Eastman Kodak Co. v. Southern Photo Materials Co.

273 U.S. 359, 47 S. Ct. 400, 71 L. Ed. 684, 1927 U.S. LEXIS 987
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 21, 1927
Docket6
StatusPublished
Cited by824 cases

This text of 273 U.S. 359 (Eastman Kodak Co. v. Southern Photo Materials Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eastman Kodak Co. v. Southern Photo Materials Co., 273 U.S. 359, 47 S. Ct. 400, 71 L. Ed. 684, 1927 U.S. LEXIS 987 (1927).

Opinion

*367 Mr. Justice Sanford

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought by the Southern Photo Materials Co., a Georgia corporation, in 1915, in the Federal District Court for Northern Georgia, against the Eastman Kodak Co., a New York corporation, to recover damages for injuries sustained by the plaintiff through the defendant’s violation of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act. 1 Proceeding under § 12 of the Clayton Act, 2 process was issued and served upon the defendant, pursuant to an order of the court, at Rochester, New York, where it had its principal place of business. The defendant, appearing specially, traversed the return, entered a plea to the jurisdiction, and moved to quash the service. The jurisdictional issues thus raised were tried by the judge, who overruled *368 these defenses. 234 Fed. 955. The defendant, by leave of court, then answered on the merits. The trial to the court and jury resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff assessing its actual damages at $7,914.66. Judgment was entered against the defendant for triple this amount and an attorney’s fee. This was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals. 295 Fed. 98. And the case was then brought here by writ of error, prior to the Jurisdictional Act of 1925.

The plaintiff operates a photographic stock house in Atlanta and deals in photographic materials and supplies, which it sells to photographers in Georgia and other Southern States. The defendant is a manufacturer of photographic. materials and supplies, which it sells to dealers throughout the United States.

The case made by the allegations of the complaint was, in substance, this: The defendant, in violation of the Anti-Trust Act, had engaged in a combination to monopolize the interstate trade in the United States in photographic materials and supplies, and had monopolized the greater part of such interstate trade. This had been brought about by'purchasing and acquiring the control of competing companies engaged in manufacturing such materials, and the businesses and stock houses of dealers; by restraining the vendors from re-entering these businesses; by imposing on the dealers to whom it sold goods restrictive terms of sale fixing i the prices at which its goods could be resold and preventing them from handling competitive goods; and by other means of suppressing competition.

Prior to 1910 the plaintiff had dealt with the defendant, and purchased its goods on the same terms as'other dealers, with whom it was enabled to compete; but in that year the defendant, having acquired the control of the' stock houses in Atlanta which were in competition with the plaintiff and unsuccessfully attempted' to purchase the plaintiff’s business, had, in furtherance of its purpose to *369 monopolize, thereafter refused to sell the plaintiff its goods at the dealers’ discounts, and would no longer furnish them except at the retail prices at which they were sold by other dealers and the agencies which the defendant owned and controlled, with whom the plaintiff could no longer compete. And, the plaintiff being thus deprived, by reason of the monopoly, of the ability to obtain the defendant’s goods and supply them to its trade, its business had been greatly injured and it had sustained large damages in the loss of the profits which it would have realized in the four years covered by the suit had it been able to continue the purchase and sale of such goods.

The answer denied that the defendant had combined to monopolize or monopolized interstate trade, or refused to sell its goods to the plaintiff at the dealers’ discounts in furtherance of a purpose to monopolize; and averred that the defendant had not only committed no actionable wrong, but that in any event the plaintiff had sustained no damages capable of ascertainment upon any legal basis.

While many errors were assigned, some of which were also specified, in general terms, in the defendant’s brief in this Court, we confine our consideration of the case in this opinion' to the controlling questions which are stated in that brief to present the chief issues here in controyersy, and to which alone the argument in the brief is directed. See I. T. S. Co. v. Essex Rubber Co., 272 U. S. 429. These do not involve the existence of the defendant’s monopoly — which is not questioned' here 3 — but relate solely to the questions whether there *370 was local jurisdiction or venue in the District Court; whether the refusal of the defendant to continue to sell the plaintiff its goods at the dealers’ discounts was in furtherance of a purpose to monopolize and constituted an actionable wrong which could form the basis of any recovery; and whether there was any competent and legal proof on which a measurement of the plaintiff’s damages could be based.

1. Whether or not the jurisdiction of the District Court was rightly sustained — which resolves itself into a question whether the venue of the suit was properly laid in that court — depends upon the construction and effect of § 12 of the Clayton Act and its application to the facts shown by the evidence set forth in the separate bill of exceptions relating to the hearing on the jurisdictional issues. Dunlop v. Munroe, 7 Cranch 242, 270; Jones v. Buckell, 104 U. S. 654, 556.

It appears from this evidence that the defendant— which resides and has its principal place of business in New York — had not registered in Georgia as a non-resident corporation for the purpose of doing business in that State, and had no office, place of business or resident agent therein. It had, however, for many years prior to the institution of the suit, in a continuous course of business, carried on interstate trade with a large number of photographic dealers in Atlanta and other places in Georgia, to whom it sold and shipped photographic materials from New York. A large part of this business was obtained through its travelling salesmen who visited Georgia several times in each year and solicited orders from these dealers which were transmitted to its New York offices for acceptance or rejection. In furtherance of its business and to increase the demand for its goods, it also employed travel-ling demonstrators,” who visited Georgia several times in each year, for the purpose of exhibiting and explaining the superiority of its goods to photographers and other *371 users of photographic materials. And, although these demonstrators did not solicit orders for the defendant’s goods, they took at times retail orders for them from such users, which they turned over to the local dealers supplied by the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
273 U.S. 359, 47 S. Ct. 400, 71 L. Ed. 684, 1927 U.S. LEXIS 987, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastman-kodak-co-v-southern-photo-materials-co-scotus-1927.