United States v. Great Western Sugar Co.

39 F.2d 149, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1828
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nebraska
DecidedJune 18, 1929
DocketNo. 1426
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 39 F.2d 149 (United States v. Great Western Sugar Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nebraska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Great Western Sugar Co., 39 F.2d 149, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1828 (D. Neb. 1929).

Opinion

MUNGER, District Judge.

The information in this ease undertakes to charge a conspiracy to violate sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, 26 Stat. 209 (15 U. S. Code §§ 1, 2 [15 USCA §§ 1, 2]).

A demurrer of the defendant to the information has been submitted, and also a special plea of the statute of limitations. The first count of the information charges, in substance, that the defendant and some of its officers engaged in a conspiracy in unreasonable and direct restraint of interstate commerce, that this conspiracy existed continuously through many years and to the filing of the information, and that the conspirators intended to obstruct and restrain the free flow of interstate trade and commerce in beet sugar carried on between Colorado, Montana, Nebraska, and Wyoming by other named corporations; that the restraint of [150]*150interstate commerce was to be effected by means and methods which are described. Many of these means and acts by which the conspiracy was to be effected are set forth and are alleged to have occurred more than three years before the filing of the information, and when they are regarded, as they should be (Knauer v. United States (C. C. A.) 237 F. 8) as particularization of the general charge of conspiracy, and as a charge of its existence and operation at the times stated, they are vulnerable to the plea of the statute of limitations.

The plaintiff contends that the information charges fofo acts that are clearly within the three-year period. The information was filed on February 6, 1929'. The information alleges that the defendant operated a number of beet sugar factories in Colorado, Wyoming, and Nebraska, and that the Holly Sugar Corporation operated a number of such factories in Colorado, Wyoming, and Montana, and that the Holly Sugar Corporation announced in or about 1924 that it would build a beet sugar factory at or near Torrington, Wyo., and about 1925 it announced that it would build such a factory at Minatare, Neb. There are allegations to show that these factories, if built, would have drawn supplies of sugar beets from territory that otherwise would have supplied the defendant’s factories, -and that the announcements by the defendant of its proposal to build these factories was made to prevent the proposed building by the Holly Sugar Corporation. These announcements were made more than three years before the information was filed, but the government relies oh the following allegations to show the existence of the conspiracy after February 6, 1926:

“Thereafter, in or about October, 1925, with knowledge of the aforesaid intentions and operations of the Holly Sugar Corporation with respect to its proposed plants at Torrington and Minatare, and for the purpose of forestalling, dissuading and preventing the completion and operation of the said factories, the defendant corporation announced, and put into effect, and sold sugar at, a reduction of fifty cents per one hundred pound bag of beet sugar in the States of Colorado, Nebraska, Wyoming, Montana, Missouri, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Oklahoma, Iowa and Kansas and within the jurisdiction of this Court, to wit, within the County of Lancaster, in the State and District of Nebraska, said reduction being generally applicable throughout the territory in which the defendant corporation, the Holly Sugar Corporation, and the American Beet Sugar Company were selling beet-sugar in competition with each other,, and such reduction being termed an ‘advertising allowance.’ Thereafter, during the nineteen days from October 23, 1925, to November 11, 1925, inclusive, while said reduced price was in effect, the defendant corporation sold, in the States of Missouri, Minnesota, South Dakota, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Iowa, a large quantity of beet sugar, to wit, 1,052,769' bags, at an average net loss per bag, to wit, 40.2 cents, and at a large total net loss, to-wit, $423,280.75. On or about November 11, 1925, defendant corporation increased said ‘advertising allowance’ to 85 cents per 100’ pound bag in the so-called ‘high netting territory’ hereinbefore described, and in the remaining territory affected by said ‘advertising allowance’ reduced it to 25 cents per 100-pound bag.
“On or about December 18, 1925, for the-purpose of forestalling, dissuading and preventing the construction of beet sugar factories by the Holly Sugar Corporation at Torrington and Minatare, as aforesaid, the defendant corporation announced that the-minimum guaranteed prices for sugar -beets-for 1926 would be increased $2.00 per ton over the prices which had existed during the-four years next preceding said announcement, and did contract for and purchase beetsthrougho-ut the following season at,such increased prices. As the result of said increased minimum guaranteed prices as above-described, many farmers who had been selling their sugar beets to the Holly Sugar Corporation and the American Beet Sugar Company ceased doing so, because of the inability of said companies to meet said increased prices and further hindered and weakened said companies in their ability to compete with the defendant corporation in the manufacture, transportation and sale of beet sugar ini interstate commerce throughout the ‘high netting territory’ as hereinbefore described, all of which' was intended by the-defendants to be and was the direct and necessary result of their acts in announcing and adopting said increased prices.
“Thereafter, on or about January 17, 1926, and as result of the several operations by the defendant corporation hereinabovedescribed, the Holly Sugar Corporation announced that it would not construct its factory at Minatare.
“Thereafter, on February 13, 1926, the-defendant corporation withdrew the said ‘advertising allowance’ of 85 cents in said ‘high-[151]*151netting territory’ and of 25 cents in said remaining territory.”

The government asserts that the allegations that the defendant increased the advertising allowance about November 11, 1925, to 85 cents per 100 pound bag in the “high netting territory” (described elsewhere in the information as Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, and Nebraska, and decreased it to 25 cents for 100 pound bag in the other territory, coupled with the allegation that on February 13, 1926, the defendant withdrew these allowances, are equivalent to a direct charge that this allowance was in effect all of the time from November 1, 1925, to February 13, 1926. The government also claims that the allegations that the defendant announced in December, 1925, that the minimum guaranteed prices for sugar beets for 1926 would be increased $2 per ton above former prices, and that the defendant contracted for and purchased beets throughout the following season (elsewhere described as the growing season of 1926), set forth ah. existing conspiracy after February 6, 1926. It may be conceded that some of these acts are alleged as occurring less than three years before the information was filed, but do they allege a conspiracy then in operation, when considered with the general allegations?

It is alleged that the defendant put into effect and sold sugar at a reduction of 50 cents per hundred pound bag for nineteen days from October 23, 1925 to November 11, 1925, at a loss of $423,280.75, “for the purpose of forestalling, dissuading and preventing the competition and operation” of the factories of the Holly Sugar Corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
39 F.2d 149, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-great-western-sugar-co-ned-1929.