Snyder v. McCune

28 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 506

This text of 28 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 506 (Snyder v. McCune) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snyder v. McCune, 28 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 506 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1931).

Opinion

Randall, J.

In this action the plaintiff seeks to enjoin the defendants from seizing certain so-called mint vending machines which the defendants claim to be gambling devices.

The petition alleges that plaintiff is the sole owner of a business in the city of Columbus, Ohio, which he operates under the name of the Superior Confection Company; that he is engaged in the business of manufacturing, selling and distributing Superior high grade candy mints; that in connection with said business he owns and operates a factory in the city of Columbus, Ohio, in which he has installed equipment and machinery for the manufacture and packing of said mint confections; that he also carries in stock at said factory large quantities of mixing and flavoring sugar and other materials necessary [507]*507to the manufacture of said mints; that he employs some 20 or 30 people in said factory and uses approximately 25 barrels of cane sugar daily in the manufacture of mints; that the output of said mints from said factory amounts to about 125,000 packages containing 10 mints each daily with a net weight of three-fourths of an ounce to each package and that said packages of mints have a retail value of five cents and that they are a kind and quality that is standard in manufacture and equal in- quality to other mints now on the market retailing at five cents per package.

Plaintiff further alleges that he also operates in the city of Columbus, a factory in which he manufactures automatic vending machines, which are used and usable by him to the trade. That said factory is equipped with dies, tools, patterns and machinery of an expensive character which is used in the manufacture of said vending machines and that he employs approximately 50 persons in said factory in manufacturing and assembling said machines. That plaintiff owns the buildings in which said factory is housed; that he has invested in said factory and the machinery and equipment therein $150,000.

Plaintiff further alleges that he distributes the output of his mint factory to the retail trade principally through the medium of said automatic vending machines. That in the month of November, 1930, he entered into a contract with the Como Confectionery, 3244 North High Street, the Hi-Way Restaurant, 1009 West Broad Street, and the Honey Bee Restaurant, 1491 East Main Street in Columbus, a copy of which contract is inserted in the petition and which contract is in the nature of a lease to said parties of his certain mint vending machine known as the Superior Automatic Salesman. That said machine is to be used by said parties in their respective places of business for the advertisement and sale of mint confections to be furinshed by plaintiff exclusively. That said machines are to be equiped with an automatic coin return device which will return the coin and automatically throw the machine out of order when same is ,empty of mints.

[508]*508The contract further provides that plaintiff will keep the mint magazine full of mints at all times, said mints to be of a kind and quality equal to standard mints selling in the open market for five cents per package; that the lessee will not operate any other mint machines belonging to himself or another, that the lessee will not redeem any tokens obtained from the said machine for either cash or merchandise, that he will not buy nor suffer anyone else to buy or obtain any of said tokens in any manner whatsoever either for cash or trade. On violation of this condition the contract is to become null and void and plaintiff has the right to remove the same from the premises. The contract then provides for the distribution of the receipts of said machine, and further provides that plaintiff shall have the sole and exclusive right to open up the machine for the purpose of removing the money and tokens as well as putting tokens into the machine, with the right of the lessee to be present when this is done.

Said contract further provides for the termination of said contract at the will of either party.

The plaintiff then alleges that he delivered machines to each of the said named parties supplied with mints, and that in the month of November, 1930, the defendants, without any authority of law, without a writ of legal process, took said machines from the place of business of said parties and that the defendant, John P. McCune,- threatens to destroy the same without any order of court or process whatsoever, and without placing said mint vending machines under the jurisdiction of any court. And, that, unless the defendants be restrained they will break up and destroy the plaintiff’s mint vending machines so seized, to the irreparable damage and injury of the plaintiff.

The plaintiff then alleges that he has entered into a contract with three hundred merchants in the city of Columbus, Ohio, on the same terms as contained in the contract hereinbefore referred to and that the defendant, John P. McCune, as Director of Public Safety, has notified him that if said machines were installed under the [509]*509terms of said contract in the city of Columbus, that he would cause the same to be seized and confiscated without any writ or process being issued authorizing the same to be done and without any order of court; that plaintiff is, because of said threats, unable to carry out the terms of said contract and to pursue his legitimate business and that he is unable to do any business in the city of Columbus, and the defendants are preventing the expansion of his business within the jurisdiction of this court and will drive said business out of jurisdiction of this court, unless defendants are restrained from further interference with the sale of his product through the medium of said vending machines.

Plaintiff further alleges that unless an injunction issues it will be necessary for him to prosecute a multiplicity of. suits against said defendants and other persons who may interfere with the handling or prevent the operation of his business, all of which will work an injury and great hardship upon him and cause him irreparable injury for which he has no adequate remedy at law. He prays for an injunction restraining the defendants, and each of them, from issuing orders to seize and confiscate his vending machines without any warrant or authority ' of law and restraining them from interfering in any way, directly or indirectly, with the sale of mint confections manufactured by him through the medium of said vending machines when the same are installed.

To the petition, the defendants, for their first defense, admit their official capacity and admit that the Division of Police of the city of Columbus, did seize certain slot machines which had been installed by the plaintiff in the several places referred to in the petition, and that said slot machines were taken without any process issued or charges of violation of law filed, and that the defendant, John P. McCune threatens to break up and destroy plaintiff’s slot machines wherever found. Then follows' a general denial of the allegations of the petition.

For a second defense, after making the same admissions as in the first defense, the defendants allege that all of the slot machines seized and sequestered by the Division [510]*510,of the.

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Related

State v. Krauss
151 N.E. 183 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1926)
Scott v. State
141 N.E. 19 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-mccune-ohctcomplfrankl-1931.