Purofied Down Products Corp. v. National Ass'n of Bedding Manufacturers

201 Misc. 149, 105 N.Y.S.2d 132, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1878
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 201 Misc. 149 (Purofied Down Products Corp. v. National Ass'n of Bedding Manufacturers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Purofied Down Products Corp. v. National Ass'n of Bedding Manufacturers, 201 Misc. 149, 105 N.Y.S.2d 132, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1878 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

Arkwright, J.

The plaintiffs, Purofied Down Products Corp. and Hauptman Feather Company, Inc., both New York corporations, manufacturers and marketers of feather and down pillows, sue for an injunction and for money damages of $1,500,000 as against all the defendants. The gravamen of their complaint is conspiracy to injure the plaintiffs.

The main defendant is the National Association of Bedding Manufacturers (NABM), an Illinois corporation, licensed to transact business in this State, with an office for the purpose in the city of New York. The association is national in scope and is some thirty-five years old, claimed to he the oldest association in the industry. 1 . ¡ ¡ J J

[151]*151The defendant, Albert S. Roistacher, was and still is an officer and director, and the eastern manager of the defendant, National, as well as being the secretary of a subdivision of the association, known as its Feather and Pillow Division.” The remaining defendants are alleged to be officers and directors of the said division and officers and stockholders of various companies in competition with the plaintiffs. They are also members of NABM.

It appears that between about 1942 and the latter part of 1946, a trade association was in existence, known as the Feather and Down Institute, to which the plaintiffs, or their representatives, and the individual defendants (except Roistacher), representing their respective companies, belonged. This organization was apparently unsuccessful. Its membership dwindled rapidly toward the end of its existence and eventually went over to the defendant, National. Among those members who did, were the plaintiffs’ representatives and the individual defendants.

A convention of the defendant National was held in Chicago in November, 1945. As an outgrowth of this meeting, a feather and pillow division of the association was formed. Roistacher was made its executive director. Its office was and is in New York City.

The feather and pillow division, in a general way, was the successor of the declining and later defunct Feather & Down Institute. The latter’s members, as they dropped out and joined the defendant National, became eligible to join, and did affiliate themselves with, the said feather and pillow division. The division began its existence in 1946.

The purpose of the feather and pillow division was to assist and benefit the industry.

On the termination of government price- controls under the Federal Office of Price Administration, generally referred to as the O.P.A., in August, 1946, it began to be apparent that something had to be done in the industry to eliminate, if possible, or, at least to alleviate, certain abuses that had begun to arise therein as a result of the lifting of the Federal agency’s price restrictions. These abuses began to appear in the form of price wars: in unfair competition, in which prices were set greatly below those fairly based on fair standards of merchandising and selling; in misrepresentation; and in the substitution of secondhand, or used, material for new material.

There was no objection in the industry to lower, or low prices, as such. But there was objection, as there should be, among [152]*152honest business men, to feather and down merchandise being misrepresented as to its true content and to the defrauding of the public thereby.

At the conclusion of price control, the greatest abuse was in willfully mislabeled merchandise, much of .which occurred in so-called promotional sales.

Some of the States had enacted legislation against this practice. New York was among them, with its bedding laws (General Business Law, art. 25-A). Enforcement of these laws generally resided in New York’s Labor Department.

In addition, there were Federal enactments and regulations of certain Federal agencies against the practice.

There were practical difficulties, however, in connection with the enforcement of the laws, and the regulations, that rendered the restraint or prosecution of violators immediately ineffectual to prevent the abuses. It was impossible for the proper authorities to police the industry so as to readily detect and apprehend the violators. When the latter were discovered, it took considerable time to bring them to trial and to punish them, if they were found guilty. The offenders, usually corporations, were fined, but the profits that had been secured as a result of the practice of the abuses, made the fines of little or no consequence.

After consideration of the problem, the division decided to institute, for the benefit of the general public and the industry itself, whether of members of National or not, a so-called policing plan. After a preliminary plan, the association’s members, in August, 1947, adopted the so-called pillow policing plan. It took effect in October of that year. There was nothing secret about it. Copies of the plan were distributed to the associhtion’s members, to government officials, and to others interested.

The plan provided standards for labeling pillows, and, under it, there was put into effect a method for ascertaining and determining whether the contents of pillows, offered for sale, were consonant with their labels.

Generally, two pillows were secured from any lot to be tested. For instance, a department store was having a sale of pillows. Two of them would be secured, usually by purchase, by a member of the association. However, pillows could be sent in for test by the retailer having them on sale, a competitor, or anyone interested. A committee of the division, at least three, met at stated intervals.. The members of the committee were representatives of the members of the association, and were considered experts. The defendant, Boistacher, who had received some instruction [153]*153in drawing samples, was always present. All identifications were removed from the pillows to be tested. They were assigned designating numbers known only to Roistacher. Fair samples of the contents were drawn, and put in envelopes. One envelope was forwarded to a chemical analyst, an expert on feathers and down, for chemical analysis in accordance with the bedding law and the labor regulations of the State of New York. The expert selected was so well regarded for his ability and impartiality that these facts were conceded hy the plaintiffs, who admitted also that they had employed the same expert in their own businesses for analyses. When the analyst had made his report, the twin sample was opened by the committee. They examined it in the presence of each other, by sight, smell, feeling and other inspection, and with the application of their experience and judgment, gave their opinion as to the contents. When this had been done, the report of the chemical analyst was made known. Usually the two methods employed were in accord. If not, the committee by consensus, made its final determination, as to which should prevail in the particular instance.

The testimony was conclusive that the best results obtainable, as to such determination of content, was by a combination of the above methods.

The plaintiffs have challenged this conclusion, but the court is not in accord with their contention.

In order that the manufacturer’s name should not be known, a code number, known only to Roistacher, was assigned to each manufacturer. Thus, the committee did not know whose pillow was being examined, but only knew what the label stated the contents to be.

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201 Misc. 149, 105 N.Y.S.2d 132, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purofied-down-products-corp-v-national-assn-of-bedding-manufacturers-nysupct-1951.