First Nat. Pictures, Inc. v. Robison

72 F.2d 37, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4437
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 11, 1934
Docket7260
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 72 F.2d 37 (First Nat. Pictures, Inc. v. Robison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Nat. Pictures, Inc. v. Robison, 72 F.2d 37, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4437 (9th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

WTLB1JR, Circuit Judge.

From a judgment for $35,336.15 in favor of plaintiff and appellee, appellants have appealed. Por convenience we will refer to the parties as plaintiff and defendants rather than appellee and appellants.

This action was brought to recover damages alleged to have resulted to the plaintiff and her predecessor by reason of a combination or conspiracy of the defendants alleged to be in restraint of trade in violation of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act (15 USCA §§ 1-7, 15 note). The plaintiff and her husband owned and operated the Seville Moving Picture Theater in the city of Inglewood, Cal. The defendants are producers and distributors of moving picture films such as were used in the plaintiff’s theater. In an equitable action brought by the United States government, the defendants were declared guilty of a combination in restraint of interstate commerce and enjoined from continuing the use of certain provisions concerning arbitration in a standard form of contract between the exhibitors of moving pictures and the producers and distributors thereof theretofore used by the defendants, and from acting in concert under certain rules of the defendants for the enforcing of the awards of the arbitration boards set up under the terms of the standard form of contract, by a boycott of the theater owner who failed or refused to abide by the award. Paramount Famous Lasky Corp. et al. v. United States, 282 U. S. 30, 51 S. Ct. 42, 75 L. Ed. 145; Id. (D. C.) 34 F.(2d) 984. The plaintiff relies on this adjudication as establishing the fact of monopoly and as tolling the statute of limitations. 15 USCA § 16, ch. 323, § 5, 38 Stat. 731. The present controversy relates to the matter of zoning of territory by the defendants for the purpose of fixing the time for the exhibition of moving pictures, and, consequently, the priority of such exhibition and the rental to be charged for such use. It appears that the commercial life of a moving picture is very short; about 50 per cent, of the return therefrom being derived in the first run showings of such picture. The first exhibit of moving pictures is made in the downtown areas of large cities. Thereafter the pictures are used in suburban moving picture houses and in smaller cities and towns. The first showing in any zone is called the first run of *38 the picture and any showing thereafter of the same picture in the same zone is called the second or subsequent run of the picture. If no exhibitor in the zone desired a certain picture as first run, it was sometimes rented at the price of a second run picture to an exhibitor who was in fact the first to run the picture in the zone. In the suburban first run a great advantage arises to the exhibitor by reason of the advertisement of the first showing in the large centers and the popularity of the film due to a successful showing therein. Exhibitors are expected to contract at one time for all the films of a given producer which the exhibitor expects to use for one year. The exhibitor may contract for all of the productions of one or several producers or for a part of the productions of any number of producers. The form of contract with each producer is the standard form above referred to, but the price of each film and the date of its showing is arranged with the producer which furnishes the film. These dates of exhibition and the price of the film to the exhibitor are arranged with reference to the area or zone in which the picture is shown. The defendants claim that the zones are not fixed by the producers but by agreement between the local agents of the producers and the exhibitors, each being represented by three members of a joint committee for zoning, and, consequently, that, if the agreement to zone and to supply pictures according to the zones so fixed is illegal that the theater owners, including the plaintiff, are in pari delicto. The plaintiff contends that the defendants aet in concert in selling exhibition rights of their respective films and that films cannot be had from any of the defendants except in accordance with the zoning agreement, while the defendants claim that the zoning is voluntary and that compliance with such zoning is not only optional with each producer, but that in fact all have not conformed thereto. These respective claims were presented in evidence and to some extent were resolved by the verdict of the jury. They involve a number of legal principles, a consideration of which may be deferred until after a further statement of the facts. Suffice it to say for the present that what the plaintiff is complaining of is that the Seville Theater was arbitrarily removed from one zone to another, and that by reason of such changed zoning she has been damaged because of her inability to secure first and second run pictures, as theretofore, but was compelled to secure them in accordance with the new zoning. The Seville Theater was located at the extreme northeast corner of the city of Inglewood. Inglewood is bounded on the north and east by Los Angeles City. We may ignore a cemetery which forms a part of the east boundary of Inglewood and lies between the boundaries of the two cities. Thus, the Seville Theater is at the point of a wedge extending about a mile and three-quarters into the side of Los Angeles City. The Seville is located in residential territory. There is nothing to distinguish the territory in the city of Los Angeles from that in the city of Inglewood other than the street marking the boundary between the two municipalities. The plaintiff and her husband, who was her business partner, selected the location of the Seville Theater, which was built for them and purchased by them in February of 1924 because of its favorable position with relation to zoning. The Seville Theater was able to secure motion pictures at the same time— that is, first or second run — as in the downtown theaters in Inglewood, the Inglewood Theater, and later the Granada Theater, which was opened in the fall of 1924, the former 1.83 miles away and the latter 1.73 miles away from the Seville, but separated from each other by only a block. The nearest theater in Los Angeles City was the Rivoli, 2.95 miles distant from the Seville. Subsequently another theater, the Carlton, was opened in the fall of 1924 in Los Angeles, 2.30 miles distant from the Seville, and .65 miles south of the Rivoli, both being located on Western avenue. By the zoning system in force at the time the Seville was built, it was enabled to secure first run pictures before the Rivoli or any other theater between the Seville and the larger downtown theaters in Los Angeles, some 10 miles distant. Later the Mesa Theater was built in Los Angeles City at the comer of Slauson avenue and Crenshaw boulevard, distant .75 miles from the Seville, and opened April 15, 1926. The Mesa seated 1,700 and the Seville 786, the Rivoli between SOO and 1,000, the Granada 1,000, and the Carlton about 1,200. Thus, after the Seville was opened, theaters having four times its seating capacity were opened in that vicinity. When the Mesa Theater was building, the zoning committee of the producers and exhibitors decided that the Mesa and Seville Theaters were competing theaters and put them in the same zone so that they could compete on equal terms. This arrangement was protested by plaintiff’s husband, who was managing the Seville Theater, but his protest was overruled. As this protest is a fair statement of the position which *39

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 F.2d 37, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-pictures-inc-v-robison-ca9-1934.