Appellant was convicted on seventeen counts of an indictment which charged it with violating regulations issued pursuant to the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942, 56 Stat. 23, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix, § 901 et seq., prohibiting tie-in sales.
The violations occurred at three of appellant’s branch houses, two in Philadelphia and one in Norristown. All three branch houses were supervised by a district manager and there was no evidence that he had any knowledge of the offenses. There was-some evidence that the assistant manager of the Philadelphia, Noble Street, branch ratified a salesman’s violation of the particular regulation. There was evidence that a salesman had stated to a customer that he had received orders from the office in Chicago to make named tie-in sales. There was evidence that the manager at Norris-town himself committed the offenses involving that house. There was evidence on behalf of the appellant that the home office of the appellant sent out written instructions to its managers not to force the customers to buy one product in order to obtain another product and that it repeated *343 these in substance on at least three other occasions. Also there was evidence that at meetings of defendant’s employees, held in the branch houses, there were full discussions of price control regulations, pursuant to directions of the home office and that the salesmen were instructed in the various regulations and the interpretations thereof with particular reference to tie-in sales. Appellant concedes for the purposes oí this appeal that the evidence was sufficient to support a finding on each of the seventeen counts that one of its salesmen required a customer to purchase one commodity as a condition to the sale of another commodity. The district judge sitting without a jury found as facts that:
“(1) defendant, in good faith, instructed all its district managers, branch house managers and assistant branch house managers, never to make or permit to be made any tie-in sales.
“(2) defendant, in good faith, instructed all its salesmen never to make any tie-in sales.”
Following conviction appellant moved for a judgment of acquittal which the trial court denied.
On this state of facts appellant argues that it should not be held responsible for the offenses committed by its employees. It stresses that the violations in question involved the element of wilfulness, that the Price Control Act does not specifically provide that an employer shall be guilty of the employee’s offense and that there was no evidence of participation in or knowledge by an officer or high ranking agent of the corporation.
All of the evidence as to the violations by the employees of appellant showed that the offenses were committed deliberately and with knowledge of the pertinent regulations prohibiting such tie-in sales. Appellant’s proofs, as indicated, went to considerable lengths in establishing the care it took to familiarize its branch house people with those particular price regulations, among others.
Though the Price Control Act does not expressly state that a corporate employer shall be responsible for an offense under the statute by its employee
1
it is too late in the day to say that such offense, within the scope of the employee’s authority, cannot be brought home to the corporation. United States v. Van Riper, 3 Cir.,
The recent excellent opinion of Judge Clark for the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in United States v. George F. Fish, Inc.,
“No distinctions are made in these cases between officers and agents, or between persons holding positions involving varying degrees of responsibility. And this seems the only practical conclusion in any case, but particularly here, where the sales proscribed by the Act will almost invariably be performed by subordinate salesmen, rather than by corporate chiefs, and where the corporate hierarchy does not contemplate separate layers of official dignity, each with separate degrees of responsibility. The purpose of the Act is a deterrent one; and to deny the possibility of corporate responsibility for the acts of minor employees is to immunize the offender who really benefits, and open wide the door for evasion. Here Simon acted knowingly and deliberately and hence ‘wilfully’ within the meaning of the Act, Zimberg v. United States, 1 Cir.,142 F.2d 132 , 137, 138, certiorari denied323 U.S. 712 ,65 S.Ct. 38 [89 L.Ed. 573 ] and his wilful act is also that of the corporation. United States v. Union Supply Co.,215 U.S. 50 , 55,30 S.Ct. 15 ,54 L. Ed. 87 ; United States v. Illinois Cent. R. Co.,303 U.S. 239 ,58 S.Ct. 533 ,82 L.Ed. 773 .”
The judgment of the District Court will be affirmed.
Notes
Regarding the necessity of express inclusion of corporate liability, Mr. Justice Frankfurter in United States v. Dotterweich,
Cf. Minisohn v. United States, 3 Cir., 101 F.2d
477.
And see New
York
Central & H. R. R. Co. v. United States,
Appellant relies on some language of Judge Davis in Nobile v. United States, 3 Cir.,
