227 Mass. 466 | Mass. | 1917
This is a suit in equity brought to compel the defendant corporation to recognize the plaintiff as a stockholder and to permit him to share in dividends earned and to allow him to participate in the corporate management. The plaintiff Duane and the corporation which he represents are joined as plaintiffs and will be referred to hereafter as the plaintiff.
The bill sets out somewhat in detail the incorporation of the defendant corporation by ten stockholders, one of whom was the plaintiff, and each of whom represented another business, firm or corporation in which he was interested. It avers that the purpose of the organization of the defendant corporation by these retail merchants or their representatives was to deal in trading stamps and to supply the incorporators or the business enterprises with which they were identified with trading stamps; that the business of the corporation had been conducted by it since about 1907 through the execution of one form of contract called “A” with each of the incorporators, of another form of contract called “B” with each of the business concerns represented by the incorporators, and by a third form of contract called "C” with other merchants who might desire to use its trading stamps. The bill further alleges that the dominant design and direct tendency of these several forms of contracts was to restrict and stifle competition in the trading stamp business in this Commonwealth and to establish a monopoly therein by the defendant corporation, and to eliminate any effective rivalry with it by others in the trading stamp business, and that a monopoly in fact has been created so that approximately ninety per cent of the business in Boston and vicinity, conducted by merchants with trading stamps, is controlled by the defendant corporation, and that ninety per cent or more of trading stamps used in this Commonwealth are furnished by it under its three different forms of contracts. It is averred, also, that on February 26,1915, the decision was rendered in Merchants Legal Stamp Co. v. Murphy, 220 Mass. 281, declaring in effect that contracts like “A,” “B” and “C” were illegal as being contrary to St. 1908, c. 454, which prohibits transactions operative to choke competition and to restrain trade, and that that decision was speedily called to the attention of all parties to this suit, and that the plaintiff previous to July, 1915, repeatedly notified the defendant corporation, its directors and attorney;
Stripped of all subsidiary and ancillary matters, the real purpose of this bill is to procure through the aid of a court of equity a share in the profits of an illegal enterprise. The allegations that the main features of agreements “A,” “B” and “C,” in their conception, execution and consequence were contrary to law, must be taken as true. They appear to be interdependent parts of a single scheme. Even if they be treated as separable, their distinctive characteristics and their direct result have been contrary to law. That was established by the decisions in Merchants Legal Stamp Co. v. Murphy, 220 Mass. 281, and Merchants Legal Stamp Co. v. Scott, 220 Mass. 389, and is no longer open to discussion. It is elementary law that no court will consciously lend its assistance to the enforcement of an illegal contract or to the promotion of an unlawful adventure. Where parties have
It is not necessary to determine whether the scheme of the defendant was unlawful at its inception as tending to create .a monopoly contrary to the common law, or whether it was made unlawful only by St. 1908, c. 454. The contract between the plaintiff and the defendant was by implication subject to constitutional legislation and this statute was within the Constitution as applied to existing contracts. Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Mottley, 219 U. S. 467.
Decree dismissing hill affirmed with costs.