Page 360 U. S. 20
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Elkins Act, 32 Stat. 847, as amended, 49 U.S.C. §§
41, 43, and the Interstate Commerce Act, 24 Stat. 380, as amended,
49 U.S.C. § 6(7), make it unlawful for a common carrier to
grant rebates to individual shippers by any device whatsoever, or
to discriminate in favor of any shipper directly or indirectly. In
1941 the United States brought a complaint against appellees and
several other major oil companies and their common carrier pipeline
subsidiaries claiming that the pipelines were granting illegal
transportation rebates to their shipper-owners under the guise of
paying dividends. Although the Government charged that no dividends
at all could lawfully be granted in the same year in which a
shipper-owner sent products over a pipeline, the suit was settled
in late 1941 by a consent decree containing a provision which
allowed a shipper-owner to receive a dividend equal to "its share
of 7 percentum (7%) of the valuation" of the common carrier
pipeline's property. Any dividend
Page 360 U. S. 21
in excess of this figure, however, was forbidden. [
Footnote 1] That provision of the decree is
before us for interpretation today.
From 1941 to 1957, appellees computed allowable dividends by
taking 7% of the valuation of pipeline property and then giving
each owner a proportion of this sum equal to the percentage of
stock it owned. In 1957, however, the Government brought this suit
against appellees claiming that the pipelines were giving, and the
shipper-owners were receiving, dividends in excess of those allowed
by the decree. The Government did not contest the valuation figures
used, but argued, despite the language of the decree, that only a
part of 7% of the valuation could actually be made available as
dividends to stockholders. The total allowable "dividends," it
claimed, would have to be shared between stockholders and
creditors. The stockholder's (shipper-owner's) "share" of the
carrier valuation, so the argument ran, was to be the proportion
which stock investment in the carrier bore to the carrier's total
invested capital (including debt owed to third persons). Seven
percent stockholder dividends could only be computed out of this
"share" of the sum, and could then be distributed to each
shipper-owner in proportion to its individual stock interest. Only
in this way, the Government contended, could the consent decree's
aim of preventing disguised rebates be accomplished. For only in
this way would dividends be limited to a "fair" sum: 7% of the
current value of what each owner had invested in its subsidiary.
The trial court rejected the Government's interpretation, and the
United States brought a direct appeal under 32 Stat. 823, as
amended, 15 U.S.C. § 29, 49 U.S.C. § 45.
Page 360 U. S. 22
On consideration of the language and the history of this decree,
we agree with the trial court. If the decree had meant to limit
dividends to 7% of the current value of a parent company's actual
investment in a subsidiary, as the Government claims, one can
hardly think of less appropriate language in which to couch the
restriction. Admittedly, by reading the word "share" to refer to a
proportion of total capitalization, rather than to the percentage
of stock owned by a parent company, the language can be made to
support the United States§ contention. [
Footnote 2] But that is surely a strained
construction, and cannot be reconciled with the consistent reading
given to the decree, by both the United States and appellees, from
the date it was entered until 1957 -- about 16 years.
In 1942, less than a year after the decree was issued, the
United States consented to a supplemental order affecting one of
the pipeline companies. This order approved a plan of
recapitalization for the pipeline which would at least have been
highly suspect under the reading the Government today gives the
decree. Significantly, the supplemental order, which was agreed to
by the official who had represented the Government in drafting the
original decree, expressly stated that the plan did not violate
that judgment.
There are also other indications that the Government's
interpretation of the decree did not, originally, differ from
Page 360 U. S. 23
the one appellees urge today. For example, the 1941 decree
required annual reports from each pipeline showing total earnings
available to owners or stockholders and actual dividends paid. For
16 years, the reports made by the pipelines indicated that the
dividends were not computed on the basis of 7% of the current value
of the owners' investment but on the total valuation of the
carriers' properties. For that 16 years, the Government accepted
this interpretation without challenge. Yet today it renounces this
longstanding acquiescence and claims that the decree imposed limits
it had not previously sought to enforce.
The Government contends that the interpretation it now offers
would more nearly effectuate "the basic purpose of the Elkins and
Interstate Commerce Acts that carriers are to treat all shippers
alike." This may be true. But it does not warrant our substantially
changing the terms of a decree to which the parties consented
without any adjudication of the issues. [
Footnote 3] And we agree with the District Court that
accepting the Government's present interpretation would do just
that.
Cf. Hughes v. United States, 342 U.
S. 353.
We do not decide the case on any question of laches or estoppel,
nor do we comment on any possible modifications of the decree which
might appropriately be made under Clause X of the judgment, which
continues the jurisdiction of the District Court. We merely hold
that, where the language of a consent decree, in its normal,
meaning supports an interpretation; where that interpretation has
been adhered to over many years by all the parties, including those
government officials who drew
Page 360 U. S. 24
up and administered the decree from the start; [
Footnote 4] and where the trial court
concludes that this interpretation is in fact the one the parties
intended, we will not reject it simply because another reading
might seem more consistent with the Government's reasons for
entering into the agreement in the first place. Accordingly, the
judgment below is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS dissents.
MR. JUSTICE CLARK and MR. JUSTICE HARLAN took no part in the
consideration or decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
This consent decree is discussed in detail in Hearings,
Antitrust Subcommittee of the House Committee on the Judiciary,
85th Cong., 1st Sess., Part I.
[
Footnote 2]
Assuming a carrier has an I.C.C. "valuation" of $10,000,000,
$2,000,000 of which represents stock investments of $1,000,000 by
each of two shipper oil companies, and $8,000,000 of which
represents debt because of money borrowed by the carrier from
others, on the appellee companies' interpretation of the decree,
each of the two shipper-owners would be entitled to "dividends" of
one-half ($1,000,000/$2,000,000) of 7% of $10,000,000, or $350,000.
On the Government's new interpretation, instead, each
shipper-owner's "share" would be one-tenth ($1,000,000/$10,000,000)
of 7% of $10,000,000, or $70,000, this being 7% of each one's
actual investment of $1,000,000 in the company.
[
Footnote 3]
The consent decree reads:
"[A]ll parties hereto [have] severally consented to the entry of
this final judgment herein without trial or adjudication of any
issue of fact or law herein and without admission by any party in
respect of any such issue and in final settlement of all claims
herein in issue. . . ."
[
Footnote 4]
Cf. Fawcus Machine Co. v. United States, 282 U.
S. 375,
282 U. S.
378:
"contemporaneous construction by those charged with the
administration of the act . . . are . . . entitled to respectful
consideration, and will not be overruled, except for weighty
reasons."