52 N.Y.S. 475 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
The plaintiff is a corporation engaged in the manufacture of proprietary medicines which it sells to retailers, and is also a wholesale dealer in other medicines than those which it manufactures. The defendant the National Wholesale Druggists’ Association is an unincorporated association composed of the other defendants in this case and many other persons residing and doing business in different parts of the United States, all of whom are either wholesale druggists who own and manufacture certain proprietary goods, proprietors of proprietary goods who manufacture their own articles, or manufacturers of chemical or pharmaceutical preparations who are not interested in the proprietary goods at all. The plaintiff complains that these people have entered into an illegal conspiracy against it for the purpose of enforcing a boycott upon it and thereby preventing it from disposing of its own goods and from buying other proprietary goods of the dealers in them, or of selling such goods to retail dealers with whom it was accustomed to trade. The defendants are very numerous and are scattered all over the United
It appears from the complaint that the firm of John D. Park & Sons of Cincinnati, 0., was engaged in the same business as the plaintiff, a corporation organized under the laws of Kentucky and the successor of that firm. ' The plaintiff corporation was organized in 1891, but the firm of John D. Park & Sons had been in existence for many years before that time. The story told by the complaint is that before 1876 each dealer and manufacturer of proprietary articles had disposed of his goods in his own way, putting his own price upon them, giving to customers such rebate as he saw fit, paying such commissions for sales as seemed good to him, and giving such terms as to the payment of freight and express and cartage as
We perceive that as the result of this modification of the complaint some of the paragraphs contain allegations referring to portions of the complaint that have been stricken out and, therefore, are not as intelligible as they should be and are not proper in form, and for that reason it may be that the plaintiff upon a consideration of the com-}3laint as thus modified may desire to amend it by serving a new complaint containing substantially the allegations permitted to remain in this one, stated in such form as that their connection with each other may more plainly appear. If that is desired, the order may contain a provision that the plaintiff may serve an amended complaint complying substantially with the rules laid down in this opinion within twenty days after the service of the order upon him.
Babbett, Ingraham and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Order modified as directed in opinion and affirmed as modified, without costs, with leave to plaintiff to amend within twenty days after service of the order.