Thе plaintiff, General Shale Products Corporation, brought this action under the Robinson-Patman Act, Title 15 U.S.C.A. § 13, to recover from the defendants Struck Construction Company and Southern Brick & Tile Company $154,740 as treble damages for alleged price discrimination on the part of the defendants contrary to the provisions ’ of the Act. Thе defendants have filed separate answers raising issues of fact and law. Before the cause was set for trial a pre-trial hearing was held for the purpose of obtaining rulings from the Court on the questions hereinafter referred to.
The City of Louisville Municipal Housing Commission invited bids for a Slum Clearance Project in Louisville loоking to the demolition of buildings in the area and the construction therein of new housing facilities. The contract was awarded to the defendant Struck Construction Company. The plaintiff submitted a bid to the Construction Company to furnish it a type of building material manufactured by it, known as Speedbrik. The defendant Southern Brick and Tile Company submitted a bid to the Construction Company to furnish brick and tile. The specifications reserved to the Housing Commission the right to select either Speedbrik or face brick backed by hollow tile. The complaint alleges that the Housing Project could be constructed with the use of Speedbrik at a substantial savings over the face brick backed up by hollow tile, but that by agreement between the Construction Company and the Southern Brick and Tile Company the Southern Brick and Tile Company either reduced its price to the Construction Company so as to substantially lessen the competition offered by the plaintiff, or the Construction Company resold to thе Housing Commission brick which it purchased from the Southern Brick and Tile Company at a price lower than the price to which such brick was sold to other purchasers so as to substantially lessen competition offered by the plaintiff. It is charged that by reason of these acts the differential existing in favor of the plaintiff was cоmpletely absorbed and the Housing Commission selected face brick backed by hollow tile which destroyed the competition offered by the plaintiff in the use of its Speedbrik, and so destroyed the plaintiff’s opportunity to sell its product for use in the project. The plaintiff claims a loss of its manufacturing profit in the sum of $26,-580 and furthеr loss of prestige for its material in the sum of $25,000 and seeks damages for treble the total of these two sums. The complaint alleges that the com■modities sold by the Southern Brick and Tile Company to the Construction Company were commodities sold for use and consumption in commerce.
The section of the Statute, Title 15 U.S. C.A. § 13, giving rise to the alleged cause of action reads in part as follows: “It shall be unlawful for any person engaged in commerce, in the course of such commerce, either directly or indirectly, to discriminate in price between different purchasers of commodities of like grade and quality, where either or any of thе purchases involved in such discrimination are in commerce, where such commodities are sold for use, consumption, or resale within the United States or any Territory thereof or the District of Columbia or any insular possession or other place under the jurisdiction of the United States, and where the effect of such discriminаtion may be substantially to lessen competition or tend to create a monopoly in any line of commerce, or to injure, destroy, or prevent competition with any person who either grants or knowingly receives the benefit of such discrimination, or with customers of either of them: Provided, That nothing herein contained shall prevent differentials which make only due allowance' for differences in the cost.of manufacture, sale, or delivery resulting from the differing methods or quantities in which such commodities are to such purchasers sold or delivered.”
The first question raised by the defendants is that neither the Struck Construction Company nor the Southern Briсk & Tile Company was engaged in commerce, as is required by the statute in order to make them subject to the provisions thereof. The complaint does not state specifically when the acts complained of occurred, but it is assumed for the purposes of this discussion that they occurred in the year 1939. Both the answеr of the Southern Brick and Tile Company and the evidence taken show that while that company sold its bricks almost exclusively in' the state in 1938 and 1939 it did make a few inter
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state sales and shipments. It has been held several times recently that the power of Congress to regulate interstate commerce is plenary and extends to all such commerce he it great or small. Santa Cruz Fruit Packing Co. v. National Labor Relations Board,
The second question presented for decision is whether the Clayton Act, 38 Stat. 730, as amended by the Robinson-Patman Act, prohibits the concessions made by the Struck Construction Company to the Louisville Municipal Housing Commission, since the Louisville Housing Commission is a governmental agency. The evidence showed that the bid of the Construction Company was based upon a price of $20 •per thousand for brick, and that the total contract price would be either decreased or increased depending upon the cost of the brick eventually selected by the Housing Commission. Brick was quoted by several manufacturers at a price range between $18.25 per thousand and $16.75 per thousand. . The price quoted by the Southern Brick & Tile Company was $18 per thousand. Even аt a price of $16.75 per thousand there was a substantial differential in favor of using Speedbrik offered by the plaintiff. The Construction Company came to the conclusion that it had underestimated its cost in laying Speedbrik which would make it’ unprofitable to the Construction Company if Speedbrik was used. It was considered advisable to use face brick even though it be necessary to reduce the cost to the Commission below $16.75 per thousand. The Construction Company prevailed upon th.e Southern Brick & Tile Company to furnish the face brick at $16.-75 a thousand, being the same price quoted by other brick manufacturers, and it in turn offered to furnish the face brick to the Housing Commission at $14.09, which price eliminated the differential in favor of Speedbrik. This arrangement was carried through and face brick furnished by the Southern Brick & Tile Company was' selected and used.
The statute makes it unlawful for any person to discriminate in price “between- different purchasers of commodities.” This means it is illegal for a seller to discriminate betweеn two parties buying the same product from him under similar conditions. The report of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary, which considered this amendment to the Clayton Act stated the purposes of the bill as follows: “The bill proposes to amend Section 2 of the Clayton Act, so as -to suppress more effectually discriminations between customers of the same seller not supported by sound economic differences in their business position or in the cost of serving them.”
The report of the House Committee on the Judiciary uses substantially the same language. The Act accordingly applies to commercial sales on the part of thоse who deal in the commodity under consideration to" purchasers from such a dealer. The Struck Construction Company is not a manufacturer or a jobber of brick nor is it in the true sense of the word a dealer in brick. It does not buy brick for the purpose of resale. Its purchase of brick in the present case was to еnable it to carry out an existing contract obligation with the Housing Commission, it was not for the purpose of a subsequent resale. The sale of brick is not mentioned in any part of the contract with the Housing Commission. I do not believe that the transfer of the title to the brick from the Construction Company to the Louisville Housing Commission by reаson of the brick being used in the construction of the Housing Project was a sale of the brick to a customer, as contemplated by the Act; the transfer of title was merely an incident in the completed performance of the contract calling for - the construction of the buildings included therein. The contract was еssentially a construction contract, not a contract of sale. Compare St. Mary Iron Works v. Community Mfg. Enterprise,
Accordingly, the provisions of the Act do not apply.
I am also of the opinion that even if the transaction could be construed as a sale of brick by the Struck Construction Company to the Housing Commission it would not be within the purview of the Act because the Act dоes not apply to sales to the government, state or municipalities. The statute provides that such a discrimination is unlawful “where the effect of such discrimination may be substantially to lessen competition or tend to create a monopoly in any line of commerce.” This means, according to the discussion of thе bill at the time of its consideration and en
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actment, that the parties must be in competition with each other. Neither the government nor a city in its purchase of property considered necessary for the purposes of carrying out its governmental functions is in competition with another buyer who may be engaged in buying аnd reselling that article. There is nothing in the Act which attempts to establish the price at which an article can be sold to a purchaser; it merely provides that a seller can not discriminate by selling it to one purchaser for less than he sells it to another purchaser who is in competition. Accordingly, a sale at a reduced price is not illegal unless it is made for the purpose of discriminating between competitive buyers. After the passage of the Act, Attorney General Cummins rendered an opinion that the Act did not apply to government contracts. This opinion followed the decision of the Supreme Court in the early case of Dollar Savings Bank v. United States,
See also Emergency Fleet Corporation v. Western Union Telegraph Co.,
Counsel will submit for entry an appropriate order as provided by Rule 16 of the Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723c, conforming to the foregoing views of the Court.
