1. Under § 310 of the Packers & Stockyards Act, a hearing is
prerequisite to a valid order of the Secretary of Agriculture
fixing rates for Market Agencies. P.
298 U. S.
473.
2. Upon review under the Packers & Stockyards Act of an
order of the Secretary of Agriculture fixing rates of such
agencies, all questions touching the regularity and validity of the
proceedings before the Secretary are open. P.
298 U. S.
477.
3. The Secretary's recitals of his procedure in such cases are
not conclusive on the question whether the statutory requirements
were obeyed.
Id.
4. If, upon the facts alleged before the court on review of the
Secretary's order, the full hearing required by the Act was not
given, the plaintiffs are entitled by the terms of the Act itself
to prove the facts and have the order set aside.
Id.
5. It is not essential to the validity of a rate order made by
the Secretary of Agriculture under the Packers & Stockyards Act
that each of several respondents be given a separate hearing, or
that a preliminary report be made by the examiner who took the
testimony and be submitted to the parties in order that they may
take their exceptions and address their arguments to the points
thus raised. P.
298 U. S.
478.
6. The function of the Secretary of Agriculture in fixing rates
under the Packers & Stockyards Act is not that of ordinary
executive action, but is both legislative and judicial in quality;
fundamental procedural requirements must be obeyed; a full hearing
of both evidence and argument must be given; nothing can be treated
as evidence which is not introduced as such; facts and
circumstances which ought to be considered must not be excluded,
and those that should not legally influence the conclusion must not
be considered; findings based on the evidence must embrace the
basic facts needed to sustain the order. P.
298 U. S.
479.
7. An order of the Secretary of Agriculture fixing rates for
Market Agencies under the Packers & Stockyards Act is invalid
if the evidence and arguments were heard and considered by an
assistant to the Secretary, but not by the Secretary himself . P.
298 U. S.
481.
Page 298 U. S. 469
8. If the duty of ascertaining and fixing just and reasonable
rates for Market Agencies, imposed by the Packers & Stockyards
Act on the Secretary of Agriculture, may lawfully be delegated by
him in a particular case to an assistant -- a question not here
presented or determined -- it would be for the assistant to make
the order, as well as to conduct the hearing. Pp.
298 U. S. 478,
298 U. S.
481.
8 F. Supp.
766 reversed.
Appeals from decrees of the District Court of three judges
dismissing fifty bills brought by Market Agencies, under the
Packers & Stockyards Act, to enjoin the enforcement of an order
of the Secretary of Agriculture fixing maximum rates to be charged
by them for buying and selling livestock. The cases were
consolidated in the court below for trial.
Page 298 U. S. 471
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
These are fifty suits, consolidated for the purpose of trial, to
restrain the enforcement of an order of the Secretary of
Agriculture fixing the maximum rates to be charged by market
agencies for buying and selling livestock at the Kansas City Stock
Yards. Packers and Stockyards Act 1921, 42 Stat. 159, 7 U.S.C. §§
181-229.
Page 298 U. S. 472
The proceeding was instituted by an order of the Secretary of
Agriculture in April, 1930, directing an inquiry into the
reasonableness of existing rates. Testimony was taken, and an order
prescribing rates followed in May, 1932. An application for
rehearing, in view of changed economic conditions, was granted in
July, 1932. After the taking of voluminous testimony, which was
concluded in November, 1932, the order in question was made on June
14, 1933. Rehearing was refused on July 6, 1933.
Plaintiffs then brought these suits attacking the order, so far
as it prescribed maximum charges for selling livestock, as illegal
and arbitrary and as depriving plaintiffs of their property without
due process of law in violation of the Fifth Amendment of the
Constitution. The District Court of three judges entered decrees
sustaining the order and dismissing the bills of complaint.
8 F. Supp.
766. Motions for rehearing were denied and, by stipulation, the
separate decrees were set aside and a joint and final decree was
entered to the same effect. Plaintiffs bring this direct appeal. 7
U.S.C. § 217; 28 U.S.C. § 47.
On the merits, plaintiffs assert that the ultimate basis for the
reduction in commission rates is the Secretary's opinion that there
are too many market agencies, too many salesmen, and too much
competition in the business; that the Secretary has departed
entirely from the evidence as to the actual cost of employing
salesmen in selling cattle at these yards, and has made an
allowance for salaries which is based on pure speculation and is
wholly inadequate to meet the cost of the service; that he has
substituted in place of his accountants' figures as to actual
expenditures, with respect to the item entitled "Business Getting
and Maintaining Expense," a hypothetical allowance greatly less
than actual cost, and that the Secretary has thus made findings
without evidence, and an order, essentially arbitrary, which
prescribes
Page 298 U. S. 473
unreasonable rates. The Government answers that, while the
Secretary is not authorized expressly to prescribe or limit the
number of firms that may engage in the market agency business, he
is under a duty to take cognizance of evidence tending to show
that, under present competitive conditions, certain costs actually
incurred are unreasonable; that, in determining what are just and
reasonable rates, he must give consideration to evidence of the
excessiveness of costs, and, if such evidence shows that there are
many market agencies not receiving a sufficient volume of business
to entitle their costs to be regarded as reasonable, the Secretary
must take cognizance of that fact; that it was in this view that
the Secretary made certain findings as to the inadequacy of the
present business at the stockyards to support economically all the
firms now striving to make a profit; that his findings, supported
by evidence, were directly pertinent to the determination of
reasonable costs, and, so determining, the Secretary was authorized
to fix the rates prescribed in his order.
Before reaching these questions, we meet at the threshold of the
controversy plaintiffs' additional contention that they have not
been accorded the hearing which the statute requires. They rightly
assert that the granting of that hearing is a prerequisite to the
making of a valid order. The statute provides (42 Stat. 159, 166, §
310; 7 U.S.C. § 211):
"Sec. 310. Whenever after full hearing upon a complaint made as
provided in § 309, or after full hearing under an order for
investigation and hearing made by the Secretary on his own
initiative, either in extension of any pending complaint or without
any complaint whatever, the Secretary is of the opinion that any
rate, charge, regulation, or practice of a stockyard owner or
market agency, for or in connection with the furnishing of
stockyard services, is or will be unjust, unreasonable, or
discriminatory, the Secretary -- "
Page 298 U. S. 474
"(a) May determine and prescribe what will be the just and
reasonable rate or charge, or rates or charges, to be thereafter
observed in such case, or the maximum or minimum, or maximum and
minimum, to be charged, and what regulation or practice is or will
be just, reasonable, and nondiscriminatory to be thereafter
followed."
The allegations as to the failure to give a proper hearing are
set forth in paragraph IV of the bill of complaint, quoted in full
in the margin.
* The allegations
in substance are: that separate hearings were not accorded to the
respective respondents (plaintiffs here). That, at the
Page 298 U. S. 475
conclusion of the taking of the testimony before an examiner, a
request was made that the examiner prepare a tentative report,
which should be subject to oral argument and exceptions, so that a
hearing might be had before the Secretary without undue
inconvenience to him, but that the request was denied, and no
tentative report was exhibited to plaintiffs and no oral argument
upon the issues presented by the order of inquiry and the evidence
was at any time had before the Secretary. That the Secretary,
without warrant of law, delegated to Acting Secretaries the
determination of issues
Page 298 U. S. 476
with respect to the reasonableness of the rates involved. That,
when the oral arguments were presented after the original hearing,
and after the rehearing, the Secretary was neither sick, absent,
nor otherwise disabled, but was at his office in the Department of
Agriculture, and the appointment of any other person as Acting
Secretary was illegal. That the Secretary, at the time he signed
the order in question, had not personally heard or read any of the
evidence presented at any hearing in connection with the
proceeding, and had not heard or considered oral arguments relating
thereto or briefs submitted on behalf of the plaintiffs, but that
the sole information of the Secretary with respect to the
proceeding was derived from consultation with employees in the
Department of Agriculture out of the presence of the plaintiffs or
any of their representatives.
On motion of the government, the District Court struck out all
the allegations in paragraph IV of the bill of complaint, and the
plaintiffs were thus denied opportunity to require an answer to
these allegations or to prove the facts alleged.
Certain facts appear of record. The testimony was taken before
an examiner. At its conclusion, counsel for respondents stated
"that he would continue to demand that the Secretary hear
personally the argument of the evidence in behalf of the individual
respondents, or at least have some definite course of procedure
adopted whereby the examiner, or some one else, should formulate a
report on the evidence so that the respondents could have the
character of hearing and right to present their side of the issues
in this case, which they believe the law entitles them to."
The government does not suggest that this request was granted,
and plaintiffs say that it was denied. Oral argument upon the
evidence was had before the Acting Secretary of Agriculture.
Subsequently, brief was filed on plaintiffs' behalf.
Page 298 U. S. 477
Thereafter, reciting "careful consideration of the entire record
in this proceeding," findings of fact and conclusions, and an order
prescribing rates, were signed by the Secretary of Agriculture.
First. The Packers and Stockyards Act makes the
provisions of all laws relating to the "suspending or restraining
the enforcement" or the "setting aside" of the orders of the
Interstate Commerce Commission applicable to the "jurisdiction,
powers, and duties of the Secretary" in enforcing the provisions of
the act. Section 316; 7 U.S.C. § 217. These suits for the review of
the administrative action were thus directly authorized, and appeal
lies under the Urgent Deficiencies Act of October 22, 1913. 38
Stat. 219, 220; 28 U.S.C. § 47.
Tagg Bros. & Moorhead v.
United States, 280 U. S. 420,
280 U. S. 443;
Acker v. United States, ante, p.
298 U. S. 426. All
questions touching the regularity and validity of the proceeding
before the Secretary are open to review.
United States v.
Abilene & Southern Ry. Co., 265 U.
S. 274,
265 U. S.
286-290;
Florida v. United States, 282 U.
S. 194,
282 U. S.
212-215. When the Secretary acts within the authority
conferred by the statute, his findings of fact are conclusive.
Tagg Bros. & Moorhead v. United States, supra; St. Joseph
Stock Yards Co. v. United States, ante, p.
298 U. S. 38;
Acker v. United States, supra. But, in determining
whether, in conducting an administrative proceeding of this sort,
the Secretary has complied with the statutory prerequisites, the
recitals of his procedure cannot be regarded as conclusive.
Otherwise, the statutory conditions could be set at naught by mere
assertion. If, upon the facts alleged, the "full hearing" required
by the statute was not given, plaintiffs were entitled to prove the
facts and have the Secretary's order set aside. Nor is it necessary
to go beyond the terms of the statute in order to consider the
constitutional requirement of due process as to notice and hearing.
For the statute itself demands a full hearing, and the order is
void if such a hearing was
Page 298 U. S. 478
denied.
Interstate Commerce Comm'n v. Louisville &
Nashville R. Co., 227 U. S. 88,
227 U. S. 91;
United States v. Abilene & Southern Ry. Co., supra; Florida
v. United States, supra; United States v. Baltimore & O. R.
Co., 293 U. S. 454,
293 U. S.
464.
Second. The outstanding allegation, which the District
Court struck out, is that the Secretary made the rate order without
having heard or read any of the evidence, and without having heard
the oral arguments or having read or considered the briefs which
the plaintiffs submitted. That the only information which the
Secretary had as to the proceeding was what he derived from
consultation with employees of the Department.
The other allegations of the stricken paragraph do not go to the
root of the matter. Thus, it cannot be said that the failure to
hear the respondents separately was an abuse of discretion. Again,
while it would have been good practice to have the examiner prepare
a report and submit it to the Secretary and the parties, and to
permit exceptions and arguments addressed to the points thus
presented -- a practice found to be of great value in proceedings
before the Interstate Commerce Commission -- we cannot say that
that particular type of procedure was essential to the validity of
the hearing. The statute does not require it, and what the statute
does require relates to substance, and not form.
Nor should the fundamental question be confused with one of mere
delegation of authority. The government urges that the Acting
Secretary who heard the oral argument was in fact the Assistant
Secretary of Agriculture, whose duties are prescribed by the Act of
February 9, 1889 (5 U.S.C. § 517), providing for his appointment
and authorizing him to perform such duties in the conduct of the
business of the Department of Agriculture as may be assigned to him
by the Secretary. If the Secretary had assigned to the Assistant
Secretary the duty of holding the hearing, and the Assistant
Secretary accordingly
Page 298 U. S. 479
had received the evidence taken by the examiner, had heard
argument thereon, and had then found the essential facts and made
the order upon his findings, we should have had simply the question
of delegation. But, while the Assistant Secretary heard argument,
he did not make the decision. The Secretary who, according to the
allegation, had neither heard nor read evidence or argument,
undertook to make the findings and fix the rates. The Assistant
Secretary, who had heard, assumed no responsibility for the
findings or order, and the Secretary, who had not heard, did assume
that responsibility.
We may likewise put aside the contention as to the circumstances
in which an Acting Secretary may take the place of his chief. In
the course of administrative routine, the disposition of official
matters by an Acting Secretary is frequently necessary, and the
integrity of administration demands that credit be given to his
action in that capacity. We have no such question here. The Acting
Secretary did not assume to make the order.
Third. What is the essential quality of the proceeding
under review, and what is the nature of the hearing which the
statute prescribes?
The proceeding is not one of ordinary administration,
conformable to the standards governing duties of a purely executive
character. It is a proceeding looking to legislative action in the
fixing of rates of market agencies. And, while the order is
legislative and gives to the proceeding its distinctive character
(
Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Garrett,
231 U. S. 298,
231 U. S.
307), it is a proceeding which, by virtue of the
authority conferred, has special attributes. The Secretary, as the
agent of Congress in making the rates, must make them in accordance
with the standards and under the limitations which Congress has
prescribed. Congress has required the Secretary to determine, as a
condition of his action, that the existing rates are or will be
"unjust, unreasonable, or discriminatory."
Page 298 U. S. 480
If and when he so finds, he may "determine and prescribe" what
shall be the just and reasonable rate, or the maximum or minimum
rate, thereafter to be charged. That duty is widely different from
ordinary executive action. It is a duty which carries with it
fundamental procedural requirements. There must be a full hearing.
There must be evidence adequate to support pertinent and necessary
findings of fact. Nothing can be treated as evidence which is not
introduced as such.
United States v. Abilene & Southern Ry.
Co., supra. Facts and circumstances which ought to be
considered must not be excluded. Facts and circumstances must not
be considered which should not legally influence the conclusion.
Findings based on the evidence must embrace the basic facts which
are needed to sustain the order.
Interstate Commerce Comm'n v.
Louisville & Nashville R. Co., supra; Chicago Junction
Case, 264 U. S. 258,
264 U. S. 263;
United States v. Abilene & Southern Railway Co., supra;
Florida v. United States, supra; United States v. Baltimore &
O. R. Co., supra.
A proceeding of this sort requiring the taking and weighing of
evidence, determinations of fact based upon the consideration of
the evidence, and the making of an order supported by such
findings, has a quality resembling that of a judicial proceeding.
Hence, it is frequently described as a proceeding of a
quasi-judicial character. The requirement of a "full
hearing" has obvious reference to the tradition of judicial
proceedings in which evidence is received and weighed by the trier
of the facts. The "hearing" is designed to afford the safeguard
that the one who decides shall be bound in good conscience to
consider the evidence, to be guided by that alone, and to reach his
conclusion uninfluenced by extraneous considerations which, in
other fields, might have play in determining purely executive
action. The "hearing" is the hearing of evidence and argument. If
the one who determines
Page 298 U. S. 481
the facts which underlie the order has not considered evidence
or argument, it is manifest that the hearing has not been
given.
There is thus no basis for the contention that the authority
conferred by § 310 of the Packers and Stockyards Act is given to
the Department of Agriculture, as a department in the
administrative sense, so that one official may examine evidence,
and another official who has not considered the evidence may make
the findings and order. In such a view, it would be possible, for
example, for one official to hear the evidence and argument and
arrive at certain conclusions of fact and another official who had
not heard or considered either evidence or argument to overrule
those conclusions and, for reasons of policy, to announce entirely
different ones. It is no answer to say that the question for the
court is whether the evidence supports the findings and the
findings support the order. For the weight ascribed by the law to
the findings -- their conclusiveness when made within the sphere of
the authority conferred -- rests upon the assumption that the
officer who makes the findings has addressed himself to the
evidence, and, upon that evidence, has conscientiously reached the
conclusions which he deems it to justify. That duty cannot be
performed by one who has not considered evidence or argument. It is
not an impersonal obligation. It is a duty akin to that of a judge.
The one who decides must hear.
This necessary rule does not preclude practicable administrative
procedure in obtaining the aid of assistants in the department.
Assistants may prosecute inquiries. Evidence may be taken by an
examiner. Evidence thus taken may be sifted and analyzed by
competent subordinates. Argument may be oral or written. The
requirements are not technical. But there must be a hearing in a
substantial sense. And to give the substance of a hearing, which is
for the purpose of making determinations
Page 298 U. S. 482
upon evidence, the officer who makes the determinations must
consider and appraise the evidence which justifies them. That duty
undoubtedly may be an onerous one, but the performance of it in a
substantial manner is inseparable from the exercise of the
important authority conferred.
The government presses upon our attention the case of
Local
Government Board v. Arlidge [1915] A.C. 120, reversing
King v. Local Government Board [1914] 1 K.B. 160. That
case has provoked much discussion, but we do not think it necessary
to review it, as it relates to a different sort of administrative
action, and is not deemed to be pertinent to a proceeding under the
statute before us and to the hearing which is required by the
principles established by our decisions.
Our conclusion is that the District Court erred in striking out
the allegations of paragraph IV of the bill of complaint with
respect to the Secretary's action. The defendants should be
required to answer these allegations, and the question whether
plaintiffs had a proper hearing should be determined.
The decree is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further
proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
Reversed.
* Paragraph IV of the bill of complaint is as follows:
"Petitioner states that the Order is null and void in that this
petitioner was denied a full hearing before the Secretary upon the
matters and things referred to in the Order of Inquiry as provided
for in said Packers and Stockyards Act, 1921, and the enforcement
of the Order would take Petitioner's property without due process
of law, in violation of the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution of
the United States, in that:"
"(a) The Secretary overruled and denied the request of this
petitioner for a separate, individual, and independent hearing
apart from any other of the respondents named in said Notice of
Inquiry to the prejudice of this petitioner."
"(b) This petitioner requested at the conclusion of the hearings
held under said Notice of Inquiry before the said John C. Brooke
that said Examiner prepare a tentative report upon the evidence to
be presented to the petitioner and the Secretary subject to oral
argument as to any exceptions thereto which the petitioner might
care to present, so that in this manner a hearing might be had
before the Secretary without undue inconvenience to the Secretary,
but said request was denied and no tentative report was exhibited
to petitioner and no oral argument upon the issues presented by
said Order of Inquiry and the evidence taken by said Examiner was
at any time had before the Secretary."
"(c) The Secretary, without warrant or authority of law,
delegated to the said R. W. Dunlap and Rexford G. Tugwell,
purporting to be at the times hereinbefore named Acting Secretaries
of Agriculture, authorities and powers vested solely in the
Secretary involving the exercise of discretion and the
determination of issues in respect to the justice, reasonableness,
and lawfulness of the rates and charges of this petitioner. At each
and all of the times hereinabove referred to, when the said oral
arguments were presented after the original hearing in said
proceeding and after the rehearing thereof, the then Secretary of
Agriculture was in Washington at his office in the Department of
Agriculture, and at said time was neither sick, absent, nor from
any other cause disabled in the performance of official duties of
said Secretary of Agriculture, and a purported appointment of any
other person as Acting Secretary of Agriculture was illegal, null
and void under the laws of the United States."
"(d) Petitioner states on information and belief, and therefore
alleges the fact to be, that the Secretary, at the time said Order
was signed by him, had not personally heard or read any of the
evidence presented at any hearing in connection with this
proceeding, and had not heard or considered oral arguments relating
thereto submitted on behalf of this petitioner and had
[
sic] read or considered any briefs submitted by
petitioner in this proceeding, but that the sole information of
said Secretary with respect to said proceeding was derived from
consultation with employees in the Department of Agriculture, out
of the presence of this petitioner or any representative of this
petitioner."
"By reason of each and all of the foregoing facts, petitioner
avers that said course of action so taken by the Secretary was
without warrant and authority of law, and, by reason of each and
all of the acts and omissions in this paragraph referred to
(including the denial of petitioner's request for a separate
hearing and the overruling of objections), this petitioner has been
denied the 'full hearing' before the Secretary to which the
petitioner is entitled under said Packers and Stockyards Act, 1921,
and under the Constitution of the United States."