Stephens v. Mound City Liverymen & Undertakers Ass'n

246 S.W. 40, 295 Mo. 596, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 134
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 6, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 246 S.W. 40 (Stephens v. Mound City Liverymen & Undertakers Ass'n) 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
Stephens v. Mound City Liverymen & Undertakers Ass'n, 246 S.W. 40, 295 Mo. 596, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 134 (Mo. 1922).

Opinions

Plaintiff filed in the Circuit Court for the city of St. Louis the following petition:

"Come now the plaintiffs and, by leave of court first had and obtained, file this their amended petition.

"Plaintiffs state that they are husband and wife; that the defendants, Mound City Liverymen Undertakers' Association, Clement Schur Livery Undertaking Company, Cullen Kelly Livery, Undertaking Embalming Company, C. Hoffmesiter Undertaking Livery Company, McFarland Finan Undertaking Livery Company, Wm. J. Roberts Livery Undertaking Company, St. Louis Livery Company, Henry Leinder Undertaking Company, Wacker-Helderle Undertaking Livery Company, and Marshall Brothers' Livery Company, are corporations, duly organized and existing under the laws of the State of Missouri; that all of the defendants named are members of the Mound City Liverymen Undertakers' Association.

"For cause of action plaintiffs state that they are and have been for a long time engaged in the business of undertaking and embalming in the city of St. Louis; that plaintiff, Thomas Stephens, is a licensed embalmer; that they have complied with the state and local laws; that they have established for themselves a substantial and profitable business, which they carried on successfully for many years, until, on or about the 1st day of October, 1916.

"Plaintiffs state that these defendants, the Mound City Liverymen Undertakers' Association and the members thereof have entered into an agreement and combination in writing, combining and conspiring together against these plaintiffs and all other undertakers in the city of St. Louis who are not members of said association, whereby it is agreed and understood by and between the said defendants that these defendants would not and should not trade, exchange, give or hire to any undertaker, not a member of this association, any carriages, hearses or other equipment, and in order to more *Page 601 effectually enforce said agreement and carry out and further said conspiracy, said Mound City Liverymen Undertakers' Association of St. Louis, and the other defendants, as members thereof, agreed and threatened to suspend and fine any member of said association trading, exchanging, going or hiring or dealing with any undertaker not a member of said association, any carriages, hearses, horses or other equipment, and thereby tried to force and compel these plaintiffs to join said association and become a party to said conspiracy, which these plaintiffs refused to join and become members of said Undertakers' Association and become party to said unlawful combination, conspiracy, agreement and understanding, and refused to thereby aid and assist these defendants in their unlawful undertaking to create and maintain a monopoly for the purpose of controlling the livery and undertaking business in the city of St. Louis, Missouri, and to control the price to be charged for services so rendered, the association and the individual defendants have for a long time in the past refused to trade, exchange, give or hire to these plaintiffs or any other person in the city of St. Louis, not a member of said association, any carriages, hearses, or other equipment used in connection with the livery and undertaking business.

"Plaintiffs state that said conspiracy and combination entered into and carried on, and now carried on, was and is for the purpose of limiting competition and restricting trade, and raising and controlling the prices for the hiring of carriages and hearses.

"Plaintiffs state that by reason of the aforesaid secret, wrongful and unlawful agreement, understanding and conspiracy among and between these defendants, plaintiffs have, for a long time before the filing of this suit, been denied by these defendants the right and privilege of obtaining carriages and hearses from members of said association, said carriages and hearses being necessary with which to carry on their said business of *Page 602 undertaking and conducting funerals, and they have been obliged to forego and abandon funerals from which they could have earned large profits but for the wrongful interference and restraint put upon them by these defendants, and were finally compelled to abandon and quit their said business by reason of the wrongful interference and restraint put upon them by these defendants.

"Plaintiffs state that on divers occasions they have gone to the various members of the said association and offered and desired to hire from them carriages and hearses, tendering the regular price charged for the hire of the same and needed by them to carry on and conduct funerals for persons who requested them so to do, and that these defendants refused to hire to this plaintiff the carriages and hearses by them so requested, stating as a reason for so refusing that they did not belong to the said Mound City Liverymen Undertakers' Association.

"Plaintiffs state that these defendants, conspiring and working together as aforesaid, have driven and forced these plaintiffs and other reputable undertakers, in many instances, entirely out of business.

"Plaintiffs state that by reason of this conspiracy and combination among these defendants, it is useless for them to make or attempt to make any contract or agreement with customers for the burial of their dead, for the reason and because of the interference and restraint put upon them by these defendants, they cannot hire or obtain the necessary equipment for the purpose of carrying out said agreements.

"Plaintiffs further state that on some occasions they have requested the hire of carriages and hearses from some of the members of said association, and they agreed to furnish the same, but on being warned by defendants' officers that these plaintiffs were not members of said association, said parties refused to carry out their agreement and hire to these plaintiffs the carriages and hearses which they had previously agreed to do. *Page 603

"Plaintiffs further state that by reason of the said unlawful agreement, combination, understanding and conspiracy and the wrongful acts of these defendants, they have been greatly injured in their business, have suffered great financial loss and damage by being prevented and restrained from carrying on their said business of undertaking and embalming, by reason of these defendants' wrongful refusing to trade, exchange, give or hire to them the necessary equipment for conducting funerals.

"Plaintiffs state that by reason of the aforesaid wrongful acts of these defendants, plaintiffs are and have been compelled to abandon and lose their business of undertaking and embalming in the city of St. Louis, all to their damage in the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, and by reason of the fact that said conspiracy and combination is in violation of the statute of the State of Missouri, they are entitled to triple damages for the sum of seventy-five thousand dollars, for which said sum of seventy-five thousand dollars plaintiffs pray judgment, and for their costs of suit."

Defendants answered with a general denial.

When the cause came on for trial defendants objected to the introduction of any evidence, on the ground that the petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The objection was sustained and plaintiffs declining to plead further the case was dismissed and final judgment entered for defendants. From such judgment plaintiffs prosecute this appeal.

The objection to the introduction of any evidence was in effect a challenge of the sufficiency of the petition by general demurrer. The question then is: Does the pleading state a cause of action under any theory of legal liability?

I.

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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W. 40, 295 Mo. 596, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephens-v-mound-city-liverymen-undertakers-assn-mo-1922.