Cleaning & Dyeing Plant Owners Ass'n v. Sterling Cleaners & Dyers, Inc.

2 N.E.2d 149, 285 Ill. App. 336, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 539
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 13, 1936
DocketGen. No. 38,486
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 N.E.2d 149 (Cleaning & Dyeing Plant Owners Ass'n v. Sterling Cleaners & Dyers, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleaning & Dyeing Plant Owners Ass'n v. Sterling Cleaners & Dyers, Inc., 2 N.E.2d 149, 285 Ill. App. 336, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 539 (Ill. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hebel

delivered the opinion of the-court.

This is an appeal by Sterling Cleaners & Dyers, Inc., Peacock Cleaners & Dyers, Ltd., Michigan Cleaners & Dyers, Inc., and Checker Cleaners & Dyers, Inc., defendants, and a separate appeal by co-parties, Abarbanell Bros., Inc., and Berwyn Dry Cleaning Co., defendants, from the final decree entered by the circuit court of Cook county on- July 13, 1935, confirming and approving the master’s report and overruling the exceptions of the defendants thereto and permanently enjoining and restraining these defendants from:

“(a) Selling, offering for sale, rendering or offering to render at retail, cleaning and pressing* services below' cost. Selling, offering for sale, rendering or offering* to render, at retail, cleaning and pressing services, for men’s and women’s garments at a price less than, seventy-five (75$) cents per garment, for cash and carry, and less than ninety (90$) cents per garment, called for and delivered.

“Selling, offering* for sale, rendering or offering to render at wholesale, cleaning services for men’s suits, unfinished, or as is commonly referred to in the trade as ‘x’ work, at less than fifty (50%) per cent of the cash and carry price as set forth herein.

“Selling, offering for sale, rendering or.offering* to render at wholesale, cleaning* and pressing, or as is commonly referred to in the trade as finished work, ladies’ dresses at less than sixty (60%) per cent, of the retail cash and carry price as set forth herein.

“(b) Advertising in any publication, newspaper, periodical, by signs, on wagons, signs on windows, signs' on trucks, through the radio, verbal solicitations, through the use of circulars, handbills, billboards, or from making known in any other manner that the cleaning and pressing services as above set forth in paragraph (a) will be rendered at prices below those designated in said paragraph (a) hereof.

“(c) Advertising* in any form designated in paragraph (b) hereof in manner or statement which inaccurately describes the character of service rendered, the grade, quality of the service which is rendered, or from advertising* in any manner which might tend to deceive or mislead customers or the public.

“(d) Advertising in any manner designated in paragraph (b) hereof values of services which might tend to deceive or mislead any customer, and from advertising in any particular in any such manner as would unfairly represent the actual price charged for services rendered, and from making any statements in such advertisements that the prices charged are less than those charged by any other competitors.

“(g) Engaging in the conspiracy or combination in the cleaning business for the purpose or with the effect of destroying, injuring, or damaging the plaintiffs, or any or either of them by the doing of the acts herein restrained.

“ (h) Singly, or collectively engaging in unfair competition or unfair trade practices in the cleaning and dying industry in Cook County, as set forth in paragraphs (2), (a), (b), (e), (d) and (g) hereof.

“ (3) This court hereby specifically retains jurisdiction of the parties hereto and the subject matter hereof for the purpose of modifying or enlarging said decree, or entering another decree in furtherance of the purposes of carrying into complete effect the provisions hereof, so that complete justice may be done between all the parties necessary to carry this decree into practical effect, in the event of a change in economic conditions.”

From the record and the statement of facts in the briefs it appears that one of the plaintiffs herein, Cleaning & Dyeing Plant Owners Association, of Chicago, a corporation not for profit, was organized in October, 1933, to succeed the Chicago Master Cleaners & Dyers Association. This latter association in 1930 and 1931 consisted of about 121 plant owners in the cleaning and dyeing business, who signed a contract with one Dr. B. M. Squires, whereby he was employed as general sales manager to stabilize the cleaning and dyeing industry.

These plant owners agreed to pay Squires 2 per cent of all their gross proceeds for his services. Squires was permitted under the contract to fix the minimum price at which the members were to sell dry cleaning to the public. In 1930 he recommended a minimum price of $1. In March 1931 he fixed the price at $1.25. Most of the plants under the contract charged that price.

From time to time violations were reported to him of plants under the contract selling services for less than the recommended price and Squires, according to his testimony, “would then undertake methods of a persuasive character looking towards getting them to abide by the recommended price.”

It also appears from the evidence that James P. Gorman one of the plaintiffs’ witnesses and who was president of the Retail Cleaners & Dyers Union was employed by the Association as labor commissioner. Squires testified that as labor commissioner Gorman’s duties were “to go about the industry with such assistants as he might require to see that the various plant owners were complying with the wages and conditions I had set as impartial chairman and secondly to report to me any violations of the minimum prices I had recommended.” He was paid a salary of $200 per week and expenses. From June 1931, to April or May, 1932, Squires paid Gorman $6,000 in salary and $21,000 for expenses.

It also appears that this association financed a strike, which was called in 1931 against the Michigan Cleaners, one of the defendants herein. The Association turned over to the union for that purpose four or five thousand dollars.

It also appears that $30,000 of the Association money was turned over to Frank Harscher, secretary of the Association, for expenses in maintaining an office where complaints were “heard and investigated. ’ ’ $40,000 was spent in advertising and money was turned over to the -unions to finance pickets for strikes against plants that failed to observe the prices fixed by Squires from time to time as needed, for which no accounting was demanded or given.

It also appears from the evidence that George E. Peterson & Co. as oil jobbers supplied 80 per cent of the cleaners with naphtha when the Squires Institute was formed; that during this period the Peterson Company regularly gave the Institute and the Master Cleaners & Dyers a monthly rebate of $800 for a monopoly on the membership patronage.

In 1931 at the suggestion of Squires the name of the Chicago Master Cleaners & Dyers Association was dropped and they called themselves the Cleaners & Dyers Institute of Chicago, with Squires as Chairman. The contract expired with Squires in October, 1933, when the Cleaning & Dyeing Plant Owners Association of Chicago was formed to succeed the former company.

The constitution and by-laws of the plaintiff association are attached to the complaint herein and were offered in evidence and provide among other things that any person, firm or corporation in the business of cleaning and dyeing in Chicago, or operating such business in Chicago shall be eligible for membership.

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Bluebook (online)
2 N.E.2d 149, 285 Ill. App. 336, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleaning-dyeing-plant-owners-assn-v-sterling-cleaners-dyers-inc-illappct-1936.