United States v. General Electric Co.
United States Supreme Court
272 U.S. 476 (1926)
- Written by Heather Whittemore, JD
Facts
General Electric Co. (defendant) gave Westinghouse a license to make and sell lamps under General Electric’s patents. In return, Westinghouse agreed to sell the lamps at prices fixed by General Electric. The United States government (plaintiff) challenged the license granted by General Electric, arguing that General Electric’s price-fixing violated antitrust laws. The district court ruled in favor of General Electric, and the government appealed.
Rule of Law
Issue
Holding and Reasoning (Taft, C.J.)
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