In -7237 рlaintiff is a manufacturer of patented machines for the production of paper milk bottles. It licenses certain milk distributors in Chicago to make and sell such bottles and collects valuable license fees therefor dependent upon the number of bottles madе and sold. In 7334, plaintiff is a manufacturer of similar bottles which it sells for profit to dairy companies in Chicago. In each complaint, plaintiff sought to obtain a declaratory judgment that the milk ordinance of the City of Chicago does not prohibit the use of paper milk cоntainers, or if it does, that it is invalid. The District Court held that neither plaintiff had any such direct interest in the purpose of the suits as to enable it to maintain the action. From the resulting judgment dismissing the complaint, each plaintiff appeals.
The general rule controlling the decision in this сause is announced by the Supreme Court in Massachusetts v. Mellon,
The immediate question, therefore, is whether either plaintiff is sustaining or in danger of sustaining some direct injury. It is obvious that each plaintiff has an ultimate pecuniary interest in the practical results of the alleged invalid ordinance or the averred erroneous interpretation of the ordinance by the municipal authorities. Is that interest direct, growing out of direct injury within the meaning of the Supreme Court’s announcement? As to this, the parties are in sad disagreement.
The courts may, at the suit оf proper parties, determine, whether specific acts are unconstitutional or invalid under the law. They may, under similar circumstances, determine whether actions of administrative officials in interpretation and administration of legislative acts, violate the constitutional or legal rights of the suitor. In either instance the power of the court is the same, namely: To determine whether constitutional provision or legislative enactment is transcended either by the legislative act itself or by the administration thereof. This power of judicial determination is delicate in character, one to be 'exercised with caution and care, for it may result in disapproval of acts of the legislative department or of actions of the executive department, both co-ordinate branches of the government. This care, this caution has been proverbially observed by the courts, lest in their zeal to prevent what they deem unjust, they exceed their judicial authority, assert an unwarranted superiority over their co-ordinate governmental branches and invade fields of рolicy preserved to the legislative arm or the realm of- administrative discretion lodged in the executive branch. Obviously such determination may not be had at the suit of any and all members of the public or in an ex parte proceeding. It can be secured only at the suit of one directly and not remotely interested.
In the present case the American Can Company is not engaged in the distribution of milk. It manufactures and sells paper bottles. The ordinance complained of or the administrative acts of defendants in interpretation and administration thereof, in no wise forbid such manufacture and sale. The act, as interpreted by defendants, is asserted by them to forbid the use of paper milk bottles in Chicago. Defendant is free to manufacture and to sell such bottles wherever it may desire, even in Chicagо. Obviously, few, if any, persons will purchase them for use there, but that result we deem incidental, consequential and indirect. Were plaintiff forbidden to manufacture and sell paper milk bottles in Chicago, the effect upon its business would be direct and inevitable.
Thus it is apparent thаt inevitable financial pecuniary damage is not the test of the sufficiency of plaintiff’s interest. Otherwise the right to sue might be extended indefinitely to parties far removed, such as workmen in plaintiff’s factories whose wages are reduced or lost because of lack of realization of profits by their employer. Just as clearly, privity of contract is not essential, for defendants are liable for their torts which directly affect the plaintiff, and for breach of their legal duties in that respect, defendants are liable in damages. Rather thе whole question is whether the damage claimed springs directly to plaintiff from defendants. If it is incidental, if it is indirect, defendants may not invoke the court’s jurisdiction. In L’Hote v. City of New Orleans,
In Sproles v. Binford, D.C.,
Other instances of judicial refusal to entertain suits at the instance of parties similarly situated are Georgia Music Operators Association v. City of Atlantа,
In Davis & Farnum Mfg. Co. v. Los Angeles,
“The plaintiff in this case stands practically in the position of one who seeks to take advantage оf the unconstitutionality of a law in which it has only an indirect interest, and by the enforcement of which it has suffered no legal injury. In this it stands much in the position of the plaintiff in Tyler v. Judges of the Court of Registration,179 U.S. 405 ,21 S.Ct. 206 ,45 L.Ed. 252 , and in Turpin v. Lemon,187 U.S. 51 ,23 S.Ct. 20 [47 L.Ed. 70 ]; [In re] Wellington, 16 Pick. [Mass.] 87, 96, 26 Am.Dec. 631; Sinclair v. Jackson, 8 Cow. [N.Y.] 543; Jones v. Black,48 Ala. 540 ; Shehane v. Bailey,110 Ala. 308 ,20 So. 359 ; Dejarnett v. Haynes,23 Miss. 600 . * * *
“As - the appellant has shown no legal interest in this litigation, and no lack of a complete and adequate remedy at law, it results that the bill was properly dismissed, and the decree of the court below is therefore affirmed.”
Where plaintiff complained that the statute arbitrarily deprived him оf his rights because it required trucks carrying coal entering New York to proceed to the nearest licensed scales to be weighed and that-he had been thereby deprived of his business, the court said, in Connelly v. Department of Agriculture & Markets et al.,
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In Meyer Const. Co. v. Corbett, D.C.,
The application of the prinсiples announced, if correct, is decisive of plaintiff’s rights. Here plaintiff is not using milk bottles in the distribution of milk in Chicago. It is manufacturing and selling them. Its market in Chicago, by the actions complained of, may be removed and destroyed. Yet it may proceed to manufacture and sell wherever it desires including Chicago. It is only indirectly and remotely interested and the damage accruing to it is only remotely consequential and incidental. Christman v. United States, 7 Cir.,
Plaintiff relies upon Savage v. Jones,
Similar cases of direct interest are to be found in other сases cited by plaintiff, :such as Callaghan & Co. v. Smith,
We doubt that there is any real distinction between the suit of the holder of a monopoly franchise for public utility purposes against the alleged illegal acts of the licensor in granting another franchise in viоlation of the terms of plaintiff’s and the suit of plaintiff in the present instance. An example of the former is Arkansas Power & Light Co. v. West Memphis Power & Water Co.,
In 7237 Ex-Cell-O Corporation is even more remotely interested. It is one step further removed from the object of the legislation, for it is the manufacturer and licensor of machines built to manufacture paper milk bottles which it has leased to distributors in the City of Chicago. It follows that our conclusion with regard to the rights of the American Can Company must be the same as to those of the Ex-Cell-0 Corporation.
The judgments of the District Court are affirmed.
