1. In this suit under § 4 of the Clayton Act to recover
treble damages for injuries sustained by reason of a conspiracy in
restraint of trade, plaintiffs were entitled under § 5 to
introduce a prior criminal judgment based on a conviction of
defendants for the same conspiracy in order to establish
prima
facie all matters of fact and law necessarily decided by the
conviction and the verdict on which it was based. Pp.
340 U. S.
566-569.
2. Where the criminal judgment rests on a general verdict of the
jury, what was decided by that judgment must be determined by the
trial judge hearing the treble damage suit, upon an examination of
the record, including the pleadings, the evidence submitted, the
instructions under which the jury arrived at its verdict, and any
opinions of the court. P.
340 U. S.
569.
3. The criminal judgment involved in this case was
prima
facie evidence of a general conspiracy for the purpose of
monopolizing the financing of General Motors cars, and also of the
effectuation of that conspiracy by coercing General Motors dealers
to use its subsidiary finance company's services. Pp.
340 U. S.
570-571.
4. In order to establish their
prima facie case, it
therefore was only necessary for plaintiffs to introduce, in
addition to the criminal judgment, evidence of the impact of the
conspiracy on them and evidence of any resulting damages. P.
340 U. S.
571.
5. What issues were decided by the criminal conviction is a
question of law on which the judge must instruct the jury. He
should (1) examine the record to determine the issues decided by
that judgment; (2) in his instructions to the jury reconstruct that
case in the manner and to the extent he deems necessary to acquaint
the jury fully with the issues determined therein, and (3) explain
the scope and effect of the former judgment on the case at trial.
Pp.
340 U. S.
571-572.
181 F.2d 70 modified.
Page 340 U. S. 559
The case is
remanded to the Court of Appeals with directions
to modify its judgment, p.
340 U. S.
572.
MR. JUSTICE CLARK delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought in the United States District Court for
the Northern District of Illinois under § 4 of the Clayton Act
[
Footnote 1] to recover treble
damages for injuries alleged to have been suffered by reason of a
conspiracy in restraint of trade in violation of the Sherman Act,
§ 1. [
Footnote 2]
Plaintiffs, petitioners here, are Emich Motors Corporation, a
former dealer in Chevrolet cars, and its related finance company,
U.S. Acceptance Corporation. Respondents are General Motors
Corporation and its wholly owned subsidiary finance company,
General Motors Acceptance Corporation (GMAC).
Prior to this action, respondents had been convicted in the
Federal District Court for the Northern District of Indiana on an
indictment charging them, and certain of their officers and agents
who were acquitted, with a conspiracy in restraint of interstate
trade in General Motors cars. At trial in the instant case,
petitioners were permitted
Page 340 U. S. 560
to introduce the antecedent criminal indictment, verdict, and
judgment as evidence under § 5 of the Clayton Act, which
provides in part that
"A final judgment or decree rendered in any criminal prosecution
or in any suit or proceeding in equity brought by or on behalf of
the United States under the antitrust laws to the effect that a
defendant has violated said laws shall be
prima facie
evidence against such defendant in any suit or proceeding brought
by any other party against such defendant under said laws as to all
matters respecting which said judgment or decree would be an
estoppel as between the parties thereto. . . . [
Footnote 3]"
A judgment for petitioners was reversed by the Court of Appeals
for the Seventh Circuit partly on the ground that the trial court
erred in the use it permitted the jury to make of evidence derived
from the prior criminal proceeding. 181 F.2d 70 (1950). We granted
certiorari, limiting review to important questions as to the scope
of § 5 of the Clayton Act.1950, 340 U.S. 808,
rehearing
denied, 340 U.S. 894 (1950).
I
The relevant facts as to the criminal prosecution against
respondents may be stated briefly. The charge of the indictment was
summarized on appeal as follows:
". . . paragraph 34 charges . . . a conspiracy to restrain
unduly the interstate trade and commerce in General Motors
automobiles. Paragraph 35 states that the purpose of the defendants
was to monopolize and control the business of financing the trade
and commerce in new and used General Motors automobiles. Paragraph
70 alleges that dealers have complied
Page 340 U. S. 561
with the defendants' coercive plan in order to save substantial
investments in their businesses, paragraph 71 states that the
effect of the conspiracy has been to restrain and burden
unreasonably the interstate trade and commerce in General Motors
automobiles, and paragraph 72 is a restatement of paragraph
34."
"The specific conduct embraced within the illegal concert of
action is described in paragraphs 36 to 67 of the indictment . . .
: (1) requiring dealers to promise to use GMAC exclusively as a
condition to obtaining a franchise for the sale, transportation and
delivery of automobiles; (2) making contracts for short periods and
cancelable without cause, canceling or threatening to cancel such
contracts unless GMAC facilities are used; (3) discriminating
against dealers not using GMAC by refusing to deliver cars when
ordered, delaying shipment, and shipping cars of different number,
model, color and style; (4) compelling dealers to disclose how they
finance their wholesale purchases and retail sales, examining and
inspecting dealers' books and accounts in order to procure this
information, and requiring dealers to justify their using other
financing media; (5) giving special favors to dealers using the
wholesale and retail facilities of GMAC; (6) granting special
favors to GMAC which are denied to other discount companies; (7)
giving dealers a rebate from the GMAC finance charge paid by the
retail purchaser in order to induce use of GMAC financing
facilities, and (8) compelling dealers to refrain from using other
finance companies by all other necessary, appropriate or effective
means. [
Footnote 4] "
Page 340 U. S. 562
The criminal case was submitted to the jury with instructions
that the Government need not prove all of some twenty-six acts
alleged in the indictment as the means of effecting the conspiracy.
The jury rendered a general verdict finding the corporate
defendants guilty and acquitting all individual defendants. Maximum
fines were assessed against each of the corporations. The Seventh
Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed.
United States v. General
Motors Corp., 121 F.2d 376 (1941). This Court denied
certiorari, 314 U.S. 618 (1941),
reh'g denied, 314 U.S.
710 (1941).
Among the almost 50 dealers and former dealers whose testimony
the Government introduced in the criminal action was Fred Emich,
who owned or controlled the corporations which are petitioners
here. On the criminal appeal, the Court of Appeals thus reviewed
his testimony:
"Fred Emich was a Chevrolet dealer at Chicago, Illinois, from
1932 to 1936, and he owned his own finance company to facilitate
his purchases and sales, a course of business conduct which
displeased GMAC. He received unordered cars and trucks in 1933, and
the city manager of Chevrolet informed him that shipment of
unordered cars would cease as soon as he would give some of his
time sales finance paper to GMAC. He gave GMAC around 10% of his
business in 1934, and became acquainted with the visits of GMAC and
Chevrolet representatives. The zone manager warned him at the 1935
contract renewal meeting to the effect that, if he expected to
continue as a Chevrolet, dealer he had better use GMAC at least
50%. Again he experienced difficulties with Chevrolet. This time,
cars of wrong colors and models were shipped to him, and unordered
accessories in great quantities were forced upon him. In addition,
he was required to send blank checks to the factory before cars
were shipped to him. He was told by
Page 340 U. S. 563
the GMAC representative that these problems would disappear if
he used GMAC. In 1936, Emich was given his 'last warning,' the zone
manager telling him that he was going to make an example of Emich
for his failure to use GMAC. Not long thereafter, Emich was
canceled as a dealer, and he appealed to the president of General
Motors, where he pleaded that, in a period of four years, he had
done a gross business of around $3,000,000. The president of
General Motors told him that he had been canceled because he did
not use GMAC, that it was the policy of the corporation to require
dealers to use GMAC, and that, if Emich would not agree to use
GMAC, it would be useless for the president of General Motors to
discuss his reinstatement. . . . [
Footnote 5]"
II
In their complaint, petitioners allege that respondents
unlawfully conspired in restraint of interstate trade in General
Motors cars; that the conspiracy so alleged is the same as that
charged against respondents and of which they were convicted in the
antecedent criminal action, a copy of the indictment therein being
attached as an exhibit; that, pursuant to this conspiracy,
respondents injured petitioners' businesses by one or more of the
unlawful acts set forth in said indictment, more particularly by
terminating or canceling or threatening to terminate or cancel the
dealer franchise contracts of Emich Motors, which had financed the
purchase or sale of cars through U.S. Acceptance Corporation,
rather than through GMAC. Respondents deny any conspiracy; they
admit cancelation of the franchises, but assert that such action
was justified by Emich Motors' failure to perform certain
obligations
Page 340 U. S. 564
thereunder, as well as its persistence in a course of conduct
inimical to the interest of General Motors in promoting the sale of
Chevrolet cars.
In order to establish their
prima facie case under
§ 5, petitioners offered in evidence the six-volume record of
testimony and exhibits in the criminal case. The court held it
inadmissible as evidence for the jury, with certain exceptions not
important here. However, over respondents' objection, the court
admitted, as exhibits to go to the jury, the indictment, verdict,
and judgment of conviction in the criminal case.
In his instructions, the trial judge summarized the criminal
indictment, the complaint of petitioners, and respondents' answer.
He then instructed that the
". . . judgment in the criminal proceedings . . . is admitted as
evidence in this case as
prima facie evidence that
[respondents] did enter into an unlawful conspiracy in violation of
the antitrust laws . . . in the manner described in the indictment.
. . ."
After explaining the term "
prima facie evidence," the
court then summarized § 5 of the Clayton Act and charged
that
". . . it was not necessary for the government to prove all of
the acts alleged in the separate sections of the indictment. . . .
[N]or is it necessary for the plaintiffs to prove all the acts
charged in the indictment for you to find that the conspiracy
alleged did exist."
"The judgment in the criminal case was admitted in evidence in
this case, pursuant to the law to which I have just referred, for
the purpose of the plaintiff's making a
prima facie case
against the defendants as to one of the issues of this case, and
only and solely for the purpose of defining, describing, and
limiting the scope of the judgment on the verdict which was
Page 340 U. S. 565
entered in that case, namely, the conspiracy to violate the
antitrust laws."
"The burden is on the plaintiffs of establishing by a
preponderance of the evidence that they were injured by the
defendants pursuant to or in the course of a conspiracy, and, in
order to recover damages for the cancelation of the Chevrolet
franchises, they must prove by a preponderance of the evidence,
including the criminal judgment, that the defendants
entered into a conspiracy to compel the use of General Motors
Acceptance Corporation by agreeing among themselves, among other
things, to cancel dealers who failed or refused to use General
Motors Acceptance Corporation to a satisfactory extent, and that
the franchise of Emich Motors Corporation was canceled by reason of
and pursuant to said conspiracy, and not because of the things
alleged by defendants as the reasons for such cancelation, and, to
recover any damages for the failure of defendants to deliver any
Chevrolet automobiles, plaintiffs must establish that defendants as
part of the conspiracy agreed among themselves to withhold or delay
delivery of automobiles to dealers who refused or failed to use the
services of General Motors Acceptance Corporation to a satisfactory
extent and that the defendants actively failed to deliver or
delayed shipments of cars to plaintiffs pursuant to and as a part
of said alleged conspiracy."
(Emphasis supplied.)
The jury returned a verdict for petitioners which resulted in
judgments for $1,236,000 treble damages. The court assessed
$257,358.10 as costs and attorneys' fees.
The Court of Appeals concluded that, under § 5, the
criminal judgment was
prima facie evidence
"that defendants had been guilty of a conspiracy to restrain
dealers' interstate trade and commerce in General Motors cars for
the purpose of monopolizing the financing essential
Page 340 U. S. 566
to the movement of those cars."
It approved the trial court's ruling as to the inadmissibility
in evidence of the entire record of the criminal case, but
criticized the use of the indictment as an exhibit to the
complaint, as well as certain references to the indictment in the
opening statement and closing argument of petitioners' counsel to
the jury. It held that serious error was committed when the
indictment was sent to the jury as an exhibit and the trial court
"told the jury that it could look to it [the indictment] to
ascertain the means and the acts committed in furtherance of the
conspiracy. . . ." The court observed that
"it was unnecessary for the Government to prove . . . any of the
acts or means, except for the purpose of establishing venue, in
order for the jury in the criminal proceeding to find defendants
guilty,"
and that "such acts and means are not to be considered as
established by the finding of guilt." It concluded that the use of
the indictment as evidence was aggravated by the instruction of the
trial judge last quoted and italicized in part,
supra, p.
340 U. S.
565.
III
The issue we must determine, as defined in our order granting
review, is
"whether the Court of Appeals erred in construing § 5 of
the Clayton Act . . . as not permitting: (a) the admission in the
instant case of the indictment in the antecedent criminal case
against respondents, nor (b) the judgment therein to be used as
evidence that the conspiracy of which respondents had been
convicted occasioned Emich Motors' cancelation."
In considering the application of § 5 in this case, we are
confronted with five differing interpretations. The broadest
construction is urged by petitioners, who contend that the criminal
judgment is
prima facie evidence that Emich Motors'
franchises were canceled pursuant to the unlawful conspiracy, and
that the entire record in the
Page 340 U. S. 567
criminal case should be admissible in this action. The view of
the trial judge differs only in that he would not permit the record
in the criminal case, beyond the indictment, verdict and judgment,
to go to the jury. The United States, as
amicus curiae,
takes a more contracted position, urging in its brief that the
judgment is
prima facie evidence of the conspiracy and
also of the performance of such acts in accomplishing it as the
jury in the criminal case, in rendering a verdict of guilty,
necessarily found to have occurred, the latter to be determined by
the trial judge in the treble damage suit from the entire record in
the criminal case. In its view, the trial court under appropriate
instructions may submit the criminal pleadings to the jury in order
to assist it in understanding the charge as to what was determined
by the criminal conviction. The Court of Appeals construes the
section still more narrowly, holding the judgment
prima
facie evidence only of conspiracy by respondents. It concludes
that none of the record in the criminal case should be exhibited to
the jury, although the trial judge may examine it "as an aid in
determining or defining the issues presented by the earlier case. .
. ." 181 F.2d 76. Finally, respondents contend that the indictment
charged a single conspiracy to perform some twenty-six different
acts; that, since the Government did not offer evidence to support
all of the acts and was required to prove only one of them, it is
impossible upon a general verdict of guilty to determine on which
of the various acts the jury based its verdict; that, consequently,
the judgment has no relevance here.
IV
Section 5 of the Clayton Act was adopted in response to a
recommendation by President Wilson that Congress
"agree in giving private individuals . . . the right to found
their [antitrust] suits for redress upon the facts
Page 340 U. S. 568
and judgments proved and entered in suits by the Government
where the Government has . . . sued the combinations complained of
and won its suit. . . ."
51 Cong.Rec.1964. Congressional reports and debates on the
proposal which ultimately became § 5 reflect a purpose to
minimize the burdens of litigation for injured private suitors by
making available to them all matters previously established by the
Government in antitrust actions.
See H.R. Rep. No. 627,
63d Cong., 2d Sess. 14; S.Rep. No. 698, 63d Cong., 2d Sess. 45; 51
Cong.Rec. 9270, 9490, 13851. The intended application and extent of
such evidentiary benefits is not revealed by legislative materials
except that they should follow equally from prior criminal
prosecutions and equity proceedings by the Government. By its
terms, however, § 5 makes a prior final judgment or decree in
favor of the United States available to a private suitor as
prima facie evidence of "all matters respecting which" the
judgment "would be an estoppel" between the defendants and the
United States. We think that Congress intended to confer, subject
only to a defendant's enjoyment of its day in court against a new
party, as large an advantage as the estoppel doctrine would afford
had the Government brought suit.
The evidentiary use which may be made under § 5 of the
prior conviction of respondents is thus to be determined by
reference to the general doctrine of estoppel. As this Court has
observed, that "principle is as applicable to the decisions of
criminal courts as to those of civil jurisdiction."
Frank v.
Mangum, 237 U. S. 309,
237 U. S. 334
(1915);
Sealfon v. United States, 332 U.
S. 575,
332 U. S. 578
(1948). It is well established that a prior criminal conviction may
work an estoppel in favor of the Government in a subsequent civil
proceeding.
United States v. Greater New York Live Poultry
Chamber of Commerce, 53 F.2d 518 (1931),
aff'd sub
nom.
Page 340 U. S. 569
Local 167 v. United States, 291 U.
S. 293 (1934);
Farley v. Patterson, 166
App.Div. 358, 152 N.Y.S. 59 (1915);
see State v. Adams, 72
Vt. 253, 47 A. 779 (1900); 2 Freeman, Judgments (5th ed.1925,)
§ 657. Such estoppel extends only to questions "distinctly put
in issue and directly determined" in the criminal prosecution.
See Frank v. Mangum, supra, at
237 U. S. 334;
United States v. Meyerson, 24 F.2d
855, 856 (1928). In the case of a criminal conviction based on
a jury verdict of guilty, issues which were essential to the
verdict must be regarded as having been determined by the judgment.
Cf. Commonwealth v. Evans, 101 Mass. 25 (1869).
Accordingly, we think plaintiffs are entitled to introduce the
prior judgment to establish
prima facie all matters of
fact and law necessarily decided by the conviction and the verdict
on which it was based.
The difficult problem, of course, is to determine what matters
were adjudicated in the antecedent suit. A general verdict of the
jury or judgment of the court without special findings does not
indicate which of the means charged in the indictment were found to
have been used in effectuating the conspiracy. And since all of the
acts charged need not be proved for conviction,
United States
v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co., 310 U. S. 150
(1940), such a verdict does not establish that defendants used all
of the means charged or any particular one. Under these
circumstances, what was decided by the criminal judgment must be
determined by the trial judge hearing the treble damage suit, upon
an examination of the record, including the pleadings, the evidence
submitted, the instructions under which the jury arrived at its
verdict, and any opinions of the courts.
Sealfon v. United
States, supra; cf. Oklahoma v. Texas, 256 U. S.
70 (1921). [
Footnote
6]
Page 340 U. S. 570
In the criminal case, it was the Court of Appeals' undisturbed
determination, which we accept here, that the jury verdict was
firmly rooted in a finding of coercive conduct on the part of
respondents toward General Motors dealers to force the use of GMAC
facilities. That court, in commenting on the sufficiency of the
evidence, said that
"the jury finding of coercion is supported by the evidence. The
coercive practices were many and varied . . . , and directly aimed
to compel dealer-purchasers to use GMAC in financing the wholesale
purchase and retail sale of General Motors cars. . . . Undoubtedly
the jury was warranted in attaching the coercion label to the
action thus adopted by the appellants."
United States v. General Motors Corp., 121 F.2d 376,
397 (1941). The same conclusion was reached by this Court in
Ford Motor Co. v. United States, 335 U.
S. 303 (1948), where it was required for another purpose
to determine what was necessarily found by the jury verdict in the
criminal proceeding against General Motors and GMAC. [
Footnote 7]
We are therefore of opinion that the criminal judgment was
prima facie evidence of the general conspiracy for the
purpose of monopolizing the financing of General Motors
Page 340 U. S. 571
cars, and also of its effectuation by coercing General Motors
dealers to use GMAC. To establish their
prima facie case,
it therefore was necessary for petitioners only to introduce, in
addition to the criminal judgment, evidence of the impact of the
conspiracy on them, such as the cancelation of their franchises and
the purpose of General Motors in canceling them, and evidence of
any resulting damages. [
Footnote
8] From this it follows that the Court of Appeals was in error
when it held that the judgment was
prima facie evidence
only of a conspiracy by respondents.
What issues were decided by the former Government litigation is,
of course, a question of law as to which the court must instruct
the jury. It is the task of the trial judge to make clear to the
jury the issues that were determined against the defendant in the
prior suit, and to limit to those issues the effect of that
judgment as evidence in the present action. As to the manner in
which such explanation should be made, no mechanical rule can be
laid down to control the trial judge, who must take into account
the circumstances of each case. He must be free to exercise "a well
established range of judicial discretion."
Nardone v. United
States, 308 U. S. 338,
308 U. S. 342
(1939). He is not precluded from resorting to such portions of
the
Page 340 U. S. 572
record, including the pleadings and judgment, in the antecedent
case as he may find necessary or appropriate to use in presenting
to the jury a clear picture of the issues decided there and
relevant to the case on trial.
Cf. Eastman Kodak Co. v.
Southern Photo Material Co., 295 F. 98, 101 (1923),
aff'd, 273 U. S. 273 U.S.
359 (1927). A similar discretion must be exercised in approving the
attachment of a copy of the indictment as an exhibit to the
complaint.
In summary, the trial judge should (1) examine the record of the
antecedent case to determine the issues decided by the judgment;
(2) in his instructions to the jury, reconstruct that case in the
manner and to the extent he deems necessary to acquaint the jury
fully with the issues determined therein, and (3) explain the scope
and effect of the former judgment on the case at trial. The court
may, in the interest of clarity, so inform the jury at the time the
judgment in the prior action is offered in evidence, or he may so
instruct at a later time if, in his discretion, the ends of justice
will be served.
The case is remanded to the Court of Appeals with directions to
modify its judgment to conform with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE MINTON took no part in the consideration or decision
of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
38 Stat. 731, 15 U.S.C. § 15.
[
Footnote 2]
26 Stat. 209, 15 U.S.C. § 1.
[
Footnote 3]
38 Stat. 731, 15 U.S.C. § 16.
[
Footnote 4]
United States v. General Motors Corp., 121 F.2d 376,
383 (1941).
[
Footnote 5]
United States v. General Motors Corp., 121 F.2d 376,
396 (1941).
[
Footnote 6]
See also McLaren, The Doctrine of
Res Judicata
as Applied to the Trial of Criminal Cases, 10 Wash.L.Rev.198, 200
(1935).
[
Footnote 7]
In the
Ford case. it was stated that the "plain effect"
of the instructions in the criminal action against General Motors
and GMAC was
"to draw a line between such practices as cancelation of a
dealer's contract, or refusal to renew it, or discrimination in the
shipment of automobiles, as a means of influencing dealers to use
GMAC, all of which fall within the common understanding of
'coercion,' and other practices for which 'persuasion,'
'exposition,' or 'argument' are fair characterizations. . . . The
trial judge used the word 'coercion' to summarize practices which,
if the jury found them to exist, would call for a verdict against
General Motors. He used the words 'persuasion,' 'exposition,' and
'argument' to describe conduct which, in common usage, is not
'coercion,' and therefore would not support such a verdict. Nothing
in other portions of the judge's charge erases or blurs this line
of distinction."
335 U.S. at
335 U. S.
316-319. Relevant portions of the instructions are set
forth at p.
335 U. S. 316,
n. 3.
[
Footnote 8]
In deciding that, under § 5, the criminal judgment against
respondents may be admitted as
prima facie evidence only
of the fact of conspiracy and of the use of coercive methods in
carrying it out, we do not intend to preclude its admission for
such other purposes, apart from § 5, as the general law of
evidence may permit. Petitioners contend that the judgment may be
considered by the jury as evidence of respondents' intention in
canceling the Emichs' franchises.
Cf. Wigmore, Evidence
§§ 302-304 (3d ed., 1940);
American Medical
Association v. United States, 76 U.S.App.D.C. 70, 130 F.2d
233, 250-252 (1942),
aff'd, 317 U. S. 317 U.S.
519 (1943). Whether this contention is correct and, if so, whether
such evidence would establish
prima facie an illegal
motive are questions beyond the scope of our present review