Cream Top Bottle Corp. v. Bailes

56 F.2d 1055, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2020
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedNovember 30, 1931
DocketNos. 1239-N to 1242-N, 1244-N
StatusPublished

This text of 56 F.2d 1055 (Cream Top Bottle Corp. v. Bailes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cream Top Bottle Corp. v. Bailes, 56 F.2d 1055, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2020 (D. Kan. 1931).

Opinion

POLLOCK, District Judge.

The above entitled and numbered suits are brought for the purpose of obtaining decrees enjoining defendants from infringing rights granted one Norman A. Henderson by letters patent No. 1,528,480 for milk bottles and cream separator, which said patent was duly assigned to plaintiff herein the Cream Top Bottle Corporation, the owner thereof.

On issues joined the cases were referred to an able special master, who took the proofs, considered the same, and made a voluminous report of the facts found therefrom and conclusions of law thereon, and a recommendation as to the decrees that should enter herein. Plaintiff has filed exceptions thereto which have been fully submitted on briefs and oral argument, and the matter comes now on for ruling and decrees.

By stipulation of parties, all the proofs are considered together as one case. The facts necessary to a presentation of the cases may be summarized as stated by the special master in his report, from the proofs, as follows:

Plaintiff adopted the following plan to avail itself of the benefit of its patent: It enters into contracts with manufacturers of bottles located in different sections of the country under which it gives to the manufacturer a license to manufacture the bottles under the letters patent and to sell the bottles either directly or through jobbers to certain milk dealers and distributors who may acquire the right to use the bottles from Cream Top Bottle Corporation. Beyond this the plaintiff has no interest in the manufactured product or in the proceeds of the sale, or in the manufacturing or other profits from such sales. One of such contracts is with the Thatcher Manufacturing Company of Elmira, N. Y.

The plaintiff also enters into contracts with dairymen throughout the country under which the dairymen are given the exclusive right to use the bottles and separators for the distribution of milk, with the requirement that the dairymen shall purchase their supplies of bottles from an authorized manufacturer. In consideration for their contract, the dairymen are required to pay an annual sum, or royalty, which is calculated at one cent per capita of the population in the community served. No restriction is placed upon the number of bottles which an authorized dairyman may purchase under this arrangement from the manufacturer, and the extent or volume of his purchase has no bearing upon the royalty which he is required to pay under his contract.

Such a contract was made with the Meyer Sanitary Milk Company, a corporation, engaged in wholesale and retail distribution of [1056]*1056milk in Kansas City, Kan. The contracts •with the Thatcher Manufacturing Company and the Meyer Sanitary Milk Company are found in the proofs in this ease.

“At the time of the trial, the bottles were in use in over 600 communities in the United States and their use by dairymen is extensive. Cream Top Bottle Corporation does not keep track of the volume of such sales, but, as some indication, the President of the Company testified that they have some dairymen who use from sixty to eighty carloads in each year. A carload contains from 20,000 to 30,000 bottles. (Trans, p. 30.)

“The Meyer Sanitary Milk Company is one of the principal dairymen in Kansas City, Kansas. The Company uses in its business both the cream top bottles and other unpatented bottles of the usual pattern. It delivers to its trade from 13,000 to 18,000 bottles of milk per day of which about sixty per cent, are cream top bottles and the remainder are plain bottles. (Pages 51-59.) In the distribution of the milk there is a slight distinction made in practice with respect to the trade as testified by Mr. Meyer, President of the Company, as follows (Page 53):

“ ‘In supplying the wholesale trade the milk is sold at a certain price and we require a deposit of 5¢ for the bottle. In the retail trade no deposit for the bottle is required:’
“‘No charge is made for the bottle, or there is no deposit made for the bottle in selling at retail.’
“By the wholesale trade is meant stores, grocery stores, confectionery stores.
“In the sale to a wholesaler a charge ticket is prepared which contains the following notation:
“ ‘Total bottles—Deposit at each. (A deposit of five cents is required for each bottle and said sum will be refunded for each bottle returned.)’ (Page 54.)
“The foregoing applies to bottles of both kinds.
“In its practice the Meyer Milk Company receives from its customer, whether wholesale or retail, one empty bottle for each full bottle delivered. (Page 58.) The duty to make this exchange is imposed upon the employe of the Dairy Company who delivers the milk. If he fails to collect from the customer an empty bottle in exchange for a delivered bottle the employe is charged therefor. (Page 61.)
“No discrimination, however, is made in the exchange between cream top and ordinary bottles, that is to say, the exchange is made upon the basis of bottle for bottle rather than in kind. For example, he may deliver to a grocer a ease of milk all of which is contained in cream top bottles or part in cream top bottles and the remainder in ordinary bottles. In exchange the Meyer Company will accept all cream top bottles or all ordinary bottles, or, partly one and partly the other. So likewise, a bottle of .milk delivered to a family may be contained in either a cream top bottle or d plain bottle and in exchange therefor the Meyer Company will accept either cream top bottles or plain bottles irrespective of the container in which the particular delivery of milk is made.
“As a result of this practice of the Meyer Sanitary Milk Company a considerable volume of cream top bottles find their way into the channels of trade in the community for which the Meyer Company has received full satisfaction in exchange for other bottles (or in some instances has been paid five cents per bottle in cash) and to which cream top bottles, therefore, the Meyer Company has no further right or interest.
“The other dairymen who are defendants in this case are also engaged in distribution of milk, both wholesale and retail, in the territory covered by the Meyer Company and in competition with each other and with the Meyer Company. Meyer and others of them frequently have the same customers in the wholesale trade and, of course, there is more or less change by domestic or retail users from one dairyman to another.
“The defendant dairymen follow the identical practice of Meyer in distribution of milk. They receive in exchange an empty bottle for a delivered bottle and regardless of whether the delivered or the exchanged bottle is a cream top bottle or a plain and ordinary bottle. Under this method of distribution, therefore, it may well happen that the Meyer Company has received in exchange for a cream top bottle originally supplied by it to a customer a plain or ordinary bottle originally supplied to the same customer by one of the defendants.
“The testimony shows that this practice of delivery and exchange of bottles has become so well settled in the community that each dairyman, perforce, must adopt it.

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Bluebook (online)
56 F.2d 1055, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2020, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cream-top-bottle-corp-v-bailes-ksd-1931.