Sandler v. Gordon

210 P.2d 314, 94 Cal. App. 2d 254, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1519
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 20, 1949
DocketCiv. 17050
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 210 P.2d 314 (Sandler v. Gordon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sandler v. Gordon, 210 P.2d 314, 94 Cal. App. 2d 254, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1519 (Cal. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

*255 DRAPEAU, J.

The complaint herein alleges that plaintiff and defendant were both operating diaper laundries in the county of Los Angeles; that plaintiff prepared special lists of names and addresses of his customers which defendant surreptitiously acquired and thereafter solicited such customers without the knowledge or consent of plaintiff and also without advising the customers how their names had been secured; that defendant then extended service without charge for extended periods of time for the purpose of injuring plaintiff and destroying competition, and thereby diverted many of plaintiff’s customers to his damage.

Defendant’s answer and cross-complaint alleged that since the inception of plaintiff’s business, the latter had engaged in unfair and discriminatory business practices by means of advertising, whereby fair and honest competition was destroyed; it being further alleged that to meet such unfair practices, defendant “did offer to persons who had been customers of plaintiff free service for limited periods of time. ’ ’

Upon the issues thus presented, the court found among other things: That plaintiff prepared and owned lists of customers, which defendant’s employee Barr acquired by taking them from plaintiff’s delivery truck as instructed by his employer;

That without the knowledge or consent of plaintiff, defendant using such lists located a large proportion of plaintiff’s customers and offered and gave them free diaper laundry service;

That such conduct of defendant “was deliberately intended to ruthlessly and seriously injure plaintiff’s business, and was prompted by ill will toward plaintiff; and in engaging in such conduct defendant was guilty of oppression and malice”;

That a majority of such listed customers accepted defendant’s offer and discontinued service with plaintiff;

That plaintiff sold certain service below his cost and below the lowest competitive price, but the purpose thereof was not to injure competitors or destroy competition;

That defendant’s conduct was not justified by plaintiff’s conduct, defendant’s acts going “beyond any acts that might have been committed as so justified”;

That plaintiff was damaged thereby in the sum of $1,400.

Judgment was accordingly entered in favor of plaintiff for $1,400 actual damages; $500 punitive damages; defendant was restrained from soliciting or servicing any of plaintiff’s customers from the purloined lists; both parties were re *256 strained from giving or offering to give free service or cutting prices below cost for the purpose of injuring competitors or destroying competition; and plaintiff was restrained “from advertising in any unfair or misleading manner such as (1) for ten cents per dozen per week he will supply, launder, pick up and deliver diapers, or (2) that for one dollar per week he will supply a complete laundry service or a complete baby diaper service.”

Defendant appeals from those portions of the judgment which are adverse to it.

Appellant first complains that the following finding is not supported by the evidence:

“9. That plaintiff sold certain items of service below his cost and below the lowest competitive price, but that the purpose thereof was not to injure competitors or to destroy competition.” In this connection it is pointed out that since the sales were made below cost, the presumption arises under section 17071, Business and Professions Code, that they were made for the purpose of destroying competition and injuring competitors, and that the record reveals no substantial evidence to overcome such presumption.

This action was brought under the Unfair Practices Act (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17000 et seq.), section 17043 thereof making it unlawful either to sell at less than cost or give away any article or product, for the purpose of injuring competitors or destroying competition. However, section 17050(d) of the act permits sales below cost for the purpose of meeting competition.

Appellant by its answer admitted it offered free service to respondent’s customers for limited periods of time, but sought to justify such conduct on the ground it was done to meet respondent’s unfair practices, to wit: his advertisements that he would render certain designated services knowing that his cost therefor greatly exceeded the advertised price.

An examination of the evidence presented at the trial discloses that in August of 1947, respondent purchased the Nursery Diaper Service then operating in Long Beach with about 40 customers, the business increasing to 100 customers by October 21, 1947. During this period, appellant was operating the Crib Service as part of its laundry business, covering an extended area with some 4,000 customers of which about 100 were in Long Beach. Robert Gordon, an officer of appellant corporation, managed the Crib Service and in September of 1947, he and Robert Cunningham, owner of the Tidy Didy *257 Baby Laundry of Long Beach, called on respondent to protest with respect to a $1.00 a week diaper service which respondent was then advertising." According to the witness Gordon, respondent told these men that he was just starting, and in order to increase volume and build up his business, he had to cut prices. Thereafter, appellant “embarked on a plan to protect our interest there,” which embodied a plan to take respondent’s customers away from him.

Respondent testified that when he bought the Nursery Diaper Service, certain prices for different types of service had been established, to wit: $1.00 a week for twice a week folded bundle and $1.25 per week for three times a week folded bundle; that he raised these prices 25 cents each per week, and introduced another type of service which his predecessor did not have: an unfolded diaper bundle delivered twice a week at $1.00 per week; that he also furnished a metal container for 15 cents per week; that he ascertained what others were charging and taking that into consideration together with the prices that his predecessor had established; as well as the cost to him per month for doing business, and the fact that he wanted to build up his business as soon as he could, he evolved the prices which he charged; that some of them were higher and some were lower than his competitors charged.

With respect to his understanding of the meaning of the ad offering “complete baby laundry service for as low as $1 per week,” respondent stated he meant “that my prices started at $1 per week and continued on upward depending upon the type of service the customer desired and the number of times a week a delivery and pick-up were made. ... I meant that, in our plant, we catered exclusively to babies. We handled no other line of laundry work whatsoever. We have a complete baby laundry service to offer each mother, whether she spends $1 a week with us or whether she spends four or $5 a week, as the case may be. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
210 P.2d 314, 94 Cal. App. 2d 254, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandler-v-gordon-calctapp-1949.