1. The provisions of the Fur Products Labeling Act which
prohibit false and deceptive invoicing apply to retail sales, and a
retail sales slip is an "invoice" as that term is defined in §
2(f) of the Act. Pp.
359 U. S.
388-391.
2. In a proceeding charging a retail department store with
misbranding its fur products in violation of the Fur Products
Labeling Act, the Federal Trade Commission found that it had
committed numerous violations of three of the six disclosure
requirements of § 4(2), but that there was no evidence of
violations of the other three, and the Commission issued a cease
and desist order against "misbranding" fur products by failing to
affix labels showing each of the six categories of information
required by § 4(2).
Held: the Commission did not abuse its discretion by
making its order apply to all six categories. Pp.
359 U. S.
391-393.
3. The Commission's order is to be rephrased so as not to
suggest that the store had sold garments contrary to the disclosure
requirements not found to have been violated here. P.
359 U. S.
393.
254 F.2d 18 reversed.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner issued a complaint charging respondent, a retail
department store, with violations of the Fur Products Labeling Act,
65 Stat. 175, 15 U.S.C. § 69.
Page 359 U. S. 386
Violations were found, and a cease and desist order was issued.
One of the principal violations found was that many of respondent's
retail sales were falsely "invoiced" in violation of § 3 of
the Act. [
Footnote 1] The term
"invoice" is defined in § 2(f) as
"a written account, memorandum, list, or catalog, which is
issued in connection with any commercial dealing in fur products or
furs, and describes the particulars of any fur products or furs,
transported or delivered to a purchaser, consignee, factor, bailee,
correspondent, or agent, or any other person who is engaged in
dealing commercially in fur products or furs."
Section 5(b) provides that a fur product or fur is falsely
"invoiced" if it is not "invoiced" to show (a) the name of the
animal that produced the fur; and, where applicable, that the
product (b) contains used fur, (c) contains bleached, dyed, or
otherwise artificially colored fur, (d) is composed in whole or
substantial part of paws, tails, bellies, or waste fur; (e) the
name and address of the person issuing the "invoice"; and (f) the
country of origin of any imported furs.
Page 359 U. S. 387
The Commission found that respondent had violated the "invoice"
provisions of the Act by failure to include in many of its retail
sales slips of fur products, (a) its address, (b) whether the fur
was bleached, dyed, or otherwise artificially colored, and (c) the
correct name of the animal producing the fur.
The Act in § 4 also provides [
Footnote 2] that a fur product is misbranded (1) if it is
"falsely or deceptively labeled . . . or . . . identified," (2) if
there is not affixed a label setting forth substantially the same
six items of information required
Page 359 U. S. 388
for an "invoice," or (3) if the label designates the animal that
produced the fur by some name other than that prescribed in the Fur
Products Name Guide. [
Footnote
3] The Commission found that the labels on respondent's fur
products were false in numerous instances by reason of the failure
to include information in three of the categories listed under the
second part of § 4. It held, however, that there was no
evidence that the labels were deficient in the other three
categories of information. Nevertheless, it issued a cease and
desist order against misbranding by failure to include in the
labels the required six categories of information, all of which
were listed.
On appeal, the Court of Appeals
first eliminated the
prohibitions relating to invoicing on the ground that a retail
sales slip was not an "invoice" within the meaning of the Act; and
second, it struck from the order the prohibition against
misbranding through omission of the three categories as to which no
violations were found. 254 F.2d 18. The case is here on a petition
for a writ of certiorari. 358 U.S. 812.
I
First, as to invoicing. We start with an Act whose avowed
purpose,
inter alia, was to protect
"consumers . . . against deception . . . resulting from the
misbranding, false or deceptive advertising, or false invoicing of
fur products and furs."
S.Rep. No. 78, 82d Cong., 1st Sess., p. 1. The House Report also
emphasizes that the bill was "designed to protect consumers and
others from widespread abuses" arising out of false and misleading
matter in advertisements and otherwise. H.R.Rep. No. 546, 82d
Cong., 1st Sess., p. 1. The Title of the Act (which, though not
limiting the plain meaning of the text, is nonetheless
Page 359 U. S. 389
a useful aid in resolving an ambiguity (
see Maguire v.
Commissioner, 313 U. S. 1,
313 U. S. 9)),
states that its purpose was to "protect consumers and others
against . . . false invoicing of fur products and furs." 65 Stat.
175. So we have an avowed purpose to protect retail purchasers
against improper "invoicing." We therefore should read § 2(f),
which contains the definition of "invoice," hospitably with that
end in view. Section 2(f) is not unambiguous. Yet we do not have
here the problem of a penal statute that deserves strict
construction. We deal with remedial legislation of a regulatory
nature, where our task is to fit, if possible, all parts into an
harmonious whole.
Black v. Magnolia Liquor Co.,
355 U. S. 24,
355 U. S.
26.
Section 2(f) uses "invoice" to include a "written account" and
"memorandum." So far a retail sales slip is included. Section 2(f)
requires the "invoice" to be issued "in connection with any
commercial dealing" in furs. A retail sale is plainly a "commercial
dealing." Section 2(f) requires the invoice to be issued to a
"purchaser." There again, a customer of a retailer is a
"purchaser." The case for inclusion of a retail sales slip in
"invoice," as that term is used in the Act, would therefore seem to
be complete. What turned the Court of Appeals the other way was the
last phrase in § 2(f) -- "or any other person who is engaged
in dealing commercially in fur products or furs." It held that
"engaged in dealing commercially" modifies not only "any other
person" but also all the other preceding terms in the subsection,
including "purchaser."
Cf. United States v. Standard
Brewery, 251 U. S. 210,
251 U. S. 218.
That is a possible construction. We conclude, however, that this
limiting clause is to be applied only to the last antecedent.
[
Footnote 4] We think it
would
Page 359 U. S. 390
be a partial mutilation of this Act to construe it so that the
"invoice" provisions were inapplicable to retail sales. In the
first place, the language of § 2(f) specifies in sweeping
language the categories of persons for whose benefit the invoicing
requirements were imposed,
viz., purchaser, consignee,
factor, bailee, correspondent, or agent. Then, as a general
catch-all, "any other person who is engaged in dealing commercially
in fur products or furs" was added. In the second place, only by
construing "invoice" to include retail sales slips can the full
protection of the Act be accorded consumers. We do not agree with
the point stressed by respondent that the consumer's protection is
to be found solely in the label on the fur product, and that
invoices are required only at each antecedent step of delivery or
transfer to a person dealing commercially in either furs or fur
products. The advertising and mislabeling prohibitions in §
3(b) of the Act [
Footnote 5]
are plainly applicable to retail sales. Yet the prohibition of
false invoices is contained in the same clause. If we held that
Congress, in spite of its desire to protect consumers, withheld
from them the benefits of reliable invoices, we would have to read
the clauses of § 3 distributively, making only some of them
applicable to retail sales. That would be a refashioning of §
3, an undertaking more consonant with the task of a congressional
committee than with judicial construction
Moreover, fur product "labels," we are advised, are not pieces
of cloth sewn into garments, but tags which the purchaser is likely
to throw away after the purchase. The "invoice" is the only
permanent record of the transaction that the retail purchaser has.
Its importance was emphasized by the Commission:
"Inasmuch as the invoice may serve as a documentary link
connecting the sale of specific fur
Page 359 U. S. 391
products back through the retailer's records with advertisements
therefor, the application of the invoicing provisions of the Act to
transactions between retailers and consumers represents a key
implement for effective administration of the Act."
The inclusion of retail sales slips in invoices has been the
consistent administrative construction of the Act. [
Footnote 6] This contemporaneous construction
is entitled to great weight (
United States v. American Trucking
Ass'ns, 310 U. S. 534,
310 U. S. 549;
Black v. Magnolia Liquor Co., supra; Federal Housing
Administration v. Darlington, Inc., 358 U. S.
84,
358 U. S. 90)
even though it was applied in cases settled by consent, rather than
in litigation.
Finally, respondent urges that a retailer's sale is a local
transaction not subject to the exercise by Congress of the commerce
power. Misbranding a drug held for sale after shipment in
interstate commerce was held to be within the commerce power in
United States v. Sullivan, 332 U.
S. 689. That decision and its predecessors sanction what
is done here.
We conclude that a retail sales slip is an "invoice" within the
meaning of the Act, and, accordingly, the judgment of the Court of
Appeals setting aside the part of the cease and desist order which
requires this retailer to give a proper "invoice" to each purchaser
is reversed.
II
Second, as to false labeling. The Commission, as we have noted,
found that respondent had committed numerous violations of three of
the six disclosure requirements
Page 359 U. S. 392
contained in § 4(2) of the Act, [
Footnote 7] noting that there was no evidence that it
had not complied with the other three disclosure requirements of
§ 4(2). The cease and desist order of the Commission was,
however, directed against "misbranding fur products by: 1. Failing
to affix labels to fur products showing" each of the six categories
of information required by § 4(2). The Court of Appeals struck
from the order the prohibition with respect to the three categories
as to which there was no evidence of violation.
We do not believe the Commission abused the "wide discretion"
that it has in a choice of a remedy "deemed adequate to cope with
the unlawful practices" disclosed by the record.
Jacob Siegel
Co. v. Federal Trade Comm'n, 327 U. S. 608,
327 U. S. 611.
It is not limited to prohibiting "the illegal practice in the
precise form" existing in the past.
Federal Trade Comm'n v.
Ruberoid Co., 343 U. S. 470,
343 U. S. 473.
This agency, like others, may fashion its relief to restrain "other
like or related unlawful acts."
Labor Board v. Express Pub.
Co., 312 U. S. 426,
312 U. S. 436.
The practice outlawed by § 4 is "misbranding." The disclosure
required for a properly branded garment is specified. These
disclosure requirements are so closely interrelated that the
Commission might well conclude that a retailer who, for example,
failed to disclose that the fur was bleached or dyed might well
default when it came to disclosure of the fact that used fur was
contained in the garment. One cannot generalize as to the proper
scope of these orders. It depends on the facts of each case and a
judgment as to the extent to which a particular violator should be
fenced in. Here, as in Sherman Act decrees (
Local 167, etc. v.
United States, 291 U. S. 293,
291 U. S. 299;
International Salt Co. v. United States, 332 U.
S. 392,
332 U. S.
400-401;
International Boxing Club of New York, Inc.
v. United States, 358 U. S. 242,
Page 359 U. S. 393
358 U. S.
253), the question of the extent to which related
activity should be enjoined is one of kind and degree. We sit only
to determine if the trier of facts has exercised an allowable
discretion. Where the episodes of misbranding have been so
extensive and so substantial in number as they were here, [
Footnote 8] we think it permissible for
the Commission to conclude that like and related acts of
misbranding should also be enjoined as a prophylactic and
preventive measure.
Respondent objects to the wording of the cease and desist order,
saying it suggests that the store has sold garments contrary to the
disclosure requirements not found to have been violated here. The
Commission bows to the suggestion that Part A, par. 1 of the cease
and desist order be rephrased to enjoin "misbranding fur products
by failing to affix labels to fur products showing each element of
information required by the Act." We so order.
On this phase of the case, the judgment of the Court of Appeals
is also reversed, the cease and desist order to be rephrased as we
have indicated.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
Section 3 provides in part:
"(a) The introduction, or manufacture for introduction, into
commerce, or the sale, advertising or offering for sale in
commerce, or the transportation or distribution in commerce, of any
fur product which is misbranded or falsely or deceptively
advertised or invoiced, within the meaning of this Act or the rules
and regulations prescribed under section 8(b), is unlawful and
shall be an unfair method of competition, and an unfair and
deceptive act or practice, in commerce under the Federal Trade
Commission Act."
"(b) The manufacture for sale, sale, advertising, offering for
sale, transportation or distribution, of any fur product which is
made in whole or in part of fur which has been shipped and received
in commerce, and which is misbranded or falsely or deceptively
advertised or invoiced, within the meaning of this Act or the rules
and regulations prescribed under section 8(b), is unlawful and
shall be an unfair method of competition, and an unfair and
deceptive act or practice, in commerce under the Federal Trade
Commission Act."
[
Footnote 2]
Section 4 provides:
"For the purposes of this Act, a fur product shall be considered
to be misbranded --"
"(1) if it is falsely or deceptively labeled or otherwise
falsely or deceptively identified, or if the label contains any
form of misrepresentation or deception, directly or by implication,
with respect to such fur product;"
"(2) if there is not affixed to the fur product a label showing
in words and figures plainly legible --"
"(A) the name or names (as set forth in the Fur Products Name
Guide) of the animal or animals that produced the fur, and such
qualifying statement as may be required pursuant to section 7(c) of
this Act;"
"(B) that the fur product contains or is composed of used fur,
when such is the fact;"
"(C) that the fur product contains or is composed of bleached,
dyed, or otherwise artificially colored fur, when such is the
fact;"
"(D) that the fur product is composed in whole or in substantial
part of paws, tails, bellies, or waste fur, when such is the
fact;"
"(E) the name, or other identification issued and registered by
the Commission, of one or more of the persons who manufacture such
fur product for introduction into commerce, introduce it into
commerce, sell it in commerce, advertise or offer it for sale in
commerce, or transport or distribute it in commerce;"
"(F) the name of the country of origin of any imported furs used
in the fur product;"
"(3) if the label required by paragraph (2)(A) of this section
sets forth the name or names of any animal or animals other than
the name or names provided for in such paragraph."
[
Footnote 3]
This is a register of the names of hair, fleece, and fur-bearing
animals which § 7 of the Act requires the Commission to
maintain.
[
Footnote 4]
Cf. United States ex rel. Santarelli v. Hughes, 116
F.2d 613, 616;
Puget Sound Electric R. Co. v. Benson, 253
F. 710, 711; 2 Sutherland, Statutory Construction (3d ed. 1943),
§ 4921.
[
Footnote 5]
Note 1 supra.
[
Footnote 6]
See Ed Hamilton Furs, Inc., 51 F.T.C. 186. We are
advised that, since that case, decided in 1954, the Commission has
issued 137 complaints charging violations of the Act involving
false and deceptive retail invoicing. There are presently
outstanding 110 cease and desist orders relating to retail
invoicing. In 92 other cases, furriers have agreed to discontinue
false and deceptive retail invoicing.
[
Footnote 7]
See note 2
supra.
[
Footnote 8]
The Commission found 12 instances of failure to label the
product with the correct name of the animal producing the fur, 15
instances of failure to disclose that the product was bleached,
dyed or otherwise artificially colored, and 58 instances of failure
to show the country of origin of imported furs. There were in
addition 187 other violations of the rules of the Commission which
provide additional labeling requirements and standards.
See 16 CFR, Pt. 301.