United States v. Detroit Sheet Metal & Roofing Contractors Ass'n, Inc.

116 F. Supp. 81, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2181
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedOctober 13, 1953
DocketCrim. A. 33452
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 116 F. Supp. 81 (United States v. Detroit Sheet Metal & Roofing Contractors Ass'n, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Detroit Sheet Metal & Roofing Contractors Ass'n, Inc., 116 F. Supp. 81, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2181 (E.D. Mich. 1953).

Opinion

LEVIN, District Judge.

There are numerous motions before the Court, made on behalf of the various defendants, to dismiss an indictment against them charging violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C.A. § 1. This legislation, with certain exceptions with which we are not here concerned, makes illegal every contract, combination, or conspiracy in restraint of trade among the several states or with foreign lands. In addition, there is a motion by certain of the defendants to strike alleged surplusage from parts of the indictment.

I. The Indictment

The defendants named are the Detroit Sheet Metal and Roofing Contractors Association, Inc., hereinafter referred to as the Association, which is described as a trade association of roofing and sheet metal contractors; nine corporations which are described as roofing contractors; twelve individual defendants who are described as having been associated with or employed by one of the preceding nine corporations and to have been actively engaged in the management, direction, and control of the affairs, policies and acts of the corporations; and six individuals who are described as building contractors, all said to be doing business in the City of Detroit and vicinity. The corporate and individual contractors are said to have been members of the Association during all or part of the period covered by the indictment.

Paragraphs 8-14 describe the nature of defendants’ business which involves the installation and repair of built-up roofs. What is meant by a built-up roof is not explained in the indictment, but it is implicit that (the phrase refers to a roof which is built on the site of the project as distinguished from a pre-fabricated roof. The indictment states that the roofs are built pursuant to contracts entered into with a general contractor or builder responsible for the construction of the project, usually on the basis of competitive bidding. The contract price is said to include the cost of materials and the cost of their installation as a built-up roof. It is further stated that the materials which consist of sheathing paper, felt, asbestos, pitch-blend, gravel, slag, pitch, tar and asphalt are largely produced by manufacturers located. outside the State of Michigan and are purchased by the roofing contractor either directly from the out-of-state manufacturers or are purchased from jobbers and wholesalers within the state who in turn have acquired the materials from the out-of-state manufacturers. The last sentence of paragraph 12 reads as follows: “Said materials, whether purchased direct or through distributors, jobbers, or wholesalers, are all shipped in interstate commerce and move in a continuous and uninterrupted flow of interstate commerce from the out-of-state manufacturers to the ultimate owner or builder at the site of installation.”

Paragraph 11 avers that the out-of-state manufacturers,.in addition to selling to roofing contractors generally, approve selected contractors in certain areas to install so-called “bonded roofs.” Such contractors are called “bonded roofers” and such “bonded roofs” are *85 installed according to the manufacturer’s specifications, are subject to the manufacturer’s inspection, and carry with them the manufacturer’s guarantee for a stated period of years, both as to workmanship and the quality of the materials used. “Bonded roofs” are said to be essential to any important construction job and the status of a “bonded roofer” is “a valuable, if not a necessary, asset to anyone hoping to compete successfully in the built-up roofing contracting business.”

In Paragraph 14 defendants, who according to the indictment represent fifteen of a total of fifty such contractors in the area, are said to have done approximately seventy per cent of the ten million dollars of built-up roofing done in the City of Detroit and vicinity in 1951. It is further stated that for the same period, out of this total of ten million dollars, seven and a half million dollars were spent for “bonded roofs,” defendants doing approximately ninety per cent of this “bonded roof” business.

Paragraphs 15-17 set forth in detail the alleged characteristics of and the alleged means by which were accomplished the combination and conspiracy in restraint of trade and commerce. It is said that there has been a continuing agreement and concert of action among the defendants and others unknown to the Grand Jury, whereby they have used the Association to determine and adhere to “uniform rules, methods and policies in computing bids and otherwise doing business”; that the Association has been employed as a center where its members and others could compare and exchange information on a given job in advance of the submission of bids; that it was operated as the medium through which a given contractor would be designated to submit the winning bid on the construction project, and that it was then understood and agreed by the other contractors participating in the arrangement that they would not submit bids which would compete with the bid of the chosen contractor, but instead would submit fictitious bids to give the semblance of competition but which were so high as not to offer a threat to the chances of the appointed contractor.

Further, the defendants are charged with attempting to enlist other contractors who were not members of the Association into the Association and to urge and coerce nonmember contractors to adopt the same policies and to employ the same practices as to bids as were adopted by the members of the Association. The defendants are said to have induced or to have attempted to induce out-of-state manufacturers to withhold or deny their “bonded roof” guarantee or the status of “bonded roofer” to those contractors who refused to cooperate with the Association program.

Paragraph 18 declares that the purpose, intent and necessary effect of these activities has been “to establish, fix, and maintain high, arbitrary and noncompetitive prices in the sale of materials for and the installation of built-up roofing”; to suppress and eliminate competition among the defendants and to suppress and eliminate the competition of roofing contractors who are nonmembers of the Association; and to deny to the consumer “the benefits of free competition in the sale of materials for and the installation of built-up roofing.”

Paragraph 15 (which in the indictment, as returned, is positioned approximately midway between the averments which have been above presented) charges that this alleged combination and conspiracy on the part of the defendants and the acts performed in pursuance thereof constitute an “unreasonable restraint of the aforesaid trade and commerce in the sale of materials for and the installation of built-up roofing * * It appears to the Court, and it has so been maintained by the Government in its briefs and oral arguments, that the “aforesaid trade and commerce” alludes to the averment of Paragraph 12 that the roofing materials used in the construction of built-up roofs are “all shipped in interstate commerce and move in a continuous and uninterrupted flow of interstate commerce from the out-of- *86 v Btate manufacturers to the ultimate owner or builder at the site of installation."

II. Sufficiency of the Indictment

Defendants have advanced many objections to the sufficiency of the indictment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 F. Supp. 81, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-detroit-sheet-metal-roofing-contractors-assn-inc-mied-1953.