1. The Federal Trade Commission is without authority under
§ 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act to prevent a candy
manufacturer within a State from selling, wholly within that State,
candy in so-called "break and take" assortments. P.
312 U. S.
350.
2. Such selling is not a method of competition "in [interstate]
commerce" within the meaning of the Act, and therefore not within
the jurisdiction of the Commission, even though it be in
competition with and affect the sales of out-of-state manufacturers
who are barred from selling "break and take" assortments in
interstate commerce as an unfair method of competition. P.
312 U. S.
351.
3. The phrase "unfair methods of competition in [interstate]
commerce," as used in the Federal Trade Commission Act, is not to
be construed as though it meant "unfair methods of competition in
any way affecting interstate commerce." P.
312 U. S.
355.
110 F.2d 412 affirmed.
Certiorari, 311 U.S. 624, to review a judgment setting aside an
order of the Federal Trade Commission.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Federal Trade Commission found that Bunte Brothers, candy
manufacturers in Illinois, sold products there is what the trade
calls "break and take" packages,
Page 312 U. S. 350
which makes the amount the purchaser receives dependent upon
chance, and that thereby it was enabled in the Illinois market to
compete unfairly with manufacturers outside of Illinois who could
not indulge in this device because the Trade Commission has barred
"break and take" packages as an "unfair method of competition."
Federal Trade Commission Act, § 5(a), 38 Stat. 719, as amended
15 U.S.C. § 45(a);
Federal Trade Comm'n v. Keppel &
Bro., 291 U. S. 304.
Deeming the "break and take" sales unfair methods of competition
under § 5, even though the sales took place wholly within
Illinois, the Commission forbade Bunte Brothers further use of the
device. The Circuit Court of Appeals set aside the order, 110 F.2d
412, and we brought the case here because the issue at stake
presents an important aspect of the interplay of state and federal
authority. 311 U.S. 624.
The scope of § 5 is in controversy. [
Footnote 1] That section, the court below held,
authorizes the Commission to proceed only against business
practices employed in interstate commerce. The Commission urges
that its powers are not so restricted, that it may also proscribe
unfair methods used in intrastate sales when these result in a
handicap to interstate competitors.
While one may not end with the words of a disputed statute, one
certainly begins there. "Unfair methods of competition in commerce"
are the concern of § 5, and the Commission is "directed to
prevent persons . . . from using unfair methods of competition in
commerce. . . ."
Page 312 U. S. 351
The "commerce" in which these methods are barred is interstate
commerce. [
Footnote 2] Neither
ordinary English speech nor the considered language of legislation
would aptly describe the sales by Bunte Brothers of its "break and
take" assortments in Illinois as "using unfair methods of
competition in [interstate] commerce." When, in order to protect
interstate commerce, Congress has regulated activities which in
isolation are merely local, it has normally conveyed its purpose
explicitly.
See, for example, National Labor Relations
Act, §§ 2(7), 9(c), 10(a), 49 Stat. 450, 453, 29 U.S.C.
§ 152(7), 159(c), 160(a); Bituminous Coal Act, § 4-A, 50
Stat. 83, 15 U.S.C. § 834; Federal Employers' Liability Act,
§ 1, 35 Stat. 65, as amended, 53 Stat. 1404, 45 U.S.C. §
51. To be sure, the construction of every such statute presents a
unique problem in which words derive vitality from the aim and
nature of the specific legislation. But, bearing in mind that, in
ascertaining the scope of congressional legislation, a due regard
for a proper adjustment of the local and national interests in our
federal scheme must always be in the background, we ought not to
find in § 5 radiations beyond the obvious meaning of language
unless otherwise the purpose of the Act would be defeated.
Minnesota Rate Cases, 230 U. S. 352,
230 U. S.
398-412.
That, for a quarter century, the Commission has made no such
claim is a powerful indication that effective enforcement of the
Trade Commission Act is not dependent
Page 312 U. S. 352
on control over intrastate transactions. [
Footnote 3] Authority actually granted by
Congress, of course, cannot evaporate through lack of
administrative exercise. But, just as established practice may shed
light on the extent of power conveyed by general statutory
language, so the want of assertion of power by those who presumably
would be alert to exercise it is equally significant in determining
whether such power was actually conferred.
See Norwegian
Nitrogen Co. v. United States, 288 U.
S. 294,
288 U. S. 315.
This practical construction of the Act by those entrusted with its
administration is reinforced by the Commission's unsuccessful
attempt in 1935 to secure from Congress an express grant of
authority over transactions "affecting" commerce in addition to its
control of practices in commerce. S.Rep. No. 46, 74th Cong., 1st
Sess. These circumstances are all the more significant in that,
during the whole of the Commission's life, the so-called
Shreveport doctrine operated in the regulatory field
committed to the Interstate Commerce Commission. And it is that
doctrine which gives the contention of the Trade Commission its
strongest support.
Page 312 U. S. 353
Translation of an implication drawn from the special aspects of
one statute to a totally different statute is treacherous business.
The Interstate Commerce Act and the Federal Trade Commission Act
are widely disparate in their historic settings, in the enterprises
which they affect, in the range of control they exercise, and in
the relation of these controls to the functioning of the federal
system. We need not at this late day rehearse the considerations
that led to the
Shreveport decision.
Houston, E. &
W.T. Ry. Co. v. United States, 234 U.
S. 342. The nub of it, in the language of Chief Justice
Taft, lay in the relation between intrastate and interstate
railroad traffic:
"Effective control of the one must embrace some control over the
other in view of the blending of both in actual operation. The same
rails and the same cars carry both. The same men conduct them."
Wisconsin Railroad Comm'n v. Chicago, B. & Q. R.
Co., 257 U. S. 563,
257 U. S. 588.
And so, when the Interstate Commerce Commission found that the
intrastate rates of a carrier subject to the Act in effect operated
as a discrimination against its interstate traffic, this Court
sustained the power of the Commission to bring the two rates into
harmonious relation, and thereby to terminate the unlawful
discrimination. Congress. in 1920, revised the Interstate Commerce
Act and explicitly confirmed this power of the Commerce Commission.
41 Stat. 484, 49 U.S.C. § 13(4).
There is the widest difference in practical operation between
the control over local traffic intimately connected with interstate
traffic and the regulatory authority here asserted. Unlike the
relatively precise situation presented by rate discrimination,
"unfair competition" was designed by Congress as a flexible concept
with evolving content.
Federal Trade Comm'n v. Keppel &
Bro., supra at
291 U. S.
311-312. It touches the greatest variety of unrelated
activities. The Trade Commission, in its Report
Page 312 U. S. 354
for 1939, lists as "unfair competition" thirty-one diverse types
of business practices which run the gamut from bribing employees of
prospective customers to selling below cost for hindering
competition. [
Footnote 4] The
construction of § 5 urged by the Commission would thus give a
federal agency pervasive control over myriads of local businesses
in matters heretofore traditionally left to local custom or local
law. Such control bears no resemblance to the
Page 312 U. S. 355
strictly confined authority growing out of railroad rate
discrimination. An inroad upon local conditions and local standards
of such far-reaching import as is involved here ought to await a
clearer mandate from Congress. The problem now before us is very
different from that which was recently presented by
United
States v. Darby, ante, p.
312 U. S. 100. We
had there to consider the full scope of the constitutional power of
Congress under the Commerce Clause in relation to the subject
matter of the Fair Labor Standards Act. This case presents the
narrow question of what Congress did, not what it could do. And we
merely hold that to read "unfair methods of competition in
[interstate] commerce" as though it meant "unfair methods of
competition in any way affecting interstate commerce" requires, in
view of all the relevant considerations, much clearer manifestation
of intention than Congress has furnished.
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
"Sec. 5. (a) Unfair methods of competition in commerce, and
unfair or deceptive acts or practices in commerce, are hereby
declared unlawful."
"The Commission is hereby empowered and directed to prevent
persons, partnerships, or corporations . . . from using unfair
methods of competition in commerce and unfair or deceptive acts or
practices in commerce."
[
Footnote 2]
"Sec. 4. The words defined in this section shall have the
following meaning when found in this Act, to-wit:"
"'Commerce' means commerce among the several States or with
foreign nations, or in any Territory of the United States or in the
District of Columbia, or between any such Territory and another, or
between any such Territory and any State or foreign nation, or
between the District of Columbia and any State or Territory or
foreign nation."
[
Footnote 3]
The Commission makes no claim of a contrary administrative
practice. The cases which it cites in no way mitigate what is
stated in the text of the opinion. (1) Counsel for the Commission
apparently argued for recognition of the power claimed here in
Canfield Oil Co. v. Federal Trade Comm'n, 274 F. 571, but
the Commission had made no findings of discrimination against
commerce, and had only found that the Oil Company was engaged in
commerce. (2) The jurisdiction sustained in
Chamber of Commerce
of Minneapolis v. Federal Trade Comm'n, 13 F.2d 673, was very
different from that claimed here. It rested on the fact that the
Chamber conducted a market for grain in the current of interstate
commerce.
See Chicago Board of Trade v. Olsen,
262 U. S. 1, and
cases cited. (3) The order of the Commission reviewed in
California Rice Industry v. Federal Trade Comm'n, 102 F.2d
716, resulted from proceedings instituted more than a year after
this proceeding against Bunte Brothers had begun.
[
Footnote 4]
Report, pp. 83, 88.
And see these additional examples
(pp. 83, 85, 89):
"6. Making false and disparaging statements respecting
competitors' products and business, in some cases under the guise
of ostensibly disinterested and specially informed sources or
through purported scientific, but in fact misleading,
demonstrations or tests, and making false and misleading
representations with respect to competitors' products, such as that
seller's product is competitor's, and through use of such practices
as deceptive simulation of competitor's counter display catalogs or
trade names, and that competitor's business has been discontinued,
and that seller is successor thereto or purchaser and owner
thereof."
"
* * * *"
"10. Selling rebuilt, second-hand, renovated, or old products or
articles made from used or second-hand materials as and for
new."
"
* * * *"
"19. Using containers ostensibly of the capacity customarily
associated in the mind of the general purchasing public with
standard weights or quantities of the product therein contained, or
using such standard containers only partially filled to capacity,
so as to make it appear to the purchaser that he is receiving the
standard weight or quantity."
"
* * * *"
"30. Failing and refusing to deal justly and fairly with
customers in consummating transactions undertaken, through such
practices as refusing to correct mistakes in filling orders, or to
make promised adjustments or refunds, and retaining, without
refund, goods returned for exchange or adjustment, and enforcing,
notwithstanding agents' alterations, printed terms of purchase
contracts, and exacting payments in excess of customers'
commitments."
"31. Shipping products at market prices to its customers or
prospective customers or to the customers or prospective customers
of competitors without an order and then inducing or attempting by
various means to induce the consignees to accept and purchase such
consignments."
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, dissenting.
In my opinion, the judgment should be reversed.
The Commission found that respondent's
"use of chance assortments in the sale and distribution of its
candies in Illinois has a direct and powerful burdensome effect
upon interstate commerce in candies from other states to the
Illinois, and gives respondent an undue and unreasonable preference
over competitors located in other states."
The validity of that finding and of the Commission's conclusion
that respondent's practices constitute unfair methods of
competition are not in issue. The only question presented by this
petition for certiorari is whether respondent's practices
constitute unfair methods of competition "in commerce" within the
meaning of § 5(a) of the Federal Trade Commission Act.
Page 312 U. S. 356
I think they do.
Unfair competition involves not only an offender, but also a
victim. Here some of the victims of the unfair methods of
competition are engaged in interstate commerce. The fact that the
acts of the offender are intrastate is immaterial. The purpose of
the Act is to protect interstate commerce against specified types
of injury. So far as the jurisdiction of the Commission is
concerned, it is the existence of that injury to interstate
commerce, not the interstate or intrastate character of the conduct
causing the injury, which is important. An unfair method of
competition is "in" interstate commerce not only when it has an
interstate origin, but also when it has a direct interstate impact.
Respondent is "using" unfair methods of competition "in" interstate
commerce when the direct effect of its conduct is to burden,
stifle, or impair that commerce.
Under the Sherman Act, 26 Stat. 209, a contract or conspiracy
may be "in restraint of trade or commerce among the several States"
even though the acts or conduct are intrastate.
Swift & Co.
v. United States, 196 U. S. 375,
196 U. S. 397;
United States v. Patten, 226 U. S. 525,
226 U. S.
541-543;
Standard Oil Co. v. United States,
283 U. S. 163,
283 U. S.
168-169. Sec. 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act is
"supplementary" to the Sherman Act.
Federal Trade Commission v.
Raladam Co., 283 U. S. 643,
283 U. S. 647.
Like the Sherman Act, it seeks
"to protect the public from abuses arising in the course of
competitive interstate and foreign trade. . . . The paramount aim
of the act is the protection of the public from the evils likely to
result from the destruction of competition or the restriction of it
in a substantial degree."
Federal Trade Commission v. Raladam Co., supra, pp.
283 U. S.
647-648. And, as this Court said in
Federal Trade
Commission v. Beech-Nut Packing Co., 257 U.
S. 441,
257 U. S. 453,
the declaration of public policy contained in the Sherman Act
is
"to be considered in determining what are unfair methods of
competition, which
Page 312 U. S. 357
the Federal Trade Commission is empowered to condemn and
suppress."
For the Federal Trade Commission Act "undoubtedly was aimed at
all the familiar methods of law violation which prosecutions under
the Sherman Act had disclosed."
Federal Trade Commission v.
Keppel & Bro., 291 U. S. 304,
291 U. S.
310.
That history, of course, does not give us license to disregard
plain and unambiguous limitations on the power of the Commission.
But it does admonish us to construe one of a series of legislative
acts dealing with a common or related problem in light of the
integrated statutory scheme.
See United States v. Hutcheson,
ante, p.
312 U. S. 219. It
warns us not to whittle away administrative power by resolving an
ambiguity against the existence of that power where the full
arsenal of that power is necessary to cope with the evil at hand.
The evil here is direct injurious discrimination against interstate
commerce. The Commission has issued orders against some 120 of
respondent's competitors prohibiting them from selling chance
assortments of candy in interstate commerce. Under this decision,
respondent may continue to use this same unfair method of
competition to increase its business at the expense of those who
sell in interstate commerce and who are not free to employ the same
methods in self-defense. I think the Act, an exercise by Congress
of its commerce power, should be interpreted to protect interstate
commerce not to permit discrimination against it.
Such an approach was used in the
Shreveport
case (234 U.S. 342) to give the Interstate Commerce Commission
control over intrastate rates which injuriously affected, through
an unreasonable discrimination, traffic that was interstate. That
result was reached though the Act expressly denied the Commission
any jurisdiction where the "transportation" was "wholly within one
state." This Court said (234 U.S. at
234 U. S. 358)
that those
Page 312 U. S. 358
words had
"appropriate reference to exclusively intrastate traffic,
separately considered; to the regulation of domestic commerce, as
such. The powers conferred by the act are not thereby limited where
interstate commerce itself is involved."
The interrelation between the intrastate and interstate
activities in the instant case is hardly less intimate than in the
Shreveport case. The fact that the nexus here is economic,
and not physical, is inconsequential. In this case, as in the
other, the problem is the existence of administrative authority to
provide effective protection of interstate commerce against
discrimination. In the
Shreveport case, statutory doubts
were resolved so as to strengthen the administrative process even
against the claim that thereby the state authorities would be
"shorn of those powers which alone can justify their existence."
Similar arguments should not deter us from being tolerant of an
asserted power, admittedly constitutional, to deal effectively with
the realities of economic interdependence.
The fact that a clarifying amendment to the Act was sought which
would have removed the doubts as to the meaning of "in commerce" is
not material except to the extent that it shows that doubts
existed. It does not aid in resolving those doubts. To be sure,
recent statutes dealing with other fields have removed such doubts
by explicit provisions. But they are of little aid in interpreting
an earlier act in its own legislative setting.
See United
States v. Stewart, 311 U. S. 60,
311 U. S. 69.
And, as to the charge that, for a quarter of a century, the
Commission made no claim to such a power, two answers may be made.
In the first place, as early as 1921, the Commission urged that the
doctrine of the
Shreveport case permitted an
interpretation of the Act which would give it control over certain
intrastate activities.
Canfield Oil Co. v. Federal Trade
Commission, 274 F. 571; Hankin, Jurisdiction of the Federal
Trade Commission, 12 Calif.L.Rev.
Page 312 U. S. 359
179, 197,
et seq. Although the question does not appear
to have been definitely settled, in 1926, the Commission received
some support for its view.
See Chamber of Commerce v. Federal
Trade Commission, 13 F.2d 673, 684.
Cf. American Can Co.
v. Ladoga Canning Co., 44 F.2d 763, 770, 771. But, in 1939,
that power was denied.
California Rice Industry v. Federal
Trade Commission, 102 F.2d 716, 723. Nonuse of the asserted
power clearly cannot be inferred from that record. In the second
place, it would not be relevant if this power did lay dormant for
years. Mere nonuse does not subtract from power which has been
granted. The host of practical reasons which may defer exhaustion
of administrative powers lies in the realm of policy. From that
delay we can hardly infer that the need did not or does not
exist.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK and MR. JUSTICE REED join in this dissent.