Stockholders of the Great Northern and Northern Pacific Railway
companies -- corporations having competing and substantially
parallel lines from the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River to
the Pacific Ocean at Puget Sound -- combined and conceived the
scheme of organizing a corporation, under the laws of New Jersey
which should hold the shares of the stock of the constituent
companies, such shareholders, in lieu of their shares in those
companies, to receive, upon an agreed basis of value, shares in the
holding corporation. Pursuant to such combination, the Northern
Securities Company was organized as the holding corporation through
which that scheme should be executed, and, under that scheme, such
holding corporation became the holder -- more properly speaking,
the custodian -- of more than nine-tenths of the stock of the
Northern Pacific, and more than three-fourths of the stock of the
Great Northern, the stockholders of the companies, who delivered
their stock, receiving, upon the agreed basis, shares of stock in
the holding corporation.
Held, that, necessarily, the constituent companies
ceased, under this arrangement, to be in active competition for
trade and commerce along their respective lines, and became,
practically, one powerful consolidated corporation, by the name of
a holding corporation, the principal, if not the sole, object for
the formation of which was to carry out the purpose of the original
combination under which competition between the constituent
companies would cease.
Held, that the arrangement was an illegal combination
in restraint of interstate commerce, and fell within the
prohibitions and provisions of the act of July 2, 1890, and it was
within the power of the Circuit Court, in an action brought by the
Attorney General of the United States after the completion of the
transfer of such stock to it, to enjoin the holding company from
voting such stock and from exercising any control whatever over the
acts and doings of the railroad companies, and also to enjoin the
railroad companies from paying any dividends to the holding
corporation on any of their stock held by it.
Held, that, although cases should not be brought within
a statute containing criminal provisions that are not clearly
embraced by it, the court should not, by narrow, technical, or
forced construction of words, exclude cases from it that are
obviously within its provisions, and, while the act of July 2,
1890, contains criminal provisions, the Federal court has power
under § 4 of the act in a suit in equity to prevent and restrain
violations
Page 193 U. S. 198
of the act, and may mould its decree so as to accomplish
practical results such as law and justice demand.
HARLAN, BROWN, McKENNA and DAY, JJ. *
The combination is, within the meaning of the act of Congress of
July 2, 1890, known as the Anti-Trust Act, a "trust"; but if not,
it is a combination in restraint of interstate and international
commerce, and that is enough to bring it under the condemnation of
the act.
From prior cases in this court, the following propositions are
deducible, and embrace this case:
Although the act of Congress known as the Anti-Trust Act has no
reference to the mere manufacture or production of articles or
commodities within the limits of the several States, it embraces
and declares to be illegal every contract, combination or
conspiracy, in whatever form, of whatever nature, and whoever may
be parties to it, which directly or necessarily operates in
restraint of trade or commerce among the several States or with
foreign nations.
The act is not limited to restraints of interstate and
international trade or commerce that are unreasonable in their
nature, but embraces all direct restraints, reasonable or
unreasonable, imposed by any combination, conspiracy or monopoly
upon such trade or commerce.
Railroad carriers engaged in interstate or international trade
or commerce are embraced by the act.
Combinations, even among private manufacturers or dealers,
whereby interstate or international commerce is restrained are
equally embraced by the act
Congress has the power to establish rules by which interstate
and international commerce shall be governed, and, by the
Anti-Trust Act, has prescribed the rule of free competition among
those engaged in such commerce.
Every combination or conspiracy which would extinguish
competition between otherwise competing railroads, engaged in
interstate trade or commerce, and which would in that way restrain
such trade or commerce, is made illegal by the act.
The natural effect of competition is to increase commerce, and
an agreement whose direct effect is to prevent this play of
competition restrains, instead of promotes, trade and commerce.
To vitiate a combination such as the act of Congress condemns,
it need not
Page 193 U. S. 199
be shown that such combination, in fact, results, or will
result, in a total suppression of trade or in a complete monopoly,
but it is only essential to show that, by its necessary operation,
it tends to restrain interstate or international trade or commerce,
or tends to create a monopoly in such trade or commerce, and to
deprive the public of the advantages that flow from free
competition.
The constitutional guarantee of liberty of contract does not
prevent Congress from prescribing the rule of free competition for
those engaged in interstate and international commerce.
Under its power to regulate commerce among the several States
and with foreign nations, Congress had authority to enact the
statute in question.
United States v. E. C. Knight Co.,
156 U. S. 1;
United States v Trans-Missouri Freight Association,
166 U. S. 290;
United States v. Joint Traffic Association, 171 U.
S. 505;
Hopkins v United States, 171 U.
S. 578;
Anderson v. United States, 171 U.
S. 604;
Addyston Pipe & Steel Co. v United
States, 175 U. S. 211;
Montague & Co. v. Lowrey, 193 U. S.
38.
Congress may protect the freedom of interstate commerce by any
means that are appropriate and that are lawful and not prohibited
by the Constitution.
If, in the judgment of Congress, the public convenience or the
general welfare will be best subserved when the natural laws of
competition are left undisturbed by those engaged in interstate
commerce, that must be, for all, the end of the matter if this is
to remain a government of laws, and not of men.
When Congress declared contracts, combinations and conspiracies
in restraint of trade or commerce to be illegal, it did nothing
more than apply to interstate commerce a rule that had been long
applied by the several States when dealing with combinations that
were in restraint of their domestic commerce.
Subject to such restrictions as are imposed by the Constitution
upon the exercise of all power, the power of Congress over
interstate and international commerce is as full and complete as is
the power of any State over its domestic commerce.
No State can, by merely creating a corporation, or in any other
mode, project its authority into other States so as to prevent
Congress from exerting the power it possesses under the
Constitution over interstate and international commerce, or so as
to exempt its corporation engaged in interstate commerce from
obedience to any rule lawfully established by Congress for such
commerce; nor can any State give a corporation created under its
laws authority to restrain interstate or international commerce
against the will of the nation as lawfully expressed by Congress.
Every corporation created by a State is necessarily subject to the
supreme law of the land.
Whilst every instrumentality of domestic commerce is subject to
state control, every instrumentality of interstate commerce may be
reached and controlled by national authority, so far as to compel
it to respect the rules for such commerce lawfully established by
Congress.
Page 193 U. S. 200
By MR. JUSTICE BREWER
The act of July 2, 1890, was leveled, as appears by its title,
at only unlawful restraints and monopolies. Congress did not intend
to reach and destroy those minor contracts in partial restraint of
trade which the long course of decisions at common law had affirmed
were reasonable, and ought to be upheld.
The general language of the act is limited by the power which
each individual has to manage his own property and determine the
place and manner of its investment. Freedom of action in these
respects is among the inalienable rights of every citizen.
A corporation, while by fiction of law recognized for some
purposes as a person and for purposes of jurisdiction as a citizen,
is not endowed with the inalienable rights of a natural person, but
it is an artificial person, created and existing only for the
convenient transaction of business.
Where, however, no individual investment is involved, but there
is a combination by several individuals separately owning stock in
two competing railroad companies engaged in interstate commerce, to
place the control of both in a single corporation, which is
organized for that purpose expressly, and as a mere instrumentality
by which the competing railroads can be combined, the resulting
combination is a direct restraint of trade by destroying
competition, and is illegal within the meaning of the act of July
2, 1890.
A suit brought by the Attorney General of the United States to
declare this combination illegal under the act of July 2, 1890, is
not an interference with the control of the States under which the
railroad companies and the holding company were, respectively,
organized.
Page 193 U. S. 317
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN announced the affirmance of the decree of the
Circuit Court, and delivered the following opinion:
This suit was brought by the United States against the Northern
Securities Company, a corporation of New Jersey; the Great Northern
Railway Company, a corporation of Minnesota; the Northern Pacific
Railway Company, a corporation of Wisconsin; James J. Hill, a
citizen of Minnesota; and William P. Clough, D. Willis James, John
S. Kennedy, J. Pierpont Morgan, Robert Bacon, George F. Baker, and
Daniel S. Lamont, citizens of New York.
Its general object was to enforce, as against the defendants,
the provisions of the statute of July 2, 1890, commonly known as
the Anti-Trust Act, and entitled "An act to protect trade
Page 193 U. S. 318
and commerce against unlawful restraints and monopolies." 26
Stat. 209. By the decree below, the United States was given
substantially the relief asked by it in the bill.
As the act is not very long, and as the determination of the
particular questions arising in this case may require a
consideration of the scope and meaning of most of its provisions,
it is here given in full:
"SEC. 1. Every contract, combination in the form of trust or
otherwise, or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce among
the several States, or with foreign nations, is hereby declared to
be illegal. Every person who shall make any such contract or engage
in any such combination or conspiracy, shall be deemed guilty of a
misdemeanor, and, on conviction thereof, shall be punished by fine
not exceeding five thousand dollars, or by imprisonment not
exceeding one year, or by both said punishments, in the discretion
of the court."
"SEC. 2. 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, and, on conviction thereof, shall be punished by
fine not exceeding five thousand dollars, or by imprisonment not
exceeding one year, or by both said punishments, in the discretion
of the court."
"SEC. 3. Every contract, combination in form of trust or
otherwise, or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce in any
Territory of the United States or of the District of Columbia, or
in restraint of trade or commerce between any such Territory and
another, or between any such Territory or Territories and any State
or States or the District of Columbia, or with foreign nations, or
between the District of Columbia and any State or States or foreign
nations, is hereby declared illegal. Every person who shall make
any such contract or engage in any such combination or conspiracy
shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and, on conviction
thereof, shall be punished by fine not exceeding five thousand
dollars,
Page 193 U. S. 319
or by imprisonment not exceeding one year, or by both said
punishments, in the discretion of the court."
"SEC. 4. The several Circuit Courts of the United States are
hereby invested with jurisdiction to prevent and restrain
violations of this act, and it shall be the duty of the several
district attorneys of the United States, in their respective
districts, under the direction of the Attorney-General, to
institute proceedings in equity to prevent and restrain such
violations. Such proceedings may be by way of petition setting
forth the case and praying that such violation shall be enjoined or
otherwise prohibited. When the parties complained of shall have
been duly notified of such petition the court shall proceed, as
soon as may be, to the hearing and determination of the case; and,
pending such petition and before final decree, the court may at any
time make such temporary restraining order or prohibition as shall
be deemed just in the premises."
"SEC.5. Whenever it shall appear to the court before which .my
proceeding under section four of this act may be pending that the
ends of justice require that other parties should be brought before
the court, the court may cause them to be summoned, whether they
reside in the district in which the court is held or not, and
subpoenas to that end may be served in any district by the marshal
thereof."
"SEC. 6. Any property owned under any contract or by any
combination, or pursuant to any conspiracy (and being the subject
thereof) mentioned in section one of this act, and being in the
course of transportation from one State to another, or to a foreign
country, shall be forfeited to the United States, and may be seized
and condemned by like proceedings as those provided by law for the
forfeiture, seizure, and condemnation of property imported into the
United States contrary to law."
"SEC. 7. Any person who shall be injured in his business or
property by any other person or corporation by reason of anything
forbidden or declared to be unlawful by this act may sue therefor
in any Circuit Court of the United States in the district
Page 193 U. S. 320
in which the defendant resides or is found, without respect to
the amount in controversy, and shall recover threefold the damages
by him sustained, and the costs of suit, including a reasonable
attorney's fee."
"SEC. 8. That the word 'person' or 'persons,' wherever used in
this act shall, be deemed to include corporations and associations
existing under or authorized by the laws of either the United
States, the laws of any of the Territories, the laws of any State,
or the laws of any foreign country."
Is the case as presented by the pleadings and the evidence one
of a combination or a conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce
among the States, or with foreign states? Is it one in which the
defendants are properly chargeable with monopolizing or attempting
to monopolize any part of such trade or commerce? Let us see what
are the facts disclosed by the record.
The Great Northern Railway Company and the Northern Pacific
Railway Company owned, controlled and operated separate lines of
railway -- the former road extending from Superior, and from Duluth
and St. Paul, to Everett, Seattle, and Portland, with a branch line
to Helena; the latter, extending from Ashland, and from Duluth and
St. Paul, to Helena, Spokane, Seattle, Tacoma and Portland. The two
lines, main and branches, about 9,000 miles in length, were and are
parallel and competing lines across the continent through the
northern tier of States between the Great Lakes and the Pacific,
and the two companies were engaged in active competition for
freight and passenger traffic, each road connecting at its
respective terminals with lines of railway, or with lake and river
steamers, or with seagoing vessels.
Prior to 1893, the Northern Pacific system was owned or
controlled and operated by the Northern Pacific Railroad Company, a
corporation organized under certain acts and resolutions of
Congress. That company becoming insolvent, its road and property
passed into the hands of receivers appointed by courts of the
United States. In advance of foreclosure and
Page 193 U. S. 321
sale, a majority of its bondholders made an arrangement with the
Great Northern Railway Company for a virtual consolidation of the
two systems, and for giving the practical control of the Northern
Pacific to the Great Northern. That was the arrangement declared in
Pearsall v. Great Northern Railway Company, 161 U.
S. 646, to be illegal under the statutes of Minnesota
which forbade any railroad corporation or the purchasers or
managers of any corporation to consolidate the stock, property or
franchises of such corporation, or to lease or purchase the works
or franchises of, or in any way control other railroad corporations
owning or having under their control parallel or competing lines.
Gen.Laws, Minn. 1874, c. 29; ch. 1881.
Early in 1901, the Great Northern and Northern Pacific Railway
companies, having in view the ultimate placing of their two systems
under a common control, united in the purchase of the capital stock
of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railway Company, giving in
payment, upon an agreed basis of exchange, the joint bonds of the
Great Northern and Northern Pacific Railway companies, payable in
twenty years from date, with interest at 4 percent per annum. In
this manner, the two purchasing companies became the owners of
$107,000,000 of the $112,000,000 total capital stock of the
Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railway Company, whose lines
aggregated about 8,000 miles, and extended from St. Paul to Chicago
and from St. Paul and Chicago to Quincy, Burlington, Des Moines,
St. Louis, Kansas City, St. Joseph, Omaha, Lincoln, Denver,
Cheyenne and Billings, where it connected with the Northern Pacific
railroad. By this purchase of stock, the Great Northern and
Northern Pacific acquired full control of the Chicago, Burlington
and Quincy main line and branches.
Prior to November 13, 1901, defendant Hill and associate
stockholders of the Great Northern Railway Company, and defendant
Morgan and associate stockholders of the Northern Pacific Railway
Company, entered into a combination to form,
Page 193 U. S. 322
under the laws of New Jersey, a
holding corporation, to
be called the Northern Securities Company, with a capital stock of
$400,000,000, and to which company, in exchange for its own capital
stock upon a certain basis and at a certain rate, was to be turned
over the capital stock, or a controlling interest in the capital
stock, of each of the constituent railway companies, with power in
the holding corporation to vote such stock and in all respects to
act as the owner thereof, and to do whatever it might deem
necessary in aid of such railway companies or to enhance the value
of their stocks. In this manner, the interests of individual
stockholders in the property and franchises of the two independent
and competing railway companies were to be converted into an
interest in the property and franchises of the holding corporation.
Thus, as stated in Article VI of the bill,
"by making the stockholders of each system jointly interested in
both systems, and by practically pooling the earnings of both for
the benefit of the former stockholders of each, and by vesting the
selection of the directors and officers of each system in a common
body, to-wit, the holding corporation, with not only the power but
the duty to pursue a policy which would promote the interests not
of one system at the expense of the other, but of both at the
expense of the public, all inducement for competition between the
two systems was to be removed, a virtual consolidation effected,
and a monopoly of the interstate and foreign commerce formerly
carried on by the two systems as independent competitors
established."
In pursuance of this combination and to effect its objects, the
defendant, the Northern Securities Company, was organized November
13, 1901, under the laws of New Jersey.
Its certificate of incorporation stated that the objects for
which the company was formed were:
"1. To acquire by purchase, subscription or otherwise, and to
hold as investment, any bonds or other securities or evidences of
indebtedness, or any shares of capital stock created or issued by
any other corporation or corporations, association or associations,
of the
Page 193 U. S. 323
State of New Jersey, or of any other State, Territory or
country. 2. To purchase, hold, sell, assign, transfer, mortgage,
pledge, or otherwise dispose of any bonds or other securities or
evidences of indebtedness created or issued by any other
corporation or corporations, association or associations, of the
State of New Jersey, or of any other State, Territory or country,
and while owner thereof to exercise all the rights, powers and
privileges of ownership. 3. To purchase, hold, sell, assign,
transfer, mortgage, pledge or otherwise dispose of shares of the
capital stock of any other corporation or corporations, association
or associations, of the State of New Jersey, or of any other State,
Territory or country, and while owner of such stock to exercise all
the rights, powers and privileges of ownership, including the right
to vote thereon. 4. To aid in any manner any corporation or
association of which any bonds or other securities or evidences of
indebtedness or stock are held by the corporation, and to do any
acts or things designed to protect, preserve, improve or enhance
the value of any such bonds or other securities or evidences of
indebtedness or stock. 5. To acquire, own and hold such real and
personal property as may be necessary or convenient for the
transaction of its business."
It was declared in the certificate that the business or purpose
of the corporation was from time to time to do any one or more of
such acts and things, and that the corporation should have power to
conduct its business in other States and in foreign countries, and
to have one or more offices, and hold, purchase, mortgage and
convey real and personal property, out of New Jersey.
The total authorized capital stock of the corporation was fixed
at $400,000,000, divided into 4,000,000 shares of the par value of
$100 each. The amount of the capital stock with which the
corporation should commence business was fixed at $30,000. The
duration of the corporation was to be perpetual.
This charter having been obtained, Hill and his associate
stockholders of the Great Northern Railway Company, and
Page 193 U. S. 324
Morgan and associate stockholders of the Northern Pacific
Railway Company, assigned to the Securities Company a controlling
amount of the capital stock of the respective constituent companies
upon an agreed basis of exchange of the capital stock of the
Securities Company for each share of the capital stock of the other
companies.
In further pursuance of the combination, the Securities Company
acquired additional stock of the defendant railway companies,
issuing in lieu thereof its own stock upon the above basis, and, at
the time of the bringing of this suit, held, as owner and
proprietor, substantially all the capital stock of the Northern
Pacific Railway Company, and, it is alleged, a controlling interest
in the stock of the Great Northern Railway Company,
"and is voting the same and is collecting the dividends thereon,
and in all respects is acting as the owner thereof, in the
organization, management and operation of said railway companies
and in the receipt and control of their earnings."
No consideration whatever, the bill alleges, has existed or will
exist for the transfer of the stock of the defendant railway
companies to the Northern Securities Company other than the issue
of the stock of the latter company for the purpose, after the
manner, and upon the basis stated.
The Securities Company, the bill also alleges, was not organized
in good faith to purchase and pay for the stocks of the Great
Northern and Northern Pacific Railway companies, but solely "to
incorporate the pooling of the stocks of said companies," and carry
into effect the above combination; that it is a mere depository,
custodian, holder or trustee of the stocks of the Great Northern
and Northern Pacific Railway companies; that its shares of stock
are but beneficial certificates against said railroad stocks to
designate the interest of the holders in the pool; that it does not
have and never had any capital to warrant such an operation; that
its subscribed capital was but $30,000, and its authorized capital
stock of $400,000,000 was just sufficient, when all issued, to
represent
Page 193 U. S. 325
and cover the exchange value of substantially the entire stock
of the Great Northern and Northern Pacific Railway companies, upon
the basis and at the rate agreed upon, which was about $122,000,000
in excess of the combined capital stock of the two railway
companies taken at par, and that, unless prevented, the Securities
Company would acquire as owner and proprietor substantially all the
capital stock of the Great Northern and Northern Pacific Railway
companies, issuing in lieu thereof its own capital stock to the
full extent of its authorized issue, of which, upon the agreed
basis of exchange, the former stockholders of the Great Northern
Railway Company have received or would receive and hold about
fifty-five percent, the balance going to the former stockholders of
the Northern Pacific Railway Company.
The Government charges that, if the combination was held not to
be in violation of the act of Congress, then all efforts of the
National Government to preserve to the people the benefits of free
competition among carriers engaged in interstate commerce will be
wholly unavailing, and all transcontinental lines, indeed the
entire railway systems of the country, may be absorbed, merged and
consolidated, thus placing the public at the absolute mercy of the
holding corporation.
The several defendants denied all the allegations of the bill
imputing to them a purpose to evade the provisions of the act of
Congress, or to form a combination or conspiracy having for its
object either to restrain or to monopolize commerce or trade among
the States or with foreign nations. They denied that any
combination or conspiracy was formed in violation of the act.
In our judgment, the evidence fully sustains the material
allegations of the bill, and shows a violation of the act of
Congress insofar as it declares illegal every combination or
conspiracy in restraint of commerce among the several States and
with foreign nations, and forbids attempts to monopolize such
commerce or any part of it.
Summarizing the principal facts, it is indisputable upon
this
Page 193 U. S. 326
record that, under the leadership of the defendants Hill and
Morgan, the stockholders of the Great Northern and Northern Pacific
Railway corporations, having competing and substantially parallel
lines from the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River to the Pacific
Ocean at Puget Sound, combined and conceived the scheme of
organizing a corporation under the laws of New Jersey which should
hold the shares of the stock of the constituent companies, such
shareholders, in lieu of their shares in those companies, to
receive, upon an agreed basis of value, shares in the holding
corporation; that, pursuant to such combination, the Northern
Securities Company was organized as the holding corporation through
which the scheme should be executed, and under that scheme such
holding corporation has become the holder -- more properly
speaking, the custodian -- of more than nine-tenths of the stock of
the Northern Pacific, and more than three-fourths of the stock of
the Great Northern, the stockholders of the companies who delivered
their stock receiving upon the agreed basis shares of stock in the
holding corporation. The stockholders of these two competing
companies disappeared as such for the moment, but immediately
reappeared as stockholders of the holding company, which was
thereafter to guard the interests of both sets of stockholders as a
unit, and to manage, or cause to be managed, both lines of railroad
as if held in one ownership. Necessarily, by this combination or
arrangement, the holding company in the fullest sense dominates the
situation in the interest of those who were stockholders of the
constituent companies, as much so, for every practical purpose, as
if it had been itself a railroad corporation which had built,
owned, and operated both lines for the exclusive benefit of its
stockholders. Necessarily, also, the constituent companies ceased,
under such a combination, to be in active competition for trade and
commerce along their respective lines, and have become,
practically, one powerful consolidated corporation, by the name of
a holding corporation the principal, if not the sole, object for
the formation of which was to carry out the purpose of the
original
Page 193 U. S. 327
combination under which competition between the constituent
companies would cease. Those who were stockholders of the Great
Northern and Northern Pacific and became stockholders in the
holding company are now interested in preventing all competition
between the two lines, and, as owners of stock or of certificates
of stock in the holding company, they will see to it that no
competition is tolerated. They will take care that no persons are
chosen directors of the holding company who will permit competition
between the constituent companies. The result of the combination is
that all the earnings of the constituent companies make a common
fund in the hands of the Northern Securities Company to be
distributed not upon the basis of the earnings of the respective
constituent companies, each acting exclusively in its own interest,
but upon the basis of the certificates of stock issued by the
holding company. No scheme or device could more certainly come
within the words of the act -- "combination in the form of a trust
or otherwise . . . in restraint of commerce among the several
States or with foreign nations" -- or could more effectively and
certainly suppress free competition between the constituent
companies. This combination is, within the meaning of the act, a
"trust;" but if not, it is a
combination in restraint of
interstate and international commerce, and that is enough to
bring it under the condemnation of the act. The mere existence of
such a combination and the power acquired by the holding company as
its trustee constitute a menace to, and a restraint upon, that
freedom of commerce which Congress intended to recognize and
protect, and which the public is entitled to have protected. If
such combination be not destroyed, all the advantages that would
naturally come to the public under the operation of the general
laws of competition, as between the Great Northern and Northern
Pacific Railway companies, will be lost, and the entire commerce of
the immense territory in the northern part of the United States
between the Great Lakes and the Pacific at Puget Sound will be at
the mercy of a single holding corporation,
Page 193 U. S. 328
organized in a State distant from the people of that
territory.
The Circuit Court was undoubtedly right when it said -- all the
Judges of that court concurring -- that the combination referred
to
"led inevitably to the following results: first, it placed the
control of the two roads in the hands of a single person, to-wit,
the Securities Company, by virtue of its ownership of a large
majority of the stock of both companies; second, it destroyed every
motive for competition between two roads engaged in interstate
traffic, which were natural competitors for business, by pooling
the earnings of the two roads for the common benefit of the
stockholders of both companies."
120 Fed.Rep. 721, 724.
Such being the case made by the record, what are the principles
that must control the decision of the present case? Do former
adjudications determine the controlling questions raised by the
pleadings and proofs?
The contention of the Government is that, if regard be had to
former adjudications, the present case must be determined in its
favor. That view is contested, and the defendants insist that a
decision in their favor will not be inconsistent with anything
heretofore decided and would be in harmony with the act of
Congress.
Is the act to be construed as forbidding every combination or
conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce among the States or
with foreign nations? Or does it embrace only such restraints as
are unreasonable in their nature? Is the motive with which a
forbidden combination or conspiracy was formed at all material when
it appears that the necessary tendency of the particular
combination or conspiracy in question is to restrict or suppress
free competition between competing railroads engaged in commerce
among the States? Does the act of Congress prescribe, as a
rule for
interstate or
international
commerce, that the operation of the natural laws of competition
between those engaged in
such commerce shall not be
restricted or interfered with by any contract, combination or
Page 193 U. S. 329
conspiracy? How far may Congress go in regulating the affairs or
conduct of state corporations engaged as carriers in commerce among
the States or of state corporations which, although not directly
engaged themselves in
such commerce, yet have control of
the business of interstate carriers? If state corporations, or
their stockholders, are found to be parties to a combination, in
the form of a trust or otherwise, which restrains interstate or
international commerce, may they not be compelled to respect any
rule for such commerce that may be lawfully prescribed by
Congress?
These questions were earnestly discussed at the bar by able
counsel, and have received the full consideration which their
importance demands.
The first case in this court arising under the Anti-Trust Act
was
United States v. E. C. Knight Co., 156 U. S.
1. The next case was that of
United States v.
Trans-Missouri Freight Association, 166 U.
S. 290. That was followed by
United States v. Joint
Traffic Association, 171 U. S. 505,
Hopkins v. United States, 171 U.
S. 578,
Anderson v. United States, 171 U.
S. 604,
Addyston Pipe & Steel Co. v. United
States, 175 U. S. 211, and
Montague & Co. v. Lowry, 193 U. S.
38. To these may be added
Pearsall v. Great Northern
Railway, 161 U. S. 646,
which, although not arising under the Anti-Trust Act, involved an
agreement under which the Great Northern and Northern Pacific
Railway companies should be consolidated and by which competition
between those companies was to cease. In
United States v. E. C.
Knight Co., it was held that the agreement or arrangement
there involved had reference only to the
manufacture or
production of sugar by those engaged in the alleged
combination, but if it had directly embraced interstate or
international commerce, it would then have been covered by the
Anti-Trust Act and would have been illegal; in
United States v.
Trans-Missouri Freight Association, that an agreement between
certain railroad companies providing for establishing and
maintaining, for their mutual protection, reasonable rates, rules
and regulations in respect
Page 193 U. S. 330
of freight traffic, through and local, and by which free
competition among those companies was restricted, was, by reason of
such restriction, illegal under the Anti-Trust Act; in
United
States v. Joint Traffic Association, that an arrangement
between certain railroad companies in reference to railroad traffic
among the States by which the railroads involved were not subject
to competition among themselves, was also forbidden by the act; in
Hopkins v. United States and
Anderson v. United
States, that the act embraced only agreements that had direct
connection with interstate commerce, and that such commerce
comprehended intercourse for all the purposes of trade, in any and
all its forms, including the transportation, purchase, sale and
exchange of commodities between citizens of different States, and
the power to regulate it embraced all the instrumentalities by
which such commerce is conducted; in
Addyston Pipe & Steel
Co. v. United States, all the members of the court concurring,
that the act of Congress made illegal an agreement between certain
private companies or corporations engaged in different States in
the manufacture, sale and transportation of iron pipe whereby
competition among them was avoided, was covered by the Anti-Trust
Act, and in
Montague v. Lowry, all the members of the
court again concurring, that a combination created by an agreement
between certain private manufacturers and dealers in tiles, grates
and mantels in different States whereby they controlled or sought
to control the price of such articles in those States was condemned
by the act of Congress. In
Pearsall v. Great Northern
Railway, which, as already stated, involved the consolidation
of the Great Northern and Northern Pacific Railway companies, the
court said:
"The consolidation of these two great corporations will
unavoidably result in giving to the defendant [the Great Northern]
a monopoly of all traffic in the northern half of the State of
Minnesota, as well as of all transcontinental traffic north of the
line of the Union Pacific, against which public regulations will be
but a feeble protection. The acts of the Minnesota Legislature of
1874 and 1881 undoubtedly
Page 193 U. S. 331
reflected the general sentiment of the public that their best
security is in competition."
We will not incumber this opinion by extended extracts from the
former opinions of this court. It is sufficient to say that from
the decisions in the above cases certain propositions are plainly
deducible and embrace the present case. Those propositions are:
That, although the act of Congress known as the Anti-Trust Act
has no reference to the mere manufacture or production of articles
or commodities within the limits of the several States, it does
embrace and declare to be illegal every contract, combination or
conspiracy, in whatever form, of whatever nature, and whoever may
be parties to it, which directly or necessarily operates
in
restraint of trade or commerce
among the several States or
with foreign nations;
That the act is not limited to restraints of interstate and
international trade or commerce that are unreasonable in their
nature, but embraces all direct restraints imposed by any
combination, conspiracy or monopoly upon such trade or
commerce;
That railroad carriers engaged in interstate or international
trade or commerce are embraced by the act;
That combinations even among
private manufacturers or
dealers whereby
interstate or international commerce is
restrained are equally embraced by the act;
That Congress has the power to establish
rules by which
interstate and international commerce shall be governed,
and, by the Anti-Trust Act, has prescribed the rule of free
competition among those engaged in such commerce;
That
every combination or conspiracy which would
extinguish competition between otherwise competing railroads
engaged in
interstate trade or commerce, and which would
in that way restrain
such trade or commerce, is
made illegal by the act;
That the natural effect of competition is to increase commerce,
and an agreement whose direct effect is to prevent this play of
competition restrains, instead of promotes, trade and commerce;
Page 193 U. S. 332
That to vitiate a combination, such as the act of Congress
condemns, it need not be shown that the combination, in fact,
results or will result in a total suppression of trade or in a
complete monopoly, but it is only essential to show that, by its
necessary operation, it tends to restrain interstate or
international trade or commerce or tends to create a monopoly in
such trade or commerce and to deprive the public of the advantages
that flow from free competition;
That the constitutional guarantee of liberty of contract does
not prevent Congress from prescribing the rule of free competition
for those engaged in
interstate and international
commerce; and,
That, under its power to regulate commerce among the several
States and with foreign nations, Congress had authority to enact
the statute in question.
No one, we assume, will deny that these propositions were
distinctly announced in the former decisions of this court. They
cannot be ignored or their effect avoided by the intimation that
the court indulged in
obiter dicta. What was said in those
cases was within the limits of the issues made by the parties. In
our opinion, the recognition of the principles announced in former
cases must, under the conceded facts, lead to an affirmance of the
decree below, unless the special objections, or some of them, which
have been made to the application of the act of Congress to the
present case are of a substantial character. We will now consider
those objections.
Underlying the argument in behalf of the defendants is the idea
that, as the Northern Securities Company is a state corporation,
and as its acquisition of the stock of the Great Northern and
Northern Pacific Railway companies is not inconsistent with the
powers conferred by its charter, the enforcement of the act of
Congress, as against those corporations, will be an unauthorized
interference by the national government with the internal commerce
of the States creating those corporations. This suggestion does not
at all impress us. There is no reason to suppose that Congress had
any purpose
Page 193 U. S. 333
to interfere with the internal affairs of the States, nor, in
our opinion, is there any ground whatever for the contention that
the Anti-Trust Act regulates their domestic commerce. By its very
terms, the act regulates only commerce among the States and with
foreign states. Viewed in that light, the act, if within the powers
of Congress, must be respected; for, by the explicit words of the
Constitution, that instrument and the laws enacted by Congress in
pursuance of its provisions are the supreme law of the land,
"anything in the constitution or laws of any State to the contrary
notwithstanding" -- supreme over the States, over the courts, and
even over the people of the United States, the source of all power
under our governmental system in respect of the objects for which
the National Government was ordained. An act of Congress
constitutionally passed under its power to regulate commerce among
the States and with foreign nations is binding upon all; as much so
as if it were embodied, in terms, in the Constitution itself. Every
judicial officer, whether of a national or a state court, is under
the obligation of an oath so to regard a lawful enactment of
Congress. Not even a State, still less one of its artificial
creatures, can stand in the way of its enforcement. If it were
otherwise, the Government and its laws might be prostrated at the
feet of local authority.
Cohens v.
Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264,
19 U. S. 385,
19 U. S. 414.
These views have been often expressed by this court.
It is said that, whatever may be the power of a State over such
subjects, Congress cannot forbid single individuals from disposing
of their stock in a state corporation, even if such corporation be
engaged in interstate and international commerce; that the holding
or purchase by a state corporation, or the purchase by individuals,
of the stock of another corporation, for whatever purpose, are
matters in respect of which Congress has no authority under the
Constitution; that, so far as the power of Congress is concerned,
citizens or state corporations may dispose of their property and
invest their money in any way they choose, and that, in regard to
all
Page 193 U. S. 334
such matters, citizens and state corporations are subject, if to
any authority, only to the lawful authority of the State in which
such citizens reside, or under whose laws such corporations are
organized. It is unnecessary in this case to consider such abstract
general questions. The court need not now concern itself with them.
They are not here to be examined and determined, and may well be
left for consideration in some case necessarily involving their
determination.
In this connection, it is suggested that the contention of the
Government is that the acquisition and ownership of stock in a
state railroad corporation is itself interstate commerce, if that
corporation be engaged in interstate commerce. This suggestion is
made in different ways, sometimes in express words, at other times
by implication. For instance, it is said that the question here is
whether the power of Congress over interstate commerce extends to
the regulation of the ownership of the stock in state railroad
companies, by reason of their being engaged in such commerce.
Again, it is said that the only issue in this case is whether the
Northern Securities Company can acquire and hold stock in other
state corporations. Still further, is it asked, generally, whether
the organization or ownership of railroads is not under the control
of the States under whose laws they came into existence? Such
statements as to the issues in this case are, we think, wholly
unwarranted, and are very wide of the mark; it is the setting up of
mere men of straw to be easily stricken down. We do not understand
that the Government makes any such contentions or takes any such
positions as those statements imply. It does not contend that
Congress may control the mere acquisition or the mere ownership of
stock in a state corporation engaged in interstate commerce. Nor
does it contend that Congress can control the organization of state
corporations authorized by their charters to engage in interstate
and international commerce. But it does contend that Congress may
protect the freedom of interstate commerce by any means that are
appropriate and that are lawful and not prohibited
Page 193 U. S. 335
by the Constitution. It does contend that no state corporation
can stand in the way of the enforcement of the national will,
legally expressed. What the Government particularly complains of,
indeed, all that it complains of here, is the existence of a
combination among the stockholders of competing railroad companies
which, in violation of the act of Congress, restrains interstate
and international commerce through the agency of a common corporate
trustee designated to act for both companies in repressing free
competition between them. Independently of any question of the mere
ownership of stock or of the organization of a state corporation,
can it in reason be said that such a combination is not embraced by
the very terms of the Anti-Trust Act? May not Congress declare that
combination to be illegal? If Congress legislates for the
protection of the public, may it not proceed on the ground that
wrongs, when effected by a powerful combination, are more dangerous
and require more stringent supervision than when they are to be
effected by a single person?
Callan v. Wilson,
127 U. S. 540,
127 U. S. 556.
How far may the courts go in order to give effect to the act of
Congress, and remedy the evils it was designed by that act to
suppress? These are confessedly questions of great moment, and they
will now be considered.
By the express words of the Constitution, Congress has power to
"regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the several
States, and with the Indian tribes." In view of the numerous
decisions of this court, there ought not, at this day, to be any
doubt as to the general scope of such power. In some circumstances,
regulation may properly take the form and have the effect of
prohibition.
In re Rahrer, 140 U.
S. 545;
Lottery Case, 188 U.
S. 321,
188 U. S. 355,
and authorities there cited. Again and again, this court has
reaffirmed the doctrine announced in the great judgment rendered by
Chief Justice Marshall for the court in
Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1, 196,
22 U. S. 197,
that the power of Congress to regulate commerce among the States
and with foreign nations is the power "to prescribe the rule by
which commerce is to be governed;" that such power
"is complete
Page 193 U. S. 336
in itself, may be exercised to its utmost extent, and
acknowledges no limitations other than are prescribed in the
Constitution;"
that
"if, as has always been understood, the sovereignty of Congress,
though limited to specified objects, is plenary as to those
objects, the power over commerce with foreign nations and among the
several States is vested in Congress
as absolutely as it would
be in a single government having in its constitution the same
restrictions on the exercise of the power as are found in the
Constitution of the United States;"
that a sound construction of the Constitution allows to Congress
a large discretion,
"with respect to the means by which the powers it confers are to
be carried into execution, which enable that body to perform the
high duties assigned to it in the manner most beneficial to the
people;"
and that, if the end to be accomplished is within the scope of
the Constitution, "all means which are appropriate, which are
plainly adapted to that end, and which are not prohibited, are
constitutional."
Brown v.
Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419;
Sinnot v.
Davenport, 22 How. 227,
63 U. S. 238;
Henderson v. The Mayor, 92 U. S. 259;
Railroad Company v. Husen, 95 U. S.
465,
95 U. S. 472;
County of Mobile v. Kimball, 102 U.
S. 691;
M., K. & Texas Ky. Co. v. Haber,
169 U. S. 613,
169 U. S. 626;
The Lottery Case, 188 U. S. 321,
188 U. S. 348.
In
Cohens v.
Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264,
19 U. S. 413,
this court said that the United States were, for many important
purposes, "a single nation," and that, "in all commercial
regulations, we are one and the same people;" and it has since
frequently declared that commerce among the several States was a
unit, and subject to national control. Previously, in
McCulloch v.
Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316,
17 U. S. 405,
the court had said that the Government ordained and established by
the Constitution was, within the limits of the powers granted to
it, "the Government of all; its powers are delegated by all; it
represents all, and acts for all," and was "supreme within its
sphere of action." As late as the case of
In re Debs,
158 U. S. 564,
158 U. S. 582,
this court, every member of it concurring, said:
"The entire strength of the Nation may be used to enforce in any
part of the land the
Page 193 U. S. 337
full and free exercise of all National powers and the security
of all rights entrusted by the Constitution to its care. The strong
arm of the National Government may be put forth to brush away all
obstructions to the freedom of interstate commerce or the
transportation of the mails. If the emergency arises, the army of
the Nation, and all its militia, are at the service of the Nation
to compel obedience to its laws."
The means employed in respect of the combinations forbidden by
the Anti-Trust Act, and which Congress deemed germane to the end to
be accomplished, was to prescribe as
a rule for
interstate and international commerce (not for domestic
commerce) that it should not be vexed by combinations, conspiracies
or monopolies which restrain commerce by destroying or restricting
competition. We say that Congress has prescribed such a rule
because, in all the prior cases in this court, the Anti-Trust Act
has been construed as forbidding any combination which, by its
necessary operation, destroys or restricts free competition among
those engaged in interstate commerce; in other words, that to
destroy or restrict free competition in interstate commerce was to
restrain such commerce. Now, can this court say that such a rule is
prohibited by the Constitution or is not one that Congress could
appropriately prescribe when exerting its power under the commerce
clause of the Constitution? Whether the free operation of the
normal laws of competition is a wise and wholesome rule for trade
and commerce is an economic question which this court need not
consider or determine. Undoubtedly, there are those who think that
the general business interests and prosperity of the country will
be best promoted if the rule of competition is not applied. But
there are others who believe that such a rule is more necessary in
these days of enormous wealth than it ever was in any former period
of our history. Be all this as it may, Congress has, in effect,
recognized the rule of free competition by declaring illegal every
combination or conspiracy in restraint of interstate and
international commerce. As in the judgment of Congress the public
convenience and the general welfare
Page 193 U. S. 338
will be best subserved when the natural laws of competition are
left undisturbed by those engaged in interstate commerce, and as
Congress has embodied that rule in a statute, that must be, for
all, the end of the matter if this is to remain a government of
laws, and not of men.
It is said that railroad corporations created under the laws of
a State can only be consolidated with the authority of the State.
Why that suggestion is made in this case we cannot understand, for
there is no pretense that the combination here in question was
under the authority of the States under whose laws these railroad
corporations were created. But even if the State allowed
consolidation, it would not follow that the stockholders of two or
more state railroad corporations, having
competing lines and
engaged in interstate commerce, could lawfully combine and
form a distinct corporation to hold the stock of the constituent
corporations, and, by destroying competition between them, in
violation of the act of Congress, restrain commerce among the
States and with foreign nations.
The rule of competition, prescribed by Congress, was not at all
new in trade and commerce. And we cannot be in any doubt as to the
reason that moved Congress to the incorporation of that rule into a
statute. That reason was thus stated in
United States v. Joint
Traffic Association:
"Has not Congress with regard to interstate commerce and in the
course of regulating it, in the case of railroad corporations, the
power to say that no contract or combination shall be legal which
shall restrain trade and commerce by shutting out the operation of
the general law of competition? We think it has. It is the
combination of these large and powerful corporations, covering vast
sections of territory and influencing trade throughout the whole
extent thereof, and acting
as one body in all the matters
over which the combination extends, that constitutes the alleged
evil, and in regard to which,
so far as the combination
operates upon and restrains interstate commerce, Congress has
power to legislate and to prohibit."
(Pp.
171 U. S. 569,
171 U. S.
571.) That such a rule was applied to interstate
commerce
Page 193 U. S. 339
should not have surprised anyone. Indeed, when Congress declared
contracts, combinations and conspiracies in restraint of trade or
commerce to be illegal, it did nothing more than apply to
interstate commerce a rule that had been long applied by the
several States when dealing with combinations that were in
restraint of their domestic commerce. The decisions in state courts
upon this general subject are not only numerous and instructive,
but they show the circumstances under which the Anti-Trust Act was
passed. It may well be assumed that Congress, when enacting that
statute, shared the general apprehension that a few powerful
corporations or combinations sought to obtain, and, unless
restrained, would obtain such absolute control of the entire trade
and commerce of the country as would be detrimental to the general
welfare.
In
Morris Run Coal Co. v. Barclay Coal Co., 68 Pa.St.
173, 186, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania dealt with a
combination of coal companies seeking the control within a large
territory of the entire market for bituminous coal. The court,
observing that the combination was wide in its scope, general in
its influence, and injurious in its effects, said:
"When competition is left free, individual error or folly will
generally find a correction in the conduct of others. But here is a
combination of all the companies operating in the Blossburg and
Barclay mining regions, and controlling their entire productions.
They have combined together to govern the supply a the price of
coal in all the markets from the Hudson to the Mississippi rivers,
and from Pennsylvania to the Lakes. This combination has a power in
its confederated form which no individual action can confer. The
public interest must succumb to it, for it has left no competition
free to correct its baleful influence. When the supply of coal is
suspended, the demand for it becomes importunate, and prices must
rise, or if the supply goes forward, the prices fixed by the
confederates must accompany it. The domestic hearth, the furnaces
of the iron master and the fires of the manufacturer all feel the
restraint, while many dependent hands are
Page 193 U. S. 340
paralyzed and hungry mouths are stinted. The influence of a lack
of supply or a rise in the price of an article of such prime
necessity cannot be measured. It permeates the entire mass of the
community, and leaves few of its members untouched by its withering
blight. Such a combination is more than a contract; it is an
offense. . . . In all such combinations where the purpose is
injurious or unlawful, the gist of the offense is the conspiracy.
Men can often do by the
combination of many what severally
no one could accomplish, and even what when done by one would be
innocent. . . .
There is a potency in numbers when
combined which the law cannot overlook, where injury is the
consequence."
The same principles were applied in
Arnot v. Pittston &
Elmira Coal Co., 68 N.Y. 558, 565, which was the case of a
combination of two coal companies in order to give one of them a
monopoly of coal in a particular region, the Court of Appeals of
New York holding that
"a combination to effect such a purpose is inimical to the
interests of the public, and that all contracts designed to effect
such an end are contrary to public policy, and therefore
illegal."
They were also applied by the Supreme Court of Ohio in
Central Ohio Salt Co. v. Guthrie, 35 Ohio St. 666, 672,
which was the case of a combination among manufacturers of salt in
a large salt-producing territory, the court saying:
"It is no answer to say that competition in the salt trade was
not, in fact, destroyed, or that the price of the commodity was not
unreasonably advanced.
Courts will not stop to enquire 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."
So, in
Craft v. McConoughy, 79 Illinois 346, 350, which
was the case of a combination among grain dealers by which
competition was stifled, the court saying:
"So long as competition was free, the interest of the public was
safe. The laws of trade, in connection with the rigor of
competition, was all the guaranty the public required, but the
secret combination created by the contract destroyed all
competition and created a monopoly
Page 193 U. S. 341
against which the public interest had no protection."
Again, in
People v. Chicago Gas Trust Co., 130 Illinois
268, 297, which involved the validity of the organization of a gas
corporation which obtained a monopoly in the business of furnishing
illuminating gas in the city of Chicago by buying the stock of four
other gas companies, it was said:
"Of what avail is it that any number of gas companies may be
formed under the general incorporation law if a giant trust company
can be clothed with the power of buying up and holding the stock
and property of such companies, and, through the control thereby
attained, can direct all their operations and weld them into one
huge combination?"
To the same effect are cases almost too numerous to be cited.
But among them we refer to
Richardson v. Buhl, 77 Michigan
632, which was the case of the organization of a corporation in
Connecticut to unite in one corporation all the match manufacturers
in the United States, and thus to obtain control of the business of
manufacturing matches;
Santa Clara Mill & Lumber Co. v.
Hayes, 76 California 387, 390, which was the case of a
combination among manufacturers of lumber by which it could control
the business in certain localities, and
India Bagging
Association v. Kock, 14 La.Ann. 168, which was the case of a
combination among various commercial firms to control the prices of
bagging used by cotton planters.
The cases, just cited, it is true, relate to the domestic
commerce of the States. But they serve to show the authority which
the States possess to guard the public against
combinations that repress individual enterprise and
interfere with the operation of the natural laws of competition
among those engaged in trade within their limits. They serve also
to give point to the declaration of this court in
Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1,
22 U. S. 197 -- a
principle never modified by any subsequent decision -- that,
subject to the limitations imposed by the Constitution upon the
exercise of the powers granted by that instrument,
"the power over commerce with foreign nations and among the
several States is vested in Congress as absolutely
Page 193 U. S. 342
as it would be in a single government having in its constitution
the same restrictions on the exercise of power as are found in the
Constitution of the United States."
Is there, then, any escape from the conclusion that, subject
only to such restrictions, the power of Congress over interstate
and international commerce is as full and complete as is the power
of any State over its domestic commerce? If a State may strike down
combinations that restrain its domestic commerce by destroying free
competition among those engaged in such commerce, what power,
except that of Congress, is competent to protect the freedom of
interstate and international commerce when assailed by a
combination that restrains such commerce by stifling competition
among those engaged in it?
Now, the court is asked to adjudge that, if held to embrace the
case before us, the Anti-Trust Act is repugnant to the Constitution
of the United States. In this view we are unable to concur. The
contention of the defendants could not be sustained without, in
effect, overruling the prior decisions of this court as to the
scope and validity of the Anti-Trust Act. If, as the court has
held, Congress can strike down a combination between private
persons or private corporations that restrains trade among the
States in iron pipe (as in
Addyston Pipe & Steel Co. v.
United States), or in tiles, grates and mantels (as in
Montague v. Lowry), surely it ought not to be doubted that
Congress has power to declare illegal a combination that restrains
commerce among the States, and with foreign nations, as carried on
over the lines of competing railroad companies exercising public
franchises, and engaged in such commerce. We cannot agree that
Congress may strike down combinations among manufacturers and
dealers in iron pipe, tiles, grates and mantels that restrain
commerce among the States in such articles, but may not strike down
combinations among stockholders of competing railroad carriers,
which restrain commerce as involved in the transportation of
passengers and property among the several States. If private
parties may not, by combination among themselves, restrain
interstate
Page 193 U. S. 343
and international commerce in violation of an act of Congress,
much less can such restraint be tolerated when imposed or attempted
to be imposed upon commerce as carried on over public highways.
Indeed, if the contentions of the defendants are sound, why may not
all the railway companies in the United States that are
engaged, under state charters, in interstate and international
commerce enter into a combination such as the one here in question,
and by the device of a holding corporation obtain the absolute
control throughout the entire country of rates for passengers and
freight, beyond the power of Congress to protect the public against
their exactions? The argument in behalf of the defendants
necessarily leads to such results, and places Congress, although
invested by the people of the United States with full authority to
regulate interstate and international commerce, in a condition of
utter helplessness so far as the protection of the public against
such combinations is concerned.
Will it be said that Congress can meet such emergencies by
prescribing the rates by which interstate carriers shall be
governed in the transportation of freight and passengers? If
Congress has the power to fix such rates -- and upon that question
we express no opinion -- it does not choose to exercise its power
in that way or to that extent. It has, all will agree, a large
discretion as to the means to be employed in the exercise of any
power granted to it. For the present, it has determined to go no
farther than to protect the freedom of commerce among the States
and with foreign states by declaring illegal all contracts,
combinations, conspiracies or monopolies in restraint of such
commerce, and make it a public offence to violate the rule thus
prescribed. How much further it may go we do not now say. We need
only at this time consider whether it has exceeded its powers in
enacting the statute here in question.
Assuming, without further discussion, that the case before us is
within the terms of the act, and that the act is not in excess of
the powers of Congress, we recur to the question how far may the
courts go in reaching and suppressing the combination
Page 193 U. S. 344
described in the bill? All will agree that, if the Anti-Trust
Act be constitutional, and if the combination in question be in
violation of its provisions, the courts may enforce the provisions
of the statute by such orders and decrees as are necessary or
appropriate to that end and as may be consistent with the
fundamental rules of legal procedure . And all, we take it, will
agree, as established firmly by the decisions of this court, that
the power of Congress over commerce extends to all the
instrumentalities of such commerce, and to every device that may be
employed to interfere with the freedom of commerce among the States
and with foreign nations. Equally, we assume, all will agree that
the Constitution and the legal enactments of Congress are, by
express words of the Constitution, the supreme law of the land,
anything in the constitution and laws of any State to the contrary
notwithstanding. Nevertheless, the defendants, strangely enough,
invoke in their behalf the Tenth Amendment of the Constitution,
which declares that
"the powers not delegated to the United States by the
Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to
the States respectively or to the People;"
and we are confronted with the suggestion that any order or
decree of the Federal court which will prevent the Northern
Securities Company from exercising the power it acquired in
becoming the holder of the stocks of the Great Northern and
Northern Pacific Railway companies will be an invasion of the
rights of the State under which the Securities Company was
chartered, as well as of the rights of the States creating the
other companies. In other words, if the State of New Jersey gives a
charter to a corporation, and even if the obtaining of such charter
is, in fact, pursuant to a
combination under which it
becomes the holder of the stocks of shareholders in two competing,
parallel railroad companies engaged in interstate commerce in other
States, whereby competition between the respective roads of those
companies is to be destroyed and the enormous commerce carried on
over them restrained by suppressing competition, Congress must stay
its hands and allow
Page 193 U. S. 345
such restraint to continue to the detriment of the public
because, forsooth, the corporations concerned, or some of them, are
state corporations. We cannot conceive how it is possible for
anyone to seriously contend for such a proposition. It means
nothing less than that Congress, in regulating interstate commerce,
must act in subordination to the will of the States when exerting
their power to create corporations. No such view can be entertained
for a moment.
It is proper to say in passing that nothing in the record tends
to show that the State of New Jersey had any reason to suspect that
those who took advantage of its liberal incorporation laws had in
view, when organizing the Securities Company, to destroy
competition between two great railway carriers engaged in
interstate commerce in distant States of the Union. The purpose of
the combination was concealed under very general words that gave no
clue whatever to the real purposes of those who brought about the
organization of the Securities Company. If the certificate of the
incorporation of that company had expressly stated that the object
of the company Was to destroy competition between competing,
parallel lines of interstate carriers, all would have seen, at the
outset, that the scheme was in hostility to the national authority,
and that there was a purpose to violate or evade the act of
Congress.
We reject any such view of the relations of the National
Government and the States composing the Union as that for which the
defendants contend. Such a view cannot be maintained without
destroying the just authority of the United States. It is
inconsistent with all the decisions of this court as to the powers
of the National Government over matters committed to it. No State
can, by merely creating a corporation, or in any other mode,
project its authority into other States, and across the continent,
so as to prevent Congress from exerting the power it possesses
under the Constitution over interstate and international commerce,
or so as to exempt its corporation engaged in interstate commerce
from obedience to any rule lawfully established by Congress for
such commerce.
Page 193 U. S. 346
It cannot be said that any State may give a corporation, created
under its laws, authority to restrain interstate or international
commerce against the will of the nation as lawfully expressed by
Congress. Every corporation created by a State is necessarily
subject to the supreme law of the land. And yet the suggestion is
made that to restrain a state corporation from interfering with the
free course of trade and commerce among the States, in violation of
an act of Congress, is hostile to the reserved rights of the
States. The Federal court may not have power to forfeit the charter
of the Securities Company; it may not declare how its shares of
stock may be transferred on its books, nor prohibit it from
acquiring real estate, nor diminish or increase its capital stock.
All these and like matters are to be regulated by the State which
created the company. But to the end that effect be given to the
national will, lawfully expressed, Congress may prevent that
company, in its capacity as a holding corporation and trustee, from
carrying out the purposes of a combination formed in restraint of
interstate commerce. The Securities Company is itself a part of the
present combination; its head and front; its trustee. It would be
extraordinary if the court, in executing the act of Congress, could
not lay hands upon that company and prevent it from doing that
which, if done, will defeat the act of Congress. Upon like grounds,
the court can, by appropriate orders, prevent the two competing
railroad companies here involved from cooperating with the
Securities Company in restraining commerce among the States. In
short, the court may make any order necessary to bring about the
dissolution or suppression of an illegal combination that restrains
interstate commerce. All this can be done without infringing in any
degree upon the just authority of the States. The affirmance of the
judgment below will only mean that no combination, however
powerful, is stronger than the law or will be permitted to avail
itself of the pretext that to prevent it doing that which, if done,
would defeat a legal enactment of Congress is to attack the
reserved rights of the States. It
Page 193 U. S. 347
would mean that the Government which represents all can, when
acting within the limits of its powers, compel obedience to its
authority. It would mean that no device in evasion of its
provisions, however skillfully such device may have been contrived,
and no combination, by whomsoever formed, is beyond the reach of
the supreme law of the land if such device or combination by its
operation directly restrains commerce among the States or with
foreign nations in violation of the act of Congress.
The defendants rely with some confidence upon the case of
Railroad Company v.
Maryland, 21 Wall. 456,
88 U. S. 473.
But nothing we have said is inconsistent with any principle
announced in that case. The court there recognized the principle
that a State has plenary powers "over its own territory, its
highways, its franchises, and its corporations," and observed
that
"we are bound to sustain the constitutional powers and
prerogatives of the States, as well as those of the United States,
whenever they are brought before us for adjudication, no matter
what may be the consequences."
Of course, every State has, in a general sense, plenary power
over its corporations. But is it conceivable that a State, when
exerting power over a corporation of its creation, may prevent or
embarrass the exercise by Congress of any power with which it is
invested by the Constitution? In the case just referred to, the
court does not say, and it is not to be supposed that it will ever
say, that any power exists in a State to prevent the enforcement of
a lawful enactment of Congress, or to invest any of its
corporations, in whatever business engaged, with authority to
disregard such enactment or defeat its legitimate operation. On the
contrary, the court has steadily held to the doctrine, vital to the
United States as well as to the States, that a state enactment,
even if passed in the exercise of its acknowledged powers, must
yield, in case of conflict, to the supremacy of the Constitution of
the United States and the acts of Congress enacted in pursuance of
its provisions. This results, the court has said, as well from the
nature of the Government
Page 193 U. S. 348
as from the words of the Constitution.
Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1,
22 U. S. 210;
Sinnot v.
Davenport, 22 How. 227,
63 U. S. 243;
In re Debs, 158 U. S. 564;
Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway v. Haber,
169 U. S. 613,
169 U. S. 626,
627. In
Texas v.
White, 7 Wall. 700,
74 U. S. 725,
the court remarked
"that 'the people of each State compose a State, having its own
government, and endowed with all the functions essential to
separate and independent existence,' and that, 'without the States
in union, there could be no such political body as the United
States.'
County of Lane v. Oregon,
7 Wall. 76. Not only, therefore, can there be no loss of separate
and independent autonomy to the States through their union under
the Constitution, but it may be not unreasonably said that the
preservation of the States, and the maintenance of their
governments, are as much within the design and care of the
Constitution as the preservation of the Union and the maintenance
of the National Government."
These doctrines are at the basis of our Constitutional
Government, and cannot be disregarded with safety.
The defendants also rely on
Louisville & Nashville
Railroad v. Kentucky, 161 U. S. 677,
161 U. S. 702.
In that case, it was contended by the railroad company that the
assumption of the State to forbid the consolidation of parallel and
competing lines was an interference with the power of Congress over
interstate commerce. The court observed that but little need be
said in answer to such a proposition, for
"it has never been supposed that the dominant power of Congress
over interstate commerce took from the States the power of
legislation with respect to the instruments of such commerce, so
far as the legislation was within its ordinary police powers."
But that case distinctly recognized that there was a division of
power between Congress and the States in respect to interstate
railways, and that Congress had the superior right to control that
commerce and forbid interference therewith, while to the States
remained the power to create and to regulate the instruments of
such commerce, so far as necessary to the conservation of the
public interests. If there is anything in that case which
Page 193 U. S. 349
even intimates that a State or a state corporation may in any
way directly restrain interstate commerce, over which Congress has,
by the Constitution, complete control, we have been unable to find
it.
The question of the relations of the General Government with the
States is again presented by the specific contention of each
defendant that Congress did not intend
"to limit the power of the several States to create
corporations, define their purposes, fix the amount of their
capital, and determine who may buy, own and sell their stock."
All that is true, generally speaking, but the contention falls
far short of meeting the controlling questions in this case. To
meet this contention, we must repeat some things already said in
this opinion. But if what we have said be sound, repetition will do
no harm. So far as the Constitution of the United States is
concerned, a State may, indeed, create a corporation, define its
powers, prescribe the amount of its stock and the mode in which it
may be transferred. It may even authorize one of its corporations
to engage in commerce of every kind -- domestic, interstate and
international. The regulation or control of purely domestic
commerce of a State is, of course, with the State, and Congress has
no direct power over it so long as what is done by the State does
not interfere with the operations of the General Government, or any
legal enactment of Congress. A State, if it chooses so to do, may
even submit to the existence of combinations within its limits that
restrain its internal trade. But neither a state corporation nor
its stockholders can, by reason of the nonaction of the State or by
means of any combination among such stockholders, interfere with
the complete enforcement of any rule lawfully devised by Congress
for the conduct of commerce among the States or with foreign
nations; for, as we have seen, interstate and international
commerce is, by the Constitution, under the control of Congress,
and it belongs to the legislative department of the Government to
prescribe rules for the conduct of that commerce. If it were
otherwise, the declaration in the Constitution
Page 193 U. S. 350
of its supremacy, and of the supremacy as well of the laws made
in pursuance of its provisions, was a waste of words Whilst every
instrumentality of domestic commerce is subject to state control,
every instrumentality of interstate commerce may be reached and
controlled by national authority,
so far as to compel it to
respect the rules for such commerce lawfully established by
Congress. No corporate person can excuse a departure from or
violation of that rule under the plea that that which it has done
or omitted to do is permitted or not forbidden by the State under
whose authority it came into existence. We repeat that no State can
endow any of its corporations, or any combination of its citizens,
with authority to restrain interstate or international commerce, or
to disobey the national will as manifested in legal enactments of
Congress. So long as Congress keeps within the limits of its
authority as defined by the Constitution, infringing no rights
recognized or secured by that instrument, its regulations of
interstate and international commerce, whether founded in wisdom or
not, must be submitted to by all. Harm and only harm can come from
the failure of the courts to recognize this fundamental principle
of constitutional construction. To depart from it because of the
circumstances of special cases, or because the rule, in its
operation, may possibly affect the interests of business, is to
endanger the safety and integrity of our institutions and make the
Constitution mean not what it says, but what interested parties
wish it to mean at a particular time and under particular
circumstances. The supremacy of the law is the foundation rock upon
which our institutions rest. The law, this court said in
United
States v. Lee, 106 U. S. 196,
106 U. S. 220,
is the only supreme power in our system of government. And no
higher duty rests upon this court than to enforce, by its decrees,
the will of the legislative department of the Government, as
expressed in a statute, unless such statute be plainly and
unmistakably in violation of the Constitution. If the statute is
beyond the constitutional power of Congress, the court would fail
in the performance of a solemn duty if it
Page 193 U. S. 351
did not so declare. But if nothing more can be said than that
Congress has erred -- and the court must not be understood as
saying that it has or has not erred -- the remedy for the error and
the attendant mischief is the selection of new Senators and
Representatives, who, by legislation, will make such changes in
existing statutes, or adopt such new statutes, as may be demanded
by their constituents and be consistent with law.
Many suggestions were made in argument based upon the thought
that the Anti-Trust Act would, in the end, prove to be mischievous
in its consequences. Disaster to business and wide-spread financial
ruin, it has been intimated, will follow the execution of its
provisions. Such predictions were made in all the cases heretofore
arising under that act. But they have not been verified. It is the
history of monopolies in this country and in England that
predictions of ruin are habitually made by them when it is
attempted, by legislation, to restrain their operations and to
protect the public against their exactions. In this as in former
cases, they seek shelter behind the reserved rights of the States
and even behind the constitutional guarantee of liberty of
contract. But this court has heretofore adjudged that the act of
Congress did not touch the rights of the States, and that liberty
of contract did not involve a right to deprive the public of the
advantages of free competition in trade and commerce. Liberty of
contract does not imply liberty in a corporation or individuals to
defy the national will, when legally expressed. Nor does the
enforcement of a legal enactment of Congress infringe, in any
proper sense, the general inherent right of everyone to acquire and
hold property. That right, like all other rights, must be exercised
in subordination to the law.
But even if the court shared the gloomy forebodings in which the
defendants indulge, it could not refuse to respect the action of
the legislative branch of the Government if what it has done is
within the limits of its constitutional power. The suggestions of
disaster to business have, we apprehend, their origin
Page 193 U. S. 352
in the zeal of parties who are opposed to the policy underlying
the act of Congress or are interested in the result of this
particular case; at any rate, the suggestions imply that the court
may and ought to refuse the enforcement of the provisions of the
act if, in its judgment, Congress was not wise in prescribing as a
rule by which the conduct of interstate and international commerce
is to be governed, that every combination, whatever its form, in
restraint of such commerce and the monopolizing or attempting to
monopolize such commerce shall be illegal. These, plainly, are
questions as to the policy of legislation which belong to another
department, and this court has no function to supervise such
legislation from the standpoint of wisdom or policy. We need only
say that Congress has authority to declare, and, by the language of
its act, as interpreted in prior cases, has, in effect declared,
that the freedom of interstate and international commerce shall not
be obstructed or disturbed by any combination, conspiracy or
monopoly that will restrain such commerce, by preventing the free
operation of competition among interstate carriers engaged in the
transportation of passengers and freight. This court cannot
disregard that declaration unless Congress, in passing the statute
in question, be held to have transgressed the limits prescribed for
its action by the Constitution. But, as already indicated, it
cannot be so held consistently with the provisions of that
instrument.
The combination here in question may have been for the pecuniary
benefit of those who formed or caused it to be formed. But the
interests of private persons and corporations cannot be made
paramount to the interests of the general public. Under the
Articles of Confederation, commerce among the original States was
subject to vexatious and local regulations that took no account of
the general welfare. But it was for the protection of the general
interests, as involved in interstate and international commerce,
that Congress, representing the whole country, was given by the
Constitution full power to regulate commerce among the States and
with foreign
Page 193 U. S. 353
nations. In
Brown v.
Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419,
25 U. S. 446,
it was said:
"Those who felt the injury arising from this state of things,
and those who were capable of estimating the influence of commerce
on the prosperity of nations, perceived the necessity of giving the
control over this important subject to a single government. It may
be doubted whether any of the evils proceeding from the feebleness
of the Federal Government contributed more to that great revolution
which introduced the present system than the deep and general
conviction that commerce ought to be regulated by Congress."
Railroad companies, we said in the
Trans-Missouri Freight
Association case, "are instruments of commerce, and their
business is commerce itself." And such companies, it must be
remembered, operate "public highways, established primarily for the
convenience of the people, and therefore are subject to
governmental control and regulation."
Cherokee Nation v. Kansas
Railway Co., 135 U. S. 641 657;
Chicago &c. R.R. Co. v. Pullman Car Co., 139 U. S.
79,
139 U. S. 90;
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Brimson, 154 U.
S. 447,
154 U. S. 475;
United States v. Trans-Missouri Freight Association,
166 U. S. 290,
166 U. S. 332;
Smyth v. Ames, 169 U. S. 466,
169 U. S. 544;
Lake Shore &c. Ry. Co. v. Ohio, 173 U.
S. 285,
173 U. S. 301.
When such carriers, in the exercise of public franchises, engage in
the transportation of passengers and freight among the States, they
become -- even if they be state corporations -- subject to such
rules as Congress may lawfully establish for the conduct of
interstate commerce.
It was said in argument that the circumstances under which the
Northern Securities Company obtained the stock of the constituent
companies imported simply an investment in the stock of other
corporations, a purchase of that stock, which investment or
purchase, it is contended, was not forbidden by the charter of the
company and could not be made illegal by any act of Congress. This
view is wholly fallacious, and does not comport with the actual
transaction. There was no actual investment, in any substantial
sense, by the Northern Securities Company in the stock of the two
constituent companies.
Page 193 U. S. 354
If it was, in form, such a transaction, it was not, in fact, one
of that kind. However that company may have acquired for itself any
stock in the Great Northern and Northern Pacific Railway companies,
no matter how it obtained the means to do so, all the stock it held
or acquired in the constituent companies was acquired and held to
be used in suppressing competition between those companies. It came
into existence only for that purpose. If anyone had full knowledge
of what was designed to be accomplished, and as to what was
actually accomplished, by the combination in question, it was the
defendant Morgan. In his testimony, he was asked, "Why put the
stocks of both these [constituent companies] into one holding
company?" He frankly answered: "In the first place, this holding
company was simply a question of
custodian, because it had
no other alliances." That disclosed the actual nature of the
transaction, which was only to organize the Northern Securities
Company as a
holding company, in whose hands, not as a
real purchaser or absolute owner, but simply as custodian, were to
be placed the stocks of the constituent companies -- such custodian
to represent the combination formed between the shareholders of the
constituent companies, the direct and necessary effect of such
combination being, as already indicated, to restrain and monopolize
interstate commerce by suppressing or (to use the words of this
court in
United States v. Joint Traffic Association)
"smothering" competition between the lines of two railway
carriers.
We will now inquire as to the nature and extent of the relief
granted to the Government by the decree below.
By the decree in the Circuit Court, it was found and adjudged
that the defendants had entered into a combination or conspiracy in
restraint of trade or commerce among the several States such as the
act of Congress denounced as illegal, and that all of the stocks of
the Northern Pacific Railway Company and all the stock of the Great
Northern Railway Company, claimed to be owned and held by the
Northern Securities Company, was acquired, and is by it held, in
virtue of such combination
Page 193 U. S. 355
or conspiracy, in restraint of trade and commerce among the
several States. It was therefore decreed as follows:
"That the Northern Securities Company, its officers, agents,
servants and employees, be and they are hereby enjoined from
acquiring, or attempting to acquire, further stock of either of the
aforesaid railway companies; that the Northern Securities Company
be enjoined from voting the aforesaid stock which it now holds or
may acquire, and from attempting to vote it, at any meeting of the
stockholders of either of the aforesaid railway companies and from
exercising or attempting to exercise any control, direction,
supervision or influence whatsoever over the acts and doings of
said railway companies, or either of them, by virtue of its holding
such stock therein; that the Northern Pacific Railway Company and
the Great Northern Railway Company, their officers, directors,
servants and agents, be and they are hereby respectively and
collectively enjoined from permitting the stock aforesaid to be
voted by the Northern Securities Company, or in its behalf, by its
attorneys or agents, at any corporate election for directors or
officers of either of the aforesaid railway companies; that they,
together with their officers, directors, servants and agents, be
likewise enjoined and respectively restrained from paying any
dividends to the Northern Securities Company on account of stock in
either of the aforesaid railway companies which it now claims to
own and hold, and that the aforesaid railway companies, their
officers, directors, servants and agents be enjoined from
permitting or suffering the Northern Securities Company or any of
its officers or agents, as such officers or agents, to exercise any
control whatsoever over the corporate acts of either of the
aforesaid railway companies. But nothing herein contained shall be
construed as prohibiting the Northern Securities Company from
returning and transferring to the Northern Pacific Railway Company
and the Great Northern Railway Company, respectively, any and all
shares of stock in either of said railway companies which said, The
Northern Securities Company, may have heretofore received from such
stockholders
Page 193 U. S. 356
in exchange for its own stock, and nothing herein contained
shall be construed as prohibiting the Northern Securities Company
from making such transfer and assignments of the stock aforesaid to
such person or persons as may now be the holders and owners of its
own stock originally issued in exchange or in payment for the stock
claimed to have been acquired by it in the aforesaid railway
companies."
Subsequently, and before the appeal to this court was perfected,
an order was made in the Circuit Court to this effect:
"That, upon the giving of an approved bond to the United States
by or on behalf of the defendants in the sum of fifty thousand
dollars conditioned to prosecute their appeal with effect and to
pay all damages which may result to the United States from this
order, that portion of the injunction contained in the final decree
herein which forbids the Northern Pacific Railway Company and the
Great Northern Railway Company, their officers, directors, servants
and agents, from paying dividends to the Northern Securities
Company on account of stock in either of the railway companies
which the Securities Company claims to own and hold is suspended
during the pendency of the appeal allowed herein this day. All
other portions of the decree and of the injunction it contains
remain in force and are unaffected by this order."
No valid objection can be made to the decree below, in form or
in substance. If there was a combination or conspiracy in violation
of the act of Congress, between the stockholders of the Great
Northern and the Northern Pacific Railway companies, whereby the
Northern Securities Company was formed as a holding corporation,
and whereby interstate commerce over the lines of the constituent
companies was restrained, it must follow that the court, in
execution of that act, and to defeat the efforts to evade it, could
prohibit the parties to the combination from doing the specific
things which, being done, would affect the result denounced by the
act. To say that the court could not go so far is to say that it is
powerless to enforce the act or to suppress the illegal
combination, and powerless
Page 193 U. S. 357
to protect the rights of the public as against that
combination.
It is here suggested that the alleged combination had
accomplished its object before the commencement of this suit, in
that the Securities Company had then organized, and had actually
received a majority of the stock of the two constituent companies;
therefore, it is argued, no effective relief can now be granted to
the Government. This same view was pressed upon the Circuit Court,
and was rejected. It was completely answered by that court when it
said:
"Concerning the second contention, we observe that it would be a
novel, not to say absurd, interpretation of the Anti-Trust Act to
hold that, after an unlawful combination is formed and has acquired
the power which it had no right to acquire, namely, to restrain
commerce by suppressing competition, and is proceeding to use it
and execute the purpose for which the combination was formed, it
must be left in possession of the power that it has acquired, with
full freedom to exercise it. Obviously the act, when fairly
interpreted, will bear no such construction. Congress aimed to
destroy the power to place any direct restraint on interstate trade
or commerce when, by any combination or conspiracy, formed by
either natural or artificial persons, such a power had been
acquired, and the Government may intervene and demand relief as
well after the combination is fully organized as while it is in
process of formation. In this instance, as we have already said,
the Securities Company made itself a party to a combination in
restraint of interstate commerce that antedated its organization,
as soon as it came into existence, doing so, of course, under the
direction of the very individuals who promoted it."
The Circuit Court has done only what the actual situation
demanded. Its decree has done nothing more than to meet the
requirements of the statute. It could not have done less without
declaring its impotency in dealing with those who have violated the
law. The decree, if executed, will destroy not the property
interests of the original stockholders of the constituent
companies, but
Page 193 U. S. 358
the power of the holding corporation as the instrument of an
illegal combination of which it was the master spirit to do that
which, if done, would restrain interstate and international
commerce. The exercise of that power being restrained, the object
of Congress will be accomplished; left undisturbed, the act in
question will be valueless for any practical purpose.
It is said that this statute contains criminal provisions, and
must therefore be strictly construed. The rule upon that subject is
a very ancient and salutary one. It means only that we must not
bring cases within the provisions of such a statute that are not
clearly embraced by it, nor, by narrow, technical or forced
construction of words, exclude cases from it that are obviously
within its provisions. What must be sought for always is the
intention of the legislature, and the duty of the court is to give
effect to that intention as disclosed by the words used.
As early as the case of
King v. Inhabitants of Hodnett,
1 T.R. 96, 101, Mr. Justice Buller said: "It is not true that the
courts, in the exposition of penal statutes, are to narrow the
construction." In
United States v.
Wiltberger, 5 Wheat. 76,
18 U. S. 95,
Chief Justice Marshall, delivering the judgment of this court and
referring to the rule that penal statutes are to be construed
strictly, said:
"It is a modification of the ancient maxim, and amounts to this,
that though penal laws are to be construed strictly, they are not
to be construed so strictly as to defeat the obvious intention of
the legislature. The maxim is not to be so applied as to narrow the
words of the statute to the exclusion of cases which those words,
in their ordinary acceptation, or in that sense in which the
legislature has obviously used them, would comprehend. The
intention of the legislature is to be collected from the words they
employ. Where there is no ambiguity in the words, there is no room
for construction."
In
United States v.
Morris, 14 Pet. 464,
39 U. S. 475,
this court, speaking by Chief Justice Taney, said:
"In expounding a penal statute, the court certainly will not
extend it beyond
Page 193 U. S. 359
the plain meaning of its words, for it has been long and well
settled that such statutes must be construed strictly. Yet the
evident intention of the legislature ought not to be defeated by a
forced and overstrict construction. 5 Wheat.
18 U. S.
95."
So, in
The Schooner Industry, 1 Gall. 114, 117, Mr.
Justice Story said:
"We are undoubtedly bound to construe penal statutes strictly,
and not to extend them beyond their obvious meaning by strained
inferences. On the other hand, we are bound to interpret them
according to the manifest import of the words, and to hold all
cases which are within the words and the mischiefs to be within the
remedial influence of the statute."
In another case, the same eminent jurist said:
"I agree to that rule in its true use and sober sense, and that
is that penal statutes are not to be enlarged by implication or
extended to cases not obviously within their words and purport. . .
. In short, it appears to me that the proper course in all these
cases is to search out and follow the true intent of the
legislature, and to adopt that sense of the words which harmonizes
the best with the context, and promotes in the fullest manner the
apparent policy and objects of the legislature."
United States v. Winn, 3 Sumner 209, 11, 212. In
People v. Bartow, 6 Cowen 290, the highest court of New
York said:
"Although a penal statute is to be construed strictly, the court
are not to disregard the plain intent of the legislature. Among
other things, it is well settled that a statute which is made for
the good of the public ought, although it be penal, to receive an
equitable construction."
So, in
Commonwealth v. Martin, 17 Massachusetts 359,
362, the highest court of Massachusetts said:
"If a statute, creating or increasing a penalty, be capable of
two constructions, undoubtedly that construction which operates in
favor of life or liberty is to be adopted; but it is not
justifiable in this, any more than in any other case, to imagine
ambiguities, merely that a lenient construction may be adopted. If
such were the privilege of a court, it would be easy to obstruct
the public will in almost every statute enacted; for it rarely
happens that one is so precise and exact in its terms, as to
Page 193 U. S. 360
preclude the exercise of ingenuity in raising doubts about its
construction."
There are cases almost without number in this country and in
England to the same effect.
Guided by these long-established rules of construction, it is
manifest that, if the Anti-Trust Act is held not to embrace a case
such as is now before us, the plain intention of the legislative
branch of the Government will be defeated. If Congress has not, by
the words used in the act, described this and like cases, it would,
we apprehend, be impossible to find words that would describe them.
This, it must be remembered, is a suit in equity, instituted by
authority of Congress " to prevent and restrain violations of the
act," § 4, and the court, in virtue of a well settled rule
governing proceedings in equity, may mould its decree so as to
accomplish practical results -- such results as law and justice
demand. The defendants have no just cause to complain of the
decree, in matter of law, and it should be affirmed.
The judgment of the court is that the decree below be and hereby
is affirmed, with liberty to the Circuit Court to proceed in the
execution of its decree as the circumstances may require.
Affirmed.
* Mr. Justice HARLAN announced the affirmance of the decree of
the Circuit Court and delivered an opinion in which BROWN, McKENNA
and DAY, JJ., concurred. Mr. Justice BREWER delivered a separate
opinion in which he concurred in affirming the decree of the
Circuit Court.
Mr. Justice WHITE delivered a dissenting opinion in which the
CHIEF JUSTICE and PECKHAM and HOLMES, JJ., concurred; Mr. Justice
HOLMES delivered a dissenting opinion in which the CHIEF JUSTICE
and WHITE and PECKHAM, JJ., concurred.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER, concurring.
I cannot assent to all that is said in the opinion just
announced, and believe that the importance of the case and the
questions involved justify a brief statement of my views.
First, let me say that, while I was with the majority of the
court in the decision in
United States v. Freight
Association, 166 U. S. 290,
followed by the cases of
United States v. Joint Traffic
Association, 171 U. S. 505,
Addyston Pipe & Steel Company v. United States,
175 U. S. 211, and
Montague & Co. v. Lowry, 193 U. S.
38, decided at the present term, and while a further
examination (which has been induced by the able and exhaustive
arguments of counsel in the present case) has not disturbed the
conviction that those cases were rightly decided,
Page 193 U. S. 361
I think that, in some respects, the reasons given for the
judgments cannot be sustained. Instead of holding that the
Anti-Trust Act included all contracts, reasonable or unreasonable,
in restraint of interstate trade, the ruling should have been that
the contracts there presented were unreasonable restraints of
interstate trade, and as such within the scope of the act. That
act, as appears from its title, was leveled at only "unlawful
restraints and monopolies." Congress did not intend to reach and
destroy those minor contracts in partial restraint of trade which
the long course of decisions at common law had affirmed were
reasonable, and ought to be upheld. The purpose, rather, was to
place a statutory prohibition with prescribed penalties and
remedies upon those contracts which were in direct restraint of
trade, unreasonable and against public policy. Whenever a departure
from common law rules and definitions is claimed, the purpose to
make the departure should be clearly shown. Such a purpose does not
appear, and such a departure was not intended.
Further, the general language of the act is also limited by the
power which each individual has to manage his own property and
determine the place and manner of its investment. Freedom of action
in these respects is among the inalienable rights of every citizen.
If, applying this thought to the present case, it appeared that Mr.
Hill was the owner of a majority of the stock in the Great Northern
Railway Company, he could not, by any act of Congress, be deprived
of the right of investing his surplus means in the purchase of
stock of the Northern Pacific Railway Company, although such
purchase might tend to vest in him through that ownership a control
over both companies. In other words, the right, which all other
citizens had, of purchasing Northern Pacific stock could not be
denied to him by Congress because of his ownership of stock in the
Great Northern Company. Such was the ruling in
Pearsall v.
Great Northern Railway, 161 U. S. 646, in
which this court said (p.
161 U. S.
671), in reference to the right of the stockholders of
the Great Northern Company to purchase the stock of the
Page 193 U. S. 362
Northern Pacific Railway Company:
"Doubtless these stockholders could lawfully acquire by
individual purchases a majority, or even the whole of the stock of
the reorganized company, and thus possibly obtain its ultimate
control; but the companies would still remain separate corporations
with no interests, as such, in common."
But no such investment by a single individual of his means is
here presented. There was a combination by several individuals
separately owning stock in two competing railroad companies to
place the control of both in a single corporation. The purpose to
combine, and by combination destroy competition, existed before the
organization of the corporation, the Securities Company. That
corporation, though nominally having a capital stock of
$400,000,000, had no means of its own; $30,000 in cash was put into
its treasury, but simply for the expenses of organization. The
organizers might just as well have made the nominal stock a
thousand millions as four hundred, and the corporation would have
been no richer or poorer. A corporation, while by fiction of law
recognized for some purposes as a person and for purposes of
jurisdiction as a citizen, is not endowed with the inalienable
rights of a natural person. It is an artificial person, created and
existing only for the convenient transaction of business. In this
case, it was a mere instrumentality by which separate railroad
properties were combined under one control. That combination is as
direct a restraint of trade by destroying competition as the
appointment of a committee to regulate rates. The prohibition of
such a combination is not at all inconsistent with the right of an
individual to purchase stock. The transfer of stock to the
Securities Company was a mere incident, the manner in which the
combination to destroy competition and thus unlawfully restrain
trade was carried out.
If the parties interested in these two railroad companies can,
through the instrumentality of a holding corporation, place both
under one control, then in like manner, as was conceded on the
argument by one of the counsel for the appellants, could
Page 193 U. S. 363
the control of all the railroad companies in the country be
placed in a single corporation. Nor need this arrangement for
control stop with what has already been done. The holders of
$201,000,000 of stock in the Northern Securities Company might
organize another corporation to hold their stock in that company,
and the new corporation, holding the majority of the stock in the
Northern Securities Company and acting in obedience to the wishes
of a majority of its stockholders, would control the action of the
Securities Company and through it the action of the two railroad
companies, and this process might be extended until a single
corporation whose stock was owned by three or four parties would be
in practical control of both roads, or, having before us the
possibilities of combination, the control of the whole
transportation system of the country. I cannot believe that to be a
reasonable or lawful restraint of trade.
Again, there is by this suit no interference with state control.
It is a recognition, rather than a disregard, of its action. This
merging of control and destruction of competition was not
authorized, but specifically prohibited, by the State which created
one of the railroad companies, and within whose boundaries the
lines of both were largely located and much of their business
transacted. The purpose and policy of the State are therefore
enforced by the decree. So far as the work of the two railroad
companies was interstate commerce, it was subject to the control of
Congress, and its purpose and policy were expressed in the act
under which this suit was brought.
It must also be remembered that, under present conditions, a
single railroad is, if not a legal, largely a practical, monopoly,
and the arrangement by which the control of these two competing
roads was merged in a single corporation broadens and extends such
monopoly. I cannot look upon it as other than in unreasonable
combination in restraint of interstate commerce -- one in conflict
with state law and within the letter and spirit of the statute and
the power of Congress. Therefore I concur in the judgment of
affirmance.
Page 193 U. S. 364
I have felt constrained to make these observations for fear that
the broad and sweeping language of the opinion of the court might
tend to unsettle legitimate business enterprises, stifle or retard
wholesome business activities, encourage improper disregard of
reasonable contracts and invite unnecessary litigation.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, with whom concurred MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER,
MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM, and MR. JUSTICE HOLMES, dissenting.
The Northern Securities Company is a New Jersey corporation; the
Great Northern Railway Company, a Minnesota one, and the Northern
Pacific Railway Company, a Wisconsin corporation. Whilst, in the
argument at bar, the Government referred to the subject,
nevertheless it expressly disclaimed predicating any claim for
relief upon the fact that the predecessor in title of the Northern
Pacific Railway Company was a corporation created by act of
Congress. That fact, therefore, may be eliminated.
The facts essential to be borne in mind to understand my point
of view, without going into details, are as follows: the lines of
the Northern Pacific and the Great Northern Railway companies are
both transcontinental, that is, trunk lines to the Pacific Ocean,
and in some aspects are conceded to be competing. Mr. Morgan and
Mr. Hill and a few persons immediately associated with them
separately acquired and owned capital stock of the Northern Pacific
Railway Company, aggregating a majority thereof. Mr. Hill and
others associated with him owned, in the same manner, about
one-third of the capital stock of the Great Northern Railway
Company, the balance of the stock being distributed among about
eighteen hundred stockholders. Although Mr. Hill and his immediate
associates owned only one-third of the stock, the confidence
reposed in Mr. Hill was such that, through proxies, his influence
was dominant in the affairs of that company.
Page 193 U. S. 365
Under these circumstances, Mr. Morgan and Mr. Hill organized
under the laws of New Jersey the Northern Securities Company. The
purpose was that the company should become the holder of the stock
of the two railroads. This was to be effected by having the
Northern Securities Company give its stock in exchange for that of
the two railroad companies. Whilst the purpose of the promoters was
mainly to exchange the stock held by them in the two railroads for
the Northern Securities Company stock, nevertheless the right of
stockholders generally in the two railroads to make a similar
exchange or to sell their stock to the Securities Company was
provided for. Under the arrangement, the Northern Securities
Company came to be the registered holder of a majority of the stock
of both the railroads. It is not denied that the charter, and the
acts done under it, of the Northern Securities Company, were
authorized by the laws of New Jersey, and, therefore, insofar as
those laws were competent to sanction the transaction, the
corporation held the stock in the two railroads secured by the law
of the State of its domicil.
The government, by its bill, challenges the right of the
Northern Securities Company to hold and own the stock in the two
railroads. The grounds upon which the relief sought was based were,
generally speaking, as follows: that, as the two railroads were
competing lines engaged in part in interstate commerce, the
creation of the Northern Securities Company and the acquisition by
it of a majority of the stock of both roads was contrary to the act
of Congress known as the Anti-Trust Act. 26 Stat. 209. The clauses
of the act which it was charged were violated were the first
section, declaring illegal
"every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise,
or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce among the several
States, or with foreign nations"
and the provisions of the second section making it a misdemeanor
for any person to
"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
Page 193 U. S. 366
States or with foreign nations."
The court below sustained the contentions of the government. It
therefore enjoined the two railroad companies from allowing the
Northern Securities Company to vote the stock standing in its name
or to pay to that company any dividends upon the stock by it held.
On the giving, however, of a bond fixed by the court below, the
decree relating to the payment of dividends was suspended pending
the appeal to this court.
The court recognized, however, the right of the Northern
Securities Company to retransfer the stock in both railroads to the
persons from whom it had been acquired. The correctness of the
decree below is the question presented for decision.
Two questions arise. Does the Anti-Trust Act, when rightly
interpreted, apply to the acquisition and ownership by the Northern
Securities Company of the stock in the two railroads, and, second,
if it does, had Congress the power to regulate or control such
acquisition and ownership? As the question of power lies at the
root of the case, I come at once to consider that subject. Before
doing so, however, in order to avoid being misled by false or
irrelevant issues, it is essential to briefly consider two
questions of fact. It is said, first, that the mere exchange by the
Northern Securities Company of its stock for stock in the railroads
did not make the Northern Securities Company the real owner of the
stock in the railroads, since the effect of the transaction was to
cause the Securities Company to become merely the custodian or
trustee of the stock in the railroads; second, that as the two
railroads were both overcapitalized, stock in them furnished no
sufficient consideration for the issue of the stock of the Northern
Securities Company. It would suffice to point out,
a, that
the proof shows that nearly nine million dollars were paid by the
Securities Company for a portion of the stock acquired by it, and
that, moreover, nearly thirty-five million dollars were expended by
the Securities Company in the purchase of bonds of the Northern
Pacific Company, which have been converted by the Securities
Company into the stock of that railroad,
Page 193 U. S. 367
which the Securities Company now holds; and,
b, that
the market value of the railroad stocks is, moreover, indisputably
shown by the proof to have been equal to the value fixed on them
for the purpose of the exchange or purchase of such stock by the
Northern Securities Company. Be this as it may, it is manifest that
these considerations can have no possible influence on the question
of the power of Congress in the premises, and therefore the
suggestions can serve only to obscure the controversy. If the power
was in Congress to legislate on the subject, it becomes wholly
immaterial what was the nature of the consideration paid by the
company for the stock by it acquired and held if such acquisition
and ownership, even if real, violated the act of Congress. If on
the contrary the authority of Congress could not embrace the right
of the Northern Securities Company to acquire and own the stock,
the question of what consideration the Northern Securities Company
paid for the stock or the method by which it was transferred must
necessarily be beyond the scope of the act of Congress.
In testing the power of Congress, I shall proceed upon the
assumption that the act of Congress forbids the acquisition of a
majority of the stock of two competing railroads engaged in part in
interstate commerce by a corporation or any combination of
persons.
The authority of Congress, it is conceded by all, must rest upon
the power delegated by the eighth section of the first article of
the Constitution, "to regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and
among the several States and with the Indian tribes." The
proposition upon which the case for the government depends, then,
is that the ownership of stock in railroad corporations created by
a State is interstate commerce, wherever the railroads engage in
interstate commerce
At the outset, the absolute correctness is admitted of the
declaration of Mr. Chief Justice Marshall in
Gibbons v.
Ogden that the power of Congress to regulate commerce among
the
Page 193 U. S. 368
States and with foreign nations
"is complete, in itself, and may be exercised to its utmost
extent, and acknowledges no limitations other than are prescribed
in the Constitution;"
and that, if the end to be accomplished is within the scope of
the Constitution, "all means which are appropriate, which are
plainly adapted to that end, and which are not prohibited are
constitutional."
The plenary authority of Congress over interstate commerce, its
right to regulate it to the fullest extent, to fix the rates to be
charged for the movement of interstate commerce, to legislate
concerning the ways and vehicles actually engaged in such traffic,
and to exert any and every other power over such commerce which
flows from the authority conferred by the Constitution, is thus
conceded. But the concessions thus made do not concern the question
in this case, which is not the scope of the power of Congress to
regulate commerce, but whether the power extends to regulate the
ownership of stock in railroads, which is not commerce at all. The
confusion which results from failing to observe this distinction
will appear from an accurate analysis of
Gibbons v. Ogden,
for, in that case, the great Chief Justice was careful to define
the commerce, the power to regulate which was conferred upon
Congress, and, in the passages which I have previously quoted,
simply pointed out the rule by which it was to be determined in any
case whether Congress, in acting upon the subject, had gone beyond
the limits of the power to regulate commerce as it was defined in
the opinion. Accepting the test announced in
Gibbons v.
Ogden for determining whether a given exercise of the power to
regulate commerce has, in effect, transcended the limits of
regulation, it is essential to accept also the luminous definition
of commerce announced in that case and approved so many times
since, and hence to test the question for decision by that
definition. The definition is this:
"Commerce undoubtedly is traffic, but it is something more, it
is intercourse. It describes the commercial intercourse between
nations and parts of nations in all its branches,
and is
regulated
Page 193 U. S. 369
by prescribing rules for carrying on that
intercourse."
(Italics mine.)
Does the delegation of authority to Congress to regulate
commerce among the States embrace the power to regulate the
ownership of stock in state corporations because such corporations
may be in part engaged in interstate commerce? Certainly not, if
such question is to be governed by the definition of commerce just
quoted from
Gibbons v. Ogden. Let me analyze the
definition. "Commerce undoubtedly is traffic, but it is something
more, it is intercourse;" that is, traffic between the States and
intercourse between the States. I think the ownership of stock in a
state corporation cannot be said to be in any sense traffic between
the States or intercourse between them. The definition continues:
"It describes the commercial intercourse between nations and parts
of nations." Can the ownership of stock in a state corporation, by
the most latitudinarian construction, be embraced by the words
"commercial intercourse between nations and parts of nations?" And
to remove all doubt, the definition points out the meaning of the
delegation of power to regulate, since it says that it is to be
"regulated by prescribing rules for carrying on that intercourse."
Can it in reason be maintained that to prescribe rules governing
the ownership of stock within a State in a corporation created by
it is within the power to prescribe rules for the regulation of
intercourse between citizens of different States?
But if the question be looked at with reference to the powers of
the Federal and state governments, the general nature of the one
and the local character of the other, which it was the purpose of
the Constitution to create and perpetuate, it seems to me evident
that the contention that the authority of the National Government
under the commerce clause gives the right to Congress to regulate
the ownership of stock in railroads chartered by state authority is
absolutely destructive of the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution,
which provides that
"the powers not delegated to the United States by the
Constitution,
Page 193 U. S. 370
nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States
respectively or to the people."
This must follow since the authority of Congress to regulate on
the subject can, in reason, alone rest upon the proposition that
its power over commerce embraces the right to control the ownership
of railroads doing in part an interstate commerce business. But
power to control the ownership of all such railroads would
necessarily embrace their organization. Hence, it would result that
it would be in the power of Congress to abrogate every such
railroad charter granted by the States from the beginning if
Congress deemed that the rights conferred by such state charters
tended to restrain commerce between the States or to create a
monopoly concerning the same.
Besides, if the principle be acceded to, it must in reason be
held to embrace every consolidation of state railroads which may do
in part an interstate commerce business, even although such
consolidation may have been expressly authorized by the laws of the
States creating the corporations.
It would likewise overthrow every state law forbidding such
consolidations, for if the ownership of stock in state corporations
be within the regulating power of Congress under the commerce
clause and can be prohibited by Congress, it would be within the
power of that body to permit that which it had the right to
prohibit.
But the principle that the ownership of property is embraced
within the power of Congress to regulate commerce, whenever that
body deems that a particular character of ownership, if allowed to
continue, may restrain commerce between the States or create a
monopoly thereof, is, in my opinion, in conflict with the most
elementary conceptions of rights of property. For it would follow
if Congress deemed that the acquisition by one or more individuals
engaged in interstate commerce of more than a certain amount of
property would be prejudicial to interstate commerce, the amount of
property held or the amount which could be employed in interstate
commerce could be regulated.
Page 193 U. S. 371
In the argument at bar, many of the consequences above indicated
as necessarily resulting from the contention made were frankly
admitted, since it was conceded that, even although the holding of
the stock in the two railroads by the Northern Securities Company
which is here assailed was expressly authorized by the laws of both
the States by which the railroad corporations were created, as it
was by the law of the State of New Jersey, nevertheless as such
authority, if exerted by the States, would be a regulation of
interstate commerce, it would be repugnant to the Constitution as
an attempt on the part of the States to interfere with the
paramount authority of Congress on that subject. True, this
assertion, made in the oral argument, in the printed argument is
qualified by an intimation that the rule would not apply to state
action taken before the adoption of the Anti-Trust Act, since up to
that time, in consequence of the inaction of Congress on the
subject, the States were free to legislate as they pleased
regarding the matter. But this suggestion is without foundation to
rest on. It has long since been determined by this court that,
where a particular subject matter is national in its character and
requires uniform regulation, the absence of legislation by Congress
on the subject indicates the will of Congress that the subject
should be free from state control.
County of Mobile v.
Kimball, 102 U. S. 691;
Robbins v. Shelby Taxing District, 123
U. S. 489,
123 U. S. 493;
United States v. E. C. Knight Company, 156 U. S.
1.
It is said, moreover, that the decision of this case does not
involve the consequences above pointed out, since the only issue in
this case is the right of the Northern Securities Company to
acquire and own the stock. The right of that company to do so, it
is argued, is one thing; the power of individuals or corporations,
when not merely organized to hold stock, an entirely different
thing. My mind fails to seize the distinction. The only premise by
which the power of Congress can be extended to the subject matter
of the right of the Securities Company to own the stock must be the
proposition that such
Page 193 U. S. 372
ownership is within the legislative power of Congress, and if
that proposition be admitted, it is not perceived by what process
of reasoning the power of Congress over the subject matter of
ownership is to be limited to ownership by particular classes of
corporations or persons. If the power embraces ownership, then the
authority of Congress over all ownership which in its judgment may
affect interstate commerce necessarily exists. In other words, the
logical result of the asserted distinction amounts to one of two
things. Either that nothing is decided or that a decree is to be
entered having no foundation upon which to rest. This is said
because if the control of the ownership of stock in competing roads
by one and the same corporation is within the power of Congress,
and creates a restraint of traffic or monopoly forbidden by
Congress, it is not conceivable to me how exactly similar ownership
by one or more individuals would not create the same restraint or
monopoly, and be equally within the prohibition which it is decided
Congress has imposed. Besides the incongruity of the conclusion
resulting from the alleged distinction, to admit it would do
violence to both the letter and spirit of the Constitution, since
it would, in effect, hold that, although a particular act was a
burden upon interstate commerce or a monopoly thereof, individuals
could lawfully do the act provided only they did not use the
instrumentality of a corporation. But this court long since
declared that the power to regulate commerce, conferred upon
Congress, was "general, and includes alike commerce by individuals,
partnerships, associations and corporations."
Paul v.
Virginia, 8 Wall. 168,
75 U. S.
183.
Indeed, the natural reluctance of the mind to follow an
erroneous principle to its necessary conclusion, and thus to give
effect to a grievous wrong arising from the erroneous principle, is
an admonition that the principle itself is wrong. That admonition,
I submit, is conclusively afforded by the decree which is now
affirmed. Without stopping to point out what seems to me to be the
confusion, contradiction and denial of rights of property which the
decree exemplifies, let me see
Page 193 U. S. 373
if, in effect, it is not at war with itself and in conflict with
the principle upon which it is assumed to be based.
Fundamentally considered, the evil sought to be remedied is the
restraint of interstate commerce and the monopoly thereof alleged
to have been brought about through the acquisition by Mr. Morgan
and Mr. Hill and their friends and associates of a controlling
interest in the stock of both the roads. And yet the decree, whilst
forbidding the use of the stock by the Northern Securities Company,
authorizes its return to the alleged conspirators, and does not
restrain them from exercising the control resulting from the
ownership. If the conspiracy and combination existed and was
illegal, my mind fails to perceive why it should be left to produce
its full force and effect in the hands of the individuals by whom
it was charged the conspiracy was entered into.
It may, however, be said that, even if the results which I have
indicated be held necessarily to arise from the principles
contended for by the government, it does not follow that such power
would ever be exerted by Congress, or, if exerted, would be
enforced to the detriment of charters granted by the States to
railroads or consolidations thereof, effected under state
authority, or the ownership of stock in such railroads by
individuals, or the rights of individuals to acquire property by
purchase, lease or otherwise, and to make any and all contracts
concerning property which may thereafter become the subject matter
of interstate commerce. The first suggestion is at once met by the
consideration that it has been decided by this court that, as the
Anti-Trust Act forbids any restraint, it therefore embraces even
reasonable contracts or agreements. If, then, the ownership of the
stock of the two railroads by the Northern Securities Company is
repugnant to the act, it follows that ownership, whether by the
individual or another corporation, would be equally within the
prohibitions of the act. As to the second, true it is that, by the
terms of the Anti-Trust Act, the power to put its provisions in
motion is, as to many particulars, confided to the highest law
officer of the government,
Page 193 U. S. 374
and if that officer did not invoke the aid of the courts to
restrain the rights of the railroads previously chartered by the
States to enjoy the benefits conferred upon them by state
legislation, or to prevent individuals from exercising their right
of ownership and contract, the law in these respects would remain a
dead letter. But to indulge in this assumption would be but to say
that the law would not be enforced by the highest law officer of
the government, a conclusion which, of course, could not be
indulged in for a moment. In any view, such suggestion but involves
the proposition that vast rights of property, instead of resting
upon constitutional and legal sanction, must alone depend upon
whether an executive officer might elect to enforce the law -- a
conclusion repugnant to every principle of liberty and justice.
Having thus by the light of reason sought to show the
unsoundness of the proposition that the power of Congress to
regulate commerce extends to controlling the acquisition and
ownership of stock in state corporations, railroad or otherwise,
because they may be doing an interstate commerce business, or to
the consolidation of such companies under the sanction of state
legislation, or to the right of the citizen to enjoy his freedom of
contract and ownership, let me now endeavor to show, by a review of
the practices of the governments, both state and national, from the
beginning and the adjudications of this court, how wanting in merit
is the proposition contended for. It may not be doubted that, from
the foundation of the government, at all events to the time of the
adoption of the Anti-Trust Act of 1890, there was an entire absence
of any legislation by Congress even suggesting that it was deemed
by anyone that power was possessed by Congress to control the
ownership of stock in railroad or other corporations, because such
corporations engaged in interstate commerce. On the contrary, when
Congress came to exert its authority to regulate interstate
commerce as carried on by railroads, manifested by the adoption of
the interstate commerce act, 24 Stat. 379, it sedulously confined
the provisions of that act to the
Page 193 U. S. 375
carrying on of interstate commerce itself, including the
reasonableness of the rates to be charged for carrying on such
commerce and other matters undeniably concerning the fact of
interstate commerce. The same conception was manifested
subsequently in legislation concerning safety appliances to be used
by railroads, since the provisions of the act were confined to such
appliances when actually employed in the business of interstate
commerce. 27 Stat. 531. It also may not be doubted that, from the
beginning, the various States of the Union have treated the
incorporation and organization of railroad companies and the
ownership of stock therein as matters within their exclusive
authority. Under this conception of power in the States,
universally prevailing and always acted upon, the entire railroad
system of the United States has been built up. Charters, leases and
consolidations under the sanction of state laws lie at the basis of
that enormous sum of property and those vast interests represented
by the railroads of the United States. Extracts from the reports of
the Interstate Commerce Commission and from a standard authority on
the subject, which were received in evidence, demonstrate that, in
effect, nearly every great railroad system in the United States is
the result of the consolidation and unification of various roads,
often competitive, such consolidation or unification of management
having been brought about in every conceivable form, sometimes by
lease under state authority, sometimes by such leases made where
there was no prohibition against them, and by stock acquisitions
made by persons or corporations in order to acquire a controlling
interest in both roads. Without stopping to recite details on the
subject, I content myself with merely mentioning a few of the
instances where great systems of railroad have been formed by the
unification of the management of competitive roads, by
consolidation or otherwise, often by statutory authority. These
instances embrace the Boston and Maine system, the New York, New
Haven and Hartford, the New York Central, the Reading, and the
Pennsylvania systems.
Page 193 U. S. 376
One of the illustrations -- as to the New York Central system --
is the case of the Hudson River Railroad on one side of the Hudson
River and the West Shore Railroad on the other, both parallel roads
and directly competitive, and both united in one management by
authority of a legislative act. It is indeed remarkable, if the
whole subject was within the paramount power of Congress, and not
within the authority of the States, that there should have been a
universal understanding to the contrary from the beginning. When it
is borne in mind that such universal action related to interests of
the most vital character, involving property of enormous amount
concerning the welfare of the whole people, it is impossible in
reason to deny the soundness of the assumption that it was the
universal conviction that the States, and not Congress, had control
of the subject matter of the organization and ownership of
railroads created by the States. And the same inference is
applicable to the condition of things which has existed since the
adoption of the Anti-Trust Act in 1890. Who can deny that, from
that date to this, consolidations and unification of management, by
means of leases, stock ownership by individuals or corporations,
have been carried on, when not prohibited by state laws, to a vast
extent, and that, during all this time, despite the energy of the
government in invoking the Anti-Trust Law, that no assertion of
power in Congress under that act to control the ownership of stock
was ever knowingly made until first asserted in this cause. Quite
recently, Congress has amended the interstate commerce act by
provisions deemed essential to make its prohibitions more
practically operative, and yet no one of such provisions lends
itself even to the inference that it was deemed by anyone that the
power of Congress extended to the control of stock ownership.
Certainly the States have not so considered it. As a matter of
public history, it is to be observed that not long since, by
authority of the legislature of the State of Massachusetts, a
controlling interest by lease of the Boston and Albany road passed
to the New York Central system.
Page 193 U. S. 377
The decisions of this court, to my mind, leave no room for doubt
on the subject. As I have already shown, the very definition of the
power to regulate commerce, as announced in
Gibbons v.
Ogden, excludes the conception that it extends to stock
ownership. I shall not stop to review a multitude of decisions of
this court concerning interstate commerce, which, whilst upholding
the paramount authority of Congress over that subject, at the same
time treated it as elementary that the effect of the power over
commerce between the States was not to deprive the States of their
right to legislate concerning the ownership of property of every
character or to create railroad corporations and to endow them with
such powers as were deemed appropriate, or to deprive the
individual of his freedom to acquire, own and enjoy property by
descent, contract or otherwise, because railroads or other property
might become the subject of interstate commerce.
In
Paul v.
Virginia, 8 Wall. 168, the question was as to the
power of the State of Virginia to license a foreign insurance
company, and one of the contentions considered was whether the
contract of insurance, since it was related to commerce, was within
the regulating power of Congress, and not of the State of Virginia.
The proposition was disposed of in the following language (p.
75 U. S.
183):
"Issuing a policy of insurance is not a transaction of commerce.
The policies are simply contracts of indemnity against loss by
fire, entered into between the corporations and the assured, for a
consideration paid by the latter. These contracts are not articles
of commerce in any proper meaning of the word. They are not
subjects of trade and barter offered in the market as something
having an existence and value independent of the parties to them.
They are not commodities to be shipped or forwarded from one State
to another, and then put up for sale. They are like other personal
contracts between parties which are completed by their signature
and the transfer of the consideration. Such contracts are not
interstate transactions, though the parties may be domiciled
Page 193 U. S. 378
in different States. The policies do not take effect -- are not
executed contracts -- until delivered by the agent in Virginia.
They are, then, local transactions, and are governed by the local
law. T hey do not constitute a part of the commerce between the
States any more than a contract for the purchase and sale of goods
in Virginia by a citizen of New York whilst in Virginia would
constitute a portion of such commerce."
In other words, the court plainly pointed out the distinction
between interstate commerce as such and the contracts concerning,
or the ownership of property which might become the subjects of,
interstate commerce. And the authority of
Paul v. Virginia
has been repeatedly approved in subsequent cases, which are so
familiar as not to require citation.
In
Railroad Co. v.
Maryland, 21 Wall. 456, the question was this: the
State of Maryland had chartered the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad
Company, and in the charter had imposed upon it the duty of paying
to the State a certain proportion of all its receipts from freight,
which applied as well to interstate as domestic freight. The
argument was that these provisions were repugnant to the commerce
clause because they necessarily increased the sum which the
railroad would have to charge, and thereby constituted a regulation
of commerce. The court held the law not to be repugnant to the
Constitution, and, in the course of the opinion, said (p.
88 U. S.
473):
"In view, however, of the very plenary powers which a State has
always been conceded to have over its own territory, its highways,
its franchises and its corporations, we cannot regard the
stipulation in question as amounting to either of these
unconstitutional acts."
True it is that some of the expressions used in the opinion in
the case just cited, giving rise to the inference that there was
power in the State to regulate the rates of freight on interstate
commerce, may be considered as having been overruled by
Wabash
Railroad Company v. Illinois, 118 U.
S. 557. But that case also in the fullest manner pointed
out the fact that the power to regulate commerce, conferred on
Congress by the
Page 193 U. S. 379
Constitution, related not to the mere ownership of property or
to contracts concerning property, because such property might
subsequently be used in interstate commerce or become the subject
of it. For instance, the definition given of interstate commerce in
Gibbons v. Ogden, previously referred to, was reiterated
and, in addition, the definition expounded in
County of Mobile
v. Kimball, 102 U. S. 691, was
approvingly quoted. That definition was as follows (p.
118 U. S.
574):
"'Commerce with foreign countries and among the States, strictly
construed, consists in intercourse and traffic, including in these
terms navigation and the transportation and transit of persons and
property, as well as the purchase, sale and exchange of
commodities. For the regulation of commerce, as thus defined, there
can be only one system of rules, applicable alike to the whole
country, and the authority which can act for the whole country can
alone adopt such a system. Action upon it by separate States is
not, therefore, permissible. Language affirming the exclusiveness
of the grant of power over commerce
as thus defined may not be
inaccurate, when it would be so if applied to legislation upon
subjects which are merely auxiliary to commerce.'"
In
Ashley v. Ryan, 153 U. S. 436,
this was the question: the property of various railroad
corporations operating in the States of Ohio, Michigan, Indiana,
Illinois and Missouri had been sold under decrees of foreclosure.
The purchasers of the respective lines availed themselves of the
Ohio statutes, and consolidated all the corporations into one so as
to form a single system, the Wabash. On presenting the articles of
consolidation to the Secretary of State of Ohio, that officer
demanded a fee imposed by the Ohio statutes, predicated upon the
sum total of the capital stock of the consolidated company. This
was refused on the ground that the State of Ohio had no right to
make the charge, and that its doing so was repugnant to the
commerce clause of the Constitution of the United States and to the
Fourteenth Amendment. This court decided against this contention.
It held that, as the right to consolidate could
Page 193 U. S. 380
alone arise from the Ohio law, the corporation could not avail
of that law and avoid the condition which the law imposed. Speaking
of the consolidation, the court said (p.
153 U. S.
440):
"The rights thus sought could only be acquired by the grant of
the State of Ohio, and depended for their existence upon the
provisions of its laws. Without that State's consent, they could
not have been procured."
And, after a copious review of the authorities concerning the
power of the State over the consolidation, the case was summed up
by the court in the following passage (p.
153 U. S.
446):
"Considering, as we do, that the payment of the charge was a
condition imposed by the State of Ohio upon the taking of corporate
being or the exercise of corporate franchises,
the right to
which depended solely on the will of that State"
(italics mine),
"and hence that liability for the charge was entirely optional,
we conclude that the exaction constituted no tax upon interstate
commerce, or the right to carry on the same, or the instruments
thereof, and that its enforcement involved no attempt on the part
of the State to extend its taxing power beyond its territorial
limits."
How a right which was thus decided to depend
solely
upon the authority of the States can now be said to depend solely
upon the will of Congress I do not perceive.
In
United States v. E. C. Knight Co., 156 U. S.
1, the facts and the relief based on them were thus
stated by Mr. Chief Justice Fuller, delivering the opinion of the
court (p.
156 U. S. 9):
"By the purchase of the stock of the four Philadelphia
refineries, with shares of its own stock, the American Sugar
Refining Company acquired nearly complete control of the
manufacture of refined sugar within the United States. The bill
charged that the contracts under which these purchases were made
constituted combinations in restraint of trade, and that, in
entering into them, the defendants combined and conspired to
restrain the trade and commerce in refined sugar among the several
States and with foreign nations, contrary to the act of Congress of
July 2, 1890. "
Page 193 U. S. 381
After referring in a general way to what constituted a monopoly
or restraint of trade at common law, the question for decision was
thus stated (p.
156 U. S.
11):
"The fundamental question is whether, conceding that the
existence of a monopoly in manufacture is established by the
evidence, that monopoly can be directly suppressed under the act of
Congress in the mode attempted by this bill."
Examining this question as to the power of Congress, it was
observed (p.
156 U. S.
11):
"It cannot be denied that the power of a State to protect the
lives, health and property of its citizens, and to preserve good
order and the public morals, 'the power to govern men and things
within the limits of its dominion' is a power originally and always
belonging to the States, not surrendered by them to the general
government nor directly restrained by the Constitution of the
United States, and essentially exclusive."
Next, pointing out that the power of Congress over interstate
commerce and the fact that its failure to legislate over subjects
requiring uniform legislation expressed the will of Congress that
the State should be without power to act on that subject, the court
came to consider whether the power of Congress to regulate commerce
embraced the authority to regulate and control the ownership of
stock in the state sugar refining companies, because the products
of such companies, when manufactured, might become the subject of
interstate commerce. Elaborately passing upon that question and
reaffirming the definition of Chief Justice Marshall of commerce,
in the constitutional sense, it was held that, whilst the power of
Congress extended to commerce as thus defined, it did not embrace
the ownership of stock in state corporations, because the products
of such manufacture might subsequently become the subject of
interstate commerce.
The parallel between the two cases is complete. The one
corporation acquired the stock of other and competing corporations
by exchange for its own. It was conceded, for the
Page 193 U. S. 382
purposes of the case, that, in doing so, monopoly had been
brought about in the refining of sugar, that the sugar to be
produced was likely to become the subject of interstate commerce,
and indeed that part of it would certainly become so. But the power
of Congress was decided not to extend to the subject, because the
ownership of the stock in the corporations was not itself
commerce.
In
Pearsall v. The Great Northern Railway Company,
161 U. S. 646, the
question was whether the acquisition by the Great Northern road of
a controlling interest in the stock of the Northern Pacific Railway
Company was a violation of a Minnesota statute prohibiting the
consolidation of competing lines. It is at once evident that, if
the subject of consolidation was within the authority of Congress,
as Congress had not expressed its will upon the subject, the act of
the legislature of Minnesota was void because repugnant to the
Constitution of the United States. But the possibility of such a
contention was not thought of by either party to the cause or by
the court itself . Treating the power of the State as undoubted,
the court, speaking through Mr. Justice Brown, decided that the
Minnesota law should be enforced. It was pointed out in the opinion
that, as the charter was one granted by the State, the railroad
company and the ownership of stock therein was subject to the state
law, and this was made the basis of the decision. Whilst, however,
resting its conclusion upon the power of the State over the
corporation by it created, the court was careful to recognize that
the authority in the State was so complete, as the company was a
state corporation, that the State had the right,
if it chose to
do so, to authorize the consolidation even although the lines were
competing.
In
Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Kentucky,
161 U. S. 677, the
power of the State to pass a law forbidding the consolidation of
competing state railroad corporations doing in part an interstate
commerce business was again considered, and a state statute in
which the power was exercised was upheld. Here, again, it is to be
observed that, if the consolidation of
Page 193 U. S. 383
state railroad corporations, because they did in part an
interstate commerce business, was within the paramount authority of
Congress, that authority was exclusive, and the state regulation
which the court upheld was void. And this question, vital to the
consideration of the case and without passing upon which it could
not have been decided, did not escape observation, since it was
explicitly pressed upon the court and was directly determined. The
court, speaking through Mr. Justice Brown, said (pp.
161 U. S. 701,
161 U. S.
702):
"But little need be said in answer to the final contention of
the plaintiff in error that the assumption of a right to forbid the
consolidation of parallel and competing lines is an interference
with the power of Congress over interstate commerce. The same
remark may be made with respect to all police regulations of
interstate railways."
"
* * * *"
"It has never been supposed that the dominant power of Congress
over interstate commerce took from the States the power of
legislation with respect to the instruments of such commerce, so
far as the legislation was within its ordinary police powers.
Nearly all the railways in the country have been constructed under
state authority, and it cannot be supposed that they intended to
abandon their power over them as soon as they were finished. The
power to construct them involves necessarily the power to impose
such regulations upon their operation as a sound regard for the
interests of the public may seem to render desirable. In the
division of authority with respect to interstate railways, Congress
reserves to itself the superior right to control their commerce and
forbid interference therewith, while to the States remains the
power to create and to regulate the instruments of such commerce so
far as necessary to the conservation of the public interests."
How one case could be more completely decisive of another than
the ruling in the case just quoted is of this I am unable to
perceive.
Page 193 U. S. 384
The subject was considered at circuit in
In re Greene,
52 Fed.Rep. 104. The case was this: a person was indicted in one
State for creating a monopoly in violation of the Anti-Trust Act of
Congress and was held in another State for extradition. The writ of
habeas corpus was invoked upon the contention that the face of the
indictment did not state an offense against the United States,
since the matters charged did not involve interstate commerce. The
case is referred to, although it arose at circuit and was
determined before the decisions of this court in the
Pearsall and
Louisville and Nashville cases,
because it was decided by Mr. Justice Jackson, then a Circuit
Judge, who subsequently, became a member of this court. The opinion
manifests that the case was considered by Judge Jackson with that
care which was his conceded characteristic, and was stated by him
with that lucidity which was his wont. In discharging the accused
on the grounds stated in the application for the writ, Judge
Jackson said (p. 112):
"Congress may place restrictions and limitations upon the right
of corporations created and organized under its authority to
acquire, use and dispose of property. It may also impose such
restrictions and limitations upon the citizen in respect to the
exercise of a public privilege or franchise conferred by the United
States. But Congress certainly has not the power or authority under
the commerce clause, or any other provision of the Constitution, to
limit and restrict the right of corporations created by the States,
or the citizens of the States, in the acquisition, control and
disposition of property. Neither can Congress regulate or prescribe
the price or prices at which such property, or products thereof,
shall be sold by the owner or owners, whether corporations or
individuals. It is equally clear that Congress has no jurisdiction
over, and cannot make criminal, the aims, purposes and intentions
of persons in the acquisition and control of property, which the
States of their residence or creation sanction and permit. It is
not material that such property, or the products thereof, may
become the
Page 193 U. S. 385
subject of trade or commerce among the several States or with
foreign nations. Commerce among the States, within the exclusive
regulating power of Congress,"
"consists of intercourse and traffic between their citizens, and
includes the transportation of persons and property, as well as the
purchase, sale and exchange of commodities."
"
County of Mobile v. Kimball, 102 U. S.
691,
102 U. S. 702;
Gloucester Ferry Co. v. Pennsylvania, 114 U. S.
203. In the application of this comprehensive
definition, it is settled by the decision of the Supreme Court that
such commerce includes not only the actual transportation of
commodities and persons between the States, but also the
instrumentalities and processes of such transportation."
"
* * * *"
"That neither the production or manufacture of articles or
commodities which constitute subjects of commerce, and which are
intended for trade and traffic with citizens of other States, nor
the preparation for their transportation from the State where
produced or manufactured, prior to the commencement of the actual
transfer, or transmission thereof to another State, constitutes
that interstate commerce which comes within the regulating power of
Congress; and further, that, after the termination of the
transportation of commodities or articles of traffic from one State
to another, and the mingling or merging thereof in the general mass
of property in the State of destination, the sale, distribution and
consumption thereof in the latter State forms no part of interstate
commerce."
If this opinion had been written in the case now considered, it
could not more completely than its reasoning does have disposed of
the contention that the ownership of stock by a corporation in
competing railroads was commerce.
United States v. Freight Association, 166 U.
S. 290, was this: a large number of railway companies,
who were made defendants in the cause, had formed themselves into
an association, known as the Trans-Missouri Freight Association,
and the companies had bound themselves by the provisions contained
in the articles of agreement. Many stipulations relating to
Page 193 U. S. 386
the carrying on of interstate commerce over the roads which were
parties to the agreement were contained in it, and section provided
as follows:
"A committee shall be appointed to establish rates, rules and
regulations on the traffic subject to this association, and to
consider changes therein, and make rules for meeting the
competition of outside lines. Their conclusions, when unanimous,
shall be made effective when they so order, but if they differ the
question at issue shall be referred to the managers of the lines
parties hereto, and if they disagree it shall be arbitrated in the
manner provided in article VII."
The government sought to dissolve the association on the ground
that the agreement restrained commerce between the States, and
therefore was in violation of the Anti-Trust Act. On the hearing in
this court, as the agreement directly related in many particulars
to interstate transportation and the charge to be made therefor, it
was conceded on hands that it embraced subjects which came within
the power of Congress to regulate commerce. The contentions on
behalf of the association were these: First. That the movement of
interstate commerce by railroads was not within the Anti-Trust Act,
since Congress had regulated that subject by the interstate
commerce act, and did not intend to amplify its provisions in any
respect by the subsequent enactment of the Anti-Trust Law. Second.
That even if this were not the case, and the movement of interstate
commerce by railroads was affected by the Anti-Trust Statute, the
particular agreement in question did not violate the act because
the agreement did not unreasonably restrain interstate commerce.
Both these contentions were decided against the association, the
court holding that the Anti-Trust Act did embrace interstate
carriage by railroad corporations, and as that act prohibited any
contract in restraint of interstate commerce, it hence embraced all
contracts of that character, whether they were reasonable or
unreasonable.
The same subject was considered in a subsequent case,
Page 193 U. S. 387
United States v. Joint Traffic Association,
171 U. S. 505. In
that case also there was no question that the agreement between the
railroads related to the movement of interstate commerce, but it
was insisted that the particular agreement there involved did not
seek to fix rates, but only to secure the continuation of just
rates which had already been fixed, and hence was not within the
Anti-Trust Law. If this were held not to be true, a reconsideration
of the questions decided in the
Freight Association case
was invoked. The court reviewed and reiterated the rulings made in
the
Freight Association case, and held that the particular
agreement in question came within them.
I mention these two last cases not because they are apposite to
the case in hand, for they are not, since the contracts which were
involved in them confessedly concerned interstate commerce, whilst,
in this case, the sole question is whether the ownership of stock
in competing railroads does involve interstate commerce. The cases
are referred to in connection with the decisions previously cited,
because, taken together, they illustrate the distinction which this
court has always maintained between the power of Congress over
interstate commerce and its want of authority to regulate subjects
not embraced within that grant. The same distinction is aptly shown
in subsequent cases.
Hopkins v. United States, 171 U.
S. 578, involved whether a particular agreement entered
into between persons carrying on the business of selling cattle on
commission, exclusively at the Kansas City stockyards was valid. At
those yards, cattle were received in vast numbers through the
channels of interstate commerce, and from thence were distributed
through such channels. For these reasons, the business of those
engaged exclusively in the sale of cattle on the stockyards was
asserted to be interstate commerce, and within the power of
Congress to regulate. In the opinion of the court, delivered by Mr.
Justice Peckham, it was at the outset said (p.
171 U. S.
586):
"The relief sought in this case is based exclusively on the
Page 193 U. S. 388
act of Congress approved July 2, 1890, c. 647, entitled 'An act
to protect trade and commerce against unlawful restraints and
monopolies,' commonly spoken of as the Anti-Trust Act. 26 Stat.
209."
"The act has reference only to that trade or commerce which
exists, or may exist, among the several States or with foreign
nations, and has no application whatever to any other trade or
commerce."
"The question meeting us at the threshold, therefore, in this
case is, what is the nature of the business of the defendants, and
are the bylaws, or any subdivision of them above referred to, in
their direct effect, in restraint of trade or commerce among the
several States or with foreign nations; or does the case made by
the bill and answer show that anyone of the above defendants has
monopolized, or attempted to monopolize, or combined or conspired
with other persons to monopolize, any part of the trade or commerce
among the several States or with foreign nations?"
Proceeding, then, to consider the agreement, it was pointed out
that the contention that the sale of cattle on the stockyards
constituted interstate commerce was without merit. The distinction
between interstate commerce as such and the power to make contracts
and to buy and sell property was clearly stated, and, because of
that distinction, the agreement was held not to be within the act
of Congress, because that act could and did only relate to
interstate commerce.
And, on the day the decision just referred to was announced,
another case under the Anti-Trust Act was decided.
Anderson v.
United States, 171 U. S. 604. The
difference between that case and the
Hopkins case was thus
stated by Mr. Justice Peckham, in delivering the opinion of the
court (p.
171 U. S.
612):
"This case differs from that of
Hopkins v. United States,
supra, in the fact that these defendants are themselves
purchasers of cattle on the market, while the defendants in the
Hopkins case were only commission merchants who sold the
cattle upon commission as a compensation for their services. "
Page 193 U. S. 389
"Counsel for the Government assert that any agreement or
combination among buyers of cattle coming from other States, of the
nature of the by laws in question, is an agreement or combination
in restraint of interstate trade or commerce."
The court, however, said it did not deem it necessary to decide
whether the fact that the merchants who entered into the agreement
bought cattle in other States and shipped them to other States
caused their business to be interstate commerce, because, in any
event, the court was of opinion that the agreement which was
assailed, even if it involved interstate commerce, was not in
violation of any of the provisions of the Anti-Trust Act.
The
Anderson case was followed by
Addyston Pipe
& Steel Co. v. United States, 175 U.
S. 211. The case involved deciding whether a particular
combination of pipe manufacturers, looking to the control of the
sale and transportational of such pipe over a large territory,
embracing many States and a division of the territory between the
members of the combination, was within the prohibitions of the
Anti-Trust Act. Coming to consider the subject, the court, through
Mr. Justice Peckham, analyzed the contract and pointed out its
monopolistic features. In answer to the argument that the matter
complained of was not commerce, because it related only to a sale
of pipe, and therefore was within the rule announced in the
Knight and
Hopkins cases, the
Knight
case was approvingly reviewed, and its doctrine, in effect, was
reaffirmed, the court observing (p.
175 U. S.
240):
"The direct purpose of the combination in the
Knight
case was the control of the manufacture of sugar. There was no
combination or agreement, in terms, regarding the future
disposition of the manufactured articles; nothing looking to a
transaction in the nature of interstate commerce."
"
* * * *"
"We think the case now before us involves contracts of the
nature last before mentioned, not incidentally or collaterally,
Page 193 U. S. 390
but as a direct and immediate result of the combination engaged
in by defendants. . . .
The defendants by reason of this
combination and agreement could only send their goods out of the
State in which they were manufactured for sale and delivery in
another State, upon the terms and pursuant to the provisions of
such combination. As pertinently asked by the court below, was
not this a direct restraint upon interstate commerce in those
goods?"
(Italics mine.)
Having thus found that the agreement concerned interstate
commerce because it directly purported to control the movement of
goods from one State to the other, and besides sought to prohibit
that movement or restrict the same to particular individuals, it
was held that the contract was, for these reasons, within the
prohibitions of the act of Congress, and was therefore void. I do
not pause to consider the case of
Montague Co. v. Lowry,
193 U. S. 38,
decided at this term, since, on the face of the opinion, it is
patent that the contract directly concerned the shipment of goods
from one State to another, and this was the sole and exclusive
basis of the decision.
Now it is submitted that the decided cases just reviewed
demonstrate that the acquisition and ownership of stock in
competing railroads, organized under state law, by several persons
or by corporations, is not interstate commerce, and therefore not
subject to the control of Congress. It is, indeed, suggested that
the cases establish a contrary doctrine. This is sought to be
demonstrated by quoting passages from the opinions separated from
their context apart from the questions which the cases involved.
But as the issues which were decided in the
Knight, in the
Pearsall, in the
Louisville and Nashville case,
and in the
Hopkins case directly exclude the significance
attributed to the passages from the opinions in those cases relied
upon, it must follow that, if such passages could, when separated
from their context, have the meaning attributed to them, the
expressions would be mere
obiter. And this consideration
renders it unnecessary for me to analyze the passages to show that,
when they are read in connection with their context,
Page 193 U. S. 391
they have not the meaning now sought to be attached to them. But
other considerations equally render it unnecessary to particularly
review the sentences relied upon. There can be no doubt that it was
expressly decided in the
Knight case that the acquisition
of stock by one corporation in other corporations so as to control
them all was not interstate commerce,
although the goods of the
manufacturing companies whose stock was acquired might become the
subject of interstate commerce. If then the passage from the
Knight case could be given the meaning sought to be
affixed to it, the result would be but to say that that case
overruled itself. And this would be the result in the
Pearsall case, since, in that case, it was decided that
the States had the power to forbid the consolidation of competing
railroads, even by means of the acquisition of stock. Besides, as
in the
Louisville and Nashville case, immediately
following the
Pearsall, it was expressly decided that the
interstate commerce power of Congress did not embrace such
consolidation, and Congress, therefore, could not restrain a State
from either forbidding or permitting it to take place, it would
follow that, if the sentences in the
Pearsall case had the
import now applied to them, that that case not only overruled
itself, but was besides overruled by the
Louisville and
Nashville case, and this although the two cases were decided
on the same day, the opinions in both cases having been delivered
by the same Justice.
The same confusion and contradiction arises from separating from
their context and citing as applicable to this case passages from
the opinions in the
Freight Association and
Joint
Traffic cases. Those cases, as I have previously stated,
related exclusively to a contract admittedly involving interstate
commerce, and it was decided that any restraint of such commerce
was forbidden by the Anti-Trust Act. Now in the
Hopkins
case, decided subsequent to the
Freight Association and
Joint Traffic cases, the contract considered
unquestionably involved a restraint, but, as such restraint did not
concern interstate commerce, it was held not to come within the
power of Congress.
Page 193 U. S. 392
It would follow then, if the sentences quoted from the opinions
in the
Freight Association and
Joint Traffic
cases, which cases concerned only that which was completely
interstate commerce, applied to that which was not such commerce,
that the
Hopkins case overruled both these cases, although
the opinions in all of the cases were delivered by the same
Justice, and no intimation was suggested of such overruling. It
would also result that, after having overruled those cases in the
Hopkins case, the court, in expressing its opinion through
the same Justice, proceeded in the
Addyston Pipe case,
which related only to interstate commerce, to overrule the
Hopkins case and reaffirm the prior cases.
Of course, in my opinion, there is no ground for holding that
the decided cases embody such extreme contradictions or produce
such utter confusion. The cases are all consistent if only the
elementary distinction upon which they proceeded be not obscured,
that is, the difference which arises from the power of Congress to
regulate interstate commerce, on the one hand, and its want of
authority on the other, to regulate that which is not interstate
commerce. Indeed, the confounding and treating as one things which
are wholly different is the error permeating all the contentions
for the Government.
What has been previously said suffices to show the reasons which
control my judgment, and I might well say nothing more. There were,
however, three propositions so earnestly pressed by the Government
at bar upon the theory that they demonstrate that common ownership
of a majority of the stock of competing railroads is subject to the
regulating power of Congress that I propose to briefly give the
reasons which cause me to conclude that the contentions relied upon
are without merit.
1. This court, it is urged, has frequently declared that the
power of Congress over interstate commerce includes the authority
to regulate the instrumentalities of such commerce, and the
following cases are cited:
Railroad Co. v.
Fuller, 17 Wall. 56;
Welton v. Missouri,
91 U. S. 275;
Pensacola
Telegraph
Page 193 U. S. 393
Co. v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 96 U. S.
1;
Gloucester Ferry Co. v. Pennsylvania,
114 U. S. 196. To
these cases might be added many others, including some of those
which have been previously referred to by me. The argument now made
is, as the power extends to instrumentalities, and railroads are
such instrumentalities, therefore the acquisition and ownership of
railroads by persons or corporations is commerce, and subject to
the power of Congress to regulate. But this involves a
non
sequitur, and a confusion of thought arising from again
confounding as one things which are wholly different. True, the
instrumentalities of interstate commerce are subject to the power
to regulate commerce, and therefore such instrumentalities, when
employed in interstate commerce, may be regulated by Congress as to
their use in such commerce. But this is entirely distinct from the
power to regulate the acquisition and ownership of such
instrumentalities, and the many forms of contracts from which such
ownership may arise. The same distinction exists between the two
which obtains between the power of Congress to regulate the
movement of property in the channels of interstate commerce and its
want of authority to regulate the acquisition and ownership of the
same property. This difference was pointed out in the cases which
have been referred to, and the distinction between the two has
been, from the beginning, the dividing line, demarking the power of
the national government, on the one hand, and of the States, on the
other. All the rights of ownership in railroads belonging to
corporations organized under state law, the power to acquire the
same, to mortgage, to foreclose mortgages, to lease, and the
contract relations concerning them, have from the foundation had
their sanction in the legislation of the several States. One may
search in vain in the acts of Congress for any legislation even
suggesting that the power over these subjects was deemed to be in
Congress. On the contrary, the legislation of Congress concerning
the instrumentalities of railroads under the interstate commerce
power clearly refutes the contention, since that legislation
relates only to such instrumentalities
Page 193 U. S. 394
during their actual use in interstate commerce, and not
otherwise. How, consistently with the proposition, can the great
number of cases be explained which, in both the Federal and state
courts, have dealt with the ownership of railroads and their
instrumentalities by foreclosure and otherwise, under the
assumption that the rights of the parties were controlled by state
laws governing the subject? And, here again, it would follow, if
the proposition was adopted, that all the vast body of state
legislation on the subject would be void from the beginning, and
the enormous sum of property rights depending upon such legislation
would be impaired and lost, since, if the subject were within the
power of Congress, it was one requiring a uniform regulation, and
therefore the inaction of Congress would signify an entire want of
power in the States over the subjects.
2. The court, it is urged, has in a number of cases declared
that the several States were without power to directly burden
interstate commerce. The acquiring and ownership by one person or
corporation of a majority of the stock in competing railroads
engaged in interstate commerce, it is argued, being a direct
burden, therefore power to regulate the subject is in Congress, and
not in the States. Undoubtedly, not only in the decisions referred
to, but in many others, including most af those which have been by
me quoted, the absolute want of power in the States to legislate
concerning interstate commerce or to burden it directly has been
declared, and the doctrine in its fullest scope is too elementary
to require citation of authority. But to decide this case upon the
assumption that the acquisition and ownership of stock in competing
railroads engaged in interstate commerce is a regulation of
commerce, or, what is the same thing, a direct burden on it, would
be but to assume the question arising for decision.
Where an authority is exerted by a State which is within its
power, and that authority, as exercised, does not touch interstate
commerce or its instrumentalities, and can only have an effect upon
such commerce by reason of the reflex and remote results
Page 193 U. S. 395
of the exertion of the lawful power, it cannot be said, without
a contradiction in terms, that the power exercised is a regulation,
because a direct burden upon commerce.
To say to the contrary
would be to declare that no power on any subject, however local in
its character, could be exercised by the States if it was deemed by
Congress or the courts that there would be produced some effect
upon interstate commerce. The question whether a burden is
direct, and therefore constitutes a regulation of interstate
commerce, is to be determined by ascertaining whether the power
exerted is lawful, generally speaking, and then by finding whether
its exercise in the particular case was such as to cause it to be
illegal, because directly burdening interstate commerce. If, in a
given case, the power be lawful and the mode in which it is
exercised be not such as to directly burden, there is no regulation
of commerce, although as an indirect result of the exertion of the
lawful power some effect may be produced upon commerce. In other
words, where the power is lawful but it is asserted that it has
been so exerted as to amount to a direct burden,
there must be,
so to speak, a privity between the manifestation of the power and
the resulting burden. The distinction is well illustrated by
the cases which have been referred to, and was very lucidly pointed
out by Judge Jackson in the
Greene case. Take the
Knight case. There, as the contract merely concerned the
purchase of stock in the refineries, and contained no condition
relating to the movement in interstate commerce of the goods to be
manufactured by the refining companies, the court held, as the
right to acquire was not within the commerce clause, the fact that
the owners of the manufactured product might thereafter so act
concerning the product as to burden commerce, there was no direct
burden resulting from the mere acquisition and ownership. On the
contrary, in the
Addyston Pipe case, after stating in the
fullest way the paramount authority of Congress concerning
commerce, the court approached the terms of the contract in order
to determine whether it related to interstate commerce, and if it
did, whether it created a direct burden. In doing so, as it
Page 193 U. S. 396
found that the contract both related to interstate commerce and
directly burdened the same, the contract was held to be void. This
case comes within the
Knight case. It concerns the
acquisition and ownership of stock. No contract is in question made
by the owners of the stock controlling the railroads in the
performance of their duties as carriers of interstate commerce. The
sole contention is that as the result of the ownership of the stock
there may arise, in the operation of the roads, a burden on
interstate commerce. That is, that such burden may indirectly
result from the acquisition and ownership. To maintain the
contention, therefore, it must be decided that, because ownership
of property, if acquired, may be so used as to burden commerce,
therefore to acquire and own is to burden. This, however, would be
but to declare that that which was in its very nature and essence
indirect is direct.
3. But, it is said, it may not be denied that the common
ownership of stock in competing railroads endows the holders of the
majority of the stock with a common interest in both railroads and
with the authority, if they choose to exert it, to so unify the
management of the roads as to suppress competition between them.
This power, it is insisted, is within the regulating authority of
Congress over interstate commerce. In other words, the contention
broadly is that Congress has not only the authority to regulate the
exercise of interstate commerce, but, under that power, has the
right to regulate the ownership and possession of property if the
enjoyment of such rights would enable those who possessed them, if
they engaged in interstate commerce, to exert a power over the
same. But this proposition only asserts in another form that the
right to acquire the stock was interstate commerce, and therefore
was within the authority of Congress, and is refuted by the reasons
and authorities already advanced. That the proposition, if adopted,
would extend the power of Congress to all subjects essentially
local, as already stated in considering the previous proposition,
is, to my mind, manifest. So clearly is this the result of the
particular proposition now being considered that,
Page 193 U. S. 397
at the risk of repetition, I again illustrate the subject. Under
this doctrine, the sum of property to be acquired by individuals or
by corporations, the contracts which they may make, would be within
the regulating power of Congress. If it were judged by Congress
that the farmer, in sowing his crops, should be limited to a
certain production because overproduction would give power to
affect commerce, Congress could regulate that subject. If the
acquisition of a large amount of property by an individual was
deemed by Congress to confer upon him the power to affect
interstate commerce if he engaged in it, Congress could regulate
that subject. If the wage-earner organized to better his condition
and Congress believed that the existence of such organization would
give power, if it were exerted, to affect interstate commerce,
Congress could forbid the organization of all labor associations.
Indeed, the doctrine must, in reason, lead to a concession of the
right in Congress to regulate concerning the aptitude, the
character, and capacity of persons. If individuals were deemed by
Congress to be possessed of such ability that participation in the
management of two great competing railroad enterprises would endow
them with the power to injuriously affect interstate commerce,
Congress could forbid such participation. If the principle were
adopted, and the power which would arise from so doing were
exercised, the result would be not only to destroy the state and
Federal governments, but ,by the implication of authority, from
which the destruction would be brought about, there would be
erected upon the ruins of both a government endowed with the
arbitrary power to disregard the great guaranty of life, liberty
and property and every other safeguard upon which organized civil
society depends. I say the guaranty because, in my opinion, the
three are indissolubly united, and one cannot be destroyed without
the other. Of course, to push propositions to the extreme to which
they naturally lead is often an unsafe guide. But, at the same
time, the conviction cannot be escaped by me that principles and
conduct bear a relation one to the other, especially in matters of
public concern. The fathers
Page 193 U. S. 398
founded our government upon an enduring basis of right,
principle and of limitation of power. Destroy the principles and
the limitations which they impose, and I am unable to say that
conduct may not, when unrestrained, give rise to action doing
violence to the great truths which the destroyed principles
embodied.
The fallacy of all the contentions of the Government is, to my
mind, illustrated by the summing up of the case for the Government
made in the argument at bar. The right to acquire and own the stock
of competing railroads involves, says that summing up, the power of
an individual "
to do" (italics mine) absolutely as he
pleases with his own, whilst the claim of the Government is that
the right of the owner of property "
to do" (italics mine)
as he pleases with his own may be controlled in the public interest
by legitimate legislation. But the case involves the right to
acquire and own, not the right "
to do" (italics
mine). Confusing the two gives rise to the errors which it has been
my endeavor to point out. Undoubtedly the States possess power over
corporations, created by them, to permit or forbid consolidation,
whether accomplished by stock ownership or otherwise, to forbid one
corporation from holding stock in another, and to impose on this or
other subjects such regulations as may be deemed best. Generally
speaking, however, the right to do these things springs alone from
the fact that the corporation is created by the States, and holds
its rights subject to the conditions attached to the grant, or to
such regulations as the creator, the State, may lawfully impose
upon its creature, the corporation. Moreover, irrespective of the
relation of creator and creature, it is, of course, true in a
general sense that government possesses the authority to regulate,
within certain just limits, what an owner
may do with his
property. But the first power which arises from the authority of a
grantor to exact conditions in making a grant or to regulate the
conduct of the grantee gives no sanction to the proposition that a
government, irrespective of its power to grant, has the general
authority to
Page 193 U. S. 399
limit the character and quantity of property which may be
acquired and owned. And the second power, the general governmental
one, to reasonably control the use of property, affords no
foundation for the proposition that there exists in government a
power to limit the quantity and character of property which may be
acquired and owned. The difference between the two is that which
exists between a free and constitutional government restrained by
law and an absolute government unrestrained by any of the
principles which are necessary for the perpetuation of society and
the protection of life, liberty and property.
It cannot be denied that the sum of all just governmental power
was enjoyed by the States and the people before the Constitution of
the United States was formed. None of that power was abridged by
that instrument except as restrained by constitutional safeguards,
and hence none was lost by the adoption of the Constitution. The
Constitution, whilst distributing the preexisting authority,
preserved it all. With the full power of the States over
corporations created by them and with their authority in respect to
local legislation, and with power in Congress over interstate
commerce carried to its fullest degree, I cannot conceive that, if
these powers, admittedly possessed by both, be fully exerted, a
remedy cannot be provided fully adequate to suppress evils which
may arise from combinations deemed to be injurious. This must be
true unless it be concluded that, by the effect of the mere
distribution of power made by the Constitution, partial impotency
of governmental authority has resulted. But if this be conceded,
arguendo, the Constitution itself has pointed out the
method by which, if changes are needed, they may be brought about.
No remedy, in my opinion, for any supposed or real infirmity can be
afforded by disregarding the Constitution, by destroying the lines
which separate state and Federal authority, and by implying the
existence of a power which is repugnant to all those fundamental
rights of life, liberty and property upon which just government
must rest.
Page 193 U. S. 400
If, however, the question of the power of Congress be conceded,
and the assumption as to the meaning of the Anti-Trust Act which
has been indulged in for the purpose of considering that power be
put out of view, it would yet remain to be determined whether the
Anti-Trust Act embraced the acquisition and ownership of the stock
in question by the Northern Securities Company. It is unnecessary
for me, however, to state the reasons which have led me to the
conclusion that the act, when properly interpreted, does not
embrace the acquisition and ownership of such stock, since that
subject is considered in an opinion of Mr. Justice Holmes, which
explains the true interpretation of the statute, as it is
understood by me, more clearly that I would be able to do.
Being of the opinion, for the reasons heretofore given, that
Congress was without power to regulate the acquisition and
ownership of the stock in question by the Northern Securities
Company, and because I think, even if there were such power in
Congress, it has not been exercised by the Anti-Trust Act, as is
shown in the opinion of Mr. Justice Holmes, I dissent.
I am authorized to say that the CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE
PECKHAM and MR. JUSTICE HOLMES concur in this dissent.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES, with whom concurred the CHIEF JUSTICE, MR.
JUSTICE WHITE, and MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM, dissenting.
I am unable to agree with the judgment of the majority of the
court, and although I think it useless and undesirable, as a rule,
to express dissent, I feel bound to do so in this case, and to give
my reasons for it.
Great cases, like hard cases, make bad law. For great cases are
called great not by reason of their real importance in shaping the
law of the future, but because of some accident of immediate
overwhelming interest which appeals to the feelings and distorts
the judgment. These immediate interests
Page 193 U. S. 401
exercise a kind of hydraulic pressure which makes what
previously was clear seem doubtful, and before which even well
settled principles of law will bend. What we have to do in this
case is to find the meaning of some not very difficult words. We
must try, I have tried, to do it with the same freedom of natural
and spontaneous interpretation that one would be sure of if the
same question arose upon an indictment for a similar act which
excited no public attention, and was of importance only to a
prisoner before the court. Furthermore, while at times judges need
for their work the training of economists or statesmen, and must
act in view of their foresight of consequences, yet when their task
is to interpret and apply the words of a statute, their function is
merely academic to begin with -- to read English intelligently --
and a consideration of consequences comes into play, if at all,
only when the meaning of the words used is open to reasonable
doubt.
The question to be decided is whether, under the act of July 2,
1890, c. 647, 26 Stat. 209, it is unlawful, at any stage of the
process, if several men unite to form a corporation for the purpose
of buying more than half the stock of each of two competing
interstate railroad companies, if they form the corporation, and
the corporation buys the stock. I will suppose further that every
step is taken, from the beginning, with the single intent of ending
competition between the companies. I make this addition not because
it may not be and is not disputed, but because, as I shall try to
show, it is totally unimportant under any part of the statute with
which we have to deal.
The statute of which we have to find the meaning is a criminal
statute. The two sections on which the Government relies both make
certain acts crimes. That is their immediate purpose, and that is
what they say. It is vain to insist that this is not a criminal
proceeding. The words cannot be read one way in a suit which is to
end in fine and imprisonment and another way in one which seeks an
injunction. The construction which is adopted in this case must be
adopted in one
Page 193 U. S. 402
of the other sort. I am no friend of artificial interpretations
because a statute is of one kind, rather than another, but all
agree that, before a statute is to be taken to punish that which
always has been lawful, it must express its intent in clear words.
So I say we must read the words before us as if the question were
whether two small exporting grocers should go to jail.
Again, the statute is of a very sweeping and general character.
It hits "every" contract or combination of the prohibited sort,
great or small, and "every" person who shall monopolize or attempt
to monopolize, in the sense of the act, "any part" of the trade or
commerce among the several States. There is a natural inclination
to assume that it was directed against certain great combinations,
and to read it in that light. It does not say so. On the contrary,
it says "every," and "any part." Still less was it directed
specially against railroads. There even was a reasonable doubt
whether it included railroads until the point was decided by this
court.
Finally, the statute must be construed in such a way as not
merely to save its constitutionality but, so far as is consistent
with a fair interpretation, not to raise grave doubts on that
score. I assume, for the purposes of discussion, although it would
be a great and serious step to take, that, in some case that seemed
to it to need heroic measures, Congress might regulate not only
commerce but instruments of commerce or contracts the bearing of
which upon commerce would be only indirect. But it is clear that
the mere fact of an indirect effect upon commerce not shown to be
certain and very great would not justify such a law. The point
decided in
United States v. E. C. Knight Co., 156 U. S.
1,
156 U. S. 17, was
that "the fact that trade or commerce might be indirectly affected
was not enough to entitle complainants to a decree." Commerce
depends upon population, but Congress could not, on that ground,
undertake to regulate marriage and divorce. If the act before us is
to be carried out according to what seems to me the logic of the
argument for the Government, which I do
Page 193 U. S. 403
not believe that it will be, I can see no part of the conduct of
life with which on similar principles Congress might not
interfere.
This act is construed by the Government to affect the purchasers
of shares in two railroad companies because of the effect it may
have, or, if you like, is certain to have, upon the competition of
these roads. If such a remote result of the exercise of an ordinary
incident of property and personal freedom is enough to make that
exercise unlawful, there is hardly any transaction concerning
commerce between the States that may not be made a crime by the
finding of a jury or a court. The personal ascendency of one man
may be such that it would give to his advice the effect of a
command, if he owned but a single share in each road. The tendency
of his presence in the stockholders' meetings might be certain to
prevent competition, and thus his advice, if not his mere
existence, become a crime.
I state these general considerations as matters which I should
have to take into account before I could agree to affirm the decree
appealed from, but I do not need them for my own opinion, because,
when I read the act, I cannot feel sufficient doubt as to the
meaning of the words to need to fortify my conclusion by any
generalities. Their meaning seems to me plain on their face.
The first section makes
"Every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise,
or conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce among the several
States, or with foreign nations"
a misdemeanor, punishable by fine, imprisonment or both. Much
trouble is made by substituting other phrases assumed to be
equivalent, which then are reasoned from as if they were in the
act. The court below argued as if maintaining competition were the
expressed object of the act. The act says nothing about
competition. I stick to the exact words used. The words hit two
classes of cases, and only two -- Contracts in restraint of trade
and combinations or conspiracies in restraint of trade, and we have
to consider what
Page 193 U. S. 404
these respectively are. Contracts in restraint of trade are
dealt with and defined by the common law. They are contracts with a
stranger to the contractor's business (although in some cases
carrying on a similar one) which wholly or partially restrict the
freedom of the contractor in carrying on that business as otherwise
he would. The objection of the common law to them was primarily on
the contractor's own account. The notion of monopoly did not come
in unless the contract covered the whole of England.
Mitchel v.
Reynolds, 1 P.Wms. 181. Of course, this objection did not
apply to partnerships or other forms, if there were any, of
substituting a community of interest where there had been
competition. There was no objection to such combinations merely as
in restraint of trade, or otherwise unless they amounted to a
monopoly. Contracts in restraint of trade, I repeat, were contracts
with strangers to the contractor's business, and the trade
restrained was the contractor's own.
Combinations or conspiracies in restraint of trade, on the other
hand, were combinations to keep strangers to the agreement out of
the business. The objection to them was not an objection to their
effect upon the parties making the contract, the members of the
combination or firm, but an objection to their intended effect upon
strangers to the firm and their supposed consequent effect upon the
public at large. In other words, they were regarded as contrary to
public policy because they monopolized or attempted to monopolize
some portion of the trade or commerce of the realm.
See United
States v. E. C. Knight Co., 156 U. S. 1. All
that is added to the first section by § 2 is that like penalties
are imposed upon every single person who, without combination,
monopolizes or attempts to monopolize commerce among the States,
and that the liability is extended to attempting to monopolize any
part of such trade or commerce. It is more important as an aid to
the construction of § 1 than it is on its own account. It shows
that whatever is criminal when done by way of combination is
equally criminal if done by a single man. That I am right in my
interpretation
Page 193 U. S. 405
of the words of § 1 is shown by the words "in the form of trust
or otherwise." The prohibition was suggested by the trusts, the
objection to which, as every one knows, was not the union of former
competitors, but the sinister power exercised or supposed to be
exercised by the combination in keeping rivals out of the business
and ruining those who already were in. It was the ferocious extreme
of competition with others, not the cessation of competition among
the partners, that was the evil feared. Further proof is to be
found in § 7, giving an action to any person injured in his
business or property by the forbidden conduct. This cannot refer to
the parties to the agreement, and plainly means that outsiders who
are injured in their attempt to compete with a trust or other
similar combination may recover for it.
Montague & Co. v.
Lowry, 193 U. S. 38. How
effective the section may be or how far it goes is not material to
my point. My general summary of the two classes of cases which the
act affects is confirmed by the title, which is "An Act to protect
Trade and Commerce against unlawful Restraints and Monopolies."
What I now ask is under which of the foregoing classes this case
is supposed to come, and that question must be answered as
definitely and precisely as if we were dealing with the indictments
which logically ought to follow this decision. The provision of the
statute against contracts in restraint of trade has been held to
apply to contracts between railroads, otherwise remaining
independent, by which they restricted their respective freedom as
to rates. This restriction by contract with a stranger to the
contractor's business is the ground of the decision in
United
States v. Joint Traffic Association, 171 U.
S. 505, following and affirming
United States v.
Trans-Missouri Freight Association, 166 U.
S. 290. I accept those decisions absolutely, not only as
binding upon me, but as decisions which I have no desire to
criticise or abridge. But the provision has not been decided, and,
it seems to me, could not be decided without perversion of plain
language, to apply to an arrangement by which competition is ended
through community
Page 193 U. S. 406
of interest -- an arrangement which leaves the parties without
external restriction. That provision, taken alone, does not require
that all existing competitions shall be maintained. It does not
look primarily, if at all, to competition. It simply requires that
a party's freedom in trade between the States shall not be cut down
by contract with a stranger. So far as that phrase goes, it is
lawful to abolish competition by any form of union. It would seem
to me impossible to say that the words "every contract in restraint
of trade is a crime punishable with imprisonment" would send the
members of a partnership between, or a consolidation of, two
trading corporations to prison -- still more impossible to say that
it forbade one man or corporation to purchase as much stock as he
liked in both. Yet those words would have that effect if this
clause of § 1 applies to the defendants here. For it cannot be too
carefully remembered that that clause applies to "every" contract
of the forbidden kind -- a consideration which was the turning
point of the
Trans-Missouri Freight Association's
case.
If the statute applies to this case, it must be because the
parties, or some of them, have formed, or because the Northern
Securities Company is, a combination in restraint of trade among
the States, or, what comes to the same thing, in my opinion,
because the defendants, or some or one of them, are monopolizing or
attempting to monopolize some part of the commerce between the
States. But the mere reading of those words shows that they are
used in a limited and accurate sense. According to popular speech,
every concern monopolizes whatever business it does, and if that
business is trade between two States, it monopolizes a part of the
trade among the States. Of course, the statute does not forbid
that. It does not mean that all business must cease. A single
railroad down a narrow valley or through a mountain gorge
monopolizes all the railroad transportation through that valley or
gorge. Indeed, every railroad monopolizes, in a popular sense, the
trade of some area. Yet I suppose no one would say that
Page 193 U. S. 407
the statute forbids a combination of men into a corporation to
build and run such a railroad between the States.
I assume that the Minnesota charter of the Great Northern and
the Wisconsin charter of the Northern Pacific both are valid.
Suppose that, before either road was built, Minnesota, as part of a
system of transportation between the States, had created a railroad
company authorized singly to build all the lines in the States now
actually built, owned or controlled by either of the two existing
companies. I take it that that charter would have been just as good
as the present one, even if the statutes which we are considering
had been in force. In whatever sense it would have created a
monopoly, the present charter does. It would have been a large one,
but the act of Congress makes no discrimination according to size.
Size has nothing to do with the matter. A monopoly of "any part" of
commerce among the States is unlawful. The supposed company would
have owned lines that might have been competing -- probably the
present one does. But the act of Congress will not be construed to
mean the universal disintegration of society into single men, each
at war with all the rest, or even the prevention of all further
combinations for a common end.
There is a natural feeling that somehow or other the statute
meant to strike at combinations great enough to cause just anxiety
on the part of those who love their country more than money, while
it viewed such little ones as I have supposed with just
indifference. This notion, it may be said, somehow breathes from
the pores of the act, although it seems to be contradicted in every
way by the words in detail. And it has occurred to me that it might
be that, when a combination reached a certain size it might have
attributed to it more of the character of a monopoly merely by
virtue of its size than would be attributed to a smaller one. I am
quite clear that it is only in connection with monopolies that size
could play any part. But my answer has been indicated already. In
the first place, size in the case of railroads is an inevitable
incident, and, if it were an
Page 193 U. S. 408
objection under the act, the Great Northern and the Northern
Pacific already were too great and encountered the law. In the next
place, in the case of railroads, it is evident that the size of the
combination is reached for other ends than those which would make
them monopolies. The combinations are not formed for the purpose of
excluding others from the field. Finally, even a small railroad
will have the same tendency to exclude others from its narrow area
that great ones have to exclude others from a greater one, and the
statute attacks the small monopolies as well as the great. The very
words of the act make such a distinction impossible in this case,
and it has not been attempted in express terms.
If the charter which I have imagined above would have been good
notwithstanding the monopoly, in a popular sense, which it created,
one next is led to ask whether and why a combination or
consolidation of existing roads, although in actual competition,
into one company of exactly the same powers and extent would be any
more obnoxious to the law. Although it was decided in
Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. v. Kentucky,
161 U. S. 677,
161 U. S. 701,
that, since the statute, as before, the States have the power to
regulate the matter, it was said, in the argument, that such a
consolidation would be unlawful, and it seems to me that the
Attorney General was compelled to say so in order to maintain his
case. But I think that logic would not let him stop there, or short
of denying the power of a State at the present time to authorize
one company to construct and own two parallel lines that might
compete. The monopoly would be the same as if the roads were
consolidated after they had begun to compete -- and it is on the
footing of monopoly that I now am supposing the objection made. But
to meet the objection to the prevention of competition at the same
time, I will suppose that three parties apply to a State for
charters, one for each of two new and possibly competing lines
respectively, and one for both of these lines, and that the charter
is granted to the last. I think that charter would be good, and I
think the whole argument to the contrary rests
Page 193 U. S. 409
on a popular, instead of an accurate and legal, conception of
what the word "monopolize" in the statute means. I repeat that, in
my opinion, there is no attempt to monopolize, and what, as I have
said, in my judgment, amounts to the same thing, that there is no
combination in restraint of trade, until something is done with the
intent to exclude strangers to the combination from competing with
it in some part of the business which it carries on.
Unless I am entirely wrong in my understanding of what a
"combination in restraint of trade" means, then the same monopoly
may be attempted and effected by an individual, and is made equally
illegal in that case by § 2. But I do not expect to hear it
maintained that Mr. Morgan could be sent to prison for buying as
many shares as he liked of the Great Northern and the Northern
Pacific, even if he bought them both at the same time and got more
than half the stock of each road.
There is much that was mentioned in argument which I pass by.
But in view of the great importance attached by both sides to the
supposed attempt to suppress competition, I must say a word more
about that. I said at the outset that I should assume, and I do
assume, that one purpose of the purchase was to suppress
competition between the two roads. I appreciate the force of the
argument that there are independent stockholders in each; that it
cannot be presumed that the respective boards of directors will
propose any illegal act; that, if they should, they could be
restrained, and that all that has been done as yet is too remote
from the illegal result to be classed even as an attempt. Not every
act done in furtherance of an unlawful end is an attempt or
contrary to the law. There must be a certain nearness to the
result. It is a question of proximity and decree.
Commonwealth
v. Peaslee, 177 Massachusetts 267, 272. So, as I have said, is
the amenability of acts in furtherance of interference with
commerce among the States to legislation by Congress. So, according
to the intimation of this court, is the question of liability under
the present statute.
Page 193 U. S. 410
Hopkins v. United States, 171 U.
S. 578;
Anderson v. United States, 171 U.
S. 604. But I assume further, for the purposes of
discussion, that what has been done is near enough to the result to
fall under the law, if the law prohibits that result, although that
assumption very nearly, if not quite, contradicts the decision in
United States v. E. C. Knight Co., 156 U. S.
1. But I say that the law does not prohibit the result.
If it does, it must be because there is some further meaning than I
have yet discovered in the words "combinations in restraint of
trade." I think that I have exhausted the meaning of those words in
what I already have said. But they certainly do not require all
existing competitions to be kept on foot, and, on the principle of
the
Trans-Missouri Freight Association's case, invalidate
the continuance of old contracts by which former competitors united
in the past.
A partnership is not a contract or combination in restraint of
trade between the partners unless the well known words are to be
given a new meaning invented for the purposes of this act. It is
true that the suppression of competition was referred to in
United States v. Trans-Missouri Freight Association,
166 U. S. 290,
but, as I have said, that was in connection with a contract with a
stranger to the defendant's business -- a true contract in
restraint of trade. To suppress competition in that way is one
thing, to suppress it by fusion is another. The law, I repeat, says
nothing about competition, and only prevents its suppression by
contracts or combinations in restraint of trade, and such contracts
or combinations derive their character as restraining trade from
other features than the suppression of competition alone. To see
whether I am wrong, the illustrations put in the argument are of
use. If I am, then a partnership between two stage drivers who had
been competitors in driving across a state line, or two merchants
once engaged in rival commerce among the States whether made after
or before the act, if now continued, is a crime. For, again I
repeat, if the restraint on the freedom of the members of a
combination caused by their entering into partnership is a
restraint of
Page 193 U. S. 411
trade, every such combination, as well the small as the great,
is within the act.
In view of my interpretation of the statute, I do not go further
into the question of the power of Congress. That has been dealt
with by my brother White, and I concur in the main with his views.
I am happy to know that only a minority of my brethren adopt an
interpretation of the law which in my opinion would make eternal
the
bellum omnium contra omnes and disintegrate society so
far as it could into individual atoms. If that were its intent, I
should regard calling such a law a regulation of commerce as a mere
pretense. It would be an attempt to reconstruct society. I am not
concerned with the wisdom of such an attempt, but I believe that
Congress was not entrusted by the Constitution with the power to
make it, and I am deeply persuaded that it has not tried.
I am authorized to say that the CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE WHITE
and MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM concur in this dissent.