Connecticut Importing Co. v. Continental Distilling Corp.

129 F.2d 651, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3427
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 16, 1942
Docket235
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 129 F.2d 651 (Connecticut Importing Co. v. Continental Distilling Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connecticut Importing Co. v. Continental Distilling Corp., 129 F.2d 651, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3427 (2d Cir. 1942).

Opinion

AUGUSTUS N. HAND, Circuit Judge.

This is an action to recover treble damages, brought under Section 7 of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act. 15 U.S.C.A. § 15 note. The violations of the act set forth in the complaint and in plaintiff’s proof consisted of a conspiracy between Continental Distilling Corporation and the other defendants named in the complaint, as well as Austin-Nichols and McKesson & Robbins, to control wholesale and retail prices on the liquor products sold by Continental Distilling Corporation through its Connecticut distributors and to boycott and blacklist all retailers and distributors, including the plaintiff, who would not maintain the prices agreed upon.

The defendants denied the existence of the conspiracy and introduced testimony in support of their position, but there was enough evidence to justify the jury in finding that such a conspiracy was formed, that it restrained competition and that it caused damage to the plaintiff. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $16,000, upon which judgment was entered for treble the amount. The defendants Continental Distilling Corporation and A. Sherman Manufacturing Company have appealed.

In September, 1936, Continental Distilling Corporation appointed the plaintiff a distributor of its liquor products for the State of Connecticut and informed it that it would remain a distributor as long as it paid its. 'bills. Continental issued price lists containing suggested resale prices from its distributors to retailers and from retailers to the public. During 'the same month representatives of Austin-Nichols, McKesson & Robbins and the defendant Libbey & R. C. Williams Corporation, which were also distributors of Continental’s liquor products for Connecticut, met in New Haven at the Hotel Taft and complained to each other about the appointment of the plaintiff as a distributor, and Libbey of Libbey & R. C. Williams Corporation was said to have then sent a telegram to the sales manager of Continental objecting to the appointment. The plaintiff did not adhere to the Continental price lists in respect to resales of its products, but began price cutting. The various distributors, including the plaintiff, all belonged to a Connecticut trade organization which was committed to price maintenance in the liquor business. In November, 1936, Continental adopted the policy of obtaining agreements from its distributors to maintain its price schedules and of enforcing observance of these agreements. Libbey & R. C. Williams Corporation, A. Sherman Manufacturing Company, Austin-Nichols, McKesson & Robbins and the plaintiff all wrote letters to Continental agreeing to adhere to its schedule of resale prices. But the plaintiff continued price cutting in spite of this, though the other distributors in general carried out their agreements. Grabuski, the sales manager of Continental for Connecticut, vainly protested to Brochin, who was the plaintiff’s president, about this price cutting and told him that the other distributors were objecting. The representative of Austin-Nichols testified that, in December, he had accumulated complaints and was then promised by Grabuski that their “trouble would be over soon.” Brochin testified that on January 7 or 8, 1937, Grabuski notified him that Continental had held a meeting with all the distributors and that they and Continental had decided to cut off the plaintiff who was no longer to receive Continental merchandise. Grabuski said: “You are cut off because you didn’t abide by the policy of our company, and that is the decision made between all of us,” and added that Brochin didn’t “know how to make profits.” When Brochin asked if there was any chance to be reinstated Grabuski told him that there was no chance, that no distributor would buy of Continental if it reinstated the plaintiff and that he was not going to lose five distributors because of Brochin. Brochin then telephoned Robert A. Smith, the vice president and general sales manager of Continental, at Philadelphia, and requested an interview. Smith agreed to see Brochin in New Haven. He *653 came there on January 18 and told Brochin that he had arranged for a meeting on January 19 because the question of reinstatement was one that he had to decide with all the distributors. The meeting was held on the 19th at the Hotel Taft; representatives of Libbey & R. C. Williams Company, A. Sherman Manufacturing Company and McKesson & Robbins were present, as well as Grabuski and Smith of Continental. Lapides of Austin-Nichols was also at the Taft at that time, though on instructions from his company he did not attend the meeting. He was, however, told the result of it by Grabuski the next day and had talked with Smith about it just after it ended. According to the plaintiff’s testimony, Brochin and Rabinowitz, who went to New Haven to obtain reinstatement for the plaintiff, were excluded from the meeting on the motion of the representatives of Libbey and Sherman. After ■the meeting was concluded Brochin and Rabinowitz were handed their hats by Smith, the plaintiff was not reinstated, and thereafter was never sold any of the Continental brands of liquor. When Smith gave Brochin and Rabinowitz their hats, he remarked: “Well, gentlemen, it was decided that you gentlemen are to be definitely discontinued as our distributors.” Defendant’s witness, Samuel A. Sherman, the vice-president of A. Sherman Manufacturing Company, testified that the latter’s brother Joe had a heated argument with Brochin, just before the meeting was held, and accused Brochin and his salesmen of “secret ‘kickbacks’ that discredited the whole line with the retailers.”

There was proof that in order to carry out the arrangement to fix prices Continental employed so-called “missionary men” to canvass retail stores and to advise such stores as were found to be selling Continental’s brands below the list prices to desist and, if they did not desist, to report them to the distributors, blacklist them and prevent them from buying any more goods. Other means Continental adopted to penalize retailers who refused to conform to the price schedule were to buy out their stocks of Continental goods and to induce newspapers not to carry their advertising.

From the membership of all the distributors in a price maintenance trade association, the letters in which each promised to adhere to the price schedules of Continental, the asserted inability of Continental to reinstate plaintiff without the consent of the other distributors, and the meeting of January 19th at which the reinstatement of the plaintiff was refused, it is a reasonable inference: (1) that the defendants agreed at some time in November, 1936, to maintain uniform prices in disposing of Continental’s liquors, (2) that when plaintiff was found to be under-cutting and failing to maintain prices, its competitors, Libbey, Sherman, McKesson & Robbins and Austin-Nichols insisted on removing a distributor (to whom in fact they had objected from the beginning) and refused to allow it to be reinstated, and (3) that the defendants entered into a conspiracy to violate the Sherman Act which resulted in the loss to plaintiff of its position as distributor of Continental and deprived it of such profits as it would have realized if it had been allowed to continue its former status.

There can be no doubt that an agreement to fix resale prices restrains competition and violates the Sherman AntiTrust Act, and that there was substantial proof of a conspiracy by the defendants and other distributors to that end and of acts on their part to carry out the illegal agreement.

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129 F.2d 651, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-importing-co-v-continental-distilling-corp-ca2-1942.