S.O.U.P., INC., a Corporation, Petitioner, v. The FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION, Respondent.
No. 24476
United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit.
Order Filed July 27, 1971.
Suggestion for Rehearing En Banc Denied Nov. 19, 1971.
1142
Before BAZELON, Chief Judge FAHY, Senior Circuit Judge, and WILKEY, Circuit Judge.
ORDER
PER CURIAM.
Petitioner S.O.U.P., Inc., a corporation, has filed a motion to proceed in forma pauperis in the above entitled case. At the request of members of the Court, a financial statement of each of the small number of members of the corporation was filed. In light of the statute governing forma pauperis appeals,
Ordered by the Court that petitioner‘s aforesaid motion for leave to proceed in forma pauperis is denied.
Statement of Senior Circuit Judge FAHY in support of the order of the court, in which Circuit Judge WILKEY concurs.
SOUP is not prevented by our order from proceeding with the litigation. It can easily arrange for the small item of costs by assessment or voluntary contribution of its members. The corporate form is a convenient, organizational vehicle, but its convenience does not justify turning it into a vehicle also for avoiding the costs involved in a lawsuit as if it were a pauper. The public interest motivating SOUP‘s members, which I join in applauding, does not help make the corporation a person unable to pay such costs or give security therefor.
The text of the statute reflects the congressional intent and purpose to enable person[s] to obtain exemption, not corporations formed by persons who themselves do not come within the exemption. The statute has the salutary purpose of opening the doors of the courts to poor persons on a basis of equality with the more well-to-do, not to open the doors to poor corporations formed by nonpoor members as a convenient form by which to organize and litigate. If the statute is to be enlarged as SOUP contends, I think it should be done by legislation rather than by a strained construction which does not reflect the statute‘s purposes.
The time-consuming responsibility the court has had to assume in this matter, and the remarkably poor economics of the court‘s involvement, referred to by our dissenting colleague, are not the answer to the problem, for the court does not pass over problems which are presented because to decide them consumes judicial resources.
BAZELON, Chief Judge (dissenting).
This case presents an important question concerning the right of a corporation to sue without prepayment of costs under
Students Opposing Unfair Practices, Inc. (SOUP) is a private, non-profit corporation designed primarily to assist the Federal Trade Commission in more vigorously protecting the consumers’ rights to fair and honest advertising.2 Pursuant to this goal, SOUP attempted to intervene in an FTC proceeding against the Campbell Soup Company. The case is now before this Court on SOUP‘s petition for review of an FTC order accepting a consent decree against Campbell. Petitioner challenges both the adequacy of the decree as a remedy for alleged violations of the Federal Trade Commission Act, and the agency‘s refusal to grant SOUP full rights to intervene in the proceeding before it.
I.
Section 1915(a) provides that a federal court may authorize litigation without prepayment of costs by a person who makes affidavit that he is unable to pay such costs or give security therefor. [Emphasis added.] The statute‘s reference to person does not indicate, however, that the section has no application to corporations. On the contrary, the statutory guidelines for the interpretation of Congressional acts,
II.
We are not required at this time to delineate comprehensive principles to govern the application of § 1915(a) to corporations. I am persuaded that SOUP‘s motion should succeed under any set of guidelines that we might eventually prescribe.
First, SOUP‘s appeal to this Court is neither frivolous nor malicious, as indicated by the vigorous dissenting opinions of two of the FTC‘s five Commissioners.4 Second, since the members of the corporation have no personal financial stake in the outcome of the litigation, it seems unlikely that they have adopted the corporate form as a subterfuge to avoid the payment of court costs.5 To be sure, there is potential for abuse in the in forma pauperis scheme as applied to corporations no less than as applied to individuals. But an excessive concern with this potential at this stage is, to say the least, premature. Neither this Court nor a corporation‘s adversary in litigation lacks the means to expose abuse and to take corrective action when it does appear.6 Moreover, the fact that SOUP is apparently the first corporation to apply to this Court for in forma pauperis treatment since the enactment of the statute would seem to belie any fears that we are soon to be deluged with such applications.
The real difficulty with SOUP‘s motion, it seems, concerns the assertion of indigency. SOUP is conceded to lack the corporate resources to pay the costs of proceeding in this Court.7 Indeed,
Instead of resolving the question of indigency on the basis of a single affidavit from a corporate officer, it is now apparently necessary for us to evaluate affidavits from each of the members of the corporation. In this case the corporation comprises only five persons. But if members refers to shareholders, the problem of evaluating these affidavits could in some cases be staggering. For us to undertake this time-consuming responsibility as a means of collecting about $100 in court costs strikes me as remarkably poor economics. It is also inconsistent with Congress‘s evident intention of simplifying the inquiry into indigency.
Moreover, by looking behind the corporation to the individuals it represents, today‘s order may have the unfortunate effect of deterring the use of corporations as vehicles for raising issues of great public importance. By measuring the corporation‘s indigency in terms of the assets of its wealthiest member, we may discourage non-indigent individuals from joining corporations that intend to bring law suits on behalf of the public. If these persons are forced to commit their personal resources to the cause, they may prefer to sue as individuals. Yet it seems clear that in this type of law suit a corporation or association is often a more valuable party than an individual.8 Furthermore, if these persons refuse to assume personal liability for the costs of litigation, issues of great importance may fail to reach a judicial hearing. For these reasons I cannot accept the Court‘s approach to the determination of indigency of corporations under § 1915(a) in these circumstances. Nothing in this record indicates that SOUP‘s effort to proceed in forma pauperis is in any way offensive to the public interest. Nor does anyone assert that its application is a sham or an abuse of this Court. Since a decision in favor of SOUP would in no sense deprive us of the ability to forestall any possibility of abuse in subsequent cases, I would grant petitioner‘s application.
