Olive & Sternenberg v. Van Patten

25 S.W. 428, 7 Tex. Civ. App. 630, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 371
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 7, 1894
DocketNo. 615.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 25 S.W. 428 (Olive & Sternenberg v. Van Patten) 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
Olive & Sternenberg v. Van Patten, 25 S.W. 428, 7 Tex. Civ. App. 630, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 371 (Tex. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

COLLARD, Associate Justice.

This is a suit for damages, brought by plaintiffs in error against defendants in error, for maliciously and wantonly inducing dealers in lumber in Texas to withdraw their custom from plaintiffs, who are doing a wholesale and retail lumber business in the State.

The facts set-up in the petition are as follows: On the 16th day of May, 1888, and for a long time prior thereto, plaintiffs were owners *633 of a large and extensive saw mill, in Hardin County, Texas, capable of cutting and manufacturing 12,000,000 feet of lumber annually; of planing mills used in connection with the saw mill; of six miles of well equipped tram railway leading from the mill to their timber lands, suitable to carry logs to the mill; of 8000 acres of heavy pine timber, suitable for the manufacture of lumber, near the mills, from which the timber had not been cut; and of 7000 acres of heavy timbered land contiguous to the mills, from which only a part of the timber had been cut, all suitable for first-class lumber. The plant was worth $270,000, the 8000 acres of timbered land was worth $64,000, and the 7000 acres, $14,000. Of the 12,000,000 feet of lumber, the annual output, plaintiffs were able to make and were making with their mills and preparing for market, they were able to plane upon their planing mills annually 6,000,000 feet of dressed lumber, and all the lumber manufactured they were able to sell at advantageous prices in the markets of the State and elsewhere, making an annual profit of $100,000 up to the time of the interference by defendants.

That defendants, each being engaged in the lumber business in Texas, envying the prosperity of plaintiffs, and seeking to oppress, boycott, and ruin them, and to deter them from selling to actual consumers, and to dissuade and influence dealers in lumber in Texas who had been in the habit of purchasing lumber from plaintiffs, and with the view to advance their own pecuniary and selfish interest, on May 16, 1888, entered into a trust, styled “The Lumber Dealers’ Association of Texas,” the object of which was to confederate together for the purpose of maintaining a high price for lumber against citizens of the State as consumers, and to conspire against legitimate prices on lumber, and against all persons who sought to reach the demands of legitimate trade by legitimate methods, and to force, by such unlawful confederacy and conspiracy, all mill men and manufacturers of lumber. into such unlawful combination or trust, so as the lumber business on the part of mill men or manufacturers of lumber should present a solid array against the consumer and retail dealer, and thus control by means of such trust extravagantly high prices for lumber, for the enrichment of themselves and to the impoverishment of the consumer and small dealer. And so it is charged that defendants became guilty of a conspiracy against the public as well as plaintiffs, such as is unlawful in all its acts in furtherance thereof. That in furtherance of this unlawful design, defendants, as members of the association and as chief members thereof, assembled together about the date mentioned, and adopted and published by-laws for carrying out its unlawful designs, which by-laws provided as follows:

“Sec. 13. When any manufacturer or wholesale dealer, or his agent or agents, shall sell to any person not a dealer, excepting railroad companies, and at such points where there are no dealers, such sales *634 shall be reported to the secretary, and he shall notify the members of the association; whereupon it shall be the duty of all members of this association to discontinue their patronage with such manufacturer or wholesale dealer; provided, however, that if said manufacturer or wholesale dealer shall promise and furnish a guarantee to the secretary of this association that he will not again sell to any person not a dealer, notice shall be sent by the secretary to all members of the association, when said manufacturer or wholesale dealer shall again be considered in good repute.

“Sec. 14. No dealer belonging to this association shall ship to any point where any other member may be engaged in the retail trade, at less than the regular retail price at that point.”

That, plaintiffs having incurred the displeasure of said trust, of which they were not members, because they had seen fit in the exercise of their rights as citizens to sell lumber to others than dealers, or for some other cause unknown to plaintiffs, defendants, pursuant to the by-laws quoted, did, it is alleged, on or about the 10th day of September, 1888, unlawfully and maliciously, and with intent to oppress and ruin petitioners and other mill men of Texas, not members of their unlawful trust, confederacy, and conspiracy, issue, promulgate, print, distribute, and mail and deliver to nearly every lumber dealer in Texas, and especially to those with whom petitioners had heretofore been dealing and selling lumber, a circular, in form as follows:

“ OFFICE OF
“SECRETARY AND TREASURER “ LUMBER. DEALERS’ ASSOCIATION “OF TEXAS.
“p. o. box 657.
“Austin, Texas, September 10, 1888.
“Dear Sir—We are informed that the following mill men are selling lumber to others than legitimate dealers, much to the detriment of the regular trade. We therefore ask that you will not patronize them until such a time as they shall notify the secretary of our association that they will desist from selling to other than regular dealers: Jossurand So Bro., Trinity; Olive So Sternenberg, Olive; J. Iieley, Brantley; McLean, Selma; M. T. Jones Lumber Co., Houston; R. S. Tinnin So Co., Trinity.
“In connection with this notice, we urge every dealer in the State to observe the rules of our association, and refrain from buying from these men while they persist in selling to the consumers.
“Many towns in Texas now have their trade and prices in a demoralized condition on account of this great and growing evil. The mill men who do this kind of business are pushing their trade not only into the larger towns, but are now seeking consumers in every cross-road and hamlet where they can find a farmer, merchant, or carpenter who *635 can consume as much as a mixed car load of lumber, and to these consumers they will sell as cheap as to the dealer.
“And while you may not as yet have suffered from this evil, your town and your trade may be the next to suffer, and unless the yard men of this State rise in their might and refuse to them their trade, it is a question of but a few years at furthest when the interior dealers will be a thing of the past, and their business will be absorbed by the mill men and jobbers.
“ Bespectfully yours,
“A. Van Patten, President; “C. F. Drake, Secretary;
“Ed. Steves,
“John G-. Wabbles,
“Wm. B. Brazelton,
“J. C. Hillsman,
“G. W. Owens,
“J. W. Temby,

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.W. 428, 7 Tex. Civ. App. 630, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olive-sternenberg-v-van-patten-texapp-1894.