80 Mo. App. 247 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
The crucial question in this case is whether the plaintiff corporation, either in its organization, or business operations in this state, has offended any of the provisions of its laws? That the predecessor of the plaintiff, the “National Lead- Trust,” was an unlawful combination, both in purpose and fact, is sufficiently established by the nature of the agreement under which it was created and the methods and practices resorted to in furtherance of that agreement. The agreement in question can only be construed as a contract to suppress competition, fix the prices of commodities and limit their production, and to restrain trade. Unless some one or all of these purposes had been entertained by the signers of the trust agreement, it would have not contained provisions looking to the acquisition by the trustees of the entire le'ad business of the country, nor would it have united in the accomplishment of that end, a majority of the stockholders of the largest corporations dealing in that product. That it had these objects in view and practically accomplished them, is evident from the fact that it started with a concert of eight corporations and terminated after having issued ninety million of trust certificates, and after it formed a combination of thirty corporations, constituting a large majority of the lead dealers of the country, who had united themselves together in the effort to realize dividends upon the-aforesaid capitalization out of assets of less than one-fourth in value of the amount for which trust certificates had been issued. "While the conclusion of the illegal purpose of the-trust agreement is irresistible upon a consideration of its several provisions and the manner in which they were carried out, it will appear from an examination of the cases, that this result has been declared by every court called upon to-review that agreement, or others substantially like it. State
Holding as we do that the corporation formed, fashioned, constituted and controlled by the parties to an illegal combination in furtherance of its purpose, afforded no .barrier to an exposure by the purchaser of its goods, of the nature of its business, and the true purposes of its organization under the anti-trust act law of Missouri, the next inquiry is does the record show such a state of facts as to relieve the purchaser from liability for the goods sold to him by the plaintiff ? All that the statute requires to be shown to afford such a release, in addition to the proof of the- illegal character and purpose of the plaintiff corporation already referred to, is evidence that the indebtedness sued for grew out of the transaction of its business in the state. That the goods were purchased by defendant in this state hardly admits of a doubt, for the itemized account filed with plaintiff’s petition shows that the sale of its commodities was made by one of' its branch departments in the city of St.- Louis, where the evidence also shows the defendant was engaged in business, and there was also evidence tending to prove that plaintiff was using properties it had purchased in St. Louis and East St. Louis in furtherance of its illegal design. Hence the case should have been submitted to the jury upon the undisputed facts and documentary evidence in the record proving that the plaintiff corporation was itself a party to an illegal combination on the part of its managing officers and constituent members under the first section of the Act of 1891, and upon evidence tending to prove