Auto Rental Co. v. Lee

35 Haw. 77, 1939 Haw. LEXIS 22
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 21, 1939
DocketNo. 2369.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 35 Haw. 77 (Auto Rental Co. v. Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Auto Rental Co. v. Lee, 35 Haw. 77, 1939 Haw. LEXIS 22 (haw 1939).

Opinion

*79 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

PETERS, J.

This is a bill in equity brought under section 7459-F of the Fair Trade Act of Hawaii by the proprietor of a gasoline station to enjoin a competitor and the president-manager of the latter from advertising, offering for sale or selling Associated gasoline at prices less than the respective prices stipulated in a contract entered into pursuant to the provisions of the Act between the Tide Water Associated Oil Company, hereinafter referred to as “the oil company,” the wholesale distributor of said gasoline and the alleged wrongdoer.

From a decree granting a permanent injunction as prayed, the respondents appealed.

The Hawaii Fair Trade Act is Act 212 of the Laws of *80 1937 and is incorporated into the Revised' Laws of Hawaii, 1935, as chapter 242-A, sections 7459-A to 7459-H, both inclusive. Those portions of the Act pertinent to the issues are quoted in the margin. 1

It is undisputed that during all of the times involved the oil company sold and distributed at "wholesale in the City and County of Honolulu gasoline known to the trade, and generally referred to as “Associated gasoline”; that Associated gasoline was of two grades, each grade being idéntified by the oil company by a distinctive trade name and symbol; that the oil company was the owner of the *81 names and symbols employed by it to identify its gasoline; that the uniform agreement of sale hereinafter referred to expressly recited that it was entered into pursuant to the Hawaii Fair Trade Act and contained the covenant, in respect to the trade names and symbols used by it to identify its gasoline, quoted in the margin; 2 that in all gasoline service stations selling Associated gasoline in the City and County of Honolulu the identifying names and symbols so employed were plainly, permanently and visibly inscribed upon pumps attached to and connected with tanks in which the gasoline to which the names and symbols referred was contained and by means of and through which the gasoline was withdrawn from the tanks when sold.

It is conceded that the corporate appellant and the appellee operated competing gasoline service stations in the city of Honolulu proper where there was offered for *82 sale Associated gasoline of both grades supplied them by the oil company.

It is further undisputed that the oil company on October 1, 1937, elected to avail itself of the protection afforded by the provisions of the Fair Trade Act and thereupon adopted the policy of establishing and maintaining uniform prices for its gasoline when sold at retail at gasoline service stations in the City and County of Honolulu and to that end prepared and distributed to the proprietors of all gasoline service stations, operating in said city and county and selling its gasoline at retail, including the corporate appellant and appellee, a proposed form of contract to be thereafter uniformly employed by it and to exclusively reflect the contractual relations existing between the oil company and the proprietor of each service station executing the same relating to the sale to such proprietor of Associated gasoline and resale of the same by the latter at retail; that the proposed agreement to sell contained the resale price restrictions quoted in the margin. 3

It is also undisputed that on October 1, 1937, contracts in the form adopted and promulgated were separately executed between the oil company and a majority of the proprietors of gasoline service stations, operating in the City and County of Honolulu, supplied Avitli Associated gasoline by the oil company, including both the corporate *83 appellant anti the appellee, and notice of the execution of said contracts Avas given by the oil company to all proprietors of gasoline stations in the City and County of Honolulu, selling Associated gasoline, Avhether parties to contracts Avith the oil company or not.

The trial judge found and Ave see no reason to disturb his findings that in February, 1938, and Avliile the contracts executed in the previous October Avere in existence (except as their numbers fluctuated in course of trade), including the respective contracts betAveen the oil company and the corporate appellant and the appellee, the corporate appellant Avillfully and knoAvingly offered for sale and sold Associated gasoline of both types at prices less than the oil company’s posted authorized selling price for said gasoline at retail in effect at the time and place of resale and that as a result thereof appellee suffered and if the practice Avere persisted in the appellee Avould continue to suffer irreparable injury, incapable of compensation in money damages.

No claim is made that at the time the contracts Avith the several proprietors of gasoline stations in Honolulu Avere executed the tAVO grades of Associated gasoline, identified by the names and symbols referred to, Avere not in fair and open competition Avith gasoline of the same general classes produced or distributed by others. Nor Avas it contended that the legal relationship between the oil company and noncontracting proprietors of gasoline service stations supplied Avith and selling Associated gasoline at retail Avas other or different from that reflected by the several subsisting contracts betAveen the oil company and the contracting gasoline service station proprietors. No question of a monopoly or of the fairness or reasonableness of the prices posted in February, 1938, has been interjected into the case.

Appellants specify in their briefs ten assignments of *84 error. Those not discussed by us, though considered, have been found to be -without merit.

Appellants contend that section 7459-A and section 7459-F offend the due process clause of the fifth amendment of the Constitution of the United States and are inconsistent with the provisions of the Act of Congress of July 2, 1890, known as the Sherman Antitrust Act (26 Stat. L., ch. 647, p. 209), as amended by the Act of Congress of August 17, 1937 (50 Stat. L., T. 8, ch. 690, § 1, pp. 673, 693), and hence invalid. The United States supreme court, in the cases of Old Dearborn Co. v. Seagram Corp., 299 U. S. 183, and Pep Boys v. Pyroil Sales Co., 299 U. S. 198, which involved the constitutionality of the Illinois and California fair trade Acts, held adversely to appellants’ contentions. The sales in those cases, similarly as in the instant case, involved “intrastate” sales and under the decisions referred to further consideration of appellants’ objections in that regard becomes unnecessary.

Nor do the grounds urged against the validity of sections 7459-A and 7459-F occasion any serious doubt.

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Bluebook (online)
35 Haw. 77, 1939 Haw. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/auto-rental-co-v-lee-haw-1939.