after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion erf the court.
The first section of the act of congress entitled “An act to protect trade and commerce against unlawful restraints find monopolies,” passed July 2, 1890 (26 Stat. 209), declares illegal “every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise or conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce among the several states or with foreign nations.” The second section makes it a misdemeanor for any person to monopolize, or attempt to monopolize, or combine or conspire with others to monopolize, any part of the trade or commerce among the several states. The fourth section of the act gives the circuit courts of the United States jurisdiction to hear and determine proceedings in equity brought by the district attorneys of the United States under the direction of the attorney general to restrain violations of the act.
Two questions are presented in this case for our decision: First. Was the association of the defendants a contract, combination, or conspiracy in restraint of trade, as the terms are to be understood in the act? Second. Was the trade thus restrained trade between the states?
The contention on behalf of defendants is that the association would have been valid at common law, and that the federal anti-trust law was not intended to reach any agreements that were not void and unenforceable at common law. It might be a sufficient answer to this contention to point to the decision of the supreme court of the United States in U. S. v. Trans-Missouri Freight Ass’n,
The argument for defendants is that their contract of association was not, and could not he, a monopoly, because their aggregate tonnage capacity did not exceed 30 per cent, of the total tonnage capacity of the country; that the restraints upon the members of the association, if restraints they could be called, did not embrace all the states, and were not unlimited in space; that such partial restraints were justified and upheld at common law if reasonable, and only proportioned to the necessary protection of the parties; that in this case the partial restraints were reasonable, because wi thout them each member would be subjected to ruinous competition by the other, and did not exceed in degree of stringency or scope what was necessary to protect the parties in securing prices for their product that were fair and reasonable to themselves and the public; that competition was not stilled by the association because the prices fixed by it had to he fixed with reference to the very active competition of pipe companies which were not members of the association, and which had more than double the defendants’ capacity; that in this way the association only modified and restrained the evils of ruinous competition, while the public had all the benefit from competition which public policy demanded.
From early times it was the policy of Englishmen to encourage trade in England, and to discourage those voluntary restraints which tradesmen were often induced to impose on themselves by contract. Courts recognized this public policy by refusing to enforce stipulations of this character. The objections to such restraints were mainly two. One was that by such contracts a man disabled himself from earning a livelihood with the risk of becoming a public charge, and deprived the community of the benefit of his labor. The other was that such restraints tended to give to the covenantee, the beneficiary of such restraints, a monopoly of the trade, from which he had thus excluded one competitor, and by the same means might exclude others.
Chief Justice Parker, in 1711, in the leading case of Mitchel v. Reynolds, 1P. Wms. 181, 190, stated these objections as follows:
“First. The mischief which may arise from them- (1) to the party by the loss of his livelihood and the subsistence of his family; (2) to tire public by depriving it of an useful member. Another reason is the great abuses these voluntary restraints are liable to; as, for instance, from corporations who are perpetually laboring for exclusive advantages in trade, and to reduce it into as few hands as possible.”
“The unreasonableness of contracts In restraint of trade and business is very apparent from several obvious considerations: (1) Such contracts injure the parties making them, because they diminish their means of procuring livelihoods and a competency for their families. They tempt improvident persons, for the sake of present gain, to deprive themselves of the power to make future acquisitions; and they expose such persons to imposition and oppression. (2) They tend to deprive the public of the services of men in the employments and capacities in which they may be most useful to the community as well as themselves. (3) They discourage industry and enterprise, and diminish the products of ingenuity and skill. (4) They prevent competition and enhance prices. (5) They expose the public to all the evils of monopoly; and this especially is applicable to wealthy companies and large corporations, who have the means, unless restrained by law, to exclude rivalry, monopolize business, and engross the market. Against evils like these, wise laws in-otect individuals and the public by declaring all such contracts void.”
The changed conditions under which men have ceased to be so entirely dependent for a livelihood on pursuing one trade, have rendered the first and second considerations stated above less important to the community than they were in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, but the disposition to use every means to reduce competition and create monopolies has grown so much of late that the fourth and fifth considerations mentioned in Alger v. Thacher have certainly lost nothing in weight in the present day, if we may judge from the statute here under consideration and similar legislation by the states.
The inhibition against restraints of trade at common law seems at first to have had no exception. See language of Justice Hull, Year Book, 2 Hen. V., folio 5, pi. 2G. After a time it became apparent to the people and the courts that it was in the interest of trade that certain covenants in restraint of trade should be enforced. It was of importance, as an incentive to industry and honest dealing in trade, that, after a man had built up a business with an extensive good will, he should be able to sell his business and good will to the best advantage, and he could not do so unless he could bind himself by an enforceable contract not to engage in the same business in such a way as to prevent injury to that which he was about to sell. It was equally for the good of the public and trade, when partners dissolved, and one took the business, or they divided the business, that each partner might bind himself not to do anything in trade thereafter which would derogate from his grant of the interest conveyed to his former partner. Again, when two men became partners in a business, although their union might reduce competition, this effect was only an incident to the main purpose of a union of their capital, enterprise, and energy to carry on a successful business, and one useful to the community. Bestrictions in the articles of partnership upon the business activity of the members, with a view of securing their entire effort in the common enterprise, were, of course, only ancillary to the main end of the union, and were to be encouraged. Again, when one in business Sold property with which the buyer might set up a rival business, it was certainly reasonable that the seller should be able to restrain the buyer from doing him an injury which, but for the sale, the buyer would be unable to inflict.
In a case of this last kind, Malian v. May, 11 Mees. & W. 652, Baron Parke said:
“Contracts for tlie partial' restraint of trade are upheld, not because they are advantageous to the individual with whom the contract is made, and a sacrifice pro tanto of the rights of the community, but because it is for the benefit of the public a.t large that they should be enforced. Many of these partial restraints on trade, are perfectly consistent with public convenience and the general Interest, and have been supported. Such is the case of the disposing of a shop in a particular place, with a contract, on the part of the vendor not to carry on a trade in the same place. It is, in effect, the sale of a good will, and offers an encouragement to trade by allowing a party to dispose of all the fruits of his industry. * * * And such is the class of cases of much more frequent occurrence, and to which this present case belongs, of a tradesman, manufacturer, or professional man taking a servant or clerk into his service, with a contrae: that he will not carry on the same trade or profession within certain limits. * * * In such a case the public derives an advantage in the unrestrained choice which such a stipulation gives to the employer of able, assistants, and the security it affords that the master will not withhold from the servant instruction in the secrets of his trade, and the communication of his own skill and experience, from the fear of his afterwards having a rival in the same bushness."
For the reasons given, then, covenants in partial restraint of trade are generally upheld as valid when they are agreements (3) by the seller of property or business not to compete with the buyer in such a way as to derogate from the value of the property or business sold; (2) by a retiring partner not to compete with the firm; (3) by a partner pending the partnership not to do anything to interfere, by competition or otherwise, with the business of the firm; (4) by the buyer of property not to use the same in competition with the business retained by the seller; and (5) by an assistant, servant, or agent not to compete with his master or employer after the expiration of his time of service. Before such agreements are upheld, however, the court must find that the restraints attempted thereby are reasonably necessary (1, 2, and 3) to the enjoyment by the buyer of the property, good will, or interest, in the partnership bought.; or (4) to the legitimate ends of the existing partnership; or (5) to the prevention of possible injury to the business of the seller from use by the buyer of the thing sold; or (6) to protection from the danger of loss to the employer’s business caused by the unjust use on the part of the employe of the confidential knowledge acquired in such business. Under i.he first class come the cases of Mitchel v. Reynolds, 1 P. Wms. 181: Fowle v. Parke,
It would be stating it too strongly to say that these five classes of covenants in restraint of trade include all of those upheld as valid at the common law; but it would certainly seem to follow from the tests laid down for determining the validity of such an .agreement that no conventional restraint of trade can be enforced unless the covenant embodying it is merely ancillary to the main purpose of a lawful contract, and necessary to protect the covenantee in the enjoyment of the legitimate fruits of the contract, or to protect him from the dangers of an unjust use of those fruits by the other party. In Horner v. Graves, 7 Bing. 735, Chief Justice Tindal, who seems to be regarded as the highest English judicial authority on this branch of the law (see Lord Macnaghten’s judgment in Nordenfeldt v. Maxim Nordenfelt Co., [1894] App. Cas. 535, 567), used the following language:
“We do not see bow a better test can be applied to the question whether .this is or not a reasonable restraint of trade than by considering whether the restraint is such only as to afford a fair protection to the interests of the party in favor of whom it is given, and not so large as to interfere with the interests of the public. Whatever restraint is larger than the necessary protection of the party requires can be of no benefit to either. It can only be oppressive. It is, in the eye of the law, unreasonable. Whatever is injurious to the interests of the public is void on the ground of public policy.”
This very statement” of the rule implies that tbe contract must be one in which, there is a main purpose, to which the covenant in restraint of trade is merely ancillary. The covenant is inserted only to protect one of the parties from the injury which, in the execution of the contract or enjoyment of its fruits, he may suffer from the unrestrained competition of the other. The main purpqse of the contract suggests the measure of protection needed, and furnishes a sufficiently uniform standard by which the validity of such restraints may be judicially determined. In such a case, if the restraint exceeds the necessity presented by the main purpose of the contract, it is void for two reasons: First, because it oppresses the covenantor, without any corresponding benefit to the covenantee; and, second, because it tends to a monopoly. But where the sole object of both parties in making the contract as expressed therein is merely to restrain competition, and enhance or maintain prices, it would seem that there was nothing to justify or excuse
Much has been said in regard to the relaxing of the original strictness of the common law in declaring contracts in restraint of trade void as conditions of civilization and public policy have changed, and the argument drawn therefrom is that the law now recognizes that competition may be so ruinous as to injure the public, and, therefore, that contracts made with a view to check such ruinous competition and regulate prices, though in restraint of trade, and having no other purpose, will be upheld. We think this conclusion is unwarranted by the authorities when all of them are considered. It is trae that certain rules for determining whether a covenant in restraint of trade ancillary to the main purpose of a contract was reasonably adapted and limited to the necessary protection of a party in the carrying out of such purpose have been somewhat modified by modern authorities. In Mitchel v. Reynolds, 1 P. Wms. 181, the leading early case on the subject, in which the main object of the contract was the sale of a bake house, and there was a covenant to protect the purchaser against competition by the seller in the bakery business, Chief Justice Parker laid down the rule that it must appear before such a covenant could be enforced that the restraint was not general, but particular.or partial, as to places or persons, and was upon a good and adequate consideration, so as to make it a proper and useful contract. Subsequently, it was decided in Hitchcock v. Coker, 6 Adol. & E. 454, that the adequacy of the consideration was not to be inquired into by the court if it was a legal one,'and that the operation of the covenant need not be limited in time. More recently the limitation that the restraint could not be general or unlimited as to space has been modified in some cases by holding that, if the protection necessary to the covenantee reasonably requires a covenant unrestricted as to space, it will be upheld as valid. Whittaker v. Howe, 3 Beav. 383; Cloth Co. v. Lorsont, L. R. 9 Eq. 345; Rousillon v. Rousillon, 14 Ch. Div. 351; Nordenfeldt v. Maxim Nordenfeldt Co., [1894] App. Cas. 535. See, also, Fowle v. Park,
The manifest danger in the administration of justice according to-so shifting, vague, and indeterminate a standard would seem to be a strong reason against adopting it. The cases assuming such a power in the courts are Wickens v. Evans, 3 Younge & J. 318; Collins v. Locke, 4 App. Cas. 674; Ontario Salt Co. v. Merchants’ Salt Co., 18 Grant (U. C.) 540; Kellogg v. Larkin,
In Wickens v. Evans, three trunk manufacturers of England, who had competed with each other throughout the realm to their loss, agreed to divide England into three districts, each party to have one district exclusively for his trade, and, if any stranger should invade the district of either as a competitor, they agreed “to meet to devise means to promote their own views.” The restraint was held partial and reasonable, because it left the trade open to any third party in either district. In answer to the suggestion that such an agreement to divide up the beer business of London among the London brewers would lead to the-abuses of monopoly, it was replied that outside competition would soon cure such abuses, — an answer that would validate the most complete local monopoly of the present day. It may be, as suggested by the-court, that local monopolies cannot endure long, because their very existence tempts outside capital into competition; but the public policy embodied in the common law requires the discouragement of monopolies, however temporary their existence may be. The public interest may suffer severely while new competition is slowly developing. The case can hardly be reconciled with later cases, hereafter to be referred to, in England and America. It is true, that there was in this case no direct evidence of a desire by the parties to regulate prices, and it has been sometimes explained on the theory that the agreement was solely to reduce the expenses incident to a business covering the realm by restricting its territorial extent; but it is difficult to escape the conclusion that the restraint upon each two of the three parties was imposed to secure to the other a monopoly and power to control prices in the territory assigned to him, because the final clause in the contract implies that, when it was executed, there were no other competitors except the parties in the territory divided.
Collins v. Locke was a case in the privy council. The action was brought to enforce certain articles of agreement by and between four of the leading master stevedore contracting firms in Melbourne, Australia, who did practically all the business at that port. The court (composed of Sir Barnes Peacock, Sir Montague E. Smith, and Sir Bobert P. Collier) describes the scope and purposes of the agreement and the view of the court as follows:
“The objects which this agreement has in view are to parcel out the stevedoring business of the port among the parties to it, and so to prevent competition, at least among themselves, and also, it may be, to keep up the price to be paid for the work. Their lordships are not prepared to say that an agreement having these objects is invalid if carried into effect by proper means, — that is, by*285 provisions reasonably necessary for the purpose,--llioxigh the effect of them might be to create a partial restraint upon the power of the parties to exercise Their trade.”
No attempt is made to justify the view thus comprehensively stated, or to support it by authority, or to reconcile it with the general doctrine of the common law that contracts restraining competition, raising prices, and tending to a monopoly, as this is conceded by the court to have been, are void. The court ignores the public interest that prices shall he regulated by competition, and assumes the power in the court to uphold and enforce a contract securing a monopoly if it affect only one port, so as to he hut a partial restraint of trade. The case is directly at variance with the decision of the supreme court of Illinois in More v. Bennett, 140 Ill. (59,
The Canadian case of Ontario Salt Co. v. Merchants’ Balt Co. is another one upon which counsel for the defendants rely. That was the decision of a vice chancellor. Bix salt companies, in order to maintain prices, combined, and put their business under the control of a committee, and agreed not to sell except through (he committee. It was held that because it appeared that: there were other salt companies in the province, and because the combiners denied that they intended to raise prices, hut only to maintain them, the contract of union was not in unlawful restraint of trade. The conclusion and argument of Use court in Salt Co. v. Guthrie, 35 Ohio St. (5(5(5, hereafter stated, would seem to he a sufficient answer to this case.
Kellogg v. Larkin,
The case of Leslie v. Lorillard,
The case of Mogul Steamship Co. v. McGregor, Gow & Co., [1892] App. Cas. 25, has been cited to sustain the position of the defendants. It does not do so. It was a suit for damages, brought by a company engaged in the tea-carrying trade at Hankow, China, against six other companies engaged in the same trade, for loss inflicted by an alleged unlawful conspiracy entered into by them to drive the plaintiff out of the trade, and to obtain control of the trade themselves. It appeared that the defendants agreed to conform to a plan of association, by which they should constantly underbid the plaintiff, and take away his trade by offering exceptional and very favorable terms to customers dealing exclusively with the members of the association, and that they did this to control the business the next season after he had been thus driven out of competition. It was held by the house of lords that this was not an unlawful and indictable conspiracy, giving rise to a cause of action by the person injured thereby; but it was not held that the contract of association entered into by the defendants was not void and unenforceable at common law. On the contrary, Lord Bramwell, in his judgment (at page 46), and Lord Hannen, in his (at page 58), distinctly say that the contract of association was void as in restraint of trade; but all the law lords were of opinion that contracts void as in restraint of trade were not unlawful in a criminal sense, and gave no right of action for damages to one injured thereby. The statute we are considering expressly gives such contracts a criminal and unlawful character. It is manifest, therefore, that whatever of relevancy the Mogul Steamship Co. Case has in this discussion makes for, rather than against, our conclusion.
Two other cases deserve mention here. They are Roller Co. v. Cushman,
There are other cases upon which counsel of defendants rely, which, in our judgment, have no hearing on the issue, or, if they have, are clearly within the rules we have already stated. One is a case iu which a railroad company made a contract with a sleeping-car company by which the latter agreed to do the sleeping-car business of the railway company on a number of conditions, one of which was that no other company should he allowed to engage in the sleeping-car business on the same line. Chicago, St. L. & N. O. R. Co. v. Pullman Southern Car Co.,
Having considered the cases upon which the counsel for the defendants have relied to maintain the proposition that contracts having no purpose but to restrain competition and maintain prices, if reasonable, will be held valid, we must now pass in rapid review the cases that make for an opposite view.
In People v. Sheldon,
“If agreements and combinations to prevent competition in prices are or may be hurtful to trade, the only sure remedy is to prohibit all agreements of that character. If the validity of such an agreement was made to depend upon actual proof of public prejudice or injury, it would be very difficult in any case to establish the invalidity, although the moral, evidence might be very convincing.”
See, to the same effect, Judd v. Harrington,
In Morris Run Coal Co. v. Barclay Coal Co., 68 Pa. St. 173, five coal companies controlling the bituminous coal trade in Yorthern Pennsylvania agreed to allow a committee to fix prices and rates of freight, and to fix proportion of sales by each. Competition was not destroyed, because the anthracite coal and Cumberland bituminous coal were sold in competition with this coal. The association was, nevertheless, held void, as in illegal restraint of trade and competition, and tending to injure the public. In Nester v. Brewing Co., 161 Pa. St. 473,
In Salt Co. v. Guthrie,
*289 “The clear tendency of such an agreement is to establish a monopoly, and io destroy competition in trade, and for that reason, on the ground of public policy, courts will not aid in its enforcement. It is no answer to say that competition in the salt trade was not in fact destroyed, or that the price of the commodity was not unreasonably advanced. Courts will not stop to inquire as to the degree of injury inflicted upon the public. It is enough to know that the inevitable tendency of such contracts is injurious to the public.”
Other Ohio cases which presented similar facts, and in which the same rule was enforced, are Emery v. Candle Co.,
In Anderson v. Jett,
In Chapin v. Brown,
In Craft v. McConoughy,
“A combination among a number of persons engaged in a particular business to stifle or prevent competition, and thereby to enhance or diminish prices to a point above or below what they would be if left to the influence of unrestricted competition, is contrary to public policy. Contracts in partial restraint of trade which the law sustains are those entered into by a vendor of a business and its good will with its vendee, by which the vendor agrees not to engage in the same business within a limited territory; and the restraint, to be valid, must be no more extensive than is reasonably necessary for the protection of rlie vendee in the enjoyment of the business purchased.”
As already said, this case is in direct conflict with Collins v. Locke, 4 App. Gas. 674, discussed above. To the same effect as More v. Bennett are Ford v. Association,
In Association v. Niezerowski,
*290 “The combination in question is contrary to public policy, and strikes at the interests of those of the public desiring to build, and between whom and the association or the members thereof there exist no contract relations.”
In Vulcan Powder Co. v. Hercules Powder Co.,
In Oil Co. v. Adoue,
In Association v. Kock,
In Hilton v. Eckersley, 6 El. & Bl. 47, it was held that an agreement between 18 cotton manufacturers to submit to the control of a committee of their number for 12 months the question as to prices to be paid for labor and the terms of employment, in order to resist the aggressions of an association of workingmen, was void and unenforceable" because in restraint of trade.
In Urmston v. Whitelegg, 63 L. T. (N. S.) 455, a case in the- queen’s bench division, before Day and Lawrence, JJ., the action was brought to enforce a penalty under the rules of the Bolton Mineral Water Manufacturers’ Association, which recited that the object of the association was to maintain the price of mineral water, and bound the members for 10 years not to sell at less than 9d. a dozen bottles, or at not less than any higher price fixed by the committee, on, penalty of £10 for each violation. Day, J., said:
“If a contract for raising prices against the public interest is a contract in restraint of trade, this is undoubtedly such a contract. During the last hundred years great changes have taken place in the views of the public, of the legislature, and therefore of the judges, on the matter, and many old-fashioned offenses have disappeared; hut the rule still obtains that combination for the mere purpose of raising prices is not enforceable in a court of law. This contract is illegal in the sense of not being enforceable. It is not necessary that it should be such as to form the ground of criminal proceedings.”
In the foregoing cases the only consideration of the agreement restraining the trade of one party was the agreement of the other to the same effect, and there was no relation of partnership, or of vendor and vendee, or of employer and employé. Where such relation exists between the parties, as already stated,, restraints are usually enforceable if commensurate only with the reasonable pro
In addition to the cases cited, there are others which sustain the general principle, but in them there exists the additional reason for holding the contracts invalid that: the parties were engaged in a quasi public employment. They are Gibbs v. Gas Co.,
Upon this review of the law and the authorities, we can have no doubt that the association of the defendants, however reasonable the prices they fixed, however great the competition they had to encounter, and however great: the necessity for curbing themselves by joint agreement from committing financial suicide by ill-advised competition, was void at common law, because in restraint of trade, and tending to a monopoly. But tlio facts of the case do not require' us, to go so far as this, for they show that the attempted justification of this association on the grounds slated is without foundation.
The defendants, being manufacturers and vendors of cast-iron pipe, entered into a combination to raise the prices for pipe for all the states west and south of New York, Pennsylvania, and Virginia, constituting considerably more than three-quarters of the territory of the United States, and significantly called by the associate's “pay territory.” Their joint annual output was 220,000 tons. The total capacity of all the other cast-iron pipe manufacturers in the pay territory was 170,500 tons. Of this, 45,000 tons was the ca
•‘Again, all tlie authorities agree that, in order to vitiate a contract or combination, it is not essential that its result should be a complete monopoly. (I, is sufficient if it really tends to that end, and to deprive the public of the advantages which flow from free competition.”
It has been earnestly pressed upon us that the prices at which the cas (-iron pipe was sold in pay territory were reasonable. A great many affidavits of purchasers of pipe in pay territory, all drawn by the same hand or from the same model, art; produced, in which the affiants say thai, in their opinion, the prices at which pipe has been sold by defendants have been reasonable. We do not think the issue an important one, because, as already staff'd, we do not think that at common law there is any question of reasonableness open to the courts with reference to such a contract. Its tendency was certainly to give defendants the power to charge unreasonable prices, had they chosen to do so. But, if it were important, we should unhesitatingly find that the prices charged in the instances which were in evidence were unreasonable. The letters from the manager of the Ghattanooga foundry written to the other defendants, and discussing the prices fixed by the association, do not leave (he slightest doubt upon (his point, and outweigh the perfunctory affidavits produced by the defendants. The cost of producing pipe at; Ohattanooga, together with a reasonable profit, did not exceed $15 a (on. It could hare been delivered at Atlanta at $1.7 to $18 a ton, and yet the lowest price which tha! foundry was permitted by the rules of (he association to bid was $24.25. The same thing was true all through pay territory to a greater or less degree, and especially at “reserved cities.”
Another aspect of this contract of association brings it within the term used in the statute, “a conspiracy in restraint of trade.” A conspiracy is a combination of two or more persons to accomplish an unlawful end by lawful means or a lawful end by unlawful means. In the answer of the defendants, it is averred that the chief way in which cast-iron pipe is sold is by contracts let after competitive bidding invited by the intending purchaser. It would have much interfered with the smooth working of defendants’ association had its existence and purposes become known to the public. A part of the plan was a deliberate attempt to create in the minds of the members of the public inviting bids the belief that competition existed between the defendants. Several of the defendants were required to bid at every letting, and to make their bids at such prices that the oik; already selected to obtain the contract should have (he lowest bid. It is well settled that an agreement between intending bidders at a public auction or a public letting not to bid against each other, and thus to prevent competition, is a fraud upon the intending vendor or contractor, and (he ensuing sale or contract will he set aside. Breslin v. Brown,
The second question is whether the trade restrained by the combination of the defendants was interstate trade. The mills of the defendants were situated, two in Alabama, two in Tennessee, one in Kentucky, and one in Ohio. The invariable custom in sales of pipe required the seller to' deliver the pipe at the' place where it was to be used by the buyer, and to include in the price the cost of delivery. The contracts, as the answer of the defendants avers, were invariably made after public letting at the home, and in the state, of the buyer. The pay territory, sales in which it was the professed object of the defendants to regulate by their contract of association, included 36 states. The cities which were especially reserved for the benefit of the defendants were Atlanta and Anniston, reserved to the Anniston mill, in Alabama; New Orleans and Chattanooga, reserved to the Chattanooga mill, in Tennessee; St. Louis and Birmingham, reserved to the Bessemer mill, in Alabama; Omaha, reserved to the South Pitts-burg mill, in Tennessee; Louisville, New Albany, and Jeffersonville, reserved to Dennis Long & Co., of Louisville; and Cincinnati, Newport, and Covington, reserved to the Addyston mill, in Ohio. Under the agreement, every request for bids from any place, except the reserved cities, sent to any one of the defendants, was .submitted to the central committee, who fixed a price, and the contract was awarded to that member who would agree to pay for the benefit of the other members of the association the largest “bonus.” In the case of the reserved cities, the successful bidder having been already fixed, the association determined the price and bonus to be paid. The contract of association restrained every defendant except the one selected to receive the contract from soliciting (in good faith) or making a contract for pipe with the intending purchaser at all, and re-' strained the defendant so selected from making the contract except at the price fixed by the committee. In cases of pipe to be purchased in any state of the 36 in pay territory, except 4, each one of the defendants, by his contract of association, restrained his freedom of trade in respect to making a contract in that state for the sale of pipe to be delivered across state lines; five of them agreeing not to malee such a contract at all, and the sixth agreeing not to make the contract, below a fixed price. With respect to sales in Ohio, Kentucky,
“Commerce with foreign countries and among the states, strictly considered, consists in intercourse and trailie, and the transportation and transit of persons and property, ns well as the purchase, sale, and exchange of commodities.”
In Bobbins v. Taxing Dist., 320 U. S, 489, 7 Sup. Ct. 592, a law of Tennessee, which imposed a tax on all “drummers” who solicited orders on samples, was held unconstitutional in so far as if applied to the drummer of an Ohio firm, who was soliciting orders for goods to he sent from Ohio to purchasers in Tennessee, on the ground that it was a fax on interstate commerce. In delivering the opinion of the court in that case, Mr. Justice Bradley said (page 497, 120 U. S., and page 596, 7 Sup. Ct.) that a tax on the sale of goods, or the offer to sell them before they are brought into the state, was clearly a fax on interstate commerce. He further said:
“The negotiation of sales of goods which are in another state, for the purpose of introducing them into the state in which the negotiation is made, is interstate commerce.”
The principle thus announced has been reaffirmed by the court in Corson v. Maryland,
If, then, the soliciting of orders for, and the sale of, goods in one state, to he delivered from another state, is ixxt.ersfate eoixmxerce in in its strictest axxd highest sense, — such that the states are excluded by the federal constitution from a right to regulate or tax the same, — it seems clear that contracts iu restraint of such solicita
The learned judge who dismissed the bill at the circuit was of opinion that the contract of association only indirectly affecied interstate commerce, and relied chiefly for this conclusion on the decision of the supreme court in the case of U. S. v. E. C. Knight Co.,
“The argument is that the power to control the manufacture of refined sugar is a.monopoly over a necessity of life, to the enjoyment of which by a large part of the population of the United States interstate commerce is indispensable, and that, therefore, the general government, in the exercise of the power to regulate commerce, may repress' such monopoly directly, and set aside the instruments which have created it. * * * Doubtless the power to control the manufacture of a given thing involves in a certain sense the control of its disposition, but this is a secondary, and not the primary, sense; and, although the exercise of that power may result in bringing the operation of commerce into play, it, does not control it, and it affects it only incidentally and indirectly. Commerce succeeds to manufacture, and is not a part of it. The power to regulate commerce is the power to prescribe the rule by which commerce shall be governed, .and. is a power independent of the power to suppress monopoly. But it may operate in repression of monopoly whenever that comes within the rules by which commerce is governed, or whenever the transaction is itself a monopoly of commerce. * * * The regulation of commerce applies to the subjects of commerce, and not to matters of internal police. Contracts to buy, sell, or exchange goods to be transpprted among the several states, the transportation and its instrumentalities, and articles bought, sold, or exchanged for rhe purpose of such transit among the states, or put in the way of transit, may be regulated: but this is because they form part of interstate trade or commerce. The fact*297 that an article is manufactured for export to another state does not of itself make it an article of Interstate commerce, and the intent of the manufacturer does not determine the time when the article or product passes from the control of the slate, and belongs to commerce.”
The chief justice then refers to the prior case of Coe v. Errol,
“It was in ilie light of well-settled principles that ilie act of July 2, 1890, was framed. Congress did not attempt thereby to assert the power to deal with monopoly directly as such; or to limit and restrict the rights of corporations created by the states or ilie citizens of the states in the acquisition, control, or disposition of property; or to regulate or prescribe the price or prices at which such propert j or the products thereof should be sold; or to make criminal the acts of persons in the, acquisition and control of property which the states of their residence or creation sanctioned or permitted. Aside from the provisions applicable where congress might exercise municipal power, what the law struck at was combina lions, contracts, and conspiracies to monopolize trade and commerce among the several slates or with foreign nations; but the contracts and acts of the defendants related exclusively to the acquisition of the Philadelphia refineries and the business of sugar refining in Pennsylvania, and bore no direct relation to commerce between the states or with foreign nations. The object was manifestly private gain in the manufacture of the commodity, but not through the control of interstate or foreign commerce. * * * There was nothing in the proofs to indicate any intention to put a restraint upon trade or commerce, and the fact, as we have seen, that trade or commerce might be indirectly affected, was not enough to entitle complainants to a decree.”
We have thus considered and quoted from the decision in the Knight Case at length, because it was made the principal ground for the action of the court below, and is made the chief basis of the argument on behalf of the defendants here. It seems to ns clear that, from the beginning to the end of the opinion, the chief justice draws the distinction between a restraint upon the business of manufacturing and a restraint upon the trade or commerce between the states in the articles after manufacture, with the manifest purpose of showing that the regulating power of congress under the constitution could affect only the latter, while the former was not under federal control, and rested wholly with the states. Among the subjects of commercial regulation by congress, he expressly mentions “contracts to buy, sell, or exchange goods to he transported among the several states,” find leaves it Io be plainly inferred that the statute does embrace combinations and conspiracies which have for their object Io restrain, aud which necessarily operate in restraint of, the freedom of such contracts. The citation of the case of Coe v„
The language of the chief justice in the last passages quoted above from his opinion, upon which so much reliance was placed by the circuit court and the defendants’ counsel at the bar, is to be interpreted by the facts of the case before the court. The statement in the opinion that congress did not intend by the anti-trust act to limit and restrict the rights of. persons and corporations in the mere acquisition, control, or disposition of property, or to regulate the prices at wliich such property should be sold, or to make criminal the acts of persons or corporations in the acquisition and control of property which the states of their residence or creation sanctioned or permitted, does not imply that congress did not intend to strike down any combination which had for its object the restraint and attempted monopoly of trade and commerce among a given number of •states in specified articles of commerce, and the resulting power to regulate prices therein. The obstacle in the way of granting the relief asked in U. S. v. E. C. Knight Co. was (to use the language of the chief justice) that “the contracts and acts of the defendant related exclusively to the acquisition of the Philadelphia refineries, and the business of sugar refining in Pennsylvania, and bore no direct relation to commerce between the states or with foreign nations.” The supreme court distinctly adjudged that “what the law struck at was combinations, contracts, and conspiracies to monopolize trade and commerce among the several states or with foreign nations.” That the defendants in the present case combined and contracted with each other for the purpose' of restraining trade
Counsel for the defendants also find in the language of Mr. Justice Peekham, in the case of U. S. v. Trans-Missouri Freight Ass’n,
“Wo have held that üio trust act did not apply to a company engaged in on« state in the refining of sugar under circumstances detailed in the ease of U. S. v. E. C. Kniglit Co.,156 U. S. 1 , 15 Sup. Ct. 219). because the refining of sugar under those circumstances bore no distinct relation to commerce between the states or with foreign nations. To exclude agreements as to rates by competing railroads for the transportation of articles of commerce between the states would leave little for the act to take effect upon.”
Again, upon page 326, 166 U. S., and page 553, 17 Sup. Ct., Justice Peekham repeats the same idea:
“In the Knight Co. Case, supra, it was said that this statute applied to monopolies in restraint of interstate or international trade or commerce, and not; to monopolies in ihe manufacture even of a necessary of life. It is readily seen from these cases that, if the act does not, apply to the transportation of commodities by railroads from one state to another or to foreign nations, its application is so greatly limited that the whole act might; as well be held inoperative.”
This is not a declaration that cases might not arise within the statute which were not combinations of common carriers in relation to interstate transportation. The language used, means nothing more than that, if such combinations were excluded from the effect of the act, the great and manifest scope for the operation of a federal statute on such a subject would be denied to it. To give the language more weight would be to violate the first canon for the construction of a judicial opinion laid down by Chief Justice Marshal in Cohens v. Virginia,
*300 “It.is a maxim, not tó be disregarded, that, general expressions in every opinion are to be taken in connection with the case in which those expressions are used. If they go beyond the case, they may be respected, but ought not to control the judgment in a subsequent suit when the very point is presented for decision. The. reason for this maxim is obvious. The question actually before the court is investigated with care, and considered in its full extent. Other principles which may serve to illustrate it are considered in their relation to the case decided, but their possible bearing on all cases is seldom completely investigated.”
' In re Greene,
The case of Dneber Watch Case Mfg. Co. v. E. Howard Watch & Clock Co., 35 U. S. App. 16,
There is one case which seems to be quite like tbe one at bar. It is tbe case of U. S. v. Jellico Mountain Goal & Coke Co.,
It is pressed upon us that there ivas no intention on the part of the defendants in this case to restrain interstate commerce, and in several affidavits the managing' officers of the defendants make oath that they did not know what interstate commerce was, and, therefore, that they could not have combined to restrain it. Of course, the defendants, like other persons subject to the law, cannot plead ignorance of ii, as an excuse for its violation. They knew that the combination they were making contemplated the fixing of prices for the side of pipe in 36 different states, and that the pipe sold would have to be delivered in those states from the 4 states in which defendants’ foundries were sitúale. They knew that freight rate's and transportation were a most important element in making the price for the pipe so to be delivered. They charged the successful bidder with a bonus to be paid upon the shipment of the pipe from his state to the state of the sale. Under their -first agreement, the bonus to be paid by the successful bidder was varied according to the state in which the sale and delivery were i.o be made. It seems to ns clear that the contract of association was on its -face an extensive scheme to control the whole commerce among 36 states in cast iron pipe, and that the defendants were fully aware of the fact whether they appreciated the application io it of the anti-trust law or not.
Much lias been said in argument as to (he enlargement of the federal governmental functions in respect of all trade and industry in the states if the view we. have expressed of the application of the anti-trust law in this case is to prevail, and as to the interference which is likely to follow with the control winch the states have hitherto been understood to have over contracts of the character of that before us. We do not announce any new doctrine; in holding either that contracts and negotiations for the sale of merchandise; to be delivered across state lines are interstate commerce (see cases above cited), or that burdens or restraints upon such commerce congress may pass appropriate legislation to prevent, and courts of the United States may in proper proceedings enjoin. In re Debs,
The prayer of the petition that pipe in transportation under the contract of association be forfeited in a proceeding in equity like (his is, of course, improper, and must be denied. The sixth section of the anti-trust act, after providing that property owned and in transportation from one state to another or to a foreign country under a contract inhibited by the act “shall be forfeited to the United Stales,” continues “and may be seized and condemned by like proceedings as those provided by law for the forfeiture, seizure and condemnation of property imported into ttie United Stales contrary io law.” This requires a like procedure to that prescribed in sections
For the reasons given, the decree of the circuit court dismissing the bill must be reversed, with instructions to enter a decree for the United States perpetually enjoining the defendants from maintaining the combination in cast-iron pipe described in the bill, and substantially admitted in the answer, and from doing any business thereunder.
