1. Section 1429.5 of Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 269
(issued December 18, 1942, under the Emergency Price Control Act)
-- which provides that the price limitations on poultry prescribed
by the regulation shall not be evaded by any method, direct or
indirect, whether in connection with any offer or sale of a
price-regulated commodity alone "or in conjunction with any other
commodity," or by way of any trade understanding "or otherwise" --
held not to forbid all tie-in sales, but only those which
involve secondary products that are worthless or that are sold at
artificial prices. Pp.
327 U. S.
622-626.
2. Where the information in a criminal prosecution for
violations of Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 269 charged that
the
Page 327 U. S. 615
accused "unlawfully, willfully and knowingly evaded the
provisions of" the regulation "by demanding, compelling and
requiring" the retail buyer to purchase chicken feet or chicken
skins at a specified price as a condition of the sale of poultry,
and there was evidence that the chicken skins and feet sold had
value, and were sold at their market price, a charge by the trial
judge that the "one" question in the case was whether the sale of
chicken parts was a necessary condition to the purchase of the
poultry was a reversible error, since the jury may well have
disregarded as irrelevant the evidence of value as to the secondary
product, and convicted solely on the ground that there was a tie-in
sale. P.
327 U. S.
626.
3. In order to sustain a criminal conviction, regulations
prescribed by the Price Administrator under § 2(g) of the
Emergency Price Control Act to prevent circumvention or evasion of
price limitations must be explicit and unambiguous, and must
adequately inform those who are subject to their terms what conduct
will be considered evasive; the dividing line between unlawful
evasion and lawful action cannot be left to conjecture. P.
327 U. S.
621.
4. A prosecutor, in framing an indictment, a court, in
interpreting the Administrator's regulations, or a jury, in judging
guilt, cannot supply that which the Administrator failed to do by
express word or fair implication. P.
327 U. S.
622.
5. Nor can the Administrator's interpretations of his own
regulations cure an omission or add certainty and definiteness to
otherwise vague language of a regulation. P.
327 U. S.
622.
6. A criminal conviction for violation of an administrative
regulation ought not to rest upon an administrative interpretation
reached by the use of policy judgment, rather than by the
inexorable command of relevant language of the regulation itself.
P.
327 U. S.
626.
7. Where correct statements in a charge to a jury are so
intertwined with incorrect statements as to negative the effect of
the correct statements, the charge is a reversible error, since a
conviction ought not to rest on an equivocal direction to the jury
on a basic issue.
Bollenbach v. United States,
326 U. S. 607. Pp.
327 U. S.
626-627.
Petitioner was convicted of violating Revised Maximum Price
Regulation No. 269, promulgated by the Price Administrator pursuant
to the Emergency Price Control Act. The Circuit Court of Appeals
affirmed. 149 F.2d 773. This Court granted certiorari. 326 U.S.
699.
Remandedfor new trial. P.
327 U. S.
627.
Page 327 U. S. 616
MR. JUSTICE MURPHY announced the conclusion and judgment of the
Court.
The problem here is whether the petitioner corporation was
properly convicted of a crime under the Emergency Price Control Act
of 1942. [
Footnote 1]
The petitioner is engaged in the wholesale meat and poultry
business in New York City. Poultry is a commodity subject to the
provisions of Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 269, [
Footnote 2] promulgated by the Price
Administrator pursuant to Section 2(a) of the Emergency Price
Control Act of 1942. Two informations, each containing six counts,
were filed against petitioner. Each count alleged that, as an
integral part of a specified sale of poultry on a day during the
Thanksgiving season in November, 1943, the petitioner "unlawfully,
willfully, and knowingly evaded the provisions of said Revised
Maximum Price Regulation No. 269, Sec. 1429.5, by demanding,
compelling, and requiring" the retail buyer to purchase chicken
feet or chicken skin at a specified price as a condition of the
sale of the poultry. Petitioner's president was named as a
codefendant in the first information, and the two informations were
consolidated for trial purposes.
The theory of the Government is that the petitioner was guilty
of an evasion of the price limitations set forth in this particular
regulation if it required the purchase of chicken feet and skin as
a necessary condition to obtaining the primary commodity, the
poultry. This practice is
Page 327 U. S. 617
commonly known as a "combination sale" or a "tying agreement."
It is argued that the petitioner thereby received for the poultry
the ceiling price plus the price of the secondary commodities, the
chicken parts.
The evidence was undisputed that the poultry was billed by
petitioner at ceiling prices fixed by the Price Administrator, and
that no ceiling prices had been set for chicken feet or chicken
skin. It was also undisputed that the demand for poultry during the
Thanksgiving season far exceeded the supply, and that petitioner
voluntarily imposed a rationing system among its customers.
The Government's case rested primarily upon the testimony of
seven retail butchers who had purchased poultry and poultry parts
from petitioner during the period in question. Only one of them
testified explicitly that the sale of poultry to him had been
conditioned upon the sale of poultry parts which he did not want
and for which there was no consumer demand. His testimony, however,
was disbelieved by the jury, since it acquitted the petitioner on
the two counts involving sales to him. With two exceptions, the
other butchers testified either that the feet and skins were loaded
on their trucks, without previous order or solicitation, along with
the poultry, or that they were billed for both the poultry and the
parts without comment. Five of them stated that they sold a small
amount of the chicken parts and gave away the balance; one remarked
that he could not sell any parts, and was forced to dump them.
There was no explicit evidence that any of the butchers protested,
sought to return the chicken parts, or asked to buy the poultry
separately. It was reasonable, however, for the jury to find that
the sale of poultry was conditioned upon the simultaneous sale of
the chicken parts, and no contrary claim is made before us.
Several times, the petitioner tried to introduce testimony
establishing that there was a demand for chicken parts and that
they were of value. Petitioner's counsel
Page 327 U. S. 618
stated that
"The government has inferred through all of its testimony that
chicken skin and chicken feet are so much waste, that they are
dumped, that they are not used, and they have opened up the door to
this type of testimony."
But the trial judge ruled that the Government had not put that
matter in issue, and that the "only thing we are concerned with is
whether or not the witnesses who testified purchased chicken feet
to meet a demand in their stores." He accordingly refused to admit
the proferred testimony from petitioner's witnesses, stating to
petitioner's counsel that "I direct you not to put them on the
stand."
On cross-examination, however, petitioner's president was
questioned as to the resale value of chicken skins from the
retailer to the general public. He stated that the value was from
25 to 30 cents a pound, and that the skin was used to make chicken
fat. He also testified that chicken feet had a resale value of from
12 to 16 cents a pound, and were used in making soup and gelatin.
He further stated that the demand for chicken feet came from retail
butchers such as had been on the stand. Petitioner's counsel then
recalled one of the retail butchers whose testimony previously had
been excluded by the court. He testified that he had bought chicken
feet from the petitioner, had "created a demand" for them in his
store, and had sold them for from 15 to 20 cents a pound. No
further witnesses were called in regard to the retail value of
chicken feet and skins.
In submitting the case to the jury, the judge stated that
"what these defendants are charged with having done is imposing
as a necessary condition to the purchase of turkeys the
simultaneous purchase of gizzards, chicken feet, or chicken skin
that were utterly useless and valueless to the purchasers. In order
to violate the law, these defendants must have made more than the
fixed price of 37 1/2 cents on the chickens, or the turkey price of
40 to 45
Page 327 U. S. 619
cents. And the testimony about the use of these additional
articles sold, the use that can be made of them, will enable you to
determine that they were sold at prices -- and the prices are on
all these slips that are in evidence -- entirely out of line with
any value that attaches to them, so that it is almost entirely
profit to these defendants, and, in doing that, by making the
purchase of these things at the prices fixed, the defendants both
realized a greater consideration than the Office of Price
Administration allows for the commodity sold."
He also told the jury that the "one question in the case is
whether the sale of the chicken skin and feet was a necessary
condition to the purchase of the other [poultry]."
The jury acquitted petitioner's president, but convicted the
petitioner on nine counts. Petitioner was fined $2,500 on each
count, a total of $22,500. The conviction was affirmed by the court
below, one judge dissenting because of the exclusion of
petitioner's proffered testimony. 149 F.2d 773. In our opinion,
however, the conviction must be set aside.
Section 205(b) of the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942
imposes criminal sanctions on "[a]ny person who willfully violates
any provision of section 4 of this Act." Section 4(a) of the Act,
in turn, provides that "[i]t shall be unlawful . . . for any person
to sell or deliver any commodity, . . . in violation of any
regulation or order under section 2. . . ." Section 2(a) authorizes
the Price Administrator under prescribed conditions to establish by
regulation or order such maximum prices "as in his judgment will be
generally fair and equitable and will effectuate the purposes of
this Act." Section 2(g) further states that
"Regulations, orders, and requirements under this Act may
contain such provisions as the Administrator deems necessary to
prevent the circumvention or evasion thereof."
The Price Administrator, pursuant to Section 2(a), issued
Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 269 on December
Page 327 U. S. 620
18, 1942, [
Footnote 3] which
regulation was in effect at the time the poultry sales in question
were made. Section 1429.5 of this regulation, referred to in the
informations, stems from Section 2(g) of the Act. It is entitled
"Evasion," and reads as follows:
"Price limitations set forth in this Revised Maximum Price
Regulation No. 269 shall not be evaded, whether by direct or
indirect methods, in connection with any offer, solicitation,
agreement, sale, delivery, purchase, or receipt of, or relating to,
the commodities prices of which are herein regulated, alone or in
conjunction with any other commodity, or by way of commission,
service, transportation, or other charge, or discount, premium, or
other privilege or other trade understanding, or otherwise."
The manifest purpose of Congress in enacting this statute was to
preserve and protect the economic balance of the nation during a
period of grave emergency, thereby achieving the prevention of
inflation and its consequences enumerated in Section 1.
Yakus
v. United States, 321 U. S. 414,
321 U. S. 423.
That aim was implemented by criminal sanctions to be imposed on
those who deliberately choose to ignore the national welfare in
this respect by selling commodities at prices above established
levels. As appears from a combined reading of Sections 205(b),
4(a), and 2(a), criminal liability attaches to anyone who willfully
sells commodities in violation of a regulation or order of the
Price Administrator establishing maximum prices. [
Footnote 4]
Cf. United States v.
Eaton, 144 U. S. 677.
Recognizing that
Page 327 U. S. 621
sales at above-ceiling prices may be accomplished by devious, as
well as by direct, means, Congress, in Section 2(g), authorized the
Administrator to make provisions against circumvention and evasion
of maximum prices. Hence, one who willfully sells commodities at
prices above the maximum in an evasive manner specified by the
Administrator subjects oneself to criminal liability. These
statutory warnings are clear and unambiguous. When incorporated
with such definite and clear regulations and orders as the
Administrator may promulgate, the provisions of the Act leave no
doubt as to the conduct that will render one liable to criminal
penalties.
This delegation to the Price Administrator of the power to
provide in detail against circumvention and evasion, as to which
Congress has imposed criminal sanctions, creates a grave
responsibility. In a very literal sense, the liberties and fortunes
of others may depend upon his definitions and specifications
regarding evasion. Hence, to these provisions must be applied the
same strict rule of construction that is applied to statutes
defining criminal action. In other words, the Administrator's
provisions must be explicit and unambiguous in order to sustain a
criminal prosecution; they must adequately inform those who are
subject to their terms what conduct will be considered evasive so
as to bring the criminal penalties of the Act into operation.
See United States v.
Wiltberger, 5 Wheat. 76,
18 U. S. 94-96.
The dividing line between unlawful evasion and lawful action cannot
be left to conjecture. The elements of evasive conduct should be so
clearly expressed by the
Page 327 U. S. 622
Administrator that the ordinary person can know in advance how
to avoid an unlawful course of action.
In applying this strict rule of construction of the provisions
adopted by the Administrator, courts must take care not to construe
so strictly as to defeat the obvious intention of the
Administrator. Words used by him to describe evasive action are to
be given their natural and plain meaning, supplemented by
contemporaneous or longstanding interpretations publicly made by
the Administrator. But patent omissions and uncertainties cannot be
disregarded when dealing with a criminal prosecution. A prosecutor
in framing an indictment, a court in interpreting the
Administrator's regulations or a jury in judging guilt, cannot
supply that which the Administrator failed to do by express word or
fair implication. Not even the Administrator's interpretations of
his own regulations can cure an omission or add certainty and
definiteness to otherwise vague language. The prohibited conduct
must, for criminal purposes, be set forth with clarity in the
regulations and orders which he is authorized by Congress to
promulgate under the Act. Congress has warned the public to look to
that source alone to discover what conduct is evasive, and hence
likely to create criminal liability.
United States v.
Resnick, 299 U. S. 207.
In light of these principles, we are unable to sustain this
conviction of the petitioner based upon Section 1429.5 of Revised
Maximum Price Regulation No. 269. For purposes of this case, we
must assume that the Administrator legally could include tying
agreements and combination sales involving the sale of valuable
secondary commodities at their market value among the prohibited
evasion devices. Any problem as to his power so to provide would
have to be raised initially in a proceeding before the Emergency
Court of Appeals.
Lockerty v. Phillips, 319 U.
S. 182;
Yakus v. United States, 321 U.
S. 414,
321 U. S.
427-431;
Bowles v. Seminole Rock & Sand
Co., 325 U. S. 410,
325 U. S.
418-419;
Page 327 U. S. 623
Case v. Bowles, 327 U. S. 92,
327 U. S. 98.
The only issue bearing upon the regulation which is open in this
criminal proceeding is whether the Administrator did in fact
clearly and unmistakably prohibit tying agreements of this nature
by virtue of the language he used in Section 1429.5. That issue we
answer in the negative. [
Footnote
5]
Section 1429.5, so far as here pertinent, provides that price
limitations shall not be evaded by any method, direct or indirect,
whether in connection with any offer or sale of a price-regulated
commodity alone "or in conjunction with any other commodity," or by
way of any trade understanding "or otherwise." No specific mention
is made of tying agreements or combination sales.
It is urged by the Government that this language fits the type
of tying agreement allegedly used by petitioner. The contention is
that petitioner received for the primary commodity not only the
ceiling price, but also the price of the secondary commodities
which the retailers were required to buy. Conversely the retailers
were compelled to pay not only the ceiling price, but also the
price of the secondary commodities in order to secure the primary
commodity, the poultry. Under this theory, it is immaterial whether
the secondary products, the chicken parts, had any value to the
retailers, or whether their price was a reasonable one. Reference
is made in this respect to Section 302(b) of the Act, defining
price as "the consideration demanded or received in connection with
the sale of a commodity." Hence, it is concluded that the price
limitation on the primary commodity was evaded "in conjunction with
any other commodity" within the meaning of Section 1429.5. This
argument, moreover, represents the consistent interpretation of the
Administrator. [
Footnote 6]
Page 327 U. S. 624
But we do not believe that, under the strict rule of
construction previously discussed, such an interpretation of
Section 1429.5 is dictated by its plain language. It prohibits
evasions through sales of price-regulated commodities "in
conjunction with any other commodity." That clearly and undeniably
prohibits evasions through the use of tying agreements where the
tied-in commodity is worthless, or is sold at an artificial price,
thereby hiding an above-ceiling price for the primary commodity.
But to say that the language covers more -- that it also applies to
a case where the secondary product has value and is sold at its
ceiling or market price -- is to introduce an element of
conjecture, and to give effect to an unstated judgment of
policy.
The language of Section 1429.5 is appropriate to and consistent
with a desire on the Administrator's part to prohibit only those
tying agreements involving tied-in commodities that are worthless,
or that are sold at artificial prices.
Page 327 U. S. 625
The Administrator may have thought that other tied-in sales did
not constitute a sufficient threat to the price economy of the
nation to warrant their outlawry, or that they were such an
established trade custom that they should be recognized. But we are
told that he had no such thought -- that prohibition of all tying
agreements is essential to prevent profiteering, and that this
blanket prohibition is the only policy consistent with the purposes
of the Act. All of this may well be true. But these are
administrative judgments with which the courts have no concern in a
criminal proceeding. We must look solely to the language actually
used in Section 1429.5. And when we do, we are unable to say that
the Administrator has made his position in this respect
self-evident from the language used.
The Administrator's failure to express adequately his intentions
in Section 1429.5 is emphasized by the complete and unmistakable
language he has used in other price regulations to prohibit all
tying agreements, including those involving the sale of valuable
secondary products. Thus, he has inserted in the meat regulation a
provision prohibiting evasion of price limitations by "offering,
selling, or delivering beef, veal, or any processed product on
condition that the purchaser is required to purchase some other
commodity." Section 1364.406, Revised Maximum Price Regulation No.
169, as amended March 30, 1943, 8 Fed.Reg. 4099. And, in the
clothing regulation, the Administrator has provided that
"No manufacturer shall make a sale of garments which is
conditioned directly or indirectly on the purchase of any other
commodity or service."
Section 15, Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 287, issued
June 29, 1943, 8 Fed.Reg. 9126.
See also Section 1389.555,
Maximum Price Regulation No. 330, as amended August 7, 1943, 8
Fed.Reg. 11041.
The very definiteness with which tying agreements of all types
were prohibited in regard to many other commodities
Page 327 U. S. 626
and the absence of any such prohibition in Section 1429.5 of
Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 269 might well have led a
reasonable man to believe that tying agreements involving the sale
of a valuable secondary commodity at its market price were
permissible in the poultry business when the transactions in
question took place. Certainly the language used by the
Administrator did not compel the opposite conclusion. And certainly
a criminal conviction ought not to rest upon an interpretation
reached by the use of policy judgments, rather than by the
inexorable command of relevant language.
In view of these considerations, we interpret Section 1429.5 as
prohibiting only those tying agreements involving secondary
products that are worthless or that are sold at artificial prices.
It follows that the conviction below cannot stand. While the
informations can be interpreted as charging a crime under Section
1429.5 as we have read it, the trial judge's charge to the jury was
clearly erroneous. There was evidence, at first excluded but later
admitted, that the chicken parts which the petitioner sold did have
value, and were sold at their market price. If the jury believed
such evidence, it was entitled to acquit the petitioner. But the
trial judge charged that the "one" question in the case was whether
the sale of the chicken parts was a necessary condition to the
purchase of the poultry. On the basis of that charge, the jury may
well have disregarded as irrelevant the evidence of value as to the
secondary products and convicted solely on the ground that there
was a tie-in sale. Such a charge is thus reversible error.
There were additional statements in the charge to the jury, to
be sure, that the petitioner was charged with having compelled, in
connection with the purchase of poultry, the simultaneous purchase
of chicken parts "[t]hat were utterly useless and valueless to the
purchasers," and at prices "entirely out of line with any value
that attaches
Page 327 U. S. 627
to them." While such statements tended to charge a violation of
Section 1429.5, as properly interpreted, they were so intertwined
with the incorrect charge as to negative their effect. "A
conviction ought not to rest upon an equivocal direction to the
jury on a basic issue."
Bollenbach v. United States,
326 U. S. 607.
The case must therefore be remanded for a new trial, allowing
full opportunity for the introduction of evidence as to the value
of the chicken parts and charging the jury in accordance with the
proper interpretation of Section 1429.5.
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
56 Stat. 23, 50 U.S.C. App. § 901
et seq.
[
Footnote 2]
7 Fed.Reg. 10708; reissued with amendments, 8 Fed.Reg.
13813.
[
Footnote 3]
Reissued with amendments on October 8, 1943.
See
note 2
[
Footnote 4]
Section 205(b) is somewhat inartistically drawn. It does not
specifically impose criminal liability on those who violate the
regulations and orders of the Administrator. But the hurdle of
United States v. Eaton, 144 U. S. 677, is
cleared by the reference in Section 205(b) to Section 4, which
makes it unlawful, among other things, to sell or deliver and
commodity in violation of any regulation or order.
See In re
Kollock, 165 U. S. 526;
United States v. Grimaud, 220 U.
S. 506;
United States v. George, 228 U. S.
14;
Singer v. United States, 323 U.
S. 338. Congress has subsequently emphasized this
reference even more clearly when, in adding Section 204(e)(1) to
the Emergency Price Control Act, it spoke of a criminal proceeding
"brought pursuant to section 205 involving alleged violation of any
provision of any regulation or order issued under section 2."
Section 107(b), Stabilization Extension Act of 1944, 58 Stat. 639.
See also Section 6, Act of June 30, 1945, Public Law 108,
amending Section 204(e)(1) of the Emergency Price Control Act.
[
Footnote 5]
Cf. United States v. George F. Fish, Inc., 154 F.2d
798.
[
Footnote 6]
The Price Administrator has consistently maintained the position
that compulsion to purchase a secondary product is an evasion of
the maximum prices fixed for the primary product. Thus, in an
interpretation issued November 5, 1943, applicable to all maximum
price regulations, the Administrator, in discussing violations and
evasions, made the following interpretation as to tying
agreements:
"(a)
As to freeze regulations: a purchaser may not be
required to buy a combination of commodities if he was not required
to do so during the base period, because such an arrangement is a
tying agreement which results in the seller's receiving a larger
consideration for his commodity than he charged during the base
period."
"(b)
As to regulations other than base period freeze
regulations: OPA has also consistently held that any
arrangement by which a seller conditions the sale of a commodity in
any manner upon the purchase by the buyer of any other commodity is
a tying agreement, and constitutes a violation."
"
For example, it is a violation for a seller to compel
a purchaser of a load of corn to also purchase a load of alfalfa,
even though the total price for the corn, plus the alfalfa, does
not exceed the aggregate of the ceiling price for each item, or
another example: it is a violation for a seller to compel a
purchaser of nylon hose to also purchase a war bond."
OPA Service (Pike & Fischer) vol. I, p. 2:812.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, concurring.
If a retailer sold meat or any other commodity to a consumer
only on condition that he purchase and pay for a wholly worthless
article, it would be clear that price ceilings and been violated.
For the attribution of value to the worthless article would be
nothing more than an evasive method of increasing the ceiling price
on the other commodity. I can see no difference where the
additional commodity, although it has value, has no value to the
purchaser.
But this case is different in both respects, or so the jury
might find. First, chicken gizzards, chicken skin, or chicken feet
are not wholly worthless articles. There is demand for them, and
they have a value. Second, they were tied-in with sales to
retailers who constitute the market for chicken gizzards, chicken
skin, and chicken feet. If, in fact, they had no value on that
market, evasion of price ceilings would be established. But, since
they apparently had some value on the retail market, no violation
of price ceilings occurred unless the price charged for them in
fact exceeded that market value. That might
Page 327 U. S. 628
be shown either by proof of the fact that the market value was
lower or by showing that the quantity forced on the retailers was
in excess of the quantity which the market could absorb.
The case should be remanded for a new trial on that basis. For
the trial court ruled that the additional articles sold were
valueless, and that the "one question in the case is whether the
sale of the chicken skin and feet was a necessary condition to the
purchase of the other." That ruling took from the jury the basic
issue in the case.
I think there was evidence that these chicken gizzards, chicken
skin, and chicken feet were valueless to some of the retailers, and
that a conviction would be warranted. But it is not enough that we
conclude on the whole record that a defendant is guilty.
Bollenbach v. United States, 326 U.
S. 607. The jury under our constitutional system is the
tribunal selected for the ascertainment of guilt.
MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE, concurring.
I am in agreement with the result, and substantially so with MR.
JUSTICE MURPHY's opinion. I do not think that administrative
regulations, given by statute the function of defining the
substance of criminal conduct, should have broader or more
inclusive construction than statutes performing the same function.
If the regulations involved here had been enacted specifically by
Congress in statutory form, I do not think they could properly be
construed to forbid tie-in sales of these commodities
per
se.
As the opinion points out, the regulations, with reference to
other commodities, expressly prohibited tie-in sales, regardless of
whether the tied-in commodity had value. Persons dealing in those
commodities were specifically informed by the regulations therefore
that such sales would be in violation of the Act. There was no such
specific prohibition applicable at the time of the sales in
question to sales of poultry. However the general prohibition
Page 327 U. S. 629
against evasion contained in § 1429.5 of Revised Maximum
Price Regulation No. 269 might be interpreted, if there had been no
regulations specifically forbidding tie-in sales of other
commodities, in view of their existence and the absence of any
similar provision relating to poultry, I do not think it
permissible to construe § 1429.5 as covering the same ground.
Persons reading the regulations to determine what conduct had been
forbidden were entitled, in my opinion, to conclude that the
Administrator, whenever he thought tie-in sales were
per
se evasive or in violation of the Act's policy, had expressly
so stated, and, conversely that, where he had not expressly
forbidden the practice, it was not to be understood as prohibited
by general language applicable to many other types of situation,
but not specifically to this one. This view, I think, would be
required if the regulations had bee enacted in statutory form. As
regulations, they cannot be given broader content.
Accordingly, I agree with the conclusion that tie-in sales were
not forbidden, at the time of these sales, as to poultry. I also
agree that the trial court, both in its instructions and in some of
its rulings upon the admissibility of evidence, went on a
conception of the law inconsistent with this view. I therefore
concur in the Court's disposition of the cause.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, although agreeing with the opinion of
MR. JUSTICE MURPHY, also joins in this opinion.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, dissenting.
We were at war in 1943. Scarcity of food had become an acute
problem throughout the nation. To keep the public from being
gouged, the government had set ceiling prices on food items.
Congress had made it a crime to sell food above these ceiling
prices. When Thanksgiving Day approached, there were not enough
turkeys to supply
Page 327 U. S. 630
the demand of the many American families who wanted to celebrate
in the customary style.
The information filed in the district court charged that the
petitioner "unlawfully, willfully, and knowingly evaded the
provisions of . . . " Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 269,
§ 1429.5, by compelling and requiring the buyer to purchase
chicken feet, chicken skin, or gizzards at a specified price as a
condition of the sale of poultry to them. During peacetimes, the
petitioner had ordinarily done a gross business of seven and a half
million dollars a year. In 1943, presumably due to the meat
shortage incident to the war, the petitioner's gross business was
not quite four million dollars. This meat shortage was felt acutely
during the Thanksgiving season, when petitioner, instead of his
usual 100 to 150 cars of turkeys, received only one car. When the
retail butchers and poultry market proprietors came clamoring for
their share of the small supply (which the defendant rationed among
them), they found that, along with the turkeys which they wanted so
badly, petitioner gave and charged them for large amounts of
chicken feet, skins, and gizzards which they had not asked for at
all, and which, for the most part, they had never before sold as
separate items. While the butchers paid, in addition to the ceiling
price charged for the turkeys, the price charged for the chicken
skins and feet, they did so only because they understood that,
unless they bought these unwanted items, they could get no turkeys.
Only one of the butchers sold all the chicken skins to his
customers. He explained that he operated his store in a poor
neighborhood where the food shortage had become so acute that
people were willing to buy anything they could get. As to the rest
of the butchers, some simply dumped the chicken skins and feet,
while others, after diligent efforts, sold a few pounds and then
gave the rest away either to their customers or to charitable
institutions. Certainly these particular butchers forced to buy
Page 327 U. S. 631
these unwanted items for the first time were not the regular
retail outlet for disjointed chicken feet and peeled chicken skins,
if there ever was such an outlet on a voluntary basis. It is clear,
therefore, that, as a result of petitioner's forcing his customers
to buy the feet and skins along with the turkeys, the retailers'
cost price of the turkeys was, in effect, increased beyond the
ceiling.
In my opinion, petitioner's practice in forcing the butchers to
buy unwanted chicken feet in order to get wanted turkeys amounted
to a direct violation of the Price Control Act. It certainly was no
less a violation of the Administrator's regulation against evasion.
In promulgating this regulation, the Administrator could not
possibly foresee every ingenious scheme or artifice the business
mind might contrive to shroud violations of the Price Control Act.
The regulation does not specifically describe all manner of evasive
device. The term "tying agreement" nowhere appears in it, and a
discussion of such agreements is irrelevant. We need not decide
whether what petitioner did would have violated every possible
hypothetical regulation the Administrator might have promulgated.
The regulation here involved prohibits every evasion of the Price
Control Act. It thus condemns all actions that are "on the wrong
side of the line indicated by the policy, if not by the mere
letter, of the law."
Bullen v. Wisconsin, 240 U.
S. 625,
240 U. S. 631.
What petitioner did here is on the wrong side of both letter and
policy. The Court does not deny that there was ample evidence to
support the jury's finding that petitioner did what the information
charged in with doing. In my opinion, that was a crime.
Had butchers been required to buy bags of stones as a condition
to buying turkeys, I think it would have been hard to persuade
them, or anybody else, that the seller who forced them to do so was
not guilty of violating and evading the law. Had people who wanted
and needed bacon,
Page 327 U. S. 632
at the time when bacon was almost impossible to purchase, been
required to buy dog hoofs and hog skins with each purchase of a
pound of bacon, I think the sellers would have violated the law. If
the wholesaler can require the retailer to purchase unwanted items,
the retailer can force the ordinary consumer to do the same thing.
A restaurant could then force its customers to purchase used
kitchen fats along with their meals. It would be little consolation
to a customer forced to do so to learn that soap factories can use
these fats, and would be willing to purchase them. He would pay the
price, and either dump the fat into the nearest ashcan or tell the
waiter to take the smelly substance away. The result would be
increased cost of meals in that restaurant. Thinly disguised
subterfuges like the one here adopted should not be sanctioned by
courts. Once they are sanctioned, laws enacted by Congress for the
public welfare are no longer respected.
When food is scarce and people are hungry it is a violation both
of the letter and spirit of the Price Control laws to require
consumers or retail stores where they make their purchases to buy
things that they neither need nor want as a condition to obtaining
articles which they must have. I dissent from the Court's
disposition of this case.
MR. JUSTICE REED and MR. JUSTICE BURTON join in this
opinion.