1. The "Prohibition Commissioner" and "Prohibition Director,"
are no more than mere agent and subordinate of the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue, provided for and designated under regulation
adopted by him pursuant to the National Prohibition Act. P.
265 U. S.
391.
2. Pharmacists sued to restrain a local prohibition director
from refusing them permits to buy liquors to be dispensed for
nonbeverage purposes in excess of a limit fixed in their permit to
sell as issued by the Prohibition Commissioner, the plaintiffs
denying the legality of the restriction even if authorized by
regulations of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue.
Held
that the Commissioner of Internal Revenue was a necessary party.
Id.
3. A bill which is defective for want of a necessary party
should be dismissed on that ground, and not upon the merits. P.
265 U. S. 393.
277 F. 632 reversed.
Appeal from a decree of the circuit court of appeals which
affirmed a decree of the district court dismissing a bill brought
to restrain a "prohibition director" from giving effect to a
restriction contained in the plaintiffs' permit to sell
intoxicating liquors.
Page 265 U. S. 389
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit for an injunction against the federal prohibition
director for California restraining him from giving
Page 265 U. S. 390
effect to a particular restriction embodied in a permit, issued
under the National Prohibition Act, authorizing the plaintiffs, who
are licensed pharmacists conducting a general drug business in San
Francisco, to use and sell in such business intoxicating liquors
for other than beverage purposes. The district court dismissed the
bill as not stating a cause of action, and the circuit court of
appeals affirmed the decree on the ground that the suit could not
be maintained without making the Commissioner of Internal Revenue a
party defendant. 277 F. 632. The plaintiffs prosecute this
appeal.
The National Prohibition Act, c. 85, Tit. II, 41 Stat. 307,
commits its administration to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
authorizes him to prescribe regulations for carrying out its
provisions, and declares in clause 7 of § 1 that any act
authorized to be done by the Commissioner "may be performed by any
assistant or agent designated by him for that purpose."
The act directly prohibits the manufacture, sale, etc., of
intoxicating liquors for beverage purposes, and further provides in
§ 3 that liquor for nonbeverage purposes may be manufactured,
purchased, sold, etc., "but only as herein provided," and, in
§ 6, that no one shall manufacture, sell, purchase, etc., any
liquor "without first obtaining a permit from the commissioner so
to do;" that no permit shall be issued to anyone to sell at retail
unless the selling is to be through a pharmacist designated in the
permit and licensed under the state law to compound and dispense
medicine under a physician's prescription; that every permit shall
be "signed by the Commissioner or his authorized agent" and shall
"designate and limit the acts that are permitted;" that the
Commissioner "shall prescribe the form of all permits," and that,
where he refuses a permit, the applicant "may have a review of his
decision before a court of equity."
Page 265 U. S. 391
The regulations prescribed provide for and designate a general
agent of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, called a prohibition
commissioner, who is authorized, among other things, to issue and
sign permits to sell liquor at retail for medicinal purposes
through licensed pharmacists, and also a local agent in each state
or district, called a prohibition director, who is authorized,
among other things, to issue and sign permits to purchase liquor to
be used and sold under the permits last mentioned. The regulations
further contain a provision that:
"Every permit will clearly and specifically designate and limit
the acts that are permitted and the time when and the place where
such acts may be performed."
The permit held by the plaintiffs was issued and signed by the
prohibition commissioner, and the restriction therein of which the
plaintiffs complain says "this permit is issued for 100 gallons of
distilled spirits and 5 gallons of wine per quarterly period." The
director adhered to the restriction by refusing to give the
plaintiffs permits to purchase in excess of those quantities. The
plaintiffs allege that the restriction was put in the permit
without any lawful authority; that, if it be authorized by the
regulations, the latter are void, and that the director, by giving
effect to it, is wrongfully subjecting the plaintiffs to
irreparable injury.
The act and the regulations make it plain that the prohibition
commissioner and the prohibition director are mere agents and
subordinates of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue. They act
under his direction, and perform such acts only as he commits to
them by the regulations. They are responsible to him, and must
abide by his direction. What they do is as if done by him. He is
the public's real representative in the matter, and, if the
injunction were granted, his are the hands which would be tied. All
this being so, he should have been made a party defendant -- the
principal one -- and given
Page 265 U. S. 392
opportunity to defend his direction and regulations.
Litchfield v. Register and
Receiver, 9 Wall. 575,
76 U. S. 578;
Plested v. Abbey, 228 U. S. 42,
228 U. S. 50-51.
In principle,
Warner Valley Stock Co. v. Smith,
165 U. S. 28, is
well in point. There, an injunction was sought against the
Secretary of the Interior and the Commissioner of the General Land
Office to prevent them from giving effect to prior orders of the
Secretary alleged to be outside his powers and hurtful to the
plaintiff. While the suit was pending, the Secretary resigned his
office, and there was at that time no way of bringing his successor
into the suit. So the question arose whether it could be continued
against the Commissioner alone. The answer was in the negative, the
Court saying, p.
165 U. S.
34:
"The purpose of the bill was to control the action of the
Secretary of the Interior, the principal relief sought was against
him, and the relief asked against the Commissioner of the General
Land Office was only incidental, and by way of restraining him from
executing the orders of his official head. To maintain such a bill
against the subordinate officer alone, without joining his
superior, whose acts are alleged to have been unlawful, would be
contrary to settled rules of equity pleading. Calvert on Parties
(2d ed.) bk. 3, c. 13."
"This is well exemplified by a decision of Lord Chancellor
Hardwicke. Under acts of Parliament, appointing commissioners to
build 50 new churches, appropriating money to support the
ministers, and providing that the moneys appropriated should be
paid to a treasurer, not one of the commissioners, but appointed by
the crown, and should be by him disbursed and applied according to
orders of the commissioners, Lord Hardwicke held that a bill by a
minister of one of the churches to recover his stipend, and to have
a fund in the treasurer's hands invested as required by the acts,
could not be maintained against the treasurer alone, without
joining any of the
Page 265 U. S. 393
commissioners, and said:"
"This is one of the most extraordinary bills I ever remember,
and there is no foundation for relief, either in law or equity. It
is brought against Mr. Blackerby, who is nothing but an officer
under the commissioners for building the 50 new churches. It would
be absurd if a bill should lie against a person who is only an
officer and subordinate to others, and has no directory power. . .
. I should think the commissioners only, and not the treasurer,
ought to have been parties, for it is absurd to make a person who
acts ministerially the sole party."
"
Vernon v. Blackerby, 2 Atk. 144, 146; s.c.,
Barnardiston Ch. 377."
We agree with the circuit court of appeals that the Commissioner
of Internal Revenue was a party without whose presence the suit
could not be maintained, but the decree of the district court
should not have been affirmed. The decree was on the merits, and,
as it was given in the absence of a necessary party, it should not
have been permitted to stand.
On the record as brought here, it is not certain that the amount
requisite to give the district court jurisdiction was involved, but
that question becomes immaterial in view of the conclusion reached
on the other point.
Decree reversed, with directions to dismiss the bill for
want of a necessary party.