Shawnee Compress Co. v. Anderson

209 U.S. 423, 28 S. Ct. 572, 52 L. Ed. 865, 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1696
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 13, 1908
Docket140
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 209 U.S. 423 (Shawnee Compress Co. v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shawnee Compress Co. v. Anderson, 209 U.S. 423, 28 S. Ct. 572, 52 L. Ed. 865, 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1696 (1908).

Opinion

Mb. Justice McKenna,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

The Supreme Court of the Territory, in its opinion, discussed only two of the questions urged upon its consideration, to wit (1) the legal power of the Shawnee Compress Company to execute the lease; and (2) the purpose in its execution to secure a monopoly of the business of compressing cotton and to unlawfully restrict competition. Of the first the court said: “We find no express authority to lease set out in the articles of .incorporation, but we are nevertheless of the opinion the weight of authority is that when a stritetly private corporation finds it cannot profitably continue operations it may lawfully make a .lease of its entire property for a term of years.”

*430 The court cited cases, and continued (p. 238): “It is only when such exigencies exist as necessitate or render appropriate such or similar action that the right can be exercised.” And it was observed that while there was no special finding of fact “in that regard by the trial court, yet this feature must necessarily have been considered, .in the light of the evidence introduced at the trial, and the judgment based thereon.”

The court further said that it found “ample authority in the record for that action” and, following the rule “often reiterated,” the court further said, “it must hold that where the record contains some evidence to support the finding of the trial court,” the-judgment will not be disturbed.

The ruling sustaining the power of the Shawnee Company to execute the lease is attacked by appellees, but we do not find it necessary to express an opinion upon it, on account of the view we entertain of the second proposition.

In passing bn the second proposition the Supreme Court decided adversely to the view taken by the trial court. The court therefore must either have considered that there was not some evidence supporting the conclusions of fact of the trial court or must have deemed the principles of law Which the trial court upheld were not sustained by its conclusion of fact. As our review, in the nature of things, is confined to determining whether the court below erred, it follows that our reviewing power under the circumstances is coincident with the authority to review possessed by the court below, and therefore we are confined, as was the court helow, to determining whether there was some evidence supporting the findings and whether the facts found were adequate to sustain the legal conclusions. Southern Pine Lumber Co. v. Ward, 208 U. S. 126.

The court, in its opinion, gives a summary of the pleadings and states the salient points of the lease to be that it conveys all 'of the property of the Shawnee Company to the Gulf Company, that the Shawnee Company covenants that it will not “directly or indirectly engage in the compressing of cotton *431 within fifty miles of any plant operated by the” Gulf Company, and that the Shawnee Company “agrees and pledges” to the Gulf Company “its good will, moral and legal support, and that it, individually and collectively, will render the ‘ Gulf Company ’ every assistance in discouraging unreasonable and unnecessary competition.” And from the evidence the court deduces the following conclusions, (p. 236):

“It further appears from the evidence at the trial that C. C. Hanson is the president of both the Atlanta Compress Company and the Gulf Compress Company, being a stockholder in each, and is the one who negotiated the lease in question. That the Atlanta Compress Company operates in the States of Alabama, Georgia and Florida, and was organized and is owned and controlled solely by the carriers for their benefit. That the board of directors and stockholders of .said corporation are composed entirely of railroad officials. That the Atlanta Company controls the operation of twenty-five plants. That the Gulf Compress Company is a close corporation, chartered in Mobile, Alabama, and operating in the States of Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, Louisiana, Arkansas, Indian Territory and Oklahoma, and controlling the operation of twenty-seven compresses in those States, located at various points therein. That none of the Gulf Company’s plants and the Atlanta Company’s compresses are operated at the same points.

“It is further disclosed by the evidence that the capital stock of the Gulf Company, as originally incorporated, was $25,000.00, but that it has, within the past year, been increased to one million dollars, of which $600,000.00 is treasury stock. That its field of operation has been rapidly extended from Alabama to all the cotton-growing territory; that it is at the present time engaged in the purchase or leasing of compresses at various points, and, as testified to by its president, is 'prepared to buy or lease, whichever proposition suits us best.’ It appears from the evidence that negotiations conducted by Mr. Hanson with Stubbs and Beatty for the lease of the Shaw *432 nee plant were in pursuance of an effort to avoid, ‘directly or indirectly, the possibility, if not probability, of unnecessary and unreasonable competition.’

“It is further disclosed by the testimony that the carrier pays for the compression of cotton, incorporating the cost thereof in its tariff. That tariffs for the hauling of cotton are established by the railroads as well as hauling districts or territories, within which the haul of cotton must be' one way, or otherwise the higher rate, denominated the terminal rate, applies, rendering it unprofitable to ship to other than the established point in the hauling district.”

And the court says that from these facts, and others referred to supporting them, it cannot be doubted that the object of the Gulf Company and its allied corporation, the Atlanta Compress Company, “is to prevent competition in compression of cotton throughout the cotton-producing States.” The court declared it to be its judgment that “not only is the enterprise in which the Gulf Compress Company is engaged an unlawful one, as now conducted, but the contract in .question in this case, being made to further its objects and purposes, is void on the ground that it is in unreasonable restraint of trade and against public policy.”

This conclusion is the direct antithesis of that drawn by the trial court and we are brought to the inquiry, is it justified?

The evidence cannot be given in detail, and we may say at the outset that there is no question as to its weight — we are not confronted with conflicting testimonies. This branch of the case is constituted of the lease, principally of the testimony of one witness, the president of the Gulf Company, and of facts which are not disputed. The other testimony, a great deal of which is documentary, is mostly directed to the financial condition of the Shawnee Company as the inducement of the lease and to the proceedings taken to authorize its execution. There is also testimony directed against, the purpose and motives of the appellees, and some tending to show that one of the officers and stockholders of the Shawnee Company *433

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Bluebook (online)
209 U.S. 423, 28 S. Ct. 572, 52 L. Ed. 865, 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shawnee-compress-co-v-anderson-scotus-1908.