delivered the opinion of the court.
Tins is an action by the city of Atlanta (Georgia), against two Tennessee corporations, members of the trust or combination held unlawful in
Addyston Pipe and Steel Co.
v.
United States,
The facts gave rise to a cause of action under the act of Congress. The city was a person within the meaning of § 7 by the express provision of' § 8. It was injured in its property, at least, if not in its business of furnishing water, by being led to pay more than the worth of the pipe. A person whose property is diminished by a payment of money wrongfully induced is injured in his property. The transaction which did the wrong was a transaction between parties in different States, if that be material. The fact that the defendants and others had combined with the seller led to the excessive charge, which the seller made in the interest of the trust by arrangement with its members, and which the buyer was induced to pay by the semblance of competition, also arranged by the members of the trust. One object of the combination was to prevent other producers than the Anniston Pipe and Foundry Company, the. seller, from competing in sales to the plaintiff. There can be no doubt that Congress had power to give- an
*397
action for damages to an individual who suffers by breach of the law.
Montague
v.
Lowry,
The limitation of five years in Rev. Stat. § 1047, to. any “suit or prosecution for anj' penalty or forfeiture, pecuniary or otherwise, accruing under the laws of the United States,” does not apply. The-construction of the phrase “suit for a penalty,” and the reasons for that construction have been stated so fully by this court thát it is- not necessary to repeat them. Indeed the proposition hardly is disputed here.
Huntington
v.
Attrill,
Thus we come to the main question of the case, namely, which limitation under the law’s of Tennessee is applicable, the matter being left to the local law by the silence of the Statutes of the United States. Rev. Stat. §721;
Campbell
v.
Haverhill,
As to the article touching actions for statute penalties, notwithstanding some grounds for distinguishing it from Rev. Stat. § 1047, which were pointed out, so far as this liability under the laws of the United States is concerned we must adhere to the construction of it which we already have adopted. The chief argument relied upon is' that this suit is for injury to personal property, and so within Article 2773. It was pressed upon us that formerly the limitations-addressed themselves to forms of action, that actions upon the case, such as this would have been,-were barred in three years, following St. 21 Jac. 1, c. 21, § 3, and that when a change was necessitated- by the doing away with the old forms'of action, it is not to be supposed that the change was intended to affect the substance, or more than the mode of stating the time allowed. Of course, it was argued also that this was an injury to property, within the plain meaning of- the words. But wc are satisfied, on the whole, and in view of its juxtaposition with detention and conversion, that the phrase has a narrower intent. It may be that it has a somewhat broader scope than was intimated below, and that some wrongs are within it .besidés physical damage to tangible property. But there is a sufficiently clear distinction between injuries to property *399 and “injured m Ms business or property,” the latter being the language of the act of Congress. A man is injured in Ms property when his property is diminished. He would not be said to have suffered an injury to his property unless the harm fell upon some object more definite and less ideal than his total wealth. A trade-mark, or a trade-name, or a title, is property, and is regarded as an object capable of injury in various ways. But-when a man is made poorer by an extravagant bill we do not regard his wealth as a unity, or the tort, if there is one, as directed against that unity as an object. We do not go behind the person of the sufferer. We say that he has been defrauded or subjected to duress, or whatever it may be, and stop there. It was urged that the opening article to which we have referred expressed an intention to bar all civil actions, but that hardly helps the construction of any particular article following, since the dragnet at the end, 2776, catches all cases not “expressly provided for.” On the whole case we agree with the court below.
Judgment affirmed.
