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Memphis Laundry-Cleaners v. Lindsey

Supreme Court of Mississippi, In Banc
Dec 20, 1941
5 So. 2d 227 (Miss. 1941)

Summary

In Memphis Steam Laundry-Cleaners, Inc. v. Lindsey, 192 Miss. 224, 5 So.2d 227 (1941), the issues focused on unfair competition and trade, but this Court noted that a cause of action exists against one who sets about to maliciously and wantonly injure a competitor.

Summary of this case from Cenac v. Murry

Opinion

No. 34736.

December 20, 1941.

1. CORPORATIONS.

A common-law action for damages against a foreign corporation for unfair competition was properly brought in county where acts were committed, even though agent for service of process resided in another county (Code 1930, sec. 3445).

2. APPEAL AND ERROR.

Where evidence presented a case justifying an award of punitive damages in common-law action for unfair competition, the reviewing court on appeal from judgment for plaintiff was required to find only from the entire record that plaintiff sustained some actual damages as a legal "condition precedent" to the allowance of punitive damages, and was then required to determine whether in view of size of verdict under the facts the judgment should be disturbed.

3. CORPORATIONS.

The motives or malice of the officers of defendant corporation while they were still engaged in carrying out their policy of trying to destroy plaintiff's business were the motives or malice of the corporation itself, since it could act only through them in determining upon and carrying out such a policy.

4. TRADE-MARKS AND TRADE NAMES AND UNFAIR COMPETITION.

In common-law action for damages for unfair competition allegedly conducted by defendant corporation to destroy plaintiff's established cleaning and pressing business in a particular territory, testimony concerning statements made to witness by corporation's president and his successor in regard to campaign to put plaintiff out of business was competent and relevant where campaign was still in progress when statements were made.

5. TRADE-MARKS AND TRADE NAMES AND UNFAIR COMPETITION.

"Malice" as a test of liability for unfair competition does not necessarily signify ill will toward a particular individual but denotes that condition of mind which is manifested by the intentional doing of a wrongful act without just cause or excuse.

6. TRADE-MARKS AND TRADE NAMES AND UNFAIR COMPETITION.

The reduction of prices is an absolute right of the owner of a business and is lawful in itself, but under the guise of exercising an absolute right, it is not lawful indirectly to interfere with the business, employment, or occupation of a third person, where the exercise of the right is with the object of injuring the third person rather than primarily of benefiting the person exercising the right.

7. TRADE-MARKS AND TRADE NAMES AND UNFAIR COMPETITION.

A corporation when it employed its right to reduce prices for the purpose of putting plaintiff out of business degraded its privilege to cut prices for the purpose of promoting its own business into a "willful wrong."

8. TRADE-MARKS AND TRADE NAMES AND UNFAIR COMPETITION.

A malicious interference with a trade or calling is tortious per se, and a resort to the element of conspiracy to furnish a basis for an action for unfair competition is unnecessary.

9. TRADE-MARKS AND TRADE NAMES AND UNFAIR COMPETITION.

Either an individual or a corporation, whether acting in conjunction with others or not, may be liable in an action for unfair competition for maliciously interfering with a trade or calling.

10. TRADE-MARKS AND TRADE NAMES AND UNFAIR COMPETITION.

Ordinarily, competition in business, though carried to the extent of ruining a rival, is not actionable unless the dominant purpose to inflict injury is established.

11. TRADE-MARKS AND TRADE NAMES AND UNFAIR COMPETITION.

In common-law action to recover damages allegedly sustained because of campaign of unfair competition conducted by officers and employees of defendant corporation to destroy plaintiff's established cleaning and pressing business within a particular territory, evidence was sufficient for jury to find that the purpose to injure or destroy plaintiff's business by the reduction of prices was dominant throughout the period involved.

12. TRADE-MARKS AND TRADE NAMES AND UNFAIR COMPETITION.

The mere fact that defendant corporation intended at the end of its campaign of trying to put plaintiff out of business by reducing prices to raise its prices to their former level with resultant advantage to itself did not prevent its action from being primarily action to do plaintiff a willful and wanton injury.

13. TRADE-MARKS AND TRADE NAMES AND UNFAIR COMPETITION.

Plaintiff had the right as between himself and others to exercise and enjoy the fruits and advantages of his own enterprise, industry, and skill and earn a livelihood by operating his dry cleaning business at a legitimate profit, free from any attempted dictation, coercion, and intimidation on the part of defendant and from any threat of being driven into bankruptcy or being forced to seek employment on the W.P.A. unless he should agree to charge a price approximately double the figure at which he was already earning a legitimate profit.

14. TRADE-MARKS AND TRADE NAMES AND UNFAIR COMPETITION.

Evidence did not show that at time defendant reduced its prices for cleaning and pressing men's suits and ladies' dresses below cost of doing work, plaintiff had ever reduced or changed the prices charged by him so as to preclude plaintiff from complaining of defendant's alleged unfair competition on the ground that plaintiff was the first to cut prices.

15. TRADE-MARKS AND TRADE NAMES AND UNFAIR COMPETITION.

Evidence that defendant instead of reducing its prices for cleaning and pressing men's suits and ladies' dresses to meet legitimate competition, cut its prices from 85 cents to 20 cents, or to one-half of the price charged by plaintiff, for the expressed purpose of injuring plaintiff and destroying his business warranted submission of the question of punitive damages to the jury.

16. APPEAL AND ERROR.

Where proof of amount of actual damages sustained by plaintiff because of unfair competition was unsatisfactory, but it was sufficient to show that some actual damages necessarily resulted to plaintiff from defendant's wrongful act sufficient to constitute a basis for an award of punitive damages in a sum much larger than that awarded, judgment for plaintiff should be affirmed, even though some testimony concerning certain items of actual damages claimed was improperly admitted.

APPEAL from the circuit court of Prentiss county, HON. WM. H. INZER, Judge.

C.R. Bolton, of Tupelo, and Earl King, of Memphis, Tennessee, for appellant.

We respectfully say that the proof utterly failed to show any liability on the part of the defendant, appellant herein.

It is not the law that a party may be held liable in damages to any other person because he cuts his prices. Such a law is contrary to the law of competition, which the law favors, and such a holding would be against public policy.

It is also not the law that a party is liable in damages to his competitor because he has malice or ill will toward him, or even because he tried to put him out of business. That is recognized as a part of competition and while malice and ill will may be reprehensible and unsportsman like between competitors and business rivals, yet it will continue as long as human nature is perverse. If all the business rivals who had ill will and sought to put the other out of business were liable to suit, the courts would have to be greatly multiplied to take care of the business before them. That such is not the law is clearly held in this state by this court in the case of Globe Rutgers v. Firemen's Fund Fire Ins. Co., 97 Miss. 148, 52 So. 454.

As an incident to the advance of one's own business and for the purpose, he has the right to use all proper methods, and his competitors must be able to cope with his ingenuities. As is said in the case of Martell v. White, 185 Mass. 255, 69 N.E. 1085, 64 L.R.A. 260, 102 Am. St. Rep. 341: "Competition in business is permitted, although frequently disastrous to those engaged in it. It is always selfish, often sharp, and sometimes deadly." The fact that a rival in business is vanquished is not of itself sufficient to give rise to a cause of action against his competitor; but the facts must go further, and show that the contest was carried on by methods not allowable in such warfare.

See Globe Rutgers v. Firemen's Fund Fire Ins. Co., supra.

Neither of the charges made and attempted to be proven against the appellant, even if true, constitute actionable liability. They may each be lawfully done. It is only when such acts are done with a malicious purpose and without legitimate purposes of benefit to the doer that they become actionable.

Generally speaking, no one has a right intentionally to do an act with intent to injure another in his business, but injury, in its legal sense, ordinarily means damages resulting from a violation of a legal right. It is this violation of a legal right which renders the act wrongful in the eyes of the law and makes it actionable. If, therefore, there is a legal excuse for the act, it is not wrongful, even though damage may result from its performance. Hence competition in business, though carried to the extent of ruining a rival, is not ordinarily actionable; every trader is left to conduct his business in his own way, so long as the methods he employs do not involve wrongful conduct, such as fraud, misrepresentation, intimidation, coercion, obstruction or molestation of the rival or his servants or workmen, or the procurement of the violation of contractual relations. If the disturbance or loss comes as the result as where a merchant undersells or oversells his neighbor, it is damnum absque injuria. Thus, one should not be held liable for loss inflicted by competition, unless the dominant purpose to inflict injury is established; if there is a showing of mixed motives, only some of which are improper, no liability attaches.

See 30 Am. Jur. 91-92, Sec. 43.

Compare Wesley v. Native Lumber Co., 97 Miss. 814, 53 So. 346.

From the above statement, it appears that the doing of a lawful act in a manner to be held actionable by the courts is the doing of it wholly for malice and without any purpose of benefit to the doer. In other words, it is a spite act without motive of furtherance of the business or good of the party doing it. The courts have held that such actions were mere sham on the part of the evildoer to shield him in his malicious purpose, when in truth he was acting without any purpose of benefit to himself.

See Beardsley v. Kilmer, 236 N.Y. 80, 140 N.E. 203, 27 A.L.R. 1411; Martell v. White, 185 Mass. 255, 69 N.E. 1085, 64 L.R.A. 260, 102 Am. St. Rep. 341; Gilly v. Harsh (La.), 48 So. 424.

It is without dispute that Lindsey started the price cutting. The Tupelo Cleaners took the next step, and it was not until all had cut under their prices that the Memphis Steam Laundry joined the fight and cut under them all to regain the business which the other parties had taken away from it.

It cannot be said that this competition and the cutting of prices by the defendant was only from a spirit of malice on the part of the defendant, when it continued to operate on these reduced prices long after the plaintiff had withdrawn from the territory in which it was being charged by the defendant. The record in this case does not show malice on the part of the defendant. There was no proof whatever of intimidation of plaintiff's employees or customers, no proof of misrepresentation and no complaint of unethical methods, in fact, no complaint against the defendant except that it cut the prices below that of plaintiff.

The charge of conspiracy failed completely of proof. Under the testimony, the record wholly fails to show any action on the part of the defendant for which plaintiff was entitled to recover against it, and the peremptory instruction should have been given.

We respectfully urge that the court below was in error in permitting the plaintiff to prove before the jury a conversation had by Shannon Clayton, a resident of Ripley in another county, with Mr. Rozier, the president of the defendant company, which occurred at the office of the defendant in Memphis. It is our contention that this was a conversation which was had between these two parties subsequent to the event of which plaintiff complains. Even though Rozier was the president of the corporation, he had no authority to bind the corporation except as to the business in hand. He had no authority to express for the corporation to a stranger its malice or its ill will toward Lindsey.

There was no testimony before the court to warrant the giving of the punitive damage instruction. In the first place, it should not have been given because no actual damages had been proven, and it is a well established rule that punitive damages can never be awarded unless there are actual damages.

Floyd W. Cunningham and Jas. A. Cunningham, both of Booneville, for appellee.

The proof amply established liability.

See Miss. Code of 1930, Secs. 3439, 3440; Globe Rutgers Ins. Co. v. Firemen's Fund Fire Ins. Co., 97 Miss. 148, 52 So. 454; Wesley v. Native Lumber Co., 97 Miss. 914, 53 So. 346.

The evidence of Shannon Clayton was properly admitted to show conspiracy and purpose of defendant corporation to maliciously destroy business.

See 20 Am. Jur. 511, Sec. 600; 1 Jones on Evidence (4 Ed.), Sec. 356; Ibid, Sec. 357, p. 661; Yazoo M.V.R. Co. v. Jones, 73 Miss. 226, 19 So. 91; Mobile Ohio R. Co. v. Stinson, 74 Miss. 453, 21 So. 14; 22 C.J., Evidence, Secs. 440, 492.

There was ample proof to show both actual and punitive damages.

See Beach v. Johnson, 102 Miss. 419, 59 So. 800.

The question of punitive damages was properly submitted to the jury.

See Y. M.V.R.R. Co. v. Hardy, 100 Miss. 132, 55 So. 967; Y. M.V.R.R. Co. v. May, 104 Miss. 422, 61 So. 449; Storm v. Green, 51 Miss. 103.

Argued orally by C.R. Bolton, for appellant, and by Floyd W. Cunningham, for appellee.


This is a suit under the common law for damages alleged to have been sustained by the appellee J.B. Lindsey, doing business as Lindsey's Cleaners, because of a campaign of unfair competition conducted by the officers and employees of the appellant corporation, Memphis Steam Laundry-Cleaners, Inc., for the expressed purpose of destroying the appellee's established business of cleaning and pressing men's suits and ladies' dresses within the territory hereinafter mentioned.

The case was submitted to the jury under instructions which permitted the assessment of punitive as well as actual damages, and with the result that a verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiff Lindsey for the sum of $1,250. From this judgment, the defendant Memphis Steam Laundry-Cleaners, Inc., has prosecuted this appeal, and assigns as error (1) the refusal of the court below to grant a peremptory instruction in its favor on the ground that the plaintiff had failed either to establish liability or to prove that any actual damages were sustained by him; (2) the submission to the jury of the question of punitive damages; and (3) the overruling of objections to the admissibility of certain testimony. There was also a plea to the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of Prentiss County on the ground that the defendant is a non-resident corporation domiciled at Memphis, Tennessee, with its resident agent for the service of process residing at Tupelo, in Lee County, Mississippi, and that the cause of action did not occur or accrue in Prentiss County where the suit was brought. We think that a statement of the facts in the case will constitute a sufficient response to each of these assignments of error and demonstrate that neither of them are well taken, without the necessity of discussing them separately.

In the year 1939, the appellee Lindsey was engaged in the dry cleaning and pressing business in Booneville, Prentiss County, Mississippi, where his principal place of business was located, and also in the counties of Lee and Alcorn. His prices for cleaning and pressing men's suits and ladies' dresses were 35c in his home county of Prentiss, and 40c in the adjoining counties of Lee and Alcorn. The proof shows that he was making a legitimate profit at these prices, and his growing business afforded him the means of a livelihood for himself and family. At that time, the defendant was doing business in the City of Tupelo and elsewhere in Lee County, and in the counties of Itawamba, Monroe, Chickasaw, Union, Pontotoc, Prentiss (outside of Booneville), Panola, Tate and Coahoma. Its charges for cleaning and pressing suits and dresses up to the date of January 1940 were 50c in Itawamba, Monroe, Prentiss, Tate, Panola and Coahoma, but for this same service it was charging 85c in Lee and Union Counties, and 75c in Chickasaw County. On January 1, 1940, four other local cleaning and pressing establishments in the City of Tupelo who were charging 85c for this service reduced their prices to the approximately level of the price of 40c then being charged by the plaintiff. The defendant offered no testimony to the effect that the price of 40c was not sufficient to afford a legitimate profit, or that it was not a reasonable price for the customers to pay, nor was there any proof to show that the price of 85c charged by the defendant was reasonable. Following the reduction in prices on the part of these four other competitors in the City of Tupelo to the level of the prices being charged by Lindsey, the district manager of the defendant at Tupelo went to the Town of Booneville in company with another employee of the defendant and called upon the plaintiff at his place of business, and told him that Tupelo was in the defendant's territory and that he could not continue to charge only 40c for the service, and further stated in substance that unless he would agree to compromise the matter by raising his prices to at least 75c that the defendant company intended to break him; that they had a couple of million dollars and would spend the last dollar of it to break him; and that "we are not up here to raise a racket but just come to tell you what you can do." Then, on January 22, 1940, the defendant reduced its prices in Tupelo to 20c for cleaning and pressing men's suits and 25c for ladies' dresses, and with the result that the gross receipts of the plaintiff's business in Tupelo for the first four months of the year 1940 were reduced to $1,083.90 as compared with $2,711.05 for the four preceding months, and it was shown that ordinarily there was very little change in the volume of the cleaning and pressing business during the first four months of the year as compared with the last four months of the preceding year.

During the course of the said conversation between the district manager of the defendant and the plaintiff at the latter's place of business in January 1940, the plaintiff informed the defendant's manager that he would not raise his prices, that crops in that section had been bad, and the people could not afford to pay the prices that the defendant wanted him to charge. Prior to that time, the defendant had not done business in the Town of Booneville, as heretofore stated, but on the following Monday its employees went to Booneville in trucks and began soliciting business at its reduced prices of 20c for cleaning and pressing men's suits and 25c for ladies' dresses, advertising such prices in the local newspaper and gave a local telephone number for customers to call for the service, and with the result that the plaintiff sustained a loss in gross receipts at Booneville of $427.10 during the first nine months of the year 1940, as compared with the last nine months of the year 1939, and it was shown that ordinarily there was no material change in the volume of business during one of these periods as compared with the other.

From what is thus shown to have occurred at Booneville in Prentiss County on the occasion of the visit of the defendant's district manager to the office of the plaintiff, and also because of the acts performed at Booneville in furtherance of the plan of the defendant to injure the business of the plaintiff, we are of the opinion that the plea to the jurisdiction of the court was not well taken, the suit not having been brought under any anti-trust law so as to render it necessary that the same be filed in the county where the defendant has a domicile or place of business or its agent may be found, as provided for by Section 3445, Code of 1930.

Due to the fact that the plaintiff kept books to the extent only of showing the volume of the business done and of the collections made, without any record being made of his expenses, he was unable to show the amount of his profits either at Booneville or at Tupelo during any of the periods aforesaid so as to be able to definitely show the amount of the actual damages sustained; but since by reason of the conduct of the defendant heretofore referred to, when considered in the light of the facts hereinafter to be mentioned, a case was presented justifying an award of punitive damages, we need only be able to say from the entire record that the plaintiff sustained some actual damages, as a legal condition precedent to the allowance of punitive damages, and to then determine whether or not in view of the smallness of this verdict under the facts of the case the judgment should be disturbed. In the case of Robinson Pattison v. Goings, 63 Miss. 500, the court held that punitive damages may be awarded for the unlawful seizure and detention of one's property, whereby he is prevented from the ordinary prosecution of his business, since such a wrong cannot be said to work only a nominal injury, and wherein the court said: "The facts of this case warranted the jury in the infliction of punitive damages. Whether such damages may be awarded where there is only a nominal injury inflicted on the plaintiff it is not necessary to decide, since the evidence discloses a real injury, though uncertain in extent. One in the orderly and lawful prosecution of his business cannot be said to be only nominally injured by the unwarranted and illegal seizure and detention of his property by another, so as to interrupt the course of business of the owner."

The record in this case discloses that the district manager of the defendant, who undertook to coerce and intimidate the plaintiff at his place of business into raising his prices from 40c to at least 75c for a suit or dress, was present at the trial of this case and was in the witness room of the defendant at the time the other employee was testifying to contradict the plaintiff as to what occurred in the conversation, but the district manager did not take the witness stand. Moreover, it is further shown that in April of 1940, the plaintiff, in an effort to minimize the effects of the campaign being waged by the defendant to put him out of business, undertook to expand his operations, so as to secure a greater volume of business, and went into the Town of Ripley to obtain additional business at the same prices which he was charging elsewhere, and at which he thought he would be able to derive a legitimate profit. He was soon followed there by the defendant, with its published offer to render the service at one-half of what the plaintiff was charging; and with the result that Shannon Clayton, who had a son engaged in the cleaning and pressing business at Ripley, went to Memphis to interview a Mr. Rozier, president of the defendant corporation, for the purpose of impressing upon him what his course of action would do to the local cleaners of Ripley, and was told by Mr. Rozier that "all he could promise was that as soon as Lindsey stopped making Ripley he would move their Memphis prices back to the local cleaners prices; that it would only be a few months before Lindsey would be bankrupt and that he hoped to have him on the W.P.A. in less than two years." Rozier also admitted to Clayton that 20c per suit was a "ridiculous" price but that it was only "temporary" and that it would lose his company "a tremendous amount of money but their business was so good in Memphis that the Memphis business would offset the losses in Mississippi"; and further stated that he had "a financial statement on Mr. Lindsey that had been very expensive to get, and from the appearance of Mr. Lindsey's equipment he could not last much longer," and made some further observation in regard to Lindsey being from the country and that he owned only a "little single-barrel equipment." As was to have been expected, the plaintiff Lindsey soon quit going to Ripley, with the result that Clayton made another trip to Memphis to get the defendant to carry out its promise to raise its prices back to the level of those charged by the local cleaners. Thereupon, he was directed to the official of the company who had taken Mr. Rozier's place with the corporation, and who informed him that "I don't think we are going to be able to do anything at all down there as Mr. Lindsey is still fighting and still on his feet"; that he did not feel obligated to carry out the promise made by Rozier, that Lindsey was still giving them trouble and had lasted longer than they had thought he would, and that it had cost them a good deal more money than they had figured on spending when they came into the territory and that it was their object to continue the fight until they put him out of business.

The foregoing testimony of Clayton is undisputed in the record. It was objected to on the ground that neither Rozier nor his successor as president of the company had the authority to bind the defendant in declaring what its motives were in the course of conduct complained of. In support of the objection to this testimony, the defendant contends that the prices had already been cut and that these officers were merely discussing a past and completed occurrence, but we are of the opinion that this contention is unsound for the reason that the campaign to destroy the business of the plaintiff was still in progress, and they were announcing to Clayton a policy which they were then still pursuing on behalf of the defendant. In fact, the secretary-treasurer of the defendant company testified that "we generally all get together, everyone in the Memphis office, the vice president, president and probably the route supervisors would sit in if there is any change in prices in Memphis or any other price change." Hence the motives or malice of the officers of the defendant corporation while they were still engaged in carrying out their policy of trying to destroy the business of the plaintiff were the motives or malice of the corporation itself, since it could act only through them in determining upon and carrying out such a policy. 1 Jones on Evidence (4 Ed.), Sections 356, 357, p. 661; 22 C.J. Evidence, section 440; Yazoo M.V.R.R. Co. v. Jones, 73 Miss. 229, 19 So. 91; and Mobile O.R.R. Co. v. Stinson, 74 Miss. 453, 21 So. 14, 522. We think that the testimony of the witness Clayton was competent, as well as entirely relevant, and that the circumstances under which the statements were made to Clayton are such as to render inapplicable the cases of Western Union Tel. Co. v. Jackson, 95 Miss. 471, 49 So. 737; Deposit Guaranty Bank Trust Co. v. Silver Saver Stores, 166 Miss. 882, 148 So. 367; Moore v. Chicago, St. L. N.O.R.R. Co., 59 Miss. 243; Forsee v. Alabama Great So. R.R. Co., 63 Miss. 66, 56 Am. Rep. 801, and other cases relied upon by the appellant.

It is contended that the proof fails to show that either the executive officers or the district manager had any malice against the plaintiff personally, but it is said in 30 Am. Jur., section 39, p. 87, in reference to malice as a test of liability that "malice in its legal sense does not necessarily signify ill will toward a particular individual but denotes that condition of mind which is manifested by the intentional doing of a wrongful act without just cause or excuse." This valuable text recognizes the fact that while "many of the cases in which a recovery has been sought for a wrongful interference with one's trade or calling have been dismissed by reference to the general principle that `an act lawful in itself is not converted by a malicious or bad motive into an unlawful act so as to make the doer of the act liable to a civil action' . . ., there is, however, abundant authority for saying that this is by no means the universal rule, at least as respects interference with a trade or calling, and that an act which is not of itself actionable may become so when done maliciously, wantonly, or without reasonable cause"; citing, among numerous cases, that of Globe Rutgers Fire Ins. Co. v. Firemen's Fund Ins. Co., 97 Miss. 148, 52 So. 454, 455, 29 L.R.A. (N.S.) 869, as being among the "abundant authority" referred to. The reduction of prices is an act lawful in itself; it is an absolute right of the owner of a business. "On the other hand, under the guise of exercising an absolute right, it is not lawful, according to some authorities, indirectly to interfere with the business, employment, or occupation of a third person, where the exercise of the right is with the object of injuring the latter rather than primarily of benefiting the person exercising such right." 30 Am. Jur., Sec. 39, p. 89. The objection to the appellant's position is that it sought to enlarge a legal right into a legal wrong; instead of enlarging or dignifying its privilege to cut prices for the purpose of promoting its own business, it degraded the same into a wilful wrong when employing it as a weapon for the ignoble purpose of inflicting upon the plaintiff a wanton injury.

The appellee charged a conspiracy among the officers and agents of the corporation to destroy his business, and the appellant contends that since they were acting on behalf of the corporation, the proof fails to sustain the conspiracy, since the corporation could not conspire with itself. "A resort to the element of conspiracy to furnish a basis for actions of this kind however, is wholly unnecessary under the theory that a malicious interference with a trade or calling is tortious per se." 30 Am. Jur., Section 40, p. 89. Either an individual or a corporation, whether acting in conjunction with others, or not, may be liable in such an action. In the case of Globe Rutgers Fire Ins. Co. v. Firemen's Fund Ins. Co., supra, where the facts alleged in the declaration showed a determination to destroy and drive the plaintiff out of business, the court, in holding that it stated a good cause of action, announced the principle that "surely no individual or corporation may maliciously and wantonly set about to ruin a competitor . . ." Again in Wesley v. Native Lumber Company et al., 97 Miss. 814, 53 So. 346, 348, Ann. Cas. 1912d 796, the court said: "In Globe Rutgers Fire Ins. Co. v. Firemen's Fund Fire Ins. Co., [ 97 Miss. 148], 52 So. 454 [455, 29 L.R.A. (N.S.) 869], this court has set at rest in this state the question whether an act, legal in itself, may become illegal, and a ground of action, when accompanied with the malicious purpose to injure the business of another, resulting in such injury — holding the affirmative. . . . The act and the accompanying motive together constitute the unlawful act."

The case of Beardsley v. Kilmer, 236 N.Y. 80, 140 N.E. 203, 27 A.L.R. 1411, chiefly relied upon by the appellant, cites the case of Wesley v. Native Lbr. Co., supra, along with many other authorities, as denying the proposition that it is lawful to perform an otherwise legal act, injuring another, when there is no excuse for its performance except the malicious purpose of injury. While it is true that competition in business, though carried to the extent of ruining a rival, is ordinarily not actionable, unless the dominant purpose to inflict injury is established, we are of the opinion that the jury was warranted in finding that the purpose to injure or destroy the business of the plaintiff was dominant throughout the period complained of; that the mere fact that the defendant intended at the end of its ruthless campaign of trying to put the plaintiff out of business to again raise its prices to their former level with the resultant advantage to itself, a policy wholly inimical to the public welfare, did not prevent its action from being primarily to do the plaintiff a wilful and wanton injury. The plaintiff had the right, under the law, as between himself and others, to exercise and enjoy the fruits and advantages of his own enterprise, industry and skill, and earn a livelihood by operating his business at a legitimate profit, free from any attempted dictation, coercion and intimidation on the part of the defendant, and from any threat of being driven into bankruptcy or being forced to seek employment on the W.P.A. unless he should agree to charge for his services a price at approximately double the figure at which he was already earning a legitimate profit.

But, it is argued that the plaintiff was the first to cut prices for the service and that therefore he is not in a position to complain. The record fails to disclose, however, that at the time the defendant reduced its prices below the cost of doing the work, the plaintiff had ever reduced or changed the prices being charged by him, and which was shown by the proof to be reasonable and legitimate. The record does show that the defendant instead of reducing its prices to meet legitimate competition, as did the local establishments, cut its own prices from 85c to 20c, or to one-half of that being charged by the plaintiff for the expressed purpose of injuring the plaintiff and destroying his means of earning a livelihood. Since its conduct was wilful and malicious within the legal meaning of the term and was engaged in primarily for the purpose of doing the plaintiff a wilful and wanton injury, there was neither error in refusing the peremptory instruction asked for nor in submitting to the jury the question as to punitive damages. If the case had been one entitling the plaintiff to actual damages only, it would be necessary that we hold that the data for the estimation of the loss of profits was not sufficiently definite and certain to have enabled the jury to ascertain the damages with the reasonable certainty required, and it would be at least necessary that a new trial be ordered upon the sole issue of the amount of damages in order that such issue might be more fully developed, but in view of the fact that the case made was a proper one for the infliction of punitive damages, we have reached the conclusion that the judgment should not be disturbed. Although the proof as to the amount of the actual damages is unsatisfactory, it is sufficient to show that some actual damages necessarily resulted to the plaintiff from the defendant's wrongful act, sufficient to constitute a basis for an award of punitive damages in a sum much larger than the judgment rendered. We are therefore of the opinion that the case should be affirmed, notwithstanding that there was some testimony improperly admitted as to certain items of actual damages claimed, since, on the whole record, the plaintiff was entitled to recover and the amount of the verdict is extremely reasonable, if not inadequate, under the circumstances.

Affirmed.


Summaries of

Memphis Laundry-Cleaners v. Lindsey

Supreme Court of Mississippi, In Banc
Dec 20, 1941
5 So. 2d 227 (Miss. 1941)

In Memphis Steam Laundry-Cleaners, Inc. v. Lindsey, 192 Miss. 224, 5 So.2d 227 (1941), the issues focused on unfair competition and trade, but this Court noted that a cause of action exists against one who sets about to maliciously and wantonly injure a competitor.

Summary of this case from Cenac v. Murry

In Memphis Steam Laundry Cleaners v. Lindsey, 192 Miss. 224, 5 So.2d 227 (1941), this Court recognized the existence of a common-law action for unfair competition, where the dominant purpose to inflict injury is established.

Summary of this case from Dixieland Food Stores v. Kelly's Big Star

In Memphis Steam Laundry-Cleaners, Inc. v. Lindsey, 192 Miss. 224, a case involving price cutting and other aggressive acts to destroy a competitor's business, the court, after pointing out that reduction of prices was the absolute right of the owner of the business, went on to say, quoting 30 Am. Jur. 89, § 39, that under the guise of exercising that right it was not lawful to interfere with the business of another party where the exercise of the right was "with the object of injuring the latter rather than primarily of benefiting the person exercising such right."

Summary of this case from Savoy Laundry Linen Supply v. Morgan Linen Serv
Case details for

Memphis Laundry-Cleaners v. Lindsey

Case Details

Full title:MEMPHIS STEAM LAUNDRY-CLEANERS, INC., v. LINDSEY

Court:Supreme Court of Mississippi, In Banc

Date published: Dec 20, 1941

Citations

5 So. 2d 227 (Miss. 1941)
5 So. 2d 227

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