This is a continuance of the litigation which we considered in Bordonaro Bros. Theatres, Inc. v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., 2 Cir.,
' [1] While we may sympathize with plaintiff in its disappointment, we do think — as we thought earlier,
Nór do we think that award vitiated by errors on the part of the trial judge. The first assigned error was the refusal of binding instructions in favor оf the plaintiff based on the finding of conspiracy in the previous case. But the judge properly — we might say inevitably — ruled that the plaintiff must prove that the conspiracy continued from 1946 to 1948, and so charged. The judge actually went far in the plaintiff’s favor when he told the jury that the former judgment “is conclusivе proof that there was a conspiracy between the defendants prior to September 16, 1946,” cf. The Evergreens v. Nunan, 2 Cir.,
The final two assignments of error are of perhaps more general interest. They concern the references by court and counsel to (a) the treble damages claimed and allowable under the statute and (b) the damages actually awarded in the first action which plaintiff now says were themselves entirely too small. It is plaintiff’s contention that no reference was permissible and that the mention made caused the jury to belittle its case.
It is to be noted that in its complaint plaintiff pleaded very fully the circumstanсes of its recovery in the former case, though without mention of the amount itself. It also pleaded the appropriate sections of the Sherman and Clayton Antitrust Acts, and specifically claimed the treble damages provided by statute. Both its contention based upon the former aсtion, as we have noted above, and the trial court’s appropriate ruling as to effect of the judgment there entered made reference to the earlier action inevitable and proper. Defendants point out the recital of the statute to the jury in the former actiоn and suggest that the same is true in most, if not all, similar antitrust actions. Surely reference either to the pleadings or to the governing statute is so usual a cоurse in jury trials as to occasion no comment. Hence the recital in the trial judge’s charge of just what had happened in the former actiоn and what was claimed in this suit was quite appropriate. Such a statement is more desirable than a half-recital, with; attempted conceаlment of a part — a method leading inevitably to an overemphasis of an otherwise not significant detail. The trial judge further explained with carе and precision plaintiff’s two theories for the fixing of damages, and, concluding with stress, that the case must be decided solely on the evidence before the jury, said: “The fact that a certain recovery was had in the prior trial of this case has nothing to do> *679 with your consideration of the evidence in this case.”
Since, therefore, the court’s comment was beyond criticism, we must turn entirely to the argument of defendants’ counsel if error is to be discovered. In opening, the counsel, after refеrring to plaintiff’s opening, said: “He wants what he can claim as damages multiplied by three, unearned money.” The last two words were not exactly a fаir, or, at any rate, a complete, statement of the statutory provision; but objection then made was not to the expression, but to any mention of the treble-damage claim. The court allowed this as being “what the complaint alleges.” In closing, counsel referred again to the treblе-damage claim; and plaintiff again objected and took exception to the court’s failure to rule it out, saying that he would refer to it in his own summаtion. Then defendants’ counsel went on to cite the verdict of $28,500 for six years in the earlier case, and again objection was made that mentiоn of the amount had been previously ruled out, which appears to have been an error, as counsel pointed out. The court then said, “Thе amount has been stated many times”; and plaintiff noted an ■exception. Thereupon counsel repeated his reference to the amount, noted that the period here was one-quarter that covered in the earlier case, and suggested that a division of the earlier verdict by- one-quarter here would give $7,100, “and the Court multiplies it by three, a pretty good week’s work.” Here, again, the reference was not entirely fair, being mеrely to a computation of an earlier jury not binding here; but the objection was not to the specific partially objectionable matter, but rather to any reference at all.
In -argument and summation, counsel must be accorded some leeway to discuss the matter properly in the record. Here certain nuances of argumentation were not admirable; had specific attention been called to these feаtures, correction or more careful explanation would have been appropriate. But the matter was in evidence; -and counsel, like the court, was (entitled to state the actual facts without coloration. We do not deem this slight overstepping of the full proprieties ground for upsetting a just result in the absence of appropriate or revealing objection, since, too, it was followed not merely by oрposing counsel’s own summation, covering in detail his claims of inadequacy of the earlier verdict and the congressional authorization of treble damages, but also by the precise, accurate, and limiting charge of the court which we have cited earlier.
Judgment affirmed.
