The Danville Tobacco Association v. Bryant-Buckner Associates, Inc.

372 F.2d 634, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 7656, 1967 Trade Cas. (CCH) 72,000
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 25, 1967
Docket10579_1
StatusPublished

This text of 372 F.2d 634 (The Danville Tobacco Association v. Bryant-Buckner Associates, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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The Danville Tobacco Association v. Bryant-Buckner Associates, Inc., 372 F.2d 634, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 7656, 1967 Trade Cas. (CCH) 72,000 (4th Cir. 1967).

Opinion

372 F.2d 634

The DANVILLE TOBACCO ASSOCIATION, a corporation; Producers Tobacco Company, Incorporated; W. Townes Lea and Louis W. Love, partners, trading as Piedmont Warehouse and Hughes Warehouse; Neals Warehouses, Inc., Jack L. Neal and George A. Myers, Jr., T/A Growers Warehouse, and Latane Motley and Blair Motley, Jr., and John W. Motley, Executors of the Estate of Blair Motley, Deceased, T/A Motley's Warehouse, and Danville Warehouse Company, Incorporated, Appellees,
v.
BRYANT-BUCKNER ASSOCIATES, INC., Appellant.

No. 10579.

United States Court of Appeals Fourth Circuit.

Argued October 31, 1966.

Decided January 25, 1967.

I. Murchison Biggs, Lumberton, N. C. (Robert F. Ward, Chatham, Va., on brief), for appellant.

Edwin B. Meade, Danville, Va. (Meade, Tate & Meade, Danville, Va., on brief), for appellees The Danville Tobacco Ass'n and Danville Warehouse Co., Incorporated.

C. Stuart Wheatley, Danville, Va. (John W. Carter, Clement, Wheatley, Winston & Craig, and Carter & Carter, Danville, Va., on brief), for appellees W. Townes Lea et al.

John W. Carter, Danville, Va. (C. Stuart Wheatley, Clement, Wheatley, Winston & Craig, and Carter & Carter, Danville, Va., on brief), for appellees Neals Warehouses, Inc., et al.

G. Kenneth Miller, Richmond, Va. (Allan Garrett, Earle Garrett, III, Garrett, Garrett & Smith, Danville, Va., and May, Garrett, Miller, Newman & Compton, Richmond, Va., on brief), for appellees Producers Tobacco Co., Incorporated.

Before BRYAN, BELL and WINTER, Circuit Judges.

ALBERT V. BRYAN, Circuit Judge:

Apportionment of selling time among the warehousemen on the Danville, Virginia tobacco market, comes here again as an alleged affront to the Sherman Antitrust Act.1 It is a second appeal in the original suit with which we dealt in Danville Tobacco Association v. Bryant-Buckner Associates, Inc., 4 Cir., 333 F. 2d 202 (1964).

In accordance with our suggestion on remand, the District Court asked the Federal Trade Commission to advise it upon the validity of an apportionment system known as the "permanent plan" and approved by the District Court for use beginning with the 1963 season, or to prescribe an appropriate scheme if the permanent plan were found objectionable. In our opinion in 1964 we approved, as a transitory measure, an interim plan approved by the District Court for 1962 which gave defendant-warehouseman Bryant-Buckner Associates (B-B) a diminished selling-time as a new entrant (in 1962) into the market. This interim plan was incorporated into the permanent plan, which we permitted to operate pro tempore pending the report of the Commission. In its response, the Commission found the permanent plan less than "reasonable, fair and equitable", and devised a wholly new formula.

However, the District Court rejected the Commission's scheme and declared the permanent plan to "constitute a proper and legal manner of allocating selling time both as to the warehousemen now on the Danville market and as to a new entrant". B-B now appeals from this ruling. We affirm.

The knot of this controversy is the validity of the constriction placed upon the share allotable to a new warehouseman in the total daily selling time of the market. These restraints were written into the regulations of the Danville Tobacco Association, a membership, nonprofit corporation created by the Virginia legislature "for the purpose of * * * regulating the sale of leaf tobacco and trade" in Danville. All of the company buyers and warehousemen, including B-B, are members. The "selling time" of a warehouse is its portion of the total tobacco — here 8800 baskets — that may be sold each day on the market. The rules of the Bright Belt Warehouse Association2 and the Danville Tobacco Association stipulate that the daily sale period cannot exceed 5½ hours, and must proceed at a rate of not more than 400 baskets per hour for each of four buying teams.

This suit was commenced by the Association immediately after the admission of B-B to membership in February 1962. Naming all warehouse members as defendants, it sought a declaratory judgment upon the legality under the antitrust laws of an initial plan, and when it was condemned, the permanent plan was submitted by the Association for a like ruling. Danville Tobacco Assoc. v. Bryant-Buckner Associates, Inc., supra, 333 F.2d 202, 209.

The permanent plan purports, in brief, to allocate selling time on the basis of the proportion of the floor space in each warehouse to the total floor space on the market. Any member is entitled to increase its allotment upon showing that its sales for the previous year exceeded its allotment. A gain or loss, however, cannot go beyond 8% of a preceding year's allotment. In addition, special limitations are placed upon new entrants, that is those joining after 1962.

In the District Court's decree now on review, the permanent plan is set forth in full, the now-pertinent parts of it reading:

"8. The Modified Experience System and Adjustments To Be Made as a Result of Fair Competition

"1. A warehouse unit on and in the Danville Market is identified as a building which is suitable in every respect for selling leaf tobacco at auction in an efficient manner, and which is available therefor, and which is in compliance with the requirements of the Danville Tobacco Association Rules and Regulations relating to the construction and maintenance of tobacco sales warehouses. Provided that the requirement as to `available therefor' shall be satisfied if it is determined, on the day when the allocation of selling time is made for an approaching season, that the warehouse is available for that season; and provided, further, that the requirements as to `available' shall not apply to any warehouse which, on September 10, 1962, was under an uncancellable lease, until said lease shall have expired. Each warehouse area measuring 87,500 square feet shall be considered a unit and any proportionate part thereof shall be considered that percentage of a unit. At the time of the opening of the 1962 Danville Market there were on the market 21 such units. (This includes three units for Bryant-Buckner * * *.)

"2. Original selling time is that which existed for each tobacco warehouse on the opening date of the 1962 Danville Market.

"3. Selling time for the 1963 season shall be the same as that for the 1962 season, subject only to such adjustments as may become necessary by reason of the admission of new warehouses, additions to existing warehouses, withdrawals, transfers, leases and mergers, as hereafter provided in these rules and regulations. Beginning with the year 1963 adjustments of selling time for competitive gains or losses shall be made at the end of the 1963 season so as to reflect the valid and credible experience of each warehouse to which selling time was allocated in 1963, such adjustment to be made on the basis of producers sales in pounds plus bona fide resales.

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372 F.2d 634, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 7656, 1967 Trade Cas. (CCH) 72,000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-danville-tobacco-association-v-bryant-buckner-associates-inc-ca4-1967.