Yellow Freight System, Inc., and Duncan Ceramics, Inc., appeal the district court’s denial of various pretrial motions to dismiss informations filed against them. Appellee United States moves to dismiss the appeals for lack of appellate jurisdiction. We dismiss in part and affirm in part.
On November 30,1977, the United States served Yellow Freight and Duncan Ceramics with summonses and filed informations alleging that on fifty occasions Yellow Freight knowingly gave and Duncan Ceramics knowingly received rate concessions on interstate shipments of goods. The Elkins Act proscribes rate concessions and imposes a penalty of $1000 to $20,000 fine and up to two years’ imprisonment in a penitentiary for granting or receiving rate concessions. 49 U.S.C. § 41(1), (3) (1976). 1
On April 3, 1979, Yellow Freight and Duncan Ceramics filed a set of motions in the district court to dismiss the informations. In part these motions claim that the Elkins Act does not apply to motor carriers. In addition, however, this set of motions alleges that the informations are procedurally insufficient because (1) the crimes alleged are infamous and therefore must be prosecuted by grand jury indictment and (2) in any event the prosecution may not proceed without a preliminary determination of probable cause. The district court denied these motions.
I. Appellate Jurisdiction
Yellow Freight and Duncan Ceramics seek to base appellate jurisdiction on 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (1976), which grants appeals of right from “final decisions of the district courts.” Specifically, they attempt to characterize the denial of their second set of motions as a “collateral order” appealable as a final decision under the rationale of
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
As applied to criminal pretrial orders, this rationale confers appellate jurisdiction when:
1. The pretrial order fully disposed of the appellants’ claim;
*1251 2. The appellants’ claim is collateral to, and separable from, the principal issue of guilt or innocence; and
3. The order involves an important right that would be lost if review had to await final judgment.
See Abney v. United States,
A. Elkins Act Contention.
Yellow Freight and Duncan Ceramics’ claim that the particular provisions of the Elkins Act asserted in this case do not apply to motor carriers is not immediately appealable. The issue is “plainly not ‘collateral’ in any sense of that term.”
Abney,
B. Indictment Clause Contention.
Yellow Freight and Duncan Ceramics contend that they have been charged with an infamous crime for which they may not, under the indictment clause of the Fifth Amendment, be “held to answer” except upon grand jury indictment. This claim meets all three of the standards for immediate appealability. Denial of defendants’ motion completely and finally determined their claim in the trial court. Allowing the trial to progress so that facts may develop will not facilitate consideration of their claim.
Cf. United States v. MacDonald,
*1252 C. Due Process Contention.
Finally, Yellow Freight and Duncan Ceramics contend that, even if they may be prosecuted by information, they are entitled to a preliminary hearing on the issue of probable cause. They assert that the trial itself will deprive them of protected liberty and property interests and argue that due process requires a hearing. This contention fulfills the first two elements of the Abney test. It has been fully disposed of by the trial court and is separable from the principal issue of guilt or innocence. At first blush, it also appears to meet the third element of the Abney test. If review must await final judgment, the defendants will have been subjected to a trial from which they assert they are constitutionally immune.
Since
Abney,
many appeals from pretrial orders have come before us. In these appeals defendants have demonstrated remarkable ability to frame almost any argument to meet the
Abney
test. Because the filing of an appeal allowable under
Abney
deprives the trial court of jurisdiction to proceed with trial,
Moroyoqui v. United States,
We therefore hold that, in order to show that his or her claim involves an important right requiring immediate review, a defendant must first identify a valid principie of law that can apply to his or her case.
See United States v. Perkins,
Despite defendants’ artful pleading, their final claim involves no important right that would be lost if we refuse immediate review. Although a defendant arrested or otherwise restrained has a Fourth Amendment right to a preliminary hearing on the issue of probable cause, absent restraint a prosecution may be maintained without any finding of probable cause. See
Gerstein v. Pugh,
In holding that the prosecutor’s assessment of probable cause is not sufficient alone to justify restraint of liberty pending trial, we do not imply that the accused is entitled to judicial oversight or review of the decision to prosecute. Instead, we adhere to the Court’s prior holding that a judicial hearing is not prerequisite to prosecution by information. Beck v. Washington,369 U.S. 541 , 545, [82 S.Ct. 955 , 957,8 L.Ed.2d 98 ] (1962); Lem Woon v. Oregon,229 U.S. 586 , [33 S.Ct. 783 ,57 L.Ed. 1340 ] (1913).
*1253
Id.
at 118-19,
II. Prosecution of Corporations by Information
Yellow Freight and Duncan Ceramics contend that because they stand charged with offenses punishable by two years in a penitentiary, they may be prosecuted not by information, but only by grand jury indictment. The Fifth Amendment states that “[n]o person shall be held to answer for [an] infamous crime, unless on . indictment of a Grand Jury.” Relying on United States Supreme Court pronouncements that infamous crimes are those “punishable by imprisonment in a penitentiary,”
e.g., Green v. United States,
In response, the United States notes that both defendants are corporations and therefore not amenable to imprisonment. It accordingly contends that this prosecution may proceed by information alone.
See United States v. Macklin,
We agree with the United States that potential confinement in a penitentiary of some violators of a criminal statute does not render all violations of that statute “infamous.” Congress may impose different punishments upon different classes of criminals. It has done so in the provisions of the Elkins Act here in question: the Act by its terms limits penitentiary confinement to individuals. 6 We do not, however, rest our holding upon this express recognition by Congress of practical limitations on punishment for corporate crime. Where, as in this case, a criminal statute makes violations punishable by imprisonment in a penitentiary, corporate violations of that statute are not automatically made infamous crimes by the possible infliction of such punishment on individuals.
Defendants argue that such a result completely deprives corporations of the right to grand jury protection. We disagree. The
*1254
possibility of imprisonment in a penitentiary is only one index of whether a crime is infamous.
7
Aside from tests of infamy that hinge on the possibility of punishment to which corporations are not amenable, the Supreme Court has occasionally suggested other incidents of infamy. For example, in
Ex parte Wilson,
Since we hold that imposition of potential imprisonment on individuals violating a criminal statute does not of itself make corporate violations of the same statute infamous crimes, the only remaining question is whether another factor renders the crimes charged in this case infamous. The crimes charged are not made infamous by the penalties attached to them, because those penalties are only fines. A fine, regardless of its amount, cannot be infamous punishment.
See United States v. Armored Transport, Inc.,
The only perceptible basis for holding these crimes infamous would be that Congress has declared these crimes infamous by attaching the penalty of imprisonment in a penitentiary to similar crimes committed by individuals. The history of the statutes involved precludes such a basis. Congress enacted the Elkins Act in 1903. In place of the present provisions for penitentiary sentences, the original Act provided:
In all convictions . . . for offenses under [various acts regulating interstate commerce] ... no penalty shall be imposed on the convicted party other than the fine prescribed by law, imprisonment wherever now prescribed as part of the penalty being hereby abolished.
Elkins Act, ch. 708, § 1, 32 Stat. 847, 847 (1903). The present provision was added three years later by the Hepburn Act, ch. 3591, § 2, 34 Stat. 584, 588 (1906). Al *1255 though the Hepburn Act originated in the House, its restoration of the penalty of imprisonment was the result of a Senate amendment. The floor debate on the amendment indicates that the amendment was designed to enforce more effectively the ban on concessions, rather than to brand the giving of rebates with a special mark of infamy. 9 The violations charged here are not infamous crimes. We affirm the district court’s denial of defendants’ motion to dismiss.
In summary, we grant the motion to dismiss this appeal with respect to the defendants’ Elkins Act and due process claims. With respect to the defendants’ indictment clause claim, the motion to dismiss the appeal is denied; because the violations charged are not infamous crimes, however, we affirm the district court’s rejection of that claim.
Dismissed in part and affirmed.
Notes
. The Act of October 17, 1978, Pub.L. No. 95-473, 92 Stat. 1337, recodified the substantive provisions involved in this case. Prior to this Act, the Elkins Act was codified at 49 U.S.C. §§ 41-43 (1976), but title 49 was not enacted as codified. The penal provisions of the Elkins Act now appear at 49 U.S.C. § 11903. Because the crimes charged allegedly took place before the 1978 Act, we use the 1976 codification in referring to the Elkins Act. The 1978 Act did not, however, purport to make any changes in substantive law. See Act of Oct. 17, 1978, Sec. 3(a), Pub.L. No. 95^73, 92 Stat. 1337, 1466.
. Citing C. A. Wright, A. Miller & E. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3937, at 58 n.5 (Supp. 1980), Duncan Ceramics contends that
Abney
imposed no blanket prohibition of pendent appellate jurisdiction but merely held that pendent review was inappropriate in that case. Subsequent cases have not adopted so narrow a reading of
Abney. See, e.g., United States v. MacDonald,
.
In re Fendler,
The issue of the immediate appealability of indictment clause claims was presented, but apparently not decided, in
Helstoski v. Meanor,
.
See also
. The rule we establish today may apply in other circumstances. For example, it might permit dismissal of Abney appeals founded on statutes not in force or on overruled cases. We find it unnecessary to define the contours of this rule, other than to state that defendants’ indictment clause contention is appealable while their due process contention is not. As future cases affect the merits of particular claims, of course, the immediate appealability of those claims may change.
We have recently adopted an internal procedure for expedited disposition-of
Abney
appeals on their merits under 9th Cir. R. 6(h).
United States v. Miranda-Parra,
. While the Elkins Act imposes a $1000 to $20,000 fine on “[e]very person or corporation” who knowingly gives or receives a concession, the provision imposing imprisonment applies only to “any person, or any officer or director of any corporation.” 49 U.S.C. § 41(1) (1976). Thus, by its own terms the imprisonment provision of the Elkins Act does not apply to corporations.
. The punishment attached to a crime is relevant to the determination of infamy because it indicates the character of the crime as perceived by Congress and the public. See
Mackin v. United States,
.
But see Weeks v. United States,
. 40 Cong. Rec. 6620-28 (1906). There were actually three competing proposals on the Senate floor to reestablish the penalty of imprisonment. Throughout the floor debate, various speakers stressed the deterrent purpose of the penalty, thus negating any inference that Congress intended the penalty as an expression of the infamous character of the crime. But see 40 Cong. Rec. 6625 (statement of Sen. Daniel) (suggesting a retributive purpose). Any assertion that the amendment rendered granting of concessions an infamous crime is further undercut by the fact that all three proposals denominated the offense a misdemeanor.
