delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from a decree that defendant account to plaintiffs for the difference between the respective amounts paid to plaintiffs for milk shipped by them through defendant between February 1, 1950 and July 15, 1950 and the amounts they would have received if they had been paid the average prices per hundredweight received by all who shipped through defendant for all milk shipped during that period.
Defendant, Cooperative Milk Service, Inc., the Cumberland association, is a cooperative association incorporated in 1948 under the Maryland cooperative associations act. Code, Article 23, sections 430-459. Among its purposes and powers (each stated to be both) are, “To engage in any activity in connection with producing, marketing, selling, preserving, * * * packing, handling, storing or utilization of any agricultural products of its members; * * * or in any one or more of the activities specified in this Article, and to transport the products
Defendant entered into a marketing agreement with each of its members and other producers, for a term of two years and until terminated by either party, whereby defendant bought and the producer sold to defendant all milk and milk products produced by the producer, to be delivered at such place or places as defendant might direct. By the agreement defendant was authorized “to establish from time to time, daily, weekly, monthly, or seasonal pools of the agricultural products marketed by it of the same variety, grade and quality, and all producers having such products in a particular pool shall share ratably in the net amount received therefrom”, and it was provided, among other things, that “this agreement is one of a series dependent for its true value upon the adherence of each and all of the contracting parties to each and all of the said agreements, but the cancellation of this agreement or the failure of the Producer to comply herewith shall not affect other similar agreements”, that “the Articles of Incorporation and the By-Laws, now or hereafter in effect, and this agreement constitute the entire agreement between the Association and the Producer” and that defendant might “enter into agreements with other producers differing in terms from those contained herein but consistent with the By-Laws of the Association without invalidating this agreement, provided that the Producer at his request may sign a similar agreement as a substitute for this agreement.”
In April, 1948, defendant purchased the Cumberland milk receiving station of the Embassy Dairy (James J. Ward) of Washington, D. C. From May 1, 1948 till June 30, 1949 defendant sold its milk to Embassy Dairy, receiving the “Blend Price”, which is considerably higher
In the spring of 1949 defendant negotiated with the Washington association regarding use of the Washington association as an outlet for defendant’s milk. The matter had been brought to a head in April, 1949 when Embassy Dairy notified defendant that on and after April 18th all milk in excess of 3,000 gallons a day would be paid for on the basis of only $2.50 per hundredweight, which was approximately the manufacturers’ price. This reduced the average price for all defendant’s milk, received by each of its members. The Washington association advised defendant that it was not willing to accept milk and pay the blend price for it unless the milk came from shippers who were its own members and
Before June 18, 1949 negotiations between defendant and the Washington association had led to sharp differences of opinion among defendant’s members. In a letter from defendant’s secretary to its stockholders, dated July 15th, it was said, “Your officers have contacted most of the membership and find that a majority of the members desire to market their milk through the Washington Association and these members produce over half the milk of the Association. In view of the fact that the Association does not have any definite contract with any other outlet, it is the opinion of the Board that it would be to the best interest of the producers and the Association that arrangements be affected
[sic]
whereby members who desire to do so and are eligible may market their milk through the Washington Association. To effect this, the Board of Directors is willing to cancel the marketing contract of all members who wish to market their milk through the Maryland and Virginia Milk Producers Association, Incorporated, upon the express condition that the members so cancelling shall remain members of the Association and agree to use the plant of the Association as a receiving station for their milk and shall give the Association an assignment of part of their account with the Washington Association to cover the cost of [handling?] and shipping their milk. * * * The Association will continue to market milk of any members who do not wish to market their milk through the Washington Association. As long as the District of Columbia permits milk from this area to enter Washington under a temporary permit, milk of all members of the Association who are not members of the Washington Association will be sold to the Washington Association. It is your Directors’ hope that the Washington Association will continue paying a blended
At a meeting of stockholders, in accordance with the statute (Art. 23, sec. 434), at which fifty-two members were present, amendments of the charter and the by-laws were adopted, and also, by a vote of thirty-seven for to fourteen against, a resolution authorizing the directors “to cancel the present marketing agreement of any member of the Association for the purpose of permitting such member to become a member of the Maryland and Virginia Milk Producers Association, Inc.,. and market his milk through such Association, upon the express condition that such member shall enter into a patron’s agreement with this Association whereby the Association will act as a receiving station for his milk, and such member shall assign part of his monthly account with Maryland and Virginia Milk Producers Association, Inc., to cover the cost of operating expenses in connection with such receiving operation, and to provide capital for the Association.” The minutes of the meeting state that the president, among other things, “emphasized that if Mr. Ward, of the Embassy Dairy, was correct in his statement that the temporary permits for Washington would not be removed for three years,
the milk of every member of the Association would be marketed in Washington as long as the temporary
Defendant’s members who became members of the Washington association each executed with defendant (1) a “memorandum of agreement” by which defendant cancelled the member’s previous marketing agreement and he agreed to designate and use defendant’s Cumberland plant as a receiving station for his milk, to assign to defendant part of his monthly account with the Washington association, and to sign a patron’s agreement, (2) a patron’s agreement by which defendant agreed “to receive, cool and store” all milk delivered to its plant in Cumberland by him and “to transport same and deliver it” to Washington or elsewhere as directed by the
Defendant continued to collect the milk of its members who did not become members of the Washington association and sold it to the Washington association. This milk was commingled with the milk of members of the Washington association and was transported in defendant’s tank trucks to Washington or other points designated by the Washington association. Each month the Washington association sent defendant a check covering the purchase of this milk at the Maryland blend price, and defendant in turn paid these members their pro rata share, less costs, expenses and capital “retains”. The Washington association paid directly to its members the price for their milk, less the assigned deduction paid to defendant. Only members of the Washington association who had Washington permits received the Washington blend price, which was five cents more than the Maryland blend price. Only members of the Washington association received the “seasonal adjustment payment”. As neither plaintiffs nor defendant make any point as to the seasonal adjustment payments or the difference between the Washington and Maryland blend prices, we need not explain or further mention these payments or this difference.
Two of the plaintiffs say that in August, 1949 they asked to be released from their contracts with defendant, but were refused. One says he then had another market available. Defendant’s president says it cancelled no contracts before about September 15th or October 1st, because if it cancelled, it would have to give everybody the same privilege; about that time it cancelled the contracts of those who became members of the Washington association, and it did not stand in the way of anybody else who wanted to quit. In February, 1951 the blend price was about five dollars per hundredweight, the manufacturers’ price about three dollars. Defendant made the same charge of eighty cents per hundredweight (sixty cents for expense and twenty cents for capital) for the three dollar milk sold by it to the Washington association and for the five dollar milk transported by it for members of the Washington association. Both the milk sold and the milk transported continued to be mingled. The prices and the price differential varied from month to month, the differential ranging from about $1.50 to $2. Some of the plaintiffs say the manufacturers’ price, less deductions, was less than their cost of production. Defendant says it could find no better market for its members who were not members of the Washington association. Such members were not numerous enough or their supply large enough to warrant construction or acquisition of a new receiving station by defendant. As fast as they found other
On April 14, 1950 plaintiffs filed their bill for an accounting. Of the eleven plaintiffs eight attended the stockholders meeting on August 22, 1949, and presumably voted against the action there taken. Of the five plaintiffs who testified all except one, who was not present, voted and also voiced their opposition at the meeting. Three of the plaintiffs, who happen to be the three who did not attend the meeting, were held entitled to no relief, because they had executed releases when they gave up their contracts. The other eight by the decree below were held entitled to the accounting awarded.
Plaintiffs contend, and the lower court in effect held, that defendant’s action constituted a breach of trust, and was illegal under its charter and by-laws and under the cooperative associations act, under its marketing agreement with plaintiffs, and under “general cooperative law and practice”.
Cooperative associations differ from ordinary business corporations principally in that they do most of their business with their own members. Art. 23, sec. 430. Among statutory differences are limitation of members to one vote each
{ibid.)
and prohibition of voting by proxy (Art. 23, sec. 447), with a narrow exception. Art. 23, sec. 4‘50. It may be doubted whether an ordinary business corporation, if and when it deals with its stockholders as such, is under any less duty of fairness and equality than a cooperative. Stockholders are not .trustees or
quasi
trustees for each other.
Shaw v. Davis,
Not unnaturally plaintiffs felt that injustice had been done when their milk was commingled in the same tanks
There was nothing unfair or unlawful in anything done or left undone by defendant after the announcement of price reduction in January, 1950. Defendant may have been dominated by members of the Washington association, but the Washington association was not dominated or controlled by defendant or its members, and there is no evidence that the Washington Health Department was controlled by either defendant or the Washington association.
Plaintiffs contend that defendant’s original action in the summer of 1949 in authorizing release of marketing agreements and substitution of patron’s agreements with its members who became members of the Washington association was unfair and unlawful. Plaintiffs say that defendant’s duty of equality in treatment of its members
The by-law amendment declaring that “the association may simultaneously engage in any of the activities set forth” in the charter was not necessary to remove any previous restriction, and added nothing to the powers of the association under the statute and its charter. The other by-law amendments and the charter amendment merely broadened some words in subsidiary details and were not needed to remove any previous restriction upon the statutory and charter powers of the association. It is therefore unnecessary for us to consider the scope of the power of charter and by-law amendment conferred by statute and at least recognized in the marketing agreements. The marketing agreement also, in a provision above quoted, expressly provides that defendant may “enter into other agreements with other producers differing in terms from those contained herein * * * provided that the Producer at his request may sign a similar agreement as a substitute for this agreement.”
Plaintiffs say defendant’s action was unlawful because of the “assurances” given them that the blend price would continue to be paid until cancellation of the Washington temporary permits. The “assurances” referred to are the above quoted statement in the letter of July 15, 1950 and the above quoted and italicized statement by defendant’s president at the stockholders’ meeting on August 22nd. The difference between the two statements is that what is stated in the letter as a hope, was stated at the meeting as a fact or (to speak more accurately) a prediction. Plaintiffs do not contend that this statement was made fraudulently, with intent to deceive. The lower court finds that defendant’s officials “were led to believe this purchase of all its milk at the ‘blend price’ would continue until the temporary wartime permits were revoked by the Washington Health authorities.” There is no evidence that defendant in bargaining with the Washington association could have
In equity,
e. g.,
in specific performance or recission, relief may be had for misrepresentations, without showing all the requisites for an action for deceit. This does not mean that a suit for pecuniary damages for innocent misrepresentation may be maintained in equity, without any other ground of equity jurisdiction, whenever an action for deceit cannot be maintained. Whether a demand that defendant “make good” or perform its representations would be a ground of equity jurisdiction or only a figure of speech, we need not decide. This is not such a suit. Moreover, in equity, as at law, a misrepresentation, to constitute a ground for relief, must be material.
Clark v. Kirsner,
At the argument plaintiffs stressed the facts (1) that in August, 1949 two of the plaintiffs asked to be released from their marketing agreements and where refused and (2) that after January, 1950 defendant deducted the same eighty cents per hundredweight from the proceeds of sale of plaintiffs’ three dollar milk that they charged for handling their “patrons’ ” five dollar milk. We need not decide whether in August, 1949 fundamental facts and conditions underlying the marketing agreements had so changed as to entitle an individual producer to terminate his contract. Plaintiffs did not attempt to terminate their marketing contracts but are now suing to enforce those contracts in a way which we hold is not warranted under the contracts. Nor need we decide whether, after January, 1950, defendant under its contracts should have
As we hold that plaintiffs were never entitled to the relief sought, and granted by the decree below, we need not consider whether any right to relief would have been barred by failure to assert it promptly after the action taken by defendant in August, 1949.
Decree reversed, with costs, and bill dismissed.
