United States Tobacco Co. v. American Tobacco Co.

163 F. 701, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 5263
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedJuly 10, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 163 F. 701 (United States Tobacco Co. v. American Tobacco Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Tobacco Co. v. American Tobacco Co., 163 F. 701, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 5263 (circtsdny 1908).

Opinion

RAY, District Judge.

The plaintiff is a Virginia corporation engaged in the manufacture of plug and smoking tobacco and selling said articles of merchandise in the several states of the United States and in foreign countries and engaged in commerce among the said states. The American Tobacco Company, organized in 1904, is a New Jersey corporation, and defendant James B. Duke its president. The Mac-Andrews & Forbes Company is a New Jersey corporation, and defendant Karl Jungbluth is its president. The J. S. Young Company is a marine corporation, organized in December, 1903, and Howard E. Young is its president

The American Tobacco Company is the result of the merger of three companies, viz., Continental Tobacco Company, Consolidated Tobacco Company, and the American Tobacco Company about October 1, 1904. This merger took place under the laws of the state of New Jersey and pursuant to an agreement, and all the debts, duties, eand liabilities of the Continental Tobacco Company attached to the defendant American Tobacco Company. Duke, from December 8, 1893, was the president of the Continental Company and has been president of the American Company since its organization, and he and these companies are and have been engaged in carrying on business in interstate commerce in tobacco and articles manufactured therefrom. From about December 8, 1903, the defendants, MacAndrews & Forbes Company and said J. S. Young Company and their presidents, respectively, were engaged-in carrying on business as manufacturers and dealers in licorice paste, [703]*703a valuable article of merchandise, useful and necessary in the manufacture of plug and smoking tobacco. These last-named companies had factories for its manufacture in different states. These companies and their presidents by authority of the companies sold large quantities of such licorice paste to manufacturers of plug and smoking tobacco, including the plaintiff company, throughout the United States, and in pursuance of the sales shipped same from their said factories to such manufacturers in other states of the United States than those wherein the said factories were situated. The said last-named companies and •their presidents controlled more than 85 per cent, of the interstate business in such licorice paste of which the MacAndrews & Forbes Company had and controlled about nine-tenths and the said J. S. Young Company about one-tenth. Prior to the consolidation, etc., these companies were competitors in business, and the plaintiff charges that they would have continued to be competitors but for the alleged unlawful combination, conspiracy, contract, and agreement set out in the complaint, as follows:

“(a) Competition as to the price at which the said licorice paste was during said period sold and delivered by the said MacAndrews & Forbes Company and said .T. S. Young Company, as between said corporation defendants and among them severally and their several competitors in said interstate business, trade, and commerce, was under the direction and control of the Continental Tobacco Company and of defendants, the American Tobacco Company and James B. Duke, as hereinafter stated, prevented and destroyed by the defendants herein agreeing among themselves that there should be no such competition, by the said defendants from time to time agreeing upon establishing, fixing, and maintaining arbitrary and noncompetitive prices for the said licorice.paste so sold and delivered by the said defendants, MacAndrews & Forbes Company and J S. Young Company and their several competitors in said interstate business, trade, and commerce as aforesaid, by their selling and delivering such licorice paste in such business, trade, and commerce at such arbitrary and noncompetitive prices, and by their agreeing with and inducing certain of the competitors of the said MacAndrews & Forbes Company and said J. S. Young Company, to wit, one John I). Lewis of Providence, If.. I., engaged throughout .said period in the manufacture and salo of and in interstate commerce in said licorice paste in the United States, and the Weavfcr & Sterry Company, Ltd., of New York City, N. Y., engaged throughout said period in the manufacture and sale of and in interstate commerce in said licorice paste in the United States, likewise to establish and maintain arbitrary and noncompetitive prices for said licorice paste, in said interstate business, trade, and commerce of such competitors, which said prices so agreed upon, established, fixed, and maintained by the defendants herein, and by said competitors, were greatly in excess of the prices which would at such times and during said period have prevailed for the said licorice paste in said interstate business, trade, and commerce of the said MacAndrews & Forbes Company and J. S. Young Company and their said compofitors or any of them, and in excess of reasonable and normal prices for such licorice paste which would have prevailed in such business, trade, and commerce if said defendants had not engaged in said unlawful combination, conspiracy, contract, and agreement in restraint of said interstate trade and commerce, and if they had not attempted to restrain and monopolize said trade and commerce as aforesaid.
•‘(b) A division and apportionment of said interstate business, trade, and commerce, and of the customers of the said MacAndrews & Forbes Company and the said J. S. Young Company were made under and pursuant to the direction and control of the Continental Tobacco Company and of defendants, the American Tobacco Company and James B. Duke, as hereafter set forth, between the MacAndrews & Forbes Company and J. S. Young Company, by the terms of which division and apportionment as agreed upon by the Con[704]*704tinenta] Tobacco Company and tbe defendants herein, and each of them, the customers with whom each of the said defendant corporations, the MacAndrews & Forbes Company and the J. S. Young Company, should deal, and to whom the said corporations should sell such licorice paste so arbitrarily fixed and agreed upon and the amount of the profits which the said defendant, J. S. Young Company, should be allowed from the total business carried on by the said defendants, MacAndrews & Forbes Company and J. S. Young Company, was arbitrarily fixed, determined, and agreed upon by said Continental Tobacco Company and defendants.
“(c) The defendants herein, and each of them, under and pursuant to the control and direction of the Continental Tobacco Company and defendants, the American Tobacco Company and James B. Duke, as hereinafter set forth, so contrived and managed and agreed that the said John D. Lewis contracted and agreed with the said J. S. Young Company that he would'not sell more than 1,060,000 pounds of such licorice paste during the year 1904, nor more than 50,000 pounds additional during each year for five years from December 31, 1903, so that it was agreed that the total product of sale of John D. Lewis should be not more than 1,200,000 pounds during the year 1908; it being provided by the said agreement that if he, .the said John D. Lewis, should sell more than said amounts during said years respectively, he was to pay to the said J. S. Young Company an amount of money approximately equal to his profits upon the quantity sold by him in excess of such amounts respectively, and that he should establish and maintain arbitrary and noncompetitive prices as hereinbefore set forth for all licorice paste sold by him, the terms and conditions of which said agreement were during said period duly complied with by the said John B. Lewis by his selling large quantities of such licorice paste at such prices.

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Related

Weisert Bros. Tobacco Co. v. American Tobacco Co.
163 F. 712 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1908)

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Bluebook (online)
163 F. 701, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 5263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-tobacco-co-v-american-tobacco-co-circtsdny-1908.