Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Board of Optometry

57 So. 2d 726, 213 Miss. 710, 1952 Miss. LEXIS 418
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1952
Docket38299
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 57 So. 2d 726 (Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Board of Optometry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Board of Optometry, 57 So. 2d 726, 213 Miss. 710, 1952 Miss. LEXIS 418 (Mich. 1952).

Opinion

*716 Ethridge, J.

In January, 1951 the State Board of Optometry filed a bill of complaint against Sears Roebuck and Company, charging it with the unlawful practice of optometry in its Jackson, Mississippi, retail store, in violation of Code of 1942, 'Secs. 8832-8846. Subsequently in March, 1951, the Board filed an amended hill of complaint, adding as a defendant Craftsman Optical Company, a Louisiana corporation qualified to do business in Mississippi.

Sears Roebuck and Company operates a large retail store on North State Street in Jackson. From June 15, 1950 to January 1, 1951, Sears leased to Craftsman Optical Company, a defendant, designated a “licensee”, 219 square feet of floor space in its Jackson retail store, for the merchandising’ and sale of optical goods. Under that lease Craftsman agreed to have a graduate optometrist in charge of the department at all times. Sears was to receive as rent 25 per cent, of the net sales of that department, and was to operate the optical goods department as a department of Sears’ store. It was stipulated that Dr. Carey S. McAlister, an optometrist licensed with *717 the State Board of Optometry, had a verbal agreement with Craftsman Optical Company, effective June 15,1950, under which Dr. McAlister worked in the optical department located at Sears’ store and was paid $90 per week, plus 2 per cent, of the gross sales made by Craftsman. This employment and salary arrangement continued from about June 15, 1950 to January 1, 1951. During this period, McAlister was clearly an employee of Sears and Craftsman.

On December 6, 1950, the secretary of the Mississippi Optometrie Association, Dr. ~W. F. Clarke, filed with the State Board of Optometry a complaint charging that Dr. McAlister was practicing as an optometrist in violation of law through a corporation, Sears Roebuck and Company, and was aiding the corporation to unlawfully practice optometry in Mississippi; and that, therefore, the State Board should revoke the license of Dr. Mc-Alister after due notice and hearing. It was stipulated at the time of the trial of this case on March 28, 1951, that the charges filed against Dr. McAlister were then pending before the State Board, and that the charges were being held in abeyance by agreement of counsel to await the outcome of the present suit.

After these charges of December 6, 1950, were filed against Dr. McAlister, and on January 1, 1951, Sears, Craftsman, and McAlister reorganized the arrangement of their business relationships. On that date, January 1, 1951, Sears executed to McAlister a lease of approximately 200 square feet of space in its retail store on North State Street in Jackson, “of the dimensions and at the locations as designated from time to time by Landlord.” The lease was to run for one year. McAlister was to use the space “as an optometrie office and examining room, and for the preparation, sale, and servicing of optical goods * He was to pay rent for this space in Sears’ store of $200 per month, and agreed to equip his rented premises with modern and proper equipment for the practice of “tenant’s profession and the conduct *718 of tenant’s business’’. The lease provided that McAlister would post and maintain a sign at the entrance to his premises identifying it as the location of his optometric office and examining room. He was to carry various types of liability insurance. Paragraph 9 of the lease stated: “Tenant shall conduct the said optometric office and examining room in accordance with the laws and ordinances relating thereto and in conformity with the ethics of Tenant’s profession, it being expressly understood and agreed that Tenant shall have the sole right and authority to fix the prices or charges for Tenant’s services, to collect the same and to settle all controversies with Tenant’s customers or patients, to maintain Tenant’s own records and to conduct said optometric office and examining room independently and free from the exercise of any control whatever by Landlord. ’ ’ Either party could terminate the lease upon thirty days written notice. The leased property could not be subleased without the written consent of Sears.

On the same day of the lease from Sears to McAlister, the latter partly executed a sublease to Craftsman Optical Company, leasing to it approximately 150 square feet of space in Sears’ store, for a period of one year at a rental of $600 per month to be paid by Craftsman to McAlister. The rental stated in the original sublease was $400 per month, but on March 26, 1951, the original sublease was amended to change the rental to $600 per month. The amendment of March, 1951 recited that:

“Whereas, it was the intent and understanding of the parties at the time of execution of said sublease that the net rental payable to Lessor (McAlister) by Lessee (Craftsman) after payment therefrom by Lessor of the rental of Two Hundred Dollars ($200.00) per month payable by Lessor to Sears, Roebuck and Co., Lessor’s landlord, would be Four Hundred Dollars $400.00) per month and the parties hereto have acted in accordance with said intent and understanding; and

*719 “Whereas, it is desired to reform said sublease agreement dated January 1, 1951, so as to correct the sum payable by Lessee to Lessor as rental pursuant thereto so as to conform with the intent and understanding of the parties.”

The March, 1951 amendment then provided that the rent was $600 ‘ ‘ effective from and including the first day of January 1951”. It will be noted that under the altered arrangement, Dr. McAlister was to receive a fixed or “net” profit of $400 per month from the new arrangement, and that this was approximately the same amount as the monthly salary which he had received from Craftsman prior to January 1, 1951.

In addition to the January, 1951 lease from Sears to Dr. McAlister, and the sublease from McAlister to Craftsman, there were two other contracts. The first one was between Craftsman and Sears, by letter from Craftsman to Sears dated January 10, 1951. By that contract Sears agreed to handle all sales of merchandise made by Craftsman in its optical department located in Sears’ store, through Sears own books and records, just as if such sales were made by Sears. Sears agreed to receive all cash represented by sales and all accounts receivable the same as if these items had resulted from sales by Sears’ own organization. Sears was to hold the cash items for Craftsman’s account. The “employee in charge” of Craftsman’s “Optical Dispensary” would turn over to Sears at the close of each business day all cash receipts and all accounts receivable and other records. Sears agreed to keep a record of this business, and to have its credit department pass upon all credit risks. At the end of each week, Sears would account to Craftsman for all cash received, less the hereinafter stated amount which would be deductible. In consideration of these services by Sears, Craftsman agreed to pay to Sears 25 per cent, of its gross sales, made from Craftsman’s optical dispensary “less an amount equal to $400.00 per month (the last mentioned amount of $400.00 per month being the *720 monthly rental we are required to pay to Dr. McAlister for our sublease).”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 So. 2d 726, 213 Miss. 710, 1952 Miss. LEXIS 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sears-roebuck-co-v-board-of-optometry-miss-1952.