Wood v. Texas Ice & Gold Storage Co.

171 S.W. 497, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 911
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 28, 1914
DocketNo. 7218.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 171 S.W. 497 (Wood v. Texas Ice & Gold Storage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Texas Ice & Gold Storage Co., 171 S.W. 497, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 911 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

RASBURY, J.

Counsel’s statement of the nature and result of the suit contained in appellant’s brief is not only clear and concise, but is accepted by counsel for appellee ns correct, and we accordingly adopt same. It follows:

“Appellant, a retail dealer in ice in the city of Dallas, sued appellee, a manufacturer of and wholesale dealer in said commodity, on a * * * contract entered into by the parties, whereby appellee agreed to sell appellant, at $3 per ton, ‘as much as six tons, or what his trade may demand, of ice per day,’ and as much more as appellee might be able to supply without conflicting with other arrangements; and appellant agreed ‘to make all his purchases from ap-pellee’ during the term of the contract, provided appellee should be able to furnish the quantity of ice needed. The contract also contains a provision that appellee shall meet the market price in case same should fall below $3 per ton. The petition charges a Breach of the contract upon the part of appellee, in that it refused to-sell appellant any more ice at the contract price, and that appellant was consequently compelled to go elsewhere in the market and purchase ice for his trade at an increased price. He prays damages in a sum equal to the difference between the contract price and the price actually paid by him for ice, laying the amount of damages at $1,163.25. A copy of the contract sued on was attached to and made a part of the petition, which, omitting unimportant and formal portions, is as follows:
“ ‘Dallas, Texas, Oct. 30, 1912.
“ ‘This contract and agreement, this day entered into by D. M. Jones, acting for the Texas Ice & Cold Storage Co., hereinafter called first party, and H. C. Wood, hereinafter called second party, all of Dallas, Texas, witnessoth: That the first party agrees to sell the second party as much as six tons, or what his trade may demand, of ice per day, and as much more as the first party is able to supply, without conflicting with other arrangements, and the second party agrees to make all his purchases from the first party during the term of this contract, provided the first party is able to furnish same as above indicated. The price to be paid for all purchases during the term of this contract, which is one year beginning October 30, 1912, is three dollars ($3.00) per ton on platform, located at 2225 Cedar Springs St., of first party, unless the general market price of ice in the city of Dallas goes below said price, then in that event, during such time, the first party agrees to meet such price so long as first party operates their plant. [Here follow numerous provisions relating to what shall be done in case of closing-appellee’s factory, the quality of ice to be furnished by appellee, and certain other mutual and reciprocal duties of both parties unnecessary to detail.] Witness our hands in duplicate.
“ ‘H. C. Woods,
“ ‘Texas Ice & Cold Storage Co.’ ”

[1] The only question involved in the appeal is whether the contract quoted constitutes a conspiracy in restraint of trade under subdivision 1 of article 7798, R. S. 1911. Stripped of verbiage as applied to the instant case, said subdivision 1 of said article, in substance, declares that it shall constitute a conspiracy in restraint of trade when two persons (firms, corporations, or associations) engaged in buying or selling any commodity agree to refuse to buy such commodity from or sell it to any other person, firm, etc. Such being the literal language of the statute, the contract in question, in our opinion, comes precisely within the statutory definition of the acts denounced thereby, since the declared purpose of the contract is to prevent appellant from buying ice from any other person, firm, corporation, or association. By the statute it is unlawful for two persons to agree that one of them will buy from the other exclusively of a given commodity as it is in like manner unlawful for one of them to agree to sell exclusively to the other a given commodity. It is unlawful to do either or both, and it is not necessary to do both in order to constitute the offense, and the reason therefor is the statute itself. A recent case identical in principle and quite similar in fact is Star Mill & Elevator Co. v. Ft. Worth Grain & Elevator Co., 146 S. *498 W. 604. There appellant undertook to supply appellee a stipulated number of bushels of grain on condition that appellee bought exclusively of “legitimate dealers,” such as appellant, and not from farmers, brokers, or grain elevators. The difference in the facts of the two cases is that by the contract in the case cited the appellee could buy from dealers of like nature with appellant, but not from others, while by the contract in the instant case, appellant agreed to buy wholely from appellee.

[2] But it is argued by counsel in the instant case that the statute does not apply because such contract has no tendency to destroy competition between the parties. In short, that it permits appellant to buy ice at all times at the prevailing market price. Such might be literally true and yet the prevailing market price under such agreement, if general, might create, or tend to create, restrictions in trade or commerce, or destroy competition, which is the declared purpose of other portions of the act to prevent. Article 7796, R. S. 1911.

The letter of the act, as we have said, being so plain and the difficulty of determining just how such agreements may affect trade or commerce being so manifest, a fair rule of interpretation is that announced in Star Mill & Elevator Co. v. Et. Worth Grain & Elevator Co., supra, where it is said:

“The purpóse, we think, as indicated by the scope of the statute and the language used was to denounce as illegal, without reference to the intent of the parties and without reference to its actual effect, every agreement or understanding between parties engaged in buying any commodity, whereby they, or either of them, was to refrain from buying such commodity from any one having same for sale.”

[3] Counsel for appellant, however, further argues that subdivision 1, under which this proceeding was defended, is limited to those persons, firms, etc., who are engaged in the same character of business. In short, that before the statutory rule may be applied to the case at bar, it would have to be alleged and shown that appellant and appellee were both in the wholesale ice business, or the retail ice business. We believe the language of the subdivision is susceptible of no such narrow and restricted construction, and we have been unable to find any reported case that goes to that extent, though counsel for appellee cites Nickels v. Prewitt Auto Co., 149 S. W. 1094, in support of the construction sought to be placed upon the statute. We conclude, however, there is nothing in the opinion to warrant that deduction. After reciting the fact that the case made out in the court below failed to show a monopoly, which was the defense urged, as defined by other provisions of the “anti-trust act,” and after reciting that the pleadings and the evidence were insufficient to show a conspiracy in restraint of trade as defined by subdivision 1 under discussion, the opinion states that: I

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171 S.W. 497, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 911, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-texas-ice-gold-storage-co-texapp-1914.