delivered the. opinion.' of the Court.
In broad outline, these cases involve the constitutionality of Florida statutes regulating the business of persons holding music copyrights and declaring price-fixing combinations of “authors, composers, publishers, [and] owners” of such copyrights to be illegal and in restraint of trade.
The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP), one of the appellants in No. 611 and one of the appellees in No. 610, is a combination which controls the performance rights of a major part of the available supply, of. copyrighted popular music. The other appellants in No. 611 (appellees in No. 610) are individual composers, authors and publishers of music controlled by ASCAP. The appellees in Ño. 611 (appellants in No. 610) are the Attorney General and all the state, prosecuting- attorneys of Florida, who are charged with the duty of enforcing certain parts of the statutes in question.
These two cases were originally a single action, in which ASCA.P and its co-parties- sought'to enjoin the state officials from enforcing a 1937 Florida statute.
1
A
The court below;, without passing at all upon the validity of thirteen out of the twenty-one sections and subsections of. the 1937 act, held that the remaining eight sections deprived copyright owners of rights granted them by the federal copyright laws,- and that the statute must fall in its entirety. This it did upon the premise that the sections held invalid and the other parts of the bill were intended by the Florida legislature to form “a harmonious-whole” and to “stand or fall together.” The ultimate questions involvеd are such that we must first determine whether this ruling was correct. We hold that it was not, for the following reasons.
The-Florida legislature expressed a purpose directly contrary to the District Court’s finding. For what the legislature intended in this regard was spelled out in § 12 of the Act in the clear and emphatic language of the legislature itself. That section reads:
. “If any section, sub-section, sentence, clause or any part of this Act, is for any reason, held or declared-to be-
This is a flat statement that the.Florida legislature intended that the act should stand and be enforced “after the exclusion of such part or parts” as might be held invalid. Unless a controlling .decision by Florida’s courts compels a different course, the federal courts are not justified in speculating that the state legislature mehnt exactly the opposite of what it declared “to have been the legislative intent.” But the Supreme Court of Florida recognizes and seeks to carry out the legislative intent thus exprеssed.' Speaking of a similar severability clause of another statute, that court said: “The Act as á whole evinces a purpose on the part of the Legislature to impose a license tax on chain stores and Section fifteen provides that if any section, provision or clause thereof,- or' if the Act as applied to any circumstance, shall be declared invalid or unconstitutional such invalidity shall not affect other portions of the Act held valid nor shall it extend to other circumstances not held to be invalid. Under the liberal terms of Section fifteen it may be reasonably discerned that the Legislature intended that the Act under review should be held good under any . eventuality that did not produce an unreasonable, unconstitutional or an absurd result. . . . The test, to determine Workability after severance and whether the remainder of the Act should be .upheld rests on the fact of whether or not the’ invalid portion is of such import that the valid part would be incomplete or would causé results - not contemplated by the Legisla
As a matter of fact, as the record' stands, the right of ASCAP and its co-complainants to an injunction depends upon this phase of the statute and is not to be determined at all by the validity or invalidity of the particular sections which the court below thought inconsistent with the Federal Constitution and the copyright laws passed pursuant to it. The ultimate determinative question, therefore, is whether Florida has the power it
Defendants in. the injunction proceedings are. the state’s Attorney General, who is charged with the responsibility of еnforcing, .the state’s criminal laws, and all of the state’s prosecuting attorneys, who are subject to the Attorney General’s authority in the performance of their official duties.
4
Under the statutes before us, it is made the duty- of the state’s prosecuting attorneys, acting under the Attorney General’s direction, to institute in the state courts' criminal or civil proceedings. The original bill alleged that the defendants had threatened to — and would, unless restrained — enforce thе 1937 statute “in each and all of. its terms and the whole thereof, and particularly against these complainants and others similarly situated . . and that as a consequence complainants would suffer irreparable injury and damages^ The supplemental bill contained similar allegations as' to the 1939 act. . Both bills were drawn upon .the premise that complainants were,, entitled to an injunction restraining all the state’s prosecuting officers from'enforc
Such “exceptional circumstances” and “great and immediate” danger of irreparable loss were not here shown. Tested by this rulе, therefore, and with the possible exception of that phase of the statute outlawing Florida activities by combinations declared unlawful in § 1 of the 1937 act (which we shall later cofisider separately), neither the findings of the court below nor the record on which they were based justified an injunction against the state prosecuting officers.
In addition to the fact that the situation here does not meet the tests laid down in the decided cases, the very scope of these two statutes illustrates the wisdom of a policy of judicial self-restraint on the part of federal courts in suspending state statutes in their entirety upon the ground that a complainant might eventually be prosecuted for violating some part of them. The Florida Supreme Court, which under our dual system of government has the last word on the construction and meaning of statutes of that state, has never yet passed upon
In the consideration of this case, much confusiоn has been brought about by discussing the statutes as though the power of á state to. prohibit or regulate combinations in restraint of trade, was identical with and went no further than the power exercised by Congress in the Sherman Act. Such an argument rests upon a mistaken premise.
6
Nor is it within our province; in determining whether or not this phase of the state statute comes into collision with the Federal Constitution or laws passed pursuant thereto, to scrutinize the act in order to determine whether wé believe it to be fair or unfair, conducive ,to good or evil for the people of Florida, or capable of protecting or defeating the public interest of the state.
7
These questions, were for the legislature of Florida and it has decided them. And, unless constitutionally'valid federal legislation has granted to individual copyright owners the right to combine, the state’s power validly to prohibit the proscribed combinations cannot be held non-existent merely because such individuals "can pre
Under the findings of fact of the court below, ASCAP comes squarely within the definition of the combinations prohibited by § 1 of the 1937 act. Section 1 defines as an unlawful combination an aggregation of authors, composers, publishers, and owners of copyrighted vocal or instrumental musical- compositions who form any society, association, or the like, and the members of which constitute a substantial number of the persons, firms or corporations within the United States who own or control such musical compositions, and “when one of the objects of such combination is the determination and fix
No. 610 reversed.
No. 611 affirmed.
Notes
Fla. Laws 1937, ch. 17807.
Fla. Laws 1939, ch. 19653.
The Court said:
“There remain: Sections 1, 2-C and 3, in effect declaring ASCAP and similar societies illegal associations, outlawing its arrangements for license fees, and proscribing and making an offense, attempts to collect them; Section 7-B making persons, acting for such a combination, agents for it and liable to the penalties of the Act; Section 8 fixing the penalties; Section 9 giving the state courts jurisdiction to enforce the Act, civilly and criminally; and Sections 10-A, 10-B, 11-A and 11-B, prescribing procedure under it.” 34 F. Supp-. 516. With the possible exception of § 3, rnwhere in the course of the opinion were any of these sections held invalid.
The Secretary of State and the State Comptroller- were addéd as parties defendant by a “Further Supplemental Bill of 'Complaint” filed October 19, 1939. The ground given by the complainants for adding parties was that certain duties were imposed on these officials by the 1939 act. The duties, however, required only that certain feés be collected, and not that actions be brought to enforce the law. . '
.. In the course of this litigation, Florida has had three Attorneys General. The present Attorney < General took office on January 7,. 1941, and all -the parties have joined in a motion to substitute him as a defendant in place of his predecessor in office. There is no objection to the substitution, and the motion is granted. • ■
Cf., e. g.,
Arkansas Corporation Commission
v.
Thompson, ante,
132, 144;
Railroad Commission of Texas
v.
Pullman Co.,
We have been referred to a recent consent decree against ASCAP in the federal district court for the Southern District of New York, the theory being that the decree might have some bearing upon the state’s power to pass the legislation now under attack. But it has not. In matters relating to purely intrastate transactions, the state • might pass valid regulations to prohibit restraint of trade even if the federal government had no law whatever with reference to similar matters involving interstate transactions. . .
The court below concluded as a matter of law that “enactment of the. said Statute was not necessary to protect, nor does it serve the public interest of the State of Florida.
Interstate Circuit, Inc. v. United States,
