201 F. 697 | S.D. Ohio | 1912
The indictment contains three counts, which may briefly and very generally be described as (1) a charge of conspiracy in restraint of interstate trade in cash registers during the three years preceding the date of the indictment, in the manner and by the means set forth; (2) a charge of creating a monopoly, during the same three years, of the cash register business by the means and in the manner set forth in the first count; (3) a charge of monopolizing such business, built up and augmented prior to the three years prior to "the date of the indictment, through the conspiracy and by the means in the first count described, by continuing the business during those years.
The validity of the indictment is challenged on a number of grounds:
1. Because the matters and things set forth and charged do not constitute an offense against the laws of the United States.
2. Because the provisions of the act of Congress of July 2, 1890 (26 Stat.- 209, c. 647), entitled “An act to protect trade and commerce against unlawful restraints and monopolies” are too vague, uncertain, and indefinite to create a criminal offense.
3. Because said act, in so far as it attempts to create offenses and impose penalties, is repugnant to the Constitution of the United States, and especially to section 1 of article 1, and to the provision of the fifth amendment, that no person shall be deprived of life, liberty,, or property without due process of law, and to the provision of the sixth amendment, that in all criminal prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the right to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation, and to the tenth amendment.
4. Because the averments are too general, vague, indefinite,-and uncertain to inform the defendants of the nature and cause of the accusation against them, or to apprise them with such reasonable certainty of the offense with which they are charged or what they may expect to meet on the trial as to enable them to make their defense.
5. Because it is not charged that any of the defendants has done any act to effect the object of the pretended conspiracy, or, if any such act is intended to be charged by the matters and things alleged in paragraphs 1- to 11, inclusive, of the first count, the same is not charged with sufficient definiteness and certainty.
6. Because it undertakes to charge separate and distinct offenses, and is therefore bad for duplicity.
Counsel for defendants admit — as they must, in view of the many decisions of the Supreme Court sustaining civil actions under the act, brought either by the government or by individuals by virtue of express provisions of the act — that civil actions may be prosecuted, but contend that by reason of alleged vagueness and uncertainty, brought about by the decisions in the Standard Oil Case, 221 U. S. 1, 31 Sup.
The statute is vague and uncertain, they say, because, as they assume, the Supreme Court in United States v. Freight Association, 166 U. S. 290, 17 Sup. Ct. 540, 41 L. Ed. 1007, and United States v. Joint Traffic Association, 171 U. S. 505, 19 Sup. Ct. 25, 43 L. Ed. 259, have held that every restraint of trade, however slight or in whatsoever way it might be regarded at common law, comes under the ban of the statute; that by the later decisions the Supreme Court have interpolated the word “unreasonable” into' the statute, and hence no man is advised by the statute whether any act contemplated by him is unreasonable or not; and that, as he cannot know, neither can any 12 men who are called upon to determine the quality of his acts, and that one jury might take one view and another jury a different view of the same conduct. Predicating their case on these assumptions, the defendants cite important authorities in support of their conclusion.
The substance of all the decisions relied on by them is found briefly stated by Justice Brewer, sitting with Caldwell, Circuit Judge, in Tozer v. United States (C. C.) 52 Fed. 917, 919:
“In order to constitute a crime, the act must be one which the party is able to know in advance whether it is criminal or not. The criminality of an act cannot depend upon whether a jury may think it reasonable or unreasonable. There must be some definiteness and certainty.”
The subject is discussed at length in a decision by Judges Baxter, Hammond, and Key in this circuit. Louisville & Nashville R. R. Co. v. Railroad Commission of Tennessee (C. C.) 19 Fed. 679. The case involved a statute of Tennessee, which created a Railway Commission, with power to revise tariffs and make new rates, if the present rate “is more than a just and reasonable 'compensation,” or “a,mounts to unjust and unreasonable discrimination.” The act provided, also, that the new rates were to be “a just and reasonable compensation,” and if the corporations continued to demand more than that they were subject to indictment, and that “no rates or charges for service in the transportation of freight over any railroad shall be held or considered extortionate or excessive,” if the evidence showed that the net earnings from its traffic would not Amount to more than “a fair or just return” on a certain valuation. The statute was held invalid, because its provisions were too indefinite, vague, and uncertain to sustain a suit for the penalties imposed, and did not sufficiently define the offenses declared in it.
The same conclusions are found in Louisville & Nashville R. R. Co. v. Commonwealth, 99 Ky. 132, 35 S. W. 129, 33 L. R. A. 209, 59 Am. St. Rep. 457, United States v. Capital Traction Co., 34 App. D. C. 592, 19 Ann. Cas. 68, Czarra v. Board of Supervisors, 25 App. D. C. 443, and Ex parte Jackson, 45 Ark. 158.
This claimed want of standard is emphasized in C., B. & Q. R. R. v. Jones, 149 Ill. 361, 37 N. E. 247, 24 L. R. A. 141, 41 Am. St. Rep.
The defendants justly attach importance to the report of the judiciary committee of the Senate, January 27, 1909, upon the then proposed amendment of the anti-trust act that:
“No suit or prosecution by the United States under the first six sections of the said act, approved July 2, 1890, shall hereafter be begun for or on account of this act, or any action thereunder, unless the same be an unreasonable restraint of trade or commerce among the several states or foreign nations."
This committee of eminent lawyers reported adversely, saying (page 10 of their report):
“The Anti-Trust Act makes it a criminal offense to violate the law, and provides a punishment both by fine and imprisonment. To inject into the act the question of whether an agreement or combination is reasonable or unreasonable would render the act, as a criminal or penal statute, indefinite and uncertain, and hence to that extent * * * nugatory and void, and would practically amount to a repeal of that part of the act. * * * Justice Brewer, in the case of Tozer v. United States, 52 Fed. 917, makes this perfectly clear and plain. In this case the defendant was indicted for violating the interstate commerce act, * * * and upon this the court holds: ‘In order to constitute a crime, the act must be one which the party is able to know in advance whether it is criminal or not. The criminality of an act cannot depend upon whether a jury may think it reasonable or unreasonable. There must be definiteness'and certainty. * * * No penal law can be sustained, unless its mandates aré so clearly expressed that any ordinary person can determine in advance what he may and what he may not do under it.’ ”
■ Justice Harlan, in his dissenting opinion in the Standard Oil Case (221 U. S. 96, 97, 98, 31 Sup. Ct. 502, 55 L. Ed. 619, 34 E. R. A. [Kf. S.] 834), quotes at length from that part of the report which deals with this subject. It is not to be overlooked, however, that the learned justice did not himself express an opinion on the point.
Attorney General Bonaparte and Solicitor General Hoyt, in their briefs in American Express Co. v. United States, 212 U. S. 522, 29 Sup. Ct. 315, 53 L. Ed. 635, commenting upon the failure of the Elkins Act to limit the word “discrimination” to “undue” or “unreasonable” or “unjust,” argue that criminal prosecutions-could not be based successfully upon statutes defining an offense with such uncertainty as the use of these adjectives import into them.
But even if defendants’ assumption of the effect upon this statute of the decisions in the Standard Oil Case and the Tobacco Case be acquiesced in, and even if the word “unreasonable” were actually written into the law, there is strong ground for holding that the Supreme Court have in effect already decided the question.
Waters-Pierce Oil Co. v. Texas, 212 U. S. 86, 29 Sup. Ct. 220, 53 L. Ed. 417, on error to the Court of Civil Appeals for the Third Supreme Judicial District of Texas, involved the anti-trust statutes of that state, which made it unlawful for any corporation transacting or
It was in that case, among other things, insisted that the anti-trust laws of Texas were “so vague, indefinite, and uncertain as to deprive them of their constitutionality, in that they punish by forfeiture of the right to do business, and the imposition of penalties, .under provisions of an act which do not advise a citizen or corporation, prosecuted under them, of the nature and character of the acts constituting a violation of the law.” The objections, are found in the words denouncing contracts and arrangements “reasonably calculated” to fix and regulate the price of commodities, etc., and acts which “tend” to accomplish the prohibited results.
The Supreme Cour^held that the anti-trust laws of Texas were not in contravention of the Constitution, as depriving any one of due process of law, because vague and indefinite in the prohibition of acts which “tend” or are “reasonably calculated” to restrain trade and competition. The opinion was delivered by Justice Day, who cites Tozer v. United States (C. C.) 52 Fed. 917, Railroad Co. v. Dey (C. C.) 35 Fed. 866, 1 L. R. A. 744, and Louisville & Nashville R. R. Co. v. Commonwealth, 99 Ky. 132, 35 S. W. 129, 33 L. R. A. 209, 59 Am. St. Rep. 457, and distinguishes the Texas statutes from these, in that those statutes—
“do not give the broad power to a court or jury to determine the criminal character of the act in accordance with their belief as to- whether it is reasonable or unreasonable, as do the statutes condemned in the eases cited.”
And he goes on to say that the criminal law punishes not only a completed act, but also acts which attempt to bring about the prohibited result, and that it is sufficient if the acts really tend to bring about monopoly and to deprive the public of the advantages which flow from free competition. And he says further (212 U. S. 110, 29 Sup. Ct. 227, 53 L. Ed. 417):
“As to the phrase, ‘reasonably calculated,’ what does it include less than acts which, when fairly considered, tend to accomplish the prohibited thing, or which make it highly probable that .the given result will be accomplished?”
' He notes the fact that the decisions which announce the rule's on which his opinion is based are in civil cases arising under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, but he draws no conclusion from the fact. He also notes that the Texas laws were enacted by the Legislature of that
' “We are not prepared to say that there was a deprivation of due process of law because the statute permitted, and the court charged that there might be a conviction not only for acts which accomplished the prohibited result, but also for those which tend or are reasonably calculated to bring about the things forbidden.”
There would seem to be little difference in principle between submitting to a jury the question whether certain acts were “reasonably calculated” to bring about a certain result, and submitting to them the question whether acts in restraint of trade were unreasonable or not.
One cannot escape the conviction, after considering this decision, that the anti-trust acts of Texas are upheld as criminal statutes, not because of the difference in breadth of power given a court or jury to determine the criminality of an act in accordance with their belief in its reasonableness or unreasonableness, as the case might be, or because through process of law one charged with an offense under them could have his day in court, but because the Supreme Court of the United States in United States v. Knight, 156 U. S. 1, 15 Sup. Ct. 249, 39 L. Ed. 325, the Addyston Pipe Case, 175 U. S. 237, 20 Sup. Ct. 96, 44 L. Ed. 136, the Northern Securities Case, 193 U. S. 197, 24 Sup. Ct. 436, 48 L. Ed. 679, and in Swift & Co. v. United States, 196 U. S, 375, 25 Sup. Ct. 276, 49 L. Ed. 518. have decided that it is not essential, in order to bring a contract or combination in restraint of trade under the act, that its result should be a complete monopoly, but it was sufficient if it really tended to that end, and to deprive the public of the advantages which flow from free competition.
A clear deduction from this would seem to be that while in civil cases it is sufficient that a contract is in restraint of trade in the meaning of the act when it tends to restrain trade, so in criminal cases the same rule should be applied, as it indeed was applied in the Texas case, and that when a contract tends to restrain trade, or the acts complained of are “reasonably calculated,” or are acts which '“tend,” to accomplish the prohibited thing, then the definition of the offense in a criminal statute containing such a description is not vague and uncertain, and it is not undue process of law to permit a jury to determine the tendency of the acts proscribed, and whether or not they are reasonably calculated in their tendency to accomplish the prohibited thing. In the evolution of the common law to meet changed conditions, an act directly tending to restrain trade, or the purpose of which was to restrain trade, was an unreasonable restraint, because it brought about an injury to the public, caused by enhancement of prices which the common law in the beginning sought to avoid.
The extent to which the Supreme Court have gone in upholding criminal statutes containing adjectives not exactly describing the offense at which the statute is aimed, but leaving room for the exercise by the jury of some discrimination in determining whether or not the acts complained of come within the characterization of the adjective, is illustrated by the case of Ellis v. United States, 206 U. S. 246, 27 Sup. Ct. 600, 51 L. Ed. 1047, 11 Ann. Cas. 589, in which the act
“Even if, as in other instances, a nice case might be left to the jury, what emergencies are within the statute is merely a constituent element of a question of law, since the determination of that element determines the extent of the statutory prohibition and is material only to that end. The ruling was correct.”
There seems to be firm ground upon which to base a ruling, even if the word “unreasonable” had been written into the statute, or even if the Supreme Court have read the word “unreasonable” into the statute, that the anti-trust act would not be so vague and uncertain, and so lacking in establishing a standard to which the acts of merchants must conform as to infringe any constitutional guaranties. But it is not true that the decisions in the Standard Oil Case and in the Tobacco Case have introduced the word “unreasonable” into the statute, or have required the use of that adjective in describing such acts as are to be avoided by those who wish to comply with the law, and it is not true that there is no standard erected by the statute by reference to which a man may know whether or not his acts come-within its inhibition.
The Supreme Court say in those cases that the statute must be interpreted in the light of reason, guided by the principles of law, and to effect the purpose the law against restraints of trade always had in view. That purpose originally was to prevent restraints of any kind upon the free flow of commerce, since restraints brought about the attendant evils, particularly the enhancement of prices. The evils were at first supposed to flow from every restraint upon commerce, and the common law forbade any restraint. But in the course of time and under changed conditions it was seen that the application of the common law in its strictness was a bar to the free flow of commerce and proper development of trade, rather than a protection to it; and for that reaspn, but to- accomplish the same purpose, namely, the protection of the' public and the preservation of the right of individuals to contract, a rule by way of exception to the common law arose, which looked to the purpose or motive which underlaid contracts or acts in-restraint of trade. If the purpose was to injure the public, by limit-
■Partial restraints — restraints incidental or collateral to the main purpose of the contract, accidental, secondary, or remote, and not directly the effect of it — are not regarded as restraints in the view of the law, in that they do not bring about the evils to which the public and individuals are subject by the suppression or the limiting of free competition, which same evils were aimed at by the rule at common law as it was originally and as it, in its evolution to bring about the same ends, has become; that is to say, such restraints are not wrongful. ' This is clearly pointed out by Chief Justice White in the Standard Oil Case, and he shows that that was the state of the law at the time the Sherman Anti-Trust Act was passed, both in England and in the United States (Standard Oil Case, 221 U. S. 56, 31 Sup. Ct. 514, 55 L. Ed. 619, 34 L. R. A. [N. S.] 834 et seq.), and he shows to the extent of conclusive demonstration that, notwithstanding the apparent decisions in the Freight Association Case and in the Joint Traffic Association Case, in reality the rule applied in their decision was the same as the “rule of reason” adopted in the Standard Oil Case. He proves that the contracts enjoined in those cases were enjoined, not because there might incidentally result some restraint of trade in their operation, but because they operated directly and immediately upon interstate trade, and thereby suppressed or limited competition and created or tended to create monopoly, which results the common law forbade from the beginning. After reviewing the early English cases ánd acts of Parliament on the subject he says:
' ■ “From the review just made it clearly results that outside of the restrictions resulting from the want of power in an individual to voluntarily and unreasonably restrain his right to carry on his trade or business and outside of the want of right to restrain the free course of trade by contracts or acts which implied a wrongful purpose, freedom to contract and to abstain from ‘contracting and to exercise every reasonable right incident thereto became the rule in the English law.”
,■ And as the conclusion and the summing up of the whole matter he ¡says (221 U. S., at page 58, 31 Sup. Ct. at page 515, 55 E. Ed. 619, 34 E. R. A. [N. S.] 834):
“Without going into detail and but very briefly surveying the whole field, it may be with accuracy said that the dread of enhancement of prices and of other wrongs which it was thought would flow from the undue limitation on competitive conditions caused by contracts or other acts of individuals •or corporations, led, as a matter of public policy, to the prohibition or treating as illegal of all contracts or acts which were unreasonably restrictive of competitive conditions, either from the nature or character of the contract or . act or where the surrounding circumstances were such as to justify the conclusion that they had not been entered into or performed with the legitimate purpose of reasonably forwarding personal interest and developing trade, hut on the contrary were of such a character as to give rise to the inference , or -presumption that they had been entered into or done with the mtent to do wrong to the general public and to limit the right of individuals, thus restraining the free flow of commerce and, tending to bring about the evils, such as the enhancement of prices, which were considered to be against puhlio policy.”. (The italics are mine.)
In Ellis v. United States, 206 U. S. 246, 257, 27 Sup. Ct. 600, 602, 51 L. Ed. 1047, 11 Ann. Cas. 589, it appears that Ellis attempted to justify the employment on a public work undertaken by him of men for nine hours a day (the statute making such employment for moré than eight hours, unlawful) on the ground that he had more difficulty than he expected in getting certain oak and pine piles called for by the contract and was in a hurry to get the work done. The trial court instructed the jury that, if Ellis intended to permit the men to work over eight hours, he intended to violate the statute. In passing upon this charge, Justice Holmes said:
“The argument against the instruction is that the word ‘intentionally’ in' the statute requires knowledge of the law, or at least that to be convicted' Ellis must not have supposed, even mistakenly, that there was an emergency extraordinary enough to justify his conduct. The latter proposition is only the former a little disguised. Both are without foundation. If a man intentionally adopts certain conduct in certain circumstances known to him, and that conduct is forbidden by -the law under those circumstances, he inteb-' tionally breaks the law in the only sense in which the law ever considers intent.”
“In every case,” says Chief Justice White, “where it is claimed that an act or acts are in violation of the statute, the rule of reason, in the' light of the principles of law and the public policy which the act erpbodies, must be applied.” Standard Oil Case, 221 U. S. 66, 31 Sup. Ct. 518, 55 L. Ed. 619, 34 L. R. A. (N. S.) 834.
From the decisions in the Standard Oil Case and in the Tobaqco Case and in the cases in the Supreme Court involving the anti-trust act, and the evolution of the common law (Oregon Steam Navigation Co. v. Winsor, 20 Wall. 64, 22 L. Ed. 315; Gibbs v. Consolidated Gas Co., 130 U. S. 396, 409, 9 Sup. Ct. 553, 32 L. Ed. 979; National Cotton Oil Co. v. Texas, 197 U. S. 115, 25 Sup. Ct. 379, 49 L. Ed. 689.; Shawnee Compress Co. v. Anderson, 209 U. S. 423, 28 Sup. Ct. 572, 52 L. Ed. 865; Mogul Steamship Co. v. McGregor, L. R. [1892] A. C. 25, as illustrations) to meet modern conditions, and not to unduly restrain, but to encourage, trade, it may be said that a contract, combir nation, or conspiracy is in restraint of trade when it directly affects trade, and is entered into with intent to do wrong to the general public and to individuals, by restraining the free flow of commerce, and by bringing about or tending to bring about the maintenance oí* enhancement of prices, which, but for such acts,- would adjust themselves,
The defendants admit, as they must, that ignorance of the law will not excuse them. They must be held, then, to have known that at common laW every restraint of trade was wrongful, and hence that, if they did what the indictment charges them with having done, their acts were contrary to the anti-trust act in its literal language; and they must be held to know of the exception to the common law which gives them a wider field of operation — which makes every restraint, brought about with the wrongful purpose of preventing the free flow of commerce and limiting the right of the individual to contract, unlawful. Let the act be interpreted either literally or in the light of reason — ■ that is to say, to effect the purposes of the common law as they were from the beginning, whether meaning any restraint at all, or any restraint brought about by wrongful purpose — the defendants, if the acts charged in the indictment are true, were advised of the prohibitions of the act and the penalties provided therein. If the facts alleged are true, wrongful purpose is disclosed in every one of them. Indeed, if the defendants have in fact done what they are charged with having done, there is exhibited in this indictment a flagrant case of commercial piracy.
While the Supreme Court .have not as yet directly sustained the validity of the anti-trust act as a criminal statute, yet the subject has received consideration by qminent authority. The constitutionality of the act has been sustained by Judge Carpenter in the Beef Trust prosecution, in his charge to the jury; by Judge Angelí in the Bath Tub Trust prosecution, in which he overruled the demurrer to the indictment; by Judge Hand, in the Sugar Trust prosecution; and by Judge Putnam, in the Shoe Machinery Trust Case (D. C.) 195 Fed. 578, all since the decisions in the Standard Oil Case and in the Tobacco Case.
The act does not primarily grant any right to be enforced in a civil action. It creates an offense, a crime, describing what the crime is. To do the'acts proscribed in the first and second sections is declared to be unlawful; that is to say, criminal. Hence the right given by section 7 to an individual to recover for injury to his business or property with threefold damages, and the right given by section 4 to the government to prevent by injunction a continuance of the acts complained of, are rights growing out of the commission of a crime, by whomsoever it may be, whose acts also subject him to the criminal penalties of the statute. If he has been guilty of a crime described in sections 1 or 2, then he may be restrained by the government in a civil action, or be compelled by an individual who has been injured in his business or property to respond in threefold damages.
In United States v. Swift (D. C.) 188 Fed. 92, 95, 96, 97, the so-called Beef Trust prosecution, Judge Carpenter points this out very clearly, showing that the Supreme Court must have considered and passed on the act as a criminal statute in giving effect to the civil
“The well-settled rule is that where technical words are used in an act, and their meaning has previously been conclusively settled, by long usage and judicial construction, the use of the words without an indication of an intention to give them a new significance is an adoption of the generally accepted meaning affixed to the words at the time the act was passed. Pwticularly is this mle imperative where the statute in wlvich the words cure used creates a crime, as does the statute under consideration, and gives no specific definition of the crime created. Thus in United States v. Palmer, supra, Mr. Ohief Justice Marshall, referring to the term ‘robbery,’ as used in the statute, said (3 Wheat. 630, 4 L. Ed. 471): ‘Of the meaning of the term “robbery,” as used in the statute, we think no doubt can be entertained. It must be understood in the sense in which it is recognized and defined at common law.’ ” (The italics are mine.)
But it is suggested by counsel for defendants that, inasmuch as there is great contrariety of opinion as to the meaning of the law in’ its operation as a criminal statute, the demurrer be sustained, in order that the government may, as authorized by law, at once take the case to the Supreme Court for an early decision, and thereby save the time of the court here, and the annoyance and great expense attendant upon such a long trial as would result from the overruling of the demurrer. One cannot but appreciate the force of this suggestion, and its adoption would be an easy way to dispose of the matter; but, on the other hand, there is upon this court the plain duty of deciding the case according to conviction, and of so deciding as to make the law effective, rather than to destroy it if its constitutionality is fairly clear. This is in accordance with the established rule that an act of Congress should not be set aside as unconstitutional unless clearly so. United States v. Coombs, 12 Pet. 72, 76, 9 L. Ed. 1004; Presser v. Illinois, 116 U. S. 252, 269, 6 Sup. Ct. 580, 29 L. Ed. 615; Hooper v. California, 155 U. S. 648, 657, 15 Sup. Ct. 207, 39 L. Ed. 297; Knights Templars et al. v. Jarman, 187 U. S. 197, 205, 23 Sup. Ct. 108, 47 L. Ed. 139; United States v. Delaware & Hudson Co., 213 U. S. 366, 29 Sup. Ct. 527, 53 L. Ed. 836.
I hold, therefore, from all of these considerations, that the Sherman * Anti-Trust Act is a valid criminal statute, sufficiently clear in itself to 'inform the accused of the nature and cause of the accusation against them, and that criminal prosecutions under it in no way deprive the defendants of liberty or property without due process of law.
Having in view the purposes of the common law and of the exception which has grown up in its evolution, and appreciating that these purposes are the same, there seem to be compelling reasons for the conclusion that moral considerations are involved in the question
“There is more of the decalogue in the common law respecting the trading of merchants than is sometimes supposed.” United States v. Standard Oil Co. (C. C.) 173 Fed. 177, 196.
Eminent authority, beginning with Lord Chief' Justice Hale (Taylor’s Case, 1 Vent. 293, 3 Keb. 607), have declared that the Christian religion is a part of the law of England. There are in a number of states decisions to the effect that ithe same is true of the law of the United States, and it is said by Justice Brewer in Church of Holy Trinity v. United States, 143 U. S. 457, 12 Sup. Ct. 511, 36 L. Ed. 226, that the United States is a Christian nation. No finding on this question is here made, for it is not necessary; but it may safely be said that civilization, as we understand it, so far as the recognition of the individual in the community and his. rights are concerned, is the outgrowth of the appreciation that, among many other things, dealings between man and man must be on terms of justice, and justice requires that no man shall build up his business by acts whose purpose is to put the purchasing public at his mercy or to exploit others for his advantage, and destroy thereby the opportunities of others to exercise their talents and desires in the same field of mercantile activity. The common law in many of its phases developed through the appreciation of these rights and is based upon- justice in the abstract. It may therefore be said to have a moral basis.
The ancient law against some voluntary restraint put by contract on an individual’s right to carry on his particular trade or calling was established because it was deemed that such restraints were injurious to the public as well as to the individuals who made them; and the evils of monopoly are:
“(1) The power which the monopoly gave to the one who enjoyed it to fix the price and thereby injure the public; (2) the power which it engendered of enabling a limitation on production; and (3) the danger of deterioration in quality of the monopolized article which it was deemed was the inevitable resultant of the monopolistic control over its production and sale.” Standard Oil Case, 221 U. S. 52, 31 Sup. Ct. 512, 55 L. Ed. 619, 34 L. R. A. (N. S.) 834.
It was unjust to the community that a man should contract away his right to do business, and thereby possibly become, with his family, a charge on the community. It was unjust to the community to monopolize a product, and thereby enhance, or have the power to enhance, the prices the public were to pay for it. It was unjust to deprive an individual of his right and power of freely contracting, and of carrying on any lawful business he desired, and selling his product at prices fixed by free competition; and it was recognized that when the evils were brought about by the purpose to inflict them then that purpose was wrongful, and wrongful because unjust. If in a remote and comparatively barbarous civilization every contract in restraint of trade was deemed wrong, hence unlawful, because it was thought to work an injury to the public and to individuals, and if in our own time of .advanced civilization the contract in restraint of trade is held to be wrong, hence unlawful, because its purpose is to bring about the same
If in the doing of a thing a man entertains a wrongful purpose, he knows it better than anybody else can know it. And if, under the law, a man is presumed to intend the consequences of his acts, how much the more must he be held blameworthy when his deliberate purpose is to bring about the evils condemned by the common law from the beginning — condemned because restraints of trade were wrongful to the community and to the individual and wrongful because they were unjust?
It is hard to sympathize with the often-repeated expression that a merchant is not advised by the anti-trust act of the character of a contemplated act. If the act is wrong under commonly accepted moral or ethical standards, it was wrong at common law, and wrong under the exception to the common law, and always was and always must be wrong, so long as there is community life, with common and relative rights belonging to each individual in the community and to the public as a whole. How can any fair-minded man engaged in trade, whose deliberate purpose in his acts and contracts in trade is to work injustice to his competitors and to the public, honestly claim want of knowledge of the quality of his acts? The Golden Rule may not as yet be the standard by which the law requires contracts in restraint of trade to be measured, but the ancient adage, “Rive and let live,” has its application to trade and is a safe rule to go by.
But it is said that contracts and acts in restraint of trade were not criminal at common law. It is unnecessary to decide whether they were or not, for they are made criminal by the anti-trust act, and by it the defendants were advised either that it meant every contract in restraint of trade, a construction which would hamper rather than encourage trade, or that it meant such contract, the purpose of which was wrongful in the sense so often hereinbefore stated.
The claim that the act is in contravention of section 1 of article 1 of the Constitution, which lodges all legislative power in the Congress, and of the tenth amendment, which reserves to the states or the people powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, is passed with only the remark that the Supreme Court in the Standard Oil Case and the Tobacco Trust Case did i.ot attempt to make the law, but merely to declare it, as was their duty, and that it is now somewhat late, in view of the many decisions of the Supreme Court upholding the act in question, to claim that Congress has no power to regulate interstate commerce through the means adopted in this act. Northern Securities Case, 193 U. S. 197, 347, 24 Sup. Ct. 436, 48 L. Ed. 679.
The first count describes cash registers, with the statement that for
The count then goes on to say that the defendants, as officers and agents of the National Cash Register Company have “by concerted action and continuous endeavor carried on the business and affairs of said the National Cash Register Company upon a plan involving — ” Then follow 11 different descriptions of acts, all of a general character, so far as the naming of particular instances is concerned, but all very specific as describing a course of conduct. And the count winds up with the charge that the 30 defendants “during the three years'next preceding the finding'and presentation of this indictment,
It would manifestly be impossible to set forth in detail each separate transaction and the names of the individuals engaged therein, by which those plans of operation were carried out, without producing a. paper so voluminous as probably to warrant the court in striking it from the files of its own motion as needlessly incumbering the record: The names of the individuals who carried on the various transactions, the names of the other cash register companies which were dealt with as alleged, and the quality and character of the acts by which the al•leged illegal results were obtained are all clearly detailed. If there were no such transactions, then, of course, the government would fail; and if there were any innocent transactions through any of these individuals or other employés of the National Cash Register Company who are named, all the facts connected with those transactions are in the possession of the defendants, who know them better than anybody else can know them, and if they are susceptible of an explanation consistent with innocence, the defendants know whom to call in their defense. It would seem that the particulars for which the defendants call are matters of evidence which the government must produce when it attempts to prove the charges made by it. King v. Eccles, 1 Reach, 274; King v. Parsons, 1 Bl. Rep. 392; Cope’s Case, 1 Strange, 144.
These defendants are charged with a conspiracy in restraint of trade in cash registers generally, and particularly that carried on by the several concerns named. The defendants, as officers and agents of the National Cash Register Company, were in control of its affairs, as alleged. They know the detail of dealings between that company and each of those concerns, and the manner of treatment of them by the National Cash Register Company as the agency through which the officers and agents controlled and operated, and the methods of their respective absorption, if they were absorbed, by the National Cash Register Company. They must know whom to call in each to establish their defense. It seems to me they are advised of the nature of the charges against them quite sufficiently for them to make a defense, and that, under the peculiar circumstances of the case, it is sufficient to set out the character of the acts of the defendants controlling the National Cash Register Company, and that these acts had to do with the' various other cash register companies named. While no direct author! ity may be found completely justifying a charge in an indictment' framed as this is, yet I think it meets the- rule of particularity of ti me,place, and circumstances, laid down in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542, 23 L. Ed. 588, United States v. Hess, 124 U. S. 486, 8 Sup. Ct. 571, 31 L. Ed. 516, and other cases.
The Supreme Court say that the object- of an indictment is to fur!
On the ground that no offense against the laws of the United States is charged in the indictment, in addition to other grounds of demurrer going to the same point, the defendants claim the indictment is otherwise fatally defective in that, according to my understanding of their contention—
“It is an .elementary principle .of .criminal pleading, that where the definition of an offense, whether it' he-by common law or statute, includes generic terms, it is not sufficient that the indictment shall charge the offense in the same generic terms as in the definition; but it must state the species — it must descend to particulars.”
_ And a number of cases are,.cited. This claim involves considerations already referred to. If the first count is examined with care, it will appear (page 2) it - is charged that during 20 years prior to the finding of the indictment many concerns were engaged in competition with each other in .the, manufacture and sale of cash registers, and- a list of such concerns as were known to the grand jurors was set forth. On pages 10 and 11 of the indictment the defendants are charged with having entered into a conspiracy in restraint of said interstate trade carried on by the several concerns named, intending to restrain the free flow of interstate, trade, and (page 20) defendants are charged with—
“a conspiracy in undue, unreasonable, direct, and oppressive restraint of trade and'commerce among the several states in cash registers, and one to-*721 restrain, and which has restrained, that trade and commerce by unfair, oppressive, tortious, illegal, and unlawful means, and means which have unlawfully, wrongfully, and irresistibly excluded others from engaging in that trade and commerce.”
We are dealing with the first count, for the others refer to it, and it will be seen from a consideration of the entire count that not only is the general charge njade of restraint of trade in cash registers, but the specifications go to that part of interstate trade in cash registers which these certain concerns other than the National Cash Register Company carried on. The authorities are numerous that a contract in restraint of trade is unlawful, if it directly restrains or tends to restrain that trade, or its purpose is to accomplish either of these ends. It would seem that when there is a general charge of restraint of all trade in cash registers, and the specific facts alleged show that, if true, the defendants.have restrained a part of that trade, an offense against the laws of the United States has been alleged.
(2) The defendants claim also that there is really no charge of conspiracy to do the things set forth in the indictment, but that the charge amounts to nothing more or less than that the defendants did the,things described in the indictment; that is to say, the indictment .charges that in carrying on their business the defendants did the things-charged with intent to restrain the free flow of interstate commerce, but does not charge that the defendants agreed, or combined, by concerted action to accomplish an unlawful purpose, and that it charges the concerted .action, or the “concurrent action,” as being the conspiracy itself.
There seems to be no merit in this claim, for the reason that the defendants are distinctly charged with conspiracy in the direct restraint of trade in cash registers, and particularly the trade in cash registers carried on by the several cash register companies other than the National Cash Register Company named, and that they adopted a plan which involved the doing of certain things which were done all with the intent to restrain the free flow of interstate trade as carried on by the other concerns named. The indictment clearly charges the defendants with devising a scheme involving the doing of certain things in restraint of trade through a concerted plan adopted for the purpose and carried on through concerted action and continuous endeavor. It does not specifically allege the agreement to do the unlawful acts complained of, but the acts alleged necessarily involve a continuing agreement to do them. The “plan” is set forth, and the way it was carried out is alleged. Justice Holmes says:
“A conspiracy in restraint of trade is different from and more than a contract in restraint of trade. A conspiracy is constituted by an agreement, it is true, but it is tbe result of tbe agreement, ratber than the agreement itself, just as a partnership, although constituted by a contract, is not the contract but is a result of it.” United States v. Kissel, 218 U. S. 601, 608, 81 Sup. Ct. 124, 126 (54 L. Ed. 1168).
This is sufficient in the law to meet the requirements of an indictment under this statute.
“The volume of interstate trade of these concerns is not stated, nor is it sufficiently described. It does not appear that the interstate trade of any or all of the alleged competitors is" substantial in amount. For all that appears in the indictment, the aggregate may have been infinitesimal.”
The degree of restraint is immaterial. It is sufficient if the contract is of such a character, as, with wrongful purpose, to directly affect trade, or if it only tends to do so. If the purpose of the agreement or conspiracy is to restrain trade within the meaning of the act, it surely can make no difference if in a particular case it only affected a very small part of that trade.
“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.” Central Ohio Salt Co. v. Guthrie, 35 Ohio St. 666, 672, cited in Northern Securities Case, 193 U. S. 197, 340, 24 Sup. Ct. 436, 48 L. Ed. 679.
Aside from this, however, the defendants misapprehend the force and meaning of the facts stated iii the indictment.' It is there clearly set forth that the result of the defendants’ alleged methods of dealing, with the 33 cash register companies named is the increase of the business of the National Cash Register Company from about 80 per cent, of the business in cash registers, early in the 20-year period named, to about 95 per cent, in the latter part of the period. One-sixth or one-Seventh of the business of making and selling cash registers cannot with accuracy be called “infinitesimal,” or even small.
In reaching this conclusion, Mr, Justice .Field disagreed with the Circuit Judge, whose opinion to the contrary is in harmony-with all of the other reported decisions on the subject — Judge Putnam, in United States v. Patterson (C. C.) 55 Fed. 605; Judge Holt, in United States v. Kissel (C. C.) 173 Fed. 823; Judges Van Devanter, Adams, and
I agree with Judge Holt in United States v. Kissel (C, C.) 173 Fed. 823, 825, who expresses the opinion that:
“Under this statute (Rev. St. § 5440 [U. S. Comp; St. 1901, p. 3676]) a mere-conspiracy is not an offense; but, in addition to the*conspiracy, one or more of the parties to it must do some act to effect its object before a criminal prosecution can be maintained. * * * This indictment is necessarily brought under these provisions of the Sherman Act. No indictment can be brought in the United States courts for the offense of conspiracy at common law, because it has not been made an offense by any United States statute. Nor could this indictment have been brought under section 5440 of the United States Bevised Statutes, because there is no law of the United States making a conspiracy in restraint of trade or to monopolize trade an offense-against the United States except the Sherman Act, and there cannot be a conspiracy to engage in a conspiracy. Under the Sherman Act no overt act is necessary to the commission of the offense. That provides that every person who engages in a conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce, or to-monopolize trade, is guilty of the offense.”
This ground of demurrer is, therefore, held to be untenable.
“by drawing to said the National Cash Begister Company and causing that company to grasp it, monopolized a part of the trade and commerce among the several states in cash registers, that is to say, that part of said trade and commerce which, but for their use of those means, in carrying on the business and affairs of said the National Cash Begister Company in the-manner in said first count specified, would, during that period, have been secured or retained, as a matter of lawful right, by the divers concerns, other' •than said the National Cash Begister Company, mentioned in said first count as having carried on business during said three years.”
The objection is twofold. The first is that the “part” of trade referred to is not a part of trade and commerce within the meaning of the Anti-Trust Act, and the Standard Oil Case is cited, wherein it is-said (221 U. S. 61, 31 Sup. Ct. 516, 55 L. Ed. 619, 34 L. R. A. [N. S.] 834):
“The commerce referred to by the words ‘any part’ construed in the light of the manifest purpose of the statute has both a geographical and a distributive significance, that is it includes any portion of the United States and-any one of the classes of things forming a part of interstate or foreign commerce.”
The point of the objection probably is that the whole business of making and selling cash registers, as described in the first count, would only be a part of interstate commerce, and therefore it is not sufficient to allege a monopoly by drawing to the National Cash Register Company the business of the competitors mentioned; that is to say, a monopoly of a part of the part. I am unable to follow this, nor to fit the-citation to the argument; for, if it is true that these defendants have-drawn into the National Cash Register Company the business in cash registers that the other concerns named would have done, and through the means described in the first count, the defendants inevitably have-monopolized a part of the business of making and selling cash registers.
It is true there is no such allegation in the first count, and the indictment is defective in this regard; but the defect is not necessarily fatal, for it is equally true that in the first count it is alleged! that those divers concerns during 20 years previous to the finding of the indictment have been engaged in the business of making and selling cash registers. If they were, then they must have carried on the business during the three years preceding the finding of the indictment. Further than this, it may be said that the words “as having carried on business during said three years” following the words “mentioned in said! first count” might be treated as surplusage. However that may be, the meaning of the pleader is plain; hence the manner of pleading-does no injury to the defendants. In such case the court- ought to conserve rather than destroy the indictment.
“The argument, so far as the premises are true, does not suffice to prove that a conspiracy, although it exists as soon as the agreement is made, may not continue beyond the moment of making it. It is true that the unlawful agreement satisfies the definition of the crime, but it does not exhaust it. It also is true, of course, that the mere continuance of the result of a crime does not continue the crime. United States v. Irvine, 98 U. S. 450 [25 L. Ed. 1931. But when the plot contemplates bringing to pass a continuous result that will not continue without the continuous co-operation of the conspirators to keep it up, and there is such continuous co-operation, it is a perversion of natural thought and of natural language to call such continuous co-operation a cinematographic series of distinct conspiracies, rather than to call it a single one. Take the present case. A conspiracy to restrain or monopolize trade by improperly excluding a competitor from business contemplates that the conspirators will remain in business and will continue their combined efforts to drive the competitor out until they succeed. If they do continue such efforts in pursuance of the plan the conspiracy continues up to the time of abandonment or success.”
This count charges the defendants with having, before the period of three years prior to the date of the finding of the indictment, in the manner and by the means described in the first count, engaged in the conspiracy therein-described, and having monopolized that part of the interstate trade in cash registers its said 33 competitors would have secured or retained, unlawfully, with knowledge, “continued to hold, conduct, and carry on said interstate business of said the National Cash Register Company, so by said means before' said! period .augmented, and thereby have monopolized said interstate trade and commerce in cash registers.” The charge, then, is that, having monopo
Let us suppose a case in which a concern has built itself up into greatness, enormous wealth, and practically sole possession of the trade in its particular commodity by means such as described in this indictment and by the destruction ■ or absorption of its competitors. The peace of desolation reigned in that trade, because its competitors were not, and it enjoyed the field alone. Thereupon its evil practices were abandoned, because there was no further occasion for them, and thé three years within which, under the statute of limitations, a crinjinal action might be brought against it for its unlawful acts had elapsed. Is not such a concern, so built up, still a restraint of trade and a monopoly (which is the same thing), and will it not continue to be a restraint of trade andi a monopoly so long as it exists ?
The first section of the Anti-Trust Act is aimed at contracts, combinations, and conspiracies in restraint of trade. The second section reads:
“Every person who shall monopolize, or attempt to monopolize, or combine or conspire with any other person or persons, to monopolize any part of the trade or commerce among the several States, or with foreign nations, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor. *■ * * ”
Herein are found three distinct offenses, perhaps four: Monopolizing, attempting to monopolize, and combining or conspiring to monopolize. Monopolization and attempting to monopolize are held to be distinct offenses. United States v. American Naval Stores Co; (C. C.) 186 Fed. 592. And the charge of monopolizing will support a verdict of attempting to monopolize. 1 U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 723.
A conspiracy to monopolize trade is one thing, and it is very like a conspiracy in restraint of trade; but the monopoly is the result of the conspiracy. It is the accomplished! thing. But the statute makes the act of monopolizing also an offense, and the third count charges the defendants with that offense during the three years prior to the date of the indictment. In my judgment this is a good count. That there can be a continuing monopoly such as described in this count has not been decided in any reported case, but the government’s claim finds' ample support in many expressions in the opinions of judges in a number of cases. Standard Oil Case, 221 U. S. 1, 31 Sup. Ct. 502, 55 L. Ed. 619, 34 L. R. A. (N. S.) 834; Tobacco Trust Case, 221 U. S. 176, 185, 31 Sup. Ct. 632, 55 L. Ed. 663; United States v. American Naval Stores Co. (C. C.) 172 Fed. 455, 458; United States v. Standard Oil Co. (C. C.) 173 Fed. 177, 191; United States v. Swift & Co. (D. C.) 186 Fed. 1002, 1013.
But, it is said, if there was any' continuing monopoly it was' maintained by the National Cash Register Company and not by the defend
Whether or not, the company continuing to carry on business, the heirs at law or the transferees of these defendants, or other employes than .the defendants, would be liable to indictment for monopolizing under the act, is not necessary to be decided now. We are concerned with the alleged acts of these defendants. It is distinctly charged (page 10 of the indictment) that they are the persons who “controlled and directed the business and affairs of said the National Cash Register Company.”
The monopoly the defendants have built up is carried on by them under the name of the National Cash Register Company, controlled by them. That is what the averments in this indictment amount to. In the view of the Anti-Trust Act, the name or form, however intricate or'subtly devised or maintained, under which the evils of monopoly are carried on, is altogether immaterial. No device, however skillfully contrived, and no combination by whomsoever formed, is exempt from the operation of the law, if such device or combination by its operation directly restrains commerce among the states. Northern Securities Case, 193 U. S. 197, 347, 24 Sup. Ct. 436, 48 L. Ed. 679 In the Tobacco Case, 221 U. S. 106, at pages 180, 181, 31 Sup. Ct. 632, at page 648 (55 L. Ed. 663), Chief Justice White says:
“ * * * In the Standard Oil Case * * * it was pointed out that the generic designation of the first and second sections of the law, when taken together, embraced every conceivable act which could possibly come within the spirit or purpose of the prohibitions of the law, without regard to the garb in which such acts were clothed. That is to say, it was held that in view of the general language of the statute and the public policy which it manifested, there was. no possibility of frustrating that policy by resorting to any disguise, or subterfuge of form, since resort to reason rendered it impossible to escape by any indirection the prohibitions of the statute.”
It is true that the offense of monopolizing charged in the third count is committed every day during the continuance of the monopoly, and ■ no count may contain more than one offense; but it is the same monopoly, the continuance of which during the three years is complained of, and in reality there is but one offense, brought about through the conspiracy and illegal acts the defendants are charged with prior to the three years. But the defendants are not charged with continuing a monopoly. They are charged with monopolizing by continuing to carry on the business of the National Cash Register Company aug
; “But when the plot contemplates bringing to pass a continuous result that will not continue without the continuous co-operation of the conspirators to keep it up, and there is such continuous co-operation, it.is a perversion of natural thought and of natural language to call such continuous co-operation a cinematographic series of distinct conspiracies, rather than to call it a single one.”
It is true he was speaking of conspiracies, but the reasoning which proves a continued conspiracy to be only one rather than a series of distinct conspiracies would demonstrate the unity of a continued monopoly.
For all of these reasons the indictment is held to be valid, and an order overruling the demurrer may be taken.