into the contract, upon which this action was based, with the defendant, R. E. McLain. This in substance, provides that the corporation shall be composed of cotton growers, with its business thereunder governed by a board, of eleven directors, ten of whom were to be selected from designated districts, and one named by the president of the State Board of Agriculture, with local branches to each district. The membership fee was fixed at $10. The association was to confine itself to the problems and marketing of cotton for its members, with suitable by-laws fixing the rights and duties of members, the mann’er of forfeiture of membership, withdrawal, and expulsion from the association, and that • under certain limitations of membership, the contract was to he binding with no right of withdrawal. The association was to organize the Oklahoma Grow'ers Warehousing Corporation with common and. preferred capital stock in such amount as would be sufficient to furnish funds to handle, treat, process, warehouse, or store cotton of its members, such service to be on a nonprofit basis. Th'e association contract included a marketing agreement, whereunder the association agreed to buy and. the grower agreed to sell and deliver to the association all cotton produced or acquired during the years of 1921 to 1927, inclusive, and the association covenanted to r'etsell such- cotton for its members, the cost of such service not to exceed 4% of the gross resale price; that such marketing agreement is one of a series similar in terms, and together with such series constituted a single agreement between the parties and provides for liquidated damages upon breach on the basis of five cents per pound of all cotton otherwise marketed, for an injunction to prevent further br'each. and for specific performance, and. for all costs, expenses, and attorney’s fees incurred in any litigation in the enforcement of th'e terms of the association contract.

By suitable allegations the organization of the association and the terms and conditions of the contract above outlined were contained m plaintiff’s petition, and it further alleged' performance of the contract on its part, and that defendant breached the same in the year of 1924, and, upon such further suitable allegations prayed for judgment in the sum of $245.96 as liquidated damages, $75 as attorney’s fee, for injunctive relief, and for specific performance as by the terms of th'e contract provided. Upon the filing of the petition a temporary injunction was allowed.

The issues were made up under an amended answer of general denial, but *266 which admitted the organization of the association and the execution of the contract as alleged, and further charged mismanagement and ¡breach of trust whereby defendant suffered, loss in his compliance with said contract during the year 1923, deception inducing the execution, and certain violations .thereof, to the prejudice of defendant, failure of such association to function in accordance with certain specified details, and that said contract was unilateral and not enforceable, and that by reason of the several defenses the defendant was released from said contract, and that therefore plaintiff was not entitled to the relief prayed for, to all of which new matte! the plaintiff filed its replication in traversement thereof. At the trial defendant objected to the introduction of any evidence by the plaintiff on the grounds that plaintiff’s petition was insufficient to constitute a cause of action, which was by the court overruled and exceptions saved. On May 20, 4925, judgment for the plaintiff was rendered in accordance with i'.s prayer.

Defendant complains of the action of the trial court under two propositions: First, that the court erred in overruling his objections to the introduction of any evidence by the plaintiff upon the grounds of the insufficiency of the petition to state a cause of action, and, second, that the evidence is insufficient to support the judgment of the court.

Subsequent to the trial of this cause, this court, in Oklahoma Cotton Growers’ Association v. Salyer, 114 Okla. 77, 243 Pac. 232, which in effect may be considered as a companion case, held the identical contract on which the cause at bar was based, unenforceable and void, on the ground that the same was in violation of the provisions of law whereunder the plaintiff there, now plaintiff here, was organized. Upon thjs case defendant relies and. urges that it fully disposes of his appeal in his favor under the first proposition.

Plaintiff contends that the Salyer Case is not conclusive of this appeal for the reason that an amendatory act of the original law whereunder the association was organized is controlling, and thereunder the contract involved, if it prior thereto was unenforceable, was validated. The act relied on is chapter 181, S. L. 1923. Thus the questions are by the plaintiff raised: First, that the defendant ratified the contract subsequent to the enactment of the amendatory law, and that the Legislature had the power to validate the contract, and therefore, under the r’ecord, the judgment of the trial court should be sustained.

In the Salyer Case, the sufficiency of the petition to state a cause of action was challenged by demurrer, which was by the-court sustained. Plaintiff refused to further plead and elected to stand on its petition, whereupon the court rendered judgment of d.femissal of the action. Upon appeal the judgment of tlfe trial court was affirmed upon the principles as hereinafter set out. The petition was, in substance, as to essentials, identical with the petition in the case at bar. The attack went to the validity of the contract. In that case the breach occurred prior to the amendatory act, but the action was not brought until subsequent thereto. In the cause at bar the breach occurred subsequent to the amendatory act, and for this reason, as well as performance by defendant thereunder subsequent and the validation of the contract by the Legislature, if the same was theretofore illegal, plaintiff undertakes to distinguish the principles urged by defendant as controlling in thJs appeal from the Salyer Case. In that case, upon the subject of the validity of the contract, this court, in paragraph 2 of the syllabus, held as follows : ' i

“Where the primary principle of an act is to authorize -.he formation and incorporation of mutual associations, the moving principle of such act being the mutuality of obligations, within the specific provisions and limitations of such act, a contract entered into in violation of such provisions is unenforceable and void for lack of mutuality.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 188, 258 P. 269, 125 Okla. 264, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclain-v-oklahoma-cotton-growers-assn-okla-1927.