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Articles 1 - 24 of 24
Full-Text Articles in Law
Antitrust Provisions Of The Atomic Energy Act, Richard Cosway
Antitrust Provisions Of The Atomic Energy Act, Richard Cosway
Vanderbilt Law Review
"It is ... declared to be the policy of the United States that... the development, use, and control of atomic energy shall be directed so as to promote world peace, improve the general welfare, increase the standard of living, and strengthen free competition in private enterprise." These are almost the first words of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 which, in stating the policy of the United States, establish the goals to be sought. As stated, the strengthening of free competition is a goal; it is not the device by which the other goals are to be achieved. Apparently of …
Unfair Competition - False Advertising - Scope Of Federal Jurisdiction Under Section 43(A) Of Lanham Act, John D. Kelly S.Ed.
Unfair Competition - False Advertising - Scope Of Federal Jurisdiction Under Section 43(A) Of Lanham Act, John D. Kelly S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
Plaintiff brought suit in a state court seeking injunctive relief, alleging unfair competition by defendant in manufacturing and selling slavish copies of plaintiff's swimsuits. One of the six causes of action alleged in the complaint was based on a violation of section 43 (a) of the Lanham Act. Defendant had the suit removed to federal district court. On motion to remand, held, denied. The alleged violation of section 43 (a) created a federal right of action within the original jurisdiction of the federal courts. Catalina, Inc. v. Gem Swimwear, Inc., (S.D. N.Y. 1958) 162 F. Supp. 911.
Insurance - Federal Regulation - Authority Of Federal Trade Commission To Regulate False Advertising By Insurance Companies As Affected By The Mccarran-Ferguson Act, Charles C. Moore S.Ed.
Insurance - Federal Regulation - Authority Of Federal Trade Commission To Regulate False Advertising By Insurance Companies As Affected By The Mccarran-Ferguson Act, Charles C. Moore S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
Petitioner, the FTC, issued cease and desist orders prohibiting respondent health and accident insurance companies, doing business in interstate commerce, from disseminating allegedly false and deceptive advertising through the medium of local agents. These orders, issued pursuant to the FTC act, sought to proscribe such activity both in states that had statutes prohibiting unfair and deceptive practices and in states that did not. The Courts of Appeals for the Fifth and Sixth Circuits concluded that the FTC had no authority to regulate such advertising in states which had prohibitory legislation. On certiorari to the United States Supreme Court, held, …
The Use Of Survey Evidence In Antitrust Proceedings, William N. Early
The Use Of Survey Evidence In Antitrust Proceedings, William N. Early
Washington Law Review
However, the enforcement agencies have discovered an evidentiary shortcut about which the average antitrust practitioner knows little or nothing. It is with this evidentiary shortcut—survey evidence—that this article deals.
Antitrust Implications From The Use Of Consignment Contracts In The Petroleum Industry
Antitrust Implications From The Use Of Consignment Contracts In The Petroleum Industry
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Antitrust Considerations In Motor Carrier Mergers, Carl H. Fulda
Antitrust Considerations In Motor Carrier Mergers, Carl H. Fulda
Michigan Law Review
Unification of separate independent business enterprises in a single organization may raise important questions of antitrust policy. The entity which emerges may have acquired, as a result of such unification, a market position of such significance that a substantial lessening of competition or even the creation of a monopoly becomes not only possible but probable. This would be apparent whenever opportunities for buyers of the products or services of the new single unit to shop freely, and to make independent decisions as to prices, channels of purchases and selection of suppliers were to be seriously curtailed, or where such curtailment …
Modification Of Consent Decrees: A Proposal To The Antitrust Division, Victor H. Kramer
Modification Of Consent Decrees: A Proposal To The Antitrust Division, Victor H. Kramer
Michigan Law Review
The genius of the Sherman Act has been said to lie in its generality and adaptability. Thus the act has been successfully applied for almost three-quarters of a century to an economy that has been more dynamic than during any comparable period in history.
In 1912, twenty-two years after passage of the act, consent decrees began to be frequently used as a means of settling, without trial, civil antitrust suits brought by the government. Their use became even more popular as a result of the passage in 1914 of section 5 of the Clayton Act. It permitted private plaintiffs seeking …
Regulation Of Business - Sherman Act - Expansion Of Per Se Doctrine Over Tying Agreements, Max H. Bergman S.Ed.
Regulation Of Business - Sherman Act - Expansion Of Per Se Doctrine Over Tying Agreements, Max H. Bergman S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
Through congressional grant defendant's predecessor acquired approximately forty million acres of land, consisting of every alternate section in a twenty to forty mile wide belt on each side of its railroad track from Lake Superior to Puget Sound. Defendant sold about thirty-seven million acres of its holdings and leased the balance. Many of the sales contracts and most of the leases, together covering several million acres of land, contained "preferential routing" clauses which compelled the grantee or lessee to ship all commodities produced or manufactured on the land over defendant's lines, unless competitors' rates were lower or, in some instances, …
Worldmarks And The Antitrust Law, Rudolf Callmann
Worldmarks And The Antitrust Law, Rudolf Callmann
Vanderbilt Law Review
Like all things, trademark rights can also be exploited for sinister purposes. A trademark can, for example, be used in violation of the antitrust laws and no elaborate references need be made to the legislative history of the Lanham Act to demonstrate that the Act was "not intended to undermine the anti-trust laws."' Certain specific provisions of the Act clearly disclose the legislative intent to dissuade a trademark owner from using his mark in violation of the antitrust laws.
The Impact On Business Of Antitrust Decrees, Philip Marcus
The Impact On Business Of Antitrust Decrees, Philip Marcus
Vanderbilt Law Review
Government regulation of business may not be widespread but it is not unknown in this country. The source of such regulation normally,however, is a federal or state statute. Sometimes, as in the case of the Fair Trade Laws, businessmen have even promoted such regulation. Less well known, but often far-reaching, is the regulation of business conduct through antitrust judgments. Needless to say, generally such judgments are not welcomed by those to whom they apply.
About five hundred civil antitrust judgments have been entered in cases brought by the United States under the antitrust laws.' Cease and desist orders of the …
The Legality Of Trade Association Statistical Reporting Under The Antitrust Laws, Harry Kemker
The Legality Of Trade Association Statistical Reporting Under The Antitrust Laws, Harry Kemker
Vanderbilt Law Review
Of the myriad economic functions performed by trade associations,the practice of gathering, compiling, and disseminating trade statistics is doubtless one of the most important.' Although the numerous statistical reporting programs vary markedly in size and scope, it seems safe to say that at least two-thirds of all trade associations indulge in some form of statistical activity. The beginning of this trade association statistical reporting is usually attributed to the theories contained in a book called The New Competition, written by A. J. Eddy and published in 1912. The concept championed by this work was "open competition," and an important part …
Refusal To Sell, Vernon A. Mund
Refusal To Sell, Vernon A. Mund
Vanderbilt Law Review
Today, the business practice of refusal to sell is one of the principal antitrust complaints. However, paradoxically, it is a complaint which receives practically the least amount of attention and relief. Typically, the antitrust agencies treat reports on refusal to sell with the generalized reply that "the seller has the right to choose his own customers." The very number of complaints, however, as well as an economic analysis of the practice itself, points to the need for a reevaluation of this business practice and for a reappraisal of the currently applicable judicial decisions.
As we shall see in the present …
A Note On Concentration Studies And Antitrust Policy, Jesse W. Markham
A Note On Concentration Studies And Antitrust Policy, Jesse W. Markham
Vanderbilt Law Review
The current interest in industrial concentration studies almost rivals that which gave rise to the Temporary National Economic Committee's voluminous output on the subject two decades ago. Indeed,by almost any standard, 1957 was a banner year. The Federal Trade Commission opened the season with its 656-page report in January. The National Industrial Conference Board devoted a session to the topic at its forty-first annual meeting in May. In July the Bureau of the Census published its study performed at the request of the Senate Subcommittee on Antitrust and Monopoly. In June the Chamber of Commerce of the United States issued …
For H.R. Ii And S. Ii To Strengthen The Robinson-Patman Act And Amend The Antitrust Law Prohibiting Price Discrimination, Wright Patman M.C.
For H.R. Ii And S. Ii To Strengthen The Robinson-Patman Act And Amend The Antitrust Law Prohibiting Price Discrimination, Wright Patman M.C.
Vanderbilt Law Review
H. R. 11 and S. 11 are modest and simple legislative proposals.'They provide for no change in our antitrust laws prohibiting price discrimination except to limit somewhat the use of the "good faith" defense. The extent of this limitation goes no further than to assist the Act by providing that the "good faith" defense shall not operate as an absolute and complete bar to a proceeding by the Government against the practices of destructive price discrimination: In other words, those discriminations which would have the effect of substantially lessening competition and tending to create a monopoly may not be defended …
Du Pont General Motors Case, James A. Hart
Du Pont General Motors Case, James A. Hart
Vanderbilt Law Review
On June 3, 1957, the United States Supreme Court, in a four to two decision, held that the du Pont Company's ownership of twenty-three per cent of the voting stock of General Motors had tended to create a monopoly in a line of commerce and thus violated section 71 of the Clayton Act. Justice Brennan wrote the majority opinion and Justice Burton, joined by Justice Frankfurter filed a vigorous dissent. Three of the Justices, Clark, Harlan and Whittaker took no part in the consideration or decision of the case. Hence, a possibility remains that the present Court, with all nine …
The Doctrine Of Misappropriation In Unfair Competition, W. Edward Sell
The Doctrine Of Misappropriation In Unfair Competition, W. Edward Sell
Vanderbilt Law Review
The last fifty years have witnessed a tremendous surge in American businesses, both in number and in size. With this development, new methods of doing business have been devised. Although these methods are generally designed to increase competition in our economy, not all of them are considered ethical or fair. Some of these unfair or unethical practices are now controlled, within limitations, by the Federal Trade Commission. The remaining acts or practices must be controlled by other means within the framework of the law. The legal touchstone in such instances is "unfair competition." One of the greatest problems in this …
Corporations - Clayton Act - Service Of Process On Alien Corporations Through Their Local Subsidiaries, George R. Haydon Jr.
Corporations - Clayton Act - Service Of Process On Alien Corporations Through Their Local Subsidiaries, George R. Haydon Jr.
Michigan Law Review
Two affiliated German corporations, one of which is the defendant, established a jointly owned subsidiary in New York. Three members of the subsidiary's five-man board of directors are officers or directors of the German parents, while a fourth is a former employee sent to this country to manage the subsidiary. The American company is devoted exclusively to the business of the German parents. It assists in the negotiation of contracts, although it has no power to bind the parents, advises with respect to patents, and makes infrequent sales and purchases. For these services, it receives a flat fee plus a …
The Adequacy Of State Insurance Rate Regulation: The Mccarran-Ferguson Act In Historical Perspective, Spencer L. Kimball, Ronald N. Boyce
The Adequacy Of State Insurance Rate Regulation: The Mccarran-Ferguson Act In Historical Perspective, Spencer L. Kimball, Ronald N. Boyce
Michigan Law Review
Any substantial inquiry into the functioning of the insurance commissioner in American society poses the question, at the threshold of the inquiry, whether state regulatory power over the insurance business is likely to continue, or whether insurance will fall increasingly under the aegis of the federal government. This article seeks to ascertain the minimum conditions for the permanent preservation of state regulatory power over the insurance business, and to determine whether they are now satisfied. These conditions may be summarily stated: the Congress of the United States has shown its willingness to apply federal antitrust and marketing legislation to the …
Fundamentos Del Derecho Procesal Civil, Edward Ivan Cueva
Fundamentos Del Derecho Procesal Civil, Edward Ivan Cueva
Edward Ivan Cueva
No abstract provided.
Group Buying Under The Robinson-Patman Act: The Automotive Parts Cases, Robert B. Fleming
Group Buying Under The Robinson-Patman Act: The Automotive Parts Cases, Robert B. Fleming
Buffalo Law Review
No abstract provided.
Monopolies—Restraint Of Trade—Exclusive Automobile Dealerships, Anthony J. Colucci Jr.
Monopolies—Restraint Of Trade—Exclusive Automobile Dealerships, Anthony J. Colucci Jr.
Buffalo Law Review
Packard Motor Car Company v. Webster Motor Car Company, 243 F.2d 418 (D.C. Cir. 1957).
Unfair Trade In The Simulation Of Rival Goods - The Test Of Commercial Necessity, John J. Galbally
Unfair Trade In The Simulation Of Rival Goods - The Test Of Commercial Necessity, John J. Galbally
Villanova Law Review
No abstract provided.
Regulation Of Business - Refusals To Deal - Use To Effectuate Resale Price Maintenance, Raymond J. Dittrich, Jr. S.Ed.
Regulation Of Business - Refusals To Deal - Use To Effectuate Resale Price Maintenance, Raymond J. Dittrich, Jr. S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
This comment will examine the legal questions arising from a manufacturer's exercise of his right to maintain resale prices by refusing to deal with price cutters in an attempt to determine whether this exists only as an abstract right, or whether it can be translated into legally effective business practices.
Is Price-Fixing Per Se Reasonable? A Discussion, Arval Morris
Is Price-Fixing Per Se Reasonable? A Discussion, Arval Morris
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.