State Ex Rel. Hadley v. Kansas City Live Stock Exchange

109 S.W. 675, 211 Mo. 181, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 98
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 1, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 109 S.W. 675 (State Ex Rel. Hadley v. Kansas City Live Stock Exchange) 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
State Ex Rel. Hadley v. Kansas City Live Stock Exchange, 109 S.W. 675, 211 Mo. 181, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 98 (Mo. 1908).

Opinion

VATU A N'T, P. J.

— In January,. 1905, the Attorney-General instituted this suit in the circuit court of Jackson county against the defendants, alleging that they had formed a pool or combination to control and limit the trade in live stock on the market of Kansas City and to limit competition in that trade, in violation of sections 8978 and 8979, Revised Statutes 1899, and of the common law, and praying an injunction to restrain them from further practice of the alleged un *188 lawful conduct. The defendants, are nominated in the petition as the .Kansas City Live Stock Exchange, a voluntary association, and the individuals and corporations composing that association, and also the Traders Live Stock Exchange, likewise a voluntary association, and the individuals and corporations composing that association. The appearance of all the defendants was entered by their respective counsel. On the filing of the petition a temporary injunction was issued. An amended petition was filed in April, 1905. Each group of defendants, that is, those composing the Kansas City Live Stock Exchange and those composing the Traders Live Stock Exchange, filed a demurrer to the amended petition; the court sustained the. demurrers, whereupon, the Attorney-General declining to plead further, final judgment for defendants was rendered, and this .appeal was taken.

The only question is, does the amended petition state facts sufficient to show that defendants have committed or are in the attitude of committing acts that constitute a violation of the laws of this State commonly called the anti-trust law or laws forbidding acts in restraint of trade?

I. There are two groups of defendants named in the petition; one is composed of those who constitute what is called the Kansas City Live Stock Exchange, the other of those who constitute what is designated as the Traders Live Stock Exchange. The difference, if any, in the character of business done by the defendants composing one of these exchanges, and that of those composing the other, is not very clearly set out in the amended petition and perhaps is not very important, but we gather from the briefs the idea that the defendants composing the Kansas City Live Stock Exchange are engaged chiefly as commission merchants, to receive shipments of live, stock for that market consigned to be by them sold .or. otherwise disposed of as. *189 directed by the shippers, whilst the defendants composing the Traders Live Stock Exchange are buyeis and speculators in such live stock. At all events the members of the two exchanges do a large business with each other, and, in accordance with the averments of the petition, they together handle practically all the live stock business in that market. The gravamen of the complaint is the members of the Traders Exchange have taken such action as tends to exclude all persons from buying and selling live stock coming to that market except members of that exchange and to limit competition in such trade to those members. We will notice more particularly presently what the amended petition charges on that point. But there is no allegation that the defendants composing the Kansas City Live-'Stock Exchange have wilfully done any thing, or purpose to do anything, to so exclude others who may ■ desire to do business with them, or to limit competition in the trade, but the allegation is that defendants composing the Traders Exchange have boycotted and are threatening to boycott the members of the other exchange if they do any live stock business with any persons not members of the. Traders Exchange, and the inference to be drawn is that if the members of the Kansas City Live Stock Exchange have done any of the acts complained of they have done so only by fear of the boycott. It may fairly be inferred from the amended petition that if the members of the Kansas City Live Stock Exchange were left free to act they would not do any of the things called in the petition unlawful.

When a defendant is called into court to answer the consequence of his unlawful conduct whereby a plaintiff has been made to suffer, it is no defense for bim to say that he was constrained to do the unlawful act for fear of losing the custom of a large trader or group of traders, but when he is called into a court of equity to show cause why he should not be enjoined *190 from yielding to such constraint, and it appears that the influence which is pressing him is an unlawful influence and it is within the power of the court to prevent it, equity will not leave him under the unlawful constraint and at the same time enjoin him from yielding to it, but it will exert its power to remove the cause and then there will be no occasion for an injunction.

Therefore, if the defendants composing the Kansas City Live Stock Exchange are refusing and unwilling to do business with any other persons than members of the Traders Exchange for fear of the boycott, and if the acts of the members of the Traders Exchange amount to an unlawful influence or constraint, the right thing for the court to do is to enjoin the members of the Traders Exchange from boycotting the members of the other exchange, and that will end the trouble. Under this view of the law the demurrer of the members of the Kansas City Live Stock Exchange should be sustained.

II. In support of the demurrer in behalf of the Traders Live Stock Exchange, the point is made that it is a mere voluntary association and therefore it has no legal entity, it can neither sue nor be sued. The association as such has no legal entity and therefore can neither sue nor be sued, but in the case at bar the defendants are the individuals and corporations that compose the Exchange and the name “Traders Live Stock Exchange” merely serves to distinguish those defendants in their associated capacity.

The point is also advanced that the association is not a partnership and the members are not partners in trade. That too is true to a certain extent. The association, as its purposes are defined, lacks the essential elements of a copartnership, it is not a combination of skill and capital embarked in a definite business for mutual profit, one member cannot act for the *191 whole so as to hind all in a contract. And from this premise it is argued that no member is affected by any act of another member or of all the other members combined; he is responsible only for his own acts. That argument cannot, with safety, be carried to the extent that it is here sought to carry it. Granting that the members of the association are not partners in the sense of the commercial law and that one member cannot, in that sense, bind the association, still where a large body of men combine for a particular purpose and agree inter sese

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Bluebook (online)
109 S.W. 675, 211 Mo. 181, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hadley-v-kansas-city-live-stock-exchange-mo-1908.