United States v. Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co.

92 F. Supp. 947
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedSeptember 20, 1950
DocketCiv. A. 8119
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 92 F. Supp. 947 (United States v. Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co., 92 F. Supp. 947 (D. Mass. 1950).

Opinion

WYZANSKI, District Judge.

Findings of Fact

A. Introduction

1. Count 2 of the complaint is before the Court for adjudication. It charges, defendants with 'violations of Sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C.A. §§■ 1, 2, with respect to foreign trade and commerce in coated abrasives. On May 2, 1950 the Court severed this count for separate trial. On that count it received evidence tendered by the parties. These findings, conclusions and decree represent a final determination and judgment of this. Court upon that count. In accordance with. Fed.Rules Civ.Proc. rule 54, 28 U.S.C.A., this Court hereby determines that there is no just reason for delay and that the ac— *951 tion on Count 2 shall be terminated forthwith in this Court.

2. .There are six defendants. The first four are domestic manufacturers of coated abrasives: Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Company, Behr-Manning Corporation, The Carborundum 'Company and Armour and Company. The fifth is Durex Abrasives Corporation — hereafter called the Export Company. It was organized Ma^ 23, 1929 under the Webb-Pomerene Act, /Act of April 10, 1918, c. 50, 40 Stat. 516, Í5 U.S.C.A. §§ 61-65; by the first four defendants and five other former domestic manufacturers of coated abrasives, American Glue Company, Baeder Adamson Company, Wausau Abrasives Company, H. H. Barton & Son Company and United States Sandpaper Company. The sixth is The Durex Corporation — hereafter called Durex. It also was organized by the same companies on May 23, 1929 and, as will appear later, is a corporation holding securities of foreign companies and holding foreign patents.

3. Prior to May 1929 the aforesaid nine domestic manufacturers of coated abrasives were engaged individually in the export of coated abrasives from the United States to many foreign countries, including the British Commonwealth of Nations, Germany and France. Their total sales in 1928 exceeded $3,295,000. The rate of export was increasing in 1929 and amounted to over 86% of the total dollar value of all United States exports of coated abrasives. Several of these domestic manufacturers had foreign patents and were engaged in research with the object of securing other patents. There is no satisfactory evidence that in 1929 either the export or the related patent business was conducted at either an out-of-pocket loss or at what proper accounting would show to be a loss.

4. In May 1929 the nine domestic manufacturers adopted a three-pronged program, each prong of which will be considered separately — first, the Export Company and the related Export Agreement (fdgs. 5-17) ; second, Durex and its manufacturing subsidiaries (fdgs. 18-22) and third, the main patent agreement and related license agreements (fdgs. 23-30). Thereafter these findings will recite in detail (fdgs. 31t-43) and in more summary form (fdgs. 43-45) the business relationships and relative exports of the Export Company and of the Durex subsidiaries.

B. Creation of the Export Company

5. The nine domestic producers formed the Export Company on May 23, 1929 under the laws of Delaware “to engage solely in export trade, as the term * * * is defined in the * * * Webb-Pom-erene Act.” The nine subscribed to the stock in the approximate proportion that those companies had exported coated abrasives in 1927 and the first ten months of 1928. However, the stock is now owned by the four manufacturing defendants and the others have dropped out of the picture. The Export Company has filed with the Federal Trade Commission all information and annual reports required by the Webb-Pomerene Act.

6. On the same day the Export Company was formed, the nine companies entered into an Export Agreement. Each company agreed to export only through the Export Company, with certain exceptions. This provision was canceled in October 1948. However, the member companies have not solicited any foreign business since 1948 but have continued to refer inquiries to the Export Company. And Minnesota, which is the only member that has actually made shipments, has dealt only with the foreign plants of American manufacturers and in each case has accounted to the Export Company (in accordance with a provision of the Export Agreement of May 23, 1929) for the profit.

7. The territory of the Export Company initially included all the countries of the world except the United States and its territories and possessions and Canada, but by amendment on May 20, 1931 Canada was added to the export territory. The Export Company was to purchase its requirements of coated abrasives from the shareholders in proportion to their holdings of stock in the Company. A party to the Agreement desiring to withdraw prior to December 31, 1954 might do so on one *952 year’s notice upon agreeing to refrain from competing with the Export Company until after December 31, 1956. After December 31, 1954 a party might withdraw by giving two years’ notice. On June I, 1944 the Export Agreement was amended to extend these dates to December 31, 1964 and December 31, 1966 respectively.

8. Upon beginning business in 1929, the Export Company established its principal office in this country. It established a European sales manager with offices in Europe to direct the sales in Continental Europe and a sales manager in this country to handle export sales to other countries. It adopted the policy of using the trade name DUREX and subsidiary brand names to avoid promoting products under the hundreds of trade names used by the member companies.

9. The Export Company has purchased all its coated abrasive products on direct order from its member companies. It has paid, in accordance with the Export Agreement, the “net variable cost” plus a pro rata share of the average fixed burden. “Net variable cost” was defined to include cash out-of-pocket disbursements and to exclude charges of a fixed nature which would have been incurred even if such abrasive products had not been manufactured. If the net variable costs of the different members varied, the differences were adjusted by using a weighted average of the costs of all members.-

10. The Export Company has had three methods of distribution/

11. One was through distributors in foreign countries with whom it made contracts. Three different forms of distributor contracts were used prior to February 1947. Two of these three forms required the distributor to carry stocks and solicit trade; the third did not. One of these forms made the distributor exclusive in his area; another provided for a fixed number of other distributors in his area; a third was non-exclusive. All distributor contracts made since February 1947 require the distributor to carry stocks and solicit trade but provide that the arrangement is not exclusive.

12. A second method was for the Export Company to sell coated abrasives to domestic exporters for export to ' foreign countries. These sales to American exporters have been in the neighborhood of only $150,000 to $200,000 annually. There is no evidence that the Export -Company has rejected any firm order placed by any American exporter for coated abrasives for export. To , be sure, once -..in 1941 when ■ Messrs. J. Jacobi and Company inquired about, abrasives for Rangoon, the Export Company referred it .to Durex Abrasives, Ltd., Birmingham.

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92 F. Supp. 947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-minnesota-mining-manufacturing-co-mad-1950.