LINDLEY, Circuit Judge.
Plaintiffs, constituting three partnerships and one individual separately engaged in operating retail liquor stores in Chicago and suburbs, brought this action in the District Court under Title 15 U.S.C.A. § 15, "as a class action for the benefit of the plaintiffs and all the parties named in plaintiffs' Exhibit 1 attached * * * in pursuance of the provisions of Rule 23(a) (3) of the Federal Rules of Procedure [28 U.S.C.A.]," averring that all these parties and others not specifically named constitute a class so numerous as to make it impractical to bring all of them before the court; that all the persons mentioned in the exhibit have authorized institution and prosecution of the action in their behalf; that plaintiffs will fairly insure adequate representation of all members of the class; that the rights sought to be enforced are several but embrace common questions of law and fact, and that common relief is sought.
Plaintiffs charged further that Anheuser-Busch, Incorporated, designated as primary defendant, has been, for a long period of time, engaged in the production and wholesale distribution of Budweiser beer, which it has shipped from St. Louis, Missouri,
Plaintiffs averred further, as facts sustaining their class action, that during all of the period mentioned the primary defendant has discriminated in prices between all members of plaintiffs' class on the one hand and the secondary defendants on the other in the sale of its beer at wholesale and has extended to the secondary defendants discriminatory services and facilities in connection with the sale of its beer not accorded to plaintiffs; that, as a result of the discriminations, the secondary defendants have been able to and did undersell members of the class; that the discriminations have substantially lessened competition, tend to create a monopoly in the line of commerce of primary defendant's beer and to injure, destroy or prevent competition of plaintiffs with the secondary defendants; that such discriminations have been reasonably likely to lessen, injure, destroy or prevent competition; that the secondary defendants have knowingly received the price and service discriminations aforesaid, all in violation of the Clayton Act, as amended by the Robinson-Patman Act, 15 U.S.C.A. § 13, and that, as a result of these practices, members of plaintiffs' class have been injured in their competition and in their respective businesses and damaged in the several sums shown after their names in Exhibit 1. Plaintiffs prayed that defendants be restrained and enjoined from continuing to violate the Act and that judgments enter in favor of the several plaintiffs, the total claims of the named members aggregating some $603,000.
On motion of defendants the court ordered that the complaint be stricken, with leave to one of the partnerships to file an amended complaint stating its claim in separate counts; that the class action be dismissed; that all other plaintiffs named in the complaint be dropped as plaintiffs in this cause but have leave to file separate amended complaints setting forth their separate claims, within 30 days. Thereupon plaintiffs elected not to proceed further but rather to stand upon the complaint as filed. The court then ordered the action dismissed for non-compliance with its order. This appeal followed.
Plaintiffs contend here that the court erred in granting the joint and several motions mentioned and in entering judgment of dismissal against them.
Under Title 15, 15 U.S.C.A. § 15 any person injured in his business or property by reason of anything forbidden in the anti-trust laws may sue and recover three-fold actual damages sustained. Under this section it is obviously the duty of the plaintiff to aver and prove that he has been injured in his business or property and that this injury was caused by acts forbidden by the anti-trust laws. In the present case plaintiffs, recognizing this burden, averred that they had been injured in their respective businesses by violations of three provisions of Section 13: 1) discrimination in prices between them and other purchasers from the primary defendant, the effect of which was to lessen, injure or prevent competition; 2) discrimination in favor of other purchasers as against plaintiffs in furnishing services or facilities connected with the sale of the commodity purchased upon terms not accorded to plaintiff on proportionately equal terms; 3) as against the secondary defendants, that they knowingly induced or received discriminations in price from the primary defendant. Thus the averments cover the specific elements which the statute prescribes as essentials of the cause of action. Beegle v. Thomson, 7 Cir., 138 F.2d 875.
The only possible category in which the present suit may be placed is that of a "spurious" class action, that is, one where the rights sought to be enforced are several and there exists a common question of law or fact affecting the several rights and common relief is sought. As this court said in Weeks v. Bareco Oil Co., 7 Cir., 125 F.2d 84, the rule permitting such class actions applies where the defendants jointly act to the injury of persons so numerous that their voluntary unanimous joinder is improbable and impracticable and, though the judgments will be several, a common determination is desired. The thought back of the rule creating this sort of class action is that its recognition will avoid a multiplicity of suits. Knowles v. War Damage Corp., 83 U.S.App.D.C. 388, 171 F.2d 15, certiorari denied 336 U.S. 914, 69 S.Ct. 604, 93 L.Ed. 1077.
The specific question presented to us, then, is whether the present cause comes within the class of spurious class actions defined by the rule. The action is clearly one in which the rights sought to be enforced are several. Such class actions have been approved where separate employees join to recover compensation under the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 201 et seq., provided a common question of law or practice is involved; where property owners complain severally of one injury committed by a railroad; where stockholders seek to recover separate damages for fraudulent stock sales; where investors seek to recover the several considerations paid for securities, and other similar cases.
In Oppenheimer v. F. J. Young & Co., Inc., 2 Cir., 144 F.2d 387, 390, the complaint charged that defendants entered into a conspiracy to defraud plaintiffs, whereby, occupying fiduciary relationships, they misrepresented to various bondholders what the debtor was willing to pay for bonds held by plaintiffs. The court held that there was "a common question of fact affecting the rights of all the holders of stamped bonds or certificates of deposit for
In McGrath, Atty. Gen., v. Tadayasu Abo, 9 Cir., 186 F.2d 766, 769, Japanese who had rescinded their United States citizenship, brought a class action in behalf of the named plaintiffs and others similarly situated. The complaint claimed a several right in each one of the members of the classes to rescission of the renunciations under certain conditions existing during the late war with Japan. The court held that the action was, correctly speaking, a spurious class action. "We interpret the phrase `common relief' as covering cases where all the plaintiffs seek the same type of relief, such as damages or an injunction, as distinguished from cases where some plaintiffs seek an injunction while others seek damages. In this we follow the ruling of the Second Circuit in which it is held that Rule 23(a) (3) covers cases where each plaintiff has a right to recover damages for a wrong done all, even though the amount of damages recoverable differs for the different plaintiffs. Oppenheimer v. F. J. Young & Co., 2 Cir., 144 F.2d 387, 390. The same principle was stated by the Seventh Circuit in Weeks v. Bareco Oil Co., 7 Cir., 125 F.2d 84, 88."
In Schatte v. International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees and Moving Picture Machine Operators of the United States and Canada, 9 Cir., 183 F.2d 685, 687, where plaintiff and 25 other individuals brought an action for damages arising out of loss of employment, and the complaint purported to be brought on behalf of 2000 other individuals similarly situated, but each plaintiff's claim was individual and several, and no specific property could be affected by the action, the action was held to be a spurious class suit under the Federal Rules. The court said "Such a suit is merely a permissive joinder device in which the right and liability of each individual plaintiff is distinct and no member of the `class' is bound by a judgment who does not join as plaintiff or intervenor."
In Knowles v. War Damage Corp., 83 U.S.App.D.C. 388, 171 F.2d 15, two plaintiffs, on behalf of themselves as holders of policies of war damage insurance and on behalf also of all other holders of similar policies, sought to require the defendant to file an accounting of insurance premiums received by it and to refund to the policy holders the net premiums in its possession. The court held that this was a spurious class action under 23(a) (3). See also Independence Shares Corp. v. Deckert, 3 Cir., 108 F.2d 51, reversed on other grounds in 311 U.S. 282, 61 S.Ct. 229, 85 L.Ed. 189; Baker v. S. A. Healy Co., 302 Ill.App. 634, 24 N.E.2d 228; Hunter v. Southern Indemnity Underwriters, Inc., D.C., 47 F.Supp. 242.
Though we have referred to other court's decisions, we think there can be no question but that it is the law of this circuit that persons claiming to have been injured in their respective businesses by another's conspiracy to violate Sections 1 and 2 of the Anti-trust Act constitute a so-called spurious class for which less than
Defendants insist, however, that the present suit is not within this ruling. They argue earnestly, as to the applicability of Rule 20(a), that the several rights of the various plaintiffs do not arise out of the same "series of transactions or occurrences" and that no questions of law or fact "common to all of them will arise in the action." In support of their contention that plaintiffs do not constitute a class within Rule 23(a) (3), they assert that there is no "common question of law or fact affecting the several rights" of the members of the alleged class and that no "common relief is sought." In both connections they argue that the tort complained of is not the same as to each complaining party; that a single conspiracy is not charged but that each plaintiff has his own controversy with defendants wholly lacking in the essentials for maintenance of a spurious class suit.
Whether defendants' view is a realistic one must be determined from the complaint and affidavits submitted upon the motion.
But, it is urged, no "common relief" is sought. Rule 23(a)(3) provides that in a spurious class action, not only must there be common questions of law and fact "affecting the several rights" but also that "common relief" must be sought. Therefore, defendants say that, inasmuch as the causes of action are "several," as distinguished from "inter-dependent," Knowles v. War Damages Corp., 83 U.S.App.D.C. 388, 171 F.2d 15, 18, this final requisite has not been met.
Obviously, the phrase "common relief," as used in the rule, was not intended to mean joint relief, for the expressed purpose is to permit joinder of parties who have several or separable causes of action. Hence to say that "common" means "joint" is to defeat the very purpose of the rule. "Common relief" for persons having separate causes of action who may recover only several judgments, it seems to us, must mean, in order to give life to the purpose of the rule, relief emanating from the same original source, either by way of grant, contract, tort or statute, where the claims of all beneficiaries flow from the same fountain but are allowed not in a joint judgment but in several judgments. Strictly speaking, this may not be common relief in many senses, but it is separate relief for each growing out of a common source of right to recover. The same character of right to recover exists in several; in that sense, when there are common issues of fact and law, we think, the relief is common within the meaning of the rule. To hold otherwise is to destroy the so-called spurious class entirely, for, if the relief to be recovered by several members of the class in separate judgments must be a common or joint judgment, then the whole provision is meaningless. The rule clearly contemplates, we think, relief in the form of separate similar judgments, emanating from the same source in law and grounded upon common questions of fact.
It is obvious that what we have said also disposes of the questions presented as to Rule 20(a), under which persons may join their several causes of action in one suit, if they arise out of the same "series of transactions or occurrences" and if "any question of law or fact common to all of them will arise in the action." Clearly this rule is an innovation upon common law practice. It has been argued that it is conducive to multifariousness of suits. But it is the law of the land and, inasmuch as Rule 23(a) (3) is, in its essence, a permissive joinder rule rather than a rule defining a recognizable class, it is obvious that the two rules are, as to the intents and purposes involved here, equivalents. Everything we have said as to one applies with equal force to the other. Cases dealing with Rule 20 (a) applying a rationale such as we have announced include: Lansburgh v. Clark, 75 U.S.App.D.C. 339, 127 F.2d 331; Farmers Co-Op. Oil Co. v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co., 8 Cir., 133 F.2d 101; Alabama Independent Service Station Ass'n, Inc., v. Shell Petroleum Corp., D.C., 28 F.Supp. 386; Middleton v. Coxen, D.C., 25 F.Supp. 632; McNorrill v. Gibbs, D.C., 45 F.Supp. 363.
We fully appreciate the difficulty encountered by trial courts in attempting to give to these two rules the force we have attributed to them. Both, interpreted as we feel they must be, are innovations at odds with earlier ideas of proper law and equity practices. It was once axiomatic that multifariousness of claims was to be avoided and that multiplicity of parties could be permitted only in cases far afield from those of the so-termed spurious class. The latter, obviously, has unity only as an expedient invented and introduced into modern practice for the purpose of reducing multiplicity of suits and speeding up trials. We know the invention has novelty; whether it possesses also the other quality sought, utility, is not yet fully proved. However, sensing as we do that these novel insertions into our rules of procedure were inspired by certain specific supposedly beneficient purposes, it is our duty to give them effect. Perhaps in a case such as this, where each of the parties is entitled to a jury trial, where the transactions are voluminous, complex and intricate and the possible parties so numerous as to be beyond possibility of retention in the memory of any trier of the facts, it may eventuate that the expedient provided is not efficacious in improving practice and procedure. But that possibility does not authorize us so to interpret the rules as to nullify them.
One of the requirements imposed upon the plaintiffs was that they file separate amended complaints, stating their claims in separate counts. This complaint alleges violation of only one act, the Robinson-Patman Act, a violation of each of one of its sections, 15 U.S.C.A. 13(a), (e) and (f), that is, (1) price discrimination, (2) discrimination in services or facilities and (3) a claim against the secondary defendants for knowingly receiving the discriminations. Each was set up in numbered paragraphs, as required by Rule 10(b), F.R. C.P. However, the District Court was of the opinion that the complaint should have been divided into separate counts, each of which set up each separate transaction. We think the court unduly limited plaintiffs in this connection. The complaint, which is a simple direct statement of the causes of action of plaintiffs, in conformity with the spirit of the rules, avoids repetition of basic allegations and is within such cases as James Richardson & Sons v. Conners Marine Co., 2 Cir., 141 F.2d 226, 228. In the course of its opinion there, the court said: "Respondent asserts that there should have been a separate statement of a separate cause of action as to each barge, because the Produce Exchange form stated that each boatload, or parcel if less than a boatload, was to be deemed a separate charter. Since it is now recognized that repetitive verbosity does not make for clarity, refinements of separate statement are not now in favor, Original Ballet Russe, Ltd., v. Ballet Theatre, Inc., 2 Cir., 133 F.2d 187; Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, rule 10 (b), 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723(c); and though a formal requirement of separation is still retained in the admiralty rules, yet it should be construed in a practical way. We cannot see any possible gain to respondent by forcing from 17 to 21 repetitions of the basic allegations". This view we think is in accord with the purposes of the rules. Consequently we consider the complaint sufficient. Of course, this conclusion does not deprive the defendants of remedies provided by the rules looking to the disclosure of further information by plaintiffs when and if there is occasion for such relief.
Defendants argue in their brief that plaintiffs do not adequately represent their class members. However, we fail to find in the record that this contention was presented to the District Court or that the District Judge's attention was directed to it. We think, therefore, the point is not before us for review. Despite this conclusion, however, on the face of the record as it is presented to us, in the absence of any showing other than that made out in the complaint and the affidavits, the adequacy of representation of plaintiffs in behalf of
The judgment is reversed with directions to the District Court to proceed in accord with the announcements herein.
PER CURIAM.
In their petition for rehearing defendants ask us to "remand the case for further determination with regard to the question whether or not the case actually arises out of the same series of transactions." In the interest of regularity of proceedings we think the request must be denied. We have held merely that, upon the pleadings submitted, supplemented by an affidavit as to what plaintiffs expect to prove, a prima facie case is made out, i. e. a sufficient showing of a right to join the plaintiffs in one action under the two rules discussed in our opinion. What may happen hereafter as the cause progresses is not before us; indeed, it can not be foreseen. Consequently we think it improper on our part to remand a cause where we have held the pleadings sufficient, to hear again the very question upon which the parties were heard in the District Court and, upon review, in this court. All future proceedings, all questions of sufficiency of the evidence to support the pleading, and the multitudinous questions which arise in the course of a trial de novo are for the trial court; not for a court of review. The trial tribunal must remain unhampered by any preconceived ideas on our part upon anything other than the right of plaintiffs to attempt to prove their claim.
The petition for rehearing is denied.
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