1. The Federal Trade Commission can exercise only the
administrative functions delegated to it by statute, not judicial
power, and the circuit court of appeals, on a petition for review,
may not sustain or award relief beyond the authority of the
Commission. P.
274 U. S.
623.
2. The Commission has no authority, under § 5 of the
Federal Trade Commission Act, to require a corporation to divest
itself of physical property which it acquired prior to any action
by the Commission, even though the acquisition and retention of the
property were part of, or a step in, an unfair method of
competition. P.
274 U. S.
624.
7 F.2d 994 affirmed.
Certiorari (269 U.S. 546) to a decree of the circuit court of
appeals which set aside in part an order of the Federal Trade
Commission in a proceeding under § 5 of the Federal Trade
Commission Act against the Eastman Kodak Company, the Allied
Laboratories Association, and other parties. The order required
them to desist from acts held by the Commission to constitute
unfair methods of competition in the manufacture and sale of
positive cinematograph films in interstate and foreign commerce.
The decree below set it aside insofar as it required the Eastman
Company to sell certain laboratories.
Page 274 U. S. 620
MR. JUSTICE SANFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This writ brings up for review a decree of the circuit court of
appeals setting aside in part an order of the Federal Trade
Commission, entered after a due hearing in a proceeding instituted
by it under § 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, [
Footnote 1] by which the Eastman Kodak
Company, the Allied Laboratories Association, Inc., and others were
required to desist from acts held by the Commission to constitute
unfair methods of competition in the manufacture and sale of
positive cinematograph films in interstate and foreign
commerce.
These positive films are raw materials used by film laboratories
in making positive prints of motion pictures that are thrown upon
the screen. The Eastman Company originated the commercial
manufacture of such films many years ago. In 1920, it manufactured
and sold 94 percent of those used in the United States; but in
1921, owing to competition by importers of films manufactured in
foreign countries, its sales decreased to 81 percent. Upon an
agreed statement of facts and the inferences which it drew
therefrom, the Commission found, in effect, that thereafter the
Eastman Company, with the purpose and intent of maintaining its
monopoly and lessening competition in the sale of such films,
acquired three laboratories used in making motion picture prints,
whose combined capacity exceeded that of all the other
laboratories
Page 274 U. S. 621
east of Chicago, and announced its intention of entering upon
the manufacture of such prints; that this constituted an effective
threat of overpowering competitive force which compelled the
members of the Allied Laboratories, an association of manufacturers
of such prints, to enter into an agreement or understanding with
the Eastman Company that the members of the Allied Laboratories
would use American-made films only, to the exclusion of
foreign-made films, so long as the Company did not compete with
them in manufacturing prints, and that the Company, which continued
to maintain its laboratories in readiness for operation, would not
manufacture prints in competition with them so long as they used
American-made films exclusively; that this agreement or
understanding had the effect of lessening competition in the sale
of the films in interstate and foreign commerce and sustaining the
monopoly of the Company therein, and that its ownership of the
three laboratories and their maintenance in condition for operation
continued to have the effect of inducing and compelling the
manufacturers of prints to use only the films made by the
Company.
On these and subsidiary findings, the Commission entered an
order requiring the defendants to cease and desist from combining
and cooperating in restraining competition in the manufacture and
sale of positive films and maintaining the monopoly of the Eastman
Company in their sale in interstate and foreign commerce, by the
agreement and understanding that the members of the Allied
Laboratories would use American-made films exclusively, provided
the Company would not operate its laboratories in competition with
them, and that the Company would not operate its laboratories for
the manufacture of prints in competition with them, provided they
used and continued to use American-made films exclusively, and by
other incidental means. And the Commission
Page 274 U. S. 622
further ordered that, for the purpose of preventing the
maintenance of the monopoly of the Eastman Company in the
manufacture and sale of positive films and restoring competitive
freedom in their distribution and sale, the Company should with due
diligence sell and convey its three laboratories to parties not
directly connected, or indirectly interested, with it.
On a petition by the Eastman Company and the Allied Laboratories
for a review of this order, the circuit court of appeals, without
referring specifically to the purpose for which the Eastman Company
acquired and maintained the three laboratories, held, in substance,
that the reciprocal agreement or understanding between the Eastman
Company and the Allied Laboratories that their members would use
only American-made films in the manufacture of prints, and the
Company would not operate its laboratories for the manufacture of
prints, was an unfair method of competition which the Commission
had authority to prevent, but that, one judge dissenting, it was
not unlawful for the Eastman Company to equip itself to enter upon
the business of manufacturing prints, there being nothing unfair in
its going into this business, and the Commission had no authority
to order the Company to divest itself of the laboratories which it
had lawfully acquired.
Eastman Kodak Co. v. Federal Trade
Commission, 7 F.2d 994. A decree was accordingly entered
affirming the order of the Commission insofar as it required the
Eastman Company and the Allied Laboratories to desist from their
agreement or understanding in reference to the use of American-made
films and the operation of the Eastman Company's laboratories, but
setting aside the order insofar as it required the Eastman Company
to sell its laboratories, and in other incidental respects.
This writ of certiorari was then granted on a petition by the
Commission which challenged the correctness of the decree of the
court of appeals only in respect to the
Page 274 U. S. 623
setting aside of so much of the order as required the Eastman
Company to dispose of its laboratories. 269 U.S. 546.
For present purposes, we do not find it necessary to determine
the questions whether the finding of the Commission as to the
purpose for which the Eastman Company acquired the three
laboratories, based in part at least upon inferences from the
agreed statement of facts, was correct, and whether, in any event,
it was conclusive upon the court of appeals; but, in the absence of
any specific reference to this matter by the court of appeals, we
shall assume the correctness of the Commission's finding, and
proceed, on that assumption, to the consideration of the only other
question presented in the petition for the writ of certiorari and
pressed in this Court, namely, whether the Commission had authority
to order the Eastman Company to sell and convey its laboratories to
other parties.
The proceeding before the Commission was instituted under §
5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, and its authority did not go
beyond the provisions of that section. By these, the Commission is
empowered to prevent the using of "unfair methods of competition"
in interstate and foreign commerce, and, if it finds that "any
unfair method of competition" is being used, to issue an other
requiring the offender "to cease and desist from using such method
of competition." The Commission exercises only the administrative
functions delegated to it by the Act, not judicial powers.
National Harness, etc., Association v. Federal Trade
Commission, 268 F. 705, 707;
Chamber of Commerce v.
Federal Trade Commission, 280 F. 45, 48. It has not been
delegated the authority of a court of equity. And a circuit court
of appeals, on a petition to review its order, is limited to the
question whether or not it has properly exercised the
administrative authority given it by the Act, and may not sustain
or award relief beyond
Page 274 U. S. 624
the authority of the Commission, such review being appellate and
revisory merely, and not an exercise of original jurisdiction by
the court itself.
The question here presented is in effect ruled by
Federal
Trade Commission v. Western Meat Co., 272 U.
S. 554,
272 U. S.
561-563, in which the decisions in
Federal Trade
Commission v. Thatcher Mfg. Co., 5 F.2d 615, and
Swift
& Co. v. Federal Trade Commission, 8 F.2d 595, that were
relied upon by the Commission in its petition for the writ of
certiorari, were reversed by this Court. In that case, it was held
that, although the Commission, having been granted specific
authority by § 11 of the Clayton Act [
Footnote 2] to require a corporation that had acquired
the stock of a competitive corporation in violation of law "to
cease and desist from such violations, and divest itself of the
stock held," might require the corporation to divest itself of such
stock in a manner preventing its use for the purpose of securing
the competitor's property, it could not, after the corporation, by
the use of such stock, had acquired the property of the competitor,
require it to divest itself of the property thus acquired, so as to
restore the prior lawful condition. As to this, we said:
"The Act has no application to ownership of a competitor's
property and business obtained prior to any action by the
Commission, even though this was brought about through stock
unlawfully held. The purpose of the Act was to prevent continued
holding of stock, and the peculiar evils incident thereto. If
purchase of property has produced an unlawful status, a remedy is
provided through the courts."
And they "must administer whatever remedy there may be in such
situation." Distinct reference was there made (p. 561) to § 15
of the Clayton Act, where express provision is made for the
invocation of judicial remedies as need therefor may arise.
Page 274 U. S. 625
So here the Commission had no authority to require that the
Company divest itself of the ownership of the laboratories which it
had acquired prior to any action by the Commission. If the
ownership or maintenance of these laboratories has produced any
unlawful status, the remedy must be administered by the courts in
appropriate proceedings therein instituted.
The decree of the circuit court of appeals is accordingly
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
38 Stat. 717, c. 311; U.S.C. Tit. 15, § 45.
[
Footnote 2]
38 Stat. 730, c. 323; U.S.C. Tit. 15, § 21.
MR. JUSTICE STONE, dissenting.
I am unable to agree that the Federal Trade Commission, in the
performance of its duties under the Federal Trade Commission Act,
lacks the power to order the divestment of physical property, or
that the decision in
Federal Trade Commission v. Western Meat
Co., 272 U. S. 554,
forecloses our consideration of that question here. In the
Thatcher and
Swift cases considered in that
opinion, the stock of competing corporations had been acquired in
violation of § 7 of the Clayton Act, which prohibits the
acquisition by one corporation of the capital stock of another
"where the effect of such acquisition may be to substantially
lessen competition." The stock control having been followed by
purchase of the physical assets of the competing corporation, the
Commission, proceeding under §§ 7 and 11, ordered the
offending corporation to divest itself of both the stock and the
physical property. In deciding that the Commission had exceeded its
authority so far as the property was concerned, the Court expressly
limited its consideration to the grant of power under §§
7 and 11 of the Clayton Act, § 11 in terms authorizing the
Commission to make an order "requiring such person to cease and
desist from such violations, and divest itself of the stock held .
. . contrary to the provisions of § 7. . . ."
Page 274 U. S. 626
The effect of § 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act,
dealing with the different subject of unfair competition, was put
to one side, the Court saying: "This section [referring to §
5] is not presently important; the challenged orders sought to
enforce obedience to § 7 of the Clayton Act." P.
272 U. S.
557.
The scope of the decision was thus stated:
"When the Commission institutes a proceeding based upon the
holding of stock contrary to § 7 of the Clayton Act, its power
is limited by § 11 to an order requiring the guilty person to
cease and desist from such violation, effectually to divest itself
of the stock, and to make no further use of it."
P.
272 U. S.
561.
It was not held that the Commission under no circumstances could
compel the sale of physical property, and there was in fact a clear
intimation in the opinion that, under § 7 of the Clayton Act,
the acquisition of the property after a complaint had been filed
against the corporation for illegal stock purchases would not find
the Commission powerless.
Section 5 of the Trade Commission Act, with which we are now
concerned, declares unlawful "unfair methods of competition in
commerce," and empowers and directs the Commission to prevent the
use of such methods. The Commission is directed upon finding that
the method of competition under investigation is prohibited by the
Act, to issue its order "requiring such person, partnership, or
corporation to cease and desist from using such method of
competition."
The powers thus broadly given sharply contrast with the specific
enumeration of §§ 7 and 11 of the Clayton Act. As was
pointed out in the
Western Meat Co. case, the Clayton Act
prohibits only the acquisition of stock, and not the assets, of the
competing corporation, and in terms merely authorizes an order
requiring the corporation "to cease and desist from such
violations, and divest itself of the stock held. . . ." For that
reason alone,
Page 274 U. S. 627
the majority of the Court thought that the language of these
provisions was not broad enough to enable the Commission to order
the corporation to divest itself of the physical assets thus
acquired although their acquisition aggravated and brought to its
final consummation the very evil aimed at by the statute.
The comprehensive language of § 5 neither invites nor
supports a narrow construction. It is general in terms, and in the
authorized prevention of unfair methods of competition. the
Commission is not limited to any particular method of making its
orders effective. The power does not any the less exist because the
Commission framed the present order in part in affirmative terms
specifying the manner in which the company should abandon the
unfair method of competition it found had been practiced. Nor does
the fact that the Commission is not a court of equity lessen the
power conferred upon it by the statute. It is, of course,
essentially an administrative agency. Its orders never have the
effect of an injunction, and are enforceable only by proceedings
instituted in the appropriate circuit court of appeals. Its powers
are not enhanced by the circumstance that its orders and
enforceable in courts having in their own right equity powers. But
it is likewise true that it cannot be denied powers granted by
Congress merely because its orders resemble in form familiar
equitable decrees. To make its want of equity powers ground for
limiting those expressly conferred by the statute is to condemn all
the orders ever made by the Commission. Orders compelling the sale
of stock, preventing price-cutting, local price discrimination,
resale price maintenance, exclusive dealing arrangements,
boycotting, blacklisting, disparagement of competitor's wares,
misrepresentation, misbranding, adulteration, dishonest
advertising, espionage, commercial bribery, coercion, threats,
intimidation, the use of "fighting brands" or bogus independents,
to mention
Page 274 U. S. 628
only a few of the practices which the Commission has forbidden,
remind of equitable relief no less than an order compelling the
sale of physical property, the very acquisition and continued
possession of which may be the indispensable element in a scheme of
unfair competition.
The conclusion seems to me unavoidable, therefore, that this
case cannot be disposed of without determining whether the
acquisition and retention of the film laboratories by the Eastman
Company, under the circumstances disclosed by the record,
constituted, in itself, or was a part of or a step in, an unfair
method of competition. Until that is determined, we cannot say that
the Commission was without power under § 5 to make any
appropriate order to prevent the use of such methods.
That ruinous competition or the threat of it when the aim is
monopoly or the suppression of competition may be the dominant
factor in a violation of the Sherman Act is no longer fairly open
to question. But, in determining the meaning of "unfair methods of
competition," it should be borne in mind that the Trade
Commission's function is to discourage certain trade tendencies
before violations of the Sherman Act have occurred. The advised use
of the phrase "unfair methods of competition" for the more familiar
"unfair competition" of the common law indicates an unmistakable
congressional intent to confer on the Commission the power,
subject, of course, to the judicial review provided for in the Act,
to prevent unfair trade practices not included in the prohibition
of the Sherman Act and of the common law.
See Henderson,
Federal Trade Commission 36.
Cf. Federal Trade Commission v.
Winsted Hosiery Co., 258 U. S. 483.
In that part of its order which now remains undisturbed, and
which is not questioned here, the Commission has found and
forbidden the agreement between the Eastman Company and the
Association that the members of the Association should use American
raw film, of which
Page 274 U. S. 629
it appears 94 percent of that used in the United States is
produced by the Eastman Company, to the exclusion of foreign
manufactured film, provided the Eastman Company would not operate
its laboratories commercially to produce positive prints in
competition with the members of the Association.
The majority not having found it necessary to consider whether
the stipulated facts established unfair methods of competition
because of the Commission's supposed want of power, any extended
review of them here is uncalled for. But the evidence is sufficient
to justify the inference drawn by the Commission that suppression
of competition in the sale of foreign films, consummated by this
agreement, was accomplished in part at least by the acquisition and
retention of these laboratories as a constant and imminent threat
to members of the Association of competition in the business field
they occupy.
Superficial examination might suggest that the respondent's
course of conduct involves nothing more than the innocuous process
of extending its business to include an allied trade, but the
matter may not be thus lightly disposed of. We may lay aside the
question whether one already possessing monopoly powers in one
field, especially where, as here, there is no available substitute
for his products, may make use of his strategic position to
dominate all phases of the industry, from production to
consumption. For here, it seems fairly inferable from the
stipulated facts that there was no intention of permanent
expansion. The Eastman Company threatened to engage in temporary
competition with the manufacturers of prints in order to attain its
objective -- the suppression of foreign competition in raw film.
When that was attained, the laboratories were allowed to remain
idle, and the assumed advantages to the public from permanent
competition were lacking. I have no difficulty in concluding that
this threat of temporary competition was unfair to the Eastman
Company's purchasers and to its
Page 274 U. S. 630
foreign competitors, and was an unfair method of competition
within the meaning of § 5.
Compare Tuttle v. Buck,
107 Minn. 145;
Dunshee v. Standard Oil Co., 152 Iowa, 618,
626, 627;
United States v. Corn Products Refining Co., 234
F. 964, 984, 1010;
United States v. Central West Publishing
Co., Decrees and Judgments in Federal Anti-Trust cases, 359,
360, 362;
Thomsen v. Cayser, 243 U. S.
66,
243 U. S. 87,
for cases which, although not exactly in point, lend support to
this view.
It would seem that that part of the order which still stands,
forbidding the agreement for the suppression of competition, is
futile if the Eastman Company may retain the laboratories as a
threat to compel the manufacturers of prints to do that which they
could not lawfully agree to do. In my view, the decree below should
be reversed and the order of the Commission upheld.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS joins in this dissent.