A corporation, sued by the Government under the Anti-Trust Law,
consented to a restraining decree which contained an express
condition that the defendant would be freed from a provision
forbidding financial dealings with any finance company if, on or
before a future day named, no final decree imposing a similar
restraint had been entered in a like suit then pending in another
District Court against its competitor. The decree expressly
reserved in the court power to modify its provisions.
Held: that the power was not abused by orders
postponing the time for compliance with the condition because of
delays in the other suit, since the basic purpose of the consent
decree was to have the ultimate rights of the parties determined by
the other litigation, and since the function of the time limitation
was to protect the defendant from being placed at a competitive
disadvantage through undue delay of that litigation on the part of
the Government, whereas it did not appear that the time extension
had had that effect, and there was evidence to support a finding
that the other suit had been prosecuted diligently. P.
316 U. S.
562.
Affirmed.
Appeal from an order of the District Court modifying a decree
which had been entered by consent in a prosecution under the
Anti-Trust Law.
Page 316 U. S. 557
MR. JUSTICE BYRNES delivered the opinion of the Court.
On May 27, 1938, an indictment was returned against appellants
(referred to hereafter as Chrysler) and Commercial Credit Company
and certain subsidiaries of the latter in the District Court for
the Northern District of Indiana. Two similar indictments were
returned on the same day, one against Ford Motor Company and
certain finance companies affiliated with it and the other against
General Motors Corporation and General Motors Acceptance
Corporation, its subsidiary. The gist of each of these indictments
was that the automobile manufacturer had combined and conspired
with its affiliated finance company or companies to restrain trade
and commerce in the wholesale and retail sale and financing of its
automobiles, in violation of the Sherman Act. [
Footnote 1]
During the ensuing months, Chrysler and Ford reached an
agreement with the government that the indictments against them
would be quashed and consent decrees entered. Consequently, on
November 7, 1938, bills of equity were filed against Chrysler and
Ford praying for injunctions against the acts complained of.
Answers were filed, [
Footnote
2] and on November 15, 1938, the consent decrees were
entered.
The lengthy decree against Chrysler need not be described in
detail. [
Footnote 3] Paragraph
6 imposed numerous specific restraints upon discriminatory
practices by Chrysler in favor of Commercial Credit Company.
Paragraph 7 imposed correlative restraints upon Commercial Credit
Company in its dealings with Chrysler. Paragraph 12A
Page 316 U. S. 558
contained alternative provisions depending upon the outcome of
the then still pending criminal proceedings against General Motors.
It provided: (1) that, if those proceedings should not result in
conviction, every provision of this consent decree against Chrysler
should be suspended until such time as a substantially identical
decree should be obtained against General Motors; or (2) that, upon
conviction of General Motors in the criminal proceedings or upon
the entry of a decree in a civil action against General Motors or
upon January 1, 1940 -- whichever should occur first -- Chrysler
should be free of all restraints imposed by paragraph 6 to the
extent that substantially identical restraints had not been imposed
upon General Motors by the verdict of guilty or by the civil decree
and until such restraints were imposed.
The question before us concerns paragraph 12, which is separate
and distinct from paragraph 12A. Paragraph 12 forbade Chrysler to
"make any loan to or purchase the securities of" Commercial Credit
Company or any other credit company. It then provided:
"It is an express condition of this decree that, notwithstanding
the provisions of the preceding paragraph of this paragraph 12 and
of any other provisions of this decree,
if an effective final
order or decree not subject to further review shall not have been
entered on or before January 1, 1941, requiring General Motors
Corporation permanently to divest itself of all ownership and
control of General Motors Acceptance Corporation and of all
interest therein, then and in the event, nothing in this decree
shall preclude the manufacturer [Chrysler] from acquiring and
retaining ownership of and/or control over or interest in any
finance company, or from dealing with such finance company and with
the dealers in the manner provided in this decree or in any order
or modification or suspension thereof entered pursuant to paragraph
12a. . . ."
(Emphasis added).
Page 316 U. S. 559
Affiliation between Chrysler and Commercial Credit Company or
another finance company was thus singled out for special treatment
in paragraph 12. The various restraints imposed by paragraphs 6 and
7 were subject to termination upon the contingencies described in
paragraph 12A, but the prohibition against affiliation was subject
to expiration upon the distinct and different contingency described
in paragraph 12 --
viz., the entry of
"an effective final order or decree not subject to further
review . . . on or before January 1, 1941, requiring General Motors
Corporation permanently to divest itself of all ownership and
control of General Motors Acceptance Corporation and of all
interest therein. . . ."
Jurisdiction of the cause was retained by the District Court, in
paragraph 14, for the purpose of enabling the parties to apply at
any time "for such further orders and directions as may be
necessary or appropriate in relation to the construction of or
carrying out of this decree" or "for the modification thereof."
The criminal proceedings against General Motors resulted in
conviction of the corporation on November 17, 1939. General Motors
appealed to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit.
On May 1, 1941, that Court affirmed the conviction, and on July 2,
1941, denied rehearing. A petition for certiorari was denied on
October 13, 1941. 314 U.S. 618. A petition for rehearing was denied
on November 10, 1941. 314 U.S. 710.
Meantime, a civil suit for an injunction had been instituted by
the government against General Motors on October 4, 1940, in the
District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. On October
26, 1940, the government agreed to an extension of time to answer
to January 20, 1941. This extension of time rendered it impossible
for the government to obtain "an effective final order or decree"
against General Motors before January 1, 1941, as
Page 316 U. S. 560
required by paragraph 12 of the consent decree against Chrysler.
Accordingly, on December 17, 1940, the government filed a motion in
the District Court in Indiana asking that paragraph 12 of the
consent decree against Chrysler be modified by substituting
"January 1, 1942" for "January 1, 1941." Chrysler opposed this
motion, but, on December 21, 1940, an order was entered changing
the date as requested. Chrysler appealed to this Court from the
order of modification, but the appeal was dismissed on December 8,
1941, for want of a a quorum of Justices qualified to sit, 314 U.S.
583, and on January 5, 1942, rehearing was denied. 314 U.S.
716.
Pursuant to additional stipulations between the government and
General Motors, the time to answer the government's complaint in
the civil suit in the Illinois District Court was successively
extended to January 27, 1941, to May 1, 1941, to June 15, 1941, and
to June 21, 1941. On the latter date, the government filed an
amended complaint. By agreement, the time in which to answer this
amended complaint was extended to July 15, 1941. General Motors
then sought a further extension of time to answer the amended
complaint, urging that the civil suit should be postponed pending a
final determination of the criminal case and that it was about to
petition for a writ of certiorari in the criminal case. The
government refused to agree to an extension, stating that any
further delay might prejudice the government in connection with its
consent decree against Chrysler. The District Court nevertheless
entered an order for an indefinite extension of the time in which
General Motors might answer the amended complaint. On December 1,
1941, the government moved the District Court to set a day certain
by which General Motors would be required to answer and otherwise
plead. In the motion and in an accompanying affidavit, the
government explained the connection between
Page 316 U. S. 561
the consent decree against Chrysler and the civil suit against
General Motors. After a hearing on the motion, the District Court
set January 15, 1942, as the date by which General Motors would be
required to answer.
The date fixed by the last mentioned order of the District Court
in Illinois in the suit against General Motors created further
difficulty with respect to the consent decree in the Chrysler case
in the District Court of Indiana. It had now become impossible for
the government to obtain "an effective final order or decree"
against General Motors, within the meaning of paragraph 12 of the
Chrysler consent decree, prior to January 1, 1942. On December 22,
1941, therefore, the government moved the District Court in Indiana
for a second modification of paragraph 12 of the Chrysler consent
decree by substituting "January 1, 1943," for "January 1, 1942." In
its answer, Chrysler opposed the modification. The government
offered in evidence a transcript of the proceedings in the civil
suit against General Motors. Hearing on the motion was continued to
February 16, 1942. On that date, no additional evidence was
introduced, but argument of counsel was heard.
The District Court thereupon made the following findings of
fact: (a) that the District Court had specifically retained
jurisdiction to modify the consent decree; (b) that paragraph 12
was "framed upon the basis that the ultimate rights of the parties
thereunder should be determined by the government's civil antitrust
proceedings against General Motors Corporation and affiliated
companies;" (c) that "time was not of the essence with respect to
lapse of the bar against affiliation [between Chrysler and
Commercial Credit Company or any other finance company];" (d)
"That, to safeguard defendants against undue delay in such
proceedings, the decree provided for suspension of certain of its
prohibitions in the event convictions
Page 316 U. S. 562
were not obtained in the criminal case against General Motors
Corporation by January 1, 1940;" (e) "that the decree provided for
a termination of the bar against affiliation, if the civil
proceedings against General Motors Corporation were not
successfully concluded by a court of last resort by January 1,
1941;" (f) that a conviction had been obtained in the criminal
proceedings against General Motors on November 17, 1939; (g) "That
the government has proceeded diligently and expeditiously in its
suit to divorce General Motors Acceptance Corporation from General
Motors Corporation;" and (h) "that further extension of the bar
against affiliation will not impose a serious burden upon
defendants." It then concluded as a matter of law
"that the purpose and intent of the decree will be carried out
if Chrysler is given the opportunity at any future time to propose
a plan for the acquisition of a finance company, and to make a
showing that such plan is necessary to prevent Chrysler Corporation
from being put at a competitive disadvantage during the pendency of
complainant's civil litigation against General Motors Corporation,
et al."
Upon the basis of these findings and conclusions, the District
Court entered an order modifying paragraph 12 by changing the date
to January 1, 1943, in compliance with the government's motion. The
case is before us on direct appeal from this order. 15 U.S.C.
§ 29; 28 U.S.C. § 345.
It is clear that, under paragraph 14 of the original decree, the
District Court had jurisdiction to modify it. The question is
whether the change in date in paragraph 12 amounted to an abuse of
this power to modify. We think that the test to be applied in
answering this question is whether the change served to effectuate
or to thwart the basic purpose of the original consent decree.
United States v. Swift & Co., 286 U.
S. 106.
Page 316 U. S. 563
The text of the decree itself plainly reveals the nature of that
purpose. It was, as stated in the District Court's findings,
"that the ultimate rights of the parties thereunder should be
determined by the government's civil antitrust proceedings against
General Motors and affiliated companies."
The time limitation was inserted to protect Chrysler from being
placed at a competitive disadvantage in the event that the
government unduly delayed the initiation and prosecution of the
General Motors injunctive proceedings. The District Court found
"that the government has proceeded diligently and expeditiously
in its suit to divorce General Motors Acceptance Corporation from
General Motors Corporation."
There is room for argument that this statement is markedly
generous to the government, inasmuch as the civil suit against
General Motors was not instituted until almost two years after the
entry of the consent decree, and only three months prior to the
limiting date in paragraph 12. But the finding is supported by
several circumstances: the extended course of the appeals in the
criminal proceedings against General Motors, for which the
government was not responsible; the obvious bearing of the results
in that litigation upon the method of handling the civil litigation
with General Motors, and the ruling of the District Court in
Illinois in July, 1941, in the General Motors civil action
indefinitely extending the time to answer despite the government's
objection, presumably to await the final disposition of the
criminal case. In view of these considerations, the finding of the
court below was not unreasonable, and we do not think that the
government lost its right to seek a modification of the decree.
The controlling factor thus becomes whether the extension of the
ban on affiliation contained in paragraph 12 places Chrysler at a
competitive disadvantage. Chrysler made no showing to that effect
in the District Court. The
Page 316 U. S. 564
order of December 21, 1941, set the hearing for February 16,
1942, with the explanation that Chrysler had "requested a
continuance in order to produce further evidence." But, on February
16, no evidence was forthcoming. The record therefore reveals that
Chrysler terminated its affiliation with Commercial Credit in 1938
before the consent decree was entered, and does not reveal that it
has since asserted any desire or intention to affiliate with
Commercial Credit or with any other finance company. Moreover, we
cannot be blind to the fact that the complete cessation of the
manufacture of new automobiles and light trucks has drastically
minimized the significance of the competitive factor. [
Footnote 4] Consequently there is no
warrant for disturbing the finding of the court below "that further
extension of the bar against affiliation will not impose a serious
burden upon defendants." If Chrysler desires to affiliate with a
finance company and feels that its inability to do so places it at
a disadvantage with its competitors, it should make such a showing
to the District Court. That court expressly declared that Chrysler
was free at any time to propose a plan for affiliation and to
demonstrate that such a plan is necessary to avoid unfairness.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS, MR. JUSTICE MURPHY, and MR. JUSTICE JACKSON
took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
26 Stat. 209, 15 U.S.C. § 1.
[
Footnote 2]
Chrysler's answer included an allegation that it had completely
terminated its affiliation with Commercial Credit Company by
February, 1938.
[
Footnote 3]
The consent decree against Ford is substantially the same.
[
Footnote 4]
See the order of January 21, 1942 of the Director of
Priorities of the Office of Production Management. F.R. Docs.
41-636, 42-637, 7 F.R. 473.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, dissenting.
In the spring of 1938, the Government instituted criminal
proceedings against the three leading automobile manufacturers,
Chrysler, Ford, and General Motors. For present
Page 316 U. S. 565
purposes, Ford may be disregarded. Each indictment charged
violation of the Sherman Law arising out of the manufacturer's
affiliation with a finance company and its employment of certain
trade practices. Chrysler was prepared to consent to a decree
prohibiting it from affiliation with any finance company, in
addition to its acceptance of restraints against alleged illegal
trade practices, provided, however, that the Government succeeded
in obtaining similar relief against General Motors. The problem
before the negotiators of the consent decree was therefore that of
determining how long Chrysler should remain subject to the
restraints imposed by the decree while General Motors, contesting
the claims of the Government, refused to come to terms with it and
put it to its law. As the Government recognizes in its brief here,
Chrysler was "entitled to protection against undue delay in the
prosecution of the proceedings against General Motors." With
respect to the prohibition against affiliation, the problem was
solved by providing in paragraph 12 that, if the Government should
not have obtained a final decree against General Motors by January
1, 1941, requiring General Motors to divest itself of all interest
in its affiliated finance company, the prohibition against Chrysler
would cease. This was made an "express condition" notwithstanding
any other provisions in the decree.
*
Obviously, it was an essential feature of the consent
Page 316 U. S. 566
decree against Chrysler that the prohibition of affiliation with
the finance company should result in this great competitive
disadvantage only long enough to enable the Government to press its
claim against General Motors to successful conclusion with all
reasonable speed. The parties might have refrained from fixing any
definite period, leaving the matter wholly for determination in the
future, and by undefined standards of reasonableness. Instead, the
Government chose to specify with particularity the length of the
period -- more than two years -- in which Chrysler would be
required to bear competitive hardships resulting
Page 316 U. S. 567
from the lack of the same restraints upon General Motors.
Considering the scope and nature of the decree, the interests,
both public and private, with which it was dealing, and its
technical draftsmanship, there can be no doubt that the precise
limits of paragraph 12 were not casually or carelessly defined. Of
course, the District Court had the power to modify the consent
decree in order to effectuate its basic purposes. The fact that the
decree embodied the agreement of the parties no more limited the
power of the court than if it had been a contested decree.
Swift & Co. v. United States, 276 U.
S. 311;
United States v. Swift & Co.,
286 U. S. 106,
286 U. S. 114;
United States v. International Harvester Co., 274 U.
S. 693. The decree itself contains an express
recognition of the court's power of modification, but such a
reservation plainly added nothing to the decree and subtracted
nothing from the significance of terms made an express condition of
the imposed restraint. The burden was still, as it always is, on
the moving party -- and here it was the Government -- to show that
circumstances justified a change in such terms. In fact, on
December 17, 1940, within three weeks of the expiration of the
restraint against Chrysler, the Government sought for an extension
of that restraint for another year upon the grounds that the time
"was, by mistake of the parties, underestimated." The extension was
opposed, but granted by the District Court. An appeal was brought
here, but was dismissed on December 8, 1941, "for want of a quorum
of Justices qualified to sit."
Chrysler Corp. v. United
States, 314 U.S. 583. A week later, the present proceedings
were begun for a further extension. The effect of the modification
sought by the Government and granted by the court below was to
extend until January 1, 1943, the restrictions upon Chrysler's
freedom of action which were not imposed upon its principal
rival.
Page 316 U. S. 568
In order to justify a modification having such drastic business
consequences, it was surely incumbent upon the Government to show
that it had proceeded with all deliberate speed against General
Motors. The record reveals that no such showing was made. The
history of the litigation against General Motors proves that it
could not have been made. Although the consent decree against
Chrysler was entered on November 15, 1938, the trial in the
criminal action against General Motors was not begun until October
9, 1939. This trial resulted in a conviction against General Motors
on November 17, 1939. Since the trial judge did not instruct the
jury that affiliation as such was unlawful, and indeed the
contrary, the criminal proceeding could no longer be claimed to
control the validity of the affiliation prohibited by paragraph 12
of the Chrysler decree. Consequently, it is irrelevant that the
criminal proceedings against General Motors were not finally
concluded until this Court denied certiorari on October 13, 1941.
But, in any event, the contingencies of review of a criminal
conviction do not justify holding in abeyance an equity suit even
though it concerns a related issue, when the determination of that
equity suit within a time certain, to-wit, January 1, 1941,
explicitly defined the duration of the restraint imposed upon
Chrysler. The appeal of the criminal conviction against General
Motors was at last disposed of in the Circuit Court of Appeals on
May 1, 1941. 121 F.2d 376. But, even then, the Government did
nothing to press the equity suit -- indeed it promoted its further
delay.
It was not until October 4, 1940, that the Government brought a
civil suit in equity against General Motors. This was almost two
years after the entry of the decree against Chrysler, and, perhaps
more important, less than three months before the date upon which
the bar against
Page 316 U. S. 569
Chrysler was to be lifted. Here again, the record contains
nothing to explain this period of inaction, when, by the express
terms of the decree, the duty of action was laid upon the
Government and the result of such action was of obvious business
importance to the status of Chrysler under its decree. Nor does the
record show that the Government undertook to prevent any untoward
delays in the determination of the General Motors civil suit. On
the contrary, no less than six times did the Government agree to
extensions of the time within which General Motors should plead. On
October 26, 1940, the Government acquiesced in an extension to
January 20, 1941; on January 16, 1941, in an extension to January
27, 1941; on January 24, 1941, in an extension of more than three
months, to May 1, 1941; on April 21, 1941, in a further extension
to June 15, 1941, and on June 13, 1941, in an additional extension
to June 21, 1941. On that date, the Government filed an amended
complaint, and on June 28, 1941, it agreed to a further extension
to July 15, 1941. On the latter date, General Motors requested the
court that it be given a further extension; the request recited the
Government's opposition to the motion because of its effect upon
the Chrysler decree. The court nevertheless granted General Motors
an indefinite extension. On November 29, 1941, the Government for
the first time moved that General Motors be required to file an
answer or other pleading. In response to this motion, the court
ordered that General Motors file a pleading by January 15,
1942.
This is the background of fact in the light of which the
District Court was required to judge whether the Government was
equitably entitled to impose upon Chrysler for a further period the
curtailment of its freedom of action embodied in the consent
decree. Relevant to its determination, also, was the fact that
paragraph 12 provided
Page 316 U. S. 570
only that, if the Government did not obtain a final order of
divorcement against General Motors by January 1, 1941, then nothing
in the decree against Chrysler would prohibit the latter from
affiliating with a finance company. Nothing in paragraph 12 gave,
or even purported to give, Chrysler any immunity from the antitrust
laws after January 1, 1941. Therefore, if the decree were not
modified, it would not mean that the Government would be powerless
to proceed against Chrysler if the latter resumed the activities
forbidden by the decree. The Government would still be free to take
any action it might have taken before Chrysler consented to the
decree against it.
A court of equity is not just an umpire between two litigants.
In a very special sense, the public interest is in its keeping as
the conscience of the law. The circumstance that one of the parties
is the Government does not, in itself, mean that the interest which
it asserts defines and comprehends the public interest which the
court must vindicate. A modification of a decree requested by the
Government is not
ipso facto a modification warranted by
considerations which control equity. Regard for the proper
administration of justice which makes determinations depend upon
proof, and not upon unsupported assertions of one of the litigants,
is a vital aspect of the public interest. The burden obviously
rested upon the Government to show good cause for disregarding an
express provision in a carefully framed decree, and extending to
twice its original duration the period of restraint against
Chrysler. So to enlarge the burden of the decree without any such
showing by the Government is a one-sided restriction of Chrysler's
freedom of action -- at least of its right to prove that the
restricted action is innocent. Instead of exacting such proof from
the Government, the District Court cast upon Chrysler the duty of
showing that it would not be prejudiced
Page 316 U. S. 571
if the fetters remained after the period fixed by the decree. He
who seeks relief from equity has the burden of showing that he is
entitled to it. It is unfair to cast upon Chrysler the burden of
proving that it would not be harmed if the Government got what it
wanted. As a practical business matter, Chrysler is not standing on
an abstract right to devise means of financing its sales simply
because it is not ready today with arrangements for a financial
corporation, and the war precludes them. Such arrangements cannot
be devised overnight. It may well take a year to get them under
way.
Considering, on the one hand, the drastic economic disadvantage
to which Chrysler is put in being subjected to the hazard of
contempt proceedings if it takes any steps toward preparing for
affiliation in the future, and, on the other hand, the failure of
the Government to explain the apparent lack of diligence in
prosecuting the proceedings against General Motors and to show that
the modification was necessary to achieve the purposes of the
consent decree, I am bound to conclude that the order of the
District Court, unexplained by any opinion, was not within the
proper limits of its discretion.
MR. JUSTICE REED joins in this dissent.
* The full text of Paragraph 12 is as follows:
"The Respondent Finance Company shall not pay to any automobile
manufacturing company and the Manufacturer shall not obtain from
any finance company any money or other thing of value as a bonus or
commission on account of retail time sales paper acquired by the
finance company from dealers of the Manufacturer. The Manufacturer
shall not make any loan to or purchase the securities of Respondent
Finance Company or any other finance company, and if it shall pay
any money to Respondent Finance Company or any other finance
company with the purpose or effect of inducing or enabling such
finance company to offer to the dealers of the Manufacturer a lower
finance charge than it would offer in the absence of such payment,
it shall offer in writing to make, and if such offer is accepted it
shall make, payment upon substantially similar bases, terms and
conditions to every other finance company offering such lower
finance charge; provided, however, that nothing in this paragraph
contained shall be construed to prohibit the Manufacturer from
acquiring notes, bonds, commercial paper, or other evidence of
indebtedness of Respondent Finance Company or any other finance
company in the open market."
"It is an express condition of this decree that, notwithstanding
the provisions of the preceding paragraph of this paragraph 12 and
of any other provisions of this decree, if an effective final order
or decree not subject to further review shall not have been entered
on or before January 1, 1941, requiring General Motors Corporation
permanently to divest itself of all ownership and control of
General Motors Acceptance Corporation and of all interest therein,
then and in that event, nothing in this decree shall preclude the
Manufacturer from acquiring and retaining ownership of and/or
control over or interest in any finance company, or from dealing
with such finance company and with the dealers in the manner
provided in this decree or in any order of modification or
suspension thereof entered pursuant to paragraph 12a. The Court,
upon application of the respondents or any of them, will enter an
order or decree to that effect at the foot of this decree, and the
right of any respondent herein to make the application and to
obtain such order or decree is expressly conceded and granted."