1. The amendment of § 203(a) of the Emergency Price Control
Act of 1942 by § 106 of the Stabilization Act of 1944
authorized any person subject to a price schedule to file a protest
"at any time."
Held that, although the time within which a protest
could be filed under the original Act had expired, a person whose
rights were affected was entitled to file a protest under the
amendatory Act notwithstanding that the basis of his objection to
the price schedule had been removed prospectively by modification
of the price schedule prior to the filing of the protest. P.
328 U. S.
43.
2. The considerations of fairness which led Congress to
liberalize the right of protest under the price control legislation
apply equally to a regulation that has been revised and to a new
regulation where the superseded regulation continues to govern the
validity of transactions that occurred under its rule. P.
328 U. S.
44.
3. The contentions that the Administrator ought not to be
burdened with issues arising under superseded regulations, and that
the protestant here could test the validity of the price schedule
by other procedures, do not warrant the construction urged by the
Administrator. Pp.
328 U. S.
44-45.
150 F.2d 963 reversed.
The Price Administrator denied a protest filed with him by the
petitioner under the Emergency Price Control Act. The Emergency
Court of Appeals dismissed petitioner's complaint. 150 F.2d 963.
This Court granted certiorari. 326 U.S. 710.
Reversed, p.
328 U. S.
45.
Page 328 U. S. 40
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is one of a series of cases calling for the construction of
amendments to the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942.
Section 203 of the Act, 56 Stat. 23, 31, 50 U.S.C. App. §
923, confined within narrow limits the right to protest to the
Administrator against a price schedule promulgated by him. The
Stabilization Act of 1944, 58 Stat. 632, 638, 50 U.S.C. App. §
923, greatly liberalized this right to protest. The view taken by
the United States Emergency Court of Appeals of the scope of this
liberalization, 150 F.2d 963, based on its prior ruling in
Thomas Paper Stock Co. v. Bowles, 148 F.2d 831, led us to
bring the case here.
328 U. S. 50.
The facts relevant to the immediate issue can be quickly stated.
The Administrator established maximum prices for iron and steel
scrap. Revised Price Schedule No. 4, 7 Fed.Reg. 1207 (February 21,
1942). This schedule, § 1304.13(f),
id. at 1212, made
no special provision for smelter fluxing scrap, scrap prepared for
use in lead blast furnaces. Petitioner, a scrap dealer, operating
in Utah, was engaged in the preparation and sale of fluxing scrap.
Between April 25, 1942, and February 10, 1943, it sold a
considerable amount of fluxing scrap to one of its customers, for
which it was to be paid, in addition to the ceiling price for the
scrap, $1.50 per ton for preparing the scrap. Inasmuch as the
petitioner had been notified by the Office of Price Administration
that such a charge was a violation of the Price Schedule, it merely
billed its customer for the additional $1.50 per ton, but abstained
from collecting it so as to avoid the penal provisions of the Price
Control Act.
The controversy concerns petitioner's lawful right to collect
this processing charge as previously agreed upon
Page 328 U. S. 41
between the parties to the contract. Claiming that the Price
Schedule governing the sales in question was invalid insofar as it
failed to permit an allowance for processing, petitioners filed a
protest with the Administrator. The Administrator and the Emergency
Court of Appeals ruled that the protest came too late. It was
timely, in any event, only if the amendment to § 203(a) of the
Price Control Act of 1942 made by § 106 of the Stabilization
Act of 1944, 58 Stat. 632, 638, can be invoked after the ground of
objection to a price schedule had been prospectively removed.
[
Footnote 1] For the
Administrator had completely met petitioner's objection by the time
that the petitioner could avail itself of whatever enlarged right
of protest the 1944 amendments conferred. The Administrator did so,
in part, on December 21, 1943, by authorizing a Regional Office of
the Price Administration to grant upon application an allowance of
up to $1.50 per ton for processing scrap, and, on June 30, 1944,
the very day that the Act of 1944 became effective, the Schedule
was revised to permit such a charge on all future sales of scrap. 9
Fed.Reg. 7330.
Page 328 U. S. 42
This brings us to the controlling legislation. The procedure
established by the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942 authorized
"any person subject to any provision" of a price schedule issued by
the Administrator to "file a protest specifically setting forth
objections to any such provision," with a right of appeal to the
Emergency Court of Appeals from denial of such protest by the
Administrator. §§ 203(a) and 204(a), 56 Stat. 23, 31. But
such protest had to be made "within a period of sixty days after
the effective date" of a price schedule. By the Stabilization Act
of June 30, 1944, 58 Stat. 632, 638, Congress amended the procedure
so that a protest against any provision of a price schedule could
be filed "at any time" after the effective date.
If one had only the words of the 1944 amendment to go on, it
would be dubious to infer that Congress had not only removed the
bar of sixty days for protests to which the future may give rise,
but had also revised a right of protest which had expired through
nonuser under the Act of 1942. But such, it appears, is the meaning
of the amendment. On this point, the legislative history is
decisive. A senate report furnishes an authoritative gloss:
"The committee was concerned . . . by the fact that, in the
early days of price control, many people unfamiliar with the
provisions of the act might have lost their right to challenge the
basic validity of a regulation by excusable failure to file a
protest within the statutory period. The committee therefore
recommends that, with respect to all regulations issued before July
1, 1944, a new period of sixty days from that date be provided for
the filing of protests. . . ."
S.Rep. No. 922, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. (1944) 10. It will be noted
that the Senate proposed a reviver of barred claims for only sixty
days. Even this limitation was removed when the measure was amended
by the House
Page 328 U. S. 43
and subsequently became law.
See H.R.Rep. No. 1593,
78th Cong., 2d Sess. (1944) 5; H.R.Rep. 1698, 78th Cong., 2d Sess.
(1944) 21.
Congress was evidently impressed by the need for relief of
rights lost through what it deemed excusable failure to enforce
them under the original Price Control Act. Since, then, Congress
lifted the sixty-day limitation retrospectively, we are relieved
from considering whether, in the circumstances of this case,
petitioner's right of protest would have been barred even under the
1942 Act so long as the controverted price schedule remained
unmodified. [
Footnote 2] But
this takes us only part of the way. We need still ascertain whether
the 1944 amendment authorizes a protest without a time limit only
against a price schedule contemporaneously active. Does it, that
is, preclude a right of protest like petitioner's against a
schedule that had been superseded, although it continues to govern
the validity of transactions that occurred under its rule?
The Administrator argues that this restrictions upon the
enlargement of the right of protest made by the Act of 1944 is
immanent in what Congress said. This is what Congress said:
"At any time after the issuance of any regulation or order . . .
or, in the case of a price schedule, at any time after the
effective date thereof . . . , any person
Page 328 U. S. 44
subject to any provision of such regulation, order, or price
schedule may, in accordance with the regulations to be prescribed
by the Administrator, file a protest. . . ."
We find nothing in this language of the 1944 Amendment of §
203(a), or in its history, or in any illumination otherwise shed
upon the terms of this legislation, to justify reading in a
qualification that Congress has left out.
All construction is the ascertainment of meaning. And
literalness may strangle meaning. But, in construing a definite
procedural provision, we do well to stick close to the text, and
not import argumentative qualifications from broad, unexpressed
claims of policy. Insofar as such considerations are relevant here,
however, they tell against cutting down the natural meaning of the
language Congress chose.
Congress liberalized the right to challenge the validity of
price regulations so extensively as it did, even reviving rights
theretofore lapsed, because it felt, as we have seen, that rights
were unfairly lost through unfamiliarity with the technical
requirements of emergency legislation. Price-fixing is not static;
it is a continuing process. The considerations of fairness that led
Congress to give relief are the same whether a regulation was
revised or remained unchanged. There is not a hint that Congress
intended to draw a line so artificial as the one the Administrator
would have us draw.
This conclusion is left undisturbed by the arguments advanced on
behalf of the Administrator. It is urged that he ought not to be
burdened with issues arising under superseded regulations. But, as
a matter of law, enforcement a regulation continues to survive its
supersession as a contemporaneous price schedule.
United States
v. Hark, 320 U. S. 531. The
Administrator has the duty of enforcing the Act, and, in a
proceeding for suspension of a license
Page 328 U. S. 45
or for treble damages or penalties, it is immaterial that the
basis of the suit is violation of a superseded price regulation. It
is also suggested that the protest proceedings under § 203(a)
as amended are not available to a protestant in petitioner's plight
because the validity of the old schedule may be otherwise tested.
The only other way implies the readiness of the customer to pay the
contract price for the processing charge and its acceptance by the
petitioner, subjecting both to civil and criminal actions for
violations of the Act. With the consent of the trial court, the
Emergency Court of Appeals could then pass on the schedule. §
204(e), 58 Stat. 632, 639, 50 U.S.C.Appendix § 924(e). It
surely does not commend itself to good sense to bar a direct
protest to the Administrator so easily justified by an unstrained
reading of the Act, because leave might be obtained to litigate the
issue in a roundabout way, involving violations of a presumptively
valid regulation. And, in the event that the Administrator's
insistence on the validity of the old maximum scrap price schedule
is not challenged by violation, it could not be tested by bringing
a suit on the contract for the additional price.
Yakus v.
United States, 321 U. S. 414.
Finally, apart from a construction of the statute which we are
bound to reject, the Administrator seeks to invoke "the general
doctrine of laches" against the petitioner, upon the particular
facts of this case. The Emergency Court of Appeals may consider
that issue when, upon remand, it disposes of this case in
conformity with this opinion.
Judgment reversed.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
§ 203(a) reads as follows -- the bracketed material was
deleted by the 1944 Amendment, the italicized material added by
that Amendment:
"[Within a period of sixty days]
At any time after the
issuance of any regulation or order under section 2, or in the case
of a price schedule [within sixty days]
at any time after
the effective date thereof specified in section 206, any person
subject to any provision of such regulation, order, or price
schedule may, in accordance with regulations to be prescribed by
the Administrator, file a protest specifically setting forth
objections to any such provision and affidavits or other written
evidence in support of such objections. [At any time after the
expiration of such sixty days, any persons subject to any provision
of such regulation, order, or price schedule may file such a
protest based solely on grounds arising after the expiration of
such sixty days.]"
56 Stat. 23, 31; 58 Stat. 632, 638, 50 U.S.C. App. §
923(a).
[
Footnote 2]
The Price Schedule in controversy was reissued on February 21,
1942. 7 Fed.Reg. 1707, and the sixty days for protest, under the
1942 Act, expired on April 21, 1942. But it was not until April 25,
1942, that petitioner was notified by the OPA that the schedule
applied to its sales of fluxing scrap. Under the original Act, the
sixty day limitation did not apply to "a protest based solely on
grounds arising after the expiration of such sixty days." We need
not decide whether petitioner could have brought itself under this
escape clause.
See Galban Lobo Co. v. Henderson, 132 F.2d
150;
United States Gypsum Co. v. Brown, 137 F.2d 803;
R. E. Schanzer, Inc. v. Bowles, 141 F.2d 262;
Marlene
Linens v. Bowles, 144 F.2d 874.