United States v. National Malleable & Steel Castings Co.

6 F.2d 40, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1321
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJuly 15, 1924
Docket8015
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 6 F.2d 40 (United States v. National Malleable & Steel Castings Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. National Malleable & Steel Castings Co., 6 F.2d 40, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1321 (N.D. Ohio 1924).

Opinion

WESTENHAVER, District Judge.

This is an indictment charging 52 corporate defendants and 49 individual defendants with the criminal offense of a combination or conspiracy in restraint of interstate trade, in violation of section 1, Act of July 2, 1890, commonly known as the Sherman Anti *41 Trust Act (Comp. Stat. § 8820). Of the individual defendants, the following have appeared, and have filed motions to quash and demurrers to the indictment, viz.: S. L. Smith, J. C. Haswell, H. B. Parker, G. H. Thompson, E. E. Walker, J. P. Kennedy, H. Luedinghaus, Jr., T. W. Ludlow, J. L. Simmon, E. T. Ward, R. E. Pelt, and C. F. La Harche. Of the corporate defendants, the following have also appeared, and have filed motions to quash and demurrers to the indictment, viz.: National Malleable & Steel Castings Company, the National Malleable Castings Company, the Dayton Malleable Iron Company, the Albion Malleable Iron Company, the Columbus Malleable Iron Company, the Erie Malleable Iron Company, the Kennedy Corporation, the Meeker Foundry Company, Springfield Malleable Iron Company, Warren Tool & Forge Company, and American Malleable Castings Company. Certain other corporate defendants, 30 in all, upon whom subpoenas or summons to appear and answer have been served, have appeared specially and have filed motions to quash service of summo ns. Four other corporate defendants have not been served, and two other corporate defendants have not been found.

In support of the motion to quash and the demurrers to the indictments, the same objections are urged alike by the individual and corporate defendants. Twenty-six separate grounds or reasons are assigned why the indictments are insufficient. Some are to form and others are to substance. No useful purpose will be served by dealing separately with these several objections. It will be sufficient to state my conclusions and sufficient of my reasons to show the basis on which my conclusions are rested.

In my opinion, after due consideration of all objections urged and an examination of the adjudged cases, the indictment is unexceptionable, both as to form and substance. It states adequately the venue of the crime charged as within the jurisdiction of this court. The crime is adequately alleged to be a continuing conspiracy, in which all of the corporate and individual defendants have been during the past five years and still are engaged, and is not, therefore, barred by the statute of • limitations. The criminal participation of the individual defendants, as officers having the active management, direction, and control of the interstate trade and business of the corporate defendants engaged in the illegal combination or conspiracy, is sufficiently averred, within the authorities and within the terms

of section 14, Act Oct. 15, 1914, known as the Clayton Act (Comp. Stat. § 8835m). The elements of the crime are not only charged in the language of the statute, but the means whereby the "combination or conspiracy is and has been formed and carried on, and the details thereof adequate to identify the specific combination or conspiracy, and to enable the defendants to prepare for trial and to protect them against a new prosecution in the event of acquittal or conviction, are likewise all set forth with particularity and definiteness. If the allegations of the indictment are proved, each and all of the defendants are guilty of a violation of section 1 of the Sherman Act.

These conclusions are amply supported by the adjudged cases. In 3 Zoline’s Federal Criminal Law and Procedure, p. 2, is given the indictment which was held good on demurrer in Boyle v. United States (7 C. C. A.) 259 F. 803, 170 C. C. A. 603. At page 41 is given the indictment which was held good against demurrer in United States v. American Naval Stores Co. (C. C.) 186 F. 593, which holding as to the sufficiency of the indictment was affirmed (Nash v. United States [5 C. C. A.] 186 F. 489, 108 C. C. A. 467), and again sustained by the United States Supreme Court in Nash v. United States, 229 U. S. 373, 33 S. Ct. 780, 57 L. Ed. 1232. At page 54 is given the indictment which was held good as against demurrer in Belfi v. United States (3 C. C. A.) 259 F. 822, 170 C. C. A. 622. A comparison of the present indictment with the three indictments thus held good leaves no doubt as to the sufficiency of the indictment in this ease. As already said, no useful, purpose will be served by reviewing or analyzing the specific objections to the present indictment, nor in restating or rearguing the applicable principles of law, since all the questions now raised are, in my opinion, settled by authority. In addition to the eases above cited, the following are in point: United States v. MacAndrews and Forbes Co. (C. C.) 149 F. 823; United States v. Patterson (D. C.) 201 F. 697; Patterson v. United States (6 C. C. A.) 222 F. 599, 138 C. C. A. 123. The motions to, quash and demurrers to the indictment will be overruled. An exception may be noted.

The motions of the corporate defendants to quash the service of process are based primarily on the ground that no power exists in this court to issue process directed to another district to compel the appearance of foreign corporations to an indictment pending herein. In addition thereto, objee *42 tion to process actually issued and served is made because it was issued to tbe marshal of this district, but delivered to and served by marshals in other districts, and as to three' defendants, viz. DAnville Malleable Iron Company, Ross-Meehan Foundries, 'and Kalamazoo Malleable Iron Company, for other special reasons going merely to the form of service'. Counsel for the United ■ States announced at this hearing that it was his intention to have issued and properly served new summons as to each nonresident corporate defendant, directed to the marshal of the district of which each corporation is an inhabitant or in whieh it can he found. Hence the only question now to be considered is whether or not such a summons may he properly issued out of this court, directed to the marshal of another district and service there made.

This question is likewise, in my opinion, settled by authority. Upon the allegations of the indictment, the combination or conspiracy has been and is being maintained and carried on in part within this district, and some of the individual and corporate defendants are inhabitants of and have been found within the district. It is fundamental in the law of criminal conspiracy that all the members of a combination or conspiracy may be prosecuted in any district .within whieh the conspiracy is formed or in part carried on, or within which an overt act has been committed in furtherance thereof by any one of the several conspirators. These fundamental principles of the law of criminal conspiracy are equally applicable to a criminal combination or conspiracy under section 1 of the Sherman Act. Upon these fundamental principles, the Northern district of Ohio becomes the proper jurisdiction within which any and 'all of the conspirators may he indicted and tried. No question is made but that this is true as to each of the individual defendants; but the contention is that the statute law of the United States has provided no way whereby a nonresident corporation, which cannot be arrested and required to give bond for its appearance, may be brought within the jurisdiction of the court to answer for a crime there committed or which may be there prosecuted.

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Bluebook (online)
6 F.2d 40, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-national-malleable-steel-castings-co-ohnd-1924.