State v. Caspare

80 A. 606, 115 Md. 7, 1911 Md. LEXIS 118
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 3, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 80 A. 606 (State v. Caspare) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Caspare, 80 A. 606, 115 Md. 7, 1911 Md. LEXIS 118 (Md. 1911).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion to the Court.

Pattison, J., delivered the opinion of the Court.

' The appellees in this case, the defendants below, were indicted in the Criminal Court for Baltimore City under an indictment containing three counts.

The first count charges in substance, that the defendants did unlawfully use a scheme and deviee in the nature of a gift enterprise for the sale of merchandise, in that they did sell and deliver to one Benjamin B. Barber, Jr., eighteen bars of soap, and in connection with such sale and delivery, did then and there give and issue to the said Barber, as an inducement to said purchase, ten stamps,' commonly called “trading stamps,” that had been furnished to the defendants by certain other persons engaged in the trading stamp business, to'wit: the Sperry and Hutchinson Company,' a body corporate, to be used by the defendants in connection with the sale of merchandise by them, which said stamps the said company, being then and there the agent of the said defend *10 ants, had agreed to redeem, upon presentation to it, and in exchange therefor to give to the holder thereof something uncertain, undetermined and unknown to the said Barber at the time of said purchase; and, as allegedj in violation of section 263 a of Chapter 207 of the Acts of 1898, and codified in the Code of 1904 as Article 27, section 404.

In the second count they were charged with the violation of section 412 of Chapter 381 of the Acts of 1910, in that “none of which said trading stamps (so issued by them) did then and there have a monetary redeemable value of at least one cent current money.”

The third count charges, in substance, that the defendants unlawfully failed, at the time of the issue of said stamps, to deliver to said Barber, the receiver of said stamps, a printed or written statement clearly setting forth the date and place of issue of said stamps, and every right given to the receiver thereof, also the names of the defendants issuing and the name of said Barber, the receiver of, said stamps, also, a full and itemized list of each and every article for which said stamps either singly or in connection with other similar stamps might thereafter be exchanged or redeemed by the holder thereof, and also the exact number of such stamps required for the redemption of each of said specific articles or things enumerated in such statement; and, as alleged, in violation of section 412 a of Chapter 381 of the Acts of 1910.

The defendants filed a special plea to all three counts of the indictment, alleging, in substance, that they, the defendants, were on the 11th day of May, 1910, engaged in the l’etail grocery business in the city of Baltimore, and that on said last named day they, at their place of business, sold unto one Benjamin. B. Barber, Jr., certain merchandise, at and for the sum of one dollar which was paid to them in cash, and that at such time the defendants delivered to the purchaser ten coupons, tickets or vouchers known as the Sperry and Hutchinson green trading stamps, being at the rate of one stamp for each ten cents of merchandise so purchased, pursuant to the terms of a written contract or agreement *11 existing between tbe defendants and the Sperry and Hutchinson Company, a foreign corporation dnly authorized to transact business in the State of Maryland, whereby the said company furnished said trading stamps to the defendants, who agreed to deliver said stamps to their customers as an inducement for cash trade. By the contract it was agreed by the company that it would redeem said stamps with goods and merchandise when presented by the customers of defendants in its trading stamp books in lots of 990 stamps, and according to law, “collected in the manner prescribed and subject to the conditions” in the trading stamp books of the company hereinafter referred to. One of which conditions is as follows:

“ Notice
“ To the Public and to the Customers of our Subscribers :
“This book and the trading stamps which are issued by the undersigned are so issued, and are received by you, pursuant to certain restrictions and limitations concerning their use contained in this written contract made for your benefit between the undersigned and the merchants authorized to re-issue them to their customers. Neither, the books nor the stamps are sold to you or the merchant, the title thereto being expressly reserved in the undersigned. They are furnished for you as evidence of payments to our subscribers, the only righ which you acquire in said stamps is to paste them in books like this and present them to us for redemption.”

That said company is engaged in the business of advertising defendants and other merchants in the city of Baltimore for the purpose of increasing the trade, and especially the cash trade of such merchants as contract for its services. That the company maintains a three-story and basement store on N. Howard street, in the city of Baltimore, and also a store in the large department store of Stewart & Company, in said city. These stores are stocked with good's, wares and merchandise, consisting of sideboards, chairs' china closets, tables, lamps, desks, bookcases, rugs, bedspreads, silver ware, plated ware, china, cut glass, pictures, statuary, musical instruments, and various other classes of articles for house *12 hold use, and are .open to the public during the business hours of each day, and the company by various methods of advertising, invites the public to enter and1 inspect said merchandise, which is. of the value of many thousand dollars. Each of said articles bears a printed tag correctly showing the number of stamps, in exchange for which said company offers to give such articles free of charge to the person presenting such stamps.

That the company employs numerous persons in said stores and as canvassers, who go from house to house in Baltimore City, and especially in the neighborhood of defendants’ store, all of whom explain to the general public that the company will deliver said articles of merchandise in exchange for Sperry and Hutchinson green trading stamps in certain numbers. That the canvassers carry with them catalogues containing many hundred illustrations of the mer’chandise carried by said company in said stox'es, which catalogxxes describe said ardides and state the nulnber of stamps accepted in exchange for each article. Said catalogues and directories containing the names of the merchants, of the city dealing ixx such stamps, and trading stamp books are • left at the houses by the canvasser's. That the offer of the company was, until the passage of the Act of 1910, known, as the Trading Stamp Act, also brought to the attention of the public by means of large and frequent advertisements thereof in "the newspaper’s of Baltimore City, at which time the newspapers refused to accept advertisements offered by the company; since then, as well as before, they have advertised in various other ways. The agents of the company inform the public that said stamps may be procured from those merchants with whom the company has advertising contracts, and the said merchants will deliver said stamps to the customers as an inducement for cash trade.

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Bluebook (online)
80 A. 606, 115 Md. 7, 1911 Md. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-caspare-md-1911.