State ex rel. Moose v. Frank

169 S.W. 333, 114 Ark. 47, 1914 Ark. LEXIS 578
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 13, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 169 S.W. 333 (State ex rel. Moose v. Frank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Moose v. Frank, 169 S.W. 333, 114 Ark. 47, 1914 Ark. LEXIS 578 (Ark. 1914).

Opinion

Smith, J.,

(after stating the facts). It is conceded by the State that an agreement to fix the price of laundering is not an agreement to fix the price of ‘1 any article of manufacture, mechanism or merchandise;” but it is contended that the facts here alleged constitute an agreement to fix the price of a commodity, convenience or repair. And it is not contended by the State that the business of laundering is included in the terms “any article or thing whatsoever.” This last contention could not be sustained, because if the business of laundering is not a commodity, convenience or repair, then it would not be embraced in. tbe words “article or thing whatsoever.” Such a construction would be precluded by the decision of this court in the case of State v. Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co., 95 Ark. 114. That case was a proceeding against that railroad for a violation of the anti-trust act of 1905 for entering into a pool, trust, agreement, combination, confederation, and understanding with certain domestic corporations, all owning and operating certain lines of railroads within the State, for the purpose of fixing rates to be charged for the service of carrying freight and passengers. In the opinion in that case, it was said: “Counsel for the State do not contend that freight or passenger rates are articles of merchandise, manufacture, mechanism, commodity, convenience or repair, or that they are products of mining; but they do contend that the words ‘ ‘ or any article or thing whatsoever” include passenger and freight rates. We can not agree with their contention. This is a plain case for the application of the doctrine of ejusdem generis.

“The rule is ‘when general words follow an enumeration of particular things, such words must be held to include only such things or objects as are of the same kind as those specifically enumerated.’ 2 Lewis Sutherland on Statutory Construction (2 ed.), § 422.”

(1-2) And it was there further said: “Our ‘antitrust act’ does not in express terms attempt to deal with the questions of transportation by railroads or other carriers, or the fixing of rates therefor. It would be a violent presumption, indeed, to say that the Legislature in this vague and indefinite manner attempted to deal with a subject which so vitally affects the welfare of the people, and a proper solution of which has ever been one of the greatest concern and complexity. It seems .evident to us that the framers of the act intended that the words ‘or any article or thing whatsoever’ should take their meaning from the things specifically mentioned before, and that, when so construed, the allegations of the complaint do not constitute a violation of the terms of the act.”

(3) In construing this act, we must bear in mind that it is highly penal, and as such must receive a strict construction. Hughes v. State, 6 Ark. 132; Grace v. State, 40 Ark. 97; Stout v. State, 43 Ark. 413.

Discussing the original anti-trust act of the General Assembly of 1899, Mr. Justice Riddick, in State v. Lancashire Fire Insurance Co., 66 Ark. 466, said: “Whatever the Legislature may have intended, such intention can .have no effect unless expressed in the statute; for this, being a penal statute, can not be extended by implication. It would be in the highest degree unjust to punish conduct not clearly forbidden by the law itself.”

■ Nor are we concerned with any consideration of the economic questions involved in this act. A study of its terms makes the fact plain that the Legislature has not included within the inhibition of this act agreements relating to the price of labor.

The question has several times been before the courts of various States as to whether a laundry was a manufacturing establishment or not, and so far as we are advised it has been uniformly held that it is not. In the case of Downing v. Lewis et al., 76 N. W. 900, 56 Neb. 386, it was contended the sale of a laundry and an agreement entered into between the parties with reference thereto violated the anti-trust law of that State which prohibited any combinations or agreements where persons are engaged in the manufacture of sale of any article of commerce or consumption, or for any persons so engaged to enter into any combination or agreement relating to the price of any article or product of such manufacture, and the court there decided that a laundry was not a manufacturing establishment, and in so deciding that question it was there said: “It seems perfectly plain that a laundry, the business of which is to wash and iron linen, and other articles of wearing apparel and domestic use, which have become soiled in the service for which they were fabricated, is not a manufacturing establishment, within the meaning of the section quoted. In the common understanding, the function of a laundry is to make clothes clean, rather than to make clean clothes.”

In Commonwealth v. Keystone Laundry Co., 52 Atl. 326, where a law of the State of Pennsylvania which exempted from taxation so much of the capital stock of a manufacturing corporation as was invested in the carrying on of manufacturing was under construction, a laundry company claimed the exemption of that act. It was held that the laundry company was not a manufacturing' company, even though it manufactured soaps and dyes as incidental to its business; the court there used the following language: -“Its principal business, as properly stated by the court below, is washing and ironing, and in carrying on the business it needs soaps and dyes, and even if it does manufacture these two articles for its own use, instead of buying them, such manufacture does not make the ‘washing and ironing’ concern a manufacturing plant and business as defined by statute, lexicon or judicial utterance.”

Other cases to the same effect are Muir v. Samuels, 62 S. W. 481; In re White Star Laundry Co., 117 Fed. 570.

In the case of State ex rel. Star Publishing Co. v. The Associated Press, 159 Mo. 410, 60 S. W. 91, which was a suit by mandamus to compel respondent, a press association, whose business it was to gather news to furnish relator with its service, relator, 'among other things, claimed that respondent was a member of a combination and monopoly consisting of an association of newspapers organized to fix the price for news service and so coming within the scope of the anti-trust law. The writ was denied, and it was there said: “The business is merely one of personal service; an occupation. Unless there is a ‘property’ to be ‘affected with a public interest,’ there is no basis laid for the fact or charge of a monopoly. (Citing authorities.) * * * There is one remaining point to be considered, and that relates to the antitrust laws. * * * The law on the subject in this State prohibits‘any pool, trust, agreement, combination,’ etc., ‘to regulate or fix the price of any article of manufacture, mechanism, merchandise, commodity, convenience, repair ; any product of mining, or any article or thing whatsoever ; or the price or premium to be paid for the insurance of property,’ or to fix or limit the production of the things whose price may not be regulated or fixed. Nothing is discoverable in this section which is at all applicable to the business in which respondent is engaged. Whether we apply to the words of the statute the, rule of noscitur a sociis, or that of ejusdem generis, the result must be the same, and there is a special reason why the ruling in this regard should be n strict one, and this is because the statute is highly penal.”

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Bluebook (online)
169 S.W. 333, 114 Ark. 47, 1914 Ark. LEXIS 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-moose-v-frank-ark-1914.