
    The Shinola Company, Plaintiff, v. The House of Krieg, Carl H. Krieg, Hamilton Bassett and George A. Knapp, Defendants.
    (Supreme Court, Monroe Special Term,
    January, 1912.)
    Injunction — Interference with business — Acts of private associations and corporations or officers thereof.
    The plaintiff, a manufacturer of blacking and shoe polishing outfits, while doing a large business with the jobbing trade, including the members of an association of jobbers, maintains a force of salesmen who solicit orders from the retail trade, all orders taken in the vicinity of jobbing houses being turned over to the jobbers who bill the goods to the customers and guaranty the account; the jobber’s profits being the difference between what he was charged and what the customer paid to him. The request of defendant B, a member of the association and officially connected with a jobbing house, for an extra discount of one per cent, for cash not then allowed other jobbers was refused by plaintiff. Later the subject of plaintiff’s discount to the retail trade and the matter of terms to jobbers was taken up by B with defendant K, the secretary of the association, who by letter urged plaintiff to change the rate to be allowed to members of the association. Thereafter K, in a general letter to the members of the association, urged that all jobbers decline in the future to accept orders containing a provision for a five per cent, discount to the retailer, on the ground that it did not leave sufficient profit to the jobber to pay him for handling the goods, the letter stating that such was the finding of the executive committee of the association. Thereafter defendant B sent a letter to the members of the association and to jobbers not members urging them to decline to deal with plaintiff on the five per cent, basis. On motion for an injunction pendente lite, in an action by plaintiff for damages to its business alleged to have resulted from the refusal of jobbers who were its former customers to accept orders on the five per cent, basis, the answering affidavits denied malice and alleged that defendants were only endeavoring to obtain a- fair profit for handling plaintiff’s goods. The letters complained of contained no misstatement of facts, no disciplinary methods on the part of the association or coercive tactics suggested to compel any jobber to do otherwise than follow his own judgment in future dealings with the plaintiff; nor was a boycott threatened against the sale of plaintiff’s commodities in the open market. Held, that the motion for an injunction should be denied.
    Motion by plaintiff for an injunction pendente lite restraining the defendants from circulating letters among the jobbers of shoe findings derogatory to plaintiff’s manner of doing business .with said jobbers.
    J." M. E. O’Grady, for plaintiff.
    Booth & Ellis, for defendants The House of Krieg, Carl H. Krieg and Hamilton Bassett.
   Sutherland, J.

The defendants, belong to an association of jobbers called “ National Leather and Shoe Finders’ Association,” which has a membership of about 200 throughout the United States, with headquarters at St. Louis> the defendant Knapp being the secretary of said association. The plaintiff is a manufacturer of blacking and shoe polishing outfits, doing a very large business with the jobbing trade, including the members of said association. The defendant Bassett is the secretary and treasurer of The House of Krieg, a jobbing house located in Hew York city, of which, the defendant Carl H. Krieg is the president.

The plaintiff markets a large portion of its goods through jobbers, but maintains a force of salesmen who solicit orders from the retail trade; and, where orders are taken in the vicinity of the jobbing houses with which plaintiff is doing business, they are turned over to the jobbers who bill the goods to the customer and guarantee the account.

' The plaintiff, in turn, charges the jobber a lower price than the retailer pays the jobber, the difference, less his expenses, constituting the jobber’s profit.

Early in 1911, the defendant Bassett requested the plaintiff to allow his house an extra discount of one per cent, for cash, which- was not then allowed other jobbers. This request was refused. Later, Bassett took exception to an allowance by plaintiff of five per cent, discount to the retailer from the list price on sales in gross lots made by plaintiff’s agents in Hew York city, which diminished by so much the profit of the jobber, and communicated with other jobbers there on the subject; and the five per cent, discount was withdrawn by plaintiff in that territory, for a time, but was later restored. The subject of the discount -allowed by the plaintiff to the retail trade, and- the entire matter of terms granted to the jobber, were taken up by Bassett with the defendant Knapp, as secretary of the Hational Leather and Shoe Finders’ Association, and Knapp- wrote the plaintiff urging a change of rate to be allowed the members of the association. The matter was finally taken up by the executive- committee of the association. August 19, 1911, the plaintiff -addressed a communication to the defendant Knapp, stating that the plaintiff -desired to have copies thereof sent to all members of said association; and in the letter sarcastic reference was made to Bassett, although he was not mentioned by name, and the subject in controversy was discussed in great detail from plaintiff’s standpoint. October sixth, .a general letter was sent to the members of the association by the defendant Knapp, in which it was urged that all jobbers decline to accept orders in the future containing a provision for a five per cent, discount to the retailer, on the ground that it did not leave sufficient profit to the jobber to pay him for the handling of the goods, the letter stating that such was the finding of the executive committee. October fourteenth a letter was sent out to the members of the association by the defendant Bassett, going over the whole matter and urging the members to decline to deal with the plaintiff on the five per cent, basis. The result of the agitation has been that numerous jobbers, who were former customers, have refused to accept orders on those terms, and the plaintiff alleges that great damage has resulted to its business.

The claim is made by the plaintiff that the purpose and acts of defendants constitute an unlawful conspiracy to' injure the business of the plaintiff and to injure and restrain trade and commerce. In the motion papers, the motives of the defendants, especially Bassett, are charged to be malicious. Malice is denied in the answering "affidavits, in which defendants allege that they are only endeavoring to obtain a fair rate of profit for handling the plaintiff’s goods.

After reading the affidavits and letters pro and con, I fail to see any ground for an injunction.

The direct and immediate object of defendants is not to fix the price at which the plaintiff’s products must be sold to the ultimate consumer. If such were the object, it possibly would bring the effort within the condemnation of the Supreme Court of the United States, as expressed «in the recent case entitled, Dr. Miles Med. Co. v. John D. Park & Sons Co., 220 U. S. 373, and within the class of concerted acts condemned by our State statutes and judicial decisions. People v. Sheldon, 139 N. Y. 251; Cummings v. Union Blue Stone Co., 164 id. 401. In that connection, it should be remembered that there is here no combination of manufacturers controlling the output of shoe blacking, and no combination of jobbers controlling the only means of marketing the product of any single manufacturer. The primary object sought by the defendants is a more liberal rate of profit to jobbers for handling the sales -and guaranteeing the payment of the bills, and the means utilized are the circulation of written arguments as to the demerits of the present rate. The five per cent, discount allowed to retailers (which lessens by so- much the amount to be retained by the jobber) happens to he the specific- thing criticised by defendants; but, after all, their grievance, real or fancied, is the smallness of the jobbers’ profits. A result equally satisfactory to the jobbers, no doubt, could be attained by retaining the five per cent, discount to retailers, and lowering the price at which the goods are charged to the jobber. The thing the jobbers are after is more pay for their part in marketing plaintiff’s goods. The court certainly will not attempt to decide whether the present rate is fair to the jobber, or otherwise; we can only determine whether the means employed by the defendants to accomplish their purpose are unlawful.

In the letters that are complained of, there is no false statement as to the facts in the case. There is no fraud attempted, and no endeavor to abrogate existing contracts. There is no penalty threatened against any jobber who fails to yield to the arguments offered by the defendants Bassett, and Knapp; no-r disciplinary measures on the part of the association, or coercive tactics of any sort suggested to compel any jobber to do otherwise than follow his own judgment as to future dealings with the plaintiff; and the plaintiff is not prevented from dealing directly with the retailer, if it desires to dispense with the jobber as an intermediary. Ho boycott is threatened against the sale of plaintiff’s commodities in tiie open market. So it is difficult to see how either the acts or- the purposes of the defendants can he condemned as unlawful.

True it is that the success of the effort of the defendants may have the' effect o-f increasing the cost to the ultimate consumer. The plaintiff is not likely to sacrifice its own profits if the demands of defendants can he met at the expense of the purchasing public. But the same result is likely to follow an increase of wages brought about by the united action of laborers. That does not make a labor strike for higher wages illegal. The labor strike, if successful, increases the cost of production. The success of defendants’ efforts will increase the cost of marketing the goods. In either event the price which the individual consumer must pay is apt to be enhanced. But the raising of the price to the consumer is not the primary object of either. That primary object, being lawful in itself, is not rendered illegal by the resulting increase of pricé to the consuming public.

If the organized acts and purposes which were declared to be lawful in National Prot. Assn. v. Gumming, 170 NT. T. 315, be compared with the efforts and purposes sought to be enjoined in this action, it will be seen that the defendants are, by a wide margin, within their strict legal rights.

It is admitted that the defendant Bassett has gone outside the ranks of his own association and endeavored to pursuade other jobbers, hot members, to take the same position with reference to the present rates for selling plaintiff’s goods.

“ They have the right to go farther and to solicit and persuade others, who do not belong to their organization and are employed for no fixed period, to quit work also, unless the common employer of all assents to lawful conditions, designed to improve their material welfare.” This statement, taken from the dissenting opinion of Judge Vann in National Prot. Assn. v. Gumming, supra, is well recognized as the law applicable to workingmen’s organizations, if the effort to persuade others to quit be peaceful and free from intimidation. Sinsheimer v. United Garment Workers, 77 Hun, 215; Mills v. United States P. Co., 99 App. Div. 605; Butterick Pub. Co. v. Typo. Union, No. 6, 50 Misc. Rep. 1. Is a jobber then to be denied a right which is freely accorded to an artisan ? Hot if the law of the land is to be justly 'administered and made applicable to all, without distinction as to vocation or business pursuits.

Accordingly, the motion'for an injunction pendente lite is denied, with ten dollars costs.

Motion denied, with ten dollars costs-  