Ball v. Paramount Pictures, Inc.

67 F. Supp. 1, 1946 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2271
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 30, 1946
DocketCivil Action No. 2963
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 67 F. Supp. 1 (Ball v. Paramount Pictures, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ball v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., 67 F. Supp. 1, 1946 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2271 (W.D. Pa. 1946).

Opinion

GIBSON, District Judge.

The prior • proceedings and the bulk of the testimony taken in this suit were before Judge SCHOONMAKER. After his death the case was continued under the following stipulation: •

“Now, February 4, 1946, the Honorable Frederic P. Schoonmaker, Judge of this court, having died after the beginning of the trial of this action, it is hereby stipulated that the trial may be continued before such Judge of this court as may be assigned thereto, and that all proceedings before Judge Schoonmaker on and after July 24, 1944, shall be deemed to have been before such assigned Judge.”

By the • original complaint, filed April 12, 1944, the defendants named were Paramount Pictures, Inc., Pennware Theatre Corporation and A. N. Notopoulos. On July 6, 1944, by amendment the other defendants were joined.

The defendants will hereinafter be referred to as follows: R. K. O. Radio Pictures, Inc.—“R. K. O.”; Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation—“Twentieth Century-Fox”; Paramount Pictures, Inc.— “Paramount Pictures”; Paramount Film Distributing Corporation — “Paramount Film”; Pennware Theatre Corporation— “Pennware”; and A. N. Notopoulos as “Notopoulos”.

Prior to May 15, 1933, Paramount Pictures owned all the stock of Atlantic States Theatre Corporation, which in turn owned all the stock of Pennware. On May 15, 1933, Notopoulos purchased from the Paramount subsidiary, for $1,000, one-half of the stock of Pennware. He had been a motion picture theatre operator since 1912. After acquiring his interest in Pennware, he entered into a contract with Paramount Pictures pursuant to which he became manager and supervisor of the local Penn Theatre, and thereafter he negotiated with the distributors of moving pictures for those which were exhibited in the Penn Theatre, which then, and thereafter until April 30, 1944, was under lease by Pennware. Paramount Pictures, under the arrangement, was only interested in the leasing and purchase of theatres and in borrowing money.

In 1939, one Goldstein, owner of the Penn Theatre, leased it to Pennware for a five-year term ending April 30, 1944. By a supplemental contract the ownership by Pennware of all equipment and fixtures was determined, and also the right to remove them upon, termination of the lease.

From the time when Notopoulos obtained his interest in the Penn Theatre, Paramount Film licensed all its first run pictures at that theatre. And for more than ten years prior to April 30, 1944, R. K. O., Loew’s and Twentieth Century-Fox had licensed Pennware to exhibit one-half of their first run motion, pictures at that theatre, and the other half of such first run pictures was licensed to Warner Brothers Circuit Management in Ambridge, at either the Ambridge or Prince Theatre, both operated by Warner Brothers.

Somewhat less than a year before August, 1943, Harry L. Goldstein had sold [3]*3tlie Penn Theatre to one Albert Mannheimer, who, in August of 1943 sold it to the plaintiff, Harry Norman Ball, for $110,-000. Mr. Ball purchased the property as trustee for himself, his wife, his brother, Joseph A. Ball, his wife’s sister, Flora Friedman, and his brother-in-law, Henry Friedman. None of the cestui que trustent were operators of a moving picture theatre except Henry Friedman, who had operated a fourth run house in Philadelphia.

Shortly after the purchase of the theatre site the plaintiff proposed to Joseph Bernhard, executive vice-president of Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc., that the Penn Theatre be operated in a pool with the Ambridge and Prince Theatres. Mr. Bernard postponed a discussion of this proposition until plaintiff should be in possession of his theatre. Plaintiff did not discuss the matter of a lease with Notopoulos until lie had title to the Penn Theatre for some months.

Pennware having reason to anticipate trouble in renewing its lease of the Penn Theatre, early in 1943 had bought ground for a theatre at 745-751 Merchant Street, in Ambridge, the same street on which was the Penn Theatre, and several squares from it. In October, 1943, construction work began. Plaintiff learned of the work in November. His first action thereafter was to notify Pennware that its lease was cancelled and to demand possession. This followed a dispute with Notopoulos over a claim by the latter that plaintiff owed for heat and janitor service. This notice was repeated, but the matter was settled without any eviction.

After the proposed eviction plaintiff sent a telegram to the War Production Board in which he urged that body to stop the building of Pcnnware’s theatre.

Then began negotiations for the lease of the Penn Theatre. Plaintiff demanded 15% of the gross income. This would have resulted in a loss to Pennware during the last six years of operation and it refused to agree to such terms. The rent therefrom had been $3,600 per year. Pennware offered to pay $6,000 per year during the war time, and $5,00.0 annually thereafter. Plaintiff persisted in his claim of 15% rental. This demand was not in accordance with ordinary usage in Ambridge or a town of a like size.

Negotiations for the renewal of the lease failed and Pennware continued with the construction of his State Theatre, and plaintiff instituted his present action. As stated, supra, the first defendants were Paramount Pictures, Inc., Pennware Theatre Corporation and A. N. Notopoulos. Plaintiff was apparently unaware that Pennware was the owner of the equipment and fixtures in the Penn Theatre and was authorized to remove them at the expiration of the lease. His first effort was to secure a preliminary injunction to restrain the removal of the fixtures from his theatre. After hearing, and being informed of the ownership of Pennware, the application for the preliminary injunction was abandoned. Later the other exhibitor defendants were added.

The complaint, as amended, recites ownership of the Penn Theatre property in the plaintiff as trustee, and describes the defendants. Jurisdiction is averred as under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, 15 U.S.C.A. §§ 1-7, 15 note, and Clayton Act, 38 Stat. 730, and the venue is set forth. The defendants, other than Notopoulos, were alleged to be engaged in interstate commerce in the production, distribution and exhibition of motion pictures. As such they are alleged to have “circuit buying power” by reason of their connection with the numerous theatres in which their pictures are exhibited. The importance of Paramount Pictures and its subsidiaries is accentuated.

In charging violations of the Sherman and Clayton Acts the complaint sets forth the possession of the Penn Theatre by Pennware under the lease expiring April 30, 1944, and that for many years past that theatre had enjoyed first run exhibition pictures of all Paramount Pictures, and one-half of the product of R. K. O., Loew’s and Twentieth Century-Fox. It then declares that: “The Paramount defendants” (as describing Paramount Pictures, Paramount Film, Pennware and Notopoulos) in 1943 entered into a conspiracy to depreciate and destroy the value and productive possi[4]*4bilities of the Penn Theatre. This conspiracy was to be carried out by depriving that theatre of the runs theretofore enjoyed by it, this is to be effected by the power in the industry of the Paramount defendants. This charge was repeated as to Paramount defendants and R. K. O., Twentieth Century-Fox and Loew’s and the object of the combination was alleged to be the ruin of the Penn Theatre by depriving it of the runs of motion pictures theretofore enjoyed by it.

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Bluebook (online)
67 F. Supp. 1, 1946 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-v-paramount-pictures-inc-pawd-1946.