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Articles 1 - 26 of 26
Full-Text Articles in Law
Antitrust Laws And The Territorial Principle, G. H. Haight
Antitrust Laws And The Territorial Principle, G. H. Haight
Vanderbilt Law Review
During the past few years there has been extensive discussion regarding the extraterritorial application of antitrust laws and some attempts have been made to consider the matter in the context of public international law principles.' Notwithstanding objections raised by foreign governments to court orders and subpoenas directed to foreign corporations in relation to their activities abroad, some commentators still appear to consider that there are few, if any, limitations imposed by law upon such assertions of penal power. This position requires reexamination, and in undertaking a review it will be relevant to consider the nature and effect of new antitrust …
Exclusive Arrangements And Refusal To Deal Problems, Reynolds C. Seitz
Exclusive Arrangements And Refusal To Deal Problems, Reynolds C. Seitz
Vanderbilt Law Review
Justification for including a discussion on exclusive dealing arrangements and on refusal to deal decisions in a symposium devoted to trade practices rests upon the practical consideration that there exists on the part of business management a considerable interest in the two commercial tools.
Business executives find appeal in the prospect of using a contract calling for exclusive dealing.' Those engaged in commerce have for a variety of purposes frequently employed as a lever the refusal to deal.
Possible antitrust implications in the use of the two devices has not always been understood by business. In recent years, however, the …
A New Approach To Resale Price Maintenance, James A. Maclachlan
A New Approach To Resale Price Maintenance, James A. Maclachlan
Vanderbilt Law Review
Resale price maintenance has had a lively legal history. After court decisions under the Sherman Act and the Federal Trade Commission Act had discouraged it in the first third of the current century,' it was encouraged by Fair Trade Acts in so many states as to develop an impractical cleavage between state and federal law. Congress responded by passing the Miller-Tidings Act in 1937. This made the relevant antitrust laws inapplicable to resale price maintenance contracts valid by the law of the state where resale is to be made. The amendment conformed in essential respects to the structure of the …
Legal, Economic And Political Considerations Involved In Mergers, Joseph W. Burns
Legal, Economic And Political Considerations Involved In Mergers, Joseph W. Burns
Vanderbilt Law Review
Although the merger statute--section 7 of 'the Clayton Act'--was enacted in 1914, it was forty years before it assumed any importance in the antitrust field. The original statute, applicable to acquisitions of stock but not to acquisitions of assets, was wholly ineffective to prevent mergers. Enforcement efforts were insignificant...
If Congress expected the 1950 amendment to solve all the merger problems which were discussed prior to its enactment, this expectation has not been realized. Congressional committees in both the House and Senate have instituted investigations and held public hearings which have indicated considerable dissatisfaction with the effectiveness of section 7 …
Statutory Restrictions On Selling Below Cost, Homer Clark
Statutory Restrictions On Selling Below Cost, Homer Clark
Vanderbilt Law Review
The rules of the American game of competition are numerous, diverse and often inexplicable, but none of them is as dubious in purpose or as devious in operation as those found in the statutes prohibiting sales below cost. Such statutes have been enacted in the overwhelming majority of states,' the earliest ones dating back to the Great Depression. Indeed their philosophy has infected the federal antitrust laws. That the impetus back of these statutes was not just a product of depression fears and frustrations is shown by their passage after the depression was over in some states, and during the …
Senate Bill No. Ii And Antitrust Policy, Kenneth S. Carlston
Senate Bill No. Ii And Antitrust Policy, Kenneth S. Carlston
Vanderbilt Law Review
The history of the judicial interpretation of the Sherman Act' is a history of the legislative process working through the mechanisms of the judicial process. Starting with an act phrased in the most general of terms, nearly seventy years of judicial administration have developed a system of interdependent postulates analogous to legislative norms. None of these postulates can be considered as prevailing over all others. But the binding thread of the Sherman Act is the proposition that the market shall be dynamic, manifesting sufficient energy through price competition by the organizations participating in the market to ensure that the advances …
Federal Control In The Food And Drug Industries, Thomas W. Christopher
Federal Control In The Food And Drug Industries, Thomas W. Christopher
Vanderbilt Law Review
If the attention or lack of attention law reviews give to a subject is indicative of the amount of governmental control therein, then one would conclude that there is little federal regulation in the food and drug fields. The fact is, however, that there are more than 1,200 pages of federal statutes and administrative regulations affecting the food and drug industries, and no industry is more tightly controlled. The antitrust, securities, and labor statutes, for example, are, if anything, less stringent.
In the main, the approach of food and drug regulation is from a different point of view than that …
The Lawyer's Role Before Litigation, Lee Loevinger
The Lawyer's Role Before Litigation, Lee Loevinger
Vanderbilt Law Review
A lawyer is consulted regarding antitrust aspects of proposed business activities; or regarding the possibility that his client may have a cause of action under some antitrust law. What is his role at this stage? What are his responsibilities? Would these be substantially different if the client's problems had no antitrust element?
The system of formulating legal principles and studying and teaching law on the basis of the decisions of litigated cases has one serious shortcoming, at least, in its tendency to obscure the dual role of the lawyer: first as counsel, and second as advocate. Both lawyers and laymen …
Regulation Of Business - Sherman Act - Effect Of Trade-Mark On Scope Of Relevant Market, Robert H. Kapp S. Ed.
Regulation Of Business - Sherman Act - Effect Of Trade-Mark On Scope Of Relevant Market, Robert H. Kapp S. Ed.
Michigan Law Review
Defendants are American corporations marketing trade-marked toilet goods obtained from their French affiliates. In each case the French company transferred to the American company trademark rights covering imported products. Pursuant to section 526 of the Tariff Act of 1930 defendants filed with the Bureau of Customs certificates of registration of these trade-marks for the purpose of preventing the competitive importation of products bearing the same trade-marks. In an action by the government charging that utilization of section 526 by each defendant constitutes an attempt to monopolize and a monopolization of the importation and sale of these trade-marked commodities in violation …
Federal Procedure - Mandamus - Power Of Courts Of Appeal, Jerome K. Walsh, Jr. S.Ed.
Federal Procedure - Mandamus - Power Of Courts Of Appeal, Jerome K. Walsh, Jr. S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
In two related antitrust actions instituted in the District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, an order was entered under rule 53(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure referring the cases to a master for trial because of the "extremely congested calendar" then facing the court. All parties to the· action moved to vacate the order and these motions were denied by the district judge. After appearing before the master to object to the reference, the defendants petitioned the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit praying that a writ of mandamus issue to compel the district judge …
Kittelle & Lamb: Trade Association Law And Practice, H. Thomas Austern
Kittelle & Lamb: Trade Association Law And Practice, H. Thomas Austern
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Trade Association Law and Practice By George P. Lamb and Sumner S. Kittelle, assisted by Carrington Shields.
Benrus Watch Co. Case - Judicial Recognition Of Implied Repeal Of Virginia Fair Trade Act, Frank V. Emmerson
Benrus Watch Co. Case - Judicial Recognition Of Implied Repeal Of Virginia Fair Trade Act, Frank V. Emmerson
William & Mary Law Review
No abstract provided.
Regulation Of Business - Robinson-Patman Act - Injury To Competition Between Buyers Of Auto Parts, A. Duncan Whitaker S.Ed.
Regulation Of Business - Robinson-Patman Act - Injury To Competition Between Buyers Of Auto Parts, A. Duncan Whitaker S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
Petitioner manufactured and sold automobile parts to distributors who resold them to jobbers in interstate commerce. The products were classified into three lines: leaf spring line, coil action line, and piston ring line. A progressive, cumulative discount was given in each line, based upon the aggregate yearly purchases of either a single buyer or a group-buying organization. The Federal Trade Commission charged petitioner with price discrimination in violation of the Robinson-Patman Act. Every customer who testified at the hearing denied that he had been injured competitively by the petitioner's pricing practices. Nevertheless, in view of the substantial price differentials, the …
Regulation Of Business - Sherman Act - Concerted Refusals To Deal Not Illegal Per Se, Gerald D. Rapp
Regulation Of Business - Sherman Act - Concerted Refusals To Deal Not Illegal Per Se, Gerald D. Rapp
Michigan Law Review
The government sought an injunction restraining the members of an organization of independent insurance agents responsible for writing nearly 80 percent of the fire insurance in the Cleveland, Ohio, area from carrying out association regulations. Adherence to the rules was challenged as a conspiracy in restraint of trade and an attempt to monopolize in violation of sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act. The regulations were designed to prevent the members from representing (1) mutual insurance companies, (2) branch office companies which contribute to the agents a portion of their overhead expense and, (3) insurance companies which operate branch …
Anti-Trust Law: The Impact Of The Cellophane Case On The Concept Of Market
Anti-Trust Law: The Impact Of The Cellophane Case On The Concept Of Market
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Regulatory "Executive Privilege" To Withhold Evidence
Regulatory "Executive Privilege" To Withhold Evidence
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Regulation Of Business-Civil Actions Under Section 3 Of The Robinson-Patman Act, Richard E. Day S.Ed.
Regulation Of Business-Civil Actions Under Section 3 Of The Robinson-Patman Act, Richard E. Day S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
In Nashville Milk Co. v. Carnation Co. plaintiff sought to recover treble damages and asked injunctive relief, claiming defendant had sold filled milk at unreasonably low prices for the purpose of destroying competition by plaintiff in its sale of a like product in violation of section 3 of the Robinson-Patman Act. In affirming an order dismissing the complaint, the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit held that a private action may not be maintained for a violation of section 3 of the Robinson-Patman Act. That very same week, the Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit reached a contrary …
Patents - Misues Doctrine - Multiple Licenses With Price-Fixing Provisios As Shermen Act Violation, Herbert A. Bernhard S.Ed.
Patents - Misues Doctrine - Multiple Licenses With Price-Fixing Provisios As Shermen Act Violation, Herbert A. Bernhard S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
In a suit for infringement of a moire process patent, relief was denied by the trial court partially on the ground that plaintiff had misused its patent by violating section 1 of the Sherman Act. Plaintiff had licensed two other moire finishers to use the patented process. Each license contained a proviso that plaintiff could specify the prices the licensee was to charge its customers for finishing cloth with the patented process. On appeal, held, affirmed. It is a violation of the antitrust laws for a patentee to issue more than one license containing price-fixing provisions. Newburgh Moire Co. …
Patents - Licensing - Legality Of Grant-Back Clauses, Eric E. Bergsten S.Ed.
Patents - Licensing - Legality Of Grant-Back Clauses, Eric E. Bergsten S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
There is no authoritative definition of the term "patent grant-back." It has been defined as a clause in a patent license which provides "for license or assignment to the licensor of any improvement patented by the licensee in the products or processes of the licensed patent." In litigated cases grant-back clauses usually appear either in basic patent licenses or in licenses of the products or processes of an industry which the licensor dominates through control of a multitude of overlapping patents.
Edwards: Big Business And The Policy Of Competition, Carl H. Fulda
Edwards: Big Business And The Policy Of Competition, Carl H. Fulda
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Big Business and the Policy of Competition By Corwin D. Edwards.
Antitrust - Resale Price Maintenance - Legality Of Fair Trade Contracts Made By Integrated Firm, John A. Ziegler S.Ed.
Antitrust - Resale Price Maintenance - Legality Of Fair Trade Contracts Made By Integrated Firm, John A. Ziegler S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
Defendant-appellee manufactures its own brand-name line of drug products and is also the largest drug wholesaler in the United States. Its manufactured products are sold through appellee's own wholesale division and to independent wholesalers and retailers. In 1951 appellee entered into resale price maintenance contracts with these independent wholesalers, most of whom competed with appellee's wholesale divisions. The Government then brought an action for an injunction under section 4 of the Sherman Act, restraining the further use of resale price contracts by appellee on the ground that these contracts constituted illegal price fixing under section 1 of the act. The …
Constitutionality Of State Fair Trade Acts, Richard K. Bates
Constitutionality Of State Fair Trade Acts, Richard K. Bates
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Miscellaneous—Agreement To Arbitrate, Robert Miller
Miscellaneous—Agreement To Arbitrate, Robert Miller
Buffalo Law Review
Arbitration between Writers Guild of A. E. Inc. and Prockter Productions, Inc, 1 N. Y. 2d 305, 135 N. E. 2d 204 (1956).
Miscellaneous—Corporations—Stockholders’ Agreements, Robert Miller
Miscellaneous—Corporations—Stockholders’ Agreements, Robert Miller
Buffalo Law Review
Arbitration between Burkin and Katz, 1 N. Y. 2d 570, 136 N. E. 2d 862 (1956).
Ball, Bat And Bar, Harold Seymore
Ball, Bat And Bar, Harold Seymore
Cleveland State Law Review
Most Americans assume that they live under one set of laws which govern everybody. They also think that while monopolies and their abuses were once a problem, regulatory measures have long since eliminated or controlled them. The business of organized baseball proves that both these assumptions are mistaken. Recent operations of some baseball "companies" have underscored the falsity of these assumptions. The baseball business operates under its own complicated body of private law, and has been doing so ever since the business got its real start with the formation of the National League in 1876. Organized baseball is also a …
Monopolies: Interpreting The Qualifying Clause Of Section 7, Clayton Act, C. Gibson Downing
Monopolies: Interpreting The Qualifying Clause Of Section 7, Clayton Act, C. Gibson Downing
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.