Respondent filed this private antitrust suit in 1961, alleging
violations of § 7 of the Clayton Act and §§ 1 and 2
of the Sherman Act, arising out of petitioner's acquisition in 1956
of the assets of Insulation and Wires, Inc., which had been the
primary distributor of electric insulation materials manufactured
by respondent. Petitioner claimed that the action was barred by the
four-year limitation provision of § 4B of the Clayton Act, but
respondent asserted that the bar of the statute was tolled under
§ 5(b) by a proceeding timely filed in 1960 against petitioner
pursuant to § 7 of the Clayton Act by the Federal Trade
Commission (FTC). That proceeding resulted in a consent order under
which petitioner was directed to divest itself of the acquired
assets. Section 5(a) of the Clayton Act makes a final judgment or
decree in any civil or criminal proceeding brought by or on behalf
of the United States
prima facie evidence in later private
suits as to all matters respecting which that judgment or decree
would be an estoppel as between the parties. Section 5(b) provides
that a civil or criminal proceeding instituted by the United States
to prevent, restrain, or punish violations of the antitrust laws
tolls the statute of limitations during the pendency thereof and
for one year thereafter for private actions arising under those
laws and based on any matter complained of in the government suit.
The District Court held that the statute had been tolled by §
5(b), and that the suit was timely filed, and the Court of Appeals
affirmed.
Held:
1. Sections 5(a) and 5(b) of the Clayton Act are not wholly
interdependent or coextensive. Pp.
381 U. S.
316-318.
(a) The words "final judgment or decree" are important in the
application of § 5(a), while § 5(b), which applies to
every private right of action based on any matter complained of in
the government suit and is not limited to matters which would
operate as an estoppel, tolls the statute of limitations regardless
of whether a final judgment or decree is entered. Pp.
381 U. S.
316-317.
Page 381 U. S. 312
(b) In § 5(a), Congress was concerned with the narrow issue
of the use of judgments or decrees as
prima facie evidence
in private suits, whereas, in § 5(b), Congress meant to assist
private litigants in obtaining all the benefits they might cull
from government antitrust actions. P.
381 U. S.
317.
2. Absent any specific legislative history on the inclusion of
FTC actions within the tolling provision, the issue is resolved by
reliance on the clear expression of congressional intention that
private suitors be given the benefits of prior government actions,
which would necessarily include FTC proceedings. The benefits of
§ 5(b) should not depend on an arbitrary allocation of
enforcement responsibility between the Department of Justice and
the FTC. Pp.
381 U. S.
320-322.
3. Petitioner's Sherman Act claims, arising from the asset
acquisition which was the basis of the FTC proceeding, although
requiring a greater burden of proof than the Clayton Act charges,
clearly are based "in part on any matter complained of" in the FTC
action. Pp.
381 U. S.
322-324.
332 F.2d 346 affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE CLARK delivered the opinion of the Court.
This private treble-damage antitrust action was brought by the
New Jersey Wood Finishing Company against Minnesota Mining and
Manufacturing Company and the
Page 381 U. S. 313
Essex Wire Corporation. [
Footnote 1] Respondent's original complaint was filed on
November 20, 1961. [
Footnote 2]
It alleged violations of § 7 of the Clayton Act, [
Footnote 3] a conspiracy to restrain
commerce in electrical insulation products in violation of § 1
of the Sherman Act, and an attempt to monopolize the same as
prohibited by § 2. [
Footnote
4] The substance of the complaint concerned the acquisition in
1956 of all the assets of Insulation and Wires, Inc., a subsidiary
of Essex, by Minnesota Mining, and an alleged conspiracy to
restrain trade in electrical insulation products. The latter
claimed that the suit was barred by the four-year limitation
provision of the Clayton Act. [
Footnote 5] However, New Jersey Wood asserted that the bar
of the statute had been tolled by a proceeding filed in 1960
against Minnesota Mining by the Federal Trade Commission under
§ 7 of the Clayton Act. That action resulted in a consent
order under which Minnesota Mining was directed to divest itself of
the assets acquired. Section 5(b) of the Clayton Act [
Footnote 6] provides
Page 381 U. S. 314
that a "civil or criminal proceeding . . . instituted by the
United States to prevent, restrain, or punish violations of any of
the antitrust laws" suspends the running of the statute of
limitations during the pendency thereof and for one year thereafter
with respect to private actions arising under those laws and based
on any matter complained of in the government suit. The questions
here are whether proceedings by the Federal Trade Commission toll
the running of the § 4B statute of limitations to the same
extent as to judicial proceedings, and, if they do, whether the
claim of New Jersey Wood is based on "any matter complained of" in
the Commission action. The District Court denied Minnesota Mining's
motion to dismiss, holding that the four-year statute had been
tolled by § 5(b) and that this suit was timely filed.
216 F.
Supp. 507. The Court of Appeals affirmed. 332 F.2d 346. We
granted certiorari because of a conflict between circuits [
Footnote 7] and the importance of the
question in the administration of the Clayton Act. 379 U.S.
877.
I
New Jersey Wood is engaged in the manufacture of electrical
insulation materials, some of which it sells to independent
distributors who, in turn, sell to wire and
Page 381 U. S. 315
cable manufacturers and fabricators. Minnesota Mining is a
diversified company, with one of its divisions producing electrical
insulation materials. Essex is a substantial consumer of electrical
insulation material. It owned Insulation Wires, which distributes
that type of material.
In August, 1956, Minnesota Mining bought all the assets of
Insulation Wires, and, in 1960, the Federal Trade Commission filed
a proceeding against it under § 7 of the Clayton Act which
resulted in a consent order directing the divestiture by Minnesota
Mining of the assets so acquired. This order was dated August 24,
1961. The Commission charged that, prior to 1953, Minnesota Mining
was the leading manufacturer of electrical insulation tape; that,
through five transactions in the years 1952 through 1956, it had
also brought under its control substantial shares of other major
electrical product lines; and that its subsequent acquisition of
two of the three largest distributors of these products might have
the effect of actually or potentially lessening competition and
tending to create a monopoly in various aspects of that commerce.
One of the two distributors so acquired was Insulation Wires.
Thereafter, within a year, this suit was filed. We need not
detail the allegations of the complaint. It is sufficient to say
that the gist of it was that, prior to August, 1956, Insulation
Wires was the primary distributor of New Jersey Wood products
throughout the United States; that, in August, 1956, Minnesota
Mining acquired all of the assets of Insulation Wires, and, during
the next month, notified New Jersey Wood that, beginning in
January, 1957, Insulation Wires would no longer distribute its
products. The complaint also charged Minnesota Mining and Essex
with conspiring to restrain trade and commerce in the manufacture,
sale and distribution of electrical insulation products beginning
with the acquisition of Insulation
Page 381 U. S. 316
Wires and continuing until the filing of this suit. There were
numerous overt acts alleged as being in furtherance of the
conspiracy, the first of which was that acquisition.
II
At the outset, it is necessary to examine § 5(a) of the
Clayton Act [
Footnote 8] and
its relationship to § 5(b). The former makes a final judgment
or decree in any civil or criminal proceeding brought by or on
behalf of the United States
prima facie evidence in
subsequent private suits "as to all matters respecting which said
judgment or decree would be an estoppel as between the parties
thereto." Several distinctions between these sections are apparent,
and suggest that they are not wholly interdependent. First, the
words "final judgment or decree" are used in § 5(a), and are
of crucial significance in its application. However, § 5(b)
tolls the statute of limitations set out in § 4B from the time
suit is instituted by the United States regardless of whether a
final judgment or decree is ultimately entered. Its applicability
in no way turns on the success of the Government in prosecuting its
case. Moreover, under § 5(a), the judgment or decree may be
used only as to matters respecting which it would operate as an
estoppel between the parties. No such limitation appears
Page 381 U. S. 317
in the tolling provision. It applies to every private right of
action based in whole or in part on "any matter" complained of in
the government suit.
When we turn from the express language of these two statutory
provisions to the congressional policies underlying them, it
becomes even more apparent that the applicability of § 5(a) to
Federal Trade Commission actions should not control the question
whether such proceedings toll the statute of limitations. We have
discussed these policies at greater length below. At this juncture,
it is sufficient to say that, in framing § 5(a), Congress
focused on the narrow issue of the use by private parties of
judgments or decrees as
prima facie evidence. This was
recognized in
Emich Motors Corp. v. General Motors Corp.,
340 U. S. 558
(1951), where we stated that the purpose of § 5(a) was "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" and to permit them "as large an
advantage as the estoppel doctrine would afford had the Government
brought suit."
Id. at
340 U. S. 568.
As we shall show, however, its purpose in adopting § 5(b) was
not so limited, for it was not then dealing with the delicate area
in which a judgment secured in an action between two parties may be
used by a third. Whatever ambiguities may exist in the legislative
history of these provisions as to other questions, it is plain
that, in § 5(b), Congress meant to assist private litigants in
utilizing any benefits they might cull from government antitrust
actions.
See S.Rep.No.619, 84th Cong., 1st Sess., 6,
U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1955, p. 2328. The distinction was
emphasized in
Union Carbide & Carbon Corp. v. Nisley,
300 F.2d 561 (1962), where the court, after noting the analysis of
§ 5(a) set out in
Emich Motors Corp., supra, stated
that:
"The corollary purpose of the tolling provisions of the second
paragraph of Section 5 (now § 5(b)) is
Page 381 U. S. 318
to vouchsafe the intended benefits of related government
proceedings by suspending the running of the statute of limitations
until the termination of the government proceedings, and allowing
the private suitor one year thereafter in which to prepare and file
his suit. The competency of a government judgment in a private suit
is necessarily restricted to the requirements of due process. But
the tolling of the statute during the pendency of the government
litigation is not so limited."
Id. at 569.
In our view, therefore, the two sections are not necessarily
coextensive; they are governed by different considerations as well
as congressional policy objectives. This makes § 5(b) readily
severable from § 5(a). Even if we assumed arguendo that §
5(a) is inapplicable to Commission proceedings -- a question upon
which we venture no opinion -- that conclusion would be immaterial
in our consideration of § 5(b) and § 4B. Congress has
expressed its belief that private antitrust litigation is one of
the surest weapons for effective enforcement of the antitrust laws.
This construction will lend considerable impetus to that
policy.
III
Section 5, later §§ 5(a) and 5(b), was passed in
response to the plea of President Wilson. In a speech to the
Congress on January 20, 1914, he urged that a law be enacted which
would permit victims of antitrust violations to have "redress upon
the facts and judgments proved and entered in suits by the
Government" and that "the statute of limitations . . . be suffered
to run against such litigants only from the date of the conclusion
of the Government's action." 51 Cong.Rec. 1964. The broad aim of
this enactment was to use "private self-interest as a means of
enforcement" of the antitrust laws.
Bruce's Juices, Inc. v.
American Can Co., 330 U. S. 743,
330 U. S.
751
Page 381 U. S. 319
(1947). The
"entire provision [was] intended to help persons of small means
who are injured in their property or business by combinations or
corporations violating the antitrust laws."
H.R.Rep.No.627, 627, 63d Cong., 2d Sess., 14.
See
S.Rep. No. 619,
supra, at 6.
It may be, as Minnesota Mining contends, that, when it was
enacted, the tolling provision was a logical backstop for the
prima facie evidence clause of § 5(a). But even
though § 5(b) complements § 5(a) in this respect by
permitting a litigant to await the outcome of government
proceedings and use any judgment or decree rendered therein -- a
benefit which often is of limited practical value [
Footnote 9] -- it is certainly not restricted
to that effect. As we have pointed out, the textual distinctions as
well as the policy basis of § 5(b) indicate that it was to
serve a more comprehensive function in the congressional scheme of
things. The Government's initial action may aid the private
litigant in a number of other ways. The pleadings, transcripts of
testimony, exhibits and documents are available to him in most
instances. In fact, the rules of the Commission so provide. 16 CFR
§ 1.132(e).
See generally 16 CFR § 1.131
et
seq. Moreover, difficult questions of law may be tested and
definitively resolved before the private litigant enters the fray.
The greater resources and expertise of the Commission and its staff
render the private suitor a tremendous benefit aside from any value
he may derive from a judgment or decree. Indeed, so useful is this
service that government proceedings are recognized as a major
source of evidence for private parties.
See Bicks, The
Department of Justice and Private Treble Damage Actions, 4
Antitrust Bull. 5 (1959); Loevinger, Handling a Plaintiff's
Antitrust Damage Suit, 4 Antitrust Bull. 29 (1959).
Page 381 U. S. 320
Admittedly, there is little in the legislative history to
suggest that Congress consciously intended to include Commission
actions within the sweep of the tolling provision. But neither is
there any substantial evidence that it consciously intended to
exclude them. The fact of the matter is that the record of the 1914
legislative proceedings reveals an almost complete absence of any
discussion on the tolling problem. It seems that Congress simply
did not consider the extent of its coverage in the course of its
deliberations.
It is in light of this legislative silence that we must
determine whether § 4B is tolled by Commission proceedings. In
resolving this question, we must necessarily rely on the one
element of congressional intention which is plain on the record --
the clearly expressed desire that private parties be permitted the
benefits of prior government actions. Implicit in such an objective
is the necessity that the tolling provision include Commission
proceedings. Otherwise, the benefits flowing from a major segment
of the Government's enforcement effort would, in many cases, be
denied to private parties. In this connection, and of crucial
significance, is the fact that the potential advantages available
to such litigants because of § 5(b) reach far beyond the
specific and limited benefits accruing to them under § 5(a).
Furthermore, the § 5(b) advantages flow as naturally from
Commission proceedings as they do from Justice Department actions.
Yet petitioner contends that § 4B must be tolled in the
latter, but not in the former. Such a grudging interpretation of
the interrelationship of § 5(b) and § 4B, however, would
collide head-on with Congress' basic policy objectives. Acceptance
of petitioner's position would make enjoyment of these intended
benefits turn on the arbitrary allocation of enforcement
responsibility between the Department and the Commission, and we
must therefore reject it.
Page 381 U. S. 321
It is true that the precise language of § 5(b) does not
clearly encompass Commission proceedings. But it is not the literal
wording of such a provision that is controlling where, as here,
Congress has evidenced neither acceptance nor rejection of either
interpretation, yet one effects a clearly expressed congressional
purpose, while the other defeats it. We stated the pivotal question
for determination in such an event only this Term in
Burnett v.
New York Central R. Co., 380 U. S. 424,
380 U. S. 427
(1965): "[W]hether congressional purpose is effectuated by tolling
the statute of limitations is given circumstances." In order to
determine that intent, we must examine
"the purposes and policies underlying the limitation provision,
the Act itself, and the remedial scheme developed for the
enforcement of the rights given by the Act."
Ibid. Guided by these criteria, we think it clear that
congressional policy sustaining § 5(b) would be effectively
served only by tolling the statute of limitations in cases such as
this, and we deem that policy controlling. This analysis is not a
novel one. Mr. Justice Holmes, sitting on circuit, noted in
Johnson v. United States, 163 F. 30, 32:
"A statute may indicate or require as its justification a change
in the policy of the law, although it expresses that change only in
the specific cases most likely to occur to the mind. The
Legislature has the power to decide what the policy of the law
shall be, and if it has intimated its will, however, indirectly,
that will should be recognized and obeyed. The major premise of the
conclusion expressed in a statute, the change of policy that
induces the enactment, may not be set out in terms, but it is not
an adequate discharge of duty for courts to say: we see what you
are driving at, but you have not said it, and therefore we shall go
on as before."
We hold, therefore, that the limitation provision of § 4B
is tolled by Commission proceedings to the same extent
Page 381 U. S. 322
and in the same circumstances as it is by Justice Department
actions. In so holding, we give effect to Congress' basic policy
objectives in enacting § 5(b) -- objectives which would be
frustrated should we reach a contrary conclusion, and thereby
deprive large numbers of private litigants of the benefits of
government antitrust suits simply because those suits were pursued
by one governmental agency rather than the other.
IV
Minnesota Mining further contends that, even though § 5(b)
tolls Commission proceedings, the suit here, insofar as it asserts
Sherman Act claims, is not based in part on any matter complained
of in the Commission's proceeding. We cannot agree.
New Jersey Wood's Sherman Act claims rest on an alleged
conspiracy to restrain and attempt to monopolize trade and commerce
in the manufacture, sale and distribution of electrical insulation
products. The purposes of the conspiracy were alleged to be: (1) to
control Insulation Wires; (2) to prevent it from distributing New
Jersey Wood products; (3) to insure that Insulation Wires' supplies
were purchased from a Minnesota Mining subsidiary; (4) to effect
tie-in sales of electrical insulation products with other Minnesota
Mining products; and (5) to have Essex deal only with Insulation
Wires in purchasing electrical insulation products to the exclusion
of competitive distributors handling New Jersey Wood products. The
effect of the conspiracy was alleged to be the complete disruption
of the pattern of manufacture, sale, and distribution that New
Jersey Wood had enjoyed with Insulation Wires and denial to it of
access to substantial national markets for electrical insulation
products.
Certainly the allegations are based "in part" on the Commission
action. It charged that the Insulation Wires acquisition, along
with that of another distributor, placed
Page 381 U. S. 323
in the hands of Minnesota Mining, a manufacturer, two of the
three largest distributors in the business; that following the
acquisitions these distributors discontinued distribution of the
products of a number of manufacturers who had used them prior to
their acquisition by Minnesota Mining; and that the effect of such
action by Minnesota Mining was "the actual or potential lessening
of competition" in the manufacture, sale and distribution of
insulation products and the foreclosure of other manufacturers from
a substantial share of the markets for said products. It appears to
us that both suits set up substantially the same claims. It is true
that the Commission's Clayton Act proceeding required proof only of
a potential anticompetitive effect, while the Sherman Act carries
the more onerous burden of proof of an actual restraint. The
Commission complaint, however, did allege an "actual," as well as a
"potential," lessening of competition,
i.e., manufacturers
"have been foreclosed from a substantial share of the markets."
Moreover, the monopolization count was phrased in terms of an
"attempt to monopolize," which may be illegal though not
successful.
See United States v. Columbia Steel Co.,
334 U. S. 495,
334 U. S. 525,
334 U. S.
531-532 (1948).
Minnesota Mining's claim seems to be that the crucial difference
between the Commission and the New Jersey Wood proceedings is that
the former alleges conduct that may substantially lessen
competition, while the latter asserts activity that has actually
done so. We think that this is a distinction without a difference,
and does not deprive New Jersey Wood of the tolling effect of
§ 5(b). That clause provides for tolling as long as the
private claim is based "in part on any matter complained of" in the
government proceedings. The fact that New Jersey Wood claims that
the same conduct has a greater anticompetitive effect does not make
the conduct challenged any less a matter complained of in the
government action.
Page 381 U. S. 324
It merely requires it to meet a greater burden of proof as to
the effect of the conspiracy before a Sherman Act claim can be
sustained.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN and MR. JUSTICE STEWART did not participate
in the decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
The case was considered on interlocutory appeal. 28 U.S.C.
§ 1292(b) (1958 ed.). Essex did not appeal, and is not a party
here.
[
Footnote 2]
During the pendency of the case in the District Court,
respondent filed an amended complaint. However, respondent's
theories of recovery and the controlling legal questions are common
to both pleadings.
[
Footnote 3]
38 Stat. 731, as amended, 15 U.S.C § 18 (1964 ed.).
[
Footnote 4]
26 Stat. 209, as amended, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1, 2 (1964
ed.).
[
Footnote 5]
Section 4B of the Clayton Act, 69 Stat. 283, 15 U.S.C. §
15b (1964 ed.), provides that:
"Any action to enforce any cause of action under sections 15 or
15a of this title shall be forever barred unless commenced within
four years after the cause of action accrued. No cause of action
barred under existing law on the effective date of this section and
sections 15a and 16 of this title shall be revived by said
sections."
[
Footnote 6]
Section 5(b), 38 Stat. 731, as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 16(b)
(1964 ed.), provides:
"(b) Whenever any civil or criminal proceeding is instituted by
the United States to prevent, restrain, or punish violations of any
of the antitrust laws, but not including an action under section
15a of this title, the running of the statute of limitations in
respect of every private right of action arising under said laws
and based in whole or in part on any matter complained of in said
proceeding shall be suspended during the pendency thereof and for
one year thereafter:
Provided, however, That whenever the
running of the statute of limitations in respect of a cause of
action arising under section 15 of this title is suspended
hereunder, any action to enforce such cause of action shall be
forever barred unless commenced either within the period of
suspension or within four years after the cause of action
accrued."
[
Footnote 7]
See Highland Supply Corp. v. Reynolds Metals Co., 327
F.2d 725 (C.A.8th Cir. 1964).
[
Footnote 8]
Section 5(a) 38 Stat. 731, as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 16(a)
(1964 ed.), provides:
"(a) A final judgment or decree heretofore or hereafter rendered
in any civil or criminal proceeding 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 action or proceeding brought by any
other party against such defendant under said laws or by the United
States under section 15a of this title, as to all matters
respecting which said judgment or decree would be an estoppel as
between the parties thereto:
Provided, That this section
shall not apply to consent judgments or decrees entered before any
testimony has been taken or to judgments or decrees entered in
actions under section 15a of this title."
[
Footnote 9]
See Theatre Enterprises, Inc. v. Paramount Film Distributing
Corp., 346 U. S. 537
(1954).
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, dissenting.
Section 4B of the Clayton Act bars a private antitrust damage
suit unless brought within four years after the cause of action
arises. [
Footnote 2/1] Section 5(b)
of the Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 16(b) (1964 ed.), however,
suspends the running of this limitation period
"[w]henever any civil or criminal proceeding is instituted by
the United States to prevent, restrain, or punish violations of any
of the antitrust laws. . . ."
I am unable to agree with the Court's holding that a purely
administrative proceeding initiated by the Federal Trade Commission
and decided by that same regulatory agency is the kind of "civil or
criminal proceeding . . . instituted by the United States . . ."
which tolls the statute of limitations under § 5(b). The Court
itself concedes that, even as amended, "the precise language of
§ 5(b) does not clearly encompass Commission proceedings," and
that
"there is little in the legislative history to suggest that
Congress consciously intended to include Commission actions within
the sweep of the tolling provision."
And the Solicitor General, while urging as
amicus
curiae the result the Court reaches today, candidly admits
that this "result is difficult and perhaps impossible to justify in
terms of conventional analysis of the text and legislative history.
. . ." It is
Page 381 U. S. 325
because I think both the language of the statute and the
legislative history persuasively, if not conclusively, show that
Congress did not intend the construction the Court gives §
5(b) today that I am unable to agree with its decision.
The whole of § 5, now divided into subdivisions (a) and
(b), was passed in response to President Wilson's 1914 plea to
Congress to enact a law designed to make it easier for antitrust
victims to collect damages through private lawsuits, since
preparing an antitrust case against a major corporate defendant was
a larger task than most injured persons could undertake. To
accomplish that single purpose, he recommended to Congress, as the
Court notes, two things -- that these victims be permitted to seek
"redress upon the facts and judgments proved and entered in suits
by the Government" and also that "the statute of limitations . . .
be suffered to run against such litigants only from the date of the
conclusion of the Government's action." 51 Cong.Rec. 1964. Congress
accepted the President's recommendation and passed § 5, a
single section in two paragraphs, making
"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 . . . prima facie evidence"
against a civil antitrust defendant and tolling the statute of
limitations during the pendency of "any suit or proceeding in
equity or criminal prosecution . . . instituted by the United
States. . . ." This language of § 5 as it passed the Congress
in 1914 clearly did not refer to administrative proceedings, but to
antitrust suits or criminal prosecutions instituted by the
Government in civil or criminal courts. Moreover, the purpose and
effect of the two parts of this provision were obviously
complementary, permitting the injured party to utilize a final
judgment obtained by the Government and also providing a means
whereby the injured party could await the result of the government
action
Page 381 U. S. 326
confident that his suit would not be barred by the statute of
limitations. In the words of one of the committee reports, the
"
entire provision is intended to help persons of small
means who are injured in their property or business by combinations
or corporations violating the antitrust laws."
H.R.Rep.No.627, 63d Cong., 2d Sess., 14. (Emphasis supplied.)
See S.Rep.No.698, 63d Cong., 2d Sess., 45. Therefore, both
the language and the complementary nature of the two paragraphs of
§ 5 ought to show beyond any doubt that the whole section as
passed was intended to apply to the same kind of proceeding in the
same kind of tribunal -- that is, a proceeding brought in a civil
or criminal court, the only tribunal which in common understanding
has power to render the kind of "final judgment or decree"
mentioned in § 5(a). [
Footnote
2/2] Furthermore, since the two paragraphs of § 5 when
offered and when passed were regarded as an entity because of their
identical language and purpose, it is not surprising that the
Senators and Congressmen addressing themselves to § 5 did not
specifically direct their remarks to the tolling provision, as
distinct from the effect to be given a court judgment or decree.
Those discussing the measure naturally treated the "suit or
proceeding in equity" or "criminal prosecution" set out in both
paragraphs in identical terms as referring to the same kind of
proceeding in the same kind of tribunal, namely, a court. It is
true that the language was changed in 1955 from "suit or proceeding
in equity" and "criminal
Page 381 U. S. 327
prosecution" to "civil or criminal proceeding," the present
language, but the legislative history of the 1955 amendment
affirmatively shows that there was no intention to affect in any
way the kind of court proceedings necessary to suspend the statute
of limitations. Thus, I am unable to go along with the Court in
construing the tolling provision of § 5(b) as though it
applies to both court and Trade Commission proceedings, while
treating § 5(a) as though it may apply to court proceedings
only. Such a holding would, in my judgment, run counter to the
whole legislative history of the 1914 Act.
I am setting out as an
381
U.S. 311app|>Appendix some of the legislative history of the
original Act and of the 1955 amendment, which points out
specifically something which does not surprise me at all: that,
while Congress was ready to make the final judgment of a court
prima facie evidence against a defendant, it was, at the
same time, entirely unwilling to give such effect to administrative
hearings and orders, and was also unwilling to toll the statute of
limitations during the pendency of such proceedings. It is true
that many administrative agencies now conduct hearings, make
findings, and issue orders in a way more or less comparable to
courts. I doubt, however, that the time has even yet come when
Congress would be willing to compel judges and juries to treat
administrative orders as
prima facie proof of a violation
of law, either civil or criminal, or to treat those proceedings as
though they were conducted in a court of law, with all the
protections there afforded litigants.
I would reverse this judgment.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Section 4B of the Clayton Act, 69 Stat. 283, 15 U.S.C. §
15b (1964 ed.), provides that:
"Any action to enforce any cause of action under sections 15 or
15a of this title shall be forever barred unless commenced within
four years after the cause of action accrued."
[
Footnote 2/2]
And, of course, it is not at all clear that this is a suit
"instituted by the United States." The Department of Justice brings
suits and criminal prosecutions in the name of the United States,
while an independent regulatory agency sues and is sued in its own
name. And the United States does not initiate the proceedings
before an administrative agency. Here for example the Federal Trade
Commission filed the proceeding against petitioner. However,
because of view I take of the other language in the section, I find
it unnecessary to decide this question.
|
381
U.S. 311app|
APPENDIX TO OPINION OF MR. JUSTICE BLACK,
DISSENTING
THE 1914 ACT.
Herewith for illustration are statements made about § 5 of
the 1914 Clayton Act by Senators and Congressmen
Page 381 U. S. 328
particularly interested in § 5, all of whom took part in
the preparation and sponsorship of the 1914 bill or the discussions
that took place as it went through the House and Senate.
Senator Walsh, the spokesman for the Judiciary Committee, led
the fight for the House version of § 5 and defended it on the
ground that the defendant "has had an opportunity to try out before
a court, with all the forms of the law, every question involved in
the
law suit. . . ." 51 Cong.Rec. 13851. (Emphasis added.)
And Senator Walsh later added that
"Here, the party has had his day in
court. He has tried
every issue, and it is simply a question, now that he has had it
tried, whether he may insist upon a second
trial."
51 Cong.Rec. 13857. (Emphasis added.) Opponents of the
"conclusive evidence" proposal of the House bill never challenged
the premise, implicit in the remarks of Senator Walsh and others,
that only judgments rendered in judicial proceedings were
contemplated by § 5. Not once did any member of Congress
suggest that, under the House version, administrative findings
based upon evidence which would not be admissible in a court should
be conclusive of the defendant's liability in a later treble damage
action.
Senator Walsh, in arguing that his proposal would not violate
the Constitution, again emphasized that § 5 did not apply to
administrative orders, but only to judgments or decrees of the
courts:
"I want to say just a word with reference to the authorities to
which the attention of the Senate has been invited. . . . Nobody
questions them. They all lay down the rule that, in an action
brought against an individual who has never theretofore had his
day in court, you can not make a certificate or a recital
or an order of an administrative board or anything of that kind
conclusive evidence against him."
51 Cong.Rec. 13856-13857. (Emphasis added.)
Page 381 U. S. 329
On the other hand, there were Senators who thought a judgment or
decree for a defendant should be equally binding on a treble damage
plaintiff. In opposing this idea, Senator White argued:
"Then, Mr. President, as has been said, it is burdensome enough
to require parties to the litigation themselves to be bound by the
findings of a
court or
jury in a particular case.
So many things that we can not at the time possibly foresee
influence such decisions. The way in which the evidence is produced
may have its effect upon a
jury or a
court."
"The manner in which the case is handled by the lawyers employed
may determine in the mind of a
jury or a
court
what the
verdict or the
judgment shall be, and
yet, Mr. President, those things should probably not have been
controlling influences in the conclusions reached."
51 Cong.Rec. 13900. (Emphasis added.)
And Senator Cummins said:
"But when the suit is brought, then the judgment or decree of
the
court in the suit that has been brought by the
Government would be
prima facie evidence of violation of
the antitrust law. . . ."
51 Cong.Rec. 13850. (Emphasis added.)
When the bill left the conference committee and went back to the
House, the managers were called on to defend the changes against
charges that elimination of the criminal penalties had emasculated
the bill. Chairman Webb of the House Judiciary Committee attempted
to describe the proposed enforcement procedures in the strongest
possible light. After reading the provision vesting enforcement
responsibility in the Trade Commission, he stated:
"Now, the value of these two sections is this: that they not
only give the individual the right to sue for treble damages where
he pleases, and we not only
Page 381 U. S. 330
suspend the statute of limitations against an individual if a
Government suit is brought against a trust, but we also
require the
Federal Trade Commission to stop these
practices and take those guilty of such practices into court."
"But that is not all. Some argue that, after the Trade
Commission takes jurisdiction, that excludes individuals from
pursuing these other remedies. The bill further provides:"
" No order of the commission or board or the judgment of the
court to enforce the same shall in any wise relieve or absolve any
person from any liability under the antitrust acts."
"So you have three or four distinct remedies, all of which may
be invoked at the same time."
51 Cong.Rec. 16274. (Emphasis added.)
It is clear therefore that Chairman Webb distinguished between
suits by the "Government" -- the suits to which the tolling
provision applied -- and proceedings of the Federal Trade
Commission. He believed that the statute was suspended only when
actions were brought under the direction of the Attorney General.
This was confirmed a few moments later by the following
exchange:
"Mr. HARDY. Under the bill, does the Government have the
authority to bring suit for injunction as well as private
parties?"
"MR. WEBB. Yes. Section 15 gives the district attorneys under
the direction of the Attorney General the right to apply for an
injunction."
51 Cong.Rec. 16276.
The day following Chairman Webb's remarks, Representative Floyd,
another of the House managers, again attempted to persuade the
House that the enforcement scheme contemplated by the bill was
strong:
"That is not all. Under section 5 of the bill, any private
litigant injured by the unlawful acts of any
Page 381 U. S. 331
corporation where the
Government of the United States
has proceeded against such corporation and obtained a judgment,
either in a
court of law or equity, is allowed the use of
that judgment or decree to show the unlawful acts of the
combination to the full extent that it would be an estoppel between
the Government and the original offender. . . . That is a new
remedy and a most efficient remedy. The
Government of the
United States, acting in behalf of all of its citizens,
prosecutes a trust, convicts it either in a
criminal court or a
civil court, and the private litigant, injured by the unlawful
acts of such trust, has nothing to do in order to recover the
three-fold damages except to prove the amount of damages and that
the injury was done by this trust or corporation. . . ."
"
* * * *"
"But that is not all. There are several other remedies provided
in this bill. Under section 11, the violation of sections 2, 3, 7,
and 8 may be enforced, respectively, by
the Trade
Commission, by the Interstate Commerce Commission, or by the
Federal Reserve Board."
51 Cong.Rec. 16319. (Emphasis added.)
Another relevant discussion in the House is the following:
"Mr. McKENZIE: If this section is left in the bill, do you not
feel and believe that this decree that is mentioned in this section
should be the decree of the court of last resort -- the Supreme
Court of the land?"
"Mr. VOLSTEAD. No."
"
* * * *"
"Mr. McKENZIE. You think it would be good policy to leave a
matter of such great importance in the hands of an inferior
court?"
"Mr. VOLSTEAD. Yes."
51 Cong.Rec. 9079.
Page 381 U. S. 332
As originally presented to the House, § 5 also made a
"judgment or decree" rendered in a "suit or proceeding in equity
brought by or on behalf of the United States" conclusive against
any prospective treble damage plaintiff. Opponents of this clause
vigorously challenged the constitutionality of binding a party who
had never had his "day in court." The debates made it clear time
and again that the proceeding contemplated was an action brought
for the United States by the Attorney General, not an
administrative proceeding:
"Mr. SISSON. . . . [D]oes the gentleman believe that his rights
in the court should be determined upon the questions raised by the
Attorney General of the United States?"
"Mr. PROUTY. Why, certainly not; the Constitution expressly
prohibits it. In other words, the Attorney General could go in and
prevent my having a trial before a jury."
"Mr. SISSON. That is the point I had in mind."
"Mr. PROUTY. By instituting a proceeding in equity and having
the case tried."
"Mr. SISSON. That is the point I had in mind, that the Attorney
General, if he was disposed to do so -- we would not charge that of
any particular Attorney General -- might cook up a case which would
directly defeat the rights of every individual if he had been
injured."
51 Cong.Rec. 9492.
Defenders of the proposition, on the other hand, stated:
"Mr. CULLOP. My question is this: supposing a collusive suit was
brought and the defendant won on the issue, then is every outsider
barred from any further suit? According to this language, he
is."
"Mr. FLOYD of Arkansas. . . ."
". . . My answer to that proposition is that, if the time ever
comes in this Government when any Attorney
Page 381 U. S. 333
General will enter into collusive suits with corporations and
combinations engaged in unlawful acts, it will be an evil day for
our Republic, a day when every statute will become useless and
justice will become a mockery."
51 Cong.Rec. 9489.
Furthermore, an amendment was in fact offered to the Senate
which arguably would have resulted in bringing administrative
proceedings within the scope of the phrase "suit or proceeding."
The amendment met with opposition, and was withdrawn. The House
bill originally dealt only with a "suit or proceeding in equity,"
and did not apply to criminal proceedings. After the bill reached
the Senate, Senator Bryan moved to strike out the words "in
equity," so the provision would read simply "any suit or
proceeding." As observed by Senator Reed, "That would cover any
kind of proceeding." Senator Culberson proposed a substitute adding
the phrase "criminal prosecution or," and retaining the phrase "in
equity." Senator Bryan withdrew his broader proposal and accepted
Senator Culberson's limited substitute. 51 Cong.Rec.
13897-13898.
The House initially passed the Act with four substantive
sections, each having a criminal penalty attached. All of the
criminal penalties were removed in the Senate or in conference.
Senator Reed of Missouri, leading the opposition to the bill,
charged repeatedly that the Clayton Act had been stripped of all
force and effectiveness:
"We end by providing a smooth and easy road which may be
traveled through the years, until finally a
commission
shall issue an innocuous, nonenforcible decree, a decree that can
be vitalized only by being affirmed by a court. At the conclusion
of all the litigation, we propose to impose no penalty, levy no
fine, send no one to jail, and we permit the culprit to preserve
his swag!"
51 Cong.Rec. 15867. (Emphasis added.)
Page 381 U. S. 334
Had the proponents of the measure contemplated the use of
administrative findings as evidence, it appears that the obvious
answer to Senator Reed would have been that the bill does have
teeth, for the Commission's order would be admissible as
prima
facie evidence against the "culprit," and private claimants
would be able to reclaim "his swag," three times over. Neither this
nor any other answer challenging the accuracy of Senator Reed's
statement was heard on the Senate floor, although his complaint was
repeatedly made. And in the House, Representative Nelson
charged:
"Finally, the penalty is cut out; they can do all these things,
and the Trade Commission can only say, 'You must not to it any
more.' Then there is the long delay in an appeal to the courts; and
they go through the courts. And then what? There may be an
injunction issued, but they have got away with the loot with
impunity."
51 Cong.Rec. 16325.
For further examples,
see 51 Cong.Rec. 9079, 9169,
9488-9490, 9492, 9494-9495, 12789-12790, 13850-13851, 13856-13857,
13897-13898, 13900, 14262, 14328, 15867, 15948, 15950, 16003,
16044, 16046, 16149, 16154, 16274, 16281, 16319, 16325.
THE 1955 AMENDMENT.
The committee reports on the amendment detailed carefully every
change the bill would make, but there is absolutely no evidence
that there was any intent to amend § 5(b) for the purpose of
suspending the statute of limitations during the pendency of
Federal Trade Commission hearings.
See H.R.Rep. No. 422,
84th Cong., 1st Sess.; S.Rep.No.619, 84th Cong., 1st Sess. And the
debates and the hearings affirmatively show that no change was
intended. For example, in the 1951 hearings, Representative Patman
appeared before the House subcommittee considering the bill and
questioned whether § 5 had been changed to deny the right of a
private
Page 381 U. S. 335
litigant to use a judgment obtained by the Government.
Representative Wilson assured him that: "This doesn't change the
present law." Representative Keating, the author of the bill, then
commented:
"I think there is a slight change in existing law where it
refers to the subsequent numbers. There has to be a change in
phraseology in that because of what we have done in section 4. I
believe that is the only change."
Hearings on H.R. 3408 before the Subcommittee on Study of
Monopoly Power of the House Committee on the Judiciary, 82d Cong.,
1st Sess., Part 3, 98-100. And, on the floor of the House in the
discussion of the bill which became the present law, Representative
Quigley stated:
"It was the specific purpose of the committee in reporting this
bill to in no way affect the substantive rights of individual
litigants. It is simply a procedural change and suggested with the
thought of setting up a uniform statute of limitations. That is the
sole purpose."
101 Cong.Rec. 5131.
MR. JUSTICE GOLDBERG, dissenting.
With all deference, I dissent. I agree with the Court,
ante at
381 U. S. 321,
that, as we recently stated in
Burnett v. New York Central R.
Co., 380 U. S. 424,
380 U. S. 427,
the pivotal question for determination is "whether congressional
purpose is effectuated by tolling the statute of limitations in
given circumstances." I cannot agree, however, that the Court has
correctly applied that test in this case. As my Brother BLACK has
so well demonstrated in his dissenting opinion, both the language
and legislative history of the statutes before us clearly show that
Congress did not intend that the statute of limitations applicable
to private antitrust actions be tolled by the institution of a
Federal Trade Commission administrative proceeding.
Cf. United
States v. Welden, 377 U. S. 95. It
frustrates rather than effectuates congressional purpose to fail to
honor the express intent of Congress in this given
circumstance.