Loew's, Inc. v. Milwaukee Towne Corp.

201 F.2d 19
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 13, 1953
Docket10647_1
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 201 F.2d 19 (Loew's, Inc. v. Milwaukee Towne Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loew's, Inc. v. Milwaukee Towne Corp., 201 F.2d 19 (7th Cir. 1953).

Opinion

MAJOR, Chief Judge.

Milwaukee Towne Corporation, engaged in the operation of a motion picture theatre in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, instituted its suit under the anti-trust laws, Title 15 U.S.C.A. § 1 et seq., against certain defendants for damages and injunctive relief. A judgment was obtained and a decree entered containing numerous injunctive provisions. Upon appeal this court in the main affirmed the judgment and, with certain modifications, approved the decree. Milwaukee Towne Corp. v. Loew’s Inc., 7 Cir., 190 F.2d 561. Reference is made to our opinion for a statement of the issues and the names of the defendants involved. The instant appeal is by those who were defendants in that case, who filed in the District Court what is designated as a cross-complaint, in which Milwaukee Towne Corporation (sometimes called Towne) was designated as cross-defendant. Thus, the parties are designated as cross-plaintiffs-appellants and cross-defendant-appellee. In the briefs the former have been referred to as defendants, the latter as plaintiff, as they were in the original suit, and we shall characterize them in the same manner.

The original decree entered by the District Court contained Section V(b), which provides:

“* * * defendants or any of them * * * are perpetually enjoined from: * * * (b) preventing plaintiff, in the operation of the Towne Theatre in the City of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, from contracting for or from securing in the course of interstate trade and commerce, at fair and reasonable film rental, any motion picture film or films suitable for first-run exhibition in the City of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, by refusing to offer such picture to plaintiff at such fair and reasonable film rental. A refusal on the part of plaintiff to accept such offer or to play a picture on the contracted play date shall not prevent defendants from contracting with any other exhibitor for a first run showing of the same. (Italics ours.)”

On appeal, this court eliminated the italicized portion of the section; otherwise, it was approved.

Defendants instituted the instant proceeding for the purpose of obtaining an interpretation or construction of the provision as approved. The complaint discloses that there are seven first-run theatres in the central business district of Milwaukee, namely, the Towne, operated by the plaintiff; the Riverside, operated by Standard Riverside Company (not a defendant in the original suit); the Wisconsin, Palace and Strand, operated by Fox-Wisconsin Corporation, affiliated with defendant Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation; and the Warner and Alhambra, operated by defendant Warner Bros. Circuit Management Corporation. It is also alleged that there are other theatres in downtown Milwaukee which on occasion exhibit pictures on exclusive first run.

The complaint alleged:

“12. Cross-plaintiffs have been put upon notice by Towne that it takes the position that under the decree obtained by it, as modified, each cross-plaintiff distributor is required to offer each of its pictures to Towne for exclusive first *21 run exhibition in Milwaukee at ‘fair and reasonable film rentals,’ without requiring Towne to make any offer for such license and without regard to the terms which the operator of any other theatre, seeking to compete against Towne for such a license, might offer such distributor.
“13. Standard Riverside Company has put cross-plaintiff distributors upon notice that it demands and will expect to be offered by each of them an opportunity to obtain first run licenses equal in every respect to that offered to Towne.
“14. Cross-plaintiffs take the position that under said decree, as modified by the Court of Appeals, they are not enjoined from entertaining offers from other exhibitors in Milwaukee who desire to compete against Towne for first run licenses or from granting any such license to an exhibitor other than Towne from which it receives a higher acceptable offer.”

The complaint further alleged:

“20. Because of the difference of opinion between cross-plaintiffs and Towne as to the proper construction of paragraph V(b) of the decree, as described above, Towne has threatened that it will instigate contempt proceedings against cross-plaintiffs, charging that by conducting their business in accordance with what they believe to be the correct interpretation of the decree they have violated the decree. * * *
“21. Cross-plaintiffs also are fearful that Towne, by delaying the initiation of contempt proceedings, might seek to build up a large claim for damages against them, based upon alleged violations of the decree.”

The prayer for relief was:

“* * * that upon a full hearing of this cause the Court order adjudge and decree that Towne is not entitled under paragraph V(b) of the decree, to a competitive position superior to that of any other exhibitor, with respect to its right to obtain from cross-plaintiff distributors licenses to exhibit pictures on first run in Milwaukee, and that, if any such other exhibitor shall desire to compete against Towne for any such license, the rights of Towne under paragraph V(b) of the decree will be satisfied if Towne shall be afforded an opportunity to compete for and obtain such license at least equal, in all substantial respects, to the opportunity afforded such other exhibitor, such opportunity to include, as a minimum, a reasonable opportunity for Towne to offer to the distributor the film rental and other terms and conditions of license to which Towne shall be ready, able and willing to agree.”

To this complaint plaintiff interposed a motion to strike for a number of reasons, (1) that the matters set forth were supplemental and that such a proceeding could not be filed without leave of court, which had not been obtained, (2) that the prayer of the cross-complaint disclosed that there was involved nothing more than a rehearing on matters and things ruled upon both by the District Court and this court, and (3) that allowance of the relief sought would constitute nothing more than a reversal of the District Court’s previous action as well as the decision of this court.

The District Court made no ruling upon plaintiff’s motion to dismiss but instead, and apparently with the approval of all parties, entered the order from which the instant appeal comes. The order recites, among other things, that the matter came on for hearing upon the defendants’ complaint and plaintiff’s motion to strike and “upon the issue raised as to the proper construction of Section V(b) of the injunction decree, which said issue is raised by the prayer of the cross-complaint and has been submitted by all parties for the determination of the Court on the record in this case * * * .” The order states: “That the meaning of the words contained in Section V(b) of the decree entered herein [setting forth the section] is just what the words say, and that said decretal provision does not contemplate nor does it mean that plaintiff-cross-defendant’s Towne Theatre must outbid any other theatre or theatres in order to obtain such *22

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Bluebook (online)
201 F.2d 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loews-inc-v-milwaukee-towne-corp-ca7-1953.