Interborough News Co. v. Curtis Publishing Co.

127 F. Supp. 286
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 22, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 127 F. Supp. 286 (Interborough News Co. v. Curtis Publishing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Interborough News Co. v. Curtis Publishing Co., 127 F. Supp. 286 (S.D.N.Y. 1954).

Opinion

SUGARMAN, District Judge.

The defendants’ motions to dismiss the complaint are granted.

In this opinion and appendix a number in parentheses ( ) denotes the page numbér of the printed trial record whereon testimony concerning the subject matter appears and a description and number in brackets [ ] denotes the identification mark of an exhibit received in evidence wherein the subject matter appears.

On December 13, 1949 Interborough News Company (hereinafter Interborough) filed its complaint against Curtis Publishing Company, Curtis Circulation Company (Curtis), Triangle Publications, Inc., (Triangle), S-M News Company (S-M), McCall Corporation, Popular Science Publishing Co., Inc., Meredith Publishing Company, Reader’s Digest Association, Inc., Hearst Magazines, Inc. (Hearst), Fawcett Publications, Inc. (Fawcett), Macfadden Publications, Inc. . (Macfadden), Hillman Periodicals, Inc. (Hillman), National Comics Publications, Inc., Independent News Company (Independent), Publishers Distributing Corporation (PDC), Field Enterprises, Inc., Pocket Books, Inc. (Pocket Books), Walter D. Fuller, Benjamin Allen, Ray C. McLarty, Victor E. Lance, Marvin Pierce, William A. Rogers, Robert E. Haig, Roscoe Fawcett, Jr., Allan Adams, O. J. Elder, Sol N. Himmelman, Alexander L. Hillman, Philip Keenan, Paul H. Sampliner, Harry Donenfeld, Irving S. Manheimer, Robert F. DeGraff, Wallis E. Howe, Jr., S. O. Shapiro and George B. Davis.

All said defendants were served with the summons and complaint or appeared herein except defendants Roscoe Fawcett, Allan Adams and Wallis E. Howe, Jr. (4). The defendant Ray-C. McLarty died before trial and his estate has not been substituted herein (4). Independent News Co., Inc., appeared in place and stead of Independent News Company, and S-M News Company, Inc., filed an answer for S-M News Company.

The first amended answer of Curtis and the answers of Triangle and Fawcett each pleaded a counterclaim against the plaintiff and Jules Stolz, Alfred E. Booth, George P. Booth and Herbert Meyer, who were impleaded as additional defendants to the said counterclaims and who, with plaintiff replied thereto.

After the other defendants answered, plaintiff filed an amended complaint to which defendants answered, Curtis, Triangle and Fawcett reasserting their several counterclaims against the plaintiff and the additional defendants and Independent asserting a counterclaim against only the plaintiff which it subsequently during trial voluntarily dismissed (2731).

By stipulation filed herein on August 7, 1951, the plaintiff “discontinued” its action against defendant Triangle Publications, Inc., which in turn “discontinued” its counterclaim against the plaintiff and the said additional defendants. Thereupon some of the defendants filed supplemental answers asserting that the voluntary dismissal by the plaintiff of its suit against Triangle constituted a bar to the suit against said other defendants. The answers of the remaining defendants were, by a later pre-trial order deemed similarly amended.

After other intermediate proceedings, including the filing of further amended pleadings, motions addressed thereto and interrogatories, depositions and production of documents, the parties came to pre-trial.

When the pre-trial order was entered on August 13, 1953 the pleadings stood as follows: The complaint asserted a “first separate claim” against all defendants for $4,860,000 ($1,620,000 trebled) “for injury to its business and property by reason of the defendants’ violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act (15 *290 U.S.C. § 1), and for the cost of the action, including a reasonable attorney’s fee” (emphasis supplied) and a “second separate claim” against all defendants, except S-M and certain other corporate and individual defendants connected with it, for $57,102 ($19,034 trebled), costs and attorney’s fee upon the same grounds as those of the “first separate claim” and finally it sought a permanent injunction against the continuance of the acts alleged in the first and second claims.

The answers denied the allegations of wrongdoing in the complaint, set up certain separate defenses and in the cases of Curtis, Fawcett and Independent asserted the counterclaims as aforesaid.

During the trial of the plaintiff’s case its complaint was finally amended (2413) to plead in its first claim $5,996,556 ($1,998,852 trebled) damages “by reason of the defendants’ violation of Sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act (15 U.S.C. §§ 1, 2)” (emphasis supplied) and to plead in its second claim $38,070 ($12,690 trebled) damages upon the same grounds as those of the amended first claim.

The earlier pre-trial hearings resulted in the order, filed as aforesaid on August 13, 1953, wherein the issues to be tried were formulated by Judge Conger. Because of the plaintiff’s amendment of its complaint during trial it became necessary to amend the pretrial order appropriately and that was done (2486) so that the issues were finally formulated as follows:

“8. The issues to be tried are formulated by the Court as follows:
“(a) With respect to the First Claim of the Amended Complaint:
“1. Whether, in or about 1947, defendants, or any of them, entered into and carried out, by the means alleged, a combination or conspiracy to withdraw from plaintiff, and' transfer to others, the wholesale distribution of magazines, periodicals and reprints in the Greater New York Area;
“2. Whether, in or about 1947, defendants, or any of them, entered into and carried out, by the means alleged, a combination or conspiracy to monopolize, or monopolized, or attempted to monopolize, the wholesale distribution of magazines, periodicals and reprints in the Greater New York Area;
“3. If so, whether any such combination or conspiracy, monopolization, or attempt to monopolize, was
(a) a violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act, or
(b) a violation of Section 2 of the Sherman Act, or
(c) a violation of both said Sections.
“4. If there was such a violation;
(a) Which defendants were parties thereto;
(b) Was plaintiff injured in its business or property by reason thereof; and
(c) What, if any, damages were sustained by plaintiff by reason thereof.
“(b) With respect to the Second Claim of the Amended Complaint:
“1. Whether, during the period 1946 through 1949, any of the defendants (other than S-M News Company, Inc., McCall Corporation, Popular Science Publishing Company, Inc., Reader’s Digest Association, Inc., Meredith Publishing Company, Marvin Pierce and William A. Rogers), or any of them, entered into and carried out, by the means alleged, a combination or conspiracy to withdraw from plaintiff the galley distribution of magazines and reprints in Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, Massachusetts, Maine, Vermont, or New Hampshire ;
“2.

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Bluebook (online)
127 F. Supp. 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interborough-news-co-v-curtis-publishing-co-nysd-1954.