St. Louis Catering Co. v. Glancy

242 S.W. 392, 294 Mo. 438, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 77
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 16, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 242 S.W. 392 (St. Louis Catering Co. v. Glancy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Louis Catering Co. v. Glancy, 242 S.W. 392, 294 Mo. 438, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 77 (Mo. 1922).

Opinion

*445 ELDER, J.

This is an action for damages for conversion of the furnishings, equipment and supplies used in connection with the operation of the restaurant and •buffet, of the Marquette Hotel at St. Louis. Plaintiff claims to he the owner and entitled to the possession of the property alleged to have been converted. Defendant T. H. Glancy is president and majority stockholder of defendant Glancy & Watson Hotel Company, which operates the said hotel.

The petition of plaintiff alleges that on the 25th day of January, 1916, it owned and had possession of a lot of tables, chairs, linen, china, stoves, kitchen utensils, tapestries, food, groceries, wines, liquors, supplies and other restaurant property and appurtenances, all of the value of $30,000, situated in the hotel building; that defendants “maliciously, fraudulently, wrongfully, illegally, wantonly and wilfully seized, to'ok and converted to their own use, secretly without the knowledge and consent of plaintiff, all of plaintiff’s said property” (which is thereupon itemized); that immediately after the taking thereof plaintiff demanded hack its property, but defendants refused to return the same. The prayer of the petition is for $30,000 actual damages, with interest, and $30,000 punitive damages.

The answer of defendants is joint, and consists of a general denial.

The evidence shows that some time prior to 1906, defendant T. H. Glancy and one M. D. Watson came to St. Louis from Texas, started in the hotel business as partners, under the firm name of Glancy & Watson, and erected the Marquette Hotel; that later, in the year 1907, the business was incorporated; that Glancy & Watson, being but. little known in St. Louis, and the building erected by them being in a new part of the city, *446 had been somewhat discouraged in the promotion of their, enterprise; that they thought if they could get the plaintiff company, which operated Faust’s, a well known cafe in St. Louis, -to take over the restaurant privileges in their hotel, so that they could advertise that the cafe was conducted by the same management as Faust’s it would give them some prestige; that' accordingly, as the hotel was nearing completion, on October 10, 1906, the firm of Glancy & Watson entered into a written agreement with the plaintiff company whereby it was provided substantially as follows: Glancy & Watson were to lease to plaintiff, for a term of ten years, beginning on the day that the Marquette Hotel was opened for guests, certain portions of the premises of the hotel for the purpose of conducting therein a restaurant and bar; plaintiff was to be given the exclusive right to sell wines, liquors and food in the hotel building,, with the right to dispense the same in guest rooms, billiard rooms and bowling alleys whenever ordered by guests; Glancy & Watson were to furnish all light, heat, hot water and steam required by plaintiff in the conduct of said business, the light and heat to be paid for by plaintiff monthly at the end of each month at the rate of $300 per month, and water to be paid for by plaintiff at the same rate as that charged therefor by the city of St. Louis; plaintiff was “to establish and maintain in said premises a cafe and bar similar to and of the same standard as Faust’s Restaurant at St. Louis, and to furnish for use in said premises appropriate fittings and fixtures to cost not less than fifteen thousand dollars and not to exceed twenty thousand dollars;” plaintiff was to pay Glancy & Watson a further sum “equal to one-half of the net profits of said business, the said profits to be ascertained by charging against the gross receipts all legitimate expenses of conducting the said business, all amounts paid for additional china, silverware, linen and other furnishings, light, heat, .supplies, insurance, license fees and taxes, all losses on account of unpaid bills of patrons, *447 and one-tenth each year of the amount that shall be originally expended by the party of the second part [plaintiff] for fixtures, fittings and funishings.” The agreement further provided that all furnishings, fittings and fixtures installed, and any additions thereto, or restorations thereof, should be'first approved by Glancy & Watson; and that at the termination thereof “the obligations of the parties of the first part [Glancy & Watson] being full performed, the fixtures, fittings and furnishings of the said restaurant and bar installed in said premises by the party of the second part shall be the joint property of the parties hereto, and the parties of the first part are to pay the party of the second part one-half of the value thereof.” One of the concluding-paragraphs of the agreement is as follows:

“It is agreed that inasmuch as said first parties are not only interested in results ás to the management of said bar and cafe under this contract, but that the character of the Marquette Hotel is coupled with the proper management of said bar and cafe, which is expected to be of a certain appropriate standard as hereinbefore stated; therefore, it is agreed that said first parties [Glancy & Watson] have the right to correct and regulate any mismanagement, and in the event of any disagreement between the said parties of the first part and said second party as to any and all details in connection with the operation of said bar and cafe, difference of opinion shall be submitted to arbitrators, each of the parties hereto to select one arbitrator and they to select a third, and the findings of such three arbitrators shall be binding upon both.”

The evidence shows that the Marquette Hotel was opened some time in September, 1907, and from that time on plaintiff operated the restaurant and bar. For the first seven years, or up until the close of the year 1914, the cafe and bar were conducted to the satisfaction of defendants, and the business always showed a profit at each settlement period. During each of these years ten *448 per cent of the cost of the original equipment was deducted from the gross profits, and plaintiff had thereby-been reimbursed for seventy per cent of the original purchase price thereof. Replacements of equipment and supplies to the aggregate amount of $55,000 were also deducted from the gross profits during the seven years.

About February, 1915, the plaintiff company became financially involved and was unable to pay its creditors, who numbered about sixty and whose claims aggregated about $45,000. Plaintiff then operated Nagel’s restaurant, in addition to the Marquette and Faust’s. C. O. Baxter was at that time president and Eugene L. Clifford was secretary of the company. On February 9, 1915, pursuant to call authorized by the executive committee of plaintiff, a meeting of creditors was held at Faust’s. At this meeting a creditors’ committee, consisting of three creditors, was elected to make an investigation of the affairs of plaintiff, and it was decided that all future disbursements were to be made only with the approval of the ’ committee. Thereafter several meetings of the board of directors of plaintiff were held, at which the sale of the Faust and Nagel branches was decided upon, and proposals for the purchase thereof were considered. A sale of Nagel’s for $10,000 was approved on April. 13, 1915.

On May 7, 191.5, a further meeting of creditors was held.

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Bluebook (online)
242 S.W. 392, 294 Mo. 438, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-catering-co-v-glancy-mo-1922.