Hoover Co. v. Sesquicentennial Exhibition Ass'n

26 F.2d 821, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1271
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 17, 1928
DocketNo. 4015
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 26 F.2d 821 (Hoover Co. v. Sesquicentennial 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. Sesquicentennial Exhibition Ass'n, 26 F.2d 821, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1271 (E.D. Pa. 1928).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

This cause, complicated in itself in its beginnings, is now almost beyond the possibility of disentanglement. The grievances complained of by the plaintiff are so many and so interrelated directly or remotely to so many different acts in which sometimes the same and sometimes different persons had a part that a recital of them is beyond the reach of clear statement. With no hope of adequacy and little of accuracy in their statement, we will first attempt to broadly outline them, so as to disclose the legal and equitable' principles which concern us, and follow this with a further attempt to analyze the specific averments of the amended bill and the grounds of the present motion to dismiss.

The broad complaint made is this:

The Hoover Company, the plaintiff, and the Eureka Vacuum Cleaner Company, one of the defendants, each had and has a carpet cleaning device. The Sesquieentennial Association, by public invitation, requested the above companies to exhibit their respective devices, upon the promise that the merits of each would be fairly judged and appraised, and the exhibitors given awards of merit in accordance with established rules and regulations, following the usual practices of like expositions theretofore and elsewhere held.

Responding to this invitation, and in reliance upon the promises made, the plaintiff, at some cost and expense, exhibited its device. The defendant company likewise put its device on exhibition. Instead of the fair and just treatment which the plaintiff had the right to receive, the awards were juggled in a way which bespeaks the grossest indifference to incurred obligations to exhibitors by some of those who had a part in what took place and the plainest fraud on the part of the Eureka Company and others. One result was that through this neglect and fraud (a part of which was forgery) the Eureka Company was given an award to which it had no claim of merit. Another result was the [822]*822merits of the Hoover device were first sought to be depreciated by awards which were expressive of inferior worth, and when this was corrected by the jury of award, by the grant of prizes in different classes, the rights of the plaintiff were ignored and denied by the refusal to issue the usual and promised certificate, and the further refusal to thus give effect to the correction of the wrong done. The wrong was made greater by the act of the Eureka Company in putting out grossly unfair and misleading advertisements, falsely stating that the Eureka Company had been given in competition an award of superior merit over the device of the Hoover Company. No one could escape the judgment that this is a recital of great and grievous wrongs, which, if proven, call for correction, if within the lawful powers of the court to so do.

By the bill as first filed we were'asked: (1) To annul the award to the Eureka Company. (2) To restrain said company from advertising the award issued to them. (3) To order the Sesquicentennial Association to issue a grand prize award to the Hoover Company.

The law arising out of the averments of this bill we found to be: (1) A court of equity could not review the judgments of awards made, nor correct errors of judgment therein. (2) The plaintiff had no equitable interest in an award given to another noncompeting exhibitor. (3) A bill could not be maintained against two or more defendants for separate, independent, and distinct causes of action, in the absence of any averment of conspiracy or other joint or concerted acts.

The plaintiff thereupon amended its bill, which the defendants have met by a motion to dismiss the present amended bill. This takes us to its averments. The argument in support of the motion provokes a general comment. The bill is criticized, because its averments are charged to be inferences from facts, instead of statements of the facts from which these inferences are drawn. A justified criticism of this bill might well be made, directed not to the paucity, but the overfullness of the fact averments made. Equity rule 25 commands that the pleadings in equity be confined to averments of the “ultimate facts.” These in their very nature are inferred from the evidentiary facts. The latter are found from the evidence and the former inferred from them. In this sense ultimate facts are reasoned conclusions, but they are none the less facts, although and because they are conclusions of fact. This bill avers ultimate facte, but in many instances supports the averments by a statement of the evidentiary facte, and in some instances supplements these with the evidence from which they may be found. The equity rules call for the omission of not merely the evidence from which the evidentiary facts may be found, but likewise of the evidentiary facts themselves, and for a statement of the -ultimate facts only.

The inclusion of these unnecessary averments has led the plaintiff into an anomalous pleading situation. The present bill is an amended bill. In consequence it speaks as of its original filing date. Some of its fact averments, however, are of occurrences some time after the bill was filed. This makes of the bill, not an historical recital, but a prophesy. We restrict ourselves, however, to the motion before us, which is one to dismiss.

There is some uncertainty, and perhaps confusion, wrought by the use of different names of designation for the different official groups which had to do with the grant and issuance of awards, the story told by this bill, however, as we interpret its meaning, is, after omitting the features which may readily be implied, as follows:

The Hoover Company exhibited a device which was finally found to be in a class by itself and worthy of the award of a grand prize or other certificate of merit. The Eureka Company, an exhibitor in another class, promoted and entered into a conspiracy with officials of the Sesquicentennial and others to bring it about (1) that the device of the Hoover Company and its own should be made to appear as if competitors in the same class; (2) that an award of superior merit should falsely and fraudulently be procured to be issued to the Eureka Company, in such way as to carry the implication of a finding of superior merit in the Eureka device in comparison with that of the plaintiff; (3) that the issuance of the award of merit which had been earned by the Hoover Company and granted to it should be fraudulently withheld, and not issued; and (4) the final purpose and motive was to enable the Eureka Company to put out the deceptive and unscrupulously false advertisements which, as the unlawful fruit of the conspiracy, have been given wide circulation.

There is added an averment which could not be a part of the bill, and, as we view it, cannot be made part of an amended bill, but could only be brought upon the record by way of a supplemental- bill, to the effeet that the Eureka Company, since the filing of the [823]*823opinion of the court, has made a most unfair use of the opinion by grossly misstating its purport and effect, and, wholly misrepresenting it through printed and widely circulated advertisements. We have not considered these later advertisements as at present in the ease. They, of course, figured largely in the arguments at bar. . The forced admissions, which the patent facts compelled counsel to make by their silence and otherwise, make it, we think, our duty to state that the advertising tactics resorted to by the Eureka Company cannot do otherwise than make a very bad impression upon the court.

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26 F.2d 821, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoover-co-v-sesquicentennial-exhibition-assn-paed-1928.