1. In a suit by the United States to enjoin violation of the
Sherman Antitrust Act resulting from control of the affairs of a
gas pipeline company by competitors through stock ownership, etc.,
a consent decree was entered which specifically conferred certain
rights on the pipeline company and specifically provided that, upon
proper application, it could become a party to the suit for the
purpose of enforcing those rights, jurisdiction of the cause and
the parties being retained to give full effect to the decree.
Held:
(1) The right of the pipeline company to intervene at a
subsequent stage to enforce the rights so reserved was not
dependent upon Rule 24(a) of the Rules of Civil Procedure, nor
subject to the District Court's discretion, but was a right
established by the consent decree. P.
312 U. S.
505.
(2) Orders denying motions to intervene made on its behalf were
final orders appealable to this Court. P.
312 U. S.
508.
(3) Enforcement of such rights of the pipeline company through
its intervention and active participation in the litigation would
not conflict with the public duties of the Attorney General. P.
312 U. S.
508.
Page 312 U. S. 503
(4) The company's right of intervention was not barred by the
denial of motions to intervene made earlier by one of its
stockholders, but made on that stockholder's own behalf and
involving different claims from those now asserted. P.
312 U. S.
508.
2. Expedition in the enforcement of the antitrust laws, to be
attained by modification of an existing decree with the approval of
the Government, cannot be had at the sacrifice of private right
which the decree itself established. P.
312 U. S.
509.
No. 268 reversed.
No. 269 affirmed.
Appeals from two orders of a District Court of three judges
denying applications for leave to intervene in a suit instituted by
the Government under the Antitrust Act. One of the applications
purported to be made by the Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Company,
the other was made on its behalf by the Missouri-Kansas Pipe Line
Company as one of its stockholders.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
These proceedings grow out of a suit in equity brought by the
Attorney General in 1935 to enforce the antitrust
Page 312 U. S. 504
laws. That suit was terminated by a consent decree the terms of
which specifically reserved certain rights to the Panhandle Eastern
Pipe Line Company. The issues here revolve around the scope of
those provisions of the decree.
In its bill, the Government charged that Columbia Gas &
Electric Corporation and its controlled instrumentality, Columbia
Oil & Gasoline Corporation, together with individual
defendants, had conspired, for the benefit of Columbia Gas, to shut
out operation in the Indiana-Ohio-Michigan area by the Panhandle
Company, which had built a natural gas pipeline from the Texas
fields to the border of Indiana. Panhandle was an offspring of
Missouri-Kansas Pipe Line Company (hereafter called Mokan), which,
at the inception of the Government's suit, still owned half of
Panhandle's stock and held half its junior debt. Columbia Gas, it
was charged, had a practical monopoly of natural gas in the market
which Panhandle proposed to enter, and, to maintain this monopoly,
Columbia Gas acquired domination of Panhandle through the
acquisition by Columbia Oil of half of Panhandle's stock and junior
debt and its whole senior debt. These acts stifled, so it was
claimed, Panhandle's potential competition, rendered it insolvent,
and forced Mokan into receivership.
The consent decree sought to assure opportunities for
competition by Panhandle. Deeming the terms of the decree
inadequate for its purpose, the Government, in 1939, reopened the
proceedings. The defendants proposed modifications of the decree by
a plan which the district court referred to a master. After the
master's report approving the plan had been submitted, but before
the district court had acted upon it, two attempts to intervene
were made on behalf of Panhandle. The denial
Page 312 U. S. 505
of these two motions by the district court is the basis of the
appeals here which come to us directly under the Expediting Act, 32
Stat. 823, as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 29. In No. 268, Mokan, as a
stockholder of Panhandle, made the appropriate allegations as to
the unwillingness of those responsible for the actions of the
corporation to protect its interests, and moved to intervene on
behalf of Panhandle. In No. 269, the motion purported to be made in
Panhandle's name. In addition to the formal parties, the City of
Detroit was heard here as
amicus curiae because of its
interest in the supply of gas by Panhandle.
For clarity's sake, we shall first dispose of No. 268.
Numerous arguments were pressed upon us challenging our
jurisdiction over the appeal or, in the alternative, insisting on
the propriety of the action of the district court. Treating Rule
24(a) of the Rules of Civil Procedure as a comprehensive inventory
of the allowable instances for intervention, it is insisted that
the present case is not one for intervention as of right, and, as
an exercise of the district court's discretion, is not reviewable
here. In any event, the order of the district court is said not to
be a "final decree" within the Expediting Act,
compare United
States v. California Canneries, 279 U.
S. 553,
279 U. S. 556,
and on this score not reviewable. If the merits be here open, the
order was correct, because there was not "timely application," as
required by Rule 24(a). Finally, various considerations of
controlling public interest are invoked to sustain the district
court: the Attorney General is the guardian of the public interest
in enforcing the antitrust laws,
compare New York City v. New
York Telephone Co., 261 U. S. 312;
injection of new issues ought not to be allowed to delay
disposition of the main litigation,
see United States v.
Northern Securities Co., 128 F. 808, 813; a decree already
entered should not be
Page 312 U. S. 506
impeached by intervention,
see United States v. California
Canneries, supra, at
279 U. S.
556.
All of these arguments misconceive the basis of the right now
asserted. Its foundation is the consent decree. We are not here
dealing with a conventional form of intervention, whereby an appeal
is made to the court's good sense to allow persons having a common
interest with the formal parties to enforce the common interest
with their individual emphasis. Plainly enough, the circumstances
under which interested outsiders should be allowed to become
participants in a litigation is, barring very special
circumstances, a matter for the
nisi prius court. But,
where the enforcement of a public law also demands distinct
safeguarding of private interests by giving them a formal status in
the decree, the power to enforce rights thus sanctioned is not left
to the public authorities, nor put in the keeping of the district
court's discretion.
That is the present case. Panhandle's right to economic
independence was at the heart of the controversy. An important
aspect of that independence was the extension of its operations to
permit sales in Detroit. The assurance of this extension was deemed
so vital that it was safeguarded by explicit provisions in the
decree. Section IV, which is in full in the margin, [
Footnote 1] contained
Page 312 U. S. 507
those provisions, and by Section V, also set out below,
[
Footnote 2] Panhandle, "upon
proper application," could "become a party" to the suit "for the
limited purpose of enforcing the rights conferred by Section IV."
Mokan, on behalf of Panhandle, claimed that Columbia Gas had made
financial arrangements, which we need not detail, that would in
practice defeat the free enterprise of Panhandle.
Page 312 U. S. 508
We are not concerned with the substantiality of this claim. The
sole question before us is whether there was standing to make the
claim before the district court. We hold there was such standing.
To enforce the rights conferred by Section IV was the purpose of
the motion. Therefore, the codification of general doctrines of
intervention contained in Rule 24(a) does not touch our problem.
And, since the protection afforded Panhandle by Section IV of the
decree could only be secured by the remedy designed by Section V,
to-wit, active participation in the suit, the denial of that
protection is a definitive adjudication, and so appealable.
See
Credits Commutation Co. v. United States, 177 U.
S. 311,
177 U. S. 316;
cf. Cobbledick v. United States, 309 U.
S. 323. Nor can the enforcement of this protection be
deemed remotely in conflict with the public duties of the Attorney
General, nor to bring in digressive issues, nor to impeach the
existing decree. It is a vindication of the decree.
A final contention in support of the order remains. It is based
on two prior denials of motions by Mokan to intervene. Treating
Mokan's motions as made on its own behalf on the score of its
ownership of more than forty percent of Panhandle's stock, the
District Court denied the motions. Appeals from these denials were
dismissed by the Circuit Court of Appeals, 108 F.2d 614, and we
denied certiorari, 309 U.S. 687. The denials are now urged as
res judicata. But they were a rejection of Mokan's attempt
to intervene in its own behalf. In neither instance was the relief
denied deemed a mode of enforcing Panhandle's rights under Sections
IV and V of the decree. The earlier denials involved different
legal claims from that now asserted, and therefore are no bar to
the present proceeding.
In No. 269, Panhandle's intervention was sought by a different
route. At a meeting of the stockholders of Panhandle, a resolution
was introduced authorizing this
Page 312 U. S. 509
proceeding. It was defeated because Columbia Oil's holding of
Panhandle stock was voted against it. Mokan claimed that this stock
was disqualified from being voted on a matter so deeply touching
the self-interest of the Columbia companies. If this stock be not
counted, so runs the argument, Mokan's votes constituted a
majority, and the resolution carried. But we need not pass on these
problems of corporate control, because, under our decision in No.
268, Panhandle's participation, derivatively asserted by Mokan, is
secured.
In a memorandum filed by the Attorney General, we are advised
that, on January 18, 1941, the District Court filed an opinion, 36
F. Supp. 488, approving the plan for modifying the original decree
subject to some suggestions by the Government. This, we are told,
"is believed to satisfy the public interest," and so the Government
desires to sustain the action of the court below without further
litigation. We recognize the duty of expeditious enforcement of the
antitrust laws. But expedition cannot be had at the sacrifice of
rights which the original decree itself established. We assume that
the district court will adjust the right which belongs to Panhandle
with full regard to that public interest which underlay the
original suit.
The order in No. 268 is reversed, but that in No. 269 is
affirmed.
No. 268 reversed.
No. 269 affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS is of opinion that both judgments should be
affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS and MR. JUSTICE MURPHY took no part in the
consideration or disposition of this case.
* Together with No. 269,
Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co. v.
United States et al., also on appeal from the District Court
of the United States for the District of Delaware.
[
Footnote 1]
"That the defendants be and they are hereby perpetually enjoined
from restraining or interfering in any manner in the freedom of
Panhandle Eastern to contract or to finance or arrange the
financing of all contracts, extensions (including the proposed new
line to Detroit, whether or not built and owned by it), repairs,
maintenance, service, or improvements necessary in its business
through or with any firm, person, or corporation with whom it may
choose to deal (and to that end any such financial or contractual
arrangements made by Panhandle Eastern to consummate its contract
dated August 31, 1935, with the Detroit City Gas Company shall be
subject to the approval of the trustee who shall receive, and
consider the advisability of, alternative methods of financing from
any responsible under-writer);"
"That, if such contracts be made with or financial assistance be
secured from Columbia Gas, such contracts may be made or financial
assistance furnished only upon terms or conditions which do not in
any way, directly or indirectly, presently or potentially, confer
upon Columbia Gas any voting rights, control or participation in
the management of Panhandle Eastern or confer any rights of
ownership in the works or properties of Panhandle Eastern except as
security for the investment, and in the event that Columbia Gas
shall, with respect to any contract or any contractual rights of
any kind whatsoever or any property held as security or used in
connection with any contract, in any way prevent the free
transportation, sale, and distribution of gas by Panhandle Eastern,
then, upon application to this Court or any court of competent
jurisdiction, Panhandle Eastern shall have the right (1) to the
immediate appointment of a trustee to hold such contract rights or
property subject to the purposes and provisions of this decree; (2)
to immediate specific performance of any and all contracts with
Columbia Gas, and (3) to immediate injunction, both temporary and
final, as well as any other appropriate remedy at law or in equity,
including any remedy hereunder."
[
Footnote 2]
"That jurisdiction of this cause and of the parties hereto is
retained for the purpose of giving full effect to this decree and
for the enforcement of strict compliance herewith and the
punishment of evasions hereof, and for the further purpose of
making such other and further orders and decrees or taking such
other action as may from time to time be necessary to the carrying
out hereof, and that Panhandle Eastern, upon proper application,
may become a party hereto for the limited purpose of enforcing the
rights conferred by Section IV hereof."