State Ex Rel. Jordan v. Gilmer Grocery Co.

125 So. 710, 156 Miss. 99, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 151
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1930
DocketNo. 27805.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 125 So. 710 (State Ex Rel. Jordan v. Gilmer Grocery Co.) 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
State Ex Rel. Jordan v. Gilmer Grocery Co., 125 So. 710, 156 Miss. 99, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 151 (Mich. 1930).

Opinion

McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Prom an adverse judgment rendered by the circuit court of Sunflower county, the state appeals to this court.

On the relation of its district attorney the state filed its declaration against the Gilmer Grocery Company, alleging, substantially in the terms of the statute, a violation thereof by the appellee, and sought recovery of the penalties therein prescribed, chapter 305, Laws 1928, being the one upon which the suit is based. .

In substance, the declaration charged that Gilmer Grocery Company, a Mississippi corporation, on August 28, 1928, was a chain operator of cotton gins, and prior thereto had operated and is now "operating gins in more than two places within the state,” and specified that it operated gins at Indianola in Sunflower county, and likewise at Itta Bena and other places in the state; and that it did then, and theretofore, buy cotton seed at its said gins in connection with its gin business.

It was further alleged that the Gilmer Grocery Company on that date unlawfully discriminated in prices paid for cotton seed, in that it bought the seed from five b.ales of cotton at its gin located at Itta Bena for forty-five dollars per ton, "which price was then and there far in excess of the market price;” on the same day it purchased large .quantities of cotton seed at its gin at Indianola and other places, paying therefor thir *105 ty-seven dollars per ton,, and averred that the necessary operating expenses, freight rates, and other elements affecting the price thereof at Indianola and at other gins were not different from the conditions in this behalf existing at Itta Bena, and that no difference existed warranting the payment of such excess in price at Itta Bena.

The declaration further averred: ‘ ‘ And plaintiff avers that the said defendant thereby attempted to destroy competition in its gin business including the business of purchasing the seed at Itta Bena, Mississippi, and that the effect of said discrimination would be to destroy competition in said business at Itta Bena, Mississippi, and plaintiff avers that there were other persons and other cotton gins at Itta Bena on said day engaged in the business of operating cotton gins and buying seed on said da.y at Itta Bena, and plaintiff further avers that the said higher price paid for cotton seed at Itta Bena was not paid in meeting legitimate competition, but pursuant to defendant’s usual method and scheme to destroy and to attempt to destroy competition at places and in the territory where defendant operates its chain of cotton gins; and said defendant on said day ginned five bales of cotton at its Itta Bena gin in pursuance of said discriminatory practices.”

Appellant demanded judgment for the statutory penalty provided in said chapter 305', Laws of 1928, in the sum of one hundred dollars per bale, or five hundred dollars.

The only defense by pleading offered by appellee now before us is its special plea No. 1, which we set forth in h<BC verba:

“Now comes Gilmer Grocery Company, a corporation, by its attorney, in this its special plea and says that the plaintiff ought not to have or maintain its aforesaid action against it because it says that at the time of the passage and approval of chapter 305 of the laws enacted at the regular 1928 session of the Mississippi leg *106 islature, and at the time of the purchase of the seed from five hales of cotton at dissimilar prices, as charged in the declaration, there were in Mississippi about one thousand four hundred active cotton gins, which were engaged in the business of the purchase of cotton seed; and there were also forty-eight cotton oil mills in Mississippi engaged in the business of buying cotton seed at two or more places in this state; and there were other seed buyers which bought seed at two or more places within the state; and there are nonresident cotton oil mills which buy cotton seed at two or more places within the state of Mississippi; and that chain operators of cotton gins existing at the time of the passage of said act, aucl at all times laid in the declaration, purchased the seed from not exceeding seventy-five thousand bales of cotton, whereas, the total production of cotton for the year 1927 within the state of Mississippi was one million three hundred forty-six thousand bales; and that estimated production of cotton for the year 1928 is in excess of one million one hundred thousand bales.
“Defendant further says that in the Town of Indianola, and within a radius of four miles there were in the 1927 season and are now seven cotton gins which ginned in 1927 a total of fifteen thousand and fifty-two bales of cotton; and of that amount the gin of this defendant ginned two thousand six hundred and seventy-five bales, and purchased the cotton seed 'from all of this cotton except that which was saved; and that the other gins in Indianola purchased the seed from all of the cotton ginned, by them except the seed saved, which seed; saved was only a small fraction of the total tonnage delivered; that Indianola is in Sunflower county, Mississippi, which has seventy-one active gins.
“Defendant further says that within the trade radius of Indianola are several other cotton gins, which, in the 1927 season and at the present season, are engaged in the purchase of cotton seed.
*107 “Defendant further says that in the town of Itta Bena and within a radius of two miles there are located five cotton gins, all engaged in the purchase of seed there ginned, and during the 1927 season'ginned a total of eight thousand three hundred and ninety-six bales, whereas, the gin of defendant ginned a total of two thousand two hundred and eighty bales. There are also several other gins within a radius of seven miles of Itta Bena, which buy cotton seed; that Itta Bena is in Leflore county which has sixty-two active gins.
“Defendant further says that it has been a chain operator of cotton gins for a period of at least eight years and during that timé no competitor of ’the Gilmer Grocery Company has been put out of business by the competition of defendant.
“Defendant further says that it is impossible at the time of purchasing cotton seed to foretell the exact quality or pribe of see,d when sold as the purchasers from the cotton gins make prices dependent upon the quality shown by analysis at the time of actual delivery, which analysis is made at or after delivery.
“Defendant further says that the price of seed is linked inseparably with the volume of bales ginned, and the overhead expenses of operation are dependent largely upon the total volume to be handled, except by guessing at the volume handled the preceding season; that the cost per bale of ginning is also dependent upon the volume of ginning done in a season.

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Bluebook (online)
125 So. 710, 156 Miss. 99, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-jordan-v-gilmer-grocery-co-miss-1930.