1. The Renegotiation Act is constitutional on its face as
authority for the recovery by the United States of "excessive
profits" (less tax credits) realized by private parties in the
circumstances of these cases on subcontracts for war goods in time
of war with contractors who were also private parties -- even in
the absence of contractual provisions for the renegotiation of such
profits and even as applied to contracts entered into prior to the
enactment of the Act, provided final payments had not been made
pursuant to such contracts prior to the date of enactment of the
original Act. Pp.
334 U. S. 746,
334 U. S.
753-793.
2. The power of Congress to authorize the recovery of such
excessive profits is included in the broad scope of the war powers
expressly granted to Congress by the Constitution. Pp.
334 U. S.
753-772.
(a) In time of war, Congress unquestionably has the fundamental
power to conscript men and to requisition properties necessary and
proper to enable it to raise and support armies. Pp.
334 U. S. 756,
334 U. S.
765.
(b) The Renegotiation Act was a law "necessary and proper" for
carrying into execution the war powers of Congress, and especially
its power to raise and support armies. Pp.
334 U. S.
757-765.
(c) Not only was it "necessary and proper" for Congress to
provide for the production of war supplies in the successful
conduct of the war, but it was well within the outer limits of the
constitutional discretion of Congress and the President to do so
under the terms of the Renegotiation Act in a manner designed to
eliminate excessive private profits.
See United States v.
Bethlehem Steel Corp., 315 U. S. 289,
315 U. S. 305.
Pp.
334 U. S.
763-765,
334 U. S.
769.
(d) The plan for renegotiation of profits realized by private
parties on contracts for production of war goods -- chosen by
Page 334 U. S. 743
Congress as an alternative to mobilization of the productive
capacity of the nation into a governmental unit on the totalitarian
model -- symbolized a free people united in reaching unequalled
productive capacity and yet retaining the maximum of individual
freedom consistent with a general mobilization of effort. Pp.
334 U. S.
765-772.
3. The authority granted for administrative determination of the
amount of "excessive profits," if any, realized on war subcontracts
was a constitutional definition of administrative authority, and
not an unconstitutional delegation of legislative power. Pp.
334 U. S.
774-787.
(a) A constitutional power implies a power of delegation of
authority under it sufficient to effect its purposes. Pp.
334 U. S.
778-783.
(b) The administrative practices developed under the Act
demonstrated the definitive adequacy of the term "excessive
profits" as used in the Act. P.
334 U. S.
783.
(c) In the light of the purpose of the Act and its factual
background, the statutory term "excessive profits" was a sufficient
expression of legislative policy and standards to render it
constitutional. Pp.
334 U. S.
783-786.
(d) The methods prescribed and the limitations imposed by
Congress on the contemplated administrative action help to sustain
its constitutionality. Pp.
334 U. S. 786-787.
4. The war powers of Congress and the President are only those
which are to be derived from the Constitution, but the primary
implication of a war power is that it shall be an effective power
to wage war successfully. P.
334 U. S.
782.
5. While the constitutional structure and controls of our
Government are our guides equally in war and in peace, they must be
read with the realistic purposes of the entire instrument fully in
mind. P.
334 U. S.
782.
6. It is not necessary that Congress supply administrative
officials with a specific formula for their guidance in a field
where flexibility and the adaptation of the congressional policy to
infinitely variable conditions constitute the essence of the
program. P.
334 U. S.
785.
7. The collection of renegotiated excessive profits on a war
subcontract is not in the nature of a penalty, and is not a
deprivation of a subcontractor of his property without due process
of law in violation of the Fifth Amendment. Pp.
334 U. S.
787-788.
8. The Government was entitled to recover excessive profits
(less tax credits) from each of the subcontractors in these cases,
whether they arose from contracts made before or after the passage
of the Act, provided final payments had not been made pursuant to
such contracts prior to the date of the original Act -- even
though
Page 334 U. S. 744
they arose out of contracts between private parties, and not out
of contracts made directly with the Government itself. Pp.
334 U. S.
747-753,
334 U. S.
788-789.
9. In a suit by the Government under the Act to recover
excessive profits administratively determined to have been realized
by subcontractors under war contracts in the circumstances of these
cases, subcontractors who failed to make timely application to the
Tax Court for redetermination of the amount of such excessive
profits do not have the right to raise questions as to the coverage
of the Act, as to the amount of excessive profits adjudged to be
due from them, or as to other comparable issues which might have
been presented by them to the Tax Court upon a timely petition for
a redetermination. Pp.
334 U. S.
753-754,
334 U. S.
789-793.
(a) The statute and the course of action taken afforded
procedural due process to the subcontractors in these cases. P.
334 U. S.
791.
(b) The statutory provision for a petition to the Tax Court was
not, in any of these cases, an optional or alternative procedure;
it provided the only procedure to secure a redetermination of the
excessive profits which had been administratively determined to
exist. P.
334 U. S.
792.
(c) Failure of the subcontractors in these cases to exhaust that
procedure has left them no right to present such issues in this
Court. P.
334 U. S.
792.
160 F.2d 329; 159 F.2d 73; 160 F.2d 103, affirmed.
The cases are stated concisely in the opinion, with citations to
the decisions below, pp.
334 U. S.
746-753.
Affirmed, p.
334 U. S.
793.
Page 334 U. S. 745
MR. JUSTICE BURTON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Renegotiation Act, [
Footnote
1] in time of crisis, presented to this nation a new
legislative solution of a major phase
Page 334 U. S. 746
of the problem of national defense against world-wide
aggression. Through its contribution to our production program, it
sought to enable us to take the leading part in winning World War
II on an unprecedented scale of total global warfare without
abandoning our traditional faith in and reliance upon private
enterprise and individual initiative devoted to the public
welfare.
In each of the three cases before us, the principal issue is the
constitutionality, on its face, of the Renegotiation Act insofar as
it is authority for the recovery of the excessive profits sought to
be recovered by the United States from the respective petitioners.
In each case, the secondary issue is whether the failure of the
respective petitioners to petition the Tax Court for a
redetermination of the amount, if any, of their excessive profits
excludes from consideration here the coverage of the Act, the
amount of the profits, and other comparable issues which could have
been presented to the Tax Court. In each of these cases, the
District Court has held that the Act was constitutional, and that,
by failure to petition the Tax Court for their redetermination, the
existing orders have become final, as claimed by the Government.
Each Circuit Court of Appeals has affirmed, unanimously, the
judgment appealed to it. We agree with the courts below.
In each of these cases, the United States obtained a judgment
for a sum alleged to be owed to it pursuant to a determination of
excessive profits under the Renegotiation Act. The determinations
of excessive profits in the respective cases were made by the Under
Secretary of War or by the War Contracts Price Adjustment Board
after the Revenue Act of 1943 had been approved, February 25, 1944.
That Act contained, in its Title VII, the so-called Second
Renegotiation Act, which included provisions for the filing with
the Tax Court of petitions for the redeterminations of excess
profits. None of these petitioners, however, filed such a petition
with the Tax
Page 334 U. S. 747
Court. On the other hand, the respective petitioners have relied
upon their claims that, as a matter of law, the Renegotiation Act
is unconstitutional on its face insofar as it purports to authorize
the judgments which have been taken against the respective
petitioners. The petitioners contend also that their failures to
file petitions with the Tax Court have not foreclosed their
respective rights to contest here the coverage of the Act, the
amount of the excess profits found against them, and other
comparable issues which they might have presented to the Tax
Court.
NO. 105 (THE LICHTER CASE)
In May, 1945, the United States filed its complaint in the
District Court of the United States for the Southern District of
Ohio against the petitioners, Jacob Lichter and Jennie L. Lichter,
engaged in the construction business in Cincinnati, Ohio, under the
name of the Southern Fireproofing Company, a copartnership. The
complaint was founded upon the determination by the Under Secretary
of War, dated October 20, 1944, that $70,000 of the profits
realized by petitioners during the calendar year 1942 from nine
subcontracts, executed in 1942 for a total price of $710,244.16,
were, under the Renegotiation Act, excessive profits. The complaint
showed that the petitioners were entitled to a tax credit of
$42,980.61 against such excessive profits. It alleged, moreover,
that the petitioners had not, within the required period,
petitioned the Tax Court for a redetermination of the order in
question, and had not paid or otherwise eliminated the amount of
$27,019.39 thus due to the United States.
The petitioners admitted that the Under Secretary had made the
determination as alleged; that, if his order were valid, the
petitioners were entitled to the tax credit specified, and that
they had not paid the sum demanded, nor had they filed a petition
with the Tax Court for a redetermination
Page 334 U. S. 748
of the excessive profits, if any. They put in issue, on
specifically stated grounds, the constitutionality of the
Renegotiation Act insofar as it might be authority for the recovery
of the profits sought to be recovered, and they put in issue the
applicability to them of any requirement that they seek in the Tax
Court a redetermination of the profits which they had been ordered
to repay to the United States. They alleged also that: of the nine
subcontracts which were made the basis of renegotiation, all were
executed during the calendar year 1942; four were executed before
April 28, 1942, the date of the original Renegotiation Act; none
contained clauses permitting or requiring their renegotiation; only
two of them were for amounts in excess of $100,000 each; these two
were among those which had been executed before April 28, 1942, and
no excessive profits had been in fact earned by the petitioners
during 1942. Finally, they alleged that the several contracts
referred to were subcontracts entered into under prime contracts
which had been awarded by a department of the Government as the
result of competitive bidding for the construction of buildings and
facilities, and the subcontracts themselves had been obtained by
petitioners after further competitive bidding. For these and other
reasons stated in the answer, the contracts were claimed to be
exempt from renegotiation.
The United States moved for judgment on the pleadings, and, in
the alternative, for summary judgment. Affidavits were filed in
support of those motions. These included particularly the
comprehensive affidavits of Robert P. Patterson, then Under
Secretary of War, and of H. Struve Hensel, then Assistant Secretary
of the Navy. These affidavits set forth the general background of
the Renegotiation Act and the basis for claiming that the
renegotiation of war contracts was necessary in order to sustain
this nation's share of the burden of winning World War II.
Counterparts of these two affidavits were
Page 334 U. S. 749
filed in each of the other cases before us. The petitioners, on
the other hand, moved to dismiss the complaint on the grounds that
it failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted and
that the profits in question were exempt from the Act.
The District Court made findings of fact substantially as stated
in the complaint and admitted in the answer. It concluded that
there was no genuine issue as to any material fact, and that the
United States was entitled to judgment as a matter of law for
$27,019.39, with interest at six percent per annum from November 6,
1944. 68 F. Supp. 19. The Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth
Circuit affirmed the judgment. It held expressly that the
Renegotiation Act was valid on its face, and that the petitioners,
by reason of their failure to petition the Tax Court for a
redetermination of the amount of the excessive profits, if any,
were barred from making their other attacks on the Secretary's
determination of such excessive profits. 160 F.2d 329. Because of
the basic significance of the constitutional questions involved, we
granted certiorari. 331 U.S. 802.
NO. 74 (THE POURNALL CASE)
In September, 1945, the United States filed its complaint in the
District Court of the United States for the Southern District of
California against the petitioners, A. V. Pournall, Grace M.
Pournall, and Henes-Morgan Machinery Company, Limited, a California
corporation, all three doing business in Los Angeles, California,
as copartners under the name of General Products Company. The
record indicates that they were there engaged in the production of
precision parts, machinery, and tools for use by war contractors.
The complaint was founded upon a determination made by the Under
Secretary of War, on behalf of the War Contracts Price Adjustment
Board, dated December 27, 1944, to the effect that $628,373.14
of
Page 334 U. S. 750
the profits realized by petitioners during the calendar year
1943 on their contracts and subcontracts, subject to renegotiation
pursuant to the Renegotiation Act, were excessive profits. The
complaint showed that the petitioners were entitled to a tax credit
of $514,663.95 against such profits. It alleged, moreover, that the
petitioners had not, within the required period, petitioned the Tax
Court for a redetermination of the order in question, and had not
paid the sum of $113,709.19 thus claimed by the United States. The
petitioners admitted that the Under Secretary had made the
determination as alleged; that the Board had adopted his order;
that the appropriate tax credit was as alleged; that no petition
for redetermination had been filed with the Tax Court; that the
time for filing had expired, and that no payment of the amount
claimed had been made. The petitioners alleged, however, that the
Renegotiation Act was invalid on its face on numerous specifically
stated constitutional grounds; that the Under Secretary's order was
invalid in that it was based on undisclosed data and contained no
findings, and that no single contract under consideration exceeded
in amount the sum of $99,000.
The United States moved for judgment on the pleadings and, in
the alternative, for summary judgment. The petitioners did the
same. Under the stipulations of the parties, there were no disputed
issues of fact, and the only questions left for decision were those
as to the constitutional validity of the Act and as to its
interpretation if found to be valid.
The District Court denied the motions of both parties. However,
ruling on the merits of the cause thus before it, it found the
facts to be substantially as alleged in the complaint and as
stipulated. It held the Act to be valid on its face, and held the
unappealed determination of excessive profits to be final. It
rendered judgment for the United States for $121,043.39, evidently
representing
Page 334 U. S. 751
$113,709.19, with interest at six percent per annum from March
13, 1945. 65 F. Supp. 147,
and see findings of fact,
conclusions of law and judgment of the court. The Circuit Court of
Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed the judgment. It followed
its earlier decision in
Spaulding v. Douglas Aircraft Co.,
154 F.2d 419, in upholding the constitutionality of the Act and
expressly holding that the petitioners, by not having petitioned
the Tax Court for relief, had failed to exhaust their
administrative remedies. Accordingly, it held that the District
Court was without jurisdiction to consider the petitioners'
contentions as to the coverage of the Act. 159 F.2d 73. We granted
certiorari. 331 U.S. 802.
NO. 95 (THE ALEXANDER CASE)
In August, 1945, the United States filed its complaint in the
District Court of the United States for the District of
Massachusetts against the petitioner, Alexander Wool Combing
Company, a Massachusetts corporation doing business at Lowell,
Massachusetts, and there engaged in the business of scouring wool
and combing it into tops and noils for commissions paid to it by
the owners of the wool. The complaint was founded upon two
determinations by the Under Secretary of War, both dated September
6, 1944. One determined that $22,500 of the profits realized by the
petitioner during its fiscal year ended June 30, 1942, and the
other that $45,000 of the profits realized by the petitioner during
its fiscal year ended June 30, 1943, under its contracts and
subcontracts which were alleged to be subject to the provisions of
the Renegotiation Act, were excessive. The complaint showed that
the petitioner was entitled to a tax credit of $15,020.80 against
such excessive profits for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1942, and
of $36,596.42 against those for the fiscal year ended June 30,
1943. The complaint alleged, moreover, that the petitioner had not,
within the
Page 334 U. S. 752
required periods, petitioned the Tax Court for a redetermination
of either of the orders in question; that the respective periods
for filing such petitions had expired, and that the petitioner had
not paid, or otherwise eliminated, the amount of $15,882.78 thus
due to the United States. The petitioner admitted the factual
allegations of the complaint, but denied that any amount was owing
to the United States. It claimed that the determinations made by
the Under Secretary were void because made without due process of
law, and were unenforceable as to the petitioner because, as
applied to it, they were unconstitutional for several specifically
stated reasons.
The United States moved for judgment on the pleadings or, in the
alternative, for summary judgment. In support of these motions, the
above-mentioned affidavits of Robert P. Patterson, Under Secretary
of War, and of H. Struve Hensel, Assistant Secretary of the Navy,
and several others were filed. Evidence, both oral and in affidavit
form, was submitted in opposition. The District Court stated in its
opinion,
66 F. Supp.
389, 391, that the petitioner
"had no direct contracts with any department or agency of the
United States. It combed wool for different private companies. It
knew that some of the wool it combed for the companies was destined
for use in government contracts, but it was and is ignorant as to
the destination of other wool."
That court nevertheless rendered judgment in favor of the United
States for $15,882.78, with interest at six percent per annum from
September 6, 1944. It held that the war powers of Congress were
sufficient to enable it to authorize the recapture of excessive
profits such as these; that the standard of "excessive profits" was
sufficient to satisfy the constitutional limitations on the power
of Congress to delegate authority; that any defects in the
departmental proceedings were immaterial in view of the opportunity
afforded the petitioner for a trial
de novo and
Page 334 U. S. 753
for a redetermination of excessive profits, if any, in the Tax
Court, and that petitioner's defenses on the ground of lack of
coverage or of retroactivity of the application of the
Renegotiation Act to the petitioner were lost to it by its failure
to seek relief from the Tax Court. The Circuit Court of Appeals for
the First Circuit said, per curiam:
"We think the court below adequately covered all the issues in
this case, and we affirm its judgment upon the grounds and for the
reasons set forth in its opinion. . . ."
160 F.2d 103. [
Footnote 2]
We granted certiorari. 331 U.S. 802.
THE BACKGROUND
We have two main issues before us: (1) the constitutionality of
the Renegotiation Act on its face, and (2) the finality of the
determination of the excessive profits made under it in the absence
of a petition filed with the Tax Court within the required time,
seeking a redetermination of those profits. In the
Lichter
case, we have issues as to profits made in the calendar year 1942,
in the
Pournall case as to profits made in the calendar
year 1943, and in the
Alexander case, as to certain
profits made in the fiscal year ended June 30, 1942, and as to
other profits made in the fiscal year ended June 30, 1943. In each
case, we uphold the constitutionality of the Act as providing the
necessary authorization for the judgments rendered. We also accept
the finality given by the courts below to the administrative
determinations made of the excessive profits, although the
statutory situation
Page 334 U. S. 754
as a basis for the finality of such determinations is not
precisely the same in each case. By reason of the finality thus
attached to the determinations made as to excessive profits in
these cases, we do not pass upon the issues attempted to be raised
here as to the coverage of the Act, the amount of the profits, or
other matters which the petitioners might have presented to the Tax
Court, but did not.
In procedure which affects property rights as directly and
substantially as that authorized by the Renegotiation Act, the
governmental action authorized, although resting on valid
constitutional grounds, is capable of gross abuse. The very
finality of the administrative determinations here upheld
emphasizes the seriousness of the injustices which can result from
the abuse of the large powers vested in the administrative
officials. We do not minimize the seriousness of complaints which
thus may be cut off without relief in the name of the necessities
of war and for the sake of the defense of the nation when its
survival is at stake. We reemphasize that, under these conditions,
there is great need both for adequate channels of procedural due
process and for careful conformity to those channels. In total war,
it is necessary that a civilian make sacrifices of his property and
profits with at least the same fortitude as that with which a
drafted soldier makes his traditional sacrifices of comfort,
security, and life itself. Within procedure thus authorized by the
Constitution, the Congress, and the Administration, and here
affirmed, resulting injustices can and should be carefully
examined, and, as far as possible, relieved. In war, both the
raising and the support of the armed forces are essential. Both
require mobilization and control under the authority of Congress.
Both are entitled also to such post-war relief as may be authorized
by Congress.
The Renegotiation Act was developed as a major wartime policy of
Congress comparable to that of the Selective Training and Service
Act. The authority of Congress to authorize
Page 334 U. S. 755
each of them sprang from its war powers. Each was a part of a
national policy adopted in time of crisis in the conduct of total
global warfare by a nation dedicated to the preservation, practice,
and development of the maximum measure of individual freedom
consistent with the unity of effort essential to success.
With the advent of such warfare, mobilized property in the form
of equipment and supplies became as essential as mobilized
manpower. Mobilization of effort extended not only to the uniformed
armed services, but to the entire population. Both Acts were a form
of mobilization. The language of the Constitution authorizing such
measures is broad, rather than restrictive. It says
"The Congress shall have Power . . . To raise and support
Armies, but no Appropriation of Money to that Use shall be for a
longer Term than two Years. . . ."
Art. I, § 8, Cl. 12. [
Footnote 3] This places emphasis upon the supporting, as
well
Page 334 U. S. 756
as upon the raising of armies. The power of Congress as to both
is inescapably express, not merely implied. The conscription of
manpower is a more vital interference with the life, liberty, and
property of the individual than is the conscription of his property
or his profits, or any substitute for such conscription of them.
For his hazardous, full-time service in the armed forces, a soldier
is paid whatever the Government deems to be a fair but modest
compensation. Comparatively speaking, the manufacturer of war goods
undergoes no such hazard to his personal safety as does a
front-line soldier, and yet the Renegotiation Act gives him far
better assurance of a reasonable return for his wartime services
than the Selective Service Act and all its related legislation give
to the men in the armed forces. The constitutionality of the
conscription of manpower for military service is beyond question.
The constitutional power of Congress to support the armed forces
with equipment and supplies is no less clear and sweeping.
[
Footnote 4] It is valid
a
fortiori.
Page 334 U. S. 757
In view of this power "To raise and support Armies, . . ." and
the power granted in the same Article of the Constitution "To make
all Laws which shall
Page 334 U. S. 758
be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the
foregoing Powers, . . . ," the only question remaining is whether
the Renegotiation Act was a law "necessary and proper for carrying
into Execution" the war powers of Congress, and especially its
power to support armies.
It is impossible here to picture adequately all that might have
been "necessary and proper" in 1942-1944 to meet the unprecedented
responsibility facing Congress in this field. We do, however, catch
a glimpse of it in authoritative contemporaneous descriptions of
the situation. Accordingly, we have set forth in the margin
excerpts from the message of the President to the Congress upon the
the Union, January 6, 1942, [
Footnote 5] from a
Page 334 U. S. 759
report of the Special Committee of the Senate Investigating the
National Defense Program under the chairmanship
Page 334 U. S. 760
of Senator Harry S. Truman, of Missouri, March 30, 1943,
[
Footnote 6] and from the
affidavit of Robert P. Patterson, Under
Page 334 U. S. 762
Secretary of War, dated August 3, 1945, [
Footnote 7] in the form filed in each of the three
cases before us.
Page 334 U. S. 763
The above-mentioned excerpts describe a demand for production of
war supplies in proportions previously unimagined.
Page 334 U. S. 764
They call for production in a volume never before approximated,
and at an undreamed of speed.
Page 334 U. S. 765
The results amply demonstrated the infinite value of that
production in winning the war. It proved to be a
sine qua
non condition of the survival of the nation. Not only was it
"necessary and proper" for Congress to provide for such production
in the successful conduct of the war, but it was well within the
outer limits of the constitutional discretion of Congress and the
President to do so under the terms of the Renegotiation Act.
Accordingly, the question before us as to the constitutionality of
the Renegotiation Act is not that of the power of the government to
renegotiate and recapture war profits. The only questions are
whether the particular method of renegotiation and the
administrative procedure prescribed conformed to the constitutional
limitations under which Congress was permitted to exercise its
basic powers.
Our first question relates to the method of adjusting net
compensation for war services through the compulsory
"renegotiation" of profits under existing contracts between private
parties, including recourse to unilateral orders for payments into
the Treasury of the United States of such portions of those profits
as were determined by the administrative officials of that
Government to be "excessive profits." There were added the
limitations that the contracts were for war goods in time of war,
the ultimate payment for which was, in any event, to come from the
Government, and that, at the time of this impingement of the
Renegotiation Act upon them, the contracts must not have been
completed to the extent that final payments had been made on
them.
One approach to the question of the constitutional power of
Congress over the profits on these contracts is to recognize that
Congress, in time of war, unquestionably has the fundamental power,
previously discussed, to conscript men and to requisition the
properties necessary and proper to enable it to raise and support
its Armies. Congress furthermore has a primary obligation to
bring
Page 334 U. S. 766
about whatever production of war equipment and supplies shall be
necessary to win a war. Given this mission, Congress then had to
choose between possible alternatives for its performance. In the
light of the compelling necessity for the immediate production of
vast quantities of war goods, the first alternative, all too
clearly evident to the world, was that which Congress did not
choose -- namely, that of mobilizing the productive capacity of the
nation into a governmental unit on the totalitarian model. This
would have meant the conscription of property and of workmen. It
would have meant the raising of supplies for the Armies in much the
same manner as that in which Congress raised the manpower for such
Armies. Already, the nation had some units of production of
military supplies in the form of arsenals, navy yards, and in the
increasing number of governmentally owned, if not operated, war
material plants. The production of the atomic bombs was one example
of a war industry owned and operated exclusively by the Government.
Faced with this ironical alternative of converting the nation, in
effect, into a totalitarian state in order to preserve itself from
totalitarian domination, that alternative was steadfastly rejected.
The plan for Renegotiation of Profits which was chosen in its place
by Congress appears in its true light as the very symbol of a free
people united in reaching unequalled productive capacity and yet
retaining the maximum of individual freedom consistent with a
general mobilization of effort.
Somewhat crude in its initial statutory simplicity, the
Renegotiation Act developed rapidly as the demand for war
production increased beyond precedent. First approved April 28,
1942, less than five months after our declaration of war, the Act
was adjusted and strengthened in its effectiveness and fairness by
the numerous amendments made to it. [
Footnote 8] The nation previously had experienced
Page 334 U. S. 767
different, but fundamentally comparable, federal regulation of
civilian liberty and property in proportion to the increasing
demands of modern warfare. [
Footnote 9]
The demands for war equipment and supplies were so great in
volume, were for such new types of products, were subject to so
many changes in specifications, and were subject to such pressing
demands for delivery that accurate advance estimates of cost were
out of the question. Laying aside as undesirable the complete
governmental ownership and operation of the production of war goods
of all kinds, many alternative solutions were attempted. Often
these called for capital expenditures by the Government
Page 334 U. S. 768
in building new plant facilities. Adhering, however, to the
policy of private operation of these facilities Congress and the
Administration sought to promote a policy of wide distribution of
prime contracts and subcontracts, even to comparatively high-cost
marginal producers of unfamiliar products. Congress sought to do
everything possible to retain and encourage individual initiative
in the worldwide race for the largest and quickest production of
the best equipment and supplies. It clung to its faith in private
enterprise . The problem was to find a fair means of compensation
for the services rendered and the goods purchased. Contracts were
awarded by negotiation wherever competitive bidding no longer was
practicable. Contracts were let at cost plus a fixed fee. Escalator
clauses were inserted. Price ceilings were established. A flat
percentage limit on the profits in certain lines of production was
tried. Excess profits taxes were imposed. Appeals were made for
voluntary refunds of excessive profits. However, experience with
these alternatives convinced the Government that contracts at fixed
initial prices still provided the best incentive to production.
[
Footnote 10]
Page 334 U. S. 769
On February 16, 1942, this Court, in
United States v.
Bethlehem Steel Corp., 315 U. S. 289,
pointed to the possibility of legislative relief. It said (p.
315 U. S.
309):
"The problem of war profits is not new. In this country, every
war we have engaged in has provided opportunities for profiteering,
and they have been too often scandalously seized.
See
Hearings before the House Committee on Military Affairs on H.R. 3
and H.R. 5293, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., 590-598. To meet this
recurrent evil, Congress has at times taken various measures. It
has authorized price-fixing. It has placed a fixed limit on
profits, or has recaptured high profits through taxation. It has
expressly reserved for the government the right to cancel contracts
after they have been made. Pursuant to Congressional authority, the
government has requisitioned existing production facilities or
itself built and operated new ones to provide needed war materials.
It may be that one or some or all of these measures should be
utilized more comprehensively, or that still other measures must be
devised. But if the Executive is in need of additional laws by
which to protect the nation against war profiteering, the
Constitution has given to Congress, not to this Court, the power to
make them."
Finally the compulsory renegotiation of contracts was
authorized. The procedure outlined in the Original Renegotiation
Act, April 28, 1942, was rapidly perfected. As it developed, it
required advance consents to such renegotiation to be written into
the respective contracts
Page 334 U. S. 770
and subcontracts for war goods prior to their award, and finally
it made express provision for a redetermination of the excessive
profits, in a proceeding
de novo before the Tax Court,
wherever a war goods contractor or subcontractor was aggrieved by
the administrative order. Throughout these developments, extended
congressional and public consideration was given to the issues
presented. [
Footnote 11]
The plan proved itself readily adaptable to the needs of the
time. It called for initial contract estimates based upon the best
available information at the time of entering
Page 334 U. S. 771
into the contracts. Production proceeded at once on the basis of
those estimates. Many factors were incapable of exact advance
determination. The final net compensation, however, resulted from a
renegotiation made after both parties had had the benefit of actual
experience under the contract. This determination of the allowable
profit was guided by many relevant factors. A list of commonly
relevant factors was presented in an early administrative
directive. Later, such a list was enacted into the statute. Each
administrative determination was made subject to a redetermination
in a proceeding
de novo in the Tax Court, provided a
timely petition for it was filed by the aggrieved contractor or
subcontractor. The Act always has been limited in duration to a
period during and shortly following the war. In most instances, the
Act has resulted in a disposition of cases
Page 334 U. S. 772
by agreements reached between the parties. [
Footnote 12] The controversies which have
survived to this day are, in large measure, not those dealing with
the constitutionality of the general effect of the plan, or even
with the finality of redetermination under the prescribed
administrative procedure, but are those arising out of an alleged
abuse of discretion in its administration.
THE RENEGOTIATION ACT
While there have been six legislative steps [
Footnote 13] in the development of the
Renegotiation Act, the portions of it that are especially material
here consist of certain
Page 334 U. S. 773
language in the so-called Original Renegotiation Act contained
in § 403 of the Sixth Supplemental Defense Appropriations Act,
approved April 28, 1942; [
Footnote 14] in the amendments made by the Revenue Act of
1942, October 21, 1942; [
Footnote 15] and its further amendment and substantial
expansion by § 701(b) of the Revenue Act of 1943, February 25,
1944. [
Footnote 16] In that
form, it is sometimes called the Second Renegotiation Act, but the
entire § 403, both in its original and amended forms, may be
properly cited as the "Renegotiation Act." [
Footnote 17] In the proceedings leading up to
the enactment of the Original Renegotiation Act, an alternative in
the form of a rigid limitation of profits was rejected in favor of
the more flexible definition embodied in the term "excessive
profits." [
Footnote 18] The
War Department Directive of August 10, 1942, entitled "Principles,
Policy, and Procedure to be Followed in Renegotiation" promptly
stated the factors to be stressed in determining excessive profits.
This directive was introduced in the hearings held by the Finance
Committee of the Senate in September, [
Footnote 19] and thus was before the Senate at the
time of the passage of the above-mentioned Revenue
Page 334 U. S. 774
Act of 1942, October 21, 1942, which made important amendments
in the Renegotiation Act.
The "Joint Statement by the War, Navy, and Treasury Departments
and the Maritime Commission -- Purposes, Principles, Policies, and
Interpretations," dealing with the Renegotiation Act, was issued
March 31, 1943. This was considered at the Hearings before the
House Committee on Naval Affairs, 78th Cong., 1st Sess., Vol. 2,
pp. 469,
et seq., 1025-1039, especially 1028-1029 (1943).
Finally, the above-mentioned Revenue Act of 1943, 58 Stat. 21, on
February 25, 1944, largely incorporated these views in §
403(a)(4)(A), [
Footnote 20]
thus indicating congressional approval of this administrative
practice and further assuring continuity of it during the balance
of the life of the Act.
DELEGATION OF AUTHORITY UNDER THE RENEGOTIATION ACT
The petitioners contend that the Renegotiation Act
unconstitutionally attempted to delegate legislative power to
administrative officials. The United States does not contest the
right of the courts to decide the issues as to the validity of the
Act on its face in the present cases, each of which was instituted
after the petitioners' respective rights to a Tax Court
redetermination had been forfeited. We find no reason for not
reaching here the constitutionality of the Act.
Cf. Aircraft
& Diesel Corp. v. Hirsch, 331 U.
S. 752;
Wade v. Stimson, 331 U.S. 793;
Macauley v. Waterman S.S. Corp., 327 U.
S. 540;
Yakus v. United States, 321 U.
S. 414.
The constitutional argument is based upon the claim that the
delegation of authority contained in the Act carried with it too
slight a definition of legislative policy and standards.
Accordingly, it is contended that the resulting determination of
excessive profits which were
Page 334 U. S. 775
claimed by the United States amounted to an unconstitutional
exercise of legislative power by an administrative official,
instead of a mere exercise of administrative discretion under valid
legislative authority. We hold that the authorization was
constitutional. Certainly, as spelled out in § 403(a)(4)(A)
[
Footnote 21] of the Second
Renegotiated Act with respect to fiscal years ending after June 30,
1943, there can be no objection on this ground. This question
therefore relates to the delegation of authority as made by the Act
before the effective date of the Second Renegotiation Act. The
argument on this question is limited to the
Lichter and
Alexander cases, inasmuch as the excessive profits
determined to exist in the
Pournall case were so found by
the War contracts Price Adjustment Board under the Second
Renegotiation Act.
1. The Statutory Language
The Original Renegotiation Act, [
Footnote 22] approved April 28, 1942, provided in §
403(b), (c), (d), and (e) for the renegotiation of all contracts
and subcontracts thereafter made, and also of all contracts and
subcontracts theretofore made by the War Department, the Navy
Department, or the Maritime Commission, whether or not such
contracts or subcontracts contained a renegotiation or recapture
clause, provided the final payment pursuant thereto had not been
made prior to April 28, 1942. The renegotiation was to be done by
the Secretary of the Department concerned. For this purpose, the
Chairman of the Maritime Commission was included in the term
"Secretary." The services of the Bureau of Internal Revenue were
made available upon the request of each Secretary, subject to the
consent of the Secretary of the Treasury, for the purposes of
making examinations and determinations with
Page 334 U. S. 776
respect to profits under the Section. The Secretary of each
Department was authorized and directed whenever, in his opinion,
excessive profits had been realized or were likely to re realized
from any contract with such Department or from any subcontract
thereunder, to require the contractor or subcontractor to
renegotiate the contract price. In case any amount of the contract
price was found as a result of such renegotiation to represent
"excessive profits" which had been paid to the contractor or
subcontractor, the Secretary was authorized to recover them.
There was no express definition of the term "excessive profits"
in the Original Renegotiation Act. However, in its § 403(b),
[
Footnote 23] there was
relevant statement in connection with the renegotiation clauses
required to be inserted in future contracts and subcontracts for an
amount in excess of $100,000 each. The Secretary was required to
insert in such contracts, thereafter made by his Department,
"a provision for the renegotiation of the contract price at a
period or periods when, in the judgment of the Secretary, the
profits can be determined with reasonable certainty. . . ."
Contractors were also to be required to insert a like provision
in their subcontracts. This statement indicated a relationship
between current "excessive profits" and those which later might be
determined with "reasonable certainty."
Also, in § 403(d), [
Footnote 24] it was provided that, in renegotiating a
contract price or determining excessive profits, the Secretaries of
the respective Departments should not make allowances
"for any salaries, bonuses, or other compensation paid by a
contractor to its officers or employees in excess of a reasonable
amount . . . ,"
nor
"for any excessive reserves set up by the contractor or for any
costs
Page 334 U. S. 777
incurred by the contractor which are excessive and
unreasonable."
The amendments made to this Section by the Revenue Act of 1942,
[
Footnote 25] approved
October 21, 1942, were made effective as of April 28, 1942. At the
time they were approved, Congress had knowledge of the War
Department Directive of August 10, 1942, [
Footnote 26] which had been put into effect stressing
certain factors which the Secretary emphasized in determining
excessive profits. While Congress then made several amendments to
§ 403, those amendments did not alter the effect of such
directive in this particular. Among the amendments that were then
added there was the following purported definition of "excessive
profits":
"The term 'excessive profits' means any amount of a contract or
subcontract price which is found as a result of renegotiation to
represent excessive profits."
In the light of the existing administrative practices, this at
least expressed a congressional satisfaction with the existing
specificity of the Act. The amendment made to § 403(c)(3)
[
Footnote 27] required the
recognition of exclusions and deductions of the character afforded
by certain provisions of the Internal Revenue Code. The amendment
to § 403(c)(5) [
Footnote
28] provided also that the Secretaries, by joint regulation,
might prescribe the form and detail in which certain data might be
filed by contractors and subcontractors bearing upon their profits
under their contracts. This material concerned "statements of
actual costs of production" and "other financial statements for
Page 334 U. S. 778
any prior fiscal year or years." Under some circumstances, in
the absence of a notice from the Secretary and in the absence of
the commencement of renegotiations, it was provided that
"the contractor or subcontractor shall not thereafter be
required to renegotiate to eliminate excessive profits realized
from any such contract or subcontract during such fiscal year or
years and any liabilities of the contractor or subcontractor for
excessive profits realized during such period shall be thereby
discharged."
A new subsection (i) [
Footnote 29] was added containing new exceptions and
exemptions from the Act. The "Joint Statement by the War, Navy, and
Treasury Department and the Maritime Commission -- Purposes,
Principles, Policies, and Interpretations," issued March 31, 1943,
[
Footnote 30] similarly
contributed definiteness to the current administrative
practice.
2. The Validity of the Delegation of
Authority
It is in the light of these statutory provisions and
administrative practices that we must determine whether the
Renegotiation Act made an unconstitutional delegation of
legislative power. On the basis of (a) the nature of the particular
constitutional powers being employed, (b) the current
administrative practices later incorporated into the Act, and (c)
the adequacy of the statutory term "excessive profits" as used in
this context, we hold that the authority granted was a lawful
delegation of administrative authority, and not an unconstitutional
delegation of legislative power.
(a)
A constitutional power implies a power of delegation of
authority under it sufficient to effect its purposes. -- This
power is especially significant in connection
Page 334 U. S. 779
with constitutional war powers under which the exercise of broad
discretion as to methods to be employed may be essential to an
effective use of its war powers by Congress. The degree to which
Congress must specify its policies and standards in order that the
administrative authority granted may not be an unconstitutional
delegation of its own legislative power is not capable of precise
definition. In peace or in war, it is essential that the
Constitution be scrupulously obeyed, [
Footnote 31] and particularly that the respective
branches of the Government keep within the powers assigned to each
by the Constitution. On the other hand, it is of the highest
importance that the fundamental purposes of the Constitution be
kept in mind and given effect in order that, through the
Constitution, the people of the United States may, in time of war,
as in peace, bring to the support of those purposes the full force
of their
Page 334 U. S. 780
united action. In time of crisis, nothing could be more tragic
and less expressive of the intent of the people than so to construe
their Constitution that, by its own terms, it would substantially
hinder, rather than help, them in defending their national
safety.
In an address by Honorable Charles E. Hughes, of New York, on
"War Powers Under The Constitution," September 5, 1917, 42
A.B.A.Rep. 232, 238-239, 247-248, he said:
"The power to wage war is the power to wage war successfully.
The framers of the constitution were under no illusions as to war.
They had emerged from a long struggle which had taught them the
weakness of a mere confederation, and they had no hope that they
could hold what they had won save as they established a Union which
could fight with the strength of one people under one government
entrusted with the common defence. In equipping the National
Government with the needed authority in war, they tolerated no
limitations inconsistent with that object, as they realized that
the very existence of the Nation might be at stake, and that every
resource of the people must be at command. . . ."
"
* * * *"
"The extraordinary circumstances of war may bring particular
business[es] and enterprises clearly into the category of those
which are affected with a public interest and which demand
immediate and thorough-going public regulation. The production and
distribution of foodstuffs, articles of prime necessity, those
which have direct relation to military efficiency, those which are
absolutely required for the support of the people during the stress
of conflict, are plainly of this sort. Reasonable regulations to
safeguard the resources upon which we depend for military success
must be regarded as being within the powers confided
Page 334 U. S. 781
to Congress to enable it to prosecute a successful war."
"In the words of the Supreme Court:"
" It is also settled beyond dispute that the Constitution is not
self-destructive. In other words, that the power which it confers
on the one hand, it does not immediately take away on the other. .
. . [
Footnote 32]"
"This was said in relation to the taxing power. Having been
granted in express terms, the Court held it had not been taken away
by the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment. As the Supreme
Court put it in another case:"
"the Constitution does not conflict with itself by conferring,
upon the one hand, a taxing power, and taking the same power away
on the other by the limitations of the due process clause.
[
Footnote 33]"
"Similarly, it may be said that the power has been expressly
given to Congress to prosecute war, and to pass all laws which
shall be necessary and proper for carrying that power into
execution. That power, explicitly conferred and absolutely
essential to the safety of the Nation, is not destroyed or impaired
by any later provision of the constitution or by any one of the
amendments. These may all be construed so as to avoid making the
constitution self-destructive, so as to preserve the rights of the
citizen from unwarrantable attack, while assuring beyond all hazard
the common defence and the perpetuity of our liberties. These rest
upon the preservation of the nation."
"It has been said that the constitution marches. That is, there
are constantly new applications of unchanged powers, and it is
ascertained that, in novel and complex situations, the old grants
contain, in
Page 334 U. S. 782
their general words and true significance, needed and adequate
authority. So also, we have a fighting constitution. We cannot at
this time fail to appreciate the wisdom of the fathers, as under
this charter, one hundred and thirty years old -- the constitution
of Washington -- the people of the United States fight with the
power of unity -- as we fight for the freedom of our children and
that hereafter the sword of autocrats may never threaten the
world."
The war powers of Congress and the President are only those
which are to be derived from the Constitution, but, in the light of
the language just quoted, the primary implication of a war power is
that it shall be an effective power to wage the war successfully.
Thus, while the constitutional structure and controls of our
Government are our guides equally in war and in peace, they must be
read with the realistic purposes of the entire instrument fully in
mind. [
Footnote 34]
In 1942, in the early stages of total global warfare, the
exercise of a war power such as the power "To raise and support
Armies . . . " and "To provide and maintain a Navy . . . " called
for the production by us of war goods in unprecedented volume with
the utmost speed, combined with flexibility of control over the
product and with a high degree of initiative on the part of the
producers. Faced with the need to exercise that power, the question
was whether it was beyond the constitutional power of Congress to
delegate to the high officials named therein the discretion
contained in the Original Renegotiation Act of April 28, 1942, and
the amendments of October
Page 334 U. S. 783
21, 1942. We believe that the administrative authority there
granted was well within the constitutional war powers then being
put to their predestined uses.
(b)
The administrative practices developed under the
Renegotiation Act demonstrated the definitive adequacy of the term
"excessive profits" as used in the Act. -- The administrative
practices currently developed under the Act in interpreting the
term "excessive profits" appear to have come well within the scope
of the congressional policy. We have referred above to the War
Department Directive of August 10, 1942, [
Footnote 35] and to the Joint Departmental Statement
of March 31, 1943, [
Footnote
36] both of which were placed before appropriate Congressional
Committees. These clearly stated practices are evidence of a
current correct understanding of the congressional intent. This
appears from the fact that the congressional action of October 21,
1942, made effective as of April 28, 1942, was taken in the light
of the above-mentioned directive, and without restricting its
effect. Furthermore, the congressional action taken February 25,
1944, and made effective for the fiscal years ending after June 30,
1943, substantially incorporated into the statute the
administrative practice shown in the Joint Departmental Statement
of March 31, 1943. It thus became an express congressional
definition of the factors appropriate for consideration in
determining excessive profits, whereas, before, it was an
administrative interpretation of "excessive profits" to the same
effect.
(c)
The statutory term "excessive profits," in its context,
was a sufficient expression of legislative policy and standards to
render it constitutional. -- The fact that this term later was
further defined both by administrative action and by statutory
amendment indicates the probable
Page 334 U. S. 784
desirability of such added definition, but it does not
demonstrate that such further definition was a constitutional
necessity essential to the validity of the original exercise by
Congress of its war powers in initiating a new solution of an
unprecedented problem. The fact that the congressional definition
confirmed the administrative practice which already was in effect
under the original statutory language tends to show that a
statutory definition was not necessary in order to give effect to
the congressional intent.
In 1942, the imposition of excess profits taxes was a procedure
already familiar to Congress, both as an emergency procedure to
raise funds for extraordinary wartime expenditures and as one to
meet the needs of peace. The recapture of excess income as applied
by Congress to the railroads had been upheld by this Court in 1924.
Dayton-Goose Creek R. Co. v. United States, 263 U.
S. 456. The opinions of this Court in
Yakus v.
United States, 321 U. S. 414;
Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States, 295 U.
S. 495,
295 U. S.
529-542, and
Panama Refining Co. v. Ryan,
293 U. S. 388,
293 U. S.
413-433, are not in conflict with our present
position.
The policy and purpose of Congress in choosing the renegotiation
of profits as an alternative to cost-plus contracts, to flat
percentage limitations of profits, and to 100% excess profits taxes
was an attempt to determine a fair return on war contracts under
conditions where actual experience alone could disclose what was
fair and when the primary national need was for the immediate
production of unprecedented quantities of new products. The action
of Congress was an expression of its well considered judgment as to
the degree of administrative authority which it was necessary to
grant in order to effectuate its policy. This action of Congress
came within the scope of its discretion as described by Chief
Justice Hughes in
Panama Refining Co. v. Ryan, supra, at
293 U. S.
421:
Page 334 U. S. 785
"Undoubtedly legislation must often be adapted to complex
conditions involving a host of details with which the national
Legislature cannot deal directly. The Constitution has never been
regarded as denying to the Congress the necessary resources of
flexibility and practicality which will enable it to perform its
function in laying down policies and establishing standards while
leaving to selected instrumentalities the making of subordinate
rules within prescribed limits and the determination of facts to
which the policy as declared by the Legislature is to apply.
Without capacity to give authorizations of that sort, we should
have the anomaly of a legislative power which, in many
circumstances calling for its exertion, would be but a
futility."
It is not necessary that Congress supply administrative
officials with a specific formula for their guidance in a field
where flexibility and the adaptation of the congressional policy to
infinitely variable conditions constitute the essence of the
program.
"If Congress shall lay down by legislative act an intelligible
principle . . . , such legislative action is not a forbidden
delegation of legislative power."
Hampton Co. v. United States, 276 U.
S. 394,
276 U. S. 409.
Standards prescribed by Congress are to be read in the light of the
conditions to which they are to be applied.
"They derive much meaningful content from the purpose of the
Act, its factual background, and the statutory context in which
they appear."
American Power & Light Co. v. SEC, 329 U. S.
90,
329 U. S. 104.
The purpose of the Renegotiation Act and its factual background
establish a sufficient meaning for "excessive profits" as those
words are used in practice. [
Footnote 37] The word "excessive" appears twice in
the
Page 334 U. S. 786
Eighth Amendment to the Constitution: "Excessive bail shall not
be required, nor excessive fines imposed. . . ." In the Original
Renegotiation Act, § 403(d), [
Footnote 38] there were expressly disallowed to the
contractor in determining his profits "compensation paid by a
contractor to its officers or employees in excess of a reasonable
amount, . . . " and "any costs incurred by the contractor which are
excessive and unreasonable." "Excessive profits are those in excess
of reasonable profits."
Spaulding v. Douglas Aircraft Co.,
154 F.2d 419, 423.
The following, somewhat comparable, legislative specifications
are among those which have been held to state a sufficiently
definite standard for administrative action:
"Just and reasonable" rates for sales of natural gas,
Federal Power Comm'n v. Hope Gas Co., 320 U.
S. 591,
320 U. S.
600-601; "public interest, convenience, or necessity" in
establishing rules and regulations under the Federal Communications
Act,
National Broadcasting Co. v. United States,
319 U. S. 190,
319 U. S.
225-226; prices yielding a "fair return" or the "fair
value" of property,
Sunshine Coal Co. v. Adkins,
310 U. S. 381,
310 U. S.
397-398; "unfair methods of competition" distinct from
offenses defined under the common law,
Federal Trade Comm'n v.
Keppel & Bro., 291 U. S. 304,
291 U. S.
311-312,
291 U. S. 314;
"just and reasonable" rates for the services of commission men,
Tagg Bros. & Morehead v. United States, 280 U.
S. 420,
280 U. S. 431,
and "fair and reasonable" rent for premises, with final
determination in the courts,
Levy Leasing Co. v. Siegel,
258 U. S. 242,
258 U. S. 243,
258 U. S. 248,
258 U. S. 250.
3. Methods Prescribed and Limitations
Imposed
on the Administration
The methods prescribed and the limitations imposed by Congress
upon the contemplated administrative action
Page 334 U. S. 787
are helpful. The Act is confined to the duration of the war or
to a short time thereafter. Renegotiation, from the beginning, has
been confined to the elimination of excessive profits from
contracts and subcontracts with certain governmental departments
directly related to the conduct of the war. By subsequent
amendments, the scope of the Act was limited by further express
exceptions and exemptions. The administrative officials to whom
authority was granted were clearly specified, and were all
officials of high governmental responsibility. Each was required to
act whenever he found excessive profits existed under the
conditions defined. The provisions for a redetermination of excess
profits by the Tex Court
de novo are discussed later. They
likewise imposed important limitations on the allowable
recoveries.
Accordingly, we hold that the delegation of authority here in
issue, under the Renegotiation Act in its several forms, was a
constitutional definition of administrative authority, and not an
unconstitutional delegation of legislative power.
THE RENEGOTIATION OF WAR CONTRACTS WAS NOT A
TAKING OF PRIVATE PROPERTY FOR PUBLIC USE.
The recovery by the Government of excessive profits received or
receivable upon war contracts is in the nature of the regulation of
maximum prices under war contracts or the collection of excess
profits taxes, rather than the requisitioning or condemnation of
private property for public use. One of the primary purposes of the
renegotiation plan for redetermining the allowable profit on
contracts for the production of war goods by private persons was
the avoidance of requisitioning or condemnation proceedings leading
to governmental ownership and operation of the plants producing war
materials. A refund to the Government of excessive earnings of
railroad carriers under the recapture provisions of § 15a of
the
Page 334 U. S. 788
Transportation Act of 1920, 41 Stat. 488, has been sustained by
this Court.
Dayton-Goose Creek R. Co. v. United States,
263 U. S. 456. The
collection of renegotiated excessive profits on a war subcontract
also is not in the nature of a penalty, and is not a deprivation of
a subcontractor of his property without due process of law in
violation of the Fifth Amendment.
THE RENEGOTIATION ACT, INCLUDING ITS AMENDMENTS,
HAS BEEN PROPERLY APPLIED TO CONTRACTS ENTERED INTO
BEFORE ITS AND THEIR RESPECTIVE ENACTMENTS
The excessive profits claimed by the Government in these cases
arose out of contracts between the respective petitioners and other
private parties. None arose out of contracts made directly with the
Government itself. All the contracts, however, related to subject
matter within the meaning of the Renegotiation Act in its
respective stages. The contracts all were of the type which came to
be known, under the Act, as subcontracts. All, except four in the
Lichter case, were entered into after the enactment of the
Original Renegotiation Act, April 28, 1942, and, on those four, the
final payment had not been made by that date. We therefore do not
have before us an issue as to the recovery of excessive profits on
any contract made directly with the Government nor on any
subcontract upon which final payment had been made before April 28,
1942, although relating to war goods made or services performed
after the declaration of war, December 8, 1941. Congress limited
the Renegotiation Act to future contracts, and to contracts already
existing but pursuant to which final payments had not been made
prior to the date of enactment of the original Act. These included
contracts made directly with the Government, and also subcontracts
such as those here involved.
Page 334 U. S. 789
We uphold the right of the Government to recover excessive
profits on each of the contracts before us. This right exists as to
such excessive profits whether they arose from contracts made
before or after the passage of the Act. A contract is equally a war
contract in either event, and, if uncompleted to the extent that
the final payment has not yet been made, the recovery of excessive
profits derived from it may be authorized as has been done
here.
While the Original Renegotiation Act may not have expressly
defined some of the contracts before us as subcontracts, the Act of
October 21, 1942, in its amendments effective as of April 28, 1942,
did so. Accordingly, the contracts entered into between private
parties in the
Alexander case between April 28, 1942, and
October 21, 1942, come within the scope of the Renegotiation
Act.
THE TAX COURT REMEDY
Before the amendments incorporated in it on February 25, 1944,
by the Revenue Act of 1943 (the so-called Second Renegotiation
Act), the Original Renegotiation Act, as theretofore amended, did
not provide expressly for a review or redetermination of the
initial determination of the excess profits authorized to be made
by the respective Secretaries. The 1944 amendments added not merely
an express statement of factors to be taken into consideration in
determining excessive profits (§ 403(a)(4)(A)), [
Footnote 39] but also created a War
Contracts Price Adjustment Board (§ 403(d)(1)) [
Footnote 40] to make such determinations in
the future. Also, it provided expressly for petitions to be filed
with the Tax Court to secure redeterminations of the orders of such
Board. § 403(e)(1). [
Footnote 41] It expressly
Page 334 U. S. 790
stated that
"A proceeding before the Tax Court to finally determine the
amount, if any, of excessive profits shall not be treated as a
proceeding to review the determination of the Board, but shall be
treated as a proceeding
de novo."
§ 403(e)(1). It provided also that,
"In the absence of the filing of a petition with The Tax Court
of the United States under the provisions of and within the time
limit prescribed in subsection (e)(1), such order [of the Board]
shall be final and conclusive, and shall not be subject to review
or redetermination by any court or other agency."
§ 403(c)(1). [
Footnote
42] All of the determinations in the case before us were made
after February 25, 1944, and those in the
Pournall case
were made on behalf of the Board. The above procedure under §
403(e)(1) accordingly was open to the petitioners in the
Pournall case, but they did not file a petition with the
Tax Court.
In addition to the above procedures affecting future
determinations of excessive profits to be made by the Board, the
Second Renegotiation Act also made express provisions, in §
403(e)(2), [
Footnote 43] for
a redetermination by the Tax Court of excessive profits determined
to exist by the respective Secretaries. These provisions applied
first to any determinations made by a Secretary prior to February
25, 1944, with respect to a fiscal year ending before July 1, 1943.
In those instances, a petition for redetermination by the Tax Court
was permitted to be filed within 90 days after February 25, 1944.
We have no such case before us. These provisions applied also to
any determination made by a Secretary after February 25, 1944, with
respect to a fiscal year ending before July 1, 1943. In that event,
a petition for redetermination by the Tax Court was permitted to be
filed within 90 days after the date of the
Page 334 U. S. 791
redetermination. We have such situations in the
Lichter
and
Alexander cases.
No petitions were filed with the Tax Court in any of the cases
before us, and the time for doing so has expired. Accordingly,
here, as in
Aircraft & Diesel Corp. v. Hirsch,
331 U. S. 752,
331 U. S. 771,
we do not have before us, and we do not express an opinion upon,
the finality which would have attached to a redetermination by the
Tax Court if such a redetermination had been sought and made. We
have only the situations presented by the respective failures of
the petitioners to resort to the Tax Court in the face of the
express statutory provisions made for such administrative
relief.
As to the effect of the statute and of the course of action
taken, we hold that the statute did afford procedural due process
to the respective petitioners, but that none of them made use of
the procedure so provided for them. Consistent with the primary
need for speed and definiteness in these matters, the original
administrative determinations by the respective Secretaries or by
the Board were intended primarily as renegotiations in the course
of which the interested parties were to have an opportunity to
reach an agreement with the Government, or in connection with which
the Government, in the absence of such an agreement, might announce
its unilateral determination of the amount of excessive profit
claimed by the United States. This initial proceeding was not
required to be a formal proceeding producing a record for review by
some other authority. In lieu of such a procedure for review, the
Second Renegotiation Act provided an adequate opportunity for a
redetermination of the excessive profits, if any,
de novo
by the Tax Court.
"The demands of due process do not require a hearing at the
initial stage or at any particular point or at more than one point
in an administrative proceeding so long as the requisite
Page 334 U. S. 792
hearing is held before the final order becomes effective."
Opp Cotton Mills v. Administrator, 312 U.
S. 126,
312 U. S.
152-153.
We uphold the decisions below and the contentions of the
Government to the effect that the statutory provision thus made for
a petition to the Tax Court was not, in any case before us, an
optional or alternative procedure. It provided the one and only
procedure to secure a redetermination of the excessive profits
which had been determined to exist by the orders of the respective
Secretaries or of the Board in the cases before us. Failure of the
respective petitioners to exhaust that procedure has left them with
no right to present here issues such as those as to coverage and
the amount of profits which might have been presented there.
Accordingly, there is excluded from our consideration in this
proceeding the contention in the
Lichter case that the
petitioners' subcontracts were exempt from renegotiation on the
ground that they were subcontracts under prime contracts with a
Department of the Government, and had been awarded to them as the
result of competitive bidding for the construction of buildings and
facilities. There is excluded also, for example, the contention in
the
Pournall case that petitioners' contracts which were
for amounts under $100,000 each were not subject to renegotiation.
Likewise, in the
Alexander case, there is excluded the
petitioner's contention that it had not made excessive profits
within the meaning of the statute, and that its contracts for
processing wool were not "subcontracts" within the meaning of the
Original Renegotiation Act.
For these reasons, we uphold the constitutionality of the
Renegotiation Act on its face as authority for the recovery of
excessive profits as ordered in the three respective cases before
us, and we hold that the respective petitioners do not have the
right to present questions
Page 334 U. S. 793
as to the coverage of that Act, as to the amount of excessive
profits adjudged to be due from them, or as to other comparable
issues which might have been presented by them to the Tax Court
upon a timely petition to that court for a redetermination of
excessive profits, if any.
Accordingly, in each of the cases before us, the judgment of the
Circuit Court of Appeals is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE MURPHY concurs in the result in these cases.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON concurs in the result in the
Pournall case, but dissents in the
Lichter and
Alexander cases.
* Together with No. 74,
Pournall et al. v. United
States, on certiorari to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit, and No. 95,
Alexander Wool Combing Co. v. United
States, on certiorari to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the
First Circuit, argued November 21, 1947.
[
Footnote 1]
The Renegotiation Act, including its amendments, is here treated
as consisting of:
I. Section 403, Sixth Supplemental National Defense
Appropriation Act, 1942, approved April 28, 1942, c. 247, 56 Stat.
226, 245, 246. Sometimes this is called the Original or First
Renegotiation Act. For relevant excerpts from its text,
see 334
U.S. 742appi|>Appendix I,
infra.
II. Title VIII, Renegotiation of War Contracts, Revenue Act of
1942, approved October 21, 1942, c. 619, 56 Stat. 798, 982-985, 26
U.S.C.
Internal Revenue Acts Beginning 1940, Revenue Act
of 1942, § 801, p. 376. For relevant excerpts from its text,
see 334
U.S. 742appii|>Appendix II,
infra.
III. Section 1, Military Appropriation Act, 1944, approved July
1, 1943, c. 185, 57 Stat. 347, 348.
IV. An Act to prevent the payment of excessive fees or
compensation in connection with the negotiation of war contracts,
approved July 14, 1943, c. 239, 57 Stat. 564, 565.
V. Title VII, Renegotiation of War Contracts, and Title VIII,
Repricing of War Contracts, Revenue Act of 1943, passed
notwithstanding the objections of the President, February 25, 1944,
c. 63, 58 Stat. 21, 78-93, 50 U.S.C. (Supp. V, 1946) §§
1191, 1192; also 26 U.S.C.
Internal Revenue Acts Beginning
1940, Revenue Act of 1943, §§ 701 and 801, pp. 491
and 508. For relevant excerpts from its text,
see
334
U.S. 742appiii|>Appendix III,
infra. Sometimes this
is called the Second Renegotiation Act. Section 701(b) of the
foregoing Chapter 63, added to § 403 of the Sixth Supplemental
National Defense Appropriation Act, 1942, a final subsection as
follows: "(1) This section may be cited as the
Renegotiation
Act.'" 58 Stat. 90. Section 701(d) also provided that this
subsection (1) of § 403, and certain others, "shall be
effective as if such amendments and subsections had been a part of
section 403 of such Act of the date of its enactment." 58 Stat.
92.
VI. An Act to extend through December 31, 1945, the termination
date under the Renegotiation Act, approved June 30, 1945, c. 210,
59 Stat. 294, 295, 50 U.S.C. (Supp. V, 1946) § 1191.
[
Footnote 2]
In addition to the opinions of the Circuit Courts of Appeals and
District Courts cited in the text,
see Ring Construction Corp.
v. Secretary of War, 8 T.C. 1070;
Cohen v. Secretary of
War, 7 T.C. 1002;
Stein Bros. Mfg. Co. v. Secretary of
War, 7 T.C. 863. For discussions of the Renegotiation Act by
this Court, stopping short of passing upon its constitutionality,
see Aircraft & Diesel Corp. v. Hirsch, 331 U.
S. 752, and
Macauley v. Waterman S.S. Corp.,
327 U. S. 540.
[
Footnote 3]
Among the many other provisions implementing the Congress and
the President with powers to meet the varied demands of war, the
following obviously command attention:
"We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more
perfect Union, . . . provide for the common defence, . . . and
secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do
ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of
America."
U.S.Const. Preamble.
"The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties,
Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common
Defence and general Welfare of the United States; . . ."
"
* * * *"
"To declare War . . ."
"
* * * *"
"To provide and maintain a Navy;"
"
* * * *"
"To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for
carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers. . . ."
Id., Art. I, § 8.
"The President shall be Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy
of the United States. . . ."
Id., Art. II, § 2, Cl.
1.
Madison said in The Federalist, Number XLI -- General View of
the Powers Conferred by the Constitution:
"Security against foreign danger is one of the primitive objects
of civil society. It is an avowed and essential object of the
American Union. The powers requisite for attaining it must be
effectually confided to the federal councils."
Hamilton said in The Federalist, Number XXIII -- The Necessity
of a Government as Energetic as the One Proposed to the
Preservation of the Union:
"The circumstances that endanger the safety of nations are
infinite, and, for this reason, no constitutional shackles can
wisely be imposed on the power to which the care of it is
committed. This power ought to be coextensive with all the possible
combinations of such circumstances, and ought to be under the
direction of the same councils which are appointed to preside over
the common defence."
[
Footnote 4]
"The Constitution grants to Congress power 'to raise and support
Armies,' 'to provide and maintain a Navy,' and to make all laws
necessary and proper to carry these powers into execution. Under
this authority, Congress can draft men for battle service.
Selective Draft Law Cases, 245 U. S.
366. Its power to draft business organizations to
support the fighting men who risk their lives can be no less."
United States v. Bethlehem Steel Corp., 315 U.
S. 289,
315 U. S.
305.
In writing of the power of Congress to pass a Conscription Act,
President Lincoln said, with characteristic clearness:
"Whether a power can be implied when it is not expressed has
often been the subject of controversy; but this is the first case
in which the degree of effrontery has been ventured upon of denying
a power which is plainly and distinctly written down in the
Constitution. The Constitution declares that 'The Congress shall
have Power . . . to raise and support Armies, but no Appropriation
of Money to that Use shall be for a longer Term than two Years.'
The whole scope of the conscription act is 'to raise and support
armies.' There is nothing else in it. . . ."
". . . Do you admit that the power is given to raise and support
armies, and yet insist that, by this act, Congress has not
exercised the power in a constitutional mode? -- has not done the
thing in the right way? Who is to judge of this? The Constitution
gives Congress the power, but it does not prescribe the mode, or
expressly declare who shall prescribe it. In such case, Congress
must prescribe the mode, or relinquish the power. There is no
alternative. . . . The power is given fully, completely,
unconditionally. It is not a power to raise armies if State
authorities consent; nor if the men to compose the armies are
entirely willing; but it is a power to raise and support armies
given to Congress by the Constitution, without an 'if.'"
9 Nivolay and Hay, Works of Abraham Lincoln 75-77 (1894).
The foregoing quotation is from an opinion by President Lincoln,
which was not actually issued or published by him but which was
quoted to the above extent by Honorable Charles Evans Hughes, of
New York, in his address on "War Powers Under the Constitution"
before the American Bar Association, September 5, 11 7, 42
A.B.A.Rep. 232, 234-235.
The draft was put in force both by the Union and by the
Confederacy during the Civil War, and its validity was sustained by
the courts in both North and South.
"The power of coercing the citizen to render military service is
indeed a transcendent power in the hands of any government; but, so
far from being inconsistent with liberty, it is essential to its
preservation."
Burroughs v. Peyton, 16 Grat. 470, 473, 57 Va. 470,
473.
See cases cited in 42 A.B.A.Rep. 234 n. 1,
and
see Selective Draft Law Cases, 245 U.
S. 366;
Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 197 U. S.
11,
197 U. S. 29;
In re Grimley, 137 U. S. 147,
137 U. S.
153.
[
Footnote 5]
"Our own objectives are clear: the objective of smashing the
militarism imposed by war lords upon their enslaved peoples; the
objective of liberating the subjugated nations; the objective of
establishing and securing freedom of speech, freedom of religion,
freedom from want, and freedom from fear everywhere in the
world."
"We shall not stop short of these objectives, nor shall we be
satisfied merely to gain them and call it a day. I know that I
speak for the American people -- and I have good reason to believe
I speak also for all the other peoples who fight with us -- when I
say that this time, we are determined not only to win the war, but
also to maintain the security of the peace which will follow."
"But modern methods of warfare make it a task not only of
shooting and fighting, but an even more urgent one of working and
producing."
"Victory requires the actual weapons of war and the means of
transporting them to a dozen points of combat."
"It will not be sufficient for us and the other united nations
to produce a slightly superior supply of munitions to that of
Germany, Japan, Italy, and the stolen industries in the countries
which they have overrun."
"The superiority of the united nations in munitions and ships
must be overwhelming -- so overwhelming that the Axis nations can
never hope to catch up with it. In order to attain this
overwhelming superiority the United States must build planes and
tanks and guns and ships to the utmost limit of our national
capacity. We have the ability and capacity to produce arms not only
for our own forces, but also for the armies, navies, and air forces
fighting on our side."
"And our overwhelming superiority of armament must be adequate
to put weapons of war at the proper time into the hands of those
men in the conquered nations who stand ready to seize the first
opportunity to revolt against their German and Japanese oppressors,
and against the traitors in their own ranks, known by the already
infamous name of 'Quislings.' As we get guns to the patriots in
those lands, they too will fire shots heard 'round the world."
"This production of ours in the United States must be raised far
above its present levels, even though it will mean the dislocation
of the lives and occupations of millions of our own people. We must
raise our sights all along the production line. Let no man say it
cannot be done. It must be done -- and we have undertaken to do
it."
"I have just sent a letter of directive to the appropriate
departments and agencies of our Government ordering that immediate
steps be taken: "
"1. To increase our production rate of airplanes so rapidly that
in this year, 1942, we shall produce 60,000 planes, 10,000 more
than the goal set a year and a half ago. This includes 45,000
combat planes -- bombers, dive-bombers, pursuit planes. The rate of
increase will be continued, so that next year, 1943, we shall
produce 125,000 airplanes, including 100,000 combat planes."
"2. To increase our production rate of tanks so rapidly that, in
this year, 1942, we shall produce 45,000 tanks, and to continue
that increase so that next year, 1943, we shall produce 75,000
tanks."
"3. To increase our production rate of antiaircraft guns so
rapidly that in this year, 1942, we shall produce 20,000 of them,
and to continue that increase so that next year, 1943, we shall
produce 35,000 antiaircraft guns."
"4. To increase our production rate of merchant ships so rapidly
that in this year, 1942, we shall build 8,000,000 dead-weight tons,
as compared with a 1941 production of 1,100,000. We shall continue
that increase so that next year, 1943, we shall build 10,000,000
tons."
"These figures and similar figures for a multitude of other
implements of war will give the Japanese and Nazis a little idea of
just what they accomplished in the attack on Pearl Harbor."
"Our task is hard -- our task is unprecedented -- and the time
is short. We must strain every existing armament-producing facility
to the utmost. We must convert every available plant and tool to
war production. That goes all the way from the greatest plants to
the smallest -- from the huge automobile industry to the village
machine shop."
"Production for war is based on men and women -- the human hands
and brains which collectively we call labor. Our workers stand
ready to work long hours; to turn out more in a day's work; to keep
the wheels turning and the fires burning 24 hours a day, and 7 days
a week. They realize well that on the speed and efficiency of their
work depend the lives of their sons and their brothers on the
fighting fronts."
"Production for war is based on metals and raw materials --
steel, copper, rubber, aluminum, zinc, tin. Greater and greater
quantities of them will have to be diverted to war purposes.
Civilian use of them will have to be cut further and still further
-- and, in many cases, completely eliminated."
"War costs money. So far, we have hardly even begun to pay for
it. We have devoted only 15 percent of our national income to
national defense. As will appear in my Budget Message tomorrow, our
war program for the coming fiscal year will cost $56,000,000,000
or, in other words, more than one-half of the estimated annual
national income. This means taxes and bonds, and bonds and taxes.
It means cutting luxuries and other nonessentials. In a word, it
means an all-out war by individual effort and family effort in a
united country."
"Only this all-out scale of production will hasten the ultimate
all-out victory. Speed will count. Lost ground can always be
regained -- lost time, never. Speed will save lives; speed will
save this Nation, which is in peril; speed will save our freedom
and civilization -- and slowness has never been an American
characteristic."
88 Cong.Rec. 32, 33-34 (1942).
[
Footnote 6]
"Ever since the beginning of the last war, there has been a
constant effort to find an effective method of controlling war
profits without impeding war production. The renegotiation law is
the latest product of such efforts. To obtain speed, we have had to
use contracting methods that would never have been tolerated in
peacetime. We granted cost-plus-fixed fee contracts where the
specifications were not known or had to be subject to numerous
changes, or where there was no time to prepare detailed
specifications. We also granted lump-sum contracts for many items
which had never before been made in quantity, and for which
estimates of cost were mere guesses. This was particularly true of
the billions of dollars of war contracts which were hastily
'shoveled' out early in January 1942."
"Is the renegotiation law a necessary and desirable method of
counteracting the wasteful effects of such necessary practices in
early wartime procurement? Is it being administered in such a way
as to give effect to the statutory intent? What changes, if any,
are needed?"
"As to the necessity and desirability of the renegotiation
law:"
"(1) Because of the wartime need for rapid procurement of
materials of war, new materials with which there has been no
previous manufacturing experience, and other articles previously
manufactured only in relatively small quantities, some procedure
for subsequent price adjustment is necessary and desirable if
excessive war profits and costs are to be avoided."
"(2) Taxes alone will not do the job, because (a) higher
corporate tax rates are likely to encourage higher costs and
discourage economical production; (b) no scheme of taxation has
been devised which is sufficiently flexible to provide an incentive
for efficient low-cost production; (c) a profit percentage which
would fairly reward one war contractor with one type of financial
structure would bankrupt a second contractor with a different
financial setup, and would provide inordinately excessive profits
for a third contractor with a still different financial
problem."
"(3) War contractors in most cases can protect themselves
against loss by escalator clauses and other contract provisions for
contingencies. The people can obtain protection in many cases only
through some procedure such as renegotiation."
"(4) Experience has shown 'cost-plus' contracts to be worse than
worthless in the effort to prevent excessive costs. They strongly
tend to increase costs, instead of the reverse."
"The administration of the renegotiation law during the first 10
months of its existence has been characterized by two significant
accomplishments:"
"(1) The assembly in Government of an unusual group of able,
conscientious, and patriotic lawyers, accountants, and businessmen
as administrators of renegotiation;"
"(2) The gradual education of war contractors as to the reasons
for and importance of their adopting a policy of tailoring their
own profits to levels which, in their own special situations, are
fair both to them and to the Government."
"On the other hand, the administration of the renegotiation law
and the law itself are properly subject to certain constructive
criticisms:"
"(1) Substantial variations in administrative policy and
attitude still exist among the four departments charged with
responsibility for renegotiation, although this condition has been
noticeably improved in recent weeks. The existence of such a
condition has created wholly unnecessary confusion, uncertainty,
and misunderstanding among contractors."
"(2) Results of Navy renegotiations to date justify an inference
that, in its early proceedings, the Navy Price Adjustment Board may
have been too strongly influenced by a desire to achieve the same
kind of mathematical exactness which results from a 'cost plus a
percentage of cost' contract, a result which is inconsistent with
the flexibility which was the basic purpose of the renegotiation
law."
"(3) Army administration has been rendered unnecessarily
cumbersome by use of military channels in the handling of an
essentially business and financial enterprise."
"(4) The principles and results of renegotiation have been
shrouded with entirely too much secrecy, not only as to the public,
but as to the renegotiators themselves, causing many war
contractors to be distracted by wholly unwarranted but nevertheless
natural fears of the unknown."
"(5) In some cases, the cost audits incident to renegotiation
and taxation have been unnecessarily duplicatory."
"(6) It is impossible to recover every last dollar of excessive
war profits without unnecessarily interfering with war production,
and overzealous administration of the vast powers delegated by this
law could be seriously detrimental to war procurement."
S.Rep. No.10, Part 5, 78th Cong., 1st Sess. 1-3 (1943).
[
Footnote 7]
"5. The necessary result of this combination of circumstances is
that the war procuring agencies cannot use normal methods of
procurement. The pressing need for speed requires the abandonment
of drawn-out negotiation and the careful surveys of all relevant
factors which sound purchasing would otherwise require. Competition
necessarily wanes, and no longer offers an adequate guide to the
prices which should be paid. Above all, the forecasting of costs of
production becomes, in large measure, a matter of informed
guessing, rather than of real cost analysis. This is true in the
case of new products, new plants, and new producers; it is likewise
true, though perhaps in lesser degree, wherever the quantities to
be manufactured are sharply increased over pre-war amounts.
Accordingly, advance prices quoted in good faith by manufacturers
in a large number of cases have little relation to costs actually
experienced in the course of production. Furthermore, many
manufacturers feel unable to quote firm prices without including
reserves to cover many contingencies the occurrence of which might
skyrocket their costs, and so overturn all their estimates."
"6. These were the conditions of wartime procurement, after
December 7, 1941, and the War Department had to force its
procurement activities into their mold. Efforts were made, of
course, to develop contractual devices which would minimize the
paramount difficulty in estimating production costs. The 'cost plus
fixed fee' contract was used where unavoidable, but this form has
the disadvantage of removing financial incentives to efficiency and
of imposing a heavy burden of auditing upon the Government and the
contractor. Escalator clauses, permitting prices to be adjusted
according to fluctuations in indices of labor and material costs,
were also used, but proved unworkable. Letters of intent, under
which manufacture was commenced prior to the negotiation of a
formal contract, helped to speed production, but could not, of
course, solve the ultimate problem of decreasing costs and
preventing excessive profits."
"7. Shortly after the declarations of war, both the legislative
and the executive branches of the Government realized that
excessive wartime profits were certain to accrue unless
countermeasures were taken. The evil effect of such wartime
excessive profit on the morale of the fighting forces and the
civilian population, as well as the unnecessary financial burden
upon the Government, could not be ignored. The example of the last
war was still fresh. Many war contractors realized the dangers and
inequities resulting from such excessive profit, and some of them
made refunds of excessive profits or voluntarily reduced their
prices. In the spring of 1942, the War Department developed cost
analysis units to check, so far as practicable, on production
costs, and set up a price adjustment board to negotiate with
contractors for voluntary price reductions and refunds of past
payments. Tentative policies as to what profits were excessive were
established, and meetings with contractors had. At the same time,
there came into use contract clauses providing for the
renegotiation or redetermination of contract prices after an
initial period of production had laid a basis for the proper
estimation of costs. We hoped that these means would keep
incentives to efficiency alive and, at the same time, would tend to
eliminate undue profits such as were then coming to light."
"8. The Congress apparently felt, however, that these
contractual measures, resting as they did upon the voluntary
cooperation of a relatively small number of war contractors, did
not provide enough certainty that excessive profits would be
eliminated. The Vinson-Trammel Act, limiting profits on aircraft
and ship construction, had been repealed in 1940, but an effort was
made to revive it. In March, 1942, the War Department and the War
Production Board opposed such legislation on the ground that a flat
percentage profit limitation would impede production and would be
unfair to many contractors, and too generous to others. After the
Case amendment imposing such a flat percentage limitation on
profits from war contracts had been adopted by the House of
Representatives late in March, 1942, the armed services and the War
Production Board offered a substitute proposal giving statutory
authority to the process of voluntary renegotiation which had been
developing. Congress adopted the principle of renegotiation with
which the armed services were in accord (rather than the principle
of a flat percentage limitation of profits), and it also endowed
the procuring agencies with power to determine excessive profits
when no bilateral agreement could be reached with the contractor. I
believe that this addition by the Congress of the power of
unilateral action was a wise and a necessary one, and that, without
it, renegotiation would not have accomplished anything like the
results that have been achieved."
"
* * * *"
"12. . . . Some conception of the vast scope of the procurement
activity of the armed services after the attack on Pearl Harbor can
be gained from the fact that the total expenditures of the War and
Navy Departments for the one fiscal year ending June 30, 1942
($22,905,000,000) considerably exceeded the total military and
naval expenditures of the Government from 1789 through the end of
World War I."
Affidavit of Robert P. Patterson, Under Secretary of War, sworn
to August 3, 1945.
[
Footnote 8]
See note 1
supra.
[
Footnote 9]
McKinley v. United States, 249 U.
S. 397 (regulations of local activities near federal
military stations);
Northern Pacific R. Co. v. North
Dakota, 250 U. S. 135
(seizure and operation of railroads);
Hamilton v. Kentucky
Distilleries and W. Co., 251 U. S. 146
(local liquor traffic);
Central Union Trust Co. v. Garvan,
254 U. S. 554
(seizure of enemy property);
Hirabayashi v. United States,
320 U. S. 81
(curfew regulations);
Yakus v. United States, 321 U.
S. 414 (Emergency Price Control Act);
Bowles v.
Willingham, 321 U. S. 503
(rent control), and
Korematsu v. United States,
323 U. S. 214
(exclusion of civilians from west coast military area).
In
Hirabayashi v. United States, supra, this Court said
(p.
320 U. S.
93):
"The war power of the national government is 'the power to wage
war successfully.'
See Charles Evans Hughes, War Powers
Under the Constitution, 42 A.B.A.Rep. 232, 238. It extends to every
matter and activity so related to war as substantially to affect
its conduct and progress. The power is not restricted to the
winning of victories in the field and the repulse of enemy forces.
. . . Since the Constitution commits to the Executive and to
Congress the exercise of the war power in all the vicissitudes and
conditions of warfare, it has necessarily given them wide scope for
the exercise of judgment and discretion in determining the nature
and extent of the threatened injury or danger and in the selection
of the means for resisting it. . . . Where, as they did here, the
conditions call for the exercise of judgment and discretion and for
the choice of means by those branches of the Government on which
the Constitution has placed the responsibility of warmaking, it is
not for any court to sit in review of the wisdom of their action or
substitute its judgment for theirs."
[
Footnote 10]
"20. At the beginning of the limited emergency in 1939, the only
applicable statutory limits on profits from the sale of military or
naval supplies were contained in the Vinson-Trammel Act of March
27, 1934, as amended (relating to naval vessels) and the Merchant
Marine Act of 1936, as amended (relating to construction of
merchant ships). The Act of April 3, 1939 extended percentage
profit limitation to cover Army aircraft contracts. The percentage
of profit allowed to contractors was lowered to approximately 8% by
the Act of June 28, 1940, but the Second Supplemental National
Defense Appropriation Act, 1941, enacted September 9, 1940,
provided that as to aircraft the old limitation of 12% was to
prevail."
"21. . . . Accordingly, the Second Revenue Act of 1940,
containing the excess profits tax, suspended the profit limitation
statutes applicable to Army and Navy contracts entered into after
December 31, 1939, or uncompleted on that date by contractors and
subcontractors subject to the new excess profits tax. Thereafter,
until the passage of the Sixth Supplemental National Defense
Appropriation Act of 1942, the only statutory provisions concerning
war or defense contracts were those of the excess profits tax."
Affidavit of Robert P. Patterson, Under Secretary of War, sworn
to August 3, 1945.
And see Hensel and McClung, Profit Limitation Controls
Prior to the Present War, 10 Law & Contemp.Prob. 187
(1943-1944).
[
Footnote 11]
The following significant congressional hearings were publicly
held:
Hearings before the Senate Committee on Finance on § 403 of
Pub.L. No.528, 77th Cong., 2d Sess. (September 22 and 23,
1942);
Hearings before a Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on
Finance on § 403 of Pub.L. No.528, 77th Cong., 2d Sess.
(September 29 and 30, 1942);
Hearings before the Subcommittee of the House Committee on
Appropriations on Mil.Est. App.Bill for 1944, 78th Cong., 1st Sess.
483-518, 571-580 (June 10, 1943);
Hearings before the Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on
Appropriations on H.R.2906 (Mil.Est. App.Bill for 1944), 78th
Cong., 1st Sess. 22, 30-33, 125-138, 150-151 (1943);
Hearings before the House Committee on Naval Affairs, pursuant
to H.R.Res.30, Vol. 2, 78th Cong., 1st Sess. (June 10-30,
1943);
Hearings before the House Committee on Ways and Means on
H.R.2324, 2698 and 3015 (Renegotiation of War Contracts), 78th
Cong., 1st Sess. (September 9-23, 1943);
Hearings before the Senate Committee on Finance on H.R.3687
(Revenue Act of 1943), 78th Cong., 1st Sess. 49, 388-392, 402-424,
443-452, 465, 469, 598-601, 620-629, 669-684, 690-696, 925-926,
987-1111, 1121-1132 (November 29-December 15, 1943);
Hearings before the House Committee on Ways and Means on
H.R.2628 (extension of termination date of Renegotiation Act), 79th
Cong., 1st Sess. (April 12-16, 1945).
In addition, private hearings and interviews appear to have been
had by Congressional Committees.
The following major reports on the operation of the
Renegotiation Act were issued by Congressional Committees:
H.R.Rep. No.733, 78th Cong., 1st Sess. (October 7, 1943). Report
of the Committee on Naval Affairs, pursuant to H.R.Res.30
(Renegotiation of War Contracts);
Sen.Rep. No.10, Part 5, 78th Cong., 1st Sess. (March 30, 1943).
Additional Report of the Special Senate Committee Investigating the
National Defense Program (Renegotiation of War Contracts);
Sen.Rep. No.10, Part 16, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 40-64, 192-199
(March 4, 1944). Additional Report of the Special Senate Committee
Investigating the National Defense Program (Third Annual
Report);
H.R.Rep. No.871, 78th Cong., 1st Sess. 75-90 (November 18,
1943), on H.R.3687 (Revenue Bill of 1943);
Sen.Rep. No.627, 78th Cong., 1st Sess. 98-119 (December 22,
1943), on H.R.3687 (Revenue Bill of 1943);
H.R.Rep. No. 1079, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 34-39, 76-88 (February
4, 1944), on H.R.3687 (Conference Report on Revenue Act of
1943).
See also:
Renegotiation of War Contracts -- Law, Debates, and Other
Legislative Materials -- Compiled for the use of the House
Committee on Ways and Means, 78th Cong., 1st Sess. (1943);
Data on Renegotiation of Contracts, Senate Committee on Finance
(December 9, 1943).
[
Footnote 12]
In its brief filed jointly in the present cases the Government
has submitted the following statement as to the results of
renegotiation:
"11.
The results of renegotiation: We are advised by
the War Contracts Price Adjustment Board that, as of June 30, 1947,
118,101 contractors had been assigned for renegotiation with
respect to 1942 through 1946 fiscal years, and contracts
aggregating over $190,000,000,000 (excluding contractors eliminated
because of exemptions or noncoverage) were subjected to
renegotiation. Of the total assignments, 115,535 (or 97.8%) were
completed as of June 30, 1947. Out of the 115,535 completed
assignments, 85,037 (or 73.6%) resulted in cancellations or
clearances indicating that no excessive profits had been made or
that the contractor was found to be exempt from renegotiation;
28,889 (or 25%) resulted in bilateral refund agreements between the
Government and the contractor; 1,609 (or 1.4%) resulted in
unilateral determinations by the Departments or the War Contracts
Price Adjustment Board. Of the 30,498 assignments involving
determinations of excessive profits, 1,609 (or 5.28%) were
unilateral determinations and 28,889 (or 94.72%) were
bilateral."
"Also as of June 30, 1947, the gross recoveries through
renegotiation amounted to some $10,434,637,000, and the estimated
net recovery (after deduction of the federal tax credit allowed
contractors on renegotiation refunds) amounted to $3,130,391,000.
Of the total gross recoveries of $10,434,637,000, some $895,493,000
(or 8.58%) were involved in unilateral determinations, and the rest
were recovered by voluntary agreement."
[
Footnote 13]
See note 1
supra.
[
Footnote 14]
For relevant excerpts from its text,
see 334
U.S. 742appi|>Appendix I
infra.
[
Footnote 15]
For relevant excerpts from its text,
see 334
U.S. 742appii|>Appendix II
infra.
[
Footnote 16]
For relevant excerpts from its text,
see 334
U.S. 742appiii|>Appendix III
infra.
[
Footnote 17]
[
Footnote 18]
In the House of Representatives, the Case Amendment, providing,
in effect, a limitation of 6% on war profits was adopted without
debate. 88 Cong.Rec. 3139-3140 (1942). Before the Senate
Subcommittee on Appropriations, strong objection was made to this
provision by the representatives of the Government, and its
omission was recommended by the Senate Committee on Appropriations.
After ample consideration, it was omitted in the Act as passed. 88
Cong.Rec. 3378-3405; 3582-3599; 3647-3662; 3666 (1942),
and
see H.R.Rep. No.2030, 77th Cong., 2d Sess. 8-10 (1942).
[
Footnote 19]
Hearings before the Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on
Finance on Pub.L. No.528, 77th Cong., 2d Sess. 16-28 (September 29,
1942).
[
Footnote 20]
See 334
U.S. 742appiii|>Appendix III
infra.
[
Footnote 21]
See 334
U.S. 742appiii|>Appendix III
infra.
[
Footnote 22]
See 334
U.S. 742appi|>Appendix I
infra.
[
Footnote 23]
See 334
U.S. 742appi|>Appendix I
infra.
[
Footnote 24]
See 334
U.S. 742appi|>Appendix I
infra.
[
Footnote 25]
See 334
U.S. 742appii|>Appendix II
infra.
[
Footnote 26]
Published as part of the material submitted by Under Secretary
of War Robert P. Patterson at the Hearings on the Renegotiating of
Contracts before a Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on Finance
on § 403 of Pub.L. No. 528, 77th Cong., 2d Sess. 28, 34-43
(September 29, 1942).
[
Footnote 27]
See 334
U.S. 742appii|>Appendix II
infra.
[
Footnote 28]
See 334
U.S. 742appii|>Appendix II
infra.
[
Footnote 29]
See 334
U.S. 742appii|>Appendix II
infra.
[
Footnote 30]
See Hearings before the House Committee on Naval
Affairs, 78th Cong., 1st Sess., Vol. 2, pp. 469,
et seq.,
1025-1039, especially 1028-1029 (1943).
[
Footnote 31]
"The question remains: what may be deemed to be the force and
effect in time of war of the restrictive provisions contained in
the constitution with respect to the exercise of federal authority?
It is manifest at once that the great organs of the National
Government retain and perform their functions as the constitution
prescribes. Senators and Representatives are qualified and chosen
as provided in the Constitution, and the legislative power vested
in the Congress must be exercised in the required manner. The
President is still the constitutional Executive, elected in the
manner provided and subject to the restraints imposed upon his
office. The judicial power of the United States continues to be
vested in one Supreme Court and such inferior courts as Congress
has ordained. Again, apart from the provisions fixing the framework
of the Government, there are limitations which, by reason of their
express terms or by necessary implication, must be regarded as
applicable as well in war as in peace. Thus, one of the expressed
objects of the power granted to Congress 'to lay and collect Taxes,
Duties, Imposts, and Excises' is to 'provide for the common
defense,' and it cannot be doubted that taxes laid for this purpose
-- that is, to support the army and navy and to provide the means
for military operations -- must be laid subject to the
constitutional restrictions."
Address by Honorable Charles E. Hughes, of New York, on "War
Powers Under the Constitution," September 5, 1917, 42 A.B.A.Rep.
232, 241-242.
[
Footnote 32]
Billings v. United States, 232 U.
S. 261,
232 U. S.
282.
[
Footnote 33]
Brushaber v. Union Pacific R. Co., 240 U. S.
1,
240 U. S. 24.
[
Footnote 34]
"We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more
perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility,
provide for the common defence, promote the general
Welfare, and
secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and
our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for
the United States of America."
(Italics supplied.) U.S.Const. Preamble.
[
Footnote 35]
See notes
19 and
|
19 and S. 742fn26|>26,
supra.
[
Footnote 36]
See note 30
supra.
[
Footnote 37]
Excessive means:
"Characterized by, or exhibiting, excess; as:
a
Exceeding what is usual or proper; overmuch.
b Greater
than the usual amount or degree; exceptional; very great."
Webster's New International Dictionary, 2d ed. (1938).
[
Footnote 38]
See 334
U.S. 742appi|>Appendix I
infra.
[
Footnote 39]
See 334
U.S. 742appiii|>Appendix III
infra.
[
Footnote 40]
See 334
U.S. 742appiii|>Appendix III
infra.
[
Footnote 41]
See 334
U.S. 742appiii|>Appendix III
infra.
[
Footnote 42]
See 334
U.S. 742appiii|>Appendix III
infra.
[
Footnote 43]
See 334
U.S. 742appiii|>Appendix III
infra.
|
334
U.S. 742appi|
APPENDIX
I
Excerpts from the so-called Original or First Renegotiation Act,
§ 403, Sixth Supplemental National Defense Appropriation Act,
1942, approved April 28, 1942, c. 247, 56 Stat. 226, 245, 246.
"(a) . . . For the purposes of subsections (d) and (e) of this
section, the term 'contract' includes a subcontract and the term
'contractor' includes a subcontractor."
"(b) The Secretary of each Department is authorized and directed
to insert in any contract for an amount in excess of $100,000
hereafter made by such Department (1) a provision for the
renegotiation of the contract price at a period or periods when, in
the judgment of the Secretary, the profits can be determined with
reasonable certainty; (2) a provision for the retention by the
United States or the repayment to the United States of (A) any
amount of the contract price which is found as a result of such
renegotiation to represent excessive profits and (B) an amount of
the contract price equal to the amount of the reduction in the
contract price of any subcontract
Page 334 U. S. 794
under such contract pursuant to the renegotiation of such
subcontract as provided in clause (3) of this subsection, and (3) a
provision requiring the contractor to insert in each subcontract
for an amount in excess of $100,000 made by him under such contract
(A) a provision for the renegotiation by such Secretary and the
subcontractor of the contract price of the subcontract at a period
or periods when, in the judgment of the Secretary, the profits can
be determined with reasonable certainty, (B) a provision for the
retention by the United States or the repayment to the United
States of any amount of the contract price of the subcontract which
is found as a result of such renegotiation, to represent excessive
profits, and (C) a provision for relieving the contractor from any
liability to the subcontractor on account of any amount so retained
by or repaid to the United States."
"(c) The Secretary of each Department is authorized and
directed, whenever in his opinion excessive profits have been
realized, or are likely to be realized, from any contract with such
Department or from any subcontract thereunder, (1) to require the
contractor or subcontractor to renegotiate the contract price, (2)
to withhold from the contractor or subcontractor any amount of the
contract price which is found as a result of such renegotiation to
represent excessive profits, and (3) in case any amount of the
contract price found as a result of such renegotiation to represent
excessive profits shall have been paid to the contractor or
subcontractor, to recover such amount from such contractor or
subcontractor. Such contractor of subcontractor shall be deemed to
be indebted to the United States for any amount which such
Secretary is authorized to recover from such contractor or
subcontractor under this subsection, and such Secretary may bring
actions in the appropriate courts of the United States to recover
such amount on behalf of the United States. All amounts recovered
under this subsection shall be covered into the Treasury as
miscellaneous receipts. This subsection shall be applicable to all
contracts and subcontracts hereafter made and to all contracts and
subcontracts heretofore made, whether or not such contracts or
subcontracts contain a renegotiation or recapture clause, provided
that final payment pursuant to such contract or subcontract has not
been made prior to the date of enactment of this Act."
"(d) In renegotiating a contract price or determining excessive
profits for the purposes of this section, the Secretaries of the
respective Departments shall not make any allowance for any
salaries, bonuses, or other compensation paid by a contractor to
its officers or employees in excess of a reasonable amount, nor
shall they make
Page 334 U. S. 795
allowance for any excessive reserves set up by the contractor or
for any costs incurred by the contractor which are excessive and
unreasonable. For the purpose of ascertaining whether such
unreasonable compensation has been or is being paid, or whether
such excessive reserves have been or are being set up, or whether
any excessive and unreasonable costs have been or are being
incurred, each such Secretary shall have the same powers with
respect to any such contractor that an agency designated by the
President to exercise the powers conferred by title XIII of the
Second War Powers Act, 1942, has with respect to any contractor to
whom such title is applicable. . . ."
"(e) In addition to the powers conferred by existing law, the
Secretary of each Department shall have the right to demand of any
contractor who holds contracts with respect to which the provisions
of this section are applicable in an aggregate amount in excess of
$100,000, statements of actual costs of production and such other
financial statements at such times and in such form and detail, as
such Secretary may require. . . ."
"
* * * *"
56 Stat. 245.
|
334
U.S. 742appii|
II
Excerpts from Title VIII, Renegotiation of War Contracts,
Revenue Act of 1942, approved October 21, 1942, c. 619, 56 Stat.
798, 982-985, 26 U.S.C.
Internal Revenue Acts Beginning
1940, Revenue Act of 1942, § 801, p. 376.
Section 801 of the Revenue Act of 1942 amended the Section in
several particulars, all effective as of April 28, 1942. Among the
amendments were certain additions or changes contained in §
403(a), § 403(c) and § 403(i) and reading as follows:
"SEC. 801. RENEGOTIATION OF WAR CONTRACTS."
"(a) Subsections (a), (b), and (c) of section 403 of the Sixth
Supplemental National Defense Appropriation Act (Public 528, 77th
Cong., 2d Sess.), are amended to read as follows:"
"SEC. 403. (a) For the purposes of this section --"
"
* * * *"
" (4) The term 'excessive profits' means any amount of a
contract or subcontract price which is found as a result of
renegotiation to represent excessive profits."
" (5) The term 'subcontract' means any purchase order or
agreement to perform all or any part of the work, or to make or
furnish any article, required for the performance of another
contract or subcontract. The term 'article' includes any
material,
Page 334 U. S. 796
part, assembly, machinery, equipment, or other personal
property."
" For the purposes of subsections (d) and (e) of this section,
the term 'contract' includes a subcontract and the term
'contractor's includes a subcontractor."
"
* * * *"
"(c)(1) Whenever, in the opinion of the Secretary of a
Department, the profits realized or likely to be realized from any
contract with such Department, or from any subcontract thereunder,
whether or not made by the contractor, may be excessive, the
Secretary is authorized and directed to require the contractor or
subcontractor to renegotiate the contract price. When the
contractor or subcontractor holds two or more contracts or
subcontracts, the Secretary, in his discretion, may renegotiate to
eliminate excessive profits on some or all of such contracts and
subcontracts as a group without separately renegotiating the
contract price of each contract or subcontract."
" (2) Upon renegotiation, the Secretary is authorized and
directed to eliminate any excessive profits under such contract or
subcontract (i) by reductions in the contract price of the contract
or subcontract, or by other revision in its terms; or (ii) by
withholding, from amounts otherwise due to the contractor or
subcontractor, any amount of such excessive profits; or (iii) by
directing a contractor to withhold for the account of the United
States, from amounts otherwise due to the subcontractor, any amount
of such excessive profits under the subcontract; or (iv) by
recovery from the contractor or subcontractor, through repayment,
credit or suit, of any amount of such excessive profits actually
paid to him; or (v) by any combination of these methods, as the
Secretary deems desirable. The Secretary may bring actions on
behalf of the United States in the appropriate courts of the United
States to recover from such contractor or subcontractor, any amount
of such excessive profits actually paid to him and not withheld or
eliminated by some other method under this subsection. The surety
under a contract or subcontract shall not be liable for the
repayment of any excessive profits thereon. All money recovered by
way of repayment or suit under this subsection shall be covered
into the Treasury as miscellaneous receipts."
" (3) In determining the excessiveness of profits realized or
likely to be realized from any contract or subcontract, the
Secretary
Page 334 U. S. 797
shall recognize the properly applicable exclusions and
deductions of the character which the contractor or subcontractor
is allowed under Chapter 1 and Chapter 2E of the Internal Revenue
Code. In determining the amount of any excessive profits to be
eliminated hereunder, the Secretary shall allow the contractor or
subcontractor credit for Federal income and excess profits taxes as
provided in section 3806 of the Internal Revenue Code."
" (4) Upon renegotiation pursuant to this section, the Secretary
may make such final or other agreements with a contractor or
subcontractor for the elimination of excessive profits and for the
discharge of any liability for excessive profits under this
section, as the Secretary deems desirable. Such agreements may
cover such past and future period of periods, may apply to such
contract or contracts of the contractor or subcontractor, and may
contain such terms and conditions, as the Secretary deems
advisable. . . ."
" (5) Any contractor or subcontractor who holds contracts or
subcontracts to which the provisions of this section are applicable
may file with the Secretaries of all the Departments concerned
statements of actual costs of production and such other financial
statements for any prior fiscal year or years of such contractor or
subcontractor, in such form and detail, as the Secretaries shall
prescribe by joint regulation. Within one year after the filing of
such statements, or within such shorter period as may be prescribed
by such joint regulation, the Secretary of a Department may give
the contractor or subcontractor written notice, in form and manner
to be prescribed in such joint regulation, that the Secretary is of
the opinion that the profits realized from some or all of such
contracts or subcontracts may be excessive, and fixing a date and
place for an initial conference to be held within sixty days
thereafter. If such notice is not given and renegotiation commenced
by the Secretary within such sixty days the contractor or
subcontractor shall not thereafter be required to renegotiate to
eliminate excessive profits realized from any such contract or
subcontract during such fiscal year or years and any liabilities of
the contractor or subcontractor for excessive profits realized
during such period shall be thereby discharged."
" (6) This subsection (c) shall be applicable to all contracts
and subcontracts hereafter made and to all contracts and
subcontracts
Page 334 U. S. 798
heretofore made, whether or not such contracts or subcontracts
contain a renegotiation or recapture clause, unless (i) final
payment pursuant to such contract or subcontract was made prior to
April 28, 1942."
"(c) [SEC. 801.] Section 403 of the Sixth Supplemental National
Defense Appropriation Act (Public 528, 77th Cong., 2d Sess.) is
amended by adding at the end thereof the following
subsections:"
"(i) . . ."
"
* * * *"
" (2) The Secretary of a Department is authorized, in his
discretion, to exempt from some or all of the provisions of this
section --"
"~ (i) any contract or subcontract to be performed outside of
the territorial limits of the continental United States or in
Alaska;"
"~ (ii) any contracts or subcontracts under which, in the
opinion of the Secretary, the profits can be determined with
reasonable certainty when the contract price is established, such
as certain classes of agreements for personal services, for the
purchase of real property, perishable goods, or commodities the
minimum price for the sale of which has been fixed by a public
regulatory body, of leases and license agreements, and of
agreements where the period of performance under such contract or
subcontract will not be in excess of thirty days; and"
"~ (iii) a portion of any contract or subcontract or performance
thereunder during a specified period or periods, if in the opinion
of the Secretary, the provisions of the contract are otherwise
adequate to prevent excessive profits."
"The Secretary may so exempt contracts and subcontracts both
individually and by general classes or types."
"
* * * *"
56 Stat. 982.
|
334
U.S. 742appiii|
III
Excerpts from the so-called Second Renegotiation Act, Title VII,
Renegotiation of War Contracts, passed notwithstanding the
objections
Page 334 U. S. 799
of the President, February 25, 1944, c. 63, 58 Stat. 21, 78-92,
50 U.S.C. (Supp. V, 1946) § 1191; also 26 U.S.C.
Internal
Revenue Acts Beginning 1940, Revenue Act of 1943, § 701,
p. 491.
While § 403 of the Sixth Supplemental National Defense
Appropriation Act, 1942, as expanded by § 701(b) of the
Revenue Act 1943, is too long for reproduction here, the following
excerpts from it are especially relevant: § 403(a)(4)(A);
§ 403(c)(1); § 403(d)(1); § 403(d)(4); §
403(e)(1); § 403(e)(2); § 403(1);
see also
§ 701(d) of the Revenue Act of 1943:
"SEC. 701. RENEGOTIATION OF WAR CONTRACTS."
"
* * * *"
"(b) RENEGOTIATION OF WAR CONTRACTS. -- Section 403, as amended,
of the Sixth Supplemental National Defense Appropriation Act, 1942,
is amended to read as follows: "
"SEC. 403. (a) For the purposes of this section --"
"
* * * *"
"(4)(A) The term 'excessive profits' means the portion of the
profits derived from contracts with the Departments and
subcontracts which is determined in accordance with this section to
be excessive. In determining excessive profits, there shall be
taken into consideration the following factors: "
" (i) efficiency of contractor, with particular regard to
attainment of quantity and quality production, reduction of costs
and economy in the use of materials, facilities, and manpower;"
" (ii) reasonableness of costs and profits, with particular
regard to volume of production, normal pre-war earnings, and
comparison of war and peacetime products;"
" (iii) amount and source of public and private capital employed
and net worth;"
" (iv) extent of risk assumed, including the risk incident to
reasonable pricing policies;"
" (v) nature and extent of contribution to the war effort,
including inventive and developmental contribution and cooperation
with the Government and other contractors in supplying technical
assistance;"
" (vi) character of business, including complexity of
manufacturing technique, character and extent of subcontracting,
and rate of turnover;"
" (vii) such other factors the consideration of which the public
interest and fair and equitable dealing may require, which
factors
Page 334 U. S. 800
shall be published in the regulations of the Board from time to
time as adopted."
"
* * * *"
"(c)(1) Whenever, in the opinion of the Board, the amounts
received or accrued under contracts with the Departments and
subcontracts may reflect excessive profits, the Board shall give to
the contractor or subcontractor, as the case may be, reasonable
notice of the time and place of a conference to be held with
respect thereto. The mailing of such notice by registered mail to
the contractor or subcontractor shall constitute the commencement
of the renegotiation proceeding. At the conference, which may be
adjourned from time to time, the Board shall endeavor to make a
final or other agreement with the contractor or subcontractor with
respect to the elimination of excessive profits received or
accrued, and with respect to such other matters relating thereto as
the Board deems advisable. Any such agreement, if made, may, with
the consent of the contractor or subcontractor, also include
provisions with respect to the elimination of excessive profits
likely to be received or accrued. If the Board does not make an
agreement with respect to the elimination of excessive profits
received or accrued, it shall issue and enter an order determining
the amount, if any, of such excessive profits, and forthwith give
notice thereof by registered mail to the contractor or
subcontractor. In the absence of the filing of a petition with The
Tax Court of the United States under the provisions of and within
the time limit prescribed in subsection (e)(1), such order shall be
final and conclusive and shall not be subject to review or
redetermination by any court or other agency. The Board shall
exercise its powers with respect to the aggregate of the amounts
received or accrued during the fiscal year (or such other period as
may be fixed by mutual agreement) by a contractor or subcontractor
under contracts with the Departments and subcontracts, and not
separately with respect to amounts received or accrued under
separate contracts with the Departments or subcontracts, except
that the Board may exercise such powers separately with respect to
amounts received or accrued by the contractor or subcontractor
under any one or more separate contracts with the Departments or
subcontracts at the request of the contractor or subcontractor.
Whenever the Board makes a determination with respect to the amount
of excessive profits, whether such determination is made by order
or is embodied in an agreement with the contractor of
subcontractor, it shall at the request of the contractor or
subcontractor, as the case may be, prepare and furnish such
contractor or subcontractor with a statement of such
determination,
Page 334 U. S. 801
of the facts used as a basis therefor, and of its reasons for
such determination. Such statement shall not be used in The Tax
Court of the United States as proof of the facts or conclusions
stated therein."
"
* * * *"
"(d)(1) There is hereby created a War Contracts Price Adjustment
Board (in this section called the 'Board'), which shall consist of
six members."
"
* * * *"
"(4) The Board may delegate in whole or in part any power,
function, or duty to the Secretary of a Department, and any power,
function, or duty so delegated may be delegated in whole or in part
by the Secretary to such officers or agencies of the United States
as he may designate, and he may authorize successive redelegations
of such powers, functions, and duties."
"
* * * *"
"(e)(1) Any contractor or subcontractor aggrieved by an order of
the Board determining the amount of excessive profits received or
accrued by such contractor or subcontractor may, within ninety days
(not counting Sunday or a legal holiday in the District of Columbia
as the last day) after the mailing of the notice of such order
under subsection (c)(1), file a petition with The Tax Court of the
United States for a redetermination thereof. Upon such filing such
court shall have exclusive jurisdiction, by order, to finally
determine the amount, if any, of such excessive profits received or
accrued by the contractor or subcontractor, and such determination
shall not be reviewed or redetermined by any court or agency. The
court may determine as the amount of excessive profits an amount
either less than, equal to, or greater than that determined by the
Board. A proceeding before the Tax Court to finally determine the
amount, if any, of excessive profits shall not be treated as a
proceeding to review the determination of the Board, but shall be
treated as a proceeding de novo. . . ."
"(2) Any contractor or subcontractor . . . aggrieved by a
determination of the Secretary made prior to the date of the
enactment of the Revenue Act of 1943, with respect to a fiscal year
ending before July 1, 1943, as to the existence of excessive
profits, which is not embodied in an agreement with the contractor
or subcontractor, may, within ninety days (not counting Sunday or a
legal holiday in the District of Columbia as the last day) after
the date of the enactment of the Revenue Act of 1943, file a
petition with the Tax Court
Page 334 U. S. 802
of the United States for a redetermination thereof, and any such
contractor or subcontractor aggrieved by a determination of the
Secretary made on or after the date of the enactment of the Revenue
Act of 1943, with respect to any such fiscal year, as to the
existence of excessive profits, which is not embodied in an
agreement with the contractor or subcontractor, may, within ninety
days (not counting Sunday or a legal holiday in the District of
Columbia as the last day) after the date of such determination,
file a petition with The Tax Court of the United States for a
redetermination thereof. Upon such filing, such court shall have
the same jurisdiction, powers, and duties, and the proceeding shall
be subject to the same provisions, as in the case of a petition
filed with the court under paragraph (1), except that the
amendments made to this section by the Revenue Act of 1943 which
are not made applicable as of April 28, 1942, or to fiscal years
ending before July 1, 1943, shall not apply."
"
* * * *"
"(1) This section may be cited as the 'Renegotiation Act.'"
"
* * * *"
"(d) [SEC. 701.] EFFECTIVE DATE. -- The amendments made by
subsection (b) shall be effective only with respect to the fiscal
years ending after June 30, 1943, except that (1) the amendments
inserting subsections (a)(4)(C), (a)(4)(D), (i)(1)(C), (i)(1)(D),
(i)(1)(F), (i)(3), and (1) in section 403 of the Sixth Supplemental
National Defense Appropriation Act, 1942, shall be effective as if
such amendments and subsections had been a part of section 403 of
such Act on the date of its enactment, and (2) the amendments
adding subsection (d) and (e)(2) to section 403 of such Act shall
be effective from the date of the enactment of this Act."
58 Stat. 78.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS dissenting in part.
The business involved in the
Lichter case relates to
profits realized during the fiscal year ending December 31, 1942.
As to the amounts owed under these contracts, petitioners are
entitled to a hearing in the District Court. For Congress did not
require that class of contracts to be taken to the Tax Court. I
think a close reading of the statutes, contained in Appendix III to
the Court's opinion, will bear me out.
Page 334 U. S. 803
Section 403(e)(1) relates to orders of the Board and provides
that they may be reviewed by the Tax Court. And § 403(c)(1)
provides that in the absence of the filing of such a petition with
the Tax Court, the orders of the Board "shall be final and
conclusive."
But we are concerned here not with orders of the Board, but with
an order of the Secretary. Section 403(e)(2) provides that those
orders, too, may be taken to the Tax Court. But § 403(e)(2),
by its terms, makes inapplicable those provisions of the 1943
amendment which are not made applicable as of April 28, 1942, or to
the fiscal years ending before July 1, 1943. Thus, § 403(c)(6)
limits subsection (c)
"to all contracts and subcontracts, to the extent of amounts
received or accrued thereunder in any fiscal year ending after June
30, 1943, whether such contracts or subcontracts were made on,
prior to, or after the date of the enactment of the Revenue Act of
1943."
Hence, it is clear that the provision of § 403(c)(1) which
makes the orders of the Board final and conclusive in absence of
the filing of a petition with the Tax Court is not applicable here.
Orders of the Secretary at least as respects 1942 business, are
therefore treated differently than orders of the Board. I conclude
that the purpose was to leave contracts and contractors who fell in
that category with the right of access to the courts which they had
enjoyed prior to the Revenue Act of 1943. In those cases,
jurisdiction of the Tax Court may be invoked at the option of the
petitioners.
Macauley v. Waterman S.S. Corp., 327 U.
S. 540, is not opposed to this conclusion. For that case
involved an order of the Board.
Wade v. Stimson, 331 U.S.
793, involved an order of the Secretary and related to 1942
business. But the question in issue here was not raised there, as
it is not in
Alexander Wool Combing Co. v. United States,
decided this day.