Philip Carey Mfg. Co. v. Federal Trade Commission

29 F.2d 49, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2609
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 12, 1928
Docket5023
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 29 F.2d 49 (Philip Carey Mfg. Co. v. Federal Trade Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philip Carey Mfg. Co. v. Federal Trade Commission, 29 F.2d 49, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2609 (6th Cir. 1928).

Opinions

MOORMAN, Circuit Judge.

Petition to review an order of the Federal Trade Commission commanding petitioners to desist from: (1) Employing or using any system of espionage whereby officers, agents, and employees of petitioners obtain or seek to obtain information as to facilities, capacities, operations, or customers of any competitor; (2) circulating, representing, or publishing among prospective purchasers of preformed bituminous expansion joint any false or misleading statement concerning the ability of any competitor to fill orders or make deliveries,; (3) circulating, or publishing among prospective purchasers of preformed [50]*50bituminous expansion joint any false or misleading statement concerning tbe acceptableness or adaptability for the use intended of tbe product of any competitor; and (4) circulating or publishing among prospective purchasers of preformed bituminous expansion joint any false or misleading statement concerning the financial standing, business or business methods of any competitor.

The complaint on which this order was entered was issued May 23,1924, and charged the petitioners with violating the provisions of section 5 of the Act of September 26,1914 (Title 15, § 45, USCA), and section 3 of the Act of October 15, 1914 (title 15, § 14, USCA), by indulging in unfair methods of competition as specifically set out. Upon the hearing the Commission dismissed the charges under the Act of October 15, and failed to make any findings of fact or orders on some of the charges under the Act of September 26, but did make findings of fact on which it based its order referred to.

It is urged upon us in this review that the order of the Commission must be set aside, because the findings upon which it is based are not supported by substantial evidence.1 Section 1 of the order deals with espionage, and is based upon the finding that petitioners had sent spies under assumed names to plants of competitors to report on facilities, capacities, and extent of operations, and had used the information so obtained as a basis for representing to prospective customers that sueh competitors could not make extensive deliveries or fill orders of magnitude, “though such reports showed that sueh competitors were taking care of all business coming to them, and planning to expand, so as to take care of more business, if and when it was obtained.”

The evidence touching this subject shows that in April of 1922 an employee of the petitioners, representing himself as a possible customer, called upon the manager of a plant which was manufacturing expansion joints for the Servieised Products Company and obtained and furnished to petitioners certain information concerning the methods and capacity of the plant; that later, in June, another employee of the petitioners called again at the same plant, obtained practically the same information, and furnished it to the sales manager of the petitioners. These reports were shown by petitioners to an examiner of the Federal Trade Commission the latter part of 1922. The other instance of alleged espionage occurred in the fall of 1923, when an employee of the petitioners, representing himself as a possible customer, called at a plant of the Servieised Corporation in Illinois and obtained similar information, which he transmitted to the office of petitioners in Chicago.

The old method of making expansion joints was to pour heated bituminous material into the space between the parts to be joined. The petitioners, acting under patents which they held, were the first to manufacture and sell a preformed joint, and for several years they had a practical monopoly on sueh joints. As competitors came into the field, controversies arose as to whether they were infringing upon the petitioners' patents; and petitioners claim that the visits were made to the plants of the Servieised Company to ascertain whether the product which that company was making was an infringement upon their patents. The information which they sought 'and obtained did hot relate to any secret process or formula, but was such as the Servieised Company was willing to furnish to any possible customer. It has never been held that the obtaining of this kind of information in the manner in which petitioners obtained it, plus a use of it without misrepresentation, amounts to unfair practice under the statute. We do not find it necessary to consider that question, because, before the Commission was warranted in entering the espionage order, it was necessary that it find upon substantial evidence that the information was unlawfully used to hinder or stifle competition. Federal Trade Commission v. Beech Nut Packing Co., 257 U. S. 441, 42 S. Ct. 150, 66 L. Ed. 307, 19 A. L. R. 882. There was a finding by the Commission that it was so used; but we find no substantial evidence in the record to support that finding.

Paragraph 2 of the order commanding petitioners to desist from circulating or using among prospective purchasers of expansion joints any false or misleading statement concerning the ability of any competitor to fill orders or make deliveries rests upon the finding by the Commission that the information obtained from the visits referred to was used as a basis for sueh representation. As we have said, there is no evidence to support that finding. Indeed, the sole contention of respondent on this point is that illegal use is to be inferred from the wrongful procure[51]*51ment. This in our opinion cannot be done as against the showing made by the petitioners that the information was obtained for a lawful purpose and was not otherwise used.

Section 3 of the order deals with the circulation among prospective purchasers of expansion joints of false or misleading statements concerning the financial standing and the business or business methods of competitors. The finding of fact upon which this part of the order is based is that petitioners had represented to prospective purchasers that the product of their competitors was unsuitable for the purpose intended and would not be passed or accepted. There are some eight or ten instances disclosed in the evidence in which petitioners’ salesmen made such representations. L. H. Tower, who had been assistant sales manager for the Carey Company, but at the time of the hearing was a salesman for the Servicised Company, testified that he and Schueler, manager of the Chicago office of petitioners, instructed salesmen to say to prospective purchasers that in cold weather the Servicised joint would crack and break, and in hot weather it would “stick together on the job.” This testimony would be important in some circumstances; but it is not important here, where it does not appear that any salesman ever did this, and where there is a showing of only a small number of other disparaging comments — eight or ten in the course of several years, among many salesmen throughout the country. When so considered, it does not, we think, lend authority or purpose to the incidents relied upon.

One witness testified that he was about to purchase the Servicised joint when a representative of the Carey Company told him that he would not be able to use it; “that it would not be passed by the engineers.” Witness purchased it and it was rejected by the engineers; but later its use was permitted on condition that he use a double thickness. We see no evidence of an unfair method of competition in this. Nor do the other incidents relied upon, when considered in connection with all the proofs, amount to sueh method.

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Gimbel Bros. v. Federal Trade Commission
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 F.2d 49, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philip-carey-mfg-co-v-federal-trade-commission-ca6-1928.