Bowles v. Good Luck Glove Co.

52 F. Supp. 942, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2034
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Illinois
DecidedDecember 17, 1943
DocketCiv. No. 360-D
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 52 F. Supp. 942 (Bowles v. Good Luck Glove Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowles v. Good Luck Glove Co., 52 F. Supp. 942, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2034 (illinoised 1943).

Opinion

LINDLEY, District Judge.

Plaintiff charges that defendant, subsequent to May 11, 1942, sold certain of its products above what constituted proper ceilings fixed, under the statute, by the regulations of the Office of Price Administration, and seeks a preliminary injunction from continuation of such practice.

[943]*943Defendant is an extensive manufacturer of work gloves, listing in its catalogue some 480 different models. Some of these are for children, some for ladies and others are mittens, with none of which we are now concerned. Defendant’s business, as a result of many years’ operation, is extensive; its customers are many, including jobbers, mail order houses and the United States Government.

About the first of December, 1941, defendant issued its price list, controlling until March, 1942, sending it to some 4,000 dealers. In the months of January and February following, however, defendant’s sales representatives were instructed not to make further quotations of these prices. Some time near the middle of March, it placed a new price list in mimeograph form with its representatives in the various territories covered. This was then printed and circulated among the trade on March 20. The regulation upon which plaintiff relies became effective May 11, 1942, and provided in effect that the ceiling prices should be the highest prices charged for goods delivered in March, 1942. It is agreed that defendant at no time sold merchandise in excess of the price list issued in March. Nor did it, in March or at any time thereafter, sell or deliver goods at less than the March 20 prices, except on previous commitments.

The alleged violations are grounded upon the sales of ten models to various customers as follows: Workhound, Red Seal, Lastikbak, Red Crown, Top Notch, Good Housekeeper, Zebra, 25-P and Angora-D and 958-D. Plaintiff’s investigators found, from examination of the records of defendant, that the only deliveries of each of these models made in the month of March were charged at prices less than those quoted in March; and concluded, therefore, as plaintiff now contends, that these were the highest prices charged for these respective models delivered in the month of March and constituted the ceiling prices therefor, and that sales of the same articles made subsequent to May 11 were at more than these ceiling prices even though not in excess of the quotations in the price list of March 20, 1942. In other words, it is plaintiff’s theory that inasmuch as deliveries of these certain models made in March were at prices below the March quotations, under the statute and regulations, these sales prices became the ceilings with which all' future sales must comply.

The evidence discloses that the deliveries thus made the basis of plaintiff’s computation possess two characteristics, namely: (1), they were deliveries made in March in pursuance of fixed commitments upon contracts for continued delivery entered into many months prior, upon which defendant was bound to make deliveries in accord with its contracts, and (2) the prices charged for these models subsequent to May 11, were in accord with the quotations of March and were the same as those charged for similar models in March except as the articles varied in weight of the cloth or the side thereof presented to the exterior of the glove or in the addition of a leather thumb or of a leather index finger or a leather strap on the palm or a leather strap on the back to protect the knuckles or in differently styled cuffs or in some other minor particular. Each of these minor differences was represented by a long-established differential in price necessitated by the additional cost of the added feature. Certain models differed from others only in that they were made of heavier or lighter materials.

I am of the opinion that it was not the intent of Congress or of the Administrator to fix the ceiling as of March at the price fixed on outstanding contracts antedating March by several months.

Obviously it was the intent to fix the ceilings at not higher than the highest prices charged for sales made and completed in the month of March. The language of the Act, 50 U.S.C.A. Appendix, § 901 et seq., so indicates. Had defendant’s old contracts been completely executed prior to March and had no deliveries of the specific articles been made in March, the ceiling prices for them would necessarily have had to be determined by reference to the highest prices charged for same or similar goods. Under the construction urged by plaintiff, inasmuch as the same or similar goods were sold at higher prices than those fixed on prior commitments, there would then have resulted a situation wherein defendant could legitimately have sold for more money, an article costing less than the one actually delivered and would have been compelled to sell the more expensive model at a loss. In other words, it was the evident purpose of the regulation to fix ceiling prices as of March and not as of the date of old commitments, say, in September of the year before. For this reason, the regulation reads that the ceilings shall be [944]*944the highest prices charged for deliveries made in March.

That it was not the intent of the Office of Price Administration to place the manufacturer in a dilemma as a result of which the latter would be compelled to sell less expensive goods at a greater price than more expensive goods is apparent from the interpretation of the regulation by that office. Thus it said, in a press release on December 4, 1942: “Sellers who made general price increases prior to April 1 are authorized by the Office of Price Administration today to apply the increases to ceiling prices for goods and services delivered last March under long-term contracts. * * * The effect is to allow one, who last March delivered at prices established by a contract signed many months before and who raised his prices generally before April 1, to bring his prices on the expiration of the contract in line with the increased prices he was charging in March. March is the base price period under the two regulations. * * * Hitherto the price-raise provision of these two regulations allowed a seller to apply his general price increase only to those classes of purchasers for whom the increase was announced before April 1 for delivery during March. Since there was no occasion for a seller to announce a price increase for delivery in March to customers under long-term contracts which did not expire in March, the price-raise provision was usually inapplicable to such customers. The new provision permits a seller to increase ceilings for goods delivered to customers under contract in March if the seller (1) announced a general increase prior to April 1, (2) delivered some goods at the higher price in March, anil (3) delivered no goods in March at less than the new higher prices to such customers, aside from deliveries under the contract.”

And it announced on August 20, 1942, “if, after the general price increase, the seller delivered to a class of purchaser only at a lower price, the lower price is the maximum price, unless the delivery was made under a contract. * * * The amendment liberalizes this provision to permit similar adjustment in these situations. * * * where delivery was made after the price rise at a lower price under a previous contract.” A similar release of September 12, 1942 read: “An offering price for delivery during March may exist for a commodity even in the absence of an actual quotation of a price for delivery during that month.

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Related

Bowles v. Keller Glove Mfg. Co.
4 F.R.D. 450 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1945)
Bowles v. Krasno Bros. Glove & Mitten Co.
59 F. Supp. 581 (E.D. Wisconsin, 1945)
Bowles v. Good Luck Glove Co.
143 F.2d 579 (Seventh Circuit, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
52 F. Supp. 942, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2034, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowles-v-good-luck-glove-co-illinoised-1943.