Lowry v. Tile, Mantel & Grate Ass'n of California

Citation106 F. 38
Decision Date26 December 1900
Docket Number12,698.
CourtUnited States District Courts. 9th Circuit. United States District Courts. 9th Circuit. Northern District of California
PartiesLOWRY et al. v. TILE, MANTEL & GRATE ASS'N OF CALIFORNIA et al.

Campbell & Metson, for plaintiffs.

Walter H. Linforth and P. F. Dunne, for defendants.

MORROW Circuit Judge (charging jury).

This is an action at law brought to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiffs by reason of injury to their business as dealers in tiles and fireplace fixtures, caused by the forming of an association by the defendants as dealers in such articles, and which association, the plaintiffs claim, is within the prohibitory provisions of the act of congress of July 2, 1890, commonly known as the 'Sherman Anti-Trust Act.' That act provides, among other things as follows:

'Section 1. Every contract, combination in ?the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce among the several states or with foreign nations, is hereby declared to be illegal. * * *
'Sec 2. Every person who shall monopolize or attempt to monopolize or combine or conspire with any other person or persons to monopolize any part of the trade or commerce among the several states or foreign nations, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor. * * * '
'Sec. 7. Any person who shall be injured in his business or property by any other person or corporation by reason of anything forbidden or declared to be unlawful by this act, may sue therefor in any circuit court of the United States in the district in which the defendant resides or is found, without respect to the amount in controversy, and shall recover three-fold the damages by him sustained, and costs of suit, including a reasonable attorney's fee.'

You will observe that the things forbidden and declared to be unlawful by the act are: First, every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce among the several states; and second, the act of monopolizing, or attempting to monopolize, or combining or conspiring to monopolize, any part of the trade or commerce among the several states. The charge against the defendants, under these prohibitions, is the organization of an association called the Tile, Mantel & Grate Association of California, under an agreement and combination in restraint of trade and commerce. The printed document introduced in evidence, and entitled, 'The Constitution and By-Laws of the Tile, Mantel & Grate Association of California,' shows that this association was organized on July 7, 1898, and that the constitution and by-laws were adopted on July 14, 1898. Under the title of 'Preamble and Resolutions' the objects of the association are declared to be 'to unite all acceptable dealers in tiles, fireplace fixtures, and mantels in San Francisco and vicinity (within a radius of two hundred miles), and all American manufacturers of tiles, and, by frequent interchange of ideas, advance the interests and promote the mutual welfare of its members. ' Article 1 of the constitution provides as follows concerning membership in the association:

'Section 1. Any individual, corporation, or firm engaged or contemplating engaging in the tile, mantel and grate business in San Francisco, or within a radius of two hundred miles thereof (not manufacturers), having an established business, and carrying not less than $3,000 worth of stock, and having been proposed by a member in good standing, and elected, shall, after having signed the constitution and by-laws governing said association, and upon the payment of an entrance fee as hereinafter provided, enjoy all the privileges of membership.
'Sec. 2. All associated and individual manufacturers of tiles and fireplace fixtures through the United States may become nonresident members of this association upon the payment of an entrance fee as hereinafter provided, and after having signed the constitution and by-laws governing said association.'

Article 2 provides as follows concerning fees and dues:

'Section 1. The initiation fee of this association shall be, for active members twenty-five dollars, and for non-resident members ten dollars, which amounts must accompany each application for membership.

'Sec. 2. Each active member of the association shall pay ten dollars per year as dues, payable in advance on the third Monday in August of each year. No dues shall be charged against nonresident members.'

Article 6 makes provision for amendments to the constitution, as follows:

'All proposed alterations or amendments to this constitution shall be submitted in writing at a regular meeting, and no action thereon shall be taken until the next succeeding regular meeting. Due notice of such alterations or amendments shall be mailed to each member at least one week prior to the meeting at which action is to be taken thereon, and such alterations or amendments must receive the approval of two-thirds of the active members of the association.'

The document introduced in evidence as the constitution and by-laws of the association contains the provisions which have been quoted, and there is no evidence in the document itself of any amendment thereof. But there is testimony to the effect that that part of article 1 of the constitution limiting the qualification of membership to those persons engaged in the tile, mantel, and grate business in San Francisco, having an established business, and carrying not less than $3,000 worth of stock, has not been enforced, as to the requirement that the member shall have a stock of goods of the value of $3,000. There is also testimony to the effect that the provision of article 2 relating to the fees and dues, and fixing the initiation fee for active members at $25, has been changed to provide that the initiation fee for such membership shall be $10.

The real purpose and object of the association appears to be declared in sections 7 and 8 of the by-laws. Section 7 provides that: 'No dealer and active member of this association shall purchase directly or indirectly any tile or fireplace fixtures from any manufacturer, or resident or traveling agent of any manufacturer, not a member of this association, neither shall they sell or dispose of, directly or indirectly, any unset tile for less than list prices to any person or persons not a member of this association, under penalty of expulsion from the association.'

Section 8 provides as follows:

'Manufacturers of tile or fireplace fixtures, or resident or traveling agents of manufacturers, selling or disposing, directly or indirectly, their products or wares to any person or persons not members of the Tile, Mantel & Grate Association of California, shall forfeit their membership in the association.'

The uncontroverted evidence in this case shows that the active members of the association consist of a number of dealers in tiles, mantels and grates in San Francisco, and that they are not manufacturers of any of these articles; that the nonresident members of the association consist of a number of manufacturers of tiles and fireplace fixtures situated in different parts of the United States outside of California. The plaintiffs were not members of the association, and have not been at any time during its existence. It is the apparent purpose and the natural and direct consequence of this provision of the constitution and by-laws of the Tile, Mantel & Grate Association to restrain trade and commerce between the dealers in tiles, mantels, and grates in San Francisco and the manufacturers of such articles in the Eastern States? Or do these provisions operate in such a way that the members of the association have monopolized or have attempted to monopolize any part of the trade or commerce in these commodities between the manufacturers in the East and the dealers in San Francisco? The purpose of the organization, as declared in the preamble and in section 2 of article 1 of the constitution, was to embrace 'all American manufacturers' of tiles and fireplace fixtures, as nonresident members, and the 'acceptable dealers' in tiles, fireplace fixtures, and mantels in San Francisco and vicinity (within a radius of 200 miles) as the active resident members. It does not appear that the declared purpose of the association has actually been accomplished, in the completeness of its membership. Not all American manufacturers of tiles and fireplace fixtures have become nonresident members. Whether all 'acceptable dealers' in San Francisco have become members is not entirely clear nor is it certain what constitutes an 'acceptable member.' But the natural effect and necessary consequence of the agreement and combination, so far as completed and actually enforced, is to limit the San Francisco dealer who is a member of the association in his purchase of tiles and fireplace fixtures to those manufacturers in the United States who are nonresident members of the association. The San Francisco dealer who has become a member of this association cannot purchase tiles and fireplace fixtures from any outside manufacturer except under penalty of forfeiting his membership in the association, and the manufacturer belonging to the association as a nonresident member cannot sell to any dealer in San Francisco who is not a member of the association, except under the same penalty of forfeiture of membership. If all the manufacturers of tiles and fireplace fixtures in the United States should become members of the association, then no dealer in tiles or fireplace fixtures not a member of the association could carry on his business in San Francisco, because there would be no manufacturer of those articles from whom he could purchase the goods; and as he could not purchase from another dealer in San Francisco who, as a member of...

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