delivered the opinion of the Court.
Thе sole question involved in this proceeding under § 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act
1
concerns the power of the Commission in framing an order pursuant to its finding that respondents had conspired to adopt and use a zone delivered pricing system in their sale of lead pigments.
2
In its general cease and desist order prohibiting concert of action among respondents in the further use
I.
The original proceeding under § 5 of the Act was commenced in 1944. The order was entered on a second amended complaint filed in 1946. After protracted hearings, the Commission entered its findings which the Court of Appеals has held to be supported by substantial evidence. The findings material here are as follows:
The pricing practice of the industry as to the sale of white lead in oil prior to 1933 is not shown in the record. However, National Lead had as early as 1910 sold this pigment on the basis of territorial differentials involving free freight to specified towns. The differentials added to the base price were generally uniform for some 589 cities listed in National Lead’s pricing system in 1933. The charge to purchasers outside the listed cities was the base price plus actual freight to the nearest listed city. In the sales of dry white lead and lead oxides it appears that by the sales practice prior to 1933 there was a uniform delivered price in the case of the white lead, while the purchasers of lead oxides paid the freight charge in addition to the base price.
Beginning in July 1933, the industry held a series of meetings in Chicago for the ostensible purpose of draft
The Commission stated that “nowhere in the code, nor in any preliminary draft of a code produced at the meetings of any of the committees, is there any reference to
II.
The Commission entered an order prohibiting respondents from entering into or carrying out any “planned common course of action,” agreement, or conspiracy to sell at prices determined pursuant to a “zone delivered price system,” or any other system resulting in identical prices at the points of sale. The order also included a provision, to which respondents strenuously object, directing each of them to cease and desist from
“quoting or selling lead pigments at prices calculated or determined in whole or in part pursuant to or in accordance with a zone delivered рrice system for the purpose or with the effect of systematically matching the delivered price quotations or the delivered prices of other sellers of lead pigments and thereby preventing purchasers from finding any advantage in price in dealing with one or more sellers as against another.” Id., at 873-874.
The Commission, in an accompanying opinion, stated that in all cases where it found violations of thе law, “it is the Commission’s duty to determine to the best of its ability the remedy necessary to suppress such activity and to take every precaution to preclude its revival.”
Id.,
at 884. In this case, the opinion pointed out, the
III.
At the beginning we must understand the limits of the contested portion of the order.
First,
it is temporary. Though its life expectancy is not definite, it is clear that the Commission was creating a breathing spell during which independent pricing might be established without the hang-over of the long-existing pattern of collusion.
Second,
the order is directed solely at the use оf a zone delivered pricing system
4
and no other. This system is a pricing method based on geographic divisions or zones, the boundaries of which are entirely drawn by the seller. His delivered price is the same throughout a particular geographic zone so drawn up by him. Customarily the delivered price is different between zones, though as here, widely separated zones, geographically, might have the same dеlivered price. It is well to mention here that while this Court has passed upon the validity of basing point systems of sales,
Corn Products Refining Co.
v.
Federal Trade Commission,
Respondents contend that the cease and desist order, as written, excludes the benefits of § 2 (b) of the Clayton Act.
6
While § 2 (b) “does not concern itself with pricing systems . . . [but] only [with] the seller’s 'lower’ price and [with] that only to the extent that it is made 'in good faith to meet an equally low price of a competitor,’ ”
Federal Trade Commission
v.
A. E. Staley Mfg. Co.,
IV.
It is the contention of respondents that the contested paragraph of the order effectively bans the noncollusive,
It goes without saying that the requirements of a fair hearing include notice of the claims of the opposing party and an opportunity to meet them.
Morgan
v.
United States,
We pass on to respondents’ major contention questioning the power of the Commission. As the Court has said many times before, the Commission may exercise only the powers granted it by the Act.
Federal Trade Commission
v.
Western Meat Co.,
The Court has held that the Commission is clothed with wide discretion in determining the type of order that is necessary to bring an end to the unfair practices found to exist. In
Jacob Siegel Co.
v.
Federal Trade Commission,
The respondents were found to have plainly disregarded the law. In this respect the Commission correctly considered the circumstances under which the illegal acts occurred. Those in utter disregard of law, as here, “call for repression by sterner measures than where the steps could reasonаbly have been thought permissible.”
United States
v.
United States Gypsum Co.,
Respondents point out that in only one other case in the long history of the Commission has a similar order
Respondents pose hypothetical situations which they say may rise up to plague them. However, “we think it would not be good judicial administration,” as our late Brother Jackson said in
International Salt Co.
v.
United States,
Reversed.
Notes
38 Stat. 719, as amended, 15 U. S. C. § 45.
The three principal lead pigments arе dry white lead, white lead in oil, and the lead oxides, red lead and litharge. Dry white lead is a fine white powder used as a pigment in paints. White lead in oil is white lead with linseed oil added and is sold for use as the basic ingredient in exterior house paint. Lead oxides and litharge are sold to electric storage battery manufacturers as the basic raw material for battery plates. Red lead is also the basic ingredient in red lead paint commonly used as a protective coating for iron and steel structures.
The par zone includes a number of northeastern and midwestern States. However, some cities located within these States are excluded from the par zone. On the other hand, the San Francisco area is a par zone, as is the City of St. Louis, though both are located in States not included in par zonе areas. For a detailed discussion and maps of the operation of the zone pricing system, see the findings, 49 F. T. C. 840-870.
Our discussion of the zone delivered pricing system should in no way be construed as our approval of its use. We do not reach that question.
At oral argument, counsel for the Federal Trade Commission was requested by the Court to submit a statement on behalf of the Commission setting forth its view as to the scope of the disputed paragraph of the cease and desist order. In response, the Commission supplied its interpretation which coincides with that set out here.
49 Stat. 1526, 15 U. S. C. § 13 (b).
We need not discuss the full scope of the powers of the Federal Trade Commission, nor their relative breadth in comparison with those of a court of equity. As this Court said in
May Dept. Stores Co.
v.
Labor Board,
