265 F. 404 | S.D.N.Y. | 1920
The substantial question in this case is whether the piece of cloth is a necessary, within section 4 of the Lever Act (Comp. St. 1918, Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1919, § 3115%ff), or is wearing apparel or a necessary, as defined in section 1 of that act (section 3115%e), as amended by the Act of October 22, 1919 (41 Stat. 297).
Section 1 as originally enacted referred only to—
“foods, feeds, fuel, including fuel oil and natural gas, and fertilizer and fertilizer ingredients, tools, utensils, implements, machinery, and equipment required for the actual production of foods, feeds, and fuel, hereafter in this act called ‘necessaries.’ ”
“Wearing apparel, containers primarily designed or intended for containing foods, feeds, or fertilizers.”
The indictment is based upon that provision of section 4 making it unlawful—
“to make any unjust or unreasonable rate or charge, in handling or dealing in or with any necessaries.”
Either the word “necessaries,” as used in section 4, is free from any limitation by reason of the definition in section 1, in which case, even before the amendment of 1919, it would have included wearing apparel, or it is to be limited to those articles expressly stated in section 1 as “hereafter in this act called necessaries.” It is practically conceded, and, if it were not conceded, it must be held, especially in view of the amendment, that “any necessaries,” as used in section 4, does not include all necessaries. What, then, is the limitation? Evidently it is to such articles as are stated in section 1 to be called “necessaries” in the later sections. If section 1 had merely mentioned specific articles, without also stating that they were thereafter called “necessaries,” such a limitation in section 4 would be more accurately expressed by the phrase “any such necessaries.” But, in view of the statutory definition of necessaries, the phrase “any necessaries,” used in section 4 to denote the articles specified in section 1, is not only proper, but more apt than the phrase “any such necessaries;”
But the language of neither section 1 nor section 4 affords any scope for the application of this rule of construction. Only certain specific
While Congress had as much power to regulate the distribution by the producer or manufacturer of the wool, cotton, or silk, the dyestuffs, the cloth, the buttons, the thread, or any other ingredients, as of the finished or partly finished garment, properly designated as “wearing apparel,” and while such regulation would doubtless secure a more effectual control of the distribution by the garment manufacturer or the retailer of the finished product, I can find'in the act no intent thus to control the distribution of all, or indeed any, of the ingredients that enter into wearing apparel. Apt words to indicate such an intent were readily available. Indeed, in section 1 Congress expressly included “fertilizer ingredients,” and did not limit the control to “fertilizers.” When, therefore, Congress used nn expression haying a clear and definite meaning, I am unable to find any ground thus to broaden the ordinary and trade signification of the word, or by implication to bring other articles within the statutory prohibitions.
III. It is unnecessary to consider the other objections to the indictment.
The motion to quash must be sustained.