Hoover Co. v. Sesqui-Centennial Exhibition Ass'n

48 F.2d 1061, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1276
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 8, 1931
DocketNo. 4015
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 48 F.2d 1061 (Hoover Co. v. Sesqui-Centennial Exhibition Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoover Co. v. Sesqui-Centennial Exhibition Ass'n, 48 F.2d 1061, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1276 (E.D. Pa. 1931).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

We are indebted to the capable and experienced counsel who have argued this case for a very helpful analysis of its facts. This has saved us much labor, for which we wish to make acknowledgment. Except for this, the case would have that complexity which is the most confusing and disturbing characteristic which a case can have. Even with this help, we fear any opinion must have painful length.

There is in truth only one simple fact finding to be made, but the discussion which leads up to it is well-nigh endless. This is evidenced by the nearly two hundred requests for findings with which we have been threatened. Any one who without a guide delves into this record will become entangled in a maze of details, controversies over trivialities, and personal temperamental conflicts which may cause him to lose all sense of direction and any clear view of the legal and equitable rights of the parties.

A good beginning to an understanding of any legal controversy is to get the point of view of the complaining party. The plaintiff and one of the defendants are dealers in the trade in carpet or floor sweepers, known also from their mode of operation as vacuum cleaners. There was and is a sharp, unfriendly trade rivalry between them. Each was an exhibitor at the Sesqui-Centennial Exhibition, with a view to being given an award of merit which would have an advertising value in promoting the sale of the competing sweepers. As they were competitors, it is easy to understand that each exhibitor had a selfish interest, not only in securing an award of merit for its own make of sweeper, but also in the award made to its rival.

The grievances of which the plaintiff in the main complains grow out of an averred unlawful conspiracy among the defendants, which had three objectives: (1) To give to the rival company an unearned and undeserved award of merit in the form given; (2) to deprive the plaintiff of the award to which it had a right; and (3) to give the opportunity to the rival company to enter upon (as it at once did) an advertising campaign of detraction, which was conducted in bad faith, bad manners, bad taste, and bad English, all to the injury of the plaintiff.

[1062]*1062We may interpolate here a grievance of our own arising out of the advertising methods of the defendant company. We are not now passing judgment upon the justness of the complaints voiced by the plaintiff, but we do make the finding that the advertising of the defendant company, which affects this court, was conducted with bad judgment, whatever else may be said of it.

When the original bill was filed, it was met by a motion to dismiss on the ground that it disclosed no cause of action and because of this was without equity. We upheld the defendant in this motion as directed to the bill as first drafted, but gave the plaintiff leave to amend, of which leave it promptly availed itself. Of course, nothing was said or thought of respecting the rival merits of these sweepers, beyond perhaps the expression of the opinion that it was not the province of the court to pass upon this question. The defendant company, however, in deceptive and misleading advertising statements, given wide publicity, represented to prospective purchasers of sweepers that a United States court had solemnly pronounced the superiority of defendant’s sweeper over that of the plaintiff. This act of the defendant has been brought into the record by supplemental bill. Such grossly unfair and improper conduct throws a flood of light upon ■what had preceded.

We have striven, and we think successfully, not to permit this episode to unduly influence our judgment upon the broader merits of the éause, but such conduct cannot be permitted to pass unnoticed. We shall endeavor later to assign to it its just consequences.

We come back from this diversion to the defense, which is a broad denial of the conspiracy charge and specific denial of the supporting averments of the bill.

It is impossible for any one to make any specific fact findings in this case with any satisfying assurance of being right without having first a grasps of the general fact situation'out of which these facts emerge. That general fact situation was this:

One of the things the exhibition managers sought to do was to garner exhibits of the natural and industrial products of all the countries and nations of the world. The different governments of all nations were invited to send in exhibits of what they wished to have displayed. There was in this no direct commercial appeal, although of course the people of any country might derive a future benefit from what was thus exhibited. A like invitation was extended to private exhibitors. The promise was held out that all exhibits would be fairly judged upon their merits and awards made which would be certificates of the merits of what was displayed. Here there was a direct appeal to the selfish commercial interests of exhibitors. Such awards were expected to have a great advertising value and would be coveted because of this. The management should have known, and of course did know, that an appeal to this selfish commercial instinct of exhibitors would arouse that small, mean, envious spirit of commercial and trade rivalry which is too often displayed when selfish trade interests Come into conflict. This called for a high measure of circumspection in the awards made. The required degree of care was sadly missing. This lack was in large part due to the inherent defects of the system adopted.

It was announced that all awards would ¡be made by a tribunal which bore the high sounding name of an International Jury of Awards. This carried with it the thought that an award meant that the exhibit thus distinguished had been tested and its merits commended by a jury of world experts. This was only nominally true. The title was a mere sonorous sound signifying really nothing. What was really done was to con-, fer the honorary appointment of jurors upon a number of very estimable women and men, assigning them to judge different classes of exhibits. These jurors served without compensation and were graciously permitted, if so disposed, to bestow time and labor in the work of examination, and to make recommendations for awards, but the real awarding was meant to be done by the paid staff of the exhibition. Whenever reliance is placed upon unremunerated service, the work will usually be honestly done when it is done, but it will not always be done. When the power to do things which are of value to third persons is confided to paid servants, there are other dangers present. Any attempt to use both always has one of two results. In a jury of awards, for illustration, the unpaid jurors will look upon their duties as purely perfunctory and leave the awards to be made by the paid members, or if any of the unpaid jurors take their duties seriously and try to really function, a condition of friction is always created in which they feel they are being thwarted and suspicion and bickerings result. Any one who has had the participants in this controversy under observation during the developments of this trial would be persuaded that the present suit [1063]*1063had grown out of just the situation above outlined.

This is a convenient place to interpolate a few general findings and comments. Those to whom we. have referred as the “paid staff” who had to do with the making of awards, for reasons which they aver to have been altogether proper, early manifested a purpose and an intention to see to it that the Eureka Company triumphed over the Hoover Company in the competition between them.

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Bluebook (online)
48 F.2d 1061, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoover-co-v-sesqui-centennial-exhibition-assn-paed-1931.