United Banana Company v. United Fruit Company

245 F. Supp. 161, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9552, 1965 Trade Cas. (CCH) 71,522
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedJuly 23, 1965
DocketCiv. 7487
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 245 F. Supp. 161 (United Banana Company v. United Fruit Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Banana Company v. United Fruit Company, 245 F. Supp. 161, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9552, 1965 Trade Cas. (CCH) 71,522 (D. Conn. 1965).

Opinion

CLARIE, District Judge.

This action for treble damages, costs of suit and counsel fees was brought in three interrelated counts, pursuant to the laws of the United States commonly referred to as the Anti-Trust and Price Discrimination Acts, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1-27. The first count alleges that during the period January 1, 1958 through August 31, 1958, the defendants conspired with Thomas Kalliches, Inc., and others, to violate §§ 1 and 2 of the Sherman AntiTrust Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1, 2. The plaintiff claimed that said conspiracy was designed to fix the price, the quantity and variety of inedible green bananas, which the plaintiff purchased during said period. It further alleged that the defendants monopolized and attempted to monopolize and conspire with each other and with others, to monopolize the import banana market in the Eastern Division Area of Fruit Dispatch Company, and, in particular, in the State of Connecticut.

The second count, after reiterating all the allegations of the first, claimed that the defendants assessed the plaintiff ten cents (100) per hundredweight as a service charge for the loading of plaintiff’s banana trucks at the wharf-side loading pier in Weehawken, New Jersey; while at the same time the defendants loaded the railway cars for other banana jobbers who were competitors of the plaintiff, free of any loading charge. It claimed alternatively to *163 the first count that this practice constituted an illegal price discrimination in violation of 15 U.S.C. § 13(e).

The final count, after reiterating and adopting the allegations of the first two, claimed that the defendants had sold the identical kind and quality of bananas on the same dates to plaintiff’s competitors, to customers of the defendants whose customers competed with the plaintiff, and to plaintiff’s own customers, at prices which were lower than those charged to the plaintiff, in violation of 15 U.S.C. § 13(a).

The damages sought to be recovered in this action may be categorized in three distinct groupings. The first alleges monopoly price overcharges; the second, discriminatory handling charges, and the third, discriminatory prices. The thrust of proof in the monopoly overcharges seeks to prove the difference between the average wholesale price of green bananas charged by the defendants during the controverted period, as against comparable charges for the same period by the defendants’ largest import competitor. While the plaintiff originally alleged an average variance of One Dollar ($1.00) per hundredweight, this figure was modified at the trial to a differential of eighty-six cents (860) per hundredweight. This unit variance multiplied by the total product poundage purchased from the defendants by the plaintiff during the controverted period is utilized to establish the basis for the claim. The plaintiff’s records indicated that its total purchases amounted to 2,590,948 pounds, with resulting damages of $25,909.48. However, plaintiff’s requested findings of fact, which are based on defendants’ records of purchase, rather than its own, amount to 2,458,660 pounds. The amended differential of eighty-six cents (860) per hundredweight, thus projects plaintiff’s corrected claimed net loss to be $21,144.48. Using the defendants’ same purchase figure, the plaintiff’s claims of discriminatory illegal service charges amount to $2,458.66.

The third category, direct price discrimination, calculates what the plaintiff’s savings would have been had the defendants charged to it the lowest price charged to any of the others of defendants’ competitor banana jobber customers during said period. Its computation of this amounted to $7,805.55; this figure was claimed alternatively to have proven under the Sherman Act conspiracy or the Robinson-Patman Act discrimination. Thus, the total amount of damages which the plaintiff requested the Court to find and treble, amounted to $31,408.69, plus the costs of the action and a reasonable allowance for attorneys’ fees.

DESCRIPTION OF PARTIES

The plaintiff, United Banana Company, Inc., a Connecticut corporation, is a family operation, principally owned by Stanley Zebroski, and engaged in the banana jobbing business in the City of Stamford, Connecticut. It was originally formed in 1937 when the latter, who was then sole owner of the Stamford Banana Company, merged it with a similar business operated in that city by Charles Lecouras and Thomas Sakel-lares. In 1956 Zebroski acquired sole ownership by the purchase of all of the stock of his associates.

This jobbing business involved the purchase of green bananas from the importer at dock-side, transporting them to a banana ripening warehouse, removing the hands of ripened bananas from the stems and packaging them for delivery to retail food outlets. In 1958 the plaintiff’s premises consisted of a building eighty feet by eighty in Stamford, Connecticut, which was utilized as an office, ripening room, work area and garage. It owned one large truck with a carrying capacity of about 18,000 pounds, used for picking up bananas at the pier in the port of New York and transporting them to Stamford, and three or four smaller trucks for deliveries to retail outlets.

During this period, the plaintiff serviced retail outlets on the following *164 three routes: (1) one route commenced in Stamford and proceeded down the shoreline to Fairfield, Westport, Darien and Norwalk; (2) a second commenced in Stamford covering most of the city and party of Greenwich; (3) and the third started in Stamford, covering part of Greenwich, Portchester, New York, Rye, New York, and then south into the City of New York.

The defendant, United Fruit Company, a New Jersey corporation, had its principal office outside the State of Connecticut. It operated a number of subsidiary corporations for the growing of bananas in various Central and South American countries and maintained a fleet of ships to transport their product to the consumer market areas. It is conceded by all parties that bananas are not grown commercially in the United States and are available only by importation.

The co-defendant, Fruit ' Dispatch Company, a subsidiary of United Fruit Company, is a Delaware corporation, and is engaged solely in the business of selling bananas as the exclusive agent of the United Fruit Company in the United States. This service is performed pursuant to a sales agreement between the parties, 1 wherein Fruit Dispatch is named as the sole general sales agent and distributor of United Fruit, authorized to sell and distribute its bananas throughout the United States and Canada.

The sales operations of Fruit Dispatch were divided into geographical areas known as the Eastern, Southern and Western Divisions. The Eastern Division Office of Fruit Dispatch was at all times primarily concerned with the pricing 2 and distributing of fruit arriving at the ports of New York or Baltimore.

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Bluebook (online)
245 F. Supp. 161, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9552, 1965 Trade Cas. (CCH) 71,522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-banana-company-v-united-fruit-company-ctd-1965.