Moffat v. Lane Co., Inc.

595 F. Supp. 43, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15919
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJune 13, 1984
DocketCiv. A. 82-1667-Z
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 595 F. Supp. 43 (Moffat v. Lane Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moffat v. Lane Co., Inc., 595 F. Supp. 43, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15919 (D. Mass. 1984).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

ZOBEL, District Judge.

This antitrust action is brought by Jean Moffat, doing business as Beacon Hill Interiors, against the Lane Company, Inc. (“Lane”), and James Dunlap (“Dunlap”) the New England area sales representative for Lane’s Hickory Chair Company division (“Hickory”), manufacturers of eighteenth century furniture reproductions. Count I of the amended complaint alleges a conspiracy in violation of section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1 by Lane, Dunlap, and Boston area retail furniture dealers, competitors of plaintiff, 1 in furtherance of which Lane (through Dunlap) refused to sell to plaintiff directly, and (through other employees of Hickory) enforced a policy prohibiting authorized dealers of its furniture from selling to unauthorized dealers such as plaintiff. Counts II and III raise pendent claims for violation of Mass.Gen. Laws ch. 93A, § 11, and intentional interference with advantageous relations. Lane and Dunlap have moved for summary judgment on all counts. 2

For purposes of this motion, the parties have agreed to the following relevant facts. Since 1979 Mrs. Moffat, in her business as Beacon Hill Interiors, has been principally engaged in the retail sale of home and office furniture. She sells mostly reproductions of eighteenth céntury furniture and has carried lines from several manufacturers besides Hickory. She operates her business from her family’s apartment on the fourth floor of 34V2 Beacon Street, Boston, Massachusetts, where she sees customers by appointment only. Most frequently she deals with customers (the majority of whom are not Massachusetts residents) by mail or telephone, however.

In 1980, Mrs. Moffat began advertising in Colonial Homes magazine, indicating that she sold lines, including Hickory, at discount. A Hickory sales representative showed Dunlap her advertisement in the September-October 1980 issue, which offered “consistent savings of twenty-five percent” on lines including Hickory. Dunlap called Jerry Hux (“Hux”), then a Hickory field sales manager, mentioned the advertisements, and asked Hux about the plaintiff. Hux had not heard of her.

In January 1981, Dunlap called plaintiff, asked for and received a copy of her promotional brochure. By early 1981 he had learned that plaintiff bought her Hickory furniture from Tickle Furniture Company in North Carolina. He told Hux this and inquired about the volume of Tickle’s purchases, which was small.

During the first half of 1981, at least five dealers separately called plaintiff’s advertisements or literature to Dunlap’s attention and asked about the plaintiff. However, no dealer reported losing a sale. In the spring of 1981, Dunlap called the plaintiff, asked for and was sent an invoice quoting a price on a particular Hickory sofa. He remembers asking about fabrics and being told he could go to any store to look at them. He then called Kaplan and *46 another dealer and told them that plaintiff might be using their showrooms to their disadvantage.

Throughout 1981, Mrs. Moffat had requested that Hickory supply her with numerous copies of its furniture catalog. By the summer of 1981, plaintiff was informed in writing that she had received the maximum number of catalogs that Hickory would supply to a consumer and further requests for catalogs received from the plaintiff were refused. Hux was aware of the situation. During the summer of 1981, Hux spoke to the Hickory representative for North Carolina about the extent of Tickle’s purchases of Hickory furniture. In that summer, plaintiff stopped placing orders with Tickle and began buying Hickory furniture from Harvest House, a Hickory dealer in Denton, North Carolina.

In July 1981, a principal of the Golden Phoenix, a Hickory retail dealer in South Hadley, Massachusetts, called a Hickory customer service representative “to see how she [plaintiff] was selling furniture at such great discounts” of 40%. He asked about plaintiff’s source of supply and the terms upon which she received it. The customer service representative said she would look into the matter. She wrote a memo about the call, mentioning plaintiff’s discounting, which Hux saw. Hux replied that the plaintiff’s source was Tickle Furniture.

During July 1981, when Dunlap made a sales call on the Golden Phoenix, one of its principals showed him an invoice he had obtained from the plaintiff which indicated that no sales tax would be charged on the transaction. He told Dunlap that he had lost or might lose a big sale of non-Hickory furniture to plaintiff. Dunlap gave the invoice to the Sales and Use Tax Division of the Massachusetts Department of Revenue and told the Golden Phoenix he was working on the matter. 3 He called Hux and told him of the situation.

In August 1981, David Kaplan (of Kaplan) showed Dunlap plaintiff’s literature, which he had obtained, as he was interested in plaintiff’s prices and operation. He asked Dunlap why he was selling to her, and discussed her prices. Dunlap told Kaplan he was not selling to her and expressed displeasure that she was buying Hickory furniture from Tickle. He told Kaplan about his investigation of plaintiff’s failure to charge sales tax.

Kaplan wrote or spoke to two other dealers and three other furniture representatives about plaintiff’s discounting. In September 1981, plaintiff’s husband visited Kaplan; Kaplan voiced his concern about plaintiff’s pricing. Afterward, Kaplan told Dunlap about Mr. Moffat’s visit.

In the fall of 1981, Stuart Swan (of Swan) discussed the plaintiff and her discounting with Dunlap. Dunlap told him plaintiff was buying from Tickle and about a transaction in which plaintiff did not charge sales tax. Swan had discussed plaintiff and her discounting with at least two representatives of other furniture manufacturers.

In about October 1981, plaintiff called Dunlap about buying Hickory furniture directly from Hickory. Dunlap refused and told her that she should go through Kaplan. Dunlap called Hux and told him that he had rejected plaintiff’s request to be sold Hickory directly. 4

In January 1982, Hickory adopted a Retail Furniture Store Marketing Policy (“the Policy”). It stated that Hickory’s policy was not to sell its products to retail dealers who sell Hickory furniture at unauthorized locations or to unauthorized dealers, and *47 reserved the right to terminate business with a dealer who made such sales. 5

In February 1982, Harvest House received a copy of the Policy. That month or the next, the local Hickory sales representative told Harvest House to stop selling Hickory furniture to plaintiff, and it did so. Plaintiff began buying Hickory furniture from Country Furniture Co. of High Point, North Carolina, but from May on again had orders also filled by Harvest House.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
595 F. Supp. 43, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15919, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moffat-v-lane-co-inc-mad-1984.