B. T. Johnson Publishing Co. v. Mills
B. T. Johnson Publishing Co. v. Mills
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Mr. Mills, averring himself to be a citizen and resident of Lee county, with children attending the public schools, charges in his bill that appellant is a corporation, nonresident, and the owner of the copyrights of certain schoolbooks; that its charter is duly filed in the office of the secretary of state, with all fees paid, and with the consequent authority to exercise its franchises and sell its books in Mississippi; that‘the proper statutory schoolbook adopting agency of the state, proceeding in all respects according to law, selected certain of appellant’s copyrighted schoolbooks, among divers bids from divers publishing houses to furnish books on the same branches of education, on divers terms of selling prices, for exchange,. introduction, and permanent supply, as by law provided; that appellant offered to “sell, by way of exchange,” its books, new for old books, then in use of like grade and subject, by any author, on even terms, regardless of their condition as to wear, etc.; that accordingly its books were adopted, and a contract was concluded between appellant and the county superintendent of public education for “exchange, introduction, and permanent supply.” This contract, exhibited with the bill, has this clause: “Provided, however, for the next 90 days from date, or until January 1, 1901, an even exchange is granted on all above-named books, book for
We do not consider now, nor decide, whether, under § 3520, code 1892, and ch. 88, acts 1900, the remedy by quo warranto is exclusive; nor whether a patron of a school may proceed alone in equity; nor whether, if he had any remedy affecting such large public interests, he should or should not have proceeded by mandamus; nor whether the state, or the
Reversed and bill dismissed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- B. T. Johnson Publishing Company v. Edgar P. Mills
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Tbusts and Combines. Anti-trust' act 1900. Laws, p. 125. Schoolbooks. Public contracts. Although the hid on which a contract is based may be below the normal cost of production, the anti-trust law of 1900 has no application to the state or its public agencies in letting a contract for copyrighted schoolbooks in the manner provided by law, and as the result of competitive bidding, by the terms of which new books are for a time to be exchanged without cost, book for book, in the place of old books then in use, after which the prices agreed on are to be paid for all books furnished during the continuance of the contract. 2. Public 'Weleabe. Contracts. Prices. Constitution 1890, sec. 198. A public contract for an article below cost is not “inimical to the public welfare ” within the constitution of 1890, sec. 198.