Federal Trade Commission v. Kay

35 F.2d 160, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2924
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 18, 1929
Docket4104
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 35 F.2d 160 (Federal Trade Commission v. Kay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Federal Trade Commission v. Kay, 35 F.2d 160, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2924 (7th Cir. 1929).

Opinion

LUSE, District. Judge.

The Federal Trade Commission, the petitioner, seeks a deeree of this court for enforcement of the modified order of the petitioner dated June 21, 1928, against Abbott E. Kay, under the provisions of section 5 of the Act of Congress approved September 26, 1914 (38 Stat. 717 [15 USCA § 45]).

On December 14, 1922, the petitioner issued a eomplaint charging respondent, Kay, and one R. T. Nelson with the use of unfair methods of competition in interstate commerce, the gist of which was that Kay and *161 Nelson were producing and marketing in interstate commerce a product or substance as radium which in fact was not radium. After answers were filed, testimony was heard before an examiner of the Commission, and the Commission made its findings of fact and its conclusion, and pursuant thereto issued, and caused to be served, an order requiring the respondents to cease and desist from such methods of competition. On June 21, 1928, the Commission, after notice and hearing, modified its findings of fact and issued'its modified order as follows:

“Modified Order to Cease and Desist.
“It is Now Ordered that respondents, Abbott E. Kay and R. T. Nelson, as individuals and as copartners, doing business under the name of Aaban Radium Company, their servants, agents, and employees, cease and desist from further, in any manner whatsoever,
“1. Selling or offering for sale or advertising as and for radium or as containing radium, or possessing radioactive properties, the product heretofore sold and advertised as and for radium by respondents.
“2. Applying, employing, or using descriptively the word 'radium’ or any compound thereof implying radioactivity in connection with the sale, offering for sale, or advertising of the product heretofore sold and advertised as and for radium by respondents.
“3. Making or causing to be made in advertising matter or otherwise representations, statements, or assertions that the product heretofore sold and advertised by respondents is radium, or that said product contains radium.
“4. Making or causing to be made any false statement, claim, or representation of similar import or effect in connection with the sale of any other product or substance.
“It is Further Ordered that the respondents shall, within sixty (60) days after the service upon them of a copy of this order, file with the commission a report in writing setting forth in detail the manner and form in which they have complied with the order to cease and desist hereinbefore" set forth.”

Such modified order was served, and Nelson made and filed a report indicating that he had complied with the order to cease and desist, but the respondent, Kay, filed a report stating that "he had no intention of abandoning his business. Whereupon the Commission applied to this court for its decree against him.

Respondent, Kay, appeared in propria persona and without counsel. No legal questions, as such, have been directly raised, except that the findings and order of the Commission were unwarranted under the evidence, but the entire record has been carefully examined with a view to determining the legality and correctness of the Commission’s findings and order.

Section 5 of the Trade Commission Act makes the Commission’s findings, conclusive as to the facts, if supported by evidence. The government Bureau of Standards was furnished with several samples of the product which the respondent, Kay, had sent to various persons in various states, under the “escrow plan,” or for other purposes, and subjected such specimens to the scientific tests to which that Bureau was accustomed to subject specimens of radium for determining their genuineness. None of such samples of the Kay product responded to the radium tests so applied. One other test was applied to a sample of Dr. Kay’s product, outside the Bureau of Standards, and the testimony indicates that the sample failed to respond to such test. Such failure in all instances, the testimony amply shows, indicated that none of the samples of the Kay product had any appreciable radioactivity. It is true that radioactivity found by the photographic and electroscopio tests, which were used in all eases, may be found upon tests of mesothorium as well as radium. Nevertheless absence of radioactivity sufficient to affect a sensitive photographic film, or an electroscope, is scientifically considered as proof that the specimen tested is neither radium nor mesothorium.

It appears from the evidence that in the radium industry the regular method of purchase by physicians from the manufacturers of genuine radium is for the latter to send the product which it proposes to sell to the government Bureau of Standards for tests. The Bureau customarily subjects the product so submitted to the electroscopio and photographic tests, and compares the results of such tests with similar tests made of a standard unit of radium kept by the Bureau for the purpose of comparison, and certifies the product proposed to be sold as having the radioactivity shown by the tests, and the amount of such radioactivity is ad-measured by comparison with the Bureau’s radium standard. The Bureau does not ordinarily determine whether the product submitted to it is actually radium, or some other substance, such as mesothorium, hav *162 ing radioactivity. The explanation for this is that the process of determining whether the product is actually radium, or mesothorium, or some other radioactive substance, is an intricate one, requiring damaging or destruction of the plaques or tubes in which the product is usually contained, and some interference with the product itself. The result is that the Bureau of Standards has contented itself with certifying to the radioactivity of the commercial product in terms of radium equivalent, as determined by its comparison with the radioactivity of the known standard unit of the Bureau. In commercial practice radium thus submitted to the Bureau is so certified and transmitted to the purchaser’s bank, and delivered to the purchaser upon payment of the purchase price to the bank after examination of the product with its certificate. Respondent, Kay, makes much of the omission by the Bureau of Standards to determine that the specimens commercially submitted to it are actually radium, but it is apparent that this is no answer to the charge made by the Federal Trade Commission that the product of the respondent, Kay, has no radioactivity whatsoever, is not radium, and hence is untruthfully and falsely marketed by the respondent Kay as radium.

The evidence before the Commission amply established the fact that the respondent, Kay, had advertised in various magazines, some of them in general circulation, that his product was radium. The cases, Federal Trade Commission v. Winstead Hosiery Co., 258 U. S. 483, 42 S. Ct. 384, 66 L. Ed. 729; Royal Baking Powder Co. v. Federal Trade Commission (C. C. A.) 281 F. 744; Indiana Quartered Oak Co. v. Federal Trade Commission (C. C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 F.2d 160, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2924, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federal-trade-commission-v-kay-ca7-1929.