1. The day before a registration statement filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission would have become "effective"
under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, the Commission began
a proceeding under § 8(d) of the Act challenging the truth and
sufficiency of the statement and notified the registrant to appear
at a hearing some weeks later and show cause why a stop order
should not issue suspending its effectiveness. Thereafter, the
Commission's subpoena was served on the registrant commanding him
to appear and testify and bring designated books and papers. The
registrant then gave formal notice that his statement was withdrawn
and submitted motions to quash the subpoena, which he declined to
obey, and to dismiss the proceeding. The Commission, however,
persisted in the investigation and obtained from the District
Court, under § 22(b) of the Act, an order requiring the
registrant to appear before the Commission and answer
questions.
Held:
(1) That the stop order proceeding was analogous to a suit for
an injunction, so that, while it was pending, the effectiveness of
the registration statement was suspended, and the registrant, if he
acted under it, would act at his peril. P.
298 U. S. 15.
(2) Arbitrary power to forbid withdrawal of such statements is
not conferred upon the Commission by the statute. P.
298 U. S. 18.
(3) The power of the Commission to prevent withdrawal is no
greater than that of the courts to prevent dismissal by a plaintiff
of his complaint at law or bill in equity. P.
298 U. S. 18.
Page 298 U. S. 2
(4) A rule of the Commission declaring that any registration
statement may be withdrawn "if the Commission consents" and that
such consent shall be given "with due regard to the public interest
and the protection of investors" implies that withdrawal of a
statement not as yet effective is of right if no prejudice will
result to the public or to investors. P.
298 U. S. 21.
(5) The filing of a registration statement under the Securities
Act is, in effect, an
ex parte application for a license
to use the mails and the facilities of interstate commerce for the
purposes recognized by the Act. Withdrawal of the application
before it has become effective cannot affect any right of the
general public, nor can it be said to prejudice investors, when, as
in this case, no step towards the issuance of the securities sought
to be registered has been taken and no investor, actual or
potential, in such securities is shown to exist. P.
298 U. S. 22.
(6) The registrant's right to withdraw his statement was
unqualified, and the Commission's proceeding, limited to the
purpose of determining whether the effectiveness of the statement
should be suspended, was terminated by the withdrawal. P.
298 U. S. 23.
(7) After the withdrawal, no authority for the enforcement of
the subpoena could be exercised by court order under § 22(b)
of the Act. P.
298 U. S. 23.
(8) The stop order proceeding, having been ended by the
withdrawal, could afford no basis for continuing the inquisition
under a general power claimed by the Commission under § 19(b).
P.
298 U. S. 25.
2. After a defendant has been notified of the pendency of a suit
seeking an injunction against him, even though a temporary
injunction be not granted, he acts at his peril and subject to the
power of the court to restore the
status quo ante wholly
irrespective of the merits as they may be ultimately adjudged. P.
298 U. S. 15.
3. In the federal tribunals, a plaintiff has the unqualified
right, unless otherwise provided by a specific rule of court, to
dismiss his complaint at law or bill in equity, if no plain legal
prejudice will result to the defendant other than the mere prospect
of a second litigation upon the same subject matter. P.
298 U. S. 19.
4. To the extent that the mere will of an official or of an
official body is permitted to take the place of allowable official
discretion, or to supplant the standing law as a rule of conduct,
the Government ceases to be one of laws and becomes an autocracy.
The courts, in the performance of their duties, must be ever
vigilant to detect and turn aside this danger at its beginnings. P.
298 U. S. 23.
5. Arbitrary power and the rule of the Constitution cannot both
exist. Our institutions must be kept free from all assumptions of
such power, whether by the three primary departments of the
Government or by lesser agencies. P.
298 U. S. 24.
6. An official inquisition to compel disclosures of fact is not
an end, but a means to an end, and it is a mere truism to say hat
the end must be a legitimate one to justify the means. P.
298 U. S. 25.
7. A citizen, when interrogated about his private affairs, has a
right before answering to know why the inquiry is made, and if the
purpose disclosed is not a legitimate one, he may not be compelled
to answer. P.
298 U. S. 25.
8. An investigation not based upon specified grounds is quite as
objectionable as a search warrant not based upon specific
statements of fact. Such an investigation, or such a search, is
unlawful in its inception and cannot be made lawful by what it
might bring, or by what it actually brings, to light. P.
298 U. S. 27.
9. The philosophy that constitutional limitations and legal
restraints may be brushed aside upon the plea that good, perchance,
may follow, finds no countenance in the American system of
government. P.
298 U. S. 27.
10. The constitutionality of the Securities Act of 1933 is not
considered in this case. P.
298
U.S. 28.
79 F.2d 617 reversed.
Certiorari, 297 U.S. 699, to review the affirmance of an order
of the District Court,
12 F.
Supp. 210, requiring the present petitioner to appear and
testify before the Securities & Exchange Commission.
Page 298 U. S. 9
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case arises under the Securities Act of 1933, c. 38, 48
Stat. 74, as amended by Act of June 6, 1934, c. 404, 48 Stat. 881,
U.S.C. title 15, § 77a
et seq.. Prior to the
Page 298 U. S. 10
amendment, the act was administered by the Federal Trade
Commission; but by Securities Exchange Act of 1934, § 210, 48
Stat. 908, the administration was transferred to the
respondent.
The act, § 2(4), defines the term "issuer" as including
every person who issues or proposes to issue any security, with
certain exceptions. Section 6(a) of the act provides:
"Any security may be registered with the Commission under the
terms and conditions hereinafter provided, by filing a registration
statement in triplicate, at least one of which shall be signed by
each issuer."
The filing of the registration statement must be accompanied by
the payment to the commission of a fee measured by the maximum
aggregate price at which the securities are to be offered. The
information contained in the statement is to be made available to
the public under such regulations as the commission may prescribe.
The act prescribes in detail the character of information which is
to be set out in the statement. Elaborate provisions are made in
respect of liability on account of false registration statements,
etc., and penalties are imposed for willful violations of any of
the provisions of the act, or the rules and regulations promulgated
by the commission under authority thereof, and for willfully untrue
statements of material facts or omissions to state material facts.
Section 5(a), provides that, unless a registration statement is in
effect as to a security, it shall be unlawful for any person
directly or indirectly to make use of the instrumentalities of
interstate commerce or of the mails to sell or offer to buy such
security, etc., or to transport any such security for sale or for
delivery after sale.
"Sec. 8(a) The effective date of a registration statement shall
be the twentieth day after the filing thereof, except as
hereinafter provided, . . ."
"
* * * *"
"(d) If it appears to the Commission at any time that the
registration statement includes any untrue statement of a material
fact or omits to state any material fact
Page 298 U. S. 11
required to be stated therein or necessary to make the
statements therein not misleading, the Commission may, after notice
by personal service or the sending of confirmed telegraphic notice,
and after opportunity for hearing (at a time fixed by the
Commission) within fifteen days after such notice by personal
service or the sending of such telegraphic notice, issue a stop
order suspending the effectiveness of the registration statement. .
. ."
"(e) The Commission is hereby empowered to make an examination
in any case in order to determine whether a stop order should issue
under subsection (d). In making such examination, the Commission or
any officer or officers designated by it shall have access to and
may demand the production of any books and papers of, and may
administer oaths and affirmations to and examine, the issuer,
underwriter, or any other person, in respect of any matter relevant
to the examination, and may, in its discretion, require the
production of a balance sheet exhibiting the assets and liabilities
of the issuer, or its income statement, or both, to be certified to
by a public or certified accountant approved by the Commission. If
the issuer or underwriter shall fail to cooperate, or shall
obstruct or refuse to permit the making of an examination, such
conduct shall be proper ground for the issuance of a stop
order."
Section 19(b) provides that, for the purpose of all
investigations which the commission think necessary and proper for
the enforcement of the act, any member of the commission or any
designated officer may administer oaths and affirmations, subpoena
witnesses, take evidence, and require the production of books,
papers, etc. Section 22(b) provides that, in case of contumacy or
refusal to obey a subpoena issued [by authority of the commission]
to any person, the District Courts of the United States and others
named, upon application by the commission, may issue to such person
an order requiring him to appear
Page 298 U. S. 12
before the commission or one of its examiners, and there produce
documentary evidence and give evidence touching the matter in
question.
May 4, 1935, petitioner filed with the commission a registration
statement in pursuance of § 6(a) of the act, covering a
proposed issue of participation trust certificates. This
registration statement, under the terms of the act, was to become
effective 20 days later. On the nineteenth day, however, the
commission, having already directed that stop order proceedings be
instituted pursuant to § 8(d), sent petitioner a telegraphic
notice reciting that the registration statement appeared to contain
untrue statements of material facts and to omit material facts
required and necessary and fixing a hearing at the office of the
commission for Thursday, June 6, 1935,
"at which time and place registrant may appear and show cause
why a stop order should not be issued suspending the effectiveness
of such registration statement."
The hearing was postponed until June 18th.
On June 13, a subpoena
duces tecum was issued
commanding petitioner to appear before an officer of the commission
on the 18th to testify with respect to his registration statement
and to bring with him designated books, records, and papers, listed
as follows: general ledger, subsidiary ledgers, journal, cash book,
books of account and financial statements of J. Edward Jones;
general ledger, journal, cash book and books of account of J.
Edward Jones relating to J. Edward Jones Royalty Trust, Series "M;"
all contracts, agreements and correspondence of J. Edward Jones
relating to the distribution of Participation Trust Certificates in
J. Edward Jones Royalty Trust, Series "M;" all correspondence and
communications of J. Edward Jones with any State authority relating
to the distribution of Participation Trust Certificates in J.
Edward Jones Royalty Trust, Series "M."
Page 298 U. S. 13
June 18, in a written communication to the commission,
petitioner formally withdrew his application for registration,
assigning as a reason, among others, that the commission's action
had been given widespread publicity, and placed him in a situation
to be severely damaged. The same day, his counsel appeared before
the examiner for the commission and presented this written
withdrawal, which was marked for identification, but excluded from
consideration. On June 27, counsel for petitioner appeared again
before the examiner, and filed a dismissal signed by petitioner
dismissing "his registration statement heretofore filed" and
withdrawing "all application for consideration thereof or action
thereon." At the same time, petitioner's counsel filed a motion to
dismiss and for an order from the commission permitting the
withdrawal of the registration statement and dismissing the
registration proceeding and all matters pertaining thereto at
petitioner's cost, and also a motion to quash the subpoena which
had been issued and served on petitioner. The examiner, acting for
the commission, denied the motions and refused to allow the
withdrawal, no reason for his action being assigned. In so doing,
the commission and its examiner assumed to act under and in
conformity with a regulation of the commission which provides as
follows:
"Any registration statement or any amendment thereto may be
withdrawn upon the request of the registrant if the Commission
consents thereto. The fee paid upon the filing of such registration
statement shall not be returned to the registrant. The papers
comprising the registration statement or amendment thereto shall
not be removed from the files of the Commission, but shall be
plainly marked with the date of the giving of such consent and in
the following manner: 'Withdrawn upon the Request of the
Registrant, the Commission consenting
Page 298 U. S. 14
thereto.' Such consent shall be given by the Commission with due
regard to the public interest and the protection of investors."
On June 28th, petitioner filed with the court below a petition
asking for a review of the commission's rulings which that court
dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. A petition for a writ of
certiorari to review that action was denied by this Court. 297 U.S.
699.
July 3, 1935, the commission filed an application in a Federal
District Court for an order requiring petitioner to appear before
the examiner to give evidence in the matter of petitioner's
registration statement. Petitioner appeared and challenged, among
other things, the validity of the orders of the commission denying
petitioner's right to withdraw his registration statement,
overruling his motions to withdraw and dismiss the proceedings and
refusing to quash the subpoena which had been issued and served on
petitioner. The District Court denied petitioner's contentions and
entered an order directing him to appear before the commission at a
time and place fixed, to testify in the matter of the registration
statement and to answer all pertinent questions regarding the
information and documents filed by him with the commission in
respect of such statement.
12 F. Supp.
210. On appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed this order. 79
F.2d 617.
The principal points urged by petitioner as ground for reversing
the judgment below, and the only ones that need be stated, are as
follows: that the commission was bound as matter of law to sustain
petitioner's withdrawal and motion to withdraw the registration
statement; that the right to withdraw such statement under the
circumstances disclosed was unqualified; that the commission
therefore was without authority to require petitioner to appear and
testify or to submit his private books, records, and papers for the
inspection of the commission;
Page 298 U. S. 15
that the Securities Act is unconstitutional, because it
constitutes an attempt to exercise powers reserved to the states,
and that it finds no warrant in either the commerce clause or in
the power to regulate the use of the mails under the constitutional
authority to establish post offices and post roads, or in any other
provision of the Federal Constitution.
First. By § 8(d), when it appears to the
commission that any untrue statement of a material fact has been
made in the registration statement, or material facts have been
omitted which are required or necessary to make the statements
therein not misleading, the commission may institute an inquiry to
determine whether a stop order shall issue suspending the
effectiveness of the registration statement. Proceeding under that
section, as we have seen, the commission, before the registration
statement was to become effective by the terms of § 8(a),
directed that a stop order proceeding be instituted, and caused to
be served on petitioner a telegraphic notice fixing a time for him
to "appear and show cause why a stop order should not be issued
suspending the effectiveness of such registration statement."
Such a proceeding is analogous to a suit in equity to obtain an
injunction, and should be governed by like considerations. Applying
those considerations, then, what was the status of the registration
statement pending the inquiry under § 8(d)? Notwithstanding
the provision of § 8(a), that the effective date of a
registration statement shall be the twentieth day after it is
filed, did this intervening action of the commission nevertheless
have the effect of suspending the effective operation of the
statement pending the hearing and determination of the stop order
proceeding? We are of opinion that it did have that effect. The
rule is well settled, both by the courts of England and of this
country, that, where a suit is brought to enjoin certain acts or
activities, for example,
Page 298 U. S. 16
the erection of a building or other structure, of which suit the
defendant has notice, the hands of the defendant are effectually
tied pending a hearing and determination, even though no
restraining order or preliminary injunction be issued. We briefly
review some of the decisions.
In
Daniel v. Ferguson, L.R. [1891] 2 Ch. 27, suit had
been brought to restrain defendant from building so as to darken
plaintiff's lights. Notice of motion for a temporary injunction to
be made upon a designated future day was served on the defendant.
After receiving notice, the defendant put on a large number of men
and proceeded with his building, running a wall up to a height of
about 39 feet from the ground before the injunction was granted.
The court, without regard to the ultimate rights of the parties,
held that the wall thus run up by defendant should be torn down at
once, as an attempt to anticipate the order of the court. A like
situation was presented in
Von Joel v. Hornsey, L.R.
[1895] 2 Ch. 774. In that case, the evidence showed that defendant
had repeatedly evaded attempts to serve him with process, and in
the meantime had gone on with the building. Again, without regard
to the ultimate rights of the parties, the court directed defendant
to pull down that part of the building thus erected.
The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, in several cases, has
followed the same rule.
Clark v. Martin, 49 Pa. 289, 298,
299;
Easton Passenger Ry. Co. v. Easton, 133 Pa. 505, 519,
19 A. 486;
Cooke v. Boynton, 135 Pa. 102, 19 A. 944;
Meigs v. Milligan, 177 Pa. 66, 72, 76, 35 A. 600;
Fredericks v. Huber, 180 Pa. 572, 575, 37 A. 90. In
Cooke v. Boynton, a bill in equity had been filed praying
for a preliminary and perpetual injunction preventing defendants
from interfering with a certain tramway of the plaintiff. Before a
preliminary injunction was obtained, the defendants, on three
separate occasions, had
Page 298 U. S. 17
torn up the track which the plaintiffs had replaced. The third
incident occurred while plaintiff was obtaining a preliminary
injunction. The court said: "The writ was served just as they had
finished the work of demolition, and this coincidence is strongly
suggestive of a race against the law." The trial court had
dissolved the injunction, in part on the ground that the act sought
to be restrained had already been done, and that it was without
power at that stage of the cause to restore the property to its
former condition by mandatory injunction. The Supreme Court
reversed. "What we did in the
Easton case," the court
said, 135 Pa. 102 at 110, 19 A. 944,
"we will do here. We will restore the injunction, without
passing upon the merits of the case. They will be considered when
it comes here upon final hearing."
In
New Haven Clock Co. v. Kochersperger, 175 Ill. 383,
51 N.E. 629, the State Supreme Court held that the forced payment
of a tax after the court has acquired jurisdiction of a bill to
enjoin its collection may be restored by the court, even though no
preliminary injunction was granted, and that such payment cannot be
availed of as a defense upon the ground that, the tax having been
paid, there is nothing to enjoin. The same court, in
Turney v.
Shriver, 269 Ill. 164, 172, 109 N.E. 708, 711, held the rule
to be that,
"where a bill for an injunction has been filed, and the court
has acquired jurisdiction of both the person and the subject matter
of the suit, and the defendant does any act which the bill seeks to
enjoin, such party acts at his peril and subject to the power of
the court to compel a restoration of the status."
See also Konig v. M. & C.C. of Baltimore, 126 Md.
606, 627, 95 A. 478.
The conclusion to be drawn from all the cases is that, after a
defendant has been notified of the pendency of a suit seeking an
injunction against him, even though a temporary injunction be not
granted, he acts at his
Page 298 U. S. 18
peril and subject to the power of the court to restore the
status, wholly irrespective of the merits as they may be ultimately
decided. 1 High on Injunctions (4th Ed.), § 5(a).
We hold the principle of this rule to be applicable to the
present case. When proceedings were instituted by the commission
and the registrant was notified and called upon to show cause why a
stop order should not be issued, the practical effect was to
suspend, pending the inquiry, all action of the registrant under
his statement. Unless the registration statement is effective, the
issuer of a security who makes use of the mails or of the
instrumentalities of interstate commerce to sell the security or to
carry the same for the purposes of sale or delivery after sale,
section 5(a) of the act is liable to severe penalties of fine and
imprisonment. § 24. The word "effective," as here employed,
connotes completeness of operative force and freedom to act. And a
registration statement which, while still
in fieri, is
brought under official challenge in respect of its validity and
subjected to an official proceeding aimed at its destruction,
cannot be so characterized until the challenge is determined in
favor of the registrant. In the meantime, since he can act only at
his peril, the registration statement can in no real sense be
called effective.
Second. In this situation, does a registrant have the
unqualified right to withdraw his registration statement or, in
other words, to dismiss a pending proceeding by which, for his own
advantage, he is seeking the use of the mails and the
instrumentalities of interstate commerce? If he have such right,
there is no basis for the exercise of discretion in respect of the
matter on the part of the commission; for it is obvious that
discretion does not exist where there is no power to act except in
one way.
Cf. Detroit v. Detroit City Ry. Co., 55 F. 569,
573;
Ex parte Skinner & Eddy Corp., 265 U. S.
86,
265 U. S.
93.
Page 298 U. S. 19
The act contains no provision upon the subject, and it may not
be construed as attempting to confer upon the commission an
arbitrary power, under rule or otherwise, to deny, without reason,
a motion to dismiss. We are unable to find any precedent for the
assumption of such power on the part of an administrative body, and
we go to the practice and rules of the courts in order to determine
by analogy the scope and limit of the power; for at least in the
absence of a statute to the contrary, the power of a commission to
refuse to dismiss a proceeding on motion of the one who instituted
it cannot be greater than the power which may be exercised by the
judicial tribunals of the land under similar circumstances. Both
parties here seem to recognize the appositeness of this test.
The general rule is settled for the federal tribunals that a
plaintiff possesses the unqualified right to dismiss his complaint
at law or his bill in equity unless some plain legal prejudice will
result to the defendant other than the mere prospect of a second
litigation upon the subject matter.
Pullman's Palace Car Co. v.
Transportation Co., 171 U. S. 138,
171 U. S.
145-146. In announcing the rule, this Court approved and
cited as authority the decision rendered by Chief Justice Taft,
then circuit judge, in
Detroit v. Detroit City Ry. Co., 55
F. 569, 572. The opinion in the latter case, reviewing the English
and American authorities, states the rule as follows:
"It is very clear from an examination of the authorities,
English and American, that the right of a complainant to dismiss
his bill without prejudice, on payment of costs, was, of course,
except in certain cases. . . . The exception was where a dismissal
of the bill would prejudice the defendants in some other way than
by the mere prospect of being harassed and vexed by future
litigation of the same kind. "
Page 298 U. S. 20
Chicago & Alton R. Co. v. Union Rolling-Mill Co.,
109 U. S. 702,
109 U. S.
713-715;
Barrett v. Virginian Ry. Co.,
250 U. S. 473,
250 U. S. 476;
McGowan v. Columbia River Packers' Assn., 245 U.
S. 352,
245 U. S. 358;
Veazie v.
Wadleigh, 11 Pet. 55,
36 U. S. 61-62;
Confiscation
Cases, 7 Wall. 454,
74 U. S.
457-458. The foregoing decisions, together with others,
are reviewed in an opinion delivered by Chief Justice Taft in
Ex parte Skinner & Eddy Corp., 265 U. S.
86, and the conclusion stated as follows:
"The right to dismiss, if it exists, is absolute. It does not
depend on the reasons which the plaintiff offers for his action.
The fact that he may not have disclosed all his reasons, or may not
have given the real one, cannot affect his right."
"The usual ground for denying a complainant in equity the right
to dismiss his bill without prejudice at his own costs is that the
cause has proceeded so far that the defendant is in a position to
demand on the pleadings an opportunity to seek affirmative relief,
and he would be prejudiced by being remitted to a separate action.
Having been put to the trouble of getting his counter-case properly
pleaded and ready, he may insist that the cause proceed to a
decree. . . ."
"The government had not, when the case was dismissed, given any
time or expense to the preparation and filing of a cross-bill or of
the evidence to sustain it. It had not taken any action in respect
to the cause which entitled it to say that it would be prejudiced
by a dismissal within the meaning of the authorities. It suddenly
was awakened by the motion to dismiss to the fact that, by eighteen
months' delay, it was losing a possible opportunity to litigate a
cross-claim in the Court of Claims and without a jury. We think the
same rule should obtain in the procedure of the Court of Claims as
in federal courts of law and equity in respect to the dismissal of
cases without prejudice. "
Page 298 U. S. 21
The commission apparently concedes that, in the absence of a
regulation to the contrary, the foregoing general rule would be
applicable. The commission, however, relying upon our recent
decision in
Bronx Brass Foundry, Inc. v. Irving Trust Co.,
297 U. S. 230,
contends that its regulation, quoted
ante, justifies the
adverse action of the commission. In the
Brass Foundry
case, proof of a claim in bankruptcy had been filed. The trustee in
bankruptcy moved to expunge the claim on the ground that the
creditor had received certain payments on account which constituted
unlawful preferences. Several hearings were held before the
referee, and the evidence indicated that the contention of the
trustee was well founded. Before the hearing closed, the creditor
filed a withdrawal of its claim and abandoned the hearing. The
trustee insisted that it was entitled to an adjudication whether
the payments made were unlawful preferences. The referee refused to
permit a withdrawal of the claim, and his action was approved by
the District Court, and its judgment in turn affirmed by the
Circuit Court of Appeals having jurisdiction. We affirmed, holding
that the general rule as stated in
Ex parte Skinner & Eddy
Corp., supra, had been modified by a rule of the district
court which authorized the court to refuse, after issue joined,
"to permit the plaintiff to discontinue even though the
defendant cannot have affirmative relief under the pleadings and
though his only prejudice be the vexation and expense of a possible
second suit upon the same cause of action."
Assuming, without deciding, that the regulation of the
commission was within its power and in force, it differs
essentially from the foregoing rule of the district court. As
applied to this proceeding in which there are no adversary parties,
the regulation does not restrict the common law rule. That rule, as
we have seen is, that the right to dismiss is unqualified unless
the dismissal would legally prejudice the defendants in some
other
Page 298 U. S. 22
way than by future litigation of the same kind. The regulation
is:
"Any registration statement or any amendment thereto may be
withdrawn upon the request of the registrant if the commission
consents thereto. . . . Such consent shall be given by the
commission with due regard to the public interest and the
protection of investors."
This regulation is quite as general as the rule of the common
law, and the possibility that the same registration may be
attempted in the future is not within its terms any more than it is
within the terms of the common law rule. The question under the
regulation is whether due regard to the public interest and the
protection of investors requires that the withdrawal be denied. The
test is the absence or presence of prejudice to the public or
investors; and, plainly enough, under the decisions of this Court,
the doctrine that a dismissal must be granted if no prejudice be
shown beyond the prospect of another suit,
unless there be a
specific rule of court to the contrary, is applicable, and the
withdrawal should have been allowed as of course.
We are unable to find anything in the record, the arguments of
the commission, or the decision of the court below that suggests
the possibility of any prejudice to the public or investors beyond
the assumption, as put by the court below, 79 F.2d 617 at 620,
that
"an unlimited privilege of withdrawal would have the effect of
allowing registrants whose statements are defective, to withdraw
before a stop order was issued and then to submit another statement
with slight changes."
In this proceeding, there being no adversary parties, the filing
of the registration statement is, in effect, an
ex parte
application for a license to use the mails and the facilities of
interstate commerce for the purposes recognized by the act. We are
unable to see how any right of the general public can be affected
by the withdrawal of such an application before it has gone into
effect. Petitioner
Page 298 U. S. 23
emphatically says that no steps had been taken looking to the
issue of the securities, and this is not denied. So far as the
record shows, there were no investors, existing or potential, to be
affected. The conclusion seems inevitable that an abandonment of
the application was of no concern to anyone except the registrant.
The possibility of any other interest in the matter is so shadowy,
indefinite, and equivocal that it must be put out of consideration
as altogether unreal. Under these circumstances, the right of the
registrant to withdraw his application would seem to be as absolute
as the right of any person to withdraw an ungranted application for
any other form of privilege in respect of which he is at the time
alone concerned.
An additional reason why the action of the commission and of the
court below cannot be sustained is that the commission itself had
challenged the integrity of the registration statement and invited
the registrant to show cause why its effectiveness should not be
suspended. In the face of such an invitation, it is a strange
conclusion that the registrant is powerless to elect to save
himself the trouble and expense of a contest by withdrawing his
application. Such a withdrawal accomplishes everything which a stop
order would accomplish, as counsel for the commission expressly
conceded at the bar. And, as the court below very properly
recognized, a withdrawal of the registration statement
"would end the effect of filing it and there is no authority
under § 19(b) to issue the commission subpoena, and it could
not be enforced by order of the District Court under §
22(b)."
79 F.2d 619.
The action of the commission finds no support in right principle
or in law. It is wholly unreasonable and arbitrary. It violates the
cardinal precept upon which the constitutional safeguards of
personal liberty ultimately rest -- that this shall be a government
of laws -- because, to the precise extent that the mere will of an
official or
Page 298 U. S. 24
an official body is permitted to take the place of allowable
official discretion or to supplant the standing law as a rule of
human conduct, the government ceases to be one of laws and becomes
an autocracy. Against the threat of such a contingency, the courts
have always been vigilant, and, if they are to perform their
constitutional duties in the future, must never cease to be
vigilant, to detect and turn aside the danger at its beginning. The
admonition of Mr. Justice Bradley in
Boyd v. United
States, 116 U. S. 616,
116 U. S. 635,
should never be forgotten:
"It may be that it is the obnoxious thing in its mildest and
least repulsive form; but illegitimate and unconstitutional
practices get their first footing in that way, namely, by silent
approaches and slight deviations from legal modes of procedure. . .
. It is the duty of courts to be watchful for the constitutional
rights of the citizen, and against any stealthy encroachments
thereon. Their motto should be
obsta principiis."
Arbitrary power and the rule of the Constitution cannot both
exist. They are antagonistic and incompatible forces, and one or
the other must of necessity perish whenever they are brought into
conflict. To borrow the words of Mr. Justice Day, "there is no
place in our constitutional system for the exercise of arbitrary
power."
Garfield v. Goldsby, 211 U.
S. 249,
211 U. S. 262.
To escape assumptions of such power on the part of the three
primary departments of the government is not enough. Our
institutions must be kept free from the appropriation of
unauthorized power by lesser agencies as well. And if the various
administrative bureaus and commissions, necessarily called and
being called into existence by the increasing complexities of our
modern business and political affairs, are permitted gradually to
extend their powers by encroachments -- even petty encroachments --
upon the fundamental rights, privileges, and immunities of the
people, we shall in the end, while avoiding the
Page 298 U. S. 25
fatal consequences of a supreme autocracy, become submerged by a
multitude of minor invasions of personal rights, less destructive
but no less violative of constitutional guaranties.
Third. The proceeding for a stop order having thus
disappeared, manifestly it cannot serve as a basis for the order of
the district court compelling petitioner to appear, give testimony,
and produce his private books and papers for inspection by the
commission. But the commission contends that the order may rest
upon the general power to conduct investigations which it says is
conferred by § 19(b). The difficulty with that is that the
investigation was undertaken for the declared and sole purpose of
determining whether a stop order should issue. The first action
taken by the commission was on May 20th, four days before the
registration was to become effective under the statute. The
commission then, after averring that, upon reasonable grounds, it
believed the registration statement was false in material facts,
directed that stop order proceedings be instituted against the
statement. It never has averred or directed anything else. This
action was followed by a notice containing like recitals of a more
detailed character, and calling upon the registrant to appear and
show cause why a stop order should not be issued suspending the
effectiveness of the statement. It was upon this direction and
notice that all subsequent proceedings were had, and upon which
they must stand or fall. We do not interpret the order of the
district court, the substance of which has already been stated, as
resting upon a different view.
Nothing appears in any of the proceedings taken by the
commission to warrant the suggestion that the investigation was
undertaken or would be carried on for any other purpose or to any
different end than that specifically named. An official inquisition
to compel disclosures of fact is not an end, but a means to an end,
and it is
Page 298 U. S. 26
a mere truism to say that the end must be a legitimate one to
justify the means. The citizen, when interrogated about his private
affairs, has a right before answering to know why the inquiry is
made, and if the purpose disclosed is not a legitimate one, he may
not be compelled to answer. Since here the only disclosed purpose
for which the investigation was undertaken had ceased to be
legitimate when the registrant rightfully withdrew his statement,
the power of the commission to proceed with the inquiry necessarily
came to an end. Dissociated from the only ground upon which the
inquiry had been based, and no other being specified, further
pursuit of the inquiry, obviously, would become what Mr. Justice
Holmes characterized as "a fishing expedition . . . for the chance
that something discreditable might turn up" (
Ellis v.
Interstate Commerce Comm'n, 237 U. S. 434,
237 U. S. 445)
-- an undertaking which uniformly has met with judicial
condemnation.
In re Pacific Ry. Comm'n, 32 F. 241, 250;
Kilbourn v. Thompson, 103 U. S. 168,
103 U. S.
190-193,
103 U. S.
195-196;
Boyd v. United States, 116 U.
S. 616;
Harriman v. Interstate Commerce Comm'n,
211 U. S. 407,
211 U. S. 419;
Federal Trade Comm'n v. American Tobacco Co., 264 U.
S. 298,
264 U. S.
305-307.
In re Pacific Ry. Comm'n involved the power of a
congressional commission to investigate the private affairs, books,
and papers of officers and employees of certain corporations
indebted to the government. That commission called before it the
president of one of these corporations, required the production of
private books and papers for inspection, and submitted
interrogatories which the witness declined to answer. Acting under
the statute, the commission sought a peremptory order from the
circuit court to compel the witness to answer the interrogatories.
The court, consisting of Mr. Justice Field, Circuit Judge Sawyer,
and District Judge Sabin, denied the motion of the district
attorney for the order
Page 298 U. S. 27
and discharged the rule to show cause. Opinions were rendered
seriatim, the principal one by Justice Field. The
authority of the commission was definitely denied. That decision
has frequently been cited and approved by this Court. Judge Sawyer,
in the course of his opinion (32 F. 241 at 263), after observing
that a bill in equity seeking a discovery upon general, loose, and
vague allegations is styled "a fishing bill," and will at once, be
dismissed on that ground (Story, Eq.Pl. § 325), said:
"A general, roving, offensive, inquisitorial, compulsory
investigation, conducted by a commission without any allegations,
upon no fixed principles, and governed by no rules of law, or of
evidence, and no restrictions except its own will or caprice, is
unknown to our constitution and laws, and such an inquisition would
be destructive of the rights of the citizen, and intolerable
tyranny. Let the power once be established, and there is no knowing
where the practice under it would end."
The fear that some malefactor may go unwhipped of justice weighs
as nothing against this just and strong condemnation of a practice
so odious. And, indeed, the fear itself has little of substance
upon which to rest. The federal courts are open to the government,
and the grand jury abides as the appropriate constitutional medium
for the preliminary investigation of crime and the presentment of
the accused for trial.
The philosophy that constitutional limitations and legal
restraints upon official action may be brushed aside upon the plea
that good, perchance, may follow, finds no countenance in the
American system of government. An investigation not based upon
specified grounds is quite as objectionable as a search warrant not
based upon specific statements of fact. Such an investigation, or
such a search, is unlawful in its inception and cannot be made
lawful by what it may bring, or by what it actually succeeds in
bringing, to light.
Cf. 273 U. S. United
States,
Page 298 U. S. 28
273 U. S. 28,
273 U. S. 29,
and cases cited. If the action here of the commission be upheld, it
follows that production and inspection may be enforced not only of
books and private papers of the guilty, but those of the innocent
as well, notwithstanding the proceeding for registration, so far as
the power of the commission is concerned, has been brought to an
end by the complete and legal withdrawal of the registration
statement.
Exercise of "such a power would be more pernicious to the
innocent than useful to the public," and approval of it must be
denied, if there were no other reason for denial, because, like an
unlawful search for evidence, it falls upon the innocent as well as
upon the guilty, and unjustly confounds the two.
Entick v.
Carrington, 19 Howell St.Tr. 1030, 1074, followed by this
Court in
Boyd v. United States, 116 U.
S. 616,
116 U. S.
629-630. No one can read these two great opinions, and
the opinions in the
Pacific Ry. Comm'n case, from which
the foregoing quotation is made, without perceiving how closely
allied in principle are the three protective rights of the
individual -- that against compulsory self-accusation, that against
unlawful searches and seizures, and that against unlawful
inquisitorial investigations. They were among those intolerable
abuses of the Star Chamber, which brought that institution to an
end at the hands of the Long Parliament in 1640. Even the shortest
step in the direction of curtailing one of these rights must be
halted
in limine lest it serve as a precedent for further
advances in the same direction or for wrongful invasions of the
others.
Fourth. The foregoing disposes of the case and requires
a reversal of the judgment of the lower court. In that view, it
becomes unnecessary to consider the constitutional validity of the
act.
Reversed.
Page 298 U. S. 29
MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO, dissenting.
I am unable to concur in the opinion of the court.
A subpoena
duces tecum was issued by the commission on
June 13 before any attempt had been made to withdraw the
registration statement. On June 18, the day of the attempted
withdrawal, there was issued a second subpoena commanding the
registrant to appear and testify, and this was served upon him by
the marshal. Then and for months earlier, a standing regulation
gave warning to him and to the world that, without the consent of
the commission, there could be no withdrawal of a statement once
placed upon the files. I am persuaded that the rule is valid; that
the commission had abundant reasons for maintaining jurisdiction,
and that notice of withdrawal did not nullify the writ.
The subpoena flouted by the witness was issued under §
19(b), of the statute as well as under § 8(e). So the sworn
petition for commission explicitly informs us. It was issued in aid
of any legitimate inquiry that the commission had authority to
initiate and prosecute by reason of a false and defective statement
then part of the official records. Nothing in the case gives color
to the argument that the witness was to be subjected to a roving
examination without the restraints of pleadings or bounds analogous
thereto. On the contrary, the order of the District Court upholding
the subpoena directs him to make answer to questions pertinent to
the documents already filed with the commission, to these and
nothing more. If the petitioner is to prevail in his attack upon
the writ, it will have to be on broader grounds than those of form
and method. He must be able to make good his argument that, by the
mere announcement of withdrawal, he achieved results analogous to
those of a writ of prohibition.
Page 298 U. S. 30
Recklessness and deceit do not automatically excuse themselves
by notice of repentance. Under § 24 of the Act, there is the
possibility -- at times the likelihood -- of penal liability. A
statement willfully false or willfully defective is a penal offense
to be visited, upon conviction, with fine or imprisonment. Under
§ 12, there is the possibility, if not the likelihood, of
liability for damages. The statement now in question had been
effective for over twenty days, and the witness did not couple his
notice of withdrawal with an affidavit or even a declaration that
securities had not been sold. Nor is the statute lacking in
machinery with which to set these liabilities in motion upon
appropriate occasion. Under § 19(b), plenary authority is
conferred on the commission to conduct all investigations believed
to be necessary and proper for the enforcement of the act and of
any of its provisions. There will be only partial attainment of the
ends of public justice unless retribution for the past is added to
prevention for the future. But the opinion of the court teaches us
that, however flagrant the offense and however laudable the purpose
to uncover and repress it, investigations under § 19(b) will
be thwarted on the instant when once the statement of the
registrant has been effectively withdrawn. If that is so, or even
indeed if the effect of the retraction is to embarrass the inquiry
-- to cloud the power to continue -- the fairness of the rule is
proved out of the mouths of its accusers. If such consequences are
inherent in a privilege of withdrawal indiscriminately bestowed,
there is need of some restraint upon the power of the wrongdoer to
mitigate the penalties attaching to his wrong. Shall the truth be
shown forth or buried in the archives? The commission is to
determine in the light of all the circumstances, including its
information as to the conduct of the applicant, whether the public
interest will be prompted by forgetting and forgiving.
Bronx
Brass Foundry, Inc. v. Irving Trust Co., 297 U.
S. 230.
Page 298 U. S. 31
The objection is inadequate that an investigation directed to
the discovery of a crime is one not for the commission, but for the
prosecuting officer. There are times when the functions of the two
will coincide or overlap. Congress has made it plain that any
inquiry helpful in the enforcement of the statute may be pursued by
the commission, though conduct punishable as a crime may thereby be
uncovered. Indeed, the act is explicit -- § 22(c) -- that a
witness is not excused from testifying on the ground that the
testimony required of him may tend to incriminate him or expose him
to a penalty or forfeiture. He may, however, claim his privilege,
and if then compelled to testify, may not be prosecuted thereafter
for any matter thus revealed. All this is far from proving that
there can be no practical advantage in keeping the proceeding open.
Aside from the possibility of civil liability, the offender may not
choose to claim the privilege, and even if he does, and is then
excused from testifying, other witnesses may be available -- for
example, employees -- who are not implicated in the offense and who
can bring the facts to view. Moreover, amnesty for one offender may
mean conviction for another, an associate in the crime. Inquiry by
the commission is thus more penetrating and efficient than one by a
grand jury where there is no statutory grant of amnesty to compel
confederates to speak. More important still, the enforcement of the
act is aided when guilt is exposed to the censure of the world,
though the witness in the act of speaking may make punishment
impossible. It is no answer to all this that, upon the record now
presented, a crime has not been proved or even definitely charged.
An investigator is not expected to prove or charge at the beginning
the offenses which he has reason to suspect will be uncovered at
the end. The petition in behalf of the commission enumerates one by
one the false statements and the omissions imputed to the
registrant. Some, at least, are of
Page 298 U. S. 32
such a nature that, if chargeable to him at all, they can hardly
have been made otherwise than with criminal intent. To give the
investigating officer an opportunity to reach down into the hidden
wells of knowledge and the more hidden wells of motive is the very
purpose of the regulation by which the proceeding is kept open
after the registrant has tried to end it.
The opinion of the court reminds us of the dangers that wait
upon the abuse of power by officialdom unchained. The warning is so
fraught with truth that it can never be untimely. But timely too is
the reminder, as a host of impoverished investors will be ready to
attest, that there are dangers in untruths and half truths when
certificates masquerading as securities pass current in the market.
There are dangers in spreading a belief that untruths and half
truths, designed to be passed on for the guidance of confiding
buyers, are to be ranked as peccadillos, or even perhaps as part of
the amenities of business. When wrongs such as these have been
committed or attempted, they must be dragged to light and
pilloried. To permit an offending registrant to stifle an inquiry
by precipitate retreat on the eve of his exposure is to give
immunity to guilt, to encourage falsehood and evasion, to invite
the cunning and unscrupulous to gamble with detection. If
withdrawal without leave may check investigation before securities
have been issued, it may do as much thereafter, unless indeed
consistency be thrown to the winds, for, by the teaching of the
decision, withdrawal without leave is equivalent to a stop order,
with the result that forthwith there is nothing to investigate. The
statute and its sanctions become the sport of clever knaves.
Appeal is vaguely made to some constitutional immunity, whether
express or implied is not stated with distinctness. It cannot be an
immunity from the unreasonable search or seizure of papers or
effects: the books and documents of the witness are unaffected by
the challenged
Page 298 U. S. 33
order. It cannot be an immunity from impertinent intrusion into
matters of strictly personal concern: the intimacies of private
business lose their self-regarding quality after they have been
spread upon official records to induce official action. In such
circumstances, the relevance of
Entick v. Carrington, 19
Howell St.Tr. 1030, 1074, or
Boyd v. United States,
116 U. S. 616,
116 U. S. 629,
or
In re Pacific Railway Comm'n, 32 F. 241, 250, is not
readily perceived.
Cf. Interstate Commerce Comm'n v.
Brimson, 154 U. S. 447,
154 U. S. 469,
154 U. S. 478.
If the immunity rests upon some express provision of the
Constitution, the opinion of the court does not point us to the
article or section. If its source is to be found in some impalpable
essence, the spirit of the Constitution or the philosophy of
government favored by the Fathers, one may take leave to deny that
there is anything in that philosophy or spirit whereby the signer
of a statement filed with a regulatory body to induce official
action is protected against inquiry into his own purpose to
deceive. The argument for immunity lays hold of strange analogies.
A commission which is without coercive powers, which cannot arrest
or amerce or imprison though a crime has been uncovered, or even
punish for contempt, but can only inquire and report, the propriety
of every question in the course of the inquiry being subject to the
supervision of the ordinary courts of justice, is likened with
denunciatory fervor to the Star Chamber of the Stuarts. Historians
may find hyperbole in the sanguinary simile.
The rule now assailed was wisely conceived and lawfully adopted
to foil the plans of knaves intent upon obscuring or suppressing
the knowledge of their knavery.
The witness was under a duty to respond to the subpoena.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS and MR. JUSTICE STONE join in this
opinion.