Wagley v. Colonial Baking Co.

45 So. 2d 717, 208 Miss. 815, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 304
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1950
Docket37441
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 45 So. 2d 717 (Wagley v. Colonial Baking 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
Wagley v. Colonial Baking Co., 45 So. 2d 717, 208 Miss. 815, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 304 (Mich. 1950).

Opinions

[841]*841Smith, J.

Appellants are a co-partnership, doing business as Dixie Land Baking Company. Appellees, Colonial Bak[842]*842ing Company and Hardin’s Bakery Corporations, are corporations, while appellee, Golden Krust Bakery is a co-partnership. All, in May, 1948, were engaged in the bakery business in the City of Jackson. There was another so engaged at the same time, the Acme Bakery Company, not a party to the suit.

Appellants filed their declaration against appellees comprising two counts. The first count charged, in effect, three violations of Sections 1088 and 1089 of the Code of 1942, and demanded an award of $500 penalty for each violation. The violations allegedly consisted of concerted and simultaneous reduction of the wholesale price of white bread on June 15, 1948, from thirteen cents to twelve cents; on October 13, 1948, from twelve cents to ten cents; and on October 23,1948, from ten cents to eight cents, all such reductions applying only within the City of Jackson, or close by, and only in the territory served by appellants. It was further charged that these reductions were the result of a combination and agreement among the appellees to reduce the price of such bread to a degree inimical to the public welfare, and for the purpose of stifling competition and monopolizing the production, control and sale thereof in the said City of Jackson and a limited zone outside of it.

Section 1088, Code 1942, defines a trust or combine as being a combination, contract, understanding or agreement, expressed or implied, between two or more persons, corporations, or firms or associations of persons or between any one or more of either with one or more of the others, within the purview of criminal jurisprudence, when inimical to public welfare and producing certain listed effects therein. Persons violating the statute are made subject to punishment and injunction against the further continuation thereof.

Section 1089, Code 1942, provides that “any corporation, domestic or foreign, or individual, partnership, or association of persons whatsoever, who, with intent to [843]*843accomplish the results herein prohibited or without such intent, shall accomplish the results to a degree inimical to public welfare, and shall thus: (a) Restrain or attempt to restrain the freedom of trade or production; (b) Or shall monopolize or attempt to monopolize the production, control or sale of any commodity, or the prosecution, management or control of any kind, class or description of business; . . . (d) Or shall destroy or attempt to destroy competition in the manufacture or sale of a commodity, by selling or offering the same for sale at a lower price at one place in the state than another”; such parties “shall be deemed and held a trust and combine within the meaning and purpose of this section, and shall he liable to the pains, penalties, fines, forfeitures, judgments, and recoveries denounced against trusts and combines and shall he proceeded against in manner and form therein provided, as in case of other trusts and combines. ’ ’

Section 1092, Code 1942, authorizes any person, natural or artifical, injured or damaged by a trust and combine as defined, or by its effects directly or indirectly, to recover all damages of every kind sustained by him or it and in addition a penalty of five hundred dollars, by suit in any court of competent jurisdiction. It is also permitted by the statute for suit to he brought against one or more of the parties to the trust and combine and one or more of the officers and representatives of any corporation a party to the same, or one or more of either. Such penalty may he recovered in each instance of injury, and all recoveries provided for may be sued for in one suit.

Count II of the declaration charges that the price reductions, described in Count I, allegedly made by the defendants, were not for any legitimate purpose, but in furtherance of a joint and common scheme maliciously and wrongfully to interfere with appellants’ business, destroying it and driving them into bankruptcy. It [844]*844was further charged that the aforesaid price reductions were not intended to benefit the public but to ruin appellants’ business and coerce them into discontinuing their thirteen-inch loaf of bread. It is further asserted that when appellees had accomplished the purpose of their conspiracy they proposed to increase the price of bread back to its original cost to the public. Actual and punitive damages were demanded under Count II.

The appellees, each represented by different counsel, filed separate answers. It was denied, in detail, that there was any violation of the anti-trust statutes of this State, and that no common law rights of appellants had been by them transgressed. Price cuts were admitted, but, justified in appellees’ pleadings, as having been made only for the purpose of meeting a competitive advantage obtained by appellants as a result of appellants’ initiatory action, and to meet competition of the other baker in the City of Jackson. Denial was likewise made of any collusion, agreement or conspiracy by and between appellees, which interfered with or deprived appellants of any of their rights. The alleged “competitive advantage” to which allusion was made seems to be based on the premise that appellants gained it from their production and sale of a thirteen-inch loaf of bread in the City of Jackson for the same price charged by all three appellees for their eleven-inch loaf of bread in the same market.

At the end of appellants’ testimony, appellees moved the court to exclude it and grant them a directed verdict, which was overruled. However, the court sustained appellees’ motion, at the end of all of the evidence, for a peremptory instruction to find for the appellees, and such verdict was returned accordingly. Motion for new trial was made, overruled, and the plaintiffs below became appellants here, and the case is now before us for review.

[845]*845Errors assigned, which we deem worthy of note are: 1. The granting of the peremptory instruction; 2. refusal of the trial court to permit appellants to introduce the Presidents of Hardin’s Bakery Corporation and of Colonial Baking Company, defendants below, as adverse witnesses; 3. refusal to permit testimony of Mrs. Pucket, a witness for plaintiff below, recounting conversations with the sales manager of defendant, Hardin’s Bakery Corporation; 4. refusal to allow plaintiff’s witness, Wagster, to testify to a conversation with the general manager of Hardin’s Bakery Corporation; 5. and refusal to allow various witnesses on behalf of plaintiff below, appellant here, to testify as to their telephone conversation with persons claiming to be the general manager or sales manager of defendant appellees; the court erred in refusing to allow various witnesses to testify “of their telephone conversations with various persons claiming to be the general manager or sales manager of defendants.”

The record here is voluminous, consisting of two volumes, with the combined total of five hundred and forty-nine pages. Appellant has filed a lengthy brief, as have each of the attorneys representing the three several appellees; and the evidence is complicated and contradictory.

It is to be borne in mind that at the end of appellant-plaintiffs’ evidence, the trial court overruled a motion by appellee-defendants to exclude it, and direct a verdict for them. But that at the end of all of the testimony, a motion for a peremptory instruction to the jury to find a verdict for the latter was sustained.

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Wagley v. Colonial Baking Co.
45 So. 2d 717 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
45 So. 2d 717, 208 Miss. 815, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagley-v-colonial-baking-co-miss-1950.