Ballard Oil-Burning Equipment Co. v. Mexican Petroleum Corp.

22 F.2d 434, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1566
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 19, 1927
DocketNo. 2783
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 22 F.2d 434 (Ballard Oil-Burning Equipment Co. v. Mexican Petroleum Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ballard Oil-Burning Equipment Co. v. Mexican Petroleum Corp., 22 F.2d 434, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1566 (D. Mass. 1927).

Opinion

MORTON, District Judge.

This is an action for treble damages under the antitrust laws, founded upon an alleged conspiracy, or conspiracies, in restraint of trade. The original declaration has been twice amended after hearings on demurrers, and is now to be regarded as a final statement of the plaintiff’s case, at least in substancie. The principal question raised by the demurrers of the several defendants is whether any ease is stated in the declaration.

The alleged business conditions described at length in the declaration may be more briefly stated as follows: In 1919 the plaintiff and the Eess Company were engaged in the New England field in the business of making and selling oil-burning equipment for low-pressure boilers. They were competing with each other, and between them they did most of that business in the territory stated and furnished most of the fuel oil for such installations. In selling oil-buming equipment, it is necessary to have fuel oil to sell with the equipment. There was at this time in this territory only one source of supply of fuel oil suitable for such purposes, viz. the Mexican Petroleum Company. Each of these two companies bought fuel off from it and resold to their customers. The Mexican Company restricted them to sales for low-pressure boilers, such as are used mostly for heating purposes. It reserved to itself the high-pressure trade, and did not permit either the plaintiff or the Eess Company to sell for high-pressure use. The plaintiff was passing the Fess Company in the competition between them.

In that situation, the defendants here who. were interested in the Fess Company, and other defendants who were interested in the Mexican Company, conceived the plan of forming a new corporation, called the Petroleum Heat & Power Company, in which both the Fess group and the Mexican group should .have interests, and of having the Mexican Company sell to this new company alone fuel oil for low-pressure use. This plan was carried out. When the plaintiff’s contract with the Mexican Company for fuel oil expired on February 15, 1922, it was not renewed. Under its contract with the Mexican Company the plaintiff was prohibited from buying oil from any other person, and [435]*435this refusal to renew by the Mexican Company put the plaintiff to great disadvantage. Foreseeing, however, the failure of its supply from the Mexican Company, the plaintiff had organized a subsidiary (the Ballard Oil Terminal Company) to obtain fuel oil from other sources, and while the plaintiff’s contract with the Mexican Company was still in force .the subsidiary made a contract with the New England Oil-Refining Company, which in 1921 came into the New 'England field as a competitor of the Mexican Company, to supply its requirements up to 2,000,000 barrels a year for 15 years, this contract to begin shortly after the expiration of the plaintiff’s contract with the Mexican Company. The plaintiff continued in business getting fuel oil in this way, but losing all profit on it, because that was taken by the subsidiary; the plaintiff selling at actual cost. As the plaintiff did not own all the stock in the subsidiary, it lost by the new arrangement. This left the plaintiff competing with the Heat & Power Company and getting fuel oil for its customers from the New England -Company through the Terminal Company.

• The declaration further alleges that the parties interested in the Heat & Power Company then conceived the plan of cutting off the plaintiff’s new supply of fuel oil, by getting control of the New England Company and having it break its contract with the plaintiff’s subsidiary; that this scheme was carried out and tho New England Company refused to deliver oil under its contract. The Mexican Company and the Heat & Power Company also refused to furnish oil for the plaintiff. This loft the plaintiff with no source of fuel oil supply. Lacking it, the plaintiff was unable to continue its business profitably, and was forced to sell out - at a large loss, due to the conspiracy or conspiracies to which the defendants were parties.

The declaration is in three counts, the first of which is based on a conspiracy alleged to have begun in the scheme for tho organization of the Heat & Power Company, and to have continued until the plaintiff was finally forced out of business, as above described; i. e., a single conspiracy covering the whole period. The second count alleges as a separate conspiracy the first part of the general eo'nspiraey charged in count 1; i. e., a conspiracy ending with the refusal of the Mexican Company to renew its contract with the plaintiff in 1922. The third count alleges as a separate conspiracy the latter part of the general conspiracy charged in count 1; i. e., a conspiracy the object of which was the destruction of tho contract between the plaintiff’s subsidiary, the Terminal Company, and the New England Oil Refining Company, and the stoppage of the plaintiff’s supplies of fuel oil from that source.

It will be more convenient to discuss the questions raised by the general demurrers by considering first the allegations of separate conspiracies contained in counts II and III.

As to count II: The gist of this is that tho’parties interested in the Eess Company and tho Mexican Company conspired to restrict trade and monopolize commerce in fuel oil at retail and in the fuel oil equipment business in New England, by having the Mexican Company cease to sell fuel oil to the plaintiff and continue to sell it to the Eess Company’s successor, the Heat & Power Company; the purpose being to drive the plaintiff out of both branches of its business.

As above stated, all the oil which the Eess Company and the plaintiff were selling came from the Mexican Company. What happened was, on the allegations of the declaration, that the Mexican Company decided to take an interest in the Fess Company, and thereafter to give an advantage to that company’s successor by ceasing to supply tho plaintiff with oil to sell in competition with it. The action by which the plaintiff claims, to have been injured was the action solely of the Mexican Company. The conspiracy charged furnishes the reason and the motive for the Mexican Company’s conduct. It is not a case where two or more persons selling a certain thing have combined to deprive a user or jobber of it of his supply. Such action would be clearly illegal. I know of no limitation on the right of a single dealer to sell to whom he chooses. (Fed. Trade Com. v. Beech-Nut Packing Co., 257 U. S. 441, 452, 42 S. Ct. 150, 66 L. Ed. 307, 19 A. L. R. 882; Fed. Trade Commission v. Raymond, 263 U. S. 573, 44 S. Ct. 162, 68 L. Ed. 448, 30 A. L. R. 1114); nor do I think that this right is diminished by tho circumstances that nobody else is supplying that article in that field. The present case is in principle hard to distinguish from Locker v. Am. Tobacco Co., 195 N. Y. 565, 88 N. E. 289, in which Judge Cullen said (italics mine):

“It is unquestionable that the owner of property may sell to whom he chooses, and equally he may control his agent. A refusal to sell to any particular individual becomes illegal only when it is done in pursuance of a combination with other owners to injure the individual with whom they refuse to deal. [436]*436In other words, it is the combination of several persons which makes that action illegal which, if done by a single person without any agreement for joint action, would be legal.

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Bluebook (online)
22 F.2d 434, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballard-oil-burning-equipment-co-v-mexican-petroleum-corp-mad-1927.