This complaint was filed pursuant to leave granted by the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas under Section 204(e) (1) of the Emergency Price Control Act, as amended, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix, § 924(e) (1). In that court criminal complaints are pending charging the present complainаnts with illegal sales of beef carcasses at prices in excess of the maximum prices established by Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 169 — Beef and Veal Carcasses and Wholesale Cuts (7 F.R. 10381), and with illegal sales of dressed hogs and wholesale pork cuts at prices in exсess of the maximum prices established by Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 148 — Dressed Hogs and Wholesale Pork Cuts (7 F.R. 8609). Joined as respondents in the рresent complaint are the Price Administrator, the Director of the Office of Economic Stabilization, and the Defense Suppliеs Corporation. Complainants seek to challenge the validity of RMPR 169 and RMPR 148. They also seek in this proceeding to challenge the vаlidity of certain provisions of the Directive of the Office of Economic Stabilization issued October 25, 1943 (8 F.R. 14641), and of corresponding provisions of Amendment No. 2 (9 F.R. 1820) to Regulation No. 3 (8 F.R. 10826) of the Defense Supplies Corporation, under which provisions complainants are rendеred ineligible for the special subsidy paid to nonprocessing slaughterers of cattle because they were not nonprocеssing slaughterers, as defined, during six consecutive months of 1942.
The Director of the Office' of Economic Stabilization has moved that the comрlaint be dismissed as to him. A similar motion to dismiss has been filed by the Defense Supplies Corporation. These motions must both be granted. Whether or nоt this court has jurisdiction under Section 204(a) of the Act to entertain a complaint seeking review of the provisions of a subsidy order or rеgulation after the denial by the administrative agency of a protest filed under section 203(a) (see Illinois Packing Co. v. Bowles, Em.App.1945,
The only complaint which may be filed in this court оn leave of a District Court under Section 204(e) (1) is a complaint “setting forth objections to the validity of any provision [of a regulation or order issued under Section 2] which the defendant is alleged to have violated.” Complainants have been charged with criminal violatiоns of RMPR 169 and RMPR 148 by making sales at prices in excess of the ceiling prices therein established, but they have not been charged with violation of any provision of the aforementioned Directive or of the subsidy regulation.
The Price Administrator, who now becomes the sole respondent, has moved to have stricken from the complaint those portions thereof which purport to challenge the validity of the Directive and of the subsidy regulation. For the reason above stated, this motion will be granted.
In addition, the Price Administrator has moved for dismissal оf the complaint in so far as it is directed against the provisions of RMPR 148. The complaint in this aspect is founded on the premise that the Price Administrator has an independent duty to establish maximum prices which are generally fair and equitable, and that, in determining whether the Administrator hаs met this statutory standard, no account may be taken of the subsidy to all slaughterers of hogs provided by the action of another agency of the government. Since the Administrator concedes that the maximum prices in RMPR 148 are inadequate without the complementary subsidy, cоmplainants argue that their case is proved and that RMPR 148 is necessarily invalid. The argument is absurd. As we said in Armour & Co. v. Bowles, Em.App. 1945,
