State Ex Rel. Taylor v. Anderson

254 S.W.2d 609, 363 Mo. 884, 1953 Mo. LEXIS 526
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 9, 1953
Docket42510
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 254 S.W.2d 609 (State Ex Rel. Taylor v. Anderson) 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. Taylor v. Anderson, 254 S.W.2d 609, 363 Mo. 884, 1953 Mo. LEXIS 526 (Mo. 1953).

Opinion

COIL, C.

Appeal from a judgment in an action by the Attorney General to prevent and restrain defendants from violating the law relating to monopolies, discriminations, and conspiracies contained in Chapter 416, Mo. R. S. 1949. (References to statute sections are Mo. R. S. 1949).

The suit under §416.260 for injunctive relief, alleged in count I that defendants entered into an agreement or understanding with four corporations to regulate, control, and fix the resale price of liquid petroleum and to maintain the price so fixed and regulated; entered into such agreement or understanding for the purpose of lessening free competition and to increase the market price of liquid petroleum, and that such agreement or understanding did tend to lessen free competition and to increase the market price; and that such agreement or understanding was in. restraint of trade and competition. The averments of count I are based upon the provisions of §§416.010, 416.020, and 416.040.

*887 Count II of the bill averred that defendants combined with four corporations for the purpose of destroying the competition of another corporation and discriminated against it by selling liquid petroleum in one city or area of the state at a different price than it was sold by defendants in combination with the four corporations in another city or area of the state. These averments were based upon §416.120. As will later appear, we eliminate the question of violation of this section (416.120) from consideration. Thus, further reference herein to the “sections of the statutes” or to the “statutes” will refer, unless otherwise noted, to §§416.010, 416.020, and 416.040.

The trial court’s judgment found defendants guilty of a conspiracy in restraint of trade and permanently restrained and enjoined them from participating in any agreement or understanding for the purpose of fixing the resale price of liquid petroleum, and from participating in any agreement or understanding to discriminate against a competitor by selling liquid petroleum in one city for a lower price than liquid' petroleum is sold by defendants in another city.

The sections of the statutes here involved (for the purposes of this case) provide in substance as follows: §416.010 — that any person who enters into an agreement or understanding with any other person in restraint of trade or competition is guilty of conspiracy in restraint of trade; §416.020 — that any person who enters or participates in an agreement or understanding with any other person to regulate, control, or fix a price, or to maintain such regulated or fixed price, is guilty of conspiracy in restraint of trade; §416.040 — that agreements or understandings between two or more persons which are designed to lessen [612] or which tend to lessen free competition, or agreements which are designed to increase or which tend to increase the market price of any commodity, are against public policy, unlawful and void, and that any person participating in such an agreement is guilty of conspiracy in restraint of trade; §416.120 provides that any person engaged in the sale of a commodity who with intent to destroy, and for the purpose of destroying, competition of an established dealer in such product or commodity, discriminates by selling the commodity in one town at a lower price than he sells it in another town, having regard for different cost factors, is guilty of unfair discrimination which is prohibited and declared unlawful.

Section 416.050 provides for fine or imprisonment or both for one convicted of violating the provisions of §§416.010, 416.020, and 416.-040. While the assessment of penalties was prayed in plaintiff’s bill, no penalties were assessed by the trial court. .Obviously, penalties could not be assessed because this is a civil proceedings in equity by virtue of §416.260 and not a criminal proceedings under §416.050.

The evidence adduced by the Attorney General tended to establish that defendants are partners doing business as Economy Gas Company *888 with their principal office in Springfield, Missouri, and sell liquid petroleum (propane and butane gas) in and about the City of Springfield; that in September 1950 defendant Fritts, in company with a representative of each of three corporations which also sold liquid petroleum in Springfield, visited one Kenneth Coatney at the offices of the Lebanon Propane Gas and Appliance Company, a corporation, in Lebanon, Missouri; that Coatney controlled and managed the Lebanon Propane Gas and Appliance Company^ and was president of the Ken L. P. Gas Company, a corporation -whose principal office was in Springfield, and that both the last named corporations sold liquid petroleum in Lebanon and Springfield respectively; that Fritts, as spokesman for himself and those with him, told Coatney that since he, Fritts, and defendant Anderson had bought the Economy Gas Company (September 1949), “they had all got together and organized a group which had set the price on gas and they would get that price the year round”; that they were getting 12$ and 14$ per gallon in Springfield and Lebanon for gas, and requested that Coatney raise his price to theirs; that one or two of the others with Fritts also told Coatney that they all had the same price; that Coatney, through the Ken L. P. Gas Company, was then selling liquid petroleum in Springfield for 9-|-$ and 10-J$ a gallon depending on the amount sold; that Fritts remonstrated with Coatney about undercutting others on price and told Coatney that the others would lose money if they had to meet his price and they did not intend to do so; that if Coatney refused to go along with them they would contribute money to a fund and run Coatney out of business; Fritts said it would be cheaper to contribute to run Coatney out of business than to take the loss which would result from selling at Coatney’s price; that Fritts suggested they buy out Coatney in Springfield, which proposition Coatney refused; that someone asked whether Coatney would leave Springfield if Missouri Hydro Gas Company, a representative of .which was present in the meeting, ceased doing business in Lebanon; that Coatney said he would consider this; that Fritts said they would discuss the matter with Mr. Bales, one of the owners of the Missouri Hydro Gas Company, and-let Coatney know; that after the other parties present had left the meeting, Fritts told Coatney that they would see what could be worked out, but that the “boys really meant business”; that this meeting lasted about three hours and that many of the statements made by defendant .Fritts were repeated in various forms at numerous times during the meeting.

Several days later, probably September 22, 1950, defendants Anderson and Fritts called on Coatney at his office in Lebanon and Fritts stated that they (identified as “the group”) were going to put 5$ gas in Lebanon and run him, Coatney, out of business if he didn’t come to terms, that they had all talked it over and had discussed several plans but had decided on the plan to put 5$ gas in Lebanon as most *889 effective; that Fritts again requested that [613] Coatney raise his price; that Anderson told him (Coatney) that he was “a bull-headed fool for not coming along with the group ’ ’; that Coatney told them he would think it over and let them know by a certain day; that they said if he didn’t come to terms there would be 5‡ gas in Lebanon until he did come to terms.

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Bluebook (online)
254 S.W.2d 609, 363 Mo. 884, 1953 Mo. LEXIS 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-taylor-v-anderson-mo-1953.