An International Antitrust Primer: A Businessman's Guide to the International Aspects of United States Antitrust Law and to Key Foreign Antitrust LawsMacmillan, 1974 - 391 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 72
Page 97
... sell outside the country ( for example , into Canada ) because other distributors have been assigned those markets . There is little question that the manufacturer is entitled to desig- nate one distributor as his exclusive distributor ...
... sell outside the country ( for example , into Canada ) because other distributors have been assigned those markets . There is little question that the manufacturer is entitled to desig- nate one distributor as his exclusive distributor ...
Page 151
... sell . In this decision , which in- volved General Electric's licensing of Westinghouse to manufacture and sell patented lamps at the price set by G.E. for its own sales , the Court reasoned that this was a legitimate restriction ...
... sell . In this decision , which in- volved General Electric's licensing of Westinghouse to manufacture and sell patented lamps at the price set by G.E. for its own sales , the Court reasoned that this was a legitimate restriction ...
Page 236
... sell the patented article is not registrable if there are only two parties to the agree- ment . For example , if Company A grants Company B a license under which they agree that A shall sell only in England goods made by use of the ...
... sell the patented article is not registrable if there are only two parties to the agree- ment . For example , if Company A grants Company B a license under which they agree that A shall sell only in England goods made by use of the ...
Contents
chapter | 8 |
Mergers Acquisitions and Joint Ventures | 118 |
chapter 9 | 139 |
Copyright | |
6 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
abroad acquisition action activities agreement amended American anticompetitive apply Article 85 association authority carriers cartel CCH Comm chapter Clayton Act common carrier Common Market competition competitors concerned concerted practices conglomerate merger Congress conspiracy contract corporation Court of Justice decision defendants distributor district court domestic economic effect enforcement enterprises export trade Federal Trade Commission filed firm foreign commerce foreign country Grundig illegal Imperial Chemical Industries important industry interest involved issue jurisdiction license limited manufacturer ment merger monopoly parties patent person personal jurisdiction petition prohibited purchasing Regulation relevant resale restraint of trade Restrictive Practices Robinson-Patman Act rule Section sell Sherman Act statute subsidiary substantial Supp supplier Supreme Court territorial thereof tion trademark transactions Treaty trust laws U.S. antitrust laws U.S. commerce U.S. courts United Kingdom unlawful vertical mergers violation
References to this book
The Health Care Revolution: From Medical Monopoly to Market Competition Carl F. Ameringer Limited preview - 2008 |