1. A system of holding companies controlled, through stock
ownership, the operations of subsidiary companies which served gas
and electricity to the public in many States, partly in interstate
commerce. Some of the holding companies were themselves partly
engaged in selling, purchasing, or transmitting electricity across
state lines. The system furnished expert service, and performed
construction work, for the subsidiary utilities, and, in so doing,
made continuous and extensive use of the mails and the
instrumentalities of interstate commerce. And such
instrumentalities were from time to time used in other
transactions, such as the distribution of securities.
Held
that the holding companies were engaged in activities within the
reach of congressional regulation. P.
303 U. S.
431.
2. Section 5 of Title I of the Public Utility Act of Aug. 26,
1935, requires holding companies, as defined, to register with the
Securities and Exchange Commission and to file a registration
statement giving information with respect to the organization,
financial structure, and nature of the business of the registrants,
together with various details of operations. Section 4(a) prohibits
the use of the mails and the facilities of interstate commerce to
those companies which fail to register. Section 32 provides that,
if any provision of the Title should be held invalid, the others
shall not be affected.
Held:
(1) The separability clause reverses the presumption of
inseparability. P.
303 U. S.
433.
(2) Sections 4(a) and 5 are not so woven into the Title that
there is any inherent or practical difficulty in enforcing them
separately while reserving all questions as to the validity of the
other provisions of the Title. P.
303 U. S.
434.
(3) Although registration underlies and precedes the application
of the other regulatory provisions, §§ 4(a) and 5 were
intended to be independently operative and enforceable as
regulations requiring holding companies to furnish the information
called for by § 5(b) in registration statements. P.
303 U. S.
435.
Page 303 U. S. 420
(4) The legislative history of the Act is consistent with this
view. P.
303 U. S.
438.
3. Corporations engaged in interstate commerce cannot escape
regulation by acting through subsidiaries. P.
303 U. S.
440.
4. In view of the relation of the holding companies in this case
to interstate commerce, and to the national economy, Congress had
power to exact of them the information required by § 5 of
Title I of the Public Utility Act, and to visit their failure with
the penalties prescribed by § 4(a), restraining their use of
interstate commerce and postal facilities while they remain holding
companies and refuse to register. P.
303 U. S.
439.
5. In a suit by the Securities and Exchange Commission under
§ 18(f), Title I, Public Utility Act, brought to enforce only
compliance with §§ 4(a) and 5, the requirements and
validity of the other provisions of the Title not being involved in
the actual controversy, held that a counterclaim and cross-bill by
which the defendants invoked the Federal Declaratory Judgment Act,
and sought to have the other provisions declared unconstitutional,
was properly dismissed. P.
303 U. S. 443.
92 F.2d 580 affirmed.
Certiorari, 302 U.S. 681, to review the affirmance of a decree
of the District Court which granted an injunction and dismissed a
counterclaim and cross-bill in a suit against numerous
corporations, brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission
under § 18(f) of Title I of the Public Utility Act of 1935.
Other corporations had intervened in the District Court as
defendants. The injunction forbade the holding company defendants,
as long as they continued to be holding companies and failed to
register, from using the mails or the facilities of interstate
commerce as banned by § 4(a) of the Act. The counterclaim and
cross-bill prayed for a declaratory judgment declaring the whole
Title void, and that the Commission and its members, the Attorney
General, and the Postmaster General be enjoined from enforcing any
of its provisions.
See the opinion of Mack, Circuit Judge,
in
18 F. Supp.
131.
Page 303 U. S. 426
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Securities and Exchange Commission brought this suit to
enforce the provisions of §§ 4(a) and 5 of the
Page 303 U. S. 427
Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935, 49 Stat. 803, 812,
813. These sections provide for registration with the Commission of
holding companies, as defined, § 5(a), and prohibit the use of
the mails and the instrumentalities of interstate commerce to those
companies which fail to register. Section 4(a). Section 5(b)
provides for the filing of a registration statement giving
information with respect to the organization, financial structure,
and nature of the business of the registrant, together with various
details of operations.
Defendants, including interveners, contested the validity of
these provisions and sought by cross-bill a declaratory judgment
that the act was invalid in its entirety as being in excess of the
powers granted to Congress by § 8 of Article I, and in
violation of § 1 of Article I and of the Fifth and Tenth
Amendments, of the Constitution of the United States. The District
Court sustained the validity of §§ 4(a) and 5, and
granted an injunction accordingly. The cross-bill was dismissed for
want of equity and for lack of any actual controversy within the
meaning of the Federal Declaratory Judgment Act of 1934, Jud.Code,
§ 274d, as amended.
18 F. Supp.
131, 139. The Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the decree. 92
F.2d 580. Certiorari was granted.
The suit was brought against the Electric Bond & Share
Company and fourteen associated public utility companies. Of these,
it appears that seven have ceased to be holding companies within
the meaning of the act, two [
Footnote 1] before the cause was heard by the District
Court and five [
Footnote 2]
since the decree. The remaining companies against whom the decree
of injunction runs are Electric Bond & Share Company, American
Gas & Electric
Page 303 U. S. 428
Company, American Power & Light Company, National Power
& Light Company, Electric Power & Light Corporation, Lehigh
Power Securities Corporation, Utah Power & Light Company, and
Pacific Power & Light Company.
The decree provides in substance, as to each of these
defendants, that, after a day specified and until such defendant
shall cease to be a holding company as defined in the act, §
2, or shall register with the Securities and Exchange Commission as
provided in § 5(a), it shall not carry on any of the
activities in interstate commerce or through the mails which are
forbidden to nonregistered holding companies by paragraphs (1),
(2), (3), (4), and (6) of § 4(a). The provisions of
§§ 4(a) and 5 are set forth in the margin. [
Footnote 3]
Page 303 U. S. 429
The decree further provides that the injunction and the
dismissal of the cross-bill shall be without prejudice "to any
rights or remedies in law or in equity" which defendants may have
after registration, and leaves defendants free to challenge the
validity of any of the provisions of the act other than
§§ 4(a) and 5. The dismissal of the
Page 303 U. S. 430
cross-appeal is also declared to be without prejudice "to any
rights or remedies in law or in equity" which the intervening
defendants
"may have or be entitled to upon the act
Page 303 U. S. 431
being made applicable to them by the registration of any holding
company of which they are subsidiary companies."
All rights of defendants, including interveners, are thus fully
reserved with respect to the application to them of any provision
of the act outside of those contained in the particular sections
which are enforced by the decree.
Petitioners insist that the act is invalid as a whole; that the
provisions of §§ 4(a) and 5 are not separable from the
remainder; that these provisions, if separately considered, do not
constitute a valid regulation of interstate commerce and the mails,
and that the cross-bill presented a controversy upon the merits of
which the defendants, including interveners, were entitled to the
judgment of the court.
First. The initial question is whether the defendant
companies, against which the decree for injunction runs, are
engaged in activities which bring them within the ambit of
congressional authority. Upon this point there seems to be no
serious controversy, and, for the purpose of the present decision,
we do not find it necessary to make a comprehensive statement of
the corporate setup and operations of the respective defendants.
The facts were fully set forth in an elaborate stipulation which
underlay the findings of fact of the trial court. A brief statement
addressed to the point now under consideration will suffice.
Electric Bond & Share Company is styled in the findings as
"the top holding company" in "a holding company system" in which
all the other defendants and intervening defendants together with
numerous other companies are subsidiaries. Electric Bond &
Share Company owns substantial minorities of the voting stocks
Page 303 U. S. 432
of the defendants American Gas & Electric Company, American
Power & Light Company, National Power & Light Company, and
Electric Power & Light Corporation. These companies, in turn,
own directly or through subholding companies substantial
majorities, in some cases approximating complete ownership and in
all cases sufficient to insure voting control, of the common stocks
of operating gas and electric utilities. The "electric operations"
of subsidiaries in the Bond & Share system are conducted in
thirty-two states. Some operate only within a single state, some in
two or more states, transmitting energy across state lines for
their own account, and some sell energy at wholesale in interstate
commerce.
Until shortly prior to the institution of this suit, Electric
Bond & Share Company rendered services to both holding and
operating companies under service contracts. After the approval of
the act, it formed a wholly owned subsidiary, Ebasco Services
Incorporated, to take over the servicing of the operating companies
and the servicing of the holding companies was discontinued. The
performance of service contracts by Ebasco, operating as a
subsidiary and on behalf of Electric Bond & Share Company,
constitutes an extensive business in rendering continuous expert,
specialized, and technical service, advice, and assistance to the
serviced companies upon every phase of the utility enterprise.
Phoenix Engineering Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of
Ebasco, performs construction work for subsidiary public utility
companies in the Bond & Share system. The American Gas &
Electric Company also performs services for subsidiary operating
companies.
We need not go further in the description of the operations of
these companies, as petitioners concede that the carrying out of
these service contracts, as found by the trial court, involves
continuous and extensive use of the
Page 303 U. S. 433
mails and instrumentalities of interstate commerce, although
petitioners are careful to qualify the concession by saying that
they agree with the trial court that
"this is not to say that the entire business of Ebasco or
American Gas constitutes interstate commerce, and is therefore
subject to unlimited federal regulation."
Petitioners also state with respect to American Power &
Light Company, National Power & Light Company, and Electric
Power & Light Corporation that, while it is insisted that these
are simply investment holding companies and that their business as
such is not interstate commerce, they may
"from time to time engage in transactions in interstate commerce
or may use the instrumentalities of interstate commerce in
particular transactions, such as the distribution of securities, in
such manner that those particular activities become the subject of
federal regulation."
The trial court found that one or more subsidiary electric
utility companies of Lehigh Power Securities Corporation "are
regularly engaged in selling, purchasing, or transmitting some
electric energy across state lines;" and that Utah Power &
Light Company and Pacific Power & Light Company are both
holding companies and electric utility companies, and that the
transmission of electric energy across state lines is part of the
enterprise of each.
In the light of the findings supported by the stipulation, we
perceive no ground for a conclusion that the defendant companies
which are enjoined are not engaged in activities within the reach
of the congressional power.
Second. Challenging the validity of the act in its
entirety, petitioners contend that §§ 4(a) and 5 cannot
be separated from the other provisions of the act, and thus be
separately sustained and enforced. They urge that these sections
are purely auxiliary to the subsequent or "control provisions" of
the act, §§ 6 to 13; that the
Page 303 U. S. 434
object of this suit is to compel submission to an integrated
system of control, and that the sole question is whether the act as
a whole, "or enough to accomplish its general plan," is
constitutional. They insist that this question must be determined
before they may be compelled to register.
(1) In this branch of the case, petitioners address their
argument to the intent of Congress, rather than to its power. But
Congress has defined its intent as to separability. Section 32 of
the act, provides:
"If any provision of this title [
Footnote 4] or the application of such provision to any
person or circumstances shall be held invalid, the remainder of the
title and the application of such provision to persons or
circumstances other than those as to which it is held invalid shall
not be affected thereby."
This provision reverses the presumption of inseparability --
that the Legislature intended the act to be effective as an
entirety or not at all. Congress has established the opposite
presumption of divisibility.
Williams v. Standard Oil Co.,
278 U. S. 235,
278 U. S. 242;
Utah Power & Light Co. v. Pfost, 286 U.
S. 165,
286 U. S. 184;
Champlin Refining Co. v. Corporation Commission,
286 U. S. 210,
286 U. S. 235.
Congress has thus said that the statute is not an integrated whole,
which as such must be sustained or held invalid. On the contrary,
when validity is in question, divisibility and not integration is
the guiding principle. Invalid parts are to be excised and the
remainder enforced. When we are seeking to ascertain the
congressional purpose, we must give heed to this explicit
declaration.
(2) It is evident that the provisions of §§ 4(a) and 5
are not so interwoven with the other provisions of the
Page 303 U. S. 435
act that there is any inherent or practical difficulty in the
separation and independent enforcement of the former while
reserving all questions as to the validity of the latter. The
administrative construction of the statute was formulated in that
view. Rule 4 of the Commission provided that any person, in filing
any statement under the act, might include an express reservation
of constitutional and legal rights. It was on the basis of that
construction that this suit was prosecuted and was limited to the
enforcement of §§ 4(a) and 5. All rights and remedies as
to all other provisions of the act are, as we have seen, expressly
reserved to the defendants by the decree. Nor can it be said that
this reservation is illusory. If this decree is affirmed, it will
constitute a specific adjudication that registration will be
without prejudice to future challenge of the validity of any
provision of the act, or requirement of the Commission, outside of
§§ 4(a) and 5. It is idle to contend that registration
pursuant to the decree will subject the defendants to the act as an
integrated whole or bring into operation against them what the
decree expressly excludes.
(3) Although there is no practical obstacle to the separate
enforcement of the provisions of §§ 4(a) and 5, the
argument is pressed that, in reason and design, there is an
essential unity of these provisions and the so-called "control
provisions" which forbids such enforcement. Petitioners urge that
§§ 4(a) and 5 "merely implement the system of controls;"
that the policy of the act as declared in § 1(c) is to compel
"the simplification and the elimination of holding company
systems," and that the objective cannot be attained by informatory
processes, but only by such regulation or control as will
"eliminate" the evils.
The Government replies that, while the other provisions are
applicable only to registered companies and their subsidiaries,
§§ 4(a) and 5 are drafted so as to be operative
Page 303 U. S. 436
independently, and that the registration provisions themselves
constitute "an effective instrument of informatory regulation."
"If, for example," argues the Government,
"§ 11, dealing with corporate reorganizations, were
adjudged invalid, there is no inherent reason why the other
regulatory provisions could not be enforced as the Congress
provided. And if § 13, dealing with service contracts, were
adjudged invalid, there is no inherent reason why the registration
provisions, or §§ 6 and 7, regulating security issues, or
§§ 8, 9 and 10, dealing with utility acquisitions, could
not be administered in accordance with their terms."
"Likewise," it is said,
"the purpose and effect of the registration provision --
regulation by the informatory process -- are the same whether
registration is considered as a separate statute regulating utility
holding companies or as but one part of a comprehensive statute
containing many different regulations of utility holding
companies."
Moreover, as observed by the District Court, § 1(c) in its
entirety negatives any conclusion that the simplification and
elimination of holding companies
"is the sole policy or the whole end and object of the act,
which, as stated, is 'to meet the problems and eliminate the evils
as enumerated in this section, connected with public utility
holding companies,'"
and thus "simplification and elimination" are but a means, and
not "the exclusive means," deemed to be essential for the purpose
of effectuating such policy "in whole or insofar as may be
constitutionally possible."
We think that the manner in which the act is framed and the
variety of provisions it contains, when viewed in the light of the
presumption of divisibility, justify that conclusion. The fact that
registration underlies the application of subsequent requirements
of the statute does not prevent the provisions of §§ 4(a)
and 5 from having a purpose and a value of their own. Section 5 not
only
Page 303 U. S. 437
provides in paragraph (a) for the filing of a "notification of
registration," but also requires by paragraph (b) every registered
holding company to submit, within a reasonable time after
registration, a "registration statement" containing a variety of
detailed information as to corporate structure and activities.
Thus, § 5(b) is itself a "control" provision, which is
immediately operative. The duty to supply the described information
is separately and definitely prescribed.
It cannot be denied that a requirement of this sort is a
regulation which Congress could have regarded as important in
itself, and could have made the subject of a separate statute. The
fact that it is found in a statute imposing other regulations, or
that it precedes the application of the others, does not deprive it
of its essential character and its capacity to stand alone.
Regulation requiring the submission of information is a familiar
category. Information bearing upon activities which are within the
range of congressional power may be sought not only by
congressional investigation as an aid to appropriate legislation,
but through the continuous supervision of an administrative body.
See Interstate Commerce Commission v. Brimson,
154 U. S. 447,
154 U. S. 474;
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Goodrich Transit Co.,
224 U. S. 194,
224 U. S. 211;
American Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. United States,
299 U. S. 232,
299 U. S.
235-237. Congress may use this method in connection with
a comprehensive scheme of regulation, as, for example, in the case
of the Interstate Commerce Commission and the Federal
Communications Commission; or Congress may employ this informatory
process independently. An illustration of the latter is found in
the statute relating to newspapers and periodicals, enjoying the
privileges accorded to second class mail, which requires an annual
statement setting forth the names and addresses of the editor,
publisher, business manager, owner, and, in case of ownership by
a
Page 303 U. S. 438
corporation, the stockholders, and also the names of known
bondholders or other security holders, together with a statement as
to circulation. 39 U.S.C. § 233.
See Lewis Publishing Co.
v. Morgan, 229 U. S. 288.
Petitioners refer to the limitations upon publicity contained in
§ 22, and contrast this provision with that of the Securities
Act of 1933, § 6(d), 48 Stat. 74. But § 22 provides that
the information shall be available to the public when, in the
judgment of the Commission, its disclosure would be in the public
interest or the interest of investors or consumers. The limitations
are plainly intended to safeguard particular information which may
be regarded as of a private or confidential character and as not
directly concerning the public interest. They do not detract from
the value which may be deemed to attach to the requirement that the
described information should be furnished, whether as an aid to
legislation or as facilitating administrative supervision or as
securing a desirable publicity.
Both parties invoke the legislative history of the act.
Petitioners contend that this shows that control, not publicity,
was intended. The Government insists that the legislative history
supports the presumption of separability. It is unnecessary to
review the details of the arguments or the cited statements from
the legislative halls. The act speaks for itself with sufficient
clarity. The Government points to six groups of regulatory
provisions contained in the act --
viz., registration,
§§ 4 and 5; issuance of securities, §§ 6 and 7;
acquisition of securities and utility assets, §§ 8, 9 and
10; corporate simplification and reorganization, § 11; service
contracts and other inter-company transactions, §§ 12 and
13, and reports and accounts, §§ 14 and 15. We see
nothing in the legislative history of the Act which requires the
conclusion that all these groups were intended to constitute a
unitary system, no part of which can fail without destroying
the
Page 303 U. S. 439
rest. On the contrary, we think that the intent of Congress is
that these various groups of regulations, as well as particular
provisions of each group, should be regarded as separable so that,
if any such group or provision should be found to be invalid, that
invalidity should not extend to the remaining parts if, by reason
of their nature, and as a practical matter, they could be
separately sustained and enforced.
Congress provided in § 18(f) that the Commission might
bring an action to enforce compliance with the act or any rule,
regulation, or order thereunder, and that, upon a proper showing, a
permanent or temporary injunction or decree should be granted. In
pursuance of that authority, the present action was brought solely
to enforce the provisions of §§ 4(a) and 5. We find no
basis for holding that these provisions cannot be separately
enforced if they are valid, and we turn to that question. In view
of this conclusion as to separability, it is unnecessary to go
through the statute in order to determine whether other provisions
are valid or invalid, and we do not intimate that there would not
be found, in any event, a workable system in addition to the
registration sections.
Third. Petitioners contend that, standing by
themselves, §§ 4(a) and 5 transgress constitutional
restrictions. These sections have three parts. Section 5(a)
provides for the filing of a notification of registration. Section
5(b) makes it the duty of every registered holding company to file
a registration statement, with documents and certain detailed
information, within a reasonable time after registration. Section
4(a) prescribes the penalty for failure to register under § 5.
As the requirement of information is, in itself, a permissible and
useful type of regulation (
Interstate Commerce Commission v.
Brimson, supra; Interstate Commerce Commission v. Goodrich Transit
Company, supra; American Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. United
States, supra), the question is whether the particular
Page 303 U. S. 440
demand here assailed can be validly addressed to the defendants
enjoined by the decree, and if so, whether it exceeds
constitutional limits because of the character and extent of the
information sought.
The findings of the District Court based upon the stipulation of
facts leave no room for doubt that these defendants are engaged in
transactions in interstate commerce. That they conduct such
transactions through the instrumentality of subsidiaries cannot
avail to remove them from the reach of the federal power. It is the
substance of what they do, and not the form in which they clothe
their transactions, which must afford the test. The constitutional
authority confided to Congress could not be maintained if it were
deemed to depend upon the mere modal arrangements of those seeking
to escape its exercise.
Compare Northern Securities Co. v.
United States, 193 U. S. 197. We
need not now determine to what precise extent these defendants are
actually engaged in interstate commerce. It is enough that they do
have continuous and extensive operations in that commerce, and
Congress cannot be denied the power to demand the information which
would furnish a guide to the regulation necessary or appropriate in
the national interest. Regulation is addressed to practices which
appear to need supervision, correction, or control. And to
determine what regulation is essential or suitable, Congress is
entitled to consider and to estimate whatever evils exist.
Congress has set forth in the act what it considers to be the
factual situation and the need of federal supervision. The
following statement is found in paragraph (a) of § 1:
"Public utility holding companies and their subsidiary companies
are affected with a national public interest in that, among other
things, (1) their securities are widely marketed and distributed by
means of the mails and instrumentalities of interstate commerce and
are sold to a
Page 303 U. S. 441
large number of investors in different States; (2) their
service, sales, construction, and other contracts and arrangements
are often made and performed by means of the mails and
instrumentalities of interstate commerce; (3) their subsidiary
public utility companies often sell and transport gas and electric
energy by the use of means and instrumentalities of interstate
commerce; (4) their practices in respect of and control over
subsidiary companies often materially affect the interstate
commerce in which those companies engage; (5) their activities
extending over many States are not susceptible of effective control
by any State, and make difficult, if not impossible, effective
State regulation of public utility companies."
Congress has further declared in paragraph (b) of that section
upon the basis of facts disclosed by the reports of the Federal
Trade Commission and of the Committee on Interstate and Foreign
Commerce of the House of Representatives, and otherwise
ascertained, the circumstances in which the national interest and
the interest of investors and consumers may be adversely affected
by the operation of public utility holding companies. And after
this catalogue of the abuses which may exist in the circumstances
described, Congress declares it to be its policy
"to meet the problems and eliminate the evils as enumerated in
this section connected with public utility holding companies which
are engaged in interstate commerce or in activities which directly
affect or burden interstate commerce."
Without attempting to state the limits of permissible regulation
in the execution of this declared policy, we have no reason to
doubt that, from these defendants, with their highly important
relation to interstate commerce and the national economy, Congress
was entitled to demand the fullest information as to organization,
financial structure, and all the activities which could have any
bearing upon the exercise of congressional authority. The
regulation found in § 5(b)
Page 303 U. S. 442
goes no further than to require this information, and we are of
the opinion that its validity must be sustained.
Section 4(a) prescribes the penalty for failure to register
under § 5, and that section, as an incident to registration,
imposes the duty to file the described registration statement.
Treating the requirements of §§ 4(a) and 5 as a separable
part of the Act, the question is whether that penalty may be
validly imposed.
In the imposition of penalties for the violation of its rules,
Congress has a wide discretion. Sanctions may be of various types.
See Helvering v. Mitchell, ante, p.
303 U. S. 391.
They may involve the loss of a privilege which would otherwise be
enjoyed.
Id., note 2
When Congress lays down a valid rule to govern those engaged in
transactions in interstate commerce, Congress may deny to those who
violate the rule the right to engage in such transactions.
Champion v. Ames, 188 U. S. 321;
United States v. Delaware & Hudson Co., 213 U.
S. 366,
213 U. S. 415;
Brooks v. United States, 267 U. S. 432,
267 U. S.
436-437;
Gooch v. United States, 297 U.
S. 124;
Kentucky Whip & Collar Co. v. Illinois
Central R. Co., 299 U. S. 334,
299 U. S. 335,
299 U. S.
346-347. And, while Congress may not exercise its
control over the mails to enforce a requirement which lies outside
its constitutional province, when Congress lays down a valid
regulation pertinent to the use of the mails, it may withdraw the
privilege of that use from those who disobey.
Champion v. Ames,
supra; Lewis Publishing Co. v. Morgan, 229 U.
S. 288.
In the instant case, the penalty attaches to the use of the
instrumentalities of commerce and of the mails by those who,
engaged in that use, refuse to submit to § 5 and thus, through
registration and the statement which is incident to registration,
to supply the information which Congress is entitled to demand and
has demanded with respect to their organization and practices. Each
one of the paragraphs of § 4(a), as related to the
requirements of § 5, is addressed to those in that class. We
think
Page 303 U. S. 443
that the imposition of such a penalty does not transgress any
constitutional provision.
The decree enforces this penalty by injunction as the act itself
authorizes. Section 18(f). The terms of the injunction follow
closely the provisions of § 4(a) and do not extend beyond
them. The escape the penalty and the enforcing provisions of the
decree, all that the defendants have to do is to register with the
Commission and assume, under § 5, the obligation to file the
described registration statement. All their rights and remedies
with respect to other provisions of the statute remain without
prejudice. Their objections to the affirmative provisions of the
decree are untenable.
Fourth. The District Court did not err in dismissing
the cross-bill. Defendants are not entitled to invoke the Federal
Declaratory Judgment Act in order to obtain an advisory decree upon
a hypothetical state of facts.
See New Jersey v. Sargent,
269 U. S. 328;
United States v. West Virginia, 295 U.
S. 463;
Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley
Authority, 297 U. S. 288,
297 U. S. 324;
Anniston Manufacturing Co. v. Davis, 301 U.
S. 337,
301 U. S. 355.
By the cross-bill, defendants seek a judgment that each and every
provision of the act is unconstitutional. It presents a variety of
hypothetical controversies which may never become real. We are
invited to enter into a speculative inquiry for the purpose of
condemning statutory provisions the effect of which in concrete
situations, not yet developed, cannot now be definitely perceived.
We must decline that invitation.
Anniston Manufacturing Co. v.
Davis, supra.
The decree is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS dissents.
MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO and MR. JUSTICE REED took no part in the
consideration and decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
Idaho Power Company and The Montana Power Company.
[
Footnote 2]
United Gas Corporation, United Gas Public Service Company,
Houston Gulf Gas Company, Nebraska Power Company, and Power
Securities Company.
[
Footnote 3]
"Sec. 4. (a). After December 1, 1935, unless a holding company
is registered under section 5, it shall be unlawful for such
holding company, directly or indirectly "
"(1) to sell, transport, transmit, or distribute, or own or
operate any utility assets for the transportation, transmission, or
distribution of, natural or manufactured gas or electric energy in
interstate commerce;"
"(2) by use of the mails or any means or instrumentality of
interstate commerce, to negotiate, enter into, or take any step in
the performance of, any service, sales, or construction contract
undertaking to perform services or construction work for, or sell
goods to, any public utility company or holding company;"
"(3) to distribute or make any public offering for sale or
exchange of any security of such holding company, any subsidiary
company or affiliate of such holding company, any public utility
company, or any holding company, by use of the mails or any means
or instrumentality of interstate commerce, or to sell any such
security having reason to believe that such security, by use of the
mails or any means or instrumentality of interstate commerce, will
be distributed or made the subject of a public offering;"
"(4) by use of the mails or any means or instrumentality of
interstate commerce, to acquire or negotiate for the acquisition of
any security or utility assets of any subsidiary company or
affiliate of such holding company, any public utility company, or
any holding company;"
"(5) to engage in any business in interstate commerce; or"
"(6) to own, control, or hold with power to vote, any security
of any subsidiary company thereof that does any of the acts
enumerated in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of this subsection.
. . ."
"Sec. 5. (a) On or at any time after October 1, 1935, any
holding company or any person purposing to become a holding company
may register by filing with the Commission a notification of
registration, in such form as the Commission may by rules and
regulations prescribe as necessary or appropriate in the public
interest or for the protection of investors or consumers. A person
shall be deemed to be registered upon receipt by the Commission of
such notification of registration."
"(b) It shall be the duty of every registered holding company to
file with the Commission, within such reasonable time after
registration as the Commission shall fix by rules and regulations
or order, a registration statement in such form as the Commission
shall be rules and regulations or order prescribe as necessary or
appropriate in the public interest or for the protection of
investors or consumers. Such registration statement shall
include:"
"(1) such copies of the charter or articles of incorporation,
partnership, or agreement, with all amendments thereto, and the
bylaws, trust indentures, mortgages, underwriting arrangements,
voting trust agreements, and similar documents, by whatever name
known, of or relating to the registrant or any of its associate
companies as the Commission may by rules and regulations or order
prescribe as necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for
the protection of investors or consumers;"
"(2) such information in such form and in such detail relating
to, and copies of such documents of or relating to, the registrant
and its associate companies as the Commission may by rules and
regulations or order prescribe as necessary or appropriate in the
public interest or for the protection of investors or consumers in
respect of:"
"(A) the organization and financial structure of such companies
and the nature of their business;"
"(B) the terms, position, rights, and privileges of the
different classes of their securities outstanding;"
"(C) the terms and underwriting arrangements under which their
securities, during not more than the five preceding years, have
been offered to the public or otherwise disposed of and the
relations of underwriters to, and their interest in, such
companies;"
"(D) the directors and officers of such companies, their
remuneration, their interest in the securities of, their material
contracts with, and their borrowings from, any of such
companies;"
"(E) bonus and profit-sharing arrangements;"
"(F) material contracts, not made in the ordinary course of
business, and service, sales, and construction contracts;"
"(G) options in respect of securities;"
"(H) balance sheets for not more than the five preceding fiscal
years, certified, if required by the rules and regulations of the
Commission, by an independent public accountant;"
"(1) profit and loss statements for not more than the five
preceding fiscal years, certified, if required by the rules and
regulations of the Commission, by an independent public
accountant;"
"(3) such further information or documents regarding the
registrant or its associate companies or the relations between them
as the Commission may by rules and regulations or order prescribe
as necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the
protection of investors or consumers."
"(c) The Commission by such rules and regulations or order as it
deems necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the
protection of investors or consumers, may permit a registrant to
file a preliminary registration statement without complying with
the provisions of subsection (b); but every registrant shall file a
complete registration statement with the Commission within such
reasonable period of time as the Commission shall fix by rules and
regulations or order, but not later than one year after the date of
registration."
"(d) Whenever the Commission, upon application, finds that a
registered holding company has ceased to be a holding company, it
shall so declare by order and upon the taking effect of such order
the registration of such company shall, upon such terms and
conditions as the Commission finds and in such order prescribes as
necessary for the protection of investors, cease to be in effect.
The denial of any such application by the Commission shall be by
order."
[
Footnote 4]
The "title" is "Title I -- Control of Public Utility Holding
Companies."