| United States. Courts - Antitrust law - 1917 - 988 pages
...Supreme Court construing the same, nor the Clayton Act, Syllabus. has changed the law in this particular. We have not yet reached the stage where the selection...trader's customers is made for him by the Government. The order is affirmed. KANSAS CITY SOUTHERN KY. CO. v. LUSK ET AL. (Circuit Court of Appeals, Eighth... | |
| Paper industry - 1915 - 460 pages
...which was concurred in by Judges Coxe and Rogers. The decision says: "We have not reached the state where the selection of a trader's customers is made for him by the government." * * • "Certainly it is no offense against common law, statute, public policy or good morals for a... | |
| Electronic journals - 1916 - 788 pages
...of the Supreme Court construing the same, nor the Clayton Act, changed the law in this particular. We have not yet reached the stage where the selection...trader's customers is made for him by the government. The correctness of the decision of the court in so far as the Clayton Act is concerned may be conceded.... | |
| Reinhold Klotz - German language - 1916 - 706 pages
...prejudice or malice. With his reasons neither the public nor third persons have any legal concern."1 "We have not yet reached the stage, where the selection...trader's customers is made for him by the government." This is the cogent sentence which closes, and at the same time summarizes, the opinion of Judge Lacombe,... | |
| Electronic journals - 1916 - 770 pages
...of the Supreme Court construing the same, nor the Clayton Act, changed the law in this particular. We have not yet reached the stage where the selection...trader's customers is made for him by the government. The correctness of the decision of the court in so far as the Clayton Act is concerned may be conceded.... | |
| John Maynard Harlan, Lewis Wilson McCandless - Antitrust law - 1916 - 198 pages
...(227 Fed. 46, 49), Lacombe, J., held that neither under the Sherman Law, nor the Clayton Law, had we "yet reached the stage where the selection of a trader's customers is made for him by the government", the trader's business not constituting a monopoly or a quasi-monopoly. Cf., also, note 36, supra. The... | |
| John Maynard Harlan, Lewis Wilson McCandless - Antitrust law - 1916 - 202 pages
...(227 Fed. 46, 49), Lacombe, J., held that neither under the Sherman Law, nor the Clayton Law, had we "yet reached the stage where the selection of a trader's customers is made for him by the government", the trader's business not constituting a monopoly or a quasi-monopoly. Cf., also, note 36, supra. The... | |
| Current events - 1916 - 688 pages
...opinion, which was concurred in by Judges Coxe and Rogers, said: "We have not reached the stage where a selection of a trader's customers is made for him by the government." Dismissing the Sherman law allegation, the judge said the defendant was not a monopoly, and had a right... | |
| Current events - 1916 - 682 pages
...opinion, which was concurred in by Judges Coxe and Rogers, said: "We have not reached the stage where a selection of a trader's customers is made for him by the government." Dismissing the Sherman law allegation, the judge said the defendant was not a monopoly, and had a right... | |
| |