1. The Federal Trade Commission ordered the respondent to cease
from representing his "obesity cure" as a scientific method of
treating obesity, or as being the result of scientific research, or
the formula as a scientific one, and from representing the
preparation as a remedy for obesity, unless accompanied by the
statement that it could not be taken safely except under medical
direction. There were findings, supported by evidence, warranting
the conclusion that the preparation could not be used generally
without danger to health, except under medical advice.
Held beyond the jurisdiction of the Commission. P.
283 U. S.
646.
2. A method, to come within the jurisdiction of the Commission,
must not only be unfair and such that a proceeding for its
prevention appears to be in the public interest, but it must also
be a method of competition in commerce. The Commission has no
jurisdiction where no substantial competition, present or
potential, is shown by proof or appears by necessary inference to
have been injured or to be clearly threatened with injury to a
substantial extent by the use of the unfair methods complained of.
Pp.
283 U. S. 646,
283 U. S.
648.
3. While it is at least generally true that statements made by
members of Congress in debate cannot be used as aids to the
construction of a statute, yet the fact that, throughout the
consideration of legislation, there was common agreement in the
debate as to its purpose may properly be taken into consideration
in determining what that purpose was and what were the evils sought
to be remedied. P.
283 U. S.
650.
4. If as a result of an inquiry by the Federal Trade Commission,
it turns out that the preliminary assumption of competition upon
which the order was based was without foundation, jurisdiction to
make a desist order fails, and the proceeding must be dismissed by
the Commission. P.
283 U. S. 654.
42 F.2d 430 affirmed.
Certiorari, 282 U.S. 829, to review a decree reversing an order
of the Federal Trade Commission.
Page 283 U. S. 644
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
Under § 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, c. 311, 38 Stat.
717, 719 (U.S.C. Title 15, § 45), the relevant parts of which are
copied in the margin,
* the Commission
issued its complaint charging the respondent with using unfair
methods of competition in interstate commerce.
Respondent manufactures a preparation for internal use,
denominated an "obesity cure." The complaint charges that this
preparation is sold by respondent in and throughout the several
states, generally to wholesalers who resell to retail dealers, and
these, in turn, to consumers; that it is offered for sale and sold
in competition with other persons who are engaged
"in offering for sale,
Page 283 U. S. 645
and selling, printed professional advice, books of information
and instruction, and other methods and means and certain remedies
and appliances for dissolving or otherwise removing excess flesh of
the human body;"
that respondent advertises in newspapers, etc., circulated
generally in the United States, and in printed labels, etc., that
the preparation is the result of scientific research, knowledge,
and accuracy, that it is safe and effective and may be used without
discomfort, inconvenience, or danger of harmful results to health.
Among the ingredients is "desiccated thyroid," which, it is
alleged, cannot be prescribed to act with reasonable uniformity on
the bodies of all users, or without impairing the health of a
substantial portion of them, etc., or with safety, without previous
consultation with, and continuing observation and advice of, a
competent medical adviser. The complaint further avers that many
persons are seeking obesity remedies, and respondent's
advertisements are calculated to mislead and deceive the purchasing
public into the belief that the preparation is safe, effective,
dependable, and without danger of harmful results. By way of
conclusion, it is said that
"the acts and practices of the respondent are all to the
prejudice of the public and of competitors of respondent, . . . and
constitute unfair methods of competition. "
Page 283 U. S. 646
Respondent answered, and hearings were had before an examiner.
The Commission found against respondent, and issued a cease and
desist order. The findings in general follow the language of the
complaint. There was no finding of prejudice or injury to any
competitor, but the conclusion was drawn from the findings of fact
that the practice of respondent was to the prejudice of the public
and respondent's competitors, and constituted an unfair method of
competition.
The court of appeals reviewed the action of the Commission upon
respondent's petition, and reversed the order. 42 F.2d 430. We
brought the case here by certiorari, limiting the briefs and
argument to the question of the jurisdiction of the Commission. 282
U.S. 829.
In substance, the Commission ordered the respondent to cease and
desist from representing that its preparation is a scientific
method for treating obesity, is the result of scientific research,
or that the formula is a scientific formula, and from representing
its preparation as a remedy for obesity, unless accompanied by the
statement that it cannot be taken safely except under medical
advice and direction. Findings, supported by evidence, warrant the
conclusion that the preparation is one which cannot be used
generally with safety to physical health except under medical
direction and advice. If the necessity of protecting the public
against dangerously misleading advertisements of a remedy sold in
interstate commerce were all that is necessary to give the
Commission jurisdiction, the order could not successfully be
assailed. But this is not all.
By the plain words of the act, the power of the Commission to
take steps looking to the issue of an order to desist depends upon
the existence of three distinct prerequisites: (1) that the methods
complained of are unfair; (2) that they are methods of competition
in commerce, and (3) that a proceeding by the Commission to
Page 283 U. S. 647
prevent the use of the methods appears to be in the interest of
the public. We assume the existence of the first and third of these
requisites, and pass at once to the consideration of the
second.
Section 5 of the Trade Commission Act is supplementary to the
Sherman Anti-Trust Act and the Clayton Act.
Federal Trade
Comm'n v. Beech Nut Co., 257 U. S. 441,
257 U. S. 453.
The latter was discussed and passed at the same session of
Congress. The Sherman Act deals with contracts, agreements, and
combinations which tend to the prejudice of the public by the undue
restriction of competition or the undue obstruction of the due
course of trade,
United States v. American Tobacco Co.,
221 U. S. 106,
221 U. S. 179,
and which tend to "restrict the common liberty to engage therein,"
United States v. Patten, 226 U. S. 525,
226 U. S.
541.
The Clayton Act, so far as it deals with the subject, was
intended to reach in their incipiency agreements embraced within
the sphere of the Sherman Act.
Standard Co. v. Magrane-Houston
Co., 258 U. S. 346,
258 U. S.
355-357. The object of the Trade Commission Act was to
stop in their incipiency those methods of competition which fall
within the meaning of the word "unfair."
"The great purpose of both statutes was to advance the public
interest by securing fair opportunity for the play of the
contending forces ordinarily engendered by an honest desire for
gain."
Federal Trade Comm'n v. Sinclair Co., 261 U.
S. 463,
261 U. S. 476. All
three statutes seek to protect the public from abuses arising in
the course of competitive interstate and foreign trade. In a case
arising under the Trade Commission Act, the fundamental questions
are whether the methods complained of are "unfair," and whether, as
in cases under the Sherman Act, they tend to the substantial injury
of the public by restricting competition in interstate trade and
"the common liberty to engage therein." The paramount aim of the
act is the
Page 283 U. S. 648
protection of the public from the evils likely to result from
the destruction of competition or the restriction of it in a
substantial degree, and this presupposes the existence of some
substantial competition to be affected, since the public is not
concerned in the maintenance of competition which itself is without
real substance.
Compare International Shoe Co. v. Federal Trade
Comm'n, 280 U. S. 291,
280 U. S.
297-299.
The bill which was the foundation of the act, as it first passed
the Senate, declared "unfair competition" to be unlawful. Debate
apparently convinced the sponsors of the legislation that these
words, which had a well settled meaning at common law, were too
narrow. When the bill came from conference between the two Houses,
these words had been eliminated, and the words "unfair methods of
competition" substituted. Undoubtedly the substituted phrase has a
broader meaning, but how much broader has not been determined. It
belongs to that class of phrases which does not admit of precise
definition, but the meaning and application of which must be
arrived at by what this Court elsewhere has called "the gradual
process of judicial inclusion and exclusion."
Davidson v. New
Orleans, 96 U. S. 97,
96 U. S. 104.
The question is one for the final determination of the courts, and
not of the Commission.
Federal Trade Comm'n v. Gratz,
253 U. S. 421,
253 U. S. 427;
Federal Trade Comm'n v. Beech Nut Co., supra, p.
257 U. S.
453.
The authority of the Commission to proceed, if that body
believes that there has been or is being used any unfair method of
competition in commerce, was then qualified in conference by the
further requirement, not in the original bill, "and if it shall
appear to the commission that a proceeding by it in respect thereof
would be to the interest of the public." By these additional words,
protection to the public interest is made of paramount importance,
but, nevertheless, they are not substantive
Page 283 U. S. 649
words of jurisdiction, but complementary words of limitation
upon the jurisdiction conferred by the language immediately
preceding. Thus, the Commission is called upon first to determine,
as a necessary prerequisite to the issue of a complaint, whether
there is reason to believe that a given person, partnership, or
corporation has been or is using any unfair method of competition
in commerce; and, that being determined in the affirmative, the
Commission still may not proceed, unless it further appear that a
proceeding would be to the interest of the public, and that such
interest is specific and substantial.
Federal Trade Comm'n v.
Klesner, 280 U. S. 19,
280 U. S. 28.
Unfair trade methods are not
per se unfair methods of
competition.
It is obvious that the word "competition" imports the existence
of present or potential competitors, and the unfair methods must be
such as injuriously affect or tend thus to affect the business of
these competitors -- that is to say, the trader whose methods are
assailed as unfair must have present or potential rivals in trade
whose business will be, or is likely to be, lessened or otherwise
injured. It is that condition of affairs which the Commission is
given power to correct, and it is against that condition of
affairs, and not some other, that the Commission is authorized to
protect the public. Official powers cannot be extended beyond the
terms and necessary implications of the grant. If broader powers be
desirable, they must be conferred by Congress. They cannot be
merely assumed by administrative officers; nor can they be created
by the courts in the proper exercise of their judicial
functions.
The foregoing view of the powers of the Commission under the act
finds confirmation, if that be needed, in the committee reports and
the statements of those in charge of the legislation, as well as in
the debate which took place in the Senate, extending over weeks of
time and covering hundreds of pages in the Congressional
Record.
Page 283 U. S. 650
In that debate, the necessity of curbing those whose unfair
methods threatened to drive their competitors out of business was
constantly emphasized. It was urged that the best way to stop
monopoly at the threshold was to prevent unfair competition; that
the unfair competition sought to be reached was that which must
ultimately result in the extinction of rivals and the establishment
of monopoly; that, by the words "unfair methods" was meant those
resorted to for the purpose of destroying competition or of
eliminating a competitor or of introducing monopoly such as tend
unfairly to destroy or injure the business of a competitor; that
the law was necessary to protect small business against giant
competitors; that it was an effort to make competition stronger in
its fight against monopoly; that unfair competition was that
practice which destroys competition and establishes monopoly. These
and similar statements run through the debate from beginning to
end. Although protection to the public interest was recognized as
the ultimate aim, comparatively little was said about it.
It is true, at least generally, that statements made in debate
cannot be used as aids to the construction of a statute. But the
fact that, throughout the consideration of this legislation, there
was common agreement in the debate as to the great purpose of the
act may properly be considered in determining what that purpose was
and what were the evils sought to be remedied. In
Ho Ah Kow v.
Nunan, 5 Sawy. 552, it appeared that the board of supervisors
of San Francisco had adopted an ordinance which provided that every
male person imprisoned in the county jail, etc., should immediately
upon his arrival at the jail have the hair of his head "cut or
clipped to an uniform length of one inch from the scalp thereof."
The ordinance was attacked as being hostile and discriminating
legislation against the Chinese, and, in order to demonstrate this,
in spite of the general terms of the ordinance, statements of
supervisors made in debate were
Page 283 U. S. 651
put in evidence. Mr. Justice Field, speaking for himself and
Judge Sawyer, said (p. 560):
"The statements of supervisors in debate on the passage of the
ordinance cannot, it is true, be resorted to for the purpose of
explaining the meaning of the terms used; but they can be resorted
to for the purpose of ascertaining the general object of the
legislation proposed, and the mischiefs sought to be remedied."
While it is impossible from the terms of the act itself, and in
the light of the foregoing circumstances leading up to its passage,
reasonably to conclude that Congress intended to vest the
Commission with the general power to prevent all sorts of unfair
trade practices in commerce apart from their actual or potential
effect upon the trade of competitors, it is not necessary that the
facts point to any particular trader or traders. It is enough that
there be present or potential substantial competition which is
shown by proof, or appears by necessary inference, to have been
injured, or to be clearly threatened with injury, to a substantial
extent by the use of the unfair methods complained of.
In
Federal Trade Comm'n v. Winstead Co., 258 U.
S. 483, it appeared that a manufacturer engaged in
selling underwear and other knit goods made partly of wool labeled
them as "natural merino," "natural wool," "Australian wool," etc.
It was shown that a substantial part of the consuming public and
some buyers and retailers understood the words used in the labels
to mean that the underwear was all wool. Part of the public was
thereby misled into selling or into buying, as all wool, underwear
which was in large part cotton. The labels were false and
calculated to deceive, and did in fact deceive, a substantial
portion of the purchasing public. This Court, after saying that the
facts show that a proceeding to stop the practice was in the
interest of the public, added (p.
258 U. S.
493):
Page 283 U. S. 652
"And they show also that the practice constitutes an unfair
method of competition as against manufacturers of all wool knit
underwear and as against those manufacturers of mixed wool and
cotton underwear who brand their product truthfully. For when
misbranded goods attract customers by means of the fraud which they
perpetrate, trade is diverted from the producer of truthfully
marked goods. That these honest manufacturers might protect their
trade by also resorting to deceptive labels is no defense to this
proceeding brought against the Winstead Company in the public
interest."
And again, at p.
258 U. S. 494,
after reaffirming the existence of the public interest, the Court
said:
". . . since the business of its trade rivals who marked their
goods truthfully was necessarily affected by that practice, the
Commission was justified in its conclusion that the practice
constituted an unfair method of competition. . . ."
The court below thought that the trade to be protected "was that
legitimate trade which was entitled to hold its own in the trade
field without embarrassment from unfair competition." There is much
force in this conception of the act, and the language just quoted
from the
Winstead case seems inferentially to lend it
support. Certainly it is hard to see why Congress would set itself
to the task of devising means and creating administrative machinery
for the purpose of preserving the business of one knave from the
unfair competition of another. In the present case, however, we do
not find it necessary further to consider the merits of this view,
or to determine whether the facts are such as to bring the case
within it.
Findings of the Commission justify the conclusion that the
advertisements naturally would tend to increase the business of
respondent; but there is neither finding nor evidence from which
the conclusion legitimately can be drawn that these advertisements
substantially injured, or tended thus to injure, the business of
any competitor or
Page 283 U. S. 653
of competitors generally, whether legitimate or not. None of the
supposed competitors appeared or was called upon to show what, if
any, effect the misleading advertisements had, or were likely to
have, upon his business. The only evidence as to the existence of
competitors comes from medical sources not engaged in making or
selling "obesity cures," and consists in the main of a list of
supposed producers and sellers of "anti-fat remedies" compiled from
the files and records of the Bureau of Investigation of the
American Medical Association, a list which appears to have been
gathered mainly from newspapers and advertisements. The only
specific evidence was that of a witness who said that he had
purchased in drug stores in Chicago five different anti-fat
treatments, and could have purchased a sixth. How long they had
been in stock, what was their nature, whether they were intended to
be used internally, or in what way they competed or could compete
with respondent's preparation does not appear. Of course, medical
practitioners, by some of whom the danger of using the remedy
without competent advice was exposed, are not in competition with
respondent. They follow a profession, and not a trade, and are not
engaged in the business of making or vending remedies, but in
prescribing them. It is impossible to say whether, as a result of
respondent's advertisements, any business was diverted, or was
likely to be diverted, from others engaged in like trade, or
whether competitors, identified or unidentified, were injured in
their business, or were likely to be injured, or, indeed, whether
any other anti-obesity remedies were sold or offered for sale in
competition, or were of such a character as naturally to come into
any real competition, with respondent's preparation in the
interstate market. All this was left without proof, and remains, at
best, a matter of conjecture. Something more substantial than that
is required as a basis for the exercise of the authority of the
Commission.
Page 283 U. S. 654
Whether the respondent, in what it was doing, was subjecting
itself to administrative or other proceeding under the statute
relating to the misbranding of foods and drugs we need not now
inquire, for the administration of that statute is not committed to
the Federal Trade Commission.
A proceeding under § 5 is not one instituted before the
Commission by one party against another. It is instituted by the
Commission itself, and is authorized whenever the Commission has
reason to believe that unfair methods of competition in commerce
are being used, and that a proceeding by it in respect thereof
would be to the interest of the public. Acting upon its belief, the
Commission issues charges and enters upon an inquiry which, of
course, it has jurisdiction to make. But one of the facts necessary
to support jurisdiction to make the final order to cease and desist
is the existence of competition, and the Commission cannot, by
assuming the existence of competition, if in fact there be none,
give itself jurisdiction to make such an order. If, as a result of
the inquiry, it turn out that the preliminary assumption of
competition is without foundation, jurisdiction to make that order
necessarily fails, and the proceeding must be dismissed by the
Commission.
Compare Federal Trade Comm'n v. Klesner,
supra, pp.
280 U. S. 29-30.
That course should have been followed here.
The decree of the court below is
Affirmed.
*
"That unfair methods of competition in commerce are hereby
declared unlawful."
"The commission is hereby empowered and directed to prevent
persons, partnerships, or corporations, except banks, and common
carriers subject to the Acts to regulate commerce, from using
unfair methods of competition in commerce."
"Whenever the commission shall have reason to believe that any
such person, partnership, or corporation has been or is using any
unfair method of competition in commerce, and if it shall appear to
the commission that a proceeding by it in respect thereof would be
to the interest of the public, it shall issue and serve upon such
person, partnership, or corporation a complaint stating its charges
in that respect, and containing a notice of a hearing upon a day
and at a place therein fixed at least thirty days after the service
of said complaint. The person, partnership, or corporation so
complained of shall have the right to appear at the place and time
so fixed and show cause why an order should not be entered by the
commission requiring such person, partnership, or corporation to
cease and desist from the violation of the law so charged in said
complaint. . . . If, upon such hearing, the commission shall be of
the opinion that the method of competition in question is
prohibited by this Act, it shall make a report in writing in which
it shall state its findings as to the facts, and shall issue and
cause to be served on such person, partnership, or corporation an
order requiring such person, partnership, or corporation to cease
and desist from using such method of competition."