197 F. 686 | W.D.N.Y. | 1912
The defendant the Corn Exchange of Buffalo and others of the defendants, there being upwards of 50 of them represented by different counsel, have moved the court on the pleadings and on the affidavit of one Pond, the secretary of the Corn Exchange, for a bill of particulars in this action. The defendants in whose behalf this motion was made have answered, denying generally the allegations of the complaint. The plaintiff in opposition to the motion has submitted his own affidavit, and claims to have suffered actual damage in his business in the sum of $50,000 by reason of the asserted unlawful conduct of the defendants and demands an additional amount of $100,000 for loss of reputation and as punitive damages. In paragraph 8 of the complaint it is substantially alleged that the plaintiff was injured in his business and in his good name, reputation, and credit by reason of the unlawful combination and conspiracy of the defendants; that on October 7,1907, the defendants unlawfully posted, blacklisted, and boycotted him on the Corn Exchange of Buffalo, since which time he has been prevented from buying grain or grain products in the Buffalo market. In paragraph 9 he asserts that he was forced to abandon his business as a shipper of grain in the city of Wilkes-Barre, and because of the unlawful combination has been compelled to seek other markets in which to buy grain and grain products in order to continue his business as a miller; that such markets are remote from his place of business; and that the transportation facilities are so inadequate and unsatisfactory and the freight rates so exorbitant that his business was destroyed.