21 N.Y.S. 859 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
The defendants were convicted in the Niagara county sessions of the crime of conspiring together to commit acts injurious to trade. They were retail dealers in coal in the city of Lockport, and with eight or ten other dealers in coal in that city they organized an association called the Lockport Coal Exchange. They adopted a constitution and by-laws, the provisions of which are very voluminous. It is not necessary to rehearse them. Many of them were innocent, and to be commended. The main purpose, however, of the association was to fix prices, below which coal should not be retailed in Lockport and its vicinity. The scheme of the organization, if fully carried out, practically compelled every dealer of coal in that city to join the association, and regulate his business by its constitution and by-laws. They were required to sell coal at prices'fixed, from time to time, by a vote of the members of the association. The members were required, when joining the organization, to pay an initiation fee of $100, and to pay annual dues of $5. Penalties were prescribed for a violation of the constitution and by-laws of the association. Soliciting business was prohibited, except in the manner prescribed in the constitution. Dealers were not permitted to take club orders of associated buyers at reduced prices. Under the head of “Discipline” it was provided that, should a member be charged with violating any of the provisions of the by-laws or any rule or resolution of the exchange, he should be summoned before the secretary to answer the charge. If the secretary should decide to sustain the charge the member was to be declared in default, and considered in default until five sixths of the members should vote to reinstate him. By
The question presented by this appeal is whether the defendants were proven guilty of the crime for which they were convicted. It is an important question, especially in view of the large number of similar organizations existing in this country at the present time, and the important influence they exert upon business affairs. The purpose of the association, if carried out, would undoubtedly have had an important effect upon the coal traffic in the city of Lockport. It would have materially affected and practically prevented competition in one of the necessaries of life. An arbitrary price at which coal should be sold was to be fixed by a majority vote of the members, and every ton of coal was
“The transaction amounted, as I .thmk, to a conspiracy to commit an act ‘injurious to trade,’ within the legal meaning of the statute denouncing it as a crime, and was therefore illegal and void.”
It is the policy of the law to encourage trade and commerce', and combinations which tend in restraint thereof are illegal. Agreements made to take trade out of the realms of competition are against public policy, (Mill & Lumber Co. v. Hayes, 76 Cal. 387, 18 Pac. Rep. 391,) even although it may not appear that such agreement did really produce any result detrimental to public interests, (Atcheson v. Mallon, 43 N. Y. 147.) The case seems to have been fairly submitted to the jury, and they found the defendants to have been guilty of acts which tended to