John D. Park & Sons Co. v. National Wholesale Druggists' Ass'n

30 A.D. 508, 52 N.Y.S. 475
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 30 A.D. 508 (John D. Park & Sons Co. v. National Wholesale Druggists' Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John D. Park & Sons Co. v. National Wholesale Druggists' Ass'n, 30 A.D. 508, 52 N.Y.S. 475 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Rumsey, J.:

The plaintiff is a corporation engaged in the manufacture of proprietary medicines which it sells to retailers, and is also a wholesale dealer in other medicines than those which it manufactures. The defendant the National Wholesale Druggists’ Association is an unincorporated association composed of the other defendants in this case and many other persons residing and doing business in different parts of the United States, all of whom are either wholesale druggists who own and manufacture certain proprietary goods, proprietors of proprietary goods who manufacture their own articles, or manufacturers of chemical or pharmaceutical preparations who are not interested in the proprietary goods at all. The plaintiff complains that these people have entered into an illegal conspiracy against it for the purpose of enforcing a boycott upon it and thereby preventing it from disposing of its own goods and from buying other proprietary goods of the dealers in them, or of selling such goods to retail dealers with whom it was accustomed to trade. The defendants are very numerous and are scattered all over the United [510]*510States of America, although many, if not most of them, have officers or places of business in the city of New York. The complaint is very voluminous, containing over 401 separate paragraphs and comprising, with the exhibits, 291 pages of the printed case. The motion was made at the Special Term to strike out portions of the complaint as irrelevant and redundant, and this motion having been granted, the plaintiff now appeals from that order. Section 545 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that irrelevant or redundant matter contained in the pleading may be stricken out on the motion of the person aggrieved thereby. This power is not a new one given by the Code, hut one which the courts have always recognized as existing and which they have not been slow to exercise in a proper case. Ordinarily, however, a person should he left free to frame his own pleadings so far as the rules of good pleading will permit, and matter which is claimed to be irrelevant or redundant should he stricken out only when the moving party is actually aggrieved by it. Neither should that power be exercised in such a way as to make the pleading, which otherwise would be good, defective upon demurrer, and, in every case where the court is called upon to examine the pleading for the purpose of striking out portions of it which are said to be irrelevant or redundant, the irrelevancy must be clear and the redundancy unquestioned before the portions complained of will be eliminated from the complaint. An irrelevant allegation is one which has no substantial relation to the controversy between the parties to the suit and which cannot affect the decision of the court because it.has no bearing upon the subject-matter of the controversy. (Goodman v. Robb, 41 Hun, 605; Cahill v. Palmer, 17 Abb. 196; Van Rensselaer v. Brice, 4 Paige, 174.) Irrelevant matter is redundant, hut redundant matter is not necessarily irrelevant. Needless repetition of material allegations constitute redundancy as well as an insertion of irrelevant matter. (Bowman v. Sheldon, 5 Sandf. 657.) The rights of the parties upon such a motion must be interpreted by these rules. The Code prescribes that the complaint must contain a plain and concise statement of the facts constituting each cause of action without unnecessary repetition. (§ 481.) While the Code prescribes but one form of action by means of which every remedy must be sought, and does not recognize any distinction between actions for [511]*511equitable relief and those in which damages or a money judgment only are sought, yet in framing a complaint there necessarily is a grave distinction between the two classes of actions. In the one class, where damages only are sought for a breach of contract or for tort, the rules require only a statement of the relation of the parties, the ultimate facts showing the right, and showing the breach of the right, such allegations as may be necessary to show a right to enhanced or other damages which do not necessarily flow from the act complained of, and a demand of relief to which the party considers himself to be entitled. Ordinarily such a complaint may well be made plain and concise, but when equitable relief is sought there must be from the necessity of the case greater latitude in the allegations of the complaint. The nature of the relief itself frequently requires, not only that the ultimate facts from which the right to relief arises should be stated, but that facts which are somewhat collateral should be laid before the court so that the precise relief required to give to the party what he is entitled to and the way in which that relief shall he granted may be understood. For that reason in actions of that nature greater latitude and liberality are allowed in the preparation of pleading than in other actions, and the power to strike out matter which is claimed to be irrelevant should be used with reluctance and caution. (Town of Dunkirk v. L. S. & M. S. Ry. Co., 75 Hun, 366.) These rules must be applied in the examination of this complaint- and the determination of this appeal. As was said, the action was brought to restrain the defendants from enforcing a boycott which they had endeavored to put upon the business of the plaintiff.

It appears from the complaint that the firm of John D. Park & Sons of Cincinnati, 0., was engaged in the same business as the plaintiff, a corporation organized under the laws of Kentucky and the successor of that firm. ' The plaintiff corporation was organized in 1891, but the firm of John D. Park & Sons had been in existence for many years before that time. The story told by the complaint is that before 1876 each dealer and manufacturer of proprietary articles had disposed of his goods in his own way, putting his own price upon them, giving to customers such rebate as he saw fit, paying such commissions for sales as seemed good to him, and giving such terms as to the payment of freight and express and cartage as [512]*512seemed necessary to him to secure the largest amount of custom. In 1876, however, a scheme was devised by certain of the wholesale 'dealers in this kind of goods, by which the manner of dealing, the rebate to be given, the commission to be paid and the allowance of freight and express and cartage should be made uniform for all dealers, and efforts were made to bring all dealers in that kind of goods into the association and to induce them to agree to sell in the same manner and upon the same terms to all customers. This effort was continued during many years, and finally, as it would seem from the complaint, nearly all the wholesale dealers and manufacturers in these goods came into the association and agreed to abide by its rules, except only the firm of John D. Park & Sons. The National Wholesale Druggists’ Association was the originator and the prime mover in these efforts, which were controlled by a committee of that association known as the committee on proprietary goods. The scheme was originated while the firm of John D. Park & Sons was in existence. It was sought to bring the dealers in this class of goods into this scheme, not only by suggestion and advice and entreaty, but, if these were not sufficient, by putting pressure upon them to the end that they could not carry on their business profitably unless they belonged to this association and complied with its rules.

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Bluebook (online)
30 A.D. 508, 52 N.Y.S. 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-d-park-sons-co-v-national-wholesale-druggists-assn-nyappdiv-1898.