Bowles v. Leventhal

61 F. Supp. 144, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2140
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 28, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 61 F. Supp. 144 (Bowles v. Leventhal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowles v. Leventhal, 61 F. Supp. 144, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2140 (S.D.N.Y. 1945).

Opinion

KNOX, District Judge.

For several years prior to 1941, defendant was engaged in selling merchandise at retail upon installments of “dollar down and a dollar a week.” In so doing, he charged full list prices and a little extra because of risks involved in that type of business. In November of the latter year, and due to war conditions, he decided to go into the discount business and sell standard articles below competitive prices. His operations consist principally in dispensing jewelry, clothing, toilet articles and personal items, to retail purchaser who, according to defendant, can supply their wants at discounts of from 20 to 25 percent below list prices. This, it is said, is due to the fact that defendant carries on business on *145 the sixth floor of an office building, and is put to little expense for sales service and advertising. His gross sales amount to about $80,000 per annum.

On August 16, 1943, defendant sold and shipped to Randolph J. Seidenberg, at Buffalo, N. Y., 144 Regens mechanical cigar or cigarette lighters and charged therefor the sum of $2.75 each. On September 14, 1943, he sold, 432 of the same type of lighters to Seidenberg at a price of $3. each. Two weeks thereafter, defendant sold 360 Regens lighters, with nickel cases, to Stanley A. Levy, also of Buffalo, at $3 per item. On October 13, 1943, he sold Levy 190 additional lighters at $3.75 each, and a week later sold him 216 more lighters at the same price. The lighters were purchased by Seidenberg and Levy with the intention of retailing them at $4.95 apiece.

The items here involved were manufactured by the Regens Lighter Corporation in Long Island City, and plaintiff called Rudolf Dismas, vice president of that organization, as a witness. According to him, the prices at which his corporation sold lighters after March, 1942, as of which time prices generally were frozen, were $5.40 per dozen to jobbers; $7.20 to retailers, and the latter were supposed to supply the users of the items at $1 apiece. The manufacturer advertised its wares in the October issues of two local trade publications, known as “The Tobacco Jobber” and “The Retail Tobacconist,” respectively, and specifically declared that the retail price of the lighter was unchanged at $1 each. Letters and price sheets to the same effect, and of earlier dates, were widely distributed throughout the trade. The corporation endeavored to sell its product only to merchants who maintained its price list.

Subsequent to March, 1942, the company had but two domestic competitors, and each of them sold its lighters at prices less than those charged by the Regens Company. Dismas, however, stated that he could not, in all instances, quote jobber’s prices for lighters after March, 1942, because of the existence of a black market in the trade.

Section 1499.2 of the General Maximum Price Regulation sets the maximum price of an article offered for sale at “the highest price charged by the seller during March, 1942, for the same commodity” or “for the similar commodity most nearly like it” or at the highest price charged during March, 1942, by the “most closely competitive seller of the same class for the same commodity.”

The testimony of Dismas was offered by plaintiff in order to prove the ceiling prices on Regens lighters that had been established by defendant’s “most closely competitive seller,” which price, in the absence of a price established by defendant in March, 1942, would tend to place a limitation on the amount he might charge for the same item. While there is no direct showing that defendant saw or knew of any of the advertising matter issued by Regens Lighter Corporation, it is reasonable to suppose that defendant, as an experienced trader, when he undertook to deal in Re-gens lighters, would inform himself of what the company charged for the merchandise he was handling. For him to have done so would seem to be a natural course of procedure in the business in which he was engaged. He, the same as every trader, was charged with knowledge of the price regulations of the Administrator, and it became his duty to inform himself of the restrictions applicable to his line of business. For this reason, it is fair to assume that he either knew or should have known that the ceiling prices of Regens Lighter Corporation were also prices by which he might be bound. If I am correct in this, Leventhal must bear the burden of showing that his established ceiling price in March, 1942, if he had had one) differed from that of the manufacturer of the Re-gens lighter.

Leventhal, it appears, purchased the lighters in question from a man named Philip Applebaum, who has a place of business at 598 Seventh Avenue, New York. He is a customer of defendant, and from time to time purchases shirts and socks at Leventhal’s shop. On one of his visits to defendant’s store, Applebaum showed Lev-enthal a Regens lighter, and, on the latter’s inquiry, told him that he could supply the article at $32 per dozen. Thereupon, defendant asked the retail selling price of the article, and was informed that “in the window downstairs, there is a sign displaying them at $4.95. Leventhal then requested Applebaum to leave with him six lighters, and this was done.

Some time later, Leventhal was playing golf with David Schoolman, and, as they walked about the course, the two men discussed business matters in which they had a common interest. Schoolman, who is an accountant, called attention to the fact that Randolph J. Seidenberg was one of his clients, and on being apprised of the wide *146 variety of the lines of goods handled by Leventhal, Schoolman said: “Maybe you can pick up some lighters. This client of mine, Seidenberg, is a big distributor and a retail man in Buffalo wanted some lighters.” Leventhal replied: “Well, there is a fellow left some stuff up in my place. Let him (Seidenberg) come and look at it.” Some days later a man who turned out to be Seidenberg called on Leventhal and said, “Mr. David Schoolman sent me here.” Thereupon, Leventhal showed him á Regens lighter, and was then asked “What price is it?” Leventhal replied, “Well, we had set a price (retail) of $4.95 on it.” His explanation as to the manner by which he and Seidenberg agreed on a price of $2.75 for the first shipment is this: “Well, when he came up and he asked me the price of them and I figured we were selling them for $4.95 or $5. and on a job batch, which occasionally I had, we gave a little added discount as long as I could make a little money, and figured about 20 to 25 off, which was my customary job lot price, would bring it to $48. When I asked him that price, he says, ‘That is out of the question because they want to sell it for $4.95 and the profit wasn’t there,’ and I said, ‘All right, I will make a small turnover and I will ask for $36.’ and he said ‘$3.,’ and I said, ‘All right. Send me something as soon as you can.’ ”

Aside from the six lighters that had been left with him by Applebaum, Leventhal then had no lighters in stock. However, he called Applebaum and asked if he could procure four gross of the lighters. Thereafter, the same were delivered to Leventhal, who gave him a check to Applebaum for $1,440. After describing the circumstances under which he sold Regens lighters to Levy, the following colloquy took place between Leventhal and the Court:

“Q. When you made this sale to this merchant up in Buffalo, did you make any inquiry as to what the retail price was under the O.P.A. regulation? A.

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Bluebook (online)
61 F. Supp. 144, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowles-v-leventhal-nysd-1945.