Sterling Nelson & Sons, Inc. v. Rangen, Inc.

235 F. Supp. 393, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9627, 1964 Trade Cas. (CCH) 71,263
CourtDistrict Court, D. Idaho
DecidedSeptember 25, 1964
DocketCiv. 3785
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 235 F. Supp. 393 (Sterling Nelson & Sons, Inc. v. Rangen, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Idaho primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sterling Nelson & Sons, Inc. v. Rangen, Inc., 235 F. Supp. 393, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9627, 1964 Trade Cas. (CCH) 71,263 (D. Idaho 1964).

Opinion

THOMPSON, District Judge.

The Court, having considered the evidence and the briefs and arguments of counsel, does hereby make the following Findings of Fact:

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Plaintiff is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Utah, with its principal place of business in Salt Lake City, Utah, and licensed to do business in the State of Idaho and various other States. Plaintiff' is engaged in the manufacture and sale of fish food and other products in various States of the United States, including Idaho. Plaintiff competes with the defendant in the sale of fish food in several States, including the State of Idaho.

2. Defendant Rangen, Inc. is an Idaho corporation with its plant in Buhl, Idaho. It is engaged in the manufacture and sale of fish food and other products in various States of the United States, including Idaho. It purchases ingredients *395 for the manufacture of fish food in States other than Idaho, as well as Idaho, and sells fish food in various States, including the State of Idaho.

3. Buhl Feed and Ice Company, Inc., is merely a trade name of Rangen, Inc. under which Rangen, Inc. does business.

4. Defendant Elwood D. Grimes is a citizen and resident of the State of Idaho and was employed by the State of Idaho in the Department of Fish and Game from 1939 to June 1, 1962, first as a biologist and then, from approximately 1950, as the Superintendent of the State’s fish hatchery at Hagerman, Idaho. ’ -

5. During the four years immediately prior to the commencement of this action, the State of Idaho paid Rangen, Inc. approximately $539,600 for fish food sold by Rangen, Inc. to the State of Idaho. During such period, Rangen, Inc. was, with insignificant exceptions, the sole supplier of fish food to the State of Idaho for consumption at state fish hatcheries. Realistically, the transactions between Rangen, Inc. and the State of Idaho were sales of processed fish food and not contracts for services. The proportion supplied by the State of the ingredients of the final product delivered was relatively insignificant, and this was done for the purpose of circumventing the State Purchasing Agent and of attempting to give to a purchase transaction the appearance of a contract for services.

6. Rangen, Inc., for the period December, 1955, to June, 1962, paid defendant Elwood Grimes the sum of $24,047.80. Payments by Rangen, Inc. to Grimes were not disclosed to anyone in the Department of Fish and Game nor to any other employee of the State of Idaho until they were discovered in February, 1962. Such payments were computed roughly but inaccurately as a percentage of gross sales of fish food made by Rangen, Inc. to customers other than the State of Idaho. During such period, defendant Elwood Grimes was the authority in the Idaho Department of Fish and Game with respect to the safe utilization and nutritional value of fish foods and with respect to fish food formulae. The payments made by Rangen, Inc. to Elwood D. Grimes were made for the purpose, at least in substantial part, of influencing Grimes’ conduct as an employee of the State of Idaho with respect to recommendations of fish food products for purchase by the State of Idaho, and such payments were made pursuant to an understanding between Rangen, Inc. and Grimes that Grimes would use his best efforts to obtain for Rangen, Inc. the fish food business of the State of Idaho.' Grimes did, in fact, influence the responsible officials of the State of Idaho to purchase substantially all its requirements of fish food from Rangen, Inc., and Grimes obstructed and impeded the testing of products of other possible suppliers, including plaintiff, and action on favorable reports of such tests.

7. At various times during the period preceding 1962, plaintiff solicited James C. Simpson, Chief of Fisheries Management, for the Idaho Department of Fish and Game, and other officials and employees of the State of Idaho, to purchase plaintiff’s fish food, but James C. Simpson refused to accept plaintiff’s offers to sell fish food to the State of Idaho and the State of Idaho failed to purchase any fish food from plaintiff during the four years immediately preceding the commencement of this action. The State of Idaho was not bound by any contract to purchase fish food from defendant Rangen, Inc. during the four years immediately preceding the commencement of this action, and during that period, could have at any time purchased fish food from any other source, including plaintiff. The State commenced to purchase fish food from other sources in 1962 on public bids under the State purchasing procedures, after disclosure of the payments by Rangen, Inc. to Grimes. Plaintiff was the successful bidder on the first of such public offers for bids. The fish food offered for sale by plaintiff had been experimentally tested in 1958 and found suitable and substantially equal in grade and quality to that sold by Rangen, Inc. Grimes, in 1957, refused to test plaintiff’s product.

*396 8. There were approximately eight companies, including defendant Rangen, Inc. and plaintiff Nelson & Sons, in competition with each other in the production and sale of fish food in the western states during all or part of the four year period prior to July, 1962. Four companies, including plaintiff and defendant Rangen, Inc., made offers or bids to supply the State of Idaho- fish food requirements when the State first advertised for public offers in 1962. During the four year period immediately prior to July, 1962, the State of Idaho paid Rangen, Inc. approximately $539,600 for fish food sold by Rangen, Inc. to the State of Idaho. During such four year period, as a direct and proximate consequence of the wrongful conduct of defendant Rangen, Inc. and defendant Grimes, as aforesaid, plaintiff was precluded from an opportunity to bid to supply the fish food requirements of the State- of Idaho and to make interstate.sales of its products to the State of Idaho. It is reasonably and conservatively probable that plaintiff Sterling Nelson & Sons, Inc. would have sold to the State of Idaho approximately one-fourth of its fish food requirements, representing gross sales at plaintiff’s prices (Ex. 20) of approximately $126,000 during such four year period if there had existed a competitive market unaffected by the wrongful and restraining conduct of defendants. It is reasonably probable that plaintiff would have realized a net profit of approximately fifteen per cent on the gross sales. Plaintiff was damaged by defendants’ wrongful conduct in the amount of $18,900.

CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

As conclusions of law from the foregoing facts, the Court finds:

1. Defendant Rangen, Inc., while engaged in commerce, in the course of such commerce paid money as compensation to Elwood D. Grimes who was an agent and representative of and acting in behalf of the State of Idaho in connection with the sale by Rangen, Inc. and the purchase by the State of Idaho of processed fish food, in violation of 15 U.S.C. § 13(c).

.2. Plaintiff, Sterling Nelson & Sons, Inc., was injured in its business by reason of the aforesaid violation of the antitrust laws and sustained damages in the amount of $18,900.

3. The actual damages should be trebled by virtue of the requirements of 15 U.S.C.

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235 F. Supp. 393, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9627, 1964 Trade Cas. (CCH) 71,263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sterling-nelson-sons-inc-v-rangen-inc-idd-1964.