Court Opinion

ID: 7134755
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:22:44.520245+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:35.289267
License: Public Domain

Opinion op the court by
JUDGE DuRELLE
Affirming.
A full statement of the indictment in this case can be found in tlie opinion upon the former appeal (108 Ky. 59 (21 R., 1444) (55 S. W., 720). The appellees were indicted for a violation of section 3915, Ky. St., being what is called ' the conspiracy or trust -statute. Upon that appeal this court held the statute was valid, unrepealed, and that the indictment was sufficient. By -petition for rehearing, it was suggested that certain manufacturers, in order to prevent goods of their manufacture being brought into competition with goods of inferior grade, required of their customers an agreement not to sell below a minimum cost, fixed by the manufacturer, and that his prosecution would prove *205to be based upon such agreements. In response to that petition it was said by this court, that such contracts did not seem to be within the meaning of the. statute, but that the question was not presented by the record then before us. On the return of the case, evidence 'was introduced by the Commonwealth, the principal effect of which was to show that defendants were members of the-Kentucky Wholesale Grocers’ Association, the objects'of that association, and the relation of certain manufacturers of articles named in the indictment to their customers. From the evidence the association seems to be quite innocuous. It holds meetings-to consider the state of the business, and through its officers it obtains from the manufacturers the market changes that occur from time to time, and obtains from the various carriers the freight rates to different points,, which are published in a rate book, for the benefit of members of the association and others. There is nothing in this which violates any of the provisions of the statute. It appears, further, that certain brands of various kinds, of groceries of established reputation are .protected by the manufacturers or the owners of the brands by a refusal to sell the goods to any one who will not agree to refrain from selling them at a price below a minimum, from time to time fixed by the manufacturer or owner of the brand. (The association receives information of changes in the price upon such articles from the manufacturer, and sends, that information immediately to its members. There does, not appear from the testimony in this case, to be any obligation on the part of any member of the association to the other members to fix, control or regulate the price of any of the goods, but that as to what, in the- language of the trade, are called “contract goods,” or goods upon *206which the manufacturer puts a fixed selling price, the manufacturer alone regulates and controls the minimum price at which the jobbers may sell the goods, and this is done by requiring the customers to agree not to resell the goods at a price less than that fixed by him. We are not called on to decide whether the Legislature could prevent the manufacturer from requiring such an agreement of his customers. All that is necessary to decide here is that such an agreement with the manufacturer is not within: the purview of the statute. It was not error, therefore, for the circuit court to direct the jury to find the defendants, not guilty, and the judgment is affirmed.
Whole court sitting.