Sperry & Hutchinson Co. v. Hertzberg

60 A. 368, 69 N.J. Eq. 264, 3 Robb. 264, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 146
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 4, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 60 A. 368 (Sperry & Hutchinson Co. v. Hertzberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sperry & Hutchinson Co. v. Hertzberg, 60 A. 368, 69 N.J. Eq. 264, 3 Robb. 264, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 146 (N.J. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Stevenson, Y. C.

The complainant is a Yew Jersey corporation engaged in the trading-stamp business in the city of Paterson as well as in other cities and towns throughout the country.

The defendant, the proprietor of a department store in the city of Paterson, is charged with various invasions of the rights of the complainant in respect of its trading stamps and trading-stamp business.

The order, which was made ex 'parte on April 22d, 1904, upon the filing of the bill, restrains the defendant from using in his business “or giving to persons who' may trade or deal with him, any of the complainant’s trading stamps * * * except such trading stamps as said defendant may lawfully obtain from the complainant, or use in his business with its consent, and except such trading stamps, as may have been given by the. customers of the complainant to dealers and traders with them in pursuance of the contract of complainant with such customers.” ’ ■

[266]*266The exception to the restraint contained in the last three lines above quoted is the subject-matter of the entire argument on this motion. The defendant submits until the final hearing to the injunction as it now stands qualified by this exception; the complainant insists that the exception should be expunged. The subject for investigation on this motion is the right which the defendant claims to give out the complainant’s trading stamps as premiums to his (the defendant’s) customers, in such amounts and on such terms as he (the defendant) may see fit to prescribe, provided the stamps so given out have theretofore been lawfully issued in pursuance of the contract between the complainant and its subscribers.

1. The complainant’s trading stamps are adhesive stamps similar in size and general appearance to ordinary postage stamps. They are delivered by the complainant to its subscribers who are merchants in various lines, in pads of sheets, which pads often contain five thousand stamps. The stamps are so arranged that they may be readily separated in any desired quantity, and they are delivered by the merchant to his customers as a premium for or discount upon every cash purchase amounting to ten cents or over. For a cash purchase amounting to ten cents the customer may demand and receive one stamp, and in like manner he is entitled to another stamp for every additional ten cents which he may pay in cash for the article or articles which he purchases. The complainant also supplies the public with small pamphlets known as trading-stamp books which purport to give an explanation of the trading-stamp system and which contain leaves to which the stamps may be conveniently affixed. When any person has attached to the pages of one of these books nine hundred and ninety stamps, which number exactly fills the book, he may present his book of stamps at the complainant’s warehouse or store for redemption. The complainant maintains a store where useful and valuable articles are kept for exhibition so ticketed as to show the public how many stamps will purchase each article. The complainant advertises in its trading-stamp books the, name and business of each subscriber to whom it delivers its stamps, and who are authorized to issue the same to their cash cus[267]*267tomers. The ordinary price which the merchant, the subscriber, pays to the complainant for the use of the stamps is fifty cents per hundred, although when large amounts are taken the price is reduced to thirty-five or forty cents per hundred. What the merchant therefore pays for his share of the benefits of the system is from three and one-half to five per cent, on all his cash sales upon which trading stamps are demanded by his customers. The complainant claims that it buys large amounts of goods at the lowest possible rates, and that after paying all the expenses of its business it can supply to the collector for his trading stamps a valuable article which at retail would cost about what the merchants who< issued the stamps have been obliged to pay the complainant for them. The inference is unavoidable from facts of common knowledge, that in the ordinary operation of this trading-stamp system large numbers of stamps are liable to'be paid for and issued-by merchants which never in fact will be presented to the complainant for redemption.

The whole success of the trading-stamp business manifestly depends upon the creation and maintenance of a wide general demand for the stamps among the shop-going public. Without such demand merchants would have little inducement to contract with the complainant for the stamps, and of course the purchase of the stamps from the complainant is the only source of the complainant’s gain.

The rights of all parties in these trading stamps, from the time they leave the possession of the complainant until they are-returned to and redeemed by it at its store, are, to a very large extent, created, defined and limited by the contract which the complainant makes with its subscribers.

In every case, as the-bill sets forth, this fundamental contract is, in all particulars affecting this present investigation, precisely the same. The trading stamp itself bears on its face no obligation of the complainant whatsoever; its whole value is derived from the obligation of the complainant in its contract with its subscribers and the representations which the complainant malms to the public in various 'ways.

It is expressly provided in the contract that- the “property in and title to said stamps remain”.with the complainant. The [268]*268pads of stamps have attached to them a conspicuous printed notice to the effect that the pad is the property of the complainant, and that tire subscriber has agreed to give the stamps only to customers. The stamp, however, bears no notice upon it which indicates in any way that it may not be transferred from hand to hand, like any other chattel.

The contract leaves no room for doubt as to the method in which the subscribers, the merchants, may lawfully .issue the stamps. It provides for the redemption by the complainant of “such stamps as are issued in the regular way by merchants duly authorized by the first party to handle the same,” and the subscriber expressly agrees to give out the stamps at the rate and in -the manner above described, and also agrees “not to dispose of said stamps in any other way.” It is perfectly plain that no stamps can be lawfully issued under this contract except by subscribers to thqir customers in accordance with this definite method of business, and it is equally plain that the only obligation of the complainant to redeem its own trading stamps is confined to such stamps as are issued in the regular way. What is the “regular way” of issuing these stamps under this contract is a matter about which there is no room for controversy. It follows that every' person who in any way acquires a trading stamp of tire complainant which has been issued in any other manner tiran by one of the complainant’s customers, in pursuance of the contract, obtains no right of redemption against tire complainant.

The contract also provides that the complainant shall keep a supply of goods’ and merchandise in its store “with which to redeem said stamps when presented in the above-mentioned books (in lots of nine hundred aná ninety (990) stamps), collected in the regular way.” ' I think it i’s quite evident, and the conclusion accords with the argument of counsel for.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 A. 368, 69 N.J. Eq. 264, 3 Robb. 264, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sperry-hutchinson-co-v-hertzberg-njch-1905.