The Federal Trade Commission instituted a proceeding before
itself against an unincorporated trade association composed of
corporations which manufacture, sell, and distribute cement;
corporate members of the association, and officers and agents of
the association. The complaint charged: (1) that respondents had
engaged in an unfair method of competition in violation of § 5
of the Federal Trade Commission Act by acting in concert to
restrain competition in the sale and distribution of cement through
use of a multiple basing point delivered-price system, which
resulted in their quoting and maintaining identical prices and
terms of sale for cement at any given destination, and (2) that
this system of sales resulted in price discriminations violative of
§ 2 of the Clayton Act, as amended by the Robinson-Patman Act.
Upon a hearing and findings, the Commission ordered respondents to
cease and desist from any concerted action to do specified things,
including use of the multiple basing point delivered-price system
to maintain identical prices for cement.
Held:
1. The Commission has jurisdiction to conclude that conduct
tending to restrain trade is an unfair method of competition
violative of § 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, even
though the self-same conduct may also violate the Sherman Act. Pp.
333 U. S.
689-693.
Page 333 U. S. 684
2. The legislative history of the Federal Trade Commission Act
shows that the purpose of Congress was not only to continue
enforcement of the Sherman Act by the Department of Justice and the
federal courts, but also to supplement that enforcement through the
administrative process of the Federal Trade Commission. Pp.
333 U. S.
692-693.
3. The filing by the United States of a civil action in a
federal district court to restrain the respondents and others from
violating § 1 of the Sherman Act, though based largely on the
same alleged misconduct as in the Commission proceeding, does not
require that the Commission proceeding be dismissed. Pp.
333 U. S.
693-695.
4. Since all of the respondents were charged with combining to
maintain a delivered-price system in order to eliminate price
competition in interstate commerce, some who sold cement in
intrastate commerce exclusively were nevertheless subject to the
jurisdiction and order of the Commission. Pp.
333 U. S.
695-696.
5. The Commission was not disqualified to pass upon the issues
involved in this proceeding, even assuming that the members of the
Commission, as a result of its prior
ex parte
investigations, had previously formed the opinion that the multiple
basing point system operated as a price-fixing restraint of trade
violative of the Sherman Act. Pp.
333 U. S.
700-703.
6. It was not a denial of due process for the Commission to act
in these proceedings after having expressed the view that
industrywide use of the basing point system was illegal.
Tumey
v. Ohio, 273 U. S. 510,
distinguished. Pp.
333 U. S.
702-703.
7. Although the alleged combination be treated as having had its
beginning in 1929, evidence of respondents' activities during years
long prior thereto and during the NRA period was admissible for the
purpose of showing the existence of a continuing combination among
respondents to utilize the basing point pricing system. Pp.
333 U. S.
703-706.
(a) The Commission's consideration of respondents' pre-1929 and
NRA code activities was within the rule that testimony as to prior
or subsequent transactions, which for some reason are barred from
forming the basis for a suit, may nevertheless be introduced if it
tends reasonably to show the purpose and character of the
particular transactions under scrutiny. Pp.
333 U. S.
704-705.
(b) Administrative agencies such as the Commission are not
restricted by rigid rules of evidence. Pp.
333 U. S.
705-706.
(c) A letter written prior to the filing of the complaint by
one, since deceased, who was president of a respondent company
Page 333 U. S. 685
and an active trustee of the association, in which he stated
that free competition would be ruinous to the cement industry, was
admissible in evidence even though the statement may have been only
the writer's conclusion. P.
333 U. S.
706.
8.
Cement Mfrs. Protective Assn. v. United States,
268 U. S. 588, is
not decisive of the issues in the present case. Pp.
333 U. S.
706-709.
9. Individual conduct or concerted action may fall short of
violating the Sherman Act and yet constitute an "unfair method of
competition" prohibited by the Federal Trade Commission Act. P.
333 U. S.
708.
10. The Commission made adequate findings that respondents
collectively maintained a multiple basing point delivered-price
system for the purpose of suppressing competition. Pp.
333 U. S.
709-712.
11. There was substantial evidence to support these findings.
Pp.
333 U. S.
712-720.
12. Maintenance by concerted action of the basing point
delivered-price system employed by respondents is an unfair trade
practice prohibited by the Federal Trade Commission Act. Pp.
333 U. S.
720-721.
13. Respondents' multiple basing point delivered-price system
resulted in price discriminations between purchasers, in violation
of § 2 of the Clayton Act as amended by the Robinson-Patman
Act.
Corn Products Co. v. Federal Trade Comm'n,
324 U. S. 726;
Federal Trade Comm'n v. Staley Co., 324 U.
S. 746. Pp.
333 U. S.
721-726.
14. The differences in respondents' net returns from different
sales in different localities, resulting from use of the multiple
basing point delivered-price system, were not justifiable under
§ 2(b) of the amended Clayton Act as price discriminations
"made in good faith to meet an equally low price of a competitor."
Pp.
333 U. S.
721-726.
15. The objections to the form and substance of the Commission's
order are without merit. Pp.
333 U. S.
726-730.
157 F.2d 533 reversed.
A cease and desist order issued by the Federal Trade Commission
in proceedings against respondents under the Federal Trade
Commission Act and the amended Clayton Act was set aside by the
Circuit Court of Appeals. 157 F.2d 533. This Court granted
certiorari. 330 U.S. 815816.
Reversed, p.
333 U. S.
730.
Page 333 U. S. 687
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
We granted certiorari to review the decree of the Circuit Court
of Appeals which, with one judge dissenting, vacated and set aside
a cease and desist order issued by the Federal Trade Commission
against the respondents. 157 F.2d 533. Those respondents are: The
Cement Institute, an unincorporated trade association composed of
74 corporations [
Footnote 1]
which manufacture, sell and distribute cement; the 74 corporate
members of the Institute; [
Footnote
2] and 21 individuals who are associated with the Institute. It
took three years for a trial examiner to hear the evidence, which
consists of about 49,000 pages of oral testimony and 50,000 pages
of exhibits. Even the findings and conclusions of the Commission
cover 176 pages. The briefs, with accompanying appendixes submitted
by the parties, contain more than 4,000 pages. The legal questions
raised by the Commission and by the different respondents
Page 333 U. S. 688
are many and varied. Some contentions are urged by all
respondents, and can be jointly considered. Others require separate
treatment. In order to keep our opinion within reasonable limits,
we must restrict our record references to the minimum consistent
with an adequate consideration of the legal questions we
discuss.
The proceedings were begun by a Commission complaint of two
counts. The first charged that certain alleged conduct set out at
length constituted an unfair method of competition in violation of
§ 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act. 38 Stat. 719, 15
U.S.C. § 45. The core of the charge was that the respondents
had restrained and hindered competition in the sale and
distribution of cement by means of a combination among themselves
made effective through mutual understanding or agreement to employ
a multiple basing point system of pricing. It was alleged that this
system resulted in the quotation of identical terms of sale and
identical prices for cement by the respondents at any given point
in the United States. This system had worked so successfully, it
was further charged, that, for many years prior to the filing of
the complaint, all cement buyers throughout the nation, with rare
exceptions, had been unable to purchase cement for delivery in any
given locality from any one of the respondents at a lower price or
on more favorable terms than from any of the other respondents.
The second count of the complaint, resting chiefly on the same
allegations of fact set out in Count I, charged that the multiple
basing point system of sales resulted in systematic price
discriminations between the customers of each respondent. These
discriminations were made, it was alleged, with the purpose of
destroying competition in price between the various respondents in
violation of § 2 of the Clayton Act, 38 Stat. 730, as amended
by the Robinson-Patman Act, 49 Stat. 1526. That section, with
Page 333 U. S. 689
certain conditions which need not here be set out, makes it
"unlawful for any person engaged in commerce, . . . either
directly or indirectly, to discriminate in price between different
purchasers of commodities of like grade and quality. . . ."
15 U.S.C. § 13.
Resting upon its findings, the Commission ordered that
respondents cease and desist from "carrying out any planned common
course of action, understanding, agreement, combination, or
conspiracy" to do a number of things, 37 F.T.C. 97, 258-262, all of
which things, the Commission argues, had to be restrained in order
effectively to restore individual freedom of action among the
separate units in the cement industry. Certain contentions with
reference to the order will later require a more detailed
discussion of its terms. For the present, it is sufficient to say
that, if the order stands, its terms are broad enough to bar
respondents from acting in concert to sell cement on a basing point
delivered price plan which so eliminates competition that
respondents' prices are always identical at any given point in the
United States.
We shall not now detail the numerous contentions urged against
the order's validity. A statement of these contentions can best
await the separate consideration we give them.
Jurisdiction. -- At the very beginning, we are met with
a challenge to the Commission's jurisdiction to entertain the
complaint and to act on it. This contention is pressed by
respondent Marquette Cement Manufacturing Co., and is relied upon
by other respondents. Count I of the complaint is drawn under the
provision in § 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, which
declares that "Unfair methods of competition . . . are hereby
declared unlawful." Marquette contends that the facts alleged in
Count I do not constitute an "unfair method of competition" within
the meaning of § 5. Its argument runs this way: Count I in
reality charges a combination to restrain trade. Such
Page 333 U. S. 690
a combination constitutes an offense under § 1 of the
Sherman Act, which outlaws "Every . . . combination . . . in
restraint of trade." 26 Stat. 209, 15 U.S.C. § 1. Section 4 of
the Sherman Act provides that the attorney general shall institute
suits under the Act on behalf of the United States, and that the
federal district courts shall have exclusive jurisdiction of such
suits. Hence, continue respondents, the Commission, whose
jurisdiction is limited to "unfair methods of competition," is
without power to institute proceedings or to issue an order with
regard to the combination in restraint of trade charged in Count I.
Marquette then argues that, since the fact allegations of Count I
are the chief reliance for the charge in Count II, this latter
count also must be interpreted as charging a violation of the
Sherman Act. Assuming, without deciding, that the conduct charged
in each count constitutes a violation of the Sherman Act, we hold
that the Commission does have jurisdiction to conclude that such
conduct may also be an unfair method of competition, and hence
constitute a violation of § 5 of the Federal Trade Commission
Act.
As early as 1920, this Court considered it an "unfair method of
competition" to engage in practices "against public policy because
of their dangerous tendency unduly to hinder competition or create
monopoly."
Federal Trade Commission v. Gratz, 253 U.
S. 421,
253 U. S. 427.
In 1921, the Court, in
Federal Trade Commission v. Beech Nut
Packing Co., 257 U. S. 441,
sustained a cease and desist order against a resale price
maintenance plan because such a plan
"necessarily constitutes a scheme which restrains the natural
flow of commerce and the freedom of competition in the channels of
interstate trade which it has been the purpose of all the
Anti-Trust Acts to maintain."
Id. at
257 U. S. 454.
The Court, in holding that the scheme before it constituted an
unfair method of competition, noted that
Page 333 U. S. 691
the conduct in question was practically identical with that
previously declared unlawful in
Dr. Miles Medical Co. v. John
D. Park & Sons Co., 220 U. S. 373, and
United States v. Schrader's Son, Inc., 252 U. S.
85, the latter a suit brought under § 1 of the
Sherman Act. Again, in 1926, this Court sustained a Commission
"unfair method of competition" order against defendants who had
engaged in a price-fixing combination, a plain violation of §
1 of the Sherman Act.
Federal Trade Commission v. Pacific
States Paper Trade Assn., 273 U. S. 52. In
1941, we reiterated that certain conduct of a combination found to
conflict with the policy of the Sherman Act could be suppressed by
the Commission as an unfair method of competition.
Fashion
Originators' Guild v. Federal Trade Commission, 312 U.
S. 457,
312 U. S. 465.
The Commission's order was sustained in the
Fashion
Originators' case not only because the prohibited conduct
violated the Clayton Act, but also because the Commission's
findings brought the "combination in its entirety well within the
inhibition of the policies declared by the Sherman Act itself." In
other cases, this Court has pointed out many reasons which support
interpretation of the language "unfair methods of competition" in
§ 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act as including
violations of the Sherman Act. [
Footnote 3] Thus it appears that, soon after its creation,
the Commission began to interpret the prohibitions of § 5 as
including those restraints of trade which also were outlawed by the
Sherman Act, [
Footnote 4]
and
Page 333 U. S. 692
that this Court has consistently approved that interpretation of
the Act.
Despite this long and consistent administrative and judicial
construction of § 5, we are urged to hold that these prior
interpretations were wrong, and that the term "unfair methods of
competition" should not be construed as embracing any conduct
within the ambit of the Sherman Act. In support of this contention,
Marquette chiefly relies upon its reading of the legislative
history of the Commission Act. We have given careful consideration
to this contention because of the earnestness with which it is
pressed. Marquette points to particular statements of some of the
Act's sponsors which, taken out of their context, might lend faint
support to its contention that Congress did not intend the
Commission to concern itself with conduct then punishable under the
Sherman Act. But, on the whole, the Act's legislative history shows
a strong congressional purpose not only to continue enforcement of
the Sherman Act by the Department of Justice and the Federal
District Courts, but also to supplement that enforcement through
the administrative process of the new Trade Commission. Far from
being regarded as a rival of the Justice Department and the
District Courts in dissolving combinations in restraint of trade,
the new Commission was envisioned as an aid to them, and was
specifically authorized to assist them in the drafting of
Page 333 U. S. 693
appropriate decrees in antitrust litigation. [
Footnote 5] All of the committee reports and
the statements of those in charge of the Trade Commission Act
reveal an abiding purpose to vest both the Commission and the
courts with adequate powers to hit at every trade practice, then
existing or thereafter contrived, which restrained competition or
might lead to such restraint if not stopped in its incipient
stages. These congressional purposes are revealed in the
legislative history cited below, most of which is referred to in
respondents' briefs. [
Footnote
6] We can conceive of no greater obstacle this Court could
create to the fulfillment of these congressional purposes than to
inject into every Trade Commission proceeding brought under §
5 and into every Sherman Act suit brought by the Justice Department
a possible jurisdictional question.
We adhere to our former rulings. The Commission has jurisdiction
to declare that conduct tending to restrain trade is an unfair
method of competition even though the self-same conduct may also
violate the Sherman Act.
There is a related jurisdictional argument pressed by Marquette
which may be disposed of at this time. While review of the
Commission's order was pending in the Circuit Court of Appeals, the
Attorney General filed a civil action in the Federal District Court
for Denver, Colorado,
Page 333 U. S. 694
to restrain the Cement Institute, Marquette, and 88 other cement
companies, including all of the present respondents, from violating
§ 1 of the Sherman Act. Much of the evidence before the
Commission in this proceeding might also be relevant in that case,
which, we are informed, has not thus far been brought to trial.
Marquette urges that the Commission proceeding should now be
dismissed because it is contrary to the public interest to force
respondents to defend both a Commission proceeding and a Sherman
Act suit based largely on the same alleged misconduct.
We find nothing to justify a holding that the filing of a
Sherman Act suit by the Attorney General requires the termination
of these Federal Trade Commission proceedings. In the first place,
although all conduct violative of the Sherman Act may likewise come
within the unfair trade practice prohibitions of the Trade
Commission Act, the converse is not necessarily true. It has long
been recognized that there are many unfair methods of competition
that do not assume the proportions of Sherman Act violations.
Federal Trade Commission v. R. F. Keppel & Bro.,
291 U. S. 304;
Federal Trade Commission v. Gratz, 253 U.
S. 421,
253 U. S. 427.
Hence, a conclusion that respondents' conduct constituted an unfair
method of competition does not necessarily mean that their same
activities would also be found to violate § 1 of the Sherman
Act. In the second place, the fact that the same conduct may
constitute a violation of both acts in nowise requires us to
dismiss this Commission proceeding. Just as the Sherman Act itself
permits the Attorney General to bring simultaneous civil and
criminal suits against a defendant based on the same misconduct, so
the Sherman Act and the Trade Commission Act provide the Government
with cumulative remedies against activity detrimental to
competition. Both the legislative history of the Trade Commission
Act and its specific language indicate a congressional
Page 333 U. S. 695
purpose not to confine each of these proceedings within narrow,
mutually exclusive limits, but rather to permit the simultaneous
use of both types of proceedings. Marquette's objections to the
Commission's jurisdiction are overruled.
Objections to Commission's Jurisdiction by Certain
Respondents on Ground That They Were Not Engaged in Interstate
Commerce. -- One other challenge to the Commission's
jurisdiction is specially raised by Northwestern Portland and
Superior Portland. The Commission found that "Northwestern Portland
makes no sales or shipments outside the Washington," and that
"Superior Portland, with few exceptions, makes sales and shipments
outside the Washington only to Alaska." These two respondents
contend that, since they did not engage in interstate commerce, and
since § 5 of the Trade Commission Act applies only to unfair
methods of competition in interstate commerce, the Commission was
without jurisdiction to enter an order against them under Count I
of the complaint. For this contention, they chiefly rely on
Federal Trade Commission v. Bunte Bros., 312 U.
S. 349. They also argue that, for the same reason, the
Commission lacked jurisdiction to enforce against them the price
discrimination charge in Count II of the complaint.
We cannot sustain this contention. The charge against these
respondents was not that they, apart from the other respondents,
had engaged in unfair methods of competition and price
discriminations simply by making intrastate sales. Instead, the
charge was, as supported by the Commission's findings, that these
respondents, in combination with others, agreed to maintain a
delivered price system in order to eliminate price competition in
the sale of cement in interstate commerce. The combination, as
found, includes the Institute and cement companies located in many
different states. The Commission has further found that,
"In general, said corporate respondents
Page 333 U. S. 696
have maintained, and now maintain, a constant course of trade
and commerce in cement among and between the several States of the
United States."
The fact that one or two of the numerous participants in the
combination happen to be selling only within the borders of a
single state is not controlling in determining the scope of the
Commission's jurisdiction. The important factor is that the
concerted action of all of the parties to the combination is
essential in order to make wholly effective the restraint of
commerce among the states. [
Footnote 7] The Commission would be rendered helpless to
stop unfair methods of competition in the form of interstate
combinations and conspiracies if its jurisdiction could be defeated
on a mere showing that each conspirator had carefully confined his
illegal activities within the borders of a single state. We hold
that the Commission did have jurisdiction to make an order against
Superior Portland and Northwestern Portland.
The Multiple Basing Point Delivered Price System. --
Since the multiple basing point delivered price system of fixing
prices and terms of cement sales is the nub of this controversy, it
will be helpful at this preliminary stage to point out in general
what it is and how it works. A brief reference to the distinctive
characteristics of "factory" or "mill prices" and "delivered
prices" is of importance to an understanding of the basing point
delivered price system here involved.
Goods may be sold and delivered to customers at the seller's
mill or warehouse door, or may be sold free on board (f.o.b.)
trucks or railroad cars immediately adjacent to the seller's mill
or warehouse. In either event, the actual cost of the goods to the
purchaser is, broadly speaking, the seller's "mill price" plus the
purchaser's cost of
Page 333 U. S. 697
transportation. However, if the seller fixes a price at which he
undertakes to deliver goods to the purchaser where they are to be
used, the cost to the purchaser is the "delivered price." A seller
who makes the "mill price" identical for all purchasers of like
amount and quality simply delivers his goods at the same place (his
mill) and for the same price (price at the mill). He thus receives
for all f.o.b. mill sales an identical net amount of money for like
goods from all customers. But a "delivered price" system creates
complications which may result in a seller's receiving different
net returns from the sale of like goods. The cost of transporting
500 miles is almost always more than the cost of transporting 100
miles. Consequently if customers 100 and 500 miles away pay the
same "delivered price," the seller's net return is less from the
more distant customer. This difference in the producer's net return
from sales to customers in different localities under a "delivered
price" system is an important element in the charge under Count I
of the complaint, and is the crux of Count II.
The best known early example of a basing point price system was
called "Pittsburgh plus." It related to the price of steel. The
Pittsburgh price was the base price, Pittsburgh being therefore
called a price basing point. In order for the system to work, sales
had to be made only at delivered prices. Under this system, the
delivered price of steel from anywhere in the United States to a
point of delivery anywhere in the United States was, in general,
the Pittsburgh price plus the railroad freight rate from Pittsburgh
to the point of delivery. [
Footnote
8] Take Chicago, Illinois, as an illustration of the operation
and consequences
Page 333 U. S. 698
of the system. A Chicago steel producer was not free to sell his
steel at cost plus a reasonable profit. He must sell it at the
Pittsburgh price plus the railroad freight rate from Pittsburgh to
the point of delivery. Chicago steel customers were, by this
pricing plan, thus arbitrarily required to pay for Chicago produced
steel the Pittsburgh base price plus what it would have cost to
ship the steel by rail from Pittsburgh to Chicago had it been
shipped. The theoretical cost of this fictitious shipment became
known as "phantom freight." But, had it been economically possible
under this plan for a Chicago producer to ship his steel to
Pittsburgh, his "delivered price" would have been merely the
Pittsburgh price, although he actually would have been required to
pay the freight from Chicago to Pittsburgh. Thus, the "delivered
price" under these latter circumstances required a Chicago
(non-basing point) producer to "absorb" freight costs. That is,
such a seller's net returns became smaller and smaller as his
deliveries approached closer and closer to the basing point.
Several results obviously flow from use of a single basing point
system, such as "Pittsburgh plus" originally was. One is that the
"delivered prices" of all producers in every locality where
deliveries are made are always the same regardless of the
producers' different freight costs. Another is that sales made by a
non-base mill for delivery at different localities result in net
receipts to the seller which vary in amounts equivalent to the
"phantom freight" included in, or the "freight absorption" taken
from, the "delivered price."
As commonly employed by respondents, the basing point system is
not single, but multiple. That is, instead of one basing point,
like that in "Pittsburgh plus," a number of basing point localities
are used. In the multiple basing point system, just as in the
single basing point system, freight absorption or phantom freight
is an element
Page 333 U. S. 699
of the delivered price on all sales not governed by a basing
point actually located at the seller's mill. [
Footnote 9] And all sellers quote identical
delivered prices in any given locality regardless of their
different costs of production and their different freight expenses.
Thus, the multiple and single systems function in the same general
manner, and produce the same consequences -- identity of prices and
diversity of net returns. [
Footnote 10] Such differences
Page 333 U. S. 700
as there are in matters here pertinent are therefore differences
of degree only.
Alleged Bias of the Commission. -- One year after the
taking of testimony had been concluded, and while these proceedings
were still pending before the Commission, the respondent Marquette
asked the Commission to disqualify itself from passing upon the
issues involved. Marquette charged that the Commission had
previously prejudged the issues, was "prejudiced and biased against
the Portland cement industry generally," and that the industry and
Marquette in particular could not receive a fair hearing from the
Commission. After hearing oral argument, the Commission refused to
disqualify itself. This contention, repeated here, was also urged
and rejected in the Circuit Court of Appeals one year before that
court reviewed the merits of the Commission's order.
Marquette
Cement Mfg. Co. v. Federal Trade Commission, 147 F.2d 589.
Marquette introduced numerous exhibits intended to support its
charges. In the main, these exhibits were copies of the
Commission's reports made to Congress or to the President, as
required by § 6 of the Trade Commission Act. 15 U.S.C. §
46. These reports, as well as the testimony given by members of the
Commission before congressional committees, make it clear that,
long before the filing of this complaint, the members of the
Commission at that time, or at least some of them, were of the
opinion that the operation of the multiple basing point system, as
they had studied it, was the equivalent of a price-fixing restraint
of trade in violation of the Sherman Act. We therefore decide this
contention, as did the Circuit Court of Appeals, on the assumption
that such an opinion had been formed by the entire membership of
the Commission as a result of its prior official investigations.
But we also agree with that court's holding that this belief did
not disqualify the Commission.
Page 333 U. S. 701
In the first place, the fact that the Commission had entertained
such views as the result of its prior
ex parte
investigations did not necessarily mean that the minds of its
members were irrevocably closed on the subject of the respondents'
basing point practices. Here, in contrast to the Commission's
investigations, members of the cement industry were legally
authorized participants in the hearings. They produced evidence --
volumes of it. They were free to point out to the Commission by
testimony, by cross-examination of witnesses, and by arguments,
conditions of the trade practices under attack which they thought
kept these practices within the range of legally permissible
business activities.
Moreover, Marquette's position, if sustained, would to a large
extent defeat the congressional purposes which prompted passage of
the Trade Commission Act. Had the entire membership of the
Commission disqualified in the proceedings against these
respondents, this complaint could not have been acted upon by the
Commission or by any other government agency. Congress has provided
for no such contingency. It has not directed that the Commission
disqualify itself under any circumstances, has not provided for
substitute commissioners should any of its members disqualify, and
has not authorized any other government agency to hold hearings,
make findings, and issue cease and desist orders in proceedings
against unfair trade practices. [
Footnote 11] Yet, if Marquette is right, the Commission,
by making studies and filing reports in obedience to congressional
command, completely immunized the practices investigated, even
though they are "unfair," from any cease and desist order by the
Commission or any other governmental agency.
Page 333 U. S. 702
There is no warrant in the Act for reaching a conclusion which
would thus frustrate its purposes. If the Commission's opinions
expressed in congressionally required reports would bar its members
from acting in unfair trade proceedings, it would appear that
opinions expressed in the first basing point unfair trade
proceeding would similarly disqualify them from ever passing on
another.
See Morgan v. United States, 313 U.
S. 409,
313 U. S. 421.
Thus, experience acquired from their work as commissioners would be
a handicap, instead of an advantage. Such was not the intendment of
Congress. For Congress acted on a committee report stating:
"It is manifestly desirable that the terms of the commissioners
shall be long enough to give them an opportunity to acquire the
expertness in dealing with these special questions concerning
industry that comes from experience."
Report of Committee on Interstate Commerce, No. 597, June 13,
1914, 63d Cong., 2d Sess. 10-11.
Marquette also seems to argue that it was a denial of due
process for the Commission to act in these proceedings after having
expressed the view that industrywide use of the basing point system
was illegal. A number of cases are cited as giving support to this
contention.
Tumey v. Ohio, 273 U.
S. 510, is among them. But it provides no support for
the contention. In that case, Tumey had been convicted of a
criminal offense, fined, and committed to jail by a judge who had a
direct, personal, substantial pecuniary interest in reaching his
conclusion to convict. A criminal conviction by such a tribunal was
held to violate procedural due process. But the Court there pointed
out that most matters relating to judicial disqualification did not
rise to a constitutional level.
Id. at
273 U. S.
523.
Neither the
Tumey decision nor any other decision of
this Court would require us to hold that it would be a violation of
procedural due process for a judge to sit in
Page 333 U. S. 703
a case after he had expressed an opinion as to whether certain
types of conduct were prohibited by law. In fact, judges frequently
try the same case more than once, and decide identical issues each
time, although these issues involved questions both of law and
fact. Certainly the Federal Trade Commission cannot possibly be
under stronger constitutional compulsions in this respect than a
court. [
Footnote 12]
The Commission properly refused to disqualify itself. We thus
need not review the additional holding of the Circuit Court of
Appeals that Marquette's objection on the ground of the alleged
bias of the Commission was filed too late in the proceedings before
that agency to warrant consideration.
Alleged Errors in re Introduction of Evidence. -- The
complaint before the Commission, filed July 2, 1937, alleged that
respondents had maintained an illegal combination for "more than
eight years last past." In the Circuit Court of Appeals and in this
Court, the Government treated its case on the basis that the
combination began in August, 1929, when the respondent Cement
Institute was organized. The Government introduced much evidence
over respondents' objections, however, which showed the activities
of the cement industry for many years prior to 1929, some of it as
far back as 1902. It also introduced evidence as to respondents'
activities from 1933 to May 27, 1935, much of which related to the
preparation and administration of the NRA Code for the cement
industry pursuant to the National Industrial Recovery Act, 48 Stat.
195, held invalid by this Court
Page 333 U. S. 704
May 27, 1935, in
Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United
States, 295 U. S. 495. All
of the testimony to which objection was made related to the
initiation, development, and carrying on of the basing point
practices.
Respondents contend that the pre-1929 evidence, especially that
prior to 1919, is patently inadmissible with reference to a 1929
combination many of whose alleged members were nonexistent in 1919.
They also urge that evidence of activities during the NRA period
was improperly admitted because § 5 of Title I of the NRA
provided that any action taken in compliance with the code
provisions of an industry should be "exempt from the provisions of
the antitrust laws of the United States." And some of the NRA
period testimony relating to basing point practices did involve
references to code provisions. The Government contends that
evidence of both the pre-1929 and the NRA period activities of
members of the cement industry tends to show a continuous course of
concerted efforts on the part of the industry, or at least most of
it, to utilize the basing point system as a means to fix uniform
terms and prices at which cement would be sold, and that the
Commission had properly so regarded this evidence. The Circuit
Court of Appeals agreed with respondents that the Commission had
erroneously considered both the NRA period evidence and the
pre-1929 evidence in making its findings of the existence of a
combination among respondents.
We conclude that both types of evidence were admissible for the
purpose of showing the existence of a continuing combination among
respondents to utilize the basing point pricing system. [
Footnote 13]
The Commission did not make its findings of post-1929
combination, in whole or in part, on the premise that
Page 333 U. S. 705
any of respondents' pre-1929 or NRA code activities were
illegal. The consideration given these activities by the Commission
was well within the established judicial rule of evidence that
testimony of prior or subsequent transactions, which for some
reason are barred from forming the basis for a suit, may
nevertheless be introduced if it tends reasonably to show the
purpose and character of the particular transactions under
scrutiny.
Standard Oil Co. v. United States, 221 U. S.
1,
221 U. S. 46-47;
United States v. Reading Co., 253 U. S.
26,
253 U. S. 43-44.
Here, the trade practices of an entire industry were under
consideration. Respondents, on the one hand, insisted that the
multiple basing point delivered price system represented a natural
evolution of business practices adopted by the different cement
companies not in concert, but separately, in response to customers'
needs and demands. That the separately adopted business practices
produced uniform terms and conditions of sale in all localities
was, so the respondents contended, nothing but an inevitable result
of long continued competition. On the other hand, the Government
contended that, despite shifts in ownership of individual cement
companies, what had taken place from 1902 to the date the complaint
was filed showed continued concerted action on the part of all
cement producers to develop and improve the basing point system so
that it would automatically eliminate competition. In the
Government's view, the Institute, when formed in 1929, simply took
up the old practices for the old purpose, and aided its member
companies to carry it straight on through and beyond the NRA
period.
See Fort Howard Paper Co. v. Federal Trade
Commission, 156 F.2d 899, 906.
Furthermore, administrative agencies like the Federal Trade
Commission have never been restricted by the
Page 333 U. S. 706
rigid rules of evidence.
Interstate Commerce Commission v.
Baird, 194 U. S. 25,
194 U. S. 44.
And, of course, rules which bar certain types of evidence in
criminal or
quasi-criminal cases are not controlling in
proceedings like this, where the effect of the Commission's order
is not to punish or to fasten liability on respondents for past
conduct, but to ban specific practices for the future in accordance
with the general mandate of Congress.
The foregoing likewise largely answers respondents' contention
that there was error in the admission of a letter written by one
Treanor in 1934 to the chairman of the NRA code authority for the
cement industry. Treanor, who died prior to the filing of the
complaint, was at the time president of one of the respondent
companies, and also an active trustee of the Institute. In the
letter he stated, among other things, that the cement industry was
one "above all others that cannot stand free competition, that must
systematically restrain competition or be ruined." This statement
was made as part of his criticism of the cement industry's
publicity campaign in defense of the basing point system. The
relevance of this statement indicating this Institute official's
informed judgment is obvious. That is might be only his conclusion
does not render the statement inadmissible in this administrative
proceeding.
All contentions in regard to the introduction of testimony have
been considered. None of them justifies refusal to enforce this
order.
The Old Cement Case. -- This Court's opinion in
Cement Mfrs.' Protective Assn. v. United States,
268 U. S. 588,
known as the
Old Cement case, is relied on by the
respondents in almost every contention they present. We think it
has little relevance, if any at all, to the issues in this
case.
In that case, the United States brought an action in the
District Court to enjoin an alleged combination to violate
Page 333 U. S. 707
§ 1 of the Sherman Act. The respondents were the Cement
Manufacturers Protective Association, four of its officers, and
nineteen cement manufacturers. The District Court held hearings,
made findings of fact, and issued an injunction against those
respondents. This Court, with three justices dissenting, reversed
upon a review of the evidence. It did so because the Government did
not charge, and the record did not show, "any agreement or
understanding between the defendants placing limitations on either
prices or production," or any agreement to utilize the basing point
system as a means of fixing prices. The Court said:
"But here, the government does not rely upon agreement or
understanding, and this record wholly fails to establish, either
directly or by inference, any concerted action other than that
involved in the gathering and dissemination of pertinent
information with respect to the sale and distribution of cement to
which we have referred, and it fails to show any effect on price
and production except such as would naturally flow from the
dissemination of that information in the trade and its natural
influence on individual action."
Id. at
268 U. S. 606.
In the
Old Cement case and in
Maple Flooring Mfrs.'
Assn. v. United States, 268 U. S. 563,
decided the same day, the Court's attention was focused on the
rights of a trade association, despite the Sherman Act, openly to
gather and disseminate statistics and information as to production
costs, output, past prices, merchandise on hand, specific job
contracts, freight rates, etc., so long as the Association did
these things without attempts to foster agreements or concerted
action with reference to prices, production, or terms of sale. Such
associations were declared guiltless of violating the Sherman Act
because, "in fact, no prohibited concert of action was found."
Corn Products Refining Co. v. Federal Trade Commission,
324 U. S. 726,
324 U. S.
735.
Page 333 U. S. 708
The Court's holding in the
Old Cement case would not
have been inconsistent with a judgment sustaining the Commission's
order here, even had the two cases been before this Court the same
day. The issues in the present Commission proceedings are quite
different from those in the
Old Cement case, although many
of the trade practices shown here were also shown there. In the
first place, unlike the
Old Cement case, the Commission
does here specifically charge a combination to utilize the basing
point system as a means to bring about uniform prices and terms of
sale. And here, the Commission has focused attention on this issue,
having introduced evidence on the issue which covers thousands of
pages. Furthermore, unlike the trial court in the
Old
Cement case, the Commission has specifically found the
existence of a combination among respondents to employ the basing
point system for the purpose of selling at identical prices.
In the second place, individual conduct or concerted conduct
which falls short of being a Sherman Act violation may, as a matter
of law, constitute an "unfair method of competition" prohibited by
the Trade Commission Act. A major purpose of that Act, as we have
frequently said, was to enable the Commission to restrain practices
as "unfair" which, although not yet having grown into Sherman Act
dimensions, would most likely do so if left unrestrained. The
Commission and the courts were to determine what conduct, even
though it might then be short of a Sherman Act violation, was an
"unfair method of competition." This general language was
deliberately left to the "Commission and the courts" for definition
because it was thought that "[t]here is no limit to human
inventiveness in this field;" that, consequently, a definition that
fitted practices known to lead towards an unlawful restraint of
trade today would not fit tomorrow's new inventions in the field,
and that for Congress to try to keep its precise definitions
abreast of this course of conduct
Page 333 U. S. 709
would be an "endless task."
See Federal Trade Commission v.
R. F. Keppel & Bro., 291 U. S. 304,
291 U. S.
310-312, and congressional committee reports there
quoted.
These marked differences between what a court must decide in a
Sherman Act proceeding and the duty of the Commission in
determining whether conduct is to be classified as an unfair method
of competition are enough, in and of themselves, to make the
Old Cement decision wholly inapplicable to our problem in
reviewing the findings in this case. That basic problem is whether
the Commission made findings of concerted action, whether those
findings are supported by evidence, and, if so, whether the
findings are adequate as a matter of law to sustain the
Commission's conclusion that the multiple basing point system, as
practiced, constitutes an "unfair method of competition" because it
either restrains free competition or is an incipient menace to
it.
Findings and Evidence. -- It is strongly urged that the
Commission failed to find, as charged in both counts of the
complaint, that the respondents had, by combination, agreements, or
understandings among themselves, utilized the multiple basing point
delivered price system as a restraint to accomplish uniform prices
and terms of sale. A subsidiary contention is that, assuming the
Commission did so find, there is no substantial evidence to support
such a finding. We think that adequate findings of combination were
made, and that the findings have support in the evidence.
The Commission's findings of fact set out at great length, and
with painstaking detail, numerous concerted activities carried on
in order to make the multiple basing point system work in such way
that competition in quality, price, and terms of sale of cement
would be nonexistent, and that uniform prices, job contracts,
discounts, and terms of sale would be continuously maintained. The
Commission found that many of these activities
Page 333 U. S. 710
were carried on by the Cement Institute, the industry's
unincorporated trade association, and that, in other instances, the
activities were under the immediate control of groups of
respondents. Among the collective methods used to accomplish these
purposes, according to the findings, were boycotts; discharge of
uncooperative employees; organized opposition to the erection of
new cement plants; selling cement in a recalcitrant price-cutter's
sales territory at a price so low that the recalcitrant was forced
to adhere to the established basing point prices; discouraging the
shipment of cement by truck or barge, and preparing and
distributing freight rate books which provided respondents with
similar figures to use as actual or "phantom" freight factors, thus
guaranteeing that their delivered prices (base prices plus freight
factors) would be identical on all sales whether made to individual
purchasers under open bids or to governmental agencies under sealed
bids. These are but a few of the many activities of respondents
which the Commission found to have been done in combination to
reduce or destroy price competition in cement. After having made
these detailed findings of concerted action, the Commission
followed them by a general finding that
"the capacity, tendency, and effect of the combination
maintained by the respondents herein in the manner aforesaid is to
. . . promote and maintain their multiple basing point
delivered-price system and obstruct and defeat any form of
competition which threatens or tends to threaten the continued use
and maintenance of said system and the uniformity of prices created
and maintained by its use. [
Footnote 14]"
The Commission then concluded
Page 333 U. S. 711
that
"The aforesaid combination and acts and practices of respondents
pursuant thereto and in connection therewith, as hereinabove found,
under the conditions and circumstances set forth, constitute unfair
methods of competition in commerce within the intent and meaning of
the Federal Trade Commission Act."
And the Commission's cease and desist order prohibited
respondents
"from entering into, continuing, cooperating in, or carrying out
any planned common course of action, understanding, agreement,
combination, or conspiracy between and among any two or more of
said respondents . . ."
to do certain things there enumerated.
Thus, we have a complaint which charged collective action by
respondents designed to maintain a sales technique
Page 333 U. S. 712
that restrained competition, detailed findings of collective
activities by groups of respondents to achieve that end, then a
general finding that respondents maintained the combination, and
finally an order prohibiting the continuance of the combination. It
seems impossible to conceive that anyone reading these findings in
their entirety could doubt that the Commission found that
respondents collectively maintained a multiple basing point
delivered price system for the purpose of suppressing competition
in cement sales. The findings are sufficient. The contention that
they were not is without substance.
Disposition of this question brings us to the related contention
that there was no substantial evidence to support the findings. We
might well dispose of the contention as this Court dismissed a like
one with reference to evidence and findings in a civil suit brought
under the Sherman Act in
Sugar Institute v. United States,
297 U. S. 553,
297 U. S.
601:
"After a hearing of extraordinary length in which no pertinent
fact was permitted to escape consideration, the trial court
subjected the evidence to a thorough and acute analysis which has
left but slight room for debate over matters of fact. Our
examination of the record discloses no reason for overruling the
court's findings in any matter essential to our decision."
In this case, which involves the evidence and findings of the
Federal Trade Commission, we likewise see no reason for upsetting
the essential findings of the Commission. Neither do we find it
necessary to refer to all the voluminous testimony in this record
which tends to support the Commission's findings.
Although there is much more evidence to which reference could be
made, we think that the following facts shown by evidence in the
record, some of which are in dispute, are sufficient to warrant the
Commission's finding of concerted action.
When the Commission rendered its decision, there were about 80
cement manufacturing companies in the United
Page 333 U. S. 713
States, operating about 150 mills. Ten companies controlled more
than half of the mills, and there were substantial corporate
affiliations among many of the others. This concentration of
productive capacity made concerted action far less difficult than
it would otherwise have been. The belief is prevalent in the
industry that, because of the standardized nature of cement, among
other reasons, price competition is wholly unsuited to it. That
belief is historic. It has resulted in concerted activities to
devise means and measures to do away with competition in the
industry. Out of those activities came the multiple basing point
delivered price system. Evidence shows it to be a handy instrument
to bring about elimination of any kind of price competition. The
use of the multiple basing point delivered price system by the
cement producers has been coincident with a situation whereby, for
many years, with rare exceptions, cement has been offered for sale
in every given locality at identical prices and terms by all
producers. Thousands of secret sealed bids have been received by
public agencies which corresponded in prices of cement down to a
fractional part of a penny. [
Footnote 15]
Page 333 U. S. 714
Occasionally, foreign cement has been imported, and cement
dealers have sold it below the delivered price of the domestic
product. Dealers who persisted in selling foreign cement were
boycotted by the domestic producers. Officers of the Institute took
the lead in securing pledges by producers not to permit sales
f.o.b. mill to purchasers who furnished their own trucks, a
practice regarded as seriously disruptive of the entire delivered
price structure of the industry.
During the depression in the 1930's, slow business prompted some
producers to deviate from the prices fixed by the delivered price
system. Meetings were held by other producers; an effective plan
was devised to punish the recalcitrants and bring them into line.
The plan was simple, but successful. Other producers made the
recalcitrant's plant an involuntary base point. The base price was
driven down with relatively insignificant losses to the producers
who imposed the punitive basing point, but with heavy losses to the
recalcitrant who had to make all its sales on this basis. In one
instance, where a producer had made a low public bid, a punitive
base point price was put on its plant, and cement was reduced
10� per barrel; further reductions quickly followed until
the base price at which this recalcitrant had to sell its cement
dropped to 75� per barrel, scarcely one-half of its former
base price of $1.45. Within six weeks after the base price hit
75�, capitulation occurred, and the recalcitrant joined a
Portland cement association. Cement in that locality then bounced
back to $1.15, later to $1.35, and finally to $1.75.
The foregoing are but illustrations of the practices shown to
have been utilized to maintain the basing point price system.
Respondents offered testimony that cement is a standardized
product, that "cement is cement," that no differences existed in
quality or usefulness, and that purchasers demanded delivered price
quotations because
Page 333 U. S. 715
of the high cost of transportation from mill to dealer. There
was evidence, however, that the Institute and its members had, in
the interest of eliminating competition, suppressed information as
to the variations in quality that sometimes exist in different
cements. [
Footnote 16]
Respondents introduced the testimony of economists to the effect
that competition alone could lead to the evolution of a multiple
basing point system of uniform delivered prices and terms of sale
for an industry with a standardized product and with relatively
high freight costs. These economists testified that, for the above
reasons, no inferences of collusion, agreement, or understanding
could be drawn from the admitted fact that cement prices of all
United States producers had for many years almost invariably been
the same in every given locality in the country. There was also
considerable testimony by other economic experts that the multiple
basing point system of delivered prices, as employed by
respondents, contravened accepted economic principles, and could
only have been maintained through collusion.
The Commission did not adopt the views of the economists
produced by the respondents. It decided that, even though
competition might tend to drive the price of standardized products
to a uniform level, such a tendency alone could not account for the
almost perfect identity in prices, discounts, and cement containers
which had prevailed for so long a time in the cement industry. The
Commission held that the uniformity and absence of competition in
the industry were the results of understandings or agreements
entered into or carried out by concert of the Institute and the
other respondents. It
Page 333 U. S. 716
may possibly be true, as respondents' economists testified, that
cement producers will, without agreement, express or implied, and
without understanding, explicit or tacit, always and at all times
(for such has been substantially the case here) charge for their
cement precisely, to the fractional part of a penny, the price
their competitors charge. Certainly it runs counter to what many
people have believed -- namely, that, without agreement, prices
will vary -- that the desire to sell will sometimes be so strong
that a seller will be willing to lower his prices and take his
chances. We therefore hold that the Commission was not compelled to
accept the views of respondents' economist witnesses that active
competition was bound to produce uniform cement prices. The
Commission was authorized to find understanding, express or
implied, from evidence that the industry's Institute actively
worked, in cooperation with various of its members, to maintain the
multiple basing point delivered price system; that this pricing
system is calculated to produce, and has produced, uniform prices
and terms of sale throughout the country, and that all of the
respondents have sold their cement substantially in accord with the
pattern required by the multiple basing point system. [
Footnote 17]
Page 333 U. S. 717
Some of the respondents contend that, particularly as to them,
crucial findings of participation by them in collective action to
eliminate price competition and to bring about uniformity of cement
prices are without testimonial support. On this ground, they seek
to have the proceedings dismissed as to them even though there may
be adequate evidence to sustain the Commission's findings and order
as to other respondents. The Commission rejected their contentions;
the Circuit Court of Appeals did not consider them in its opinion.
Those respondents whose individual contentions in this respect
deserve special mention are central and southern California cement
companies; Superior Portland Cement Company and Northwestern
Portland Cement Company, both of the Washington; Huron Portland
Cement Company, which does business in the Great Lakes region, and
Marquette Cement Manufacturing Company, with plants in Illinois and
Missouri.
These companies support their separate contentions for
particularized consideration by pointing out, among other things,
that there was record evidence which showed differences between
many of their sales methods and those practiced by other
respondents. Each says that there was no direct evidence to connect
it with all of the practices found to have been used by the
Institute and other respondents to achieve delivered price
uniformity.
The record does show such differences as those suggested. It is
correct to say, therefore, that the sales practices of these
particular respondents, and perhaps
Page 333 U. S. 718
of other respondents as well, were not at all times precisely
like the sales practices of all or any of the others. For example,
the Commission found that, in 1929, all of the central California
mills became basing points. There was evidence that the Institute's
rate books did not extend to the states in which some of the
California companies did business. The Commission found that, "[i]n
Southern California, the basing point system of pricing is modified
by an elaborate system of zone prices applicable in certain areas,"
that the California system does not require separate calculations
to determine the delivered price at each destination, but that
complete price lists were published by the companies showing
delivered prices at substantially all delivery points. Northwestern
and Superior assert that, among other distinctive practices of
theirs, they were willing to and did bid for government contracts
on a mill price, rather than a delivered price basis. Huron points
out that it permitted the use of trucks to deliver cement, which
practice, far from being consistent with the plan of others to
maintain the basing point delivered price formulas, was frowned on
by the Institute and others as endangering the success of the plan.
Marquette emphasizes that it did not follow all the practices used
to carry out the anti-competition plan, and urges that, although
the Commission rightly found that it had, upon occasion, undercut
its competitors, it erroneously found that its admitted abandonment
of price-cutting was due to the combined pressure of other
respondents, including the Institute.
What these particular respondents emphasize does serve to
underscore certain findings which show that some respondents were
more active and influential in the combination than were others,
[
Footnote 18] and that some
companies
Page 333 U. S. 719
probably unwillingly abandoned competitive practices and entered
into the combination. But none of the distinctions mentioned, or
any other differences relied on by these particular respondents,
justifies a holding that there was no substantial evidence to
support the Commission's findings that they cooperated with all the
others to achieve the ultimate objective of all -- the elimination
of price competition in the sale of cement. These respondents'
special contentions only illustrate that the Commission was called
upon to resolve factual issues as to each of them in the light of
whatever relevant differences in their practices were shown by the
evidence. For, aside from the testimony indicating the differences
in their individual sales practices, there was abundant evidence as
to common practices of these respondents and the others on the
basis of which the Commission was justified in finding cooperative
conduct among all to achieve delivered price uniformity.
The evidence commonly applicable to these and the other
respondents showed that all were members of the Institute, and that
the officers of some of these particular respondents were, or had
been, officers of the Institute. We have already sustained findings
that the Institute was organized to maintain the multiple basing
point system as one of the "customs and usages" of the industry,
and that it participated in numerous activities intended to
eliminate price competition through the collective efforts of the
respondents. Evidence before the Commission also showed that the
delivered prices of these respondents, like those of all the other
respondents, were, with rare exceptions, identical with the
delivered prices of all their competitors. Furthermore, there was
evidence
Page 333 U. S. 720
that all of these respondents, including those who sold cement
on a zone basis in sections of southern California employed the
multiple basing point delivered price system on a portion of their
sales.
Our conclusion is that there was evidence to support the
Commission's findings that all of the respondents, including the
California companies, Northwestern Portland and Superior Portland,
Huron and Marquette, cooperated in carrying out the objectives of
the basing point delivered price system.
Unfair Methods of Competition. -- We sustain the
Commission's holding that concerted maintenance of the basing point
delivered price system is an unfair method of competition
prohibited by the Federal Trade Commission Act. In so doing, we
give great weight to the Commission's conclusion, as this Court has
done in other cases.
Federal Trade Commission v. R. F. Keppel
& Bro., 291 U. S. 304,
291 U. S. 314;
Federal Trade Commission v. Pacific States Paper Trade
Assn., 273 U. S. 52,
273 U. S. 63. In
the
Keppel case, the Court called attention to the express
intention of Congress to create an agency whose membership would at
all times be experienced, so that its conclusions would be the
result of an expertness coming from experience. We are persuaded
that the Commission's long and close examination of the questions
it here decided has provided it with precisely the experience that
fits it for performance of its statutory duty. The kind of
specialized knowledge Congress wanted its agency to have was an
expertness that would fit it to stop at the threshold every unfair
trade practice -- that kind of practice which, if left alone,
"destroys competition and establishes monopoly."
Federal Trade
Commission v. Raladam Co., 283 U. S. 643,
283 U. S. 647,
283 U. S. 650.
And see Federal Trade Commission v. Raladam Co.,
316 U. S. 149,
316 U. S.
152.
We cannot say that the Commission is wrong in concluding that
the delivered-price system, as here used, provides
Page 333 U. S. 721
an effective instrument which, if left free for use of the
respondents, would result in complete destruction of competition
and the establishment of monopoly in the cement industry. That the
basing point price system may lend itself to industrywide
anticompetitive practices is illustrated in the following, among
other cases:
United States v. United States Gypsum Co.,
333 U. S. 364;
Sugar Institute v. United States, 297 U.
S. 553. We uphold the Commission's conclusion that the
basing point delivered price system employed by respondents is an
unfair trade practice which the Trade Commission may suppress.
[
Footnote 19]
The Price Discrimination Charge in Count Two. -- The
Commission found that respondents' combination to use the multiple
basing point delivered price system had effected systematic price
discrimination in violation of § 2 of the Clayton Act, as
amended by the Robinson-Patman Act. 49 Stat. 1526, 15 U.S.C. §
13. Section 2(a) of that Act declares it to
"be unlawful for any person engaged in commerce . . . either
directly or indirectly, to discriminate in price between different
purchasers of commodities of like grade and quality . . . where the
effect of such discrimination may be substantially to lessen
competition or tend to create a monopoly in any line of commerce,
or to injure, destroy, or prevent competition with any person who
either grants or knowingly receives the benefit of such
discrimination, or with customers of either of them. . . ."
Section 2(b) provides that proof of discrimination in price
(selling the same kind of goods cheaper to one purchaser than to
another), makes out a
prima facie case of violation, but
permits the seller to
Page 333 U. S. 722
rebut "the
prima facie case thus made by showing that
his lower price . . . was made in good faith to meet an equally low
price of a competitor. . . ."
The Commission held that the varying mill nets received by
respondents on sales between customers in different localities
constituted a "discrimination in price between different
purchasers" within the prohibition of § 2(a), and that the
effect of this discrimination was the substantial lessening of
competition between respondents. The Circuit Court of Appeals
reversed the Commission on this count. It agreed that respondents'
prices were unlawful insofar as they involved the collection of
phantom freight, but it held that prices involving only freight
absorption came within the "good faith" proviso of § 2(b).
The respondents contend that the differences in their net
returns from sales in different localities which result from use of
the multiple basing point delivered price system are not price
discriminations within the meaning of § 2(a). If held that
these net return differences are price discriminations prohibited
by § 2(a), they contend that the discriminations were
justified under § 2(b) because "made in good faith to meet an
equally low price of a competitor." Practically all the arguments
presented by respondents in support of their contentions were
considered by this Court and rejected in 1945 in
Corn Products
Co. v. Federal Trade Commission, 324 U.
S. 726, and in the related case of
Federal Trade
Commission v. A. E. Staley Mfg. Co., 324 U.
S. 746. As stated in the
Corn Products opinion
at
324 U. S. 730,
certiorari was granted in those two cases because the "questions
involved" were "of importance in the administration of the Clayton
Act in view of the widespread use of basing point price systems."
For this reason, the questions there raised were given thorough
consideration. Consequently, we see no reason for again reviewing
the questions that were there decided.
Page 333 U. S. 723
In the
Corn Products case, the Court, in holding
illegal a single basing point system, specifically reserved
decision upon the legality under the Clayton Act of a multiple
basing point price system, but only in view of the "good faith"
proviso of § 2(b), and referred at that point to the companion
Staley opinion. 324 U.S. at
324 U. S. 735.
The latter case held that a seller could not justify the adoption
of a competitor's basing point price system under § 2(b) as a
good faith attempt to meet the latter's equally low price. Thus,
the combined effect of the two cases was to forbid the adoption for
sales purposes of any basing point pricing system. It is true that
the Commission's complaint in the
Corn Products and
Staley cases simply charged the individual respondents
with discrimination in price through use of a basing point price
system, and did not, as here, allege a conspiracy or combination to
use that system. But the holdings in those two cases that § 2
forbids a basing point price system are equally controlling here,
where the use of such a system is found to have been the result of
a combination. Respondents deny, however, that the
Corn
Products and
Staley cases passed on the questions
they here urge.
Corn Products Co. was engaged in the manufacture and sale of
glucose. It had two plants, one in Chicago, one in Kansas City.
Both plants sold
"only at delivered prices, computed by adding to a base price at
Chicago the published freight tariff from Chicago to the several
points of delivery, even though deliveries are in fact made from
their factory at Kansas City as well as from their Chicago
factory."
324 U.S. at
324 U. S. 729.
This price system, we held, resulted in Corn Products Co.'s
receiving from different purchasers different net amounts
corresponding to differences in the amounts of phantom freight
collected or of actual freight charges absorbed. We further held
that "price discriminations are necessarily involved where
Page 333 U. S. 724
the price basing point is distant from the point of production,"
because, in such situations, prices
"usually include an item of unearned of phantom freight or
require the absorption of freight with the consequent variations in
the seller's net factory prices. Since such freight differentials
bear no relation to the actual cost of delivery, they are
systematic discriminations prohibited by § 2(a) whenever they
have the defined effect upon competition."
Federal Trade Commission v. A. E. Staley Mfg. Co.,
supra at
324 U. S.
750-751. This was a direct holding that a pricing system
involving both phantom freight and freight absorption violates
§ 2(a) if, under that system, prices are computed for products
actually shipped from one locality on the fiction that they were
shipped from another. This Court made the holding despite
arguments, which are now repeated here, that, in passing the
Robinson-Patman Act, Congress manifested its purpose to sanction
such pricing systems; that this Court had approved the system in
Maple Flooring Mfrs.' Assn. v. United States, 268 U.
S. 563, and in
Cement Mfrs.' Protective Assn. v.
United States, 268 U. S. 588, and
that there was no discrimination under this system between buyers
at the same point of delivery.
Respondents attempt to distinguish their multiple basing point
pricing system from those previously held unlawful by pointing out
that, in some situations, their system involves neither phantom
freight nor freight absorption, and that is correct; for example,
sales by a base mill at its base price plus actual freight from the
mill to the point of delivery involve neither phantom freight nor
freight absorption. But the Corn Products pricing system which was
condemned by this Court related to a base mill -- that at Chicago
-- as well as to a non-base mill at Kansas City. The Court did not
permit this fact to relieve the pricing system from application of
§ 2, or to require any modification of the Commission's order.
So here, we could
Page 333 U. S. 725
not require the Commission to attempt to distinguish between
sales made by a base mill involving actual freight costs and all
other sales made by both base and non-base mills when all mills
adhere to a common pricing system.
Section 2(b) permits a single company to sell one customer at a
lower price than it sells to another if the price is "made in good
faith to meet an equally low price of a competitor." But this does
not mean that § 2(b) permits a seller to use a sales system
which constantly results in his getting more money for like goods
from some customers than he does from others. We held to the
contrary in the
Staley case. There, we said that the
Act
"speaks only of the seller's 'lower' price, and of that only to
the extent that it is made 'in good faith to meet an equally low
price of a competitor.' The Act thus places emphasis on individual
competitive situations, rather than upon a general system of
competition."
Federal Trade Commission v. A. E. Staley Mfg. Co.,
supra at
324 U. S. 753.
Each of the respondents, whether all its mills were basing points
or not, sold some cement at prices determined by the basing point
formula and governed by other base mills. Thus, all respondents, to
this extent, adopted a discriminatory pricing system condemned by
§ 2. As this, in itself, was evidence of the employment of the
multiple basing point system by the respondents as a practice,
rather than as a good faith effort to meet "individual competitive
situations," we think the Federal Trade Commission correctly
concluded that the use of this cement basing point system violated
the Act. Nor can we discern under these circumstances any
distinction between the "good faith" proviso as applied to a
situation involving only phantom freight and one involving only
freight absorption. Neither comes within its terms.
We hold that the Commission properly concluded that respondents'
pricing system results in price discriminations.
Page 333 U. S. 726
Its findings that the discriminations substantially lessened
competition between respondents and that they were not made in good
faith to meet a competitor's price are supported by evidence.
Accordingly, the Commission was justified in issuing a cease and
desist order against a continuation of the unlawful discriminatory
pricing system.
The Order. -- There are several objections to the
Commission's cease and desist order. We consider the objections,
having in mind that the language of its prohibitions should be
clear and precise in order that they may be understood by those
against whom they are directed.
See Illinois Commerce
Commission v. Thomson, 318 U. S. 675,
318 U. S. 685.
But we also have in mind that the Commission has a wide discretion
generally in the choice of remedies to cope with trade problems
entrusted to it by the Commission Act.
Jacob Siegel Co. v.
Federal Trade Commission, 327 U. S. 608,
327 U. S.
611-613.
There is a special reason, however, why courts should not
lightly modify the Commission's orders made in efforts to safeguard
a competitive economy. Congress, when it passed the Trade
Commission Act, felt that courts needed the assistance of men
trained to combat monopolistic practices in the framing of judicial
decrees in antitrust litigation. Congress envisioned a commission
trained in this type of work by experience in carrying out the
functions imposed upon it. [
Footnote 20] To this end, it provided in § 7 of the
Act, 15 U.S.C. § 47, that courts might, if it should be
concluded that the Government was entitled to
Page 333 U. S. 727
a decree in an antitrust case, refer that case "to the
commission, as a master in chancery, to ascertain and report an
appropriate form of decree therein." The Court could then adopt or
reject such a report.
In the present proceeding, the Commission has exhibited the
familiarity with the competitive problems before it which Congress
originally anticipated the Commission would achieve from its
experience. The order it has prepared is, we think, clear and
comprehensive. At the same time, the prohibitions in the order
forbid no activities except those which if continued would directly
aid in perpetuating the same old unlawful practices. Nor do we find
merit to the charges of surplusage in the order's terms.
Most of the objections to the order appear to rest on the
premise that its terms will bar an individual cement producer from
selling cement at delivered prices such that its net return from
one customer will be less than from another, even if the particular
sale be made in good faith to meet the lower price of a competitor.
The Commission disclaims that the order can possibly be so
understood. Nor do we so understand it. As we read the order, all
of its separate prohibiting paragraphs and subparagraphs,
Page 333 U. S. 728
which need not here be set out, are modified and limited by a
preamble. This preamble directs that all of the respondents
"do forthwith cease and desist from entering into, continuing,
cooperating in, or carrying out any planned common course of
action, understanding or agreement, combination or conspiracy,
between and among any two or more of said respondents, or between
any one or more of said respondents and others not parties hereto,
to do or perform any of the following things. . . ."
Then follow the prohibitory sentences. It is thus apparent that
the order, by its terms, is directed solely at concerted, not
individual activity on the part of the respondents.
Respondents have objected to the phrase "planned common course
of action" in the preamble. The objection is two-fold: first, that
it adds nothing to the words that immediately follow it, and
second, that, if it does add anything, "the Commission should be
required to state what this novel phrase means in this order and
what it adds to the four words." It seems quite clear to us what
the phrase means. It is merely an emphatic statement that the
Commission is prohibiting concerted action -- planned concerted
action. The Commission chose a phrase perhaps more readily
understood by businessmen than the accompanying legal words of like
import.
Then there is objection to that phrase in the preamble which
would prevent respondents, or any of them, from doing the
prohibited things with "others not parties hereto." We see no merit
in this objection. The Commission has found that the cement
producers have from time to time secured the aid of others outside
the industry who are not parties to this proceeding in carrying out
their program for preserving the basing point pricing system as an
instrument to suppress competition. Moreover, there will very
likely be changes in the present
Page 333 U. S. 729
ownership of cement mills, and the construction of new mills in
the future may be reasonably anticipated. In view of these facts,
the Commission was authorized to make its order broad enough
effectively to restrain respondents from combining with others as
well as among themselves.
One other specific objection to the order will be noted.
Paragraph 1 prohibits respondents from
"quoting or selling cement pursuant to or in accordance with any
other plan or system which results in identical price quotations or
prices for cement at points of quotation or sale or to particular
purchasers by respondents using such plan or system, or which
prevents purchasers from finding any advantage in price in dealing
with one or more of the respondents against any of the other
respondents."
This paragraph, like all the others in the order, is limited by
the preamble, which refers to concerted conduct in accordance with
agreement or planned common course of action. The paragraph is
merely designed to forbid respondents from acting in harmony to
bring about national uniformity in whatever fashion they may seek
by collective action to achieve that result. We think that no one
would find ambiguity in this language who concluded in good faith
to abandon the old practices. There is little difference in effect
between paragraph 1, to which objection is here raised, and
paragraph 5, which was sustained as proper in
Federal Trade
Comm'n v. Beech-Nut Packing Co., 257 U.
S. 441,
257 U. S. 456,
one of the first Trade Commission cases to come before this Court.
Paragraph 5 in the
Beech-Nut case read: ". . . by
utilizing any other equivalent cooperative means of accomplishing
the maintenance of prices fixed by the company."
Many other arguments have been presented by respondents. All
have been examined, but we find them without merit.
Page 333 U. S. 730
The Commission's order should not have been set aside by the
Circuit Court of Appeals. Its judgment is reversed, and the cause
is remanded to that court with directions to enforce the order.
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS and MR. JUSTICE JACKSON took no part in the
consideration or decision of these cases.
* Together with No. 24,
Federal Trade Comm'n v. Aetna
Portland Cement Co. et al.; No. 25,
Federal Trade Comm'n
v. Marquette Cement Mfg. Co.; No. 26,
Federal Trade Comm'n
v. Calaveras Cement Co. et al.; No. 27,
Federal Trade
Comm'n v. Huron Portland Cement Co.; No. 28,
Federal Trade
Comm'n v. Superior Portland Cement, Inc.; No. 29,
Federal
Trade Comm'n v. Northwestern Portland Cement Co.; No. 30,
Federal Trade Comm'n v. Riverside Cement Co.; No. 31,
Federal Trade Comm'n v. Universal Atlas Cement Co.; No.
32,
Federal Trade Comm'n v. California Portland Cement
Co.; No. 33,
Federal Trade Comm'n v. Monolith Portland
Cement Co. et al., and No. 34,
Federal Trade Comm'n v.
Smith, et al., also on certiorari to the same court.
[
Footnote 1]
The Commission dismissed the proceedings without prejudice
against respondent Castalia Portland Cement Co., which went into
bankruptcy.
[
Footnote 2]
Respondent Valley Forge Cement Co. is associated with the
Institute only by reason of its affiliation with a member
company.
[
Footnote 3]
Federal Trade Commission v. R. F. Keppel & Bro.,
291 U. S. 304,
291 U. S. 310;
Federal Trade Commission v. Raladam Co., 283 U.
S. 643,
283 U. S.
649-650;
see also United States Alkali Export Assn.
v. United States, 325 U. S. 196,
and see Eugene Dietzgen Co. v. Federal Trade Commission,
142 F.2d 321, 326-327, and cases there cited, among the numerous
Circuit Courts of Appeals cases on the same subject.
[
Footnote 4]
"The Commission had issued, up to October 1939, a total of 267
orders to cease and desist in cases involving cooperation,
conspiracy, or combination." Beer, Federal Trade Law and Practice,
94 (1942). Other writers have also commented on the recognition by
the Commission and courts that unfair methods of competition
include violations of the Sherman Act. Handler, Unfair Competition
and the Federal Trade Commission, 8 G.W.L.Rev. 399, 416, 417, 419.
Montague, The Commission's Jurisdiction Over Practices in Restraint
of Trade: A Large-scale Method of Mass Enforcement of the Antitrust
Laws, 8 G.W.L.Rev. 365; Miller, Unfair Competition, Chapter XI
(1941); Henderson, The Federal Trade Commission, a Study in
Administrative Law and Procedure, 22-28 (1924); Beer, Federal Trade
Law and Practice, 93
et seq. (1942).
[
Footnote 5]
Section 7 of the Act empowered the Commission, upon the request
of the district courts, to serve as a master in chancery in framing
appropriate decrees in antitrust suits brought by the attorney
general. Section 6(c) authorized the Commission to investigate
compliance with antitrust decrees upon application of the Attorney
General and to report its findings and recommendations to him. 38
Stat. 722, 15 U.S.C. §§ 47, 46(c).
[
Footnote 6]
51 Cong.Rec. 11083, 11104, 11528-11533, 12146, 12622-12623,
12733-12734, 12787, 13311-131 2, 14251, 14460, 14926, 14929;
H.R.Rep. No.533, 63d Cong., 2d Sess., 1, 6 (1914); H.R.Rep.
No.1142, 63d Cong., 2d Sess., 18-19 (1914); Sen.Rep. No.597, 63d
Cong., 2d Sess. 12-13 (1914).
[
Footnote 7]
See Ramsay Co. v. Bill Posters Assn., 260 U.
S. 501,
260 U. S. 511;
Stevens Co. v. Foster & Kleiser Co., 311 U.
S. 255,
311 U. S.
260-261;
United States v. Frankfort
Distilleries, 324 U. S. 293,
324 U. S.
297-298.
[
Footnote 8]
This was not true as to steel produced and shipped from
Birmingham, Alabama. Under the system, Birmingham steel had to be
sold at the Pittsburgh price plus an arbitrary addition of $5 per
ton. There were also other minor variations from the system as here
described.
See United States Steel Corp. et al., 8 F.T.C.
1.
[
Footnote 9]
A base mill selling cement for delivery at a point outside the
area in which its base price governs, and inside the area where
another base mill's lower delivered price governs, adopts the
latter's lower delivered price. The first base mill thus absorbs
freight and becomes, as to such sales, a non-base mill.
[
Footnote 10]
The Commission, in its findings, explained how the multiple
basing point system affects a seller's net return on sales in
different localities and how the delivered price is determined at
any particular point.
"Substantially all sales of cement by the corporate respondents
are made on the basis of a delivered price -- that is, at a price
determined by the location at which actual delivery of the cement
is made to the purchaser. In determining the delivered price which
will be charged for cement at any given location, respondents use a
multiple basing point system. The formula used to make this system
operative is that the delivered price at any location shall be the
lowest combination of base price plus all-rail freight. Thus, if
Mill A has a base price of $1.50 per barrel, its delivered price at
each location where it sells cement will be $1.50 per barrel plus
the all-rail freight from its mill to the point of delivery, except
that, when a sale is made for delivery at a location at which the
combination of the base price plus all-rail freight from another
mill is a lower figure, Mill A uses this lower combination, so that
its delivered price at such location will be the same as the
delivered price of the other mill. At all locations where the base
price of Mill A plus freight is the lowest combination, Mill A
recovers $1.50 net at the mill, and, at locations where the
combination of base price plus freight of another mill is lower,
Mill A shrinks its mill net sufficiently to equal that price. Under
these conditions, it is obvious that the highest mill net which can
be recovered by Mill A is $1.50 per barrel, and, on sales where it
has been necessary to shrink its mill net in order to match the
delivered price of another mill, its net recovery at the mill is
less than $1.50."
37 F.T.C. at 147-148.
[
Footnote 11]
Marquette, in support of its motion to disqualify the
Commission, urged that the Department of Justice and the Commission
had concurrent power or jurisdiction to enforce the prohibitions of
the Sherman Act. 147 F.2d at 593.
[
Footnote 12]
"Section Five of the Federal Trade Commission Act does not
provide private persons with an administrative remedy for private
wrongs." The Commission is not a court. It can render no judgment,
civil or criminal.
Federal Trade Commission v. Klesner,
280 U. S. 19,
280 U. S. 25,
and see Humphrey's Executor v. United States, 295 U.
S. 602,
295 U. S. 628;
Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Garrett, 231 U.
S. 298,
231 U. S.
307.
[
Footnote 13]
We need not here determine what protection was afforded
respondents by the exemption from the antitrust laws conferred by
the Act later held unconstitutional. Nor need we decide whether
this provision also exempted respondents from the unfair methods of
competition provisions of the Trade Commission Act. The Government
does not press either contention here.
[
Footnote 14]
Paragraph 26 of the Findings is as follows:
"The Commission concludes from the evidence of record, and
therefore finds, that the capacity, tendency, and effect of the
combination maintained by the respondents herein in the manner
aforesaid and the acts and practices performed thereunder and in
connection therewith by said respondents, as set out herein, has
been and is to hinder, lessen, restrain, and suppress competition
in the sale and distribution of cement in, among, and between the
several States of the United States; to deprive purchasers of
cement, both private and governmental, of the benefits of
competition in price; to systematically maintain artificial and
monopolistic methods and prices in the sale and distribution of
cement, including common rate factors used and useful in the
pricing of cement; to prevent purchasers from utilizing motor
trucks or water carriers for the transportation of cement and from
obtaining benefits which might accrue from the use of such
transportation agencies; to require that purchases of cement be
made on a delivered price basis, and to prevent and defeat efforts
of purchasers to avoid this requirement; frequently to deprive
agencies of the Federal Government of the benefits of all or a part
of the lower land grant rates available to such purchasers; to
require certain agencies of the Federal Government to purchase
their requirements of cement through dealers at higher prices than
are available in direct purchases from manufacturers; to establish
and maintain an agreed classification of customers who may purchase
cement from manufacturers thereof; to maintain uniform terms and
conditions of sale; to hinder and obstruct the sale of imported
cement through restraints upon those who deal in such cement, and
otherwise to promote and maintain their multiple basing point
delivered-price system and obstruct and defeat any form of
competition which threatens or tends to threaten the continued use
and maintenance of said system and the uniformity of prices created
and maintained by its use."
37 F.T.C. 257-258.
[
Footnote 15]
The following is one among many of the Commission's findings as
to the identity of sealed bids:
"An abstract of the bids for 6,000 barrels of cement to the
United States Engineer Office at Tucumcari, New Mexico, opened
April 23, 1936, shows the following:"
Name of Bidder Price per Bbl. Name of Bidder Price per
Bbl.
Monarch $3.286854 Oklahoma $3.286854
Ash Grove 3.286854 Consolidated 3.286854
Lehigh 3.286854 Trinity 3.286854
Southwestern 3.286854 Lone Star 3.286854
U.S. Portland Universal 3.286854
Cement Co. 3.286854 Colorado 3.286854
"All bids subject to 10� per barrel discount for payment
in 15 days."
(Com.Ex. 175-A.)
See 157 F.2d at 576.
[
Footnote 16]
See Sugar Institute v. United States, 297 U.
S. 553,
297 U. S.
600:
"The fact that, because sugar is a standardized commodity, there
is a strong tendency to uniformity of price makes it the more
important that such opportunities as may exist for fair competition
should not be impaired."
[
Footnote 17]
It is enough to warrant a finding of a "combination" within the
meaning of the Sherman Act if there is evidence that persons, with
knowledge that concerted action was contemplated and invited, give
adherence to and then participate in a scheme.
Interstate
Circuit v. United States, 306 U. S. 208,
306 U. S.
226-227;
United States v. Masonite Corp.,
316 U. S. 265,
316 U. S. 275;
United States v. Bausch & Lomb Co., 321 U.
S. 707,
321 U. S.
722-723;
United States v. U.S. Gypsum
Co., 333 U. S. 364,
333 U. S.
393-394.
See United States Maltsters Assn. v.
Federal Trade Commission, 152 F.2d 161, 164:
"We are of the view that the Commission's findings that a
price-fixing agreement existed must be accepted. Any other
conclusion would do violence to common sense and the realities of
the situation. The fact that petitioners utilized a system which
enabled them to deliver malt at every point of destination at
exactly the same price is a persuasive circumstance in itself.
Especially is this so when it is considered that petitioners'
plants are located in four different states, and that the barley
from which the malt is manufactured is procured from eight or nine
different states."
See also Milk & Ice Cream Can Institute v. Federal Trade
Commission, 152 F.2d 478, 481;
Fort Howard Paper Co. v.
Federal Trade Commission, 156 F.2d 899, 907.
[
Footnote 18]
For example, there was evidence which showed that Huron's
officials participated in meetings held in connection with another
respondent's practices deemed inimical to the policy of
noncompetition. As a result of that meeting, the offending company
agreed that it would "play the game 100%;" that it would not
countenance "chiseling;" that it would not knowingly invade
territory of its competitors, or "tear down the price
structure."
[
Footnote 19]
While we hold that the Commission's findings of combination were
supported by evidence, that does not mean that existence of a
"combination" is an indispensable ingredient of an "unfair method
of competition" under the Trade Commission Act.
See Federal
Trade Commission v. Beech-Nut Packing Co., 257 U.
S. 441,
257 U. S.
455.
[
Footnote 20]
In speaking of the authority granted the Commission to aid the
courts in drafting antitrust decrees, the Senate Committee on
Interstate Commerce said:
"These powers, partly administrative and partly
quasi-judicial, are of great importance, and will bring
both to the Attorney General and to the court the aid of special
expert experience and training in matters regarding which neither
the Department of Justice nor the courts can be expected to be
proficient."
"With the exception of the
Knight case (
United
States v. E. C. Knight Co., 156 U. S. 1), the Supreme Court
has never failed to condemn and to break up any organization formed
in violation of the Sherman law which has been brought to its
attention; but the decrees of the court, while declaring the law
satisfactorily as to the dissolution of the combinations, have
apparently failed in many instances in their accomplishment simply
because the courts and the Department of Justice have lacked the
expert knowledge and experience necessary to be applied to the
dissolution of the combinations and the reassembling of the divided
elements in harmony with the spirit of the law."
Sen.Rep. No.597, 63d Cong., 2d Sess., 12 (1914).
MR. JUSTICE BURTON, dissenting.
While this dissent is written with special reference to case No.
23 against The Cement Institute,
et al., its conclusions
apply to cases Nos. 23-34, all of which were considered
together.
It is important to note that this Court has disagreed with the
conclusions of the court below as to the material facts
constituting the premise on which that court and this have based
their respective conclusions. Accordingly, this Court has neither
reversed nor directly passed upon the principal conclusion of law
reached by the court below. The court below concluded that there
was not sufficient evidence to support a finding by the Federal
Trade Commission of the existence of that combination among the
respondents to restrain the competition in price that was charged
in both counts of the complaint. [
Footnote 2/1]
Page 333 U. S. 731
The court below even doubted that the Commission had clearly
stated that it found such a combination existed. However, rather
than send the case back to the Commission for clarification of the
Commission's findings of fact, the Court of Appeals assumed that
those findings did state that such a combination existed. The court
then concluded that, even if the Commission had so found, there was
not sufficient evidence to support the finding. [
Footnote 2/2] Accordingly, the court below applied
the law of the case to a set of facts that did not include such a
combination. On that basis, it held that the Commission's order to
cease and desist should be set aside. I agree with the court below
in both of these conclusions. [
Footnote
2/3] On the other hand, this Court today has held not only
Page 333 U. S. 732
that the Commission found the existence of the combination as
charged, but that such finding is sufficiently supported by
evidence in the record. This Court accordingly has applied the law
of the case to a set of facts which includes a combination among
the respondents to restrain competition in price as alleged in the
complaint. The resulting effect is that, while the court below has
held that, without such a combination, there was not the alleged
violation either of § 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act
[
Footnote 2/4] or of § 2 of
the amended Clayton Act, [
Footnote
2/5] yet, on the other hand, this Court has held that,
including
Page 333 U. S. 733
such a combination, there was a violation of each of those
Sections to the extent charged in the several cases. This Court
therefore has not here determined the relation, if any, of either
of the foregoing statutes to the absorption of freight charges by
individuals when not participating in a combination of the kind
charged by the Commission. [
Footnote
2/6]
Page 333 U. S. 734
The Commission based its conclusion upon its finding of the
existence of the combination charged in its complaint. [
Footnote 2/7]
Page 333 U. S. 735
The court below was in a position to, and did, judicially
examine the record at length, hear extended argument upon it, and
pass upon the many inferences to be drawn from the evidence it
contained. In the light of that court's recent experience with many
cases in this particular field of the law, and of what it has
described as its "long and careful study of the situation," it
concluded that the evidence was not sufficient to support a finding
of the combination charged. Its opinion reviewed the evidence and
pointed out many weaknesses in the inferences upon which the
Commission had based its
Page 333 U. S. 736
finding of the existence of the alleged unlawful combination.
[
Footnote 2/8]
The absence of sufficient evidence to support the conclusions of
the Commission was especially impressive in the cases concerning
the central California group, the southern California group, the
Washington-Oregon group, [
Footnote
2/9] and the Huron Portland Cement Company. The
Page 333 U. S. 737
decision of the Commission and of this Court even in those cases
was made dependent upon the conclusion of the existence of a
combination, however attenuated the basis for that conclusion might
be. [
Footnote 2/10] The cease and
desist orders in all of these cases are therefore to be regarded as
based upon the unique and extended record presented in this case,
including what this Court refers to as
"abundant evidence as to common practices of these respondents
and the others on the basis of which the Commission was justified
in finding cooperative conduct among all to achieve delivered price
uniformity."
On the view of the evidence taken by the court below and by me,
that evidence does not support the Commission's finding of the
combination as charged. Unlike the Commission and the majority of
this Court, the lower court and I therefore have faced the further
issue presented by the Commission's charges unsupported by a
finding of the alleged combination. This has led us to consider an
issue quite different from that decided by this Court today. That
issue lies within the long established and widespread practice by
individuals of
bona fide competition by freight
absorption, with which practice Congress has declined to interfere,
although asked
Page 333 U. S. 738
to do so. [
Footnote 2/11] This
is the field where a producer, for his own purposes and without
collusion, often ships his product to a customer who, in terms of
freight charges, is
Page 333 U. S. 739
located nearer to one or more of the producer's competitors than
to the producer himself. In selling to such a customer, this
producer is at an obvious freight disadvantage. To meet the lower
delivered price of his competitor, the producer therefore reduces
his delivered price in that area by a sum sufficient to absorb his
freight disadvantage. He might do this for many reasons. For
example, this customer might be such a large customer that the
volume of his orders would yield such a return to the producer that
the producer, by distributing his fixed charges over the
resultingly increased volume of business, could absorb the freight
differential without loss of profit to his business as a whole and
without raising any charges to his other customers. The securing of
this particular business might even enable the producer to reduce
his own basic factory price to all his customers. It might make the
difference between a profitable and a losing business, resulting in
the producer's solvency or bankruptcy. If the advantage to be
derived from this customer's business were not sufficient, in
itself, thus completely to absorb the freight differential, the
producer might absorb all or part of such differential by a
reduction in his net earnings without affecting his other
customers. Whether or not he would be justified in absorbing any or
all of this freight differential by increasing his charges to other
customers, in his own freight-advantage area, raises a separate
question as to the validity of such an increase. The Commission and
the majority of this Court did not reach the question of individual
and independent absorptions of freight charges by one or more
producers to meet lower prices of competitors in such competitors'
respective areas of freight advantage.
Page 333 U. S. 740
I conclude, therefore, that the judgment of the Court of Appeals
setting aside the order of the Federal Trade Commission should have
been affirmed, but I emphasize what I regard as equally important
-- that this Court, in sustaining the order of the Commission, has
done so on such a different premise that it has not passed upon the
validity of freight absorptions made in sales by one or more
producers in the course of
bona fide competition, where
such producers have not acted as part of a combination to hinder,
lessen, restrain or suppress competition in the sale or
distribution of the products so sold.
[
Footnote 2/1]
". . . For more than eight years last past, respondents have
maintained and now have in effect a combination among themselves to
hinder, lessen, restrict and restrain competition in price, among
producing respondents in the course of their aforesaid commerce
among the states. The said combination is made effective by mutual
understanding or agreement to employ, and by the actual employment
of, the methods and practices set forth in Paragraphs Five to Seven
inclusive, of this Count."
Count I, Paragraph Four, of complaint.
". . . As Paragraphs One to Five, inclusive, of Count II of this
complaint, the Commission hereby incorporates Paragraphs One to
Five, inclusive, of Count I to precisely the same extent as if each
and all of them were set forth in full and repeated verbatim in
this Count."
Count II, Paragraphs One to Five, inclusive, of complaint. 37
F.T.C. at pp. 102, 117.
[
Footnote 2/2]
The Court of Appeals considered it a "highly controverted issue"
as to whether the findings as made by the Commission, even if
supported by sufficient evidence in the record, would "sustain the
charge of combination alleged in the complaint." 157 F.2d 533, 543.
That court then said that, if
"this were an ordinary proceeding, we would return it to the
Commission for the purpose of revising its findings if it could and
so desired in the light of what we have said. However, we are
confronted with what might be termed an extraordinary situation. As
already observed, it will soon be ten years since this proceeding
was initiated. . . . We think the case should be on its way up, and
not down. For this reason, we shall not return it to the
Commission, but shall proceed to decide the legal issues
involved."
Id. 157 F.2d at 553.
[
Footnote 2/3]
The law of the case represents a development of the law in
relation to delivered-price systems.
See especially Federal
Trade Commission v. A. E. Staley Mfg. Co., 324 U.
S. 746,;
Corn Products Refining Co. v. Federal Trade
Commission, 324 U. S. 726;
Sugar Institute, Inc. v. United States, 297 U.
S. 553;
Fairmont Creamery Co. v. Minnesota,
274 U. S. 1;
Cement Mfrs.' Protective Assn. v. United States,
268 U. S. 588;
Maple Flooring Manufacturers Assn. v. United States,
268 U. S. 563;
United States v. American Linseed Oil Co., 262 U.
S. 371;
Aetna Portland Cement Co. v. Federal Trade
Commission, 157 F.2d 533 (this case below);
Fort Howard
Paper Co. v. Federal Trade Commission, 156 F.2d 899;
United States Maltsters Assn. v. Federal Trade Commission,
152 F.2d 161.
[
Footnote 2/4]
"SEC. 5. (a) Unfair methods of competition in commerce, and
unfair or deceptive acts or practices in commerce, are hereby
declared unlawful."
"The Commission is hereby empowered and directed to prevent
persons, partnerships, or corporations, . . . from using unfair
methods of competition in commerce and unfair or deceptive acts or
practices in commerce."
"(b) Whenever the Commission shall have reason to believe that
any such person, partnership, or corporation has been or is using
any unfair method of competition or unfair or deceptive act or
practice in commerce, and if it shall appear to the Commission that
a proceeding by it in respect thereof would be to the interest of
the public, it shall issue and serve upon such person, partnership,
or corporation a complaint stating its charges in that respect and
containing a notice of a hearing upon a day and at a place therein
fixed. . . . If, upon such hearing, the Commission shall be of the
opinion that the method of competition or the act or practice in
question is prohibited by this Act, it shall make a report in
writing in which it shall state its findings as to the facts and
shall issue and cause to be served on such person, partnership, or
corporation an order requiring such person, partnership, or
corporation to cease and desist from using such method of
competition or such act or practice. . . ."
52 Stat. 111, 112, 15 U.S.C. § 45.
[
Footnote 2/5]
"SEC. 2. (a) . . . It shall be unlawful for any person engaged
in commerce in the course of such commerce, either directly or
indirectly, to discriminate in price between different purchasers
of commodities of like grade and quality, . . . where the effect of
such discrimination may be substantially to lessen competition or
tend to create a monopoly in any line of commerce, or to injure,
destroy, or prevent competition with any person who either grants
or knowingly receives the benefit of such discrimination, or with
customers of either of them:
Provided, That nothing
contained shall prevent differentials which make only due allowance
for differences in the cost of manufacture, sale, or delivery
resulting from the differing methods or quantities in which such
commodities are to such purchasers sold or delivered. . . ."
"(b) Upon proof's being made at any hearing on a complaint under
this section that there has been discrimination in price or
services or facilities furnished, the burden of rebutting the prima
facie case thus made by showing justification shall be upon the
person charged with a violation of this section, and unless
justification shall be affirmatively shown, the Commission is
authorized to issue an order terminating the discrimination:
Provided, however, That nothing herein contained shall
prevent a seller's rebutting the prima facie case thus made by
showing that his lower price or the furnishing of services or
facilities to any purchaser or purchasers was made in good faith to
meet an equally low price of a competitor, or the services or
facilities furnished by a competitor."
"
* * * *"
49 Stat. 1526, 15 U.S.C. § 13.
[
Footnote 2/6]
The final section of the opinion of the Court makes appropriate
disclaimers as to the breadth of the Commission's order and of its
own decision sustaining that order. Among these is the statement
that "the order, by its terms, is directed solely at concerted, not
individual activity on the part of the respondents." These
disclaimers are further supported by such statements as the
following in the brief filed for the Commission in this Court:
"It is plain that, under this order, there is a violation of its
provisions only in the event that there is a 'planned common course
of action, understanding, agreement, combination, or conspiracy' to
which a respondent is a party to do something specified in the
numbered paragraphs of the order. This is an essential
qualification of the prohibitions of these paragraphs. The order
therefore leaves each respondent free -- provided he acts
individually and with that variability in action respecting
particular competitive situations which is characteristic of
genuine competitive endeavor and a free market -- to absorb freight
in order to meet a competitor's low price or to sell at a delivered
price."
"What the order does is to bar acting in concert in adopting,
continuing, or implementing the multiple basing point
delivered-price system or any similar system which necessarily
operates to suppress price competition. The order is aimed at
uprooting the pricing system which has flourished by virtue of the
agreement among respondents, charged and found, to stifle price
competition by selling cement at identical prices."
"The error of the court below is epitomized in its statement
that 'this court is now urged to hold that the [multiple basing
point delivered-priced] system is illegal
per se, and to
require that cement be sold on an f.o.b. plant basis.' . . . The
system as such was not attacked; what was attacked was agreement to
maintain and implement the system and to eliminate price
competition."
". . . Had the Commission inferred agreement from the system
alone, it might loosely be said that the system itself was attacked
as illegal
per se. But this is not what the Commission
did. Its searching inquiry disclosed in specific detail the
collective action which had been taken to implement and continue
the system. And from all these facts, as well as the existence of
the system, itself, the Commission found combination among
respondents to suppress price competition."
The statement by this Court, in its
note 19 to the effect that the Court does not hold
"that existence of a
combination' is an indispensable
ingredient of an `unfair method of competition' under the Trade
Commission Act," is accompanied by a citation which shows that that
statement is one of general application, and that it is not
intended as a denial that the combination found by the Commission
in this case is not a highly material and possibly decisive factor
in this particular case.
[
Footnote 2/7]
See Paragraph Twenty-six of the Commission's "Findings
as to Facts and Conclusion":
". . . The Commission concludes from the evidence of record, and
therefore finds, that the capacity, tendency, and effect of the
combination maintained by the respondents herein in the manner
aforesaid and the acts and practices performed thereunder and in
connection therewith by said respondents, as set out herein, has
been and is to hinder, lessen, restrain, and suppress competition
in the sale and distribution of cement in, among, and between the
several States of the United States; to deprive purchasers of
cement, both private and governmental, of the benefits of
competition in price; to systematically maintain artificial and
monopolistic methods and prices in the sale and distribution of
cement, including common rate factors used and useful in the
pricing of cement. . . ."
37 F.T.C. at p. 257.
The Commission followed this Paragraph Twenty-six immediately
with the following conclusion of law:
"The aforesaid combination and acts and practices of respondents
pursuant thereto and in connection therewith, as hereinabove found,
under the conditions and circumstances set forth, constitute unfair
methods of competition in commerce within the intent and meaning of
the Federal Trade Commission Act, and the discriminations in price
by respondents, as hereinabove set out, constitute violations of
subsection (a) of Section 2 of an Act of Congress entitled 'An Act
To supplement existing laws against unlawful restraints and
monopolies, and for other purposes,' approved October 15, 1914 (the
Clayton Act), as amended by Act approved June 19, 1936 (the
Robinson-Patman Act)."
Id. at p. 258.
[
Footnote 2/8]
A further review of the insufficiently supported inferences
would be of little value here. By way of illustration, however, it
may be noted that the Commission and this Court, in its
note 15 have emphasized the fact
that secret sealed bids for 6,000 barrels of cement were received
by a public agency from ten or more of the respondent companies,
and that the bid of each company was precisely $3.286854 a barrel.
Such a fractional identity of price would, on its face, create an
inference of collusion. However, the Commission failed to explain,
as has the court below, that the highly fractional figure merely
reflected the freight charge. The bid, apart from the freight
charge, was $2.10 per barrel, while "the land grant freight rate to
which the government was entitled from the nearest mill of the
eleven bidders was $1.1865854 ($1.186854) per barrel."
Aetna
Portland Cement Co. v. Federal Trade Commission, 157 F.2d 533,
567.
[
Footnote 2/9]
The central California group refers to the following
respondents:
Calaveras Cement Company,
Pacific Portland Cement Company,
Santa Cruz Portland Cement Company,
Yosemite Portland Cement Corporation,
The southern California group to:
California Portland Cement Company,
Monolith Portland Cement Company,
Riverside Cement Company,
Southwestern Portland Cement Company (Victorville, California,
plant).
The Washington-Oregon group to:
Beaver Portland Cement Company,
Lehigh Portland Cement Company (Metaline Falls, Washington,
plant),
Northwestern Portland Cement Company.
Oregon Portland Cement Company,
Spokane Portland Cement Company,
Superior Portland Cement, Inc.
[
Footnote 2/10]
In a general finding, the Commission indicated that the evidence
concerning certain of the respondent companies was less conclusive
than that relating to some of the other respondents.
"Some of the respondents have been parties to substantially all
of these activities; other respondents have participated in a
lesser degree, or fully or partially for shorter periods of time;
other respondents have been mere followers, adopting and supporting
the practices of their more active associates, and a few
respondents have from time to time, for various reasons,
participated only reluctantly in some of the practices, and have
occasionally opposed for a time particular instances of group
action."
Commission's "Findings as to Facts and Conclusion," Paragraph
Six (a). 37 F.T.C. at p. 144.
[
Footnote 2/11]
"Furthermore, the basing point price system has been in use by
industry for almost a half century. There has been and is a marked
diversity of opinion among economists, lawmakers, and people
generally as to whether it is good or bad. Numerous bills have been
introduced in Congress seeking to outlaw its use. Countless time
has been spent in hearings by Congressional committees, before whom
it has been assailed and defended. The pages of the Congressional
Record bear mute but indisputable proof of the fact that Congress
has repeatedly refused to declare its use illegal. There is no
occasion to relate this Congressional history. It is a matter of
common and general knowledge. In the
Corn Products case,
the Court, in commenting upon some of this legislative history,
stated 324 U.S. at
324 U. S. 737:"
"We think this legislative history indicates only that Congress
was unwilling to require f.o.b. factory pricing, and thus to make
all uniform delivered price systems and all basing point systems
illegal
per se."
"Notwithstanding this Congressional attitude as recognized by
the Supreme Court, this court is now urged to hold that the system
is illegal
per se, and to require that cement be sold on
an f.o.b. plant basis."
"In our judgment, the question as to whether the basing point
price system should be declared illegal rests clearly within the
legislative domain. We know of no criticism so often and so
forcibly directed at courts, particularly Federal courts, as their
propensity for usurping the functions of Congress. If this pricing
system which Congress has over the years steadfastly refused to
declare illegal, although vigorously urged to do so, is now to be
outlawed by the courts, it will mark the high tide in judicial
usurpation."
Aetna Portland Cement Co. v. Federal Trade Commission,
supra, at 573.
See §§ 1 and 2, Sherman Antitrust Act,
approved July 2, 1890, 26 Stat. 209, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1 and
2; § 5, Federal Trade Commission Act, approved September 26,
1914, 38 Stat. 719; § 2, Clayton Act, approved October 15,
1914, 38 Stat. 730; § 2, Clayton Act, as amended by the
Robinson-Patman Act, approved June 19, 1936, 49 Stat. 1526, 15
U.S.C. § 13; § 5, Federal Trade Commission Act, as
amended, March 21, 1938, 52 Stat. 111, 15 U.S.C. § 45.
See Bill "To Prevent Unnecessary and Wasteful
Cross-Hauling" introduced by Senator Wheeler in 1936 banning basing
point systems by statute, but not reported out of Committee.
Hearings before Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce on S. 4055,
74th Cong., 2d Sess. (1936),
and see p. 325.
See
also H.R.Rep. No.2287, 74th Cong., 2d Sess. 14 (1936), and
debates upon the Robinson-Patman Bill, 80 Cong.Rec. 8102, 8118,
8140, 8223-8224 (1936).