Six corporate and three individual defendants appeal their felony convictions for conspiracy to fix real estate commissions in Montgomery County, Maryland in violation of § 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1. Finding no error, we affirm.
During the summer of 1974, and for some time before, the prevailing commission rate in Montgomery County was six percent of the sales price. A few houses were listed at seven percent, but additional services were apparently provided for the higher rate. At this time the real estate brokerage business in the county was in difficult straits. While the number of houses listed with brokers for resale had continued to rise as it had for several previous years, the number of sales had fallen, mortgage funds were in short supply and increasing costs of stationery, telephone service, advertising and gasoline had reduced the profit margin.
On September 5, 1974, defendant John Foley, the president of defendant Jack Foley Realty, Inc., hosted a dinner party at the Congressional Country Club in Bethesda, Maryland. The guests were nine of the leading realtors in Montgomery County, including each of the three individual defendants and one representative of each of the corporate defendants in this appeal.
A United States grand jury for the district of Maryland indicted the nine defendants on April 1, 1977. Following a number of preliminary motions, the only one of which is of interest to this appeal being the denial of a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, a nine day jury trial was held in September 1977 before Judge Stanley Blair. All defendants were found guilty and this appeal ensued.
Several issues are presented by the appeals. Part I of the opinion addresses the contention that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because of an insufficient nexus between defendants’ conduct and interstate commerce. Part II evaluates the sufficiency of the evidence that a conspiracy was formed and that each defendant participated in it. Part III deals with several objections to the jury instructions. Finally, Part IV discusses a number of evidentiary issues. Additional facts will be developed as pertinent to the several issues.
I. INTERSTATE COMMERCE
The defendants contend that their activities were not proven to be sufficiently related to interstate commerce to support their convictions under 15 U.S.C. § 1. Our review is to determine whether, within applicable principles of law, the evidence was sufficient, when viewed in the light most favorable to the Government, United States
We start with the applicable legal principles. Jurisdictional reach of the statute is coterminous with Congress’ power to regulate interstate commerce. Gulf Oil Corp. v. Copp Paving Co.,
The traditional mode of analysis seeks the requisite nexus along one or both of two general lines of inquiry unrelated in terms to particular categories of commercial activities. One inquires whether the activities alleged to be under illegal restraint lie directly in the flow of interstate commerce; the other, whether though intrastate in nature, they nevertheless have so great an impact on interstate commerce that they substantially affect it. See, e. g., Greenville Publishing Co. v. Daily Reflector, Inc.,
In Goldfarb v. Virginia State Bar,
In this case, as in Goldfarb, the evidence was quite sufficient to permit the trier of fact to determine that the activities in question, here those of real estate brokers, were as a matter of practical necessity an integral part of an identifiable stream of interstate real estate transactions. The charged conspirators here were shown to be engaged in a business that consisted essentially of bringing together prospective buyers and sellers of residences in Montgomery County, Maryland, and then facilitating in various ways the consummation of resulting sale-purchase agreements between sellers
The impact of the charged restraint on the brokerage services demonstrably had a substantial effect on interstate commerce. Since the conspiracy as charged raised the price of the critical service of bringing together the home sellers and buyers, this affected the need for financing “as a matter of practical economics.” Hospital Building Co. v. Trustees of Rex Hospital,
Whether analyzed as being in the flow of interstate commerce, as local but substantially affecting interstate commerce, or as being by practical necessity an “integral part” of identifiable interstate transactions, the evidence here adequately supported the jury’s finding of a sufficient nexus between the brokers’ activities and interstate commerce, and of a substantial effect of the restraint charged upon that commerce.
II. CONSPIRACY AND PARTICIPATION
Defendants next contend that there was insufficient evidence, although considered in the light most favorable to the government, to allow a jury to find the existence of a conspiracy and the participation of each defendant in it beyond a reasonable doubt. Their related contention that guilt beyond a reasonable doubt can only exist if all other reasonable hypotheses are negated has been rejected. United States v. Bobo,
A. The Evidence of Conspiracy
Proof of a § 1 conspiracy need not be direct. “Acceptance by competitors of an invitation to participate in a plan, the necessary consequence of which, if carried out, is a restraint of commerce, is sufficient to establish an unlawful conspiracy under the Sherman Act, where each competitor knew that cooperation was essential to successful operation of the plan.” 3 P. Areeda & D. Turner, Antitrust Law: An Analysis of Antitrust Principles and Their Application 1841a, at 361-62 (1978). While such evidence does not compel a finding of conspiracy, Theatre Enterprises, Inc. v. Paramount Film Distributing Corp.,
In the months preceding the September 5 dinner, several of the defendants were contemplating a change in commission rate, but were concededly afraid to undertake such a move for fear that they would be unable successfully to compete with firms still at six percent. Schick & Pepe had previously attempted to go to a seven percent rate and had failed because of competition. It was in this general climate of concern about competitive constraints that
B. Connection of Each Defendant to the Conspiracy
(1) Jack Foley Realty, Inc. and John P. Foley, Jr.
Jack Foley hosted the September 5 dinner, inviting in addition to a few realtors who were close personal friends, those he regarded as the most active members of his profession. He had previously announced the commission change to his staff and on September 15 mailed a notice concerning it to all local realtors. By early October, Foley, Inc. had thirty percent of its listings at the higher rate; by December, the figure was in excess of seventy percent and remained in that neighborhood throughout 1975.
Allyn Rickman, vice president of Schick & Pepe and a guest at the September 5 dinner, testified that after Schick & Pepe took some six percent listings, Foley called him and told him that was a “mistake” because if they all did not hold the line none of them could get seven percent.
Before the policy change, Foley’s firm had accepted a house at a six percent listing. When the listing was renewed after the policy change, still at six percent, Foley, Inc. sent a card to the listing service which was in turn distributed to all the local realtors. A listing card was then received anonymously in the mail by Foley with a question mark on it. When the house was again relisted, the contract and the listing with the service were both at seven percent. John O’Keefe, a vice president at Foley, Inc., however, wrote a letter to the homeowner/seller informing him that Foley would reimburse him for the extra one percent.
“The reason I don’t want [the listing] to go through showing 6% is our Firm was one of the leading Firms in changing from 6% to 7% and with Mr. Foley being the President of the Board of Realtors, I just don’t want any unjust criticism of him or our Company for taking your listing at less than 7%.”
(2) Colquitt-Carruthers, Inc. and John T. Carruthers, Jr.
John T. Carruthers of Colquitt-Carruthers, Inc. attended the dinner. The testimony conflicts on whether he said he was already at seven percent, or whether he was going to go to seven percent. His accountant testified that a policy change occurred between September 10 and September 24. Effective September 24, all listings other than at seven percent had to be accompanied by explanation; after November 1, they would not be accepted at less than
There was testimony that Carruthers made several attempts to ensure the cooperation of other firms. William Ellis, vice president of Shannon & Luchs Co., a firm that delayed implementation of the seven percent policy, testified that Carruthers called him on three occasions. Around January 1, 1975, Carruthers called and asked about Ellis’ “considerations.” Ellis replied “You know I can’t make the decision.” Carruthers then offered to call the man who could make the decision. Later in January, Carruthers again called, this time explicitly asking about the change. Upon being told that Shannon & Luchs had adopted a seven percent policy, but had set no date for its implementation, Carruthers “threatened” Ellis with the loss of his job. In April when Shannon & Luchs’ Gaithersburg, Maryland office took some six percent listings, Carruthers again called Ellis to complain.
Allyn Rickman, vice president of Schick & Pepe Realty, Inc., also testified that Carruthers called him to complain about some six percent listings that Schick & Pepe had accepted.
(3) Bogley, Inc. and Robert W. Lebling
Robert Lebling, the president and seventy percent owner of Bogley, Inc., attended the September 5 dinner. The testimony is in conflict whether he said he would go to a seven percent rate, or that he would do so if it were to his advantage. On September 27, Bogley, Inc. adopted a policy of seeking seven percent but not losing any listings over the attempt. At least one version of the meeting at which that decision was made places the initiative for the proposal with Lebling. Bogley, Inc. had no seven percent listings from June through September 1974, but nearly fifty percent of the listings in October and November 1974 were at the higher rate and in December seventy percent were at the new rate. The percentage of seven percent listings fluctuated between forty and sixty-five percent until April, then settled at around thirty percent. Since the agreement itself, not its performance, is the crime of conspiracy, United States v. Trenton Potteries Co.,
(4) Schick & Pepe Realty, Inc.
Allyn Rickman, vice president of Schick & Pepe Realty, attended the dinner. He testified that he stated at that time that his firm would adopt a seven percent policy. On October 4, 1975, it did adopt such a policy and by November had well over eighty percent of its listings at the higher rate. Rickman testified that but for the dinner the firm would not have changed its policy. In August, the firm had considered such a change, but decided against it because of fear that it would be unable to compete for listings. There was also evidence that Rickman complained to Robert Dorsey, vice president of Bogley, Inc., about Bogley’s failure to take only seven percent listings.
(5) Shannon & Luchs Co.
Shannon & Luchs did not officially adopt a seven percent policy until January 1975. At the dinner, its vice president, William Ellis, stated that they should not be discussing a rate increase and said that his firm was always the first to be investigated
(6) Robert L. Gruen, Inc.
Robert Gruen attended the Congressional Country Club dinner. While Allyn Rick-man’s testimony is in conflict as to Gruen’s statements at that dinner, on more than one occasion he testified that Gruen said he was going to go to seven percent. Louise Lewis, a Gruen sales agent, testified that the Gruen policy as early as June 1974 was at least to seek seven percent listings, but acknowledged that she sought no seven percent listings before September.
Gruen had one listing at seven percent out of a total of seven in August 1974 and none in September, but took three of eleven at the higher rate in October. By early 1975, the firm consistently had eighty percent or more of its listings at seven percent.
Gruen makes much of the fact that it had seven listings at seven percent from March to August 1974 and also had seven such listings from September to December. Put in percentages, however, that apparent continuity evaporates: the March to August figure represents only ten percent of Gruen’s listings; there were no seven percent listings in September; and from October to December, Gruen had thirty-five percent at a seven percent commission. These figures are sufficient to allow the jury, in connection with Rickman’s testimony, to conclude that Gruen also adopted a higher commission rate following the September 5 dinner and that that adoption was part of the alleged conspiracy.
C. Conclusion
We conclude that this evidence, here merely summarized and highlighted from a much more detailed body of proof adduced by the Government, was sufficient to permit the jury to find as it did against each of the defendants on the conspiracy issue. Defendants of course offered explanatory and exculpatory evidence, and on this appeal urge that the proper inferences to be drawn from all the evidence relieve their actions of criminal implications. Among these arguments is the interesting one that only by graceless refusals to accept Foley’s invitation to dinner or by equally graceless withdrawals from it once its purpose was revealed could they have avoided the factual inferences required to implicate them in the conspiracy, and that to sustain their convictions will impose intolerable burdens on businessmen confronted with like dilemmas. This, with other arguments about the proper inferences to be drawn from the evidence, was undoubtedly presented to the jury by able counsel for the defendants. A properly composed jury of defendants’ peers rejected this factual argument as well as others in reaching its verdict of guilty. That to sustain the jury finding on this issue may have the inhibitory effect on the
III. JURY INSTRUCTION
Defendants complain that the court failed to instruct the jury that it had to find that defendants acted with specific intent before it could find them guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. While this contention is none too plainly developed, it apparently comes to the suggestion that to be convicted of a felony violation of § 1 they had to conspire with the specific intent to accomplish a restraint of trade.
Section 1 had traditionally been interpreted to define a strict liability offense, e. g., United States v. Patten,
While certain conduct may not be made criminal without including as an element of the offense a certain degree of scienter, we do not believe the 1974 amendment of the Sherman Act, Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act, Pub.L. No. 93-528, § 3, 88 Stat. 1706, 1708 (1974), mandates that specific intent in the sense apparently suggested by defendants be made an element of a § 1 conspiracy. Although in most cases particular scienter requirements seem to be based simply on statutory construction, see Morrissette v. United States,
In increasing the penalties for violating § 1 and redefining the offense as a felony, Congress did not intend to change the elements of the offense. E. g., 120 Cong.Rec. 36, 340 (1974); see United States v. Continental Group, Inc.,
Neither do we find merit in the argument that constitutional considerations require proof of “specific intent” in the sense urged by defendants. While intent of the specificity apparently urged by defendants may be constitutionally mandated with respect to offenses impinging highly protected realms of conduct such as speech, see Smith v. California,
Defendant Shannon & Luchs also complains of the following instruction, asserting that it required too little connection with the conspiracy:
[The requirement that the evidence show beyond a reasonable doubt that the Defendants knowingly participated in the unlawful plan with the intent to further or advance some object or purpose of the conspiracy] is satisfied if the evidence shows beyond a reasonable doubt a knowing assistance of any kind in effectuating the objective of the conspiracy.
Without deciding whether this particular portion of the charge required too little connection, we conclude that the charge as a whole did require a sufficient' involvement by each defendant. For example, within paragraphs of the allegedly deficient instruction, the following was charged:
A Defendant may be found guilty of a conspiracy only if the Defendant understood that he had joined the single overall conspiracy that is charged. If any Defendant was not a party to that overall agreement or conspiracy, you must find that Defendant not guilty even if he participated in isolated or subsidiary actions or events which aided the ends of the conspiracy.
Robert Lebling, Bogley, Inc., John T. Carruthers and Colquitt-Carruthers, Inc. complain that the court failed to instruct that proof of good character alone can create reasonable doubt. Judge Blair gave substantially the charge requested, but refused to include the word “alone.” Defendants rely on Michelson v. United States,
Michelson, an opinion dealing with the admissibility of character evidence, does include dictum that in a proper ease a defendant who puts on substantial evidence of good character is entitled to an instruction that such evidence alone may create reasonable doubt, id. at 476,
In Michelson, the Supreme Court relied on the case of Edgington v. United States,
IV. EVIDENTIARY ISSUES
Defendants John Foley and Jack Foley Realty, Inc. assert that the district court erred in admitting into evidence a letter written from a Foley vice president, John O’Keefe, to a homeowner whose house had been relisted at seven percent.
During the grand jury investigation some of the records of Foley, Inc. were subpoenaed. While this letter was covered by the subpoena it was not produced. Shortly before trial, an attorney in a civil suit involving the same conspiracy called the United States Attorney and told him about the letter. The government asked the attorney for a copy of the letter, but since it was subject to a protective order in the civil suit, the attorney asked that the government obtain the letter directly from defendants. The letter was then so obtained. In ruling on the objection to the admission of the letter, Judge Blair assumed that it had been obtained in violation of the protective order. We make the same assumption.
The government is not precluded from introducing improperly obtained evidence so long as it did not participate in the impropriety. Burdeau v. McDowell,
Defendants seek to analogize the protective order to 47. U.S.C. § 605, a provision of the Federal Communications Act which they assert has been interpreted to prohibit the admission of communications seized in violation of its terms even absent government complicity. Assuming that defendants’ construction were correct, a proposition which we do not accept save for the purposes of argument, see Bubis v. United States,
Defendants object to the admission of a series of charts, designated Government Exhibits Numbers 39 through 51. Numbers 39 through 50 summarized the number of listings filed by each realtor with the multiple listing service and portrayed the percentage of those listings which were at the higher, seven percent
Fed.R.Evid. 1006 provides: “The contents of voluminous writings . . which cannot conveniently be examined in court may be presented in the form of a chart, summary or calculation. The originals, or duplicates, shall be made available for examination or copying, or both, by other parties at reasonable time and place.” The data upon which these charts were based came from defendants’ own listing service, the documents were made available to defendants at the Justice Department well before trial and the charts themselves were provided the weekend before trial. Defendants complain that the charts should have been made available longer in advance of trial, relying on the last sentence of Rule 1006. That sentence refers to making available the original documents, not the charts themselves. 5 J. Weinstein & M. Berger, Weinstein’s Evidence H 1006[04], at 1006-8 (1975). The charts themselves are not misleading and we cannot say Judge Blair abused his discretion in allowing their admission.
Government Exhibit No. 51 summarized the percentage of houses sold by each defendant that were purchased with loans guaranteed by the Veterans Administration or the Federal Housing Administration. Defendant Foley and his firm complain that the base data for this chart was never made available to them. The chart was compiled from data contained in machine-readable “diskettes” provided by the multiple listing service. The diskettes were not made available to defendants, but a computer print-out of the information they contained was and the diskettes themselves only contained data that was provided to defendants themselves by their multiple listing service in the normal course of business. The computer print-outs qualify as duplicates of the diskettes within the meaning of Rule 1006. Fed.R.Evid. 1001(4). In any event, defendants conceded that substantial out-of-state funds were used to purchase houses they brokered. Thus, the admission of the chart, if erroneous, would seem to be harmless error.
Father Henry O’Meara testified to a number of versions of a conversation he had with John T. Carruthers concerning Robert Lebling’s reluctance to take seven percent listings. Carruthers and Colquitt-Carruthers, Inc. contend that the trial court erred in failing to strike the testimony, apparently on the ground that the potential for confusion, due to the inconsistencies in the several versions as to what actually was said, outweighed any relevance the testimony had. The decision to strike testimony on grounds of lack of relevance is committed to the district judge. We cannot say he abused that discretion in this instance.
The same two defendants also object to the trial court’s allowing Allyn Rick-man to refresh his recollection concerning a conversation he had with Carruthers with a transcript of his previous grand jury testimony.
Finally, Robert L. Gruen, Inc. complains that the government interfered with its cross-examination of Rickman by withholding discoverable information. Gruen was provided with the information that Rickman had told the government that he could not recall Robert Gruen saying at the dinner that his firm would go to seven percent. Gruen was not given the notes
The interview notes were not verbatim nor had they been approved by Rickman. Thus they were not discoverable under the Jencks Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3500. Without reaching the question whether the failure to make a full disclosure of Rickman’s statements violated the principle of Brady v. Maryland,
Having carefully considered the record, the briefs and the oral arguments of all the parties we conclude that no reversible error has been made in the trial of this difficult and complicated case. The convictions of the nine defendants therefore are affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Defendant Colquitt-Carruthers, Inc. was represented by defendant John T. Carruthers, Jr.; defendant, Shannon & Luchs Co. was represented by William Ellis; defendant Schick & Pepe Realty, Inc. was represented by Allyn Rickman; defendant Bogley, Inc. was represented by defendant Robert W. Lebling; and defendant Robert L. Gruen, Inc. was represented by Robert L. Gruen.
. A sufficient relationship to interstate commerce is both a critical jurisdictional fact and an element of the substantive offense charged under 15 U.S.C. § 1. Facts sufficient for the one are sufficient for the other, and vice versa. Existence of the jurisdictional fact may be attacked independently, or in conjunction with the defense on the merits. Cf. McLain v. Real Estate Board of New Orleans, Inc.,
. It may be questioned whether, in any event, these two “tests” will withstand logical scrutiny as discretely different frameworks for close legal analysis. Courts quite frequently conduct searching interstate commerce relationship
. Distinguishing this case factually from those wherein real estate brokerage activities were not shown to have involved any considerable volume of out-of-state buyers and sellers. E. g., Diversified Brokerage Services, Inc. v. Greater Des Moines Board of Realtors,
. This included advertising in Washington, D.C., newspapers and radio stations (App. 111, 998, 1003), the Foreign Service Journal, and the Army, Navy, Air Force Times (App. 1020-21). At least one defendant advertised its use of a “Military Transfer Department” and a “Corporate Referral Department” which enabled it to identify potential buyers and sellers among military and business transferees (App. 1042-43); offered to military personnel a “Free Relocation Kit” (App. 187-88); and invited collect telephone calls from prospective home purchasers coming into the Washington, D.C., area (App. 1039).
. Incident to which they paid commissions directly to out-of-state brokers who found purchasers for their listings, and received commissions directly from out-of-state brokers to whom they referred clients. (App. 998-99, 1004, 1014, 1020).
. See American Power & Light Co. v. SEC,
. App. 970-95, 997-99, 1003-04, 1019-23, 1062.
. One advertised that potential purchasers should consult a broker because he could “guide you in getting a loan,” and will “be able to negotiate the best available financing.” (App. 1046).
. Foley and Foley, Inc. object to the admissibility of that letter. See Part IV infra.
. Carruthers and Colquitt-Carruthers contend this testimony should not have been allowed. See Part IV infra where we conclude that there was no error in its admission.
. Some defendants may contend for an even , more specific intent: to denigrate or mock the law in the sense apparently of intending specifically to violate the Sherman Act. Because we find even the less stringent requirement without support, we do not address this one.
. Gypsum also involved a rule of reason offense rather than a per se violation of § 1 such as the price fixing here alleged. While the Court’s analysis is in part dependent on the relative lack of notice provided by rule of reason offenses, the rule announced is framed in terms of all § 1 criminal prosecutions.
. See text accompanying note 4 supra.
. This rule has developed in cases involving alleged constitutional improprieties so it may be said to be predicated on a lack of state action. On the other hand, the notion that the mere fact of impropriety should preclude admissibility has not been accepted. See Burdeau v. McDowell,
. The letter was neither the personal property of nor in the possession of Mr. Foley; Foley, Inc. has no privilege against self incrimination. United States v. White,
. See text accompanying note 5 supra.
