Maple Flooring Manufacturers Ass'n v. United States

268 U.S. 563, 45 S. Ct. 578, 69 L. Ed. 1093, 1925 U.S. LEXIS 592
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJune 1, 1925
Docket342
StatusPublished
Cited by205 cases

This text of 268 U.S. 563 (Maple Flooring Manufacturers Ass'n v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maple Flooring Manufacturers Ass'n v. United States, 268 U.S. 563, 45 S. Ct. 578, 69 L. Ed. 1093, 1925 U.S. LEXIS 592 (1925).

Opinion

*565 Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the Court.

By bill in equity filed March 5, 1923, the United States asked an injunction restraining the defendants, who are appellants here, from violating § 1 of the Act of Congress of July 2, 1890, entitled, “An Act to Protect Trade and Commerce Against Unlawful Restraints and Monopolies ” (c. 647, 26 Stat, 209), commonly known as the Sherman Act.

The defendants are the Maple Flooring Manufacturers Association, an unincorporated “trade association”; twenty-two corporate defendants, members of the Association, engaged in the business of selling and .shipping maple, beech and birch flooring in interstate commerce,, all but two of them having their, principal places of business in Michigan, Minnesota or Wisconsin (one"defendant being located in Illinois and one in New York); the several individual representatives of the corporate members of the Association; and George W. Keehn, Secretary of the Association. Of the corporate defendants, approximately one-half own timber lands and saw- mills and are producers of the rough lumber from which they manufacture finished flooring, sold and shipped in interstate commerce. The other defendants purchase rough flooring lumber in the open market and manufacture it. into finished flooring which is sold and shipped in interstate commerce. In 1922 there were in the States of Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin seventeen nonmember manufacturers of maple, beech and birch flooring and there were fifty-eight non-member manufacturers of maple, beech and birch flooring in the United States who reported to the Government. In that yedr thirty-eight non-member manufacturers reported a manufacturing capacity of 238,616,000 feet of flooring of the types mentioned and during the same-year the manufacturing capacity of the defendants was 158,400,000 feet. Estimates *566 submitted in behalf of the Government indicate that in the year 1922 the defendants produced 70%.of the total production of these types of flooring, the percentage having been gradually diminished duripg the five years preceding, the average for the five years being -74.2%. It is also in evidence that aside from non-member manufacturers who reported to the Government, there are numerous' other non-member manufacturers of such flooring in the United States and Canada. The defendants own only a small proportion of the total stand, in the United States, of maple, beech and birch timber from which the various types of flooring produced and sold by defendants are manufactured.

In March, 1922, the corporate defendants organized the defendant Maple Flooring Manufacturers Association, but for many years prior to that time and certainly since 1913 a substantial number of the corporate defendants have participated actively in maintaining numerous successive trade associations of the same name, which were predecessors of the present association. The oral testimony and documentary evidence have covered a wide range and have reached a great volume which it will be impossible, within the limits of an opinion, to review in detail.. The defendants have engaged in many activities to which no exception is taken by the Government and which are admittedly beneficial to the industry and to consumers; such as co-operative advertising and the standardization and improvement of the- product. The activities, however, of the present Association of which the Government complains may be summarized as follows:

(1) The computation and distribution among the members of the association of the average cost to association members of .all dimensions and grades of flooring.

(2) The compilation and distribution among members of a booklet showing freight rates on flooring from Cadil *567 .lac, Michigan, to between five and six thousand points of shipment in the United States.

(3) The.gathering of statistics which at frequent intervals are supplied by each member of the Association to the Secretary, of the Association giving complete information as to the quantity and kind of flooring sold and prices received by the reporting members, and the amount of stock on hand, which information is summarized by the Secretary and transmitted to members without, however, revealing, the identity of the members in connection with any specific information thus transmitted.

(4) Meetings at' which the representatives of members congregate’ and discuss the industry and exchange views as to its problems.

Before considering these phases of the activities of the Association, it should be pointed out- that it is neither alleged nor proved that there was any agreement among the members -of the Association either affecting production, fixing prices or for price maintenance. Both by the articles of association and in ’ actual practice, members have been left free to sell their product at any price they choose and to conduct their business' as they please. Although the-bill alleges that the activities of the defendants hereinbefore referred to resulted in the -maintenance of practical uniformity of net delivered prices as between the several corporate defendants, the evidence fails to establish such uniformity and it was not seriously urged before this Court that any substantial uniformity in price had in fact resulted from the activities of the Association, although it was conceded by defendants that the dissemination of information as to’ cost of the product and as to production and prices would tend to bring about uniformity in prices through the operatiqn of economic law. Nor was there any direct proof that the activities of the Association had affected prices adversely to consumers. On the contrary; the defendants offered a great volume of evidence, tending to show that the trend of *568 prices of the product of the defendants corresponded to the law of supply and demand and that it evidenced no abnormality when compared with the price of commodities generally. There is undisputed evidence that the prices of members were fair and reasonable and that they were usually lower than the prices of non-members and there- is no claim that defendants were guilty of unfair or arbitrary frade practices.

The contention of the Government is that there is a combination among the defendants, which is admitted; that the effect of the activities of the defendants carried on under the plan of the Association must necessarily be to bring about a concerted effort on the part of members of the Association to maintain prices at levels haying a close relation to the average cost of flooring reported to members and that consequently there is a necessary and inevitable restraint of interstate commerce and that therefore the plan of the Association itself is a violation of § 1 of the Sherman Act which should be enjoined regardless of its actual operation and effect so far as price maintenance is concerned. The case must turn therefore, on the effect of the activity of the defendants in the gathering and dissemination of information as to the cost of flooring, since, without that, the other activities complained of could have no material bearing on price levels in the industry; and it was to this phase of the case that the oral argument was mainly directed.

Having outlined the substantial issues in.

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Bluebook (online)
268 U.S. 563, 45 S. Ct. 578, 69 L. Ed. 1093, 1925 U.S. LEXIS 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maple-flooring-manufacturers-assn-v-united-states-scotus-1925.