1. Under Equity Rule 70 1/2, it is the duty of the District
Court to make special, formal findings of fact, and state
separately its conclusions of law thereon, determining all the
issues in the case. The opinion of that court in this case was not
a substitute.
2. Compliance with this rule is particularly important in an
antitrust case which comes to this Court by direct appeal from the
trial court. P.
304 U. S.
56.
Decree in
20 F.
Supp. 868 set aside and cause remanded for statement of
findings of fact and conclusions of law.
PER CURIAM.
The Government brought this suit for an injunction against the
carrying out of an alleged conspiracy, in restraint of interstate
commerce, between distributors and exhibitors of motion picture
films. The restraint was alleged to consist in provisions in
license agreements which prevented any "feature picture" of the
distributors, which had been shown "first-run" in a theater of the
defendant exhibitor at an admission price of 40 cents or more, from
thereafter being exhibited in the same locality at an admission
price of less than 25 cents or on the same program with another
feature picture.
Page 304 U. S. 56
The evidence was presented by an agreed statement of certain
facts and by oral testimony on behalf of each party. The District
Court entered a final decree adjudging that in making the
restrictive agreements the distributors had engaged in a conspiracy
with the exhibitor, Interstate Circuit, Inc., and its officers in
violation of the Anti-Trust Act, and granting a permanent
injunction against the enforcement of the restrictions.
20 F.
Supp. 868. The case comes here on direct appeal. Acts of Feb.
11, 1903, c. 544, 32 Stat. 823; February 13, 1925, c. 229, §
1, 28 U.S.C. § 345.
Equity Rule 70 1/2 provides:
"In deciding suits in equity, including those required to be
heard before three judges, the court of first instance shall find
the facts specially and state separately its conclusions of law
thereon . . ."
"Such findings and conclusions shall be entered of record and,
if an appeal is taken from the decree, shall be included by the
clerk in the record which is certified to the appellate court under
rules 75 and 76."
The District Court did not comply with this rule. The court made
no formal findings. The court did not find the facts specially and
state separately its conclusions of law, as the rule required. The
statements in the decree that, in making the restrictive
agreements, the parties had engaged in an illegal conspiracy were
not ultimate conclusions, and did not dispense with the necessity
of properly formulating the underlying findings of fact.
The opinion of the court was not a substitute for the required
findings. A discussion of portions of the evidence and the court's
reasoning in its opinion do not constitute the special and formal
findings by which it is the duty of the court appropriately and
specifically to determine all the issues which the case presents.
This is an essential aid to the appellate court in reviewing an
equity case (
Railroad Commission v. Maxcy, 281 U. S.
82, and cases
Page 304 U. S. 57
cited), and compliance with the rule is particularly important
in an antitrust case which comes to this Court by direct appeal
from the trial court.
The Government contends that the distributors were parties to a
common plan constituting a conspiracy in restraint of commerce;
that each distributor would benefit by unanimous action, whereas
otherwise the restrictions would probably injure the distributors
who imposed them, and that prudence dictated that "no distributor
agree to impose the restrictions in the absence of agreement or
understanding that his fellows would do likewise;" that the
restraints were unreasonable, and that they had the purpose and
effect of raising and maintaining the level of admission prices;
that, even if the distributors acted independently and not as
participants in a joint undertaking, still the restraints were
unreasonable in their effect upon the exhibitor's competitors.
Appellants, asserting copyright privileges, contend that the
restrictions were reasonable; that they were intended simply to
protect the licensee from what would otherwise be an unreasonable
interference by the distributors with the enjoyment of the granted
right of exhibition; that there was no combination or conspiracy
among the distributors; that it was to the independent advantage of
each distributor to impose the restrictions in its own agreement
and that the contention that less than substantially unanimous
action would have injured the distributors in making such
agreements was contrary to the evidence, and that the restrictions
did not have an injurious effect.
We intimate no opinion upon any of the questions raised by these
rival contentions, but they point the importance of special and
adequate findings in accordance with the prescribed equity
practice.
The decree of the District Court is set aside, and the cause is
remanded, with directions to the court to state
Page 304 U. S. 58
its findings of fact and conclusions of law as required by
Equity Rule 70 1/2.
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE STONE and MR. JUSTICE BLACK think that the findings
in the opinion and decree below, while informal, are sufficient for
purposes of decision, and that the case should therefore be decided
now without further proceedings below; the more so because of the
public interest involved.
MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO took no part in the consideration and
decision of this case.
* Together with No. 710,
Paramount Pictures Distributing Co.
et al. v. United States, also on appeal from the District
Court of the United States for the Northern District of Texas.