A. H. Grebe & Co. v. Siegel

14 F.2d 175, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1282
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 29, 1926
DocketNo. 244
StatusPublished

This text of 14 F.2d 175 (A. H. Grebe & Co. v. Siegel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. H. Grebe & Co. v. Siegel, 14 F.2d 175, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1282 (D.R.I. 1926).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

The-plaintiff, a corporation of the state of New York, is engaged in the business of assembling and manufacturing radio sets, and sells its product to wholesalers, known as distributors, who in turn sell to the retail merchant.

The defendant conducts a general retail hardware business in the city of Providence.

The bill alleges that the defendant is a resident and inhabitant of the state of Rhode Island, but does not allege that he is a citizen of Rhode Island, unless inferentially in the allegation of paragraph 3:

“The jurisdiction of this court is invoked because this is an action between citizens of different states.”

The answer admits this allegation.

The bill alleges that every radio set sold by the plaintiff has a number. The sets are numbered in the order of their production, and each number is a serial number, which is affixed before the set leaves the plaintiff’s plant. Plaintiff keeps records with reference to each set, a description of the materials of which it is composed, names of the concerns from whom component parts were bought, names of plaintiff’s workmen who assembled and manufactured the materials into the complete set, a description of the model, date of sale, selling price, and name of purchaser.

The defendant offers for sale and sells plaintiff’s radio sets, from which the serial number has been removed or made permanently illegible by obliteration or mutilation.

It is evident that the serial number is not to be classed as a trade-mark, but is in the class of marks known as merchants’ marks, or manufacturers’ marks. The mark serves as a means of identification, and aids in the recovery of stolen instruments. The removal of the identifying mark, which individualizes the particular instrument, interferes with the plaintiff’s business system.

The instruments are, sold with a time guaranty of future service to owners of devices carrying serial numbers. The mark is also useful in the matter of repairs, checking up on workmanship, tests, etc. It is said [176]*176that this method of doing business also enables plaintiff in an inexpensive way to select its own dealers and customers, and confine its sales to those dealers who will charge enough to enable them to carry out full service to the plaintiff by pushing and advertising sales of the apparatus locally, and enables plaintiff to give aid to the user in respect to the working of the apparatus. The serial numbers assist in ascertaining what wholesalers and retailers cut prices. The plaintiff relies upon United States v. Colgate & Co., 250 U. S. 300, 39 S. Ct. 465, 63 L. Ed. 992, 7 A. L. R. 443.

Respondent admits that serial numbers may serve as a means of identification, that they may assist the complainant in its alleged desire for improvement and investigation, but avers that such objects are entirely subordinate to the chief and actuating motive for their attachment, namely, control and maintenance of prices

Defendant admits that he sold radio sets to the public with the serial number obliterated, without in any way altering the trademark and trade-name of complainant, and without in any way damaging said sets, either in operation or in appearance; that they were sold as new sets of complainant’s make, and were such in fact, and not secondhand, stolen, or damaged sets; that he has pointed out to purchasers of such sets that serial numbers had been removed; and that such sets were bought with full knowledge. He distinctly asserts that such serial numbers were obliterated in order that the respondent might be able to continue to sell such sets at a price below the standard price fixed and maintained by complainant.

The answer alleges that by means,of the serial numbers complainant is enabled to trace sets back to the jobbers, and cut off the supply of such retailers as do not maintain the standard price.' The defendant relies upon decisions of the Supreme Court subsequent to the decision in U. S. v. Colgate, 250 U. S. 300, 39 S. Ct. 465, 63 L. Ed. 992, 7 A. L. R. 443.

Upon the question of whether a preliminary injunction should be granted, the chief practical question is as to the right of the defendant to deprive plaintiff" of means of preventing further price-cutting by this defendant, and of cutting off supply from the dealers who are the source of defendant’s supply. Upon this question the decision in Federal Trade Commission v. Beech-Nut Packing Co., 257 U. S. 441, 42 S. Ct. 150, 66 L. Ed. 307, 19 A. L. R. 882, requires careful consideration. In that case, at page 452 (42 S. Ct. 154), the court, referring to the Colgate Case and other cases, said:

“By these decisions it is settled that in prosecutions under the Sherman Act a trader is not guilty of violating its terms who simply refuses to sell to others, and he may withhold his goods from those who will not sell them at the prices which he fixes for their resale. He may not, consistently with the act, go beyond the exercise of this right, and by contracts or combinations, express or implied, unduly hinder or obstruct the free and natural flow of commerce in the channels of interstate trade.
“The Sherman Act is not involved here, except in so far as' it shows a declaration of public policy to be considered in determining what are unfair methods of competition, which the Federal Trade Commission is empowered to condemn and suppress.”

The court said further:

“The order should have required the company to cease and desist from carrying into effect its so-called .Beech-Nut policy by cooperative methods, in which the respondent and its distributors, customers, and agents undertake to prevent others from obtaining the company’s products at less than the prices designated by it — (1) by the practice of reporting the names of dealers who do not observe such resale prices; (2) by causing dealers to be enrolled upon lists of undesirable purchasers, who are not to be supplied with the products of the company unless and until they have given satisfactory assurances of their purpose to maintain such designated prices in the future; (3) by employing salesmen or agents to assist in such plan hy reporting dealers who do not observe such resale prices, and giving orders of purchase only to such jobbers and wholesalers as sell at the suggested prices and refusing to give such orders to dealers who sell at less than such prices, or who sell to others who sell at less than such prices; (4) by utilizing numbers and symbols marked upon eases containing their products, with a view to ascertaining the names of dealers who sell the company’s products at less than the suggested prices, or who sell to others who sell at less than such prices, in order to prevent such dealers from obtaining the products of the company; or (5) by utilizing any other equivalent co-operative means of accomplishing the maintenance of prices fixed by the company.”

The dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Holmes, concurred in by Mr. Justice Mc-Kenna and Mr. Justice Brandéis, states forci[177]*177bly the same argument which the plaintiff now advances.

The dissenting opinion of Mr.

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Related

United States v. Colgate & Co.
250 U.S. 300 (Supreme Court, 1919)
Federal Trade Commission v. Beech-Nut Packing Co.
257 U.S. 441 (Supreme Court, 1922)
Moir v. Federal Trade Commission
12 F.2d 22 (First Circuit, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
14 F.2d 175, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-h-grebe-co-v-siegel-rid-1926.