1. The function of the Secretary of Agriculture, when
determining under the Packers and Stockyards Act reasonable rates
for services rendered by market agencies during a period of years
past, is not merely to compare their actual expenditures and
incomes, but involves consideration of the extent to which the
services properly should be charged to the public. P.
313 U. S.
414.
2. As a basis for distribution of funds paid into the registry
of the District Court by market agencies pursuant to an order
granting an interlocutory injunction in their suit to enjoin the
enforcement of an order of the Secretary of Agriculture purporting
to fix their rates, which ultimately was adjudged void for defects
of procedure, the Secretary of Agriculture reopened the proceeding
and found and fixed for the impounding period rates which were on
the level of those fixed by the original order.
Held:
(1) A contention that the Secretary based his judgment on
conditions existing at the date of the original order, without
considering subsequent changes, is disproved by the record. P.
313 U. S.
416.
(2) A contention that the Secretary's findings are without
support in the evidence is without merit. P.
313 U. S.
417.
(3) Quite different considerations may properly have influenced
the Secretary in fixing rates for the impounding period from those
by which he determined a schedule of rates for the future. P.
313 U. S.
419.
(4) A motion that the Secretary be disqualified for bias was
properly overruled by him. P.
313 U. S.
420.
The charge of bias grew out of his criticism of the decision of
this Court declaring his original order void (
304 U. S. 304 U.S.
1), in a letter which he wrote to a newspaper while in the mistaken
belief that the decision meant return of the impounded funds to the
market agencies. In overruling the motion, he explained the
mistake, denied bias, and added that, as a matter of expediency, he
might have disqualified himself but for the fact that, while the
market agencies were pressing his disqualification, they were
simultaneously urging that none other than the Secretary had legal
authority to make the rate order.
Page 313 U. S. 410
(5) The fact that the Secretary not merely held but expressed
strong views on matters believed by him to have been in issue in
the earlier stage of the case did not unfit him for exercising his
duty in the subsequent proceedings. P.
313 U. S.
421.
3. In a suit by market agencies attacking rates fixed by the
Secretary of Agriculture, it was improper for the District Court,
over the Government's objection, to authorize the plaintiffs to
take the Secretary's deposition, and improper, upon his appearing
at the trial, to examine him regarding the process by which he
reached his conclusions, including the manner and extent of his
study of the record and his consultation with subordinates. P.
313 U. S.
422.
4. Administrative and judicial processes are collaborative
instrumentalities of justice, and the appropriate independence of
each should be respected by the other. P.
313 U. S.
422.
32 F.
Supp. 546 reversed.
Appeal from a decree of the District Court, of three judges,
which adjudged invalid an order of the Secretary of Agriculture
fixing rates and directed that funds in the registry that had been
paid in by the plaintiffs be returned to them. The history of this
protracted litigation is summed up in the first paragraph of the
opinion.
Page 313 U. S. 413
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case originated eleven years ago. As a result of
proceedings begun in April, 1930, under the Packers and Stockyards
Act, 42 Stat. 159, 7 U.S.C. § 181
et seq., the
Secretary of Agriculture in June, 1933, issued an order setting
maximum rates to be charged by market agencies for their services
at the Kansas City Stockyards. The market agencies brought suit to
set aside his order. The district court issued a temporary
restraining order under which amounts charged in excess of the
rates fixed by the order were impounded, and later it upheld the
order.
8 F. Supp.
766. On appeal here, 7 U.S.C. § 217; 28 U.S.C.
§§ 44, 47a, the case was sent back to the district court
in order to determine on the issues raised by the pleadings whether
the agencies had been denied the "full hearing" demanded by §
310 of the Act.
298 U. S. 468. The
district court thereupon decided that this requirement of the
statute had been satisfied.
23 F. Supp.
380. The case was again brought here and the order of the
Secretary
Page 313 U. S. 414
was held invalid because of procedural defects.
304 U. S.
1. Prior to this decision, the Secretary and the market
agencies had agreed upon a higher schedule of rates to become
effective on December 1, 1937. However, under the impounding order
which had continued in effect until that date, over half a million
dollars had been deposited. The disposition of this fund was made a
ground for a petition for rehearing after the second
Morgan decision, but the petition was denied because that
question was for the district court.
304 U.
S. 23, 26. The secretary then reopened the original
proceedings to determine reasonable rates during the impounding
period. Before the Secretary had made a new order, the district
court directed that the impounded moneys be turned over to the
market agencies. 24 F. Supp. 214. The case came here for the third
time, and we reversed the district court and required its retention
of the fund "until such time as the Secretary, proceeding with due
expedition, shall have entered a final order in the proceedings
pending before him."
307 U. S. 307 U.S.
183,
307 U. S. 198.
This decision was rendered on May 15, 1939. A month later, the
Secretary issued a new schedule of rates for the impounding period
based on elaborate findings. Accordingly, the Government moved the
district court to distribute the funds in accordance with the
Secretary's order, but that court, with one of its three judges
dissenting, held the order invalid and directed that the funds be
given to the market agencies.
32 F.
Supp. 546. The case is now here for the fourth time.
The validity of the Secretary's order has undergone the closest
scrutiny in elaborate briefs and extended oral arguments. Nothing
has been overlooked. However, in the final stage of this long drawn
out litigation, critical examination reveals only a few issues
demanding attention.
When the matter was last here, we defined the duty of the
Secretary. He was to determine reasonable rates for the impounding
period so that there could be just distribution
Page 313 U. S. 415
of the funds which the court below had taken into its registry.
The nature of the problem before the Secretary was a guide to its
solution. The Secretary's task was not the usual enterprise of
fixing rates for the future, so largely an exercise in prophecy.
Unique circumstances made him, in 1939, the arbiter of rates for a
period between 1933 and 1937. But even such a retrospective
determination does not present a mathematical problem. Doubts and
difficulties incapable of exact resolution confront judgment. More
than that, since the Secretary is the guardian of the public
interest in regulating a business of public concern, it is not for
him merely to reflect the items on a profit and loss statement. He
must consider whether these represent services which properly
should be charged to the public. While, therefore, the Secretary,
in determining rates for the past, could not deny himself the
benefit of hindsight, he was not merely a bookkeeper posting items
into a ledger. Rates to which these public agencies were entitled
were not to be derived merely from their expenditures and actual
income.
This Court defined the duty of the Secretary in its decision in
the 307th U.S. The record leaves no doubt that the Secretary, when
he filed his order a month after that decision, appropriately
discharged the duty. He served upon the market agencies the order
of June 14, 1933, and the findings underlying it as the starting
point of the inquiry. The market agencies protested against any
order "
nunc pro tunc as of June 14, 1933," alleged that
conditions had changed much since 1933, and asked for the
appointment of an examiner to take new evidence. Because he deemed
the earlier findings illuminating and helpful "as a working basis
for this hearing," the Secretary refused to withdraw them. But he
appointed an examiner to hear new evidence, and denied
"any intention of depriving the respondents of the opportunity
of offering evidence concerning conditions affecting the
reasonableness of their
Page 313 U. S. 416
rates during the period subsequent to June 14, 1933."
He further stated that the "forecasts of conditions" in the 1933
order "can now be checked in light of subsequent events." He
neither purported to make nor did he make a
nunc pro tunc
order. The Secretary thus adopted a procedure which admitted
whatever light was shed by change of circumstances after 1933. The
market agencies freely availed themselves of this procedure, and
the Secretary's findings leave no room for doubt that his
conclusions represent a judgment of 1939, and not a prophecy of
1933. Having overruled the contention of Government counsel that
evidence of conditions after 1933 was irrelevant, he took note of
the fact that fewer livestock came to the market after 1933; that a
larger number came by truck, thereby causing a decrease in the
number of animals in an average consignment; that specific as well
as general economic factors touching the market at Kansas City had
changed; that statistics relevant in 1933 had become outmoded, and
that he had before him evidence of expenses for "business getting
and maintaining" and salesmanship not before him in 1933. The
Secretary thus unequivocally avowed his intention to consider
conditions after 1933, and his findings carry out his purpose.
[
Footnote 1] We must therefore
reject the claim that the Secretary's judgment was founded on the
misconception that he must shut his mind to everything that
happened after 1933, and, in 1939, fix rates in the imaginary world
of 1933.
Another attack upon the Secretary's order is the
conventional
Page 313 U. S. 417
objection that the findings were not rooted in proof. To
reexamine here with particularity the extensive findings made by
the Secretary, and to test them by a record of 1340 printed pages
and thousands of pages of additional exhibits would, in itself, go
a long way to convert a contest before the Secretary into one
before the courts.
Compare 76 U. S. Register
and Receiver, 9 Wall. 575,
76 U. S. 578.
We have canvassed too fully in the past the duties respectively
allotted to the Secretary of Agriculture and the courts in the
enforcement of the Packers and Stockyards Act to justify extended
discussion of the governing principles.
Tagg Bros. &
Moorhead v. United States, 280 U. S. 420;
Acker v. United States, 289 U. S. 426;
see also United States v. Morgan, 307 U.
S. 183,
307 U. S.
190-191. We are in the legislative realm of fixing
rates. This is a task of striking a balance and reaching a judgment
on factors beset with doubts and difficulties, uncertainty and
speculation. On ultimate analysis, the real question is whether the
Secretary or a court should make an appraisal of elements having
delusive certainty. Congress has put the responsibility on the
Secretary, and the Constitution does not deny the assignment.
The objection that the proof does not support the findings is
really a repetition in disguise of the unfounded claim that the
Secretary misconceived his duty and made his order in 1939 as
though he were acting in 1933. The bedrock of these variously
phrased attacks upon the order is the contention that the Secretary
was indifferent to events occurring after 1933. The short answer is
that he was not. The conclusion which he drew from these events is
another matter. [
Footnote
2]
Page 313 U. S. 418
Specifically, it is urged that, by the increase of rates for the
future, to which the market agencies and the Secretary agreed in
1937, changes in circumstances were recognized, while the present
order ignored these changes because its rates are at the same level
as the original order. But the Secretary did not disregard changed
market conditions during the impounding period. Evidence showing
these changes was submitted by the market agencies. [
Footnote 3] He was thus duly apprised of the
changes, and
Page 313 U. S. 419
they entered into the findings. To be sure, in ascertaining the
reasonable rates for the impounding period, he did not attach to
them the significance which the market agencies drew from them. As
a result of an elaborate study of conditions prior to 1933 and
evidence indicating no essential change in those conditions for the
purpose at hand during the later years, the Secretary concluded
that the market was overstaffed, and that, in the competitive
setting of the business, amounts had been spent not justified by
that public interest which he is charged to protect. Actual
expenses for salesmen's salaries and "business getting," the items
chiefly in controversy, he found, did not furnish an adequate guide
to the ascertainment of reasonable rates. Had the lower rates
originally set by the Secretary in 1933 been tested by experience,
audits of the market agencies under these rates would have
reflected the practical operation of the policy of lowering costs
under controlled conditions. But this source of experience was
unavailable, because the agencies throughout the impounding period
continued to operate under the higher rates. Quite different
considerations may properly have influenced the Secretary in fixing
rates for the impounding period from those by which he determined a
schedule of rates for the future. The existence of the differences
is recognized in the agreement between the Secretary and the market
agencies whereby the higher rates of the 1937 schedule were to be
"without prejudice" either to the Government or to the agencies
Page 313 U. S. 420
in the present litigation. It was further agreed in 1937 that,
after six months, and unless the rate order of 1933 was found
invalid, the Secretary could at any time, "without further
hearing," reduce the rates for the future to the 1933 level. There
were very great complexities in determining rates for an industry
affected by the unstable conditions which surrounded the Kansas
City market in 1937. And the expert tribunal charged with the task
may well have felt a need for flexibility in the prophecy involved
in setting future rates which did not enter the judgment required
in fixing rates for a past period. It is not for us to try to
penetrate the precise course of the Secretary's reasoning. Our duty
is at an end when we find, as we do find, that the Secretary was
responsibly conscious of conditions at the market during the years
following 1933, that he duly weighed them, and nevertheless
concluded that rates similar to those in the 1933 order were
proper.
But the market agencies go beyond saying that the record did not
warrant what the Secretary found. They say that bias disqualified
him. This serious charge derives from a letter written by the
Secretary to the New York Times immediately following the decision
of this Court in the second
Morgan case,
301 U. S. 304 U.S.
1. By that decision, the Court had upset the order of 1933 because
of procedural defects. Largely because of his assumption that this
meant the return of the impounded funds to the market agencies, the
Secretary in his letter, vigorously criticized the decision. The
market agencies in due course moved to disqualify the Secretary in
the proceedings started by him to fix new rates. In denying their
motion, the Secretary wrote a patently sincere denial of bias. He
stated that he had complained against a return of the impounded
funds to the market agencies prior to a determination of the rates
on the merits, that the denial of the petition for rehearing,
304 U. S. 304
U.S. 23,
304 U. S. 26, had
shown him the error of his assumption, that, in his letter of
criticism, he
Page 313 U. S. 421
made no prejudgment about the rates to be fixed, and that his
only concern was to "see that the substantive rights of the parties
are fairly determined." He added that, "as a matter of expediency,"
he might have disqualified himself but for the fact that, while the
market agencies were pressing his disqualification, they were
simultaneously urging that none other than the Secretary had legal
authority to make the rate order. Plainly enough, when it was thus
suggested that he create a situation in which no order could be
made, the Secretary was offered no escape from his duty even had he
preferred to consult the comforts of personal convenience.
But, intrinsically, the letter did not require the Secretary's
dignified denial of bias. That he not merely held but expressed
strong views on matters believed by him to have been in issue did
not unfit him for exercising his duty in subsequent proceedings
ordered by this Court. As well might it be argued that the judges
below, who had three times heard this case, had disqualifying
convictions. In publicly criticizing this Court's opinion, the
Secretary merely indulged in a practice familiar in the long
history of Anglo-American litigation whereby unsuccessful litigants
and lawyers give vent to their disappointment in tavern or press.
Cabinet officers charged by Congress with adjudicatory functions
are not assumed to be flabby creatures, any more than judges are.
Both may have an underlying philosophy in approaching a specific
case. But both are assumed to be men of conscience and intellectual
discipline, capable of judging a particular controversy fairly on
the basis of its own circumstances. Nothing in this record disturbs
such an assumption.
And so we conclude that the order of the Secretary furnishes
"the appropriate basis for action in the district court in making
distribution of the fund in its custody."
United States v.
Morgan, 307 U. S. 183,
307 U. S. 198.
But, finally, a matter not touching the validity of the order
requires consideration. Over the Government's objection, the
district
Page 313 U. S. 422
court authorized the market agencies to take the deposition of
the Secretary. The Secretary thereupon appeared in person at the
trial. He was questioned at length regarding the process by which
he reached the conclusions of his order, including the manner and
extent of his study of the record and his consultation with
subordinates. His testimony shows that he dealt with the enormous
record in a manner not unlike the practice of judges in similar
situations, and that he held various conferences with the examiner
who heard the evidence. Much was made of his disregard of a
memorandum from one of his officials who, on reading the proposed
order, urged considerations favorable to the market agencies. But
the short of the business is that the Secretary should never have
been subjected to this examination. The proceeding before the
Secretary "has a quality resembling that of a judicial proceeding."
Morgan v. United States, 298 U. S. 468,
298 U. S. 480.
Such an examination of a judge would be destructive of judicial
responsibility. We have explicitly held in this very litigation
that "it was not the function of the court to probe the mental
processes of the Secretary."
304 U. S. 304 U.S.
1,
304 U. S. 18.
Just as a judge cannot be subjected to such a scrutiny,
compare
Fayerweather v. Ritch, 195 U. S. 276,
195 U. S.
306-307, so the integrity of the administrative process
must be equally respected.
See Chicago, B. & Q. Ry. v.
Babcock, 204 U. S. 585,
204 U. S. 593.
It will bear repeating that, although the administrative process
has had a different development and pursues somewhat different ways
from those of courts, they are to be deemed collaborative
instrumentalities of justice, and the appropriate independence of
each should be respected by the other.
United States v.
Morgan, 307 U. S. 183,
307 U. S.
191.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE REED did not participate in the consideration or
decision of this case.
Page 313 U. S. 423
[
Footnote 1]
Attention is called to the title page of the tentative findings
on which appeared, opposite the docket number of the case and the
names of the formal parties, the words "Tentative Findings of Fact,
Conclusions and Proposed Order, issued as of June 14, 1933." This
formal caption is not an unnatural description of the starting
point of the Secretary's new inquiry. It clearly is not descriptive
of his final findings and order, let alone a denial of the proper
theory on which he avowedly proceeded.
[
Footnote 2]
That inferences from facts and contentions regarding their
significance are the real stuff of these rate determinations is
well illustrated by the phase of the problem before the Secretary
that was most strongly pressed upon us. It is undisputed that,
since 1933, the arrival of animals by truck has increased, thereby
causing a decrease in the average number of animals in a
consignment. And since the consignment is the unit of cost, a
decrease in the number of animals results in an increase in cost
per head in the consignment. Hence, formal logic concludes, the
present order in setting the same rates as those of 1933 fails to
reflect this increase in per head cost, and on that ground is
invalid. But both the 1933 and 1939 schedules recognize that there
are minimal costs unrelated to the number of animals in a
consignment. Both orders therefore were graduated according to the
number of animals in a consignment. The Secretary found that this
graduated scale which "produces an increasing per head revenue as
the number of head in the consignment decreases" would "give
recognition to the changing method of arrival of livestock."
Moreover, the decrease in the size of consignments may well have
been reflected in the increased estimate of salesmanship cost. All
these considerations only illustrate that we are moving in a
difficult and specialized realm of judgment which has been
entrusted to the Secretary of Agriculture, and not to the courts.
The Secretary's judgment must prevail, since his finding had the
support of inferences fairly drawn from the entire evidence,
including all that the market agencies saw fit to introduce bearing
on their operations after 1933.
[
Footnote 3]
An objection to an exclusion of evidence by the examiner
requires but slight comment. Two cooperative commission companies
had accepted the rates of the Secretary's order of 1933, and the
market agencies asked that the annual reports of these companies
for the impounding period be produced by the division of the
Department of Agriculture with which they were filed. The examiner
refused to order production of the reports on the ground that he
had no authority to do so, basing his ruling on a section which the
Packers and Stockyards Act incorporates from the Federal Trade
Commission Act and which provides that it shall be a misdemeanor
for any officer of the regulatory agency to make public any
information which the agency has obtained "without its authority,
unless directed by a court." 7 U.S.C. § 222, 15 U.S.C. §
50. We need not determine whether the reports should properly have
been admitted. If they should have been, the statute provides an
orderly way for having this done during the course of the hearing
by seeking the Secretary's authorization. Having failed to pursue
the way of the statute, the market agencies were debarred from
raising the matter at a later time.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS.
With much that is said in the opinion of the Court, I agree, but
I am compelled to dissent from the conclusion. Despite the fact
that this litigation has extended over many years, I still think
that not only the rights of the market agencies, but the principles
involved, require the Court to take care that the litigation is
disposed of in accordance with the principles it has laid down. The
result now reached is not in accordance with those principles. A
recital of the course of the litigation is necessary for an
understanding of the case as now presented.
Rates for the market agencies at Kansas City were fixed by the
Secretary of Agriculture [
Footnote
2/1] July 24, 1923. By virtue of the statute, these became the
legal rates, and the agencies were bound not to exceed them until
the further order of the Secretary. April 7, 1930, the Secretary
instituted an inquiry into the existing rates. June 14, 1933, he
issued an order reducing them.
July 19, 1933, the market agencies brought suit to enjoin and
set aside the order. The District Court entered a temporary
injunction July 22, 1933, in connection with which it provided that
the difference between the rates be ng charged by the agencies and
those fixed by the order under attack should be impounded pending
the outcome of the litigation. Upon the trial of the cause, the
court refused to consider an issue tendered by the agencies as to
whether the Secretary had granted them a full hearing. Upon
examination of the record, it held the order was supported by
substantial evidence, and, on October 29, 1934, dismissed the bill.
[
Footnote 2/2] This Court reversed,
on May 25, 1936, holding that the District Court should have
considered
Page 313 U. S. 424
and decided the question whether the agencies had been afforded
a full hearing. [
Footnote 2/3]
On a further trial, the District Court again upheld the order by
a decree of July 2, 1937. [
Footnote
2/4] The United States appealed from this decree. In the
meantime, however, a significant thing occurred. On November 14,
1937, the Secretary approved new rates, effective November 1, 1937,
in recognition of changed conditions existing in the business at
Kansas City. The impounding order therefore ceased to operate
November 1, 1937.
This Court reversed the second decree of the District Court
because it found that the agencies had been denied a full hearing
in the proceedings which eventuated in the order of 1933. Its
decision was rendered April 25, 1938, and a rehearing was denied
May 31, 1938. [
Footnote 2/5]
The Secretary and his legal advisers evidently believed, and, as
I think, correctly, that the old rates authorized in 1923 stood
until a new order, lawfully made, superseded them for the future.
The rates fixed for the future by the order of 1933 had not become
effective, and the Act contained no provision for altering rates
charged in the past under authority of the existing and outstanding
order of 1923, or granting reparation in respect of them. The
Secretary seems to have thought that he could reach this situation
by the entry of a
nunc pro tunc order as of July 14, 1933.
On June 2, 1938, therefore, he directed that the proceeding be
reopened and that the "proceedings, findings of fact, conclusion
and order" issued on June 14, 1933, be served upon the agencies as
the "Tentative Findings of Fact, Conclusion and Proposed Order" of
the Secretary, and he denominated them as "Tentative Findings of
Fact, Conclusion, and Proposed Order" issued as of June 14, 1933.
It is plain that he proposed thus to cure what had
Page 313 U. S. 425
been found to be the defect in the order by affording the market
agencies an opportunity to file and argue exceptions, in an effort
to show any infirmity in the findings and conclusion on which the
1933 order was based. If none was made to appear, he proposed to
issue the order
nunc pro tunc as of its original date. It
is true that, after exceptions were filed and upon the hearing
before an examiner, the agencies were permitted to offer evidence
to show changed conditions supervening in the period between 1933
and 1937. It is also true that, while the examiner retained all of
the findings previously made as the foundation for the order of
1933, he added certain findings, but he did not, in any material
respect, alter the ultimate findings, and, indeed, he retained the
exact rates fixed in the earlier order and left undisturbed every
finding as to cost (with one immaterial exception), even to the
fourth decimal place, as it had stood in the original report.
Immediately after the reopening of the proceeding consequent
upon the decision of this Court of May 31, 1938, the Secretary, on
June 12, 1938, applied to the District Court for an order staying
the distribution of the impounded funds pending his further
decision and order. In his petition, he said:
"After a full hearing, the Secretary will determine by an order
as of June 14, 1933, what rates may reasonably be charged by
petitioners to their clients for the services rendered them."
The District Court denied the application. [
Footnote 2/6]
The United States appealed from the decree. In its brief it
stated:
"The only purpose and effect . . . [of the reopened proceeding]
is to determine whether and to what extent the appellees have been
prejudiced by the procedural defect in the earlier proceeding."
Before the case had been decided here, the reopened proceeding
before the Secretary had so progressed that
Page 313 U. S. 426
the evidence had been closed, a tentative report made by an
examiner, exceptions filed, and argument heard by the Secretary.
The record plainly discloses that, up to the time of our final
decision on this last appeal, the Secretary had been content to
take the data disclosed by his investigation of the market
agencies' activities in the years 1929, 1930, and 1931 as the basis
of any order, and this was natural if, as he then supposed, he was
justified in entering an order
nunc pro tunc as of the
date of his original 1933 order.
This Court rendered its opinion in the last appeal May 15, 1939.
[
Footnote 2/7] Speaking by a
majority, the Court there held that, as the District Court was
acting as a court of equity in the premises, the impounded funds
should be disbursed according to the equities of the situation. It
adverted to the fact that the rates fixed by the Secretary October
14, 1937, governed for the future until altered in accordance with
law, but it held that the equities of the case required an
investigation as to whether the rates charged in the interval
between 1933 and 1937 had been unreasonable, and, as a result,
whether it would be inequitable to withhold from the market
agencies' customers and return to the market agencies all or any
part of the impounded fund. The court was of the view that the
Secretary was in a peculiarly favorable position to find the facts
and advise the court upon this subject, and that the court ought to
cooperate with the Secretary to attain a just result.
At this juncture, the reopened proceeding was under submission
before the Secretary. It is to be noted that he had refused to
consider the data in his own possession with respect to the actual
experience of two of the market agencies which had conformed to the
rates he fixed in 1933. It is further to be noted that the
existence of
Page 313 U. S. 427
changed conditions not only is shown by the uncontradicted
evidence offered by the agencies, but by the fact that the
Secretary recognized such change in making his order of October 14,
1937.
The court below has found that conditions in the business had
substantially, and in some respects radically, changed since the
completion of the original record on which the 1933 order was
based. The court found the facts as to the changes which had
increased the cost of doing the business. The government does not
question the correctness of these findings. I think these increased
costs cannot be ignored or dismissed with the comment that the
Secretary considered them, when it is plain he did not. This Court
did not intend by its decision in 1939 that the Secretary should
shut his eyes to these changed conditions, and make a forecast in
1939 as of 1933 and upon the data available in 1933, as if he had
before him only the experience prior to 1933 and were then acting.
Of a similar situation, this Court has said: "A forecast gives us
one rate. A survey gives another. To prefer the forecast to the
survey is an arbitrary judgment." [
Footnote 2/8]
The Secretary had made a careful investigation of the operations
of the market agencies in the years prior to 1933. The same data
was available to him in 1939 for the period 1933 to 1937, but was
not considered. What he should have done, in the light of this
Court's decision, was again to reopen the cause and to investigate
the fairness and reasonableness of the charges exacted from 1933 to
1937 in the light of actual experience. To assert that he did in
fact pursue this course is to place an unjustified gloss upon the
record now before the Court.
We ought not to conclude the parties by a strained construction
of the record facts, or by applying to this
Page 313 U. S. 428
inquiry technical rules of evidence and procedure which have not
place in such a proceeding. On the contrary, we should require that
to be done which the broad equities of the case demand. No less, it
seems to me, will satisfy the mandate of this Court in its earlier
pronouncement. I should therefore reverse the decree and direct
that the Secretary ascertain the facts upon all available evidence,
in accordance with the decisions of this Court when the case was
last here.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Several incumbents of the office acted in the case at successive
dates. The term Secretary is used to designate the official who
acted in any instance.
[
Footnote 2/2]
8 F. Supp.
766.
[
Footnote 2/3]
298 U. S. 298 U.S.
468.
[
Footnote 2/4]
23 F. Supp.
380.
[
Footnote 2/5]
304 U. S. 304 U.S.
1,
304 U. S. 23.
[
Footnote 2/6]
24 F. Supp. 214.
[
Footnote 2/7]
307 U. S. 307 U.S.
183.
[
Footnote 2/8]
West Ohio Gas Co. v. Public Utilities Comm'n,
294 U. S. 79,
294 U. S.
82.