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Page 321
321 U.S. 321
64 S.Ct. 587 88 L.Ed. 754 HECHT CO.
v.
BOWLES, Price Administrator.
No. 316.
Argued Feb. 3, 4, 1944.
Decided Feb. 28, 1944.
Mr. Charles A. Horsky, of
Washington, D.C., for petitioner.
Mr. Chester T. Lane, of
Washington, D.C., for respondent.
Mr. Justice DOUGLAS delivered
the opinion of the Court.
Sec. 205(a) of the Emergency
Price Control Act of 1942, 56 Stat. 23, 50
U.S.C.App.Supp. II, §§ 901 et seq., 925, 50
U.S.C.A.Appendix, §§ 901 et seq., 925,
provides: 'Whenever in the judgment of the
Administrator any person has engaged or is
about to engage in any
Page 322
acts or practices which constitute or
will constitute a violation of any provision
of section 4 of this Act, * * * he may make
application to the appropriate court for an
order enjoining such acts or practices, or
for an order enforcing compliance with such
provisions, and upon a showing by the
Administrator that such person has engaged
or is about to engage in any such acts or
practices a permanent or temporary
injunction, restraining order, or other
order shall be granted without bond.' The
question in this case is whether the
Administrator, having established that a
defendant has engaged in acts or practices
violative of § 4 of the Act is entitled as
of right to an injunction restraining the
defendant from engaging in such acts or
practices or whether the court has some
discretion to grant or withhold such relief.
Sec. 4(a) of the Act makes it
unlawful for a person to sell or deliver any
commodity in violation of specified orders
or regulations of the Administrator. A
regulation issued under § 2 of the Act and
effective in May, 1942 (7 Fed.Reg. 3153)
provided that no person should sell or
deliver any commodity at a price higher than
the authorized maximum price (§ 1499.1) as
fixed or determined by the regulation.1
Since maximum prices were fixed with
Page 323
reference to earlier base periods, the
regulation also provided for the
preservation and examination of existing
records.2 And provision was
likewise made for the keeping of current
records reflecting sales made under the
regulation3 and for the filing of
maximum prices with the Administrator.4
Page 324
There is no substantial
controversy over the facts. Petitioner
operates a large department store in
Washington, D.C. and did a business of about
$20,000,000 in 1942. There are 107
departments in the store and each sells a
separate line of merchandise. In the fall of
1942 the Administrator started an
investigation to determine whether
petitioner was complying with the Act and
the regulation. The investigation was a
'spot check', confined to seven departments.
In each of the seven departments violations
were disclosed. As a result this suit was
brought. The complaint charged violations of
the maximum price provisions of the
regulation and violations of the regulations
governing the keeping of records and
reporting to the Administrator. The
Administrator payed for an injunction
enjoining petitioner from selling,
delivering or offering for sale or delivery
any commodity in violation of the regulation
and from failing to keep complete and
accurate records as required by the
regulation. In its answer petitioner pleaded
among other things that any failure or
neglect to comply with the regulation was
involuntary and was corrected as soon as
discovered.
Numerous violations both as
respects prices and records were discovered.
Thus in six of the seven departments
investigated there had occurred between May
and October,
Page 325
1942 some 3700 sales in excess of the
maximum prices with overcharges of some
$4600. The statements filed with the
Administrator were deficient, some 400 items
of merchandise being omitted. And there were
over 300 items with respect to which no
records were kept showing how the maximum
prices had been determined.
There is no doubt, however, of
petitioner's good faith and diligence. The
District Court found that the manager of the
store had offered it as a laboratory in
which the Administrator might experiment
with any regulation which might be issued.
Prior to the promulgation of the regulation
the petitioner had created a new section
known as the price control office. That
office undertook to bring petitioner into
compliance with the requirements of the
regulation in advance of its effective date.
The head of that office together with seven
assistants devoted full time to that
endeavor. But the store had about 2,000
employees and over one million two hundred
thousand articles of merchandise. In the
furniture departments alone there were over
fifty-four thousand transactions in the
first ten months of 1942. Difficulties were
encountered in interpreting the regulation,
in determining the exact nature of an
article and whether it had been previously
sold and at what price, etc. The absence of
adequate records made it difficult to
ascertain prices during the earlier
base-period. Misunderstanding of the
regulation, confusion on the part of
employees not trained in such problems of
interpretation and administration, the
complexity of the problem, and the
fallibility of humans all combined to
produce numerous errors. But the District
Court concluded that the 'mistakes in
pricing and listing were all made in good
faith and without intent to violate the
regulations.'
The District Court also found
that the mistakes brought to light 'were at
once corrected, and vigorous steps were
taken by The Hecht Company to prevent
recurrence of
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these mistakes or further mistakes in the
future.' The company increased its price
control office to twenty-eight employees.
New methods of internal control were
instituted early in November, 1942 with the
view of avoiding future violations. That new
system of control 'greatly improved' the
situation. Petitioner undertook to make
repayment of all overcharges brought to
light by the investigation in case of
customers who could be identified. It
proposed to contribute the remaining amount
of such overcharges to some local charity.
The District Court concluded that the
issuance of an injunction would have 'no
effect by way of insuring better compliance
in the future' and would be 'unjust' to
petitioner and not 'in the public interest'.
It accordingly dismissed the complaint.
Brown v. Hecht Co., 49 F.Supp. 528. On
appeal the Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia reversed that judgment, one
judge dissenting. 137 F.2d 689. That court
held that the findings of the District Court
were supported by substantial evidence,
except that it did not consider whether the
evidence supported the findings that an
injunction would not insure better
compliance in the future and would be unjust
to petitioner. In its view the latter
findings were immaterial. For it construed §
205(a) of the Act to require the issuance of
an injunction or other order as a matter of
course, once violations were found.
The case is here on a question
for a writ of certiorari which we granted
because of the importance of the problem in
the administration of the Act.
Respondent insists that the
mandatory character of § 205(a) is clear
from its language, history and purpose. He
argues that 'shall be granted' is not
permissive, that since the same section
provides that the Administrator 'may' apply
for an injunction and that, if so, the
injunction 'shall' be granted, 'may' and
'shall' are each used in the ordinary sense.
It is pointed out that when the bill (for
which the Act in its final form was
substituted)
Page 327
passed the House, § 205(a) provided that
'upon a proper showing' an injunction or
other order 'shall be granted without bond.'5
The words 'upon a proper showing' were
stricken in the Senate and were replaced by
the words 'upon a showing by the
Administrator that such person has engaged
or is about to engage in any such acts or
practices.' And the Senate Report in its
analysis of § 205(a) stated that 'upon a
showing by the Administrator that such
person has engaged or is about to engage in
any such acts or practices, a temporary or
permanent injunction, restraining order or
other order is to be granted without bond.'
S.Rep. No. 931, 77th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 25.
Further support for the view that the
issuance of an injunction is mandatory once
violations are shown is sought in the
pattern of federal legislation which
provides relief by injunction in aid of law
enforcement. Some of those statutes6
contain provisions quite close to the
language of § 205(a). Others provide that an
injunction or restraining order shall be
granted 'upon a proper showing'7
or that federal district courts shall have
jurisdiction to restrain violations 'for
cause shown'.8 The argument is
that when Congress desired to give the
district courts discretion to grant or
withhold relief by injunction it chose apt
words to make its desire plain.
We agree that the cessation of
violations, whether before or after the
institution of a suit by the Administrator,
is no bar to the issuance of an injunction
under § 205(a).
Page 328
But we do not think that under all
circumstances the court must issue the
injunction or other order which the
Administrator seeks.
It seems apparent on the face
of § 205(a) that there is some room for the
exercise of discretion on the part of the
court. For the requirement is that a
'permanent or temporary injunction,
restraining order, or other order' be
granted. Though the Administrator asks for
an injunction, some 'other order' might be
more appropriate, or at least so appear to
the court. Thus in the present case one
judge in the Court of Appeals felt that the
District Court should not have dismissed the
complaint but should have entered an order
retaining the case on the docket with the
right of the Administrator, on notice, to
renew his application for injunctive relief
if violations recurred. It is indeed not
difficult to imagine that in some situations
that might be the fairest course to follow
and one which would be as practically
effective as the issuance of an injunction.
Such an order, moreover, would seem to by a
type of 'other order' which a faithful
reading of § 205(a) would permit a court to
issue in a compliance proceeding. However
that may be, it would seem clear that the
court might deem some 'other order' more
appropriate for the evil at hand than the
one which was sought. We cannot say that it
lacks the power to make that choice. Thus it
seems that § 205(a) falls short of making
mandatory the issuance of an injunction
merely because the Administrator asks it.
There is, moreover, support in
the legislative history of § 205(a) for the
view that 'shall be granted' is less
mandatory than a literal reading might
suggest. We have already referred to a
portion of the Senate Report which lends
some support to the position of the
Administrator. But in another portion of
that Report there is the following reference
to suits to enjoin violations of the Act:
'In common with substantially all regulatory
statutes, the
Page 329
bill authorizes the official charged with
the duty of administering the act to apply
to any appropriate court, State or Federal,
for an order enjoining any person who has
engaged or is about to engage in any acts or
practices which constitute or will
constitute a violation of any provision of
the bill. Such courts are given jurisdiction
to issue whatever order to enforce
compliance is proper in the circumstances of
each particular case.' S.Rep. No. 931,
supra, p. 10. A grant of jurisdiction to
issue compliance orders hardly suggests an
absolute duty to do so under any and all
circumstances. We cannot but think that if
Congress had intended to make such a drastic
departure from the traditions of equity
practice, an unequivocal statement of its
purpose would have been made.
We do not stop to compare the
provisions of § 205(a) with the requirements
of other federal statutes governing
administrative agencies which, it is said,
make it mandatory that those agencies take
action when certain facts are shown to
exist.9 We are dealing here with
the requirements of equity practice with a
background of several hundred years of
history. Only the other day we stated that
'An appeal to the equity jurisdiction
conferred on federal district courts is an
appeal to the sound discretion which guides
the determinations of courts of equity.'
Meredith v. City of Winter Haven, 320 U.S.
228, 235, 64 S.Ct. 7, 11. The historic
injunctive process was designed to deter,
not to punish. The essence of equity
jurisdiction has been the power of the
Chancellor to do equity and to mould each
decree to the necessities of the particular
case. Flexibility rather than rigidity has
distinguished it. The qualities of mercy and
practicality have made equity the instrument
for nice adjustment and reconciliation
between the public interest and private
needs as well as between competing private
Page 330
claims. We do not believe that such a
major departure from that long tradition as
is here proposed should be lightly implied.
We do not think the history or language of §
206(a) compel it. It should be noted,
moreover, that § 205(a) governs the
procedure in both federal and state courts.
For § 205(c) gives the state courts
concurrent jurisdiction with federal
district courts of civil enforcement
proceedings. It is therefore even more
compelling to conclude that, if Congress
desired to make such an abrupt departure
from traditional equity practice as is
suggested, it would have made its desire
plain. Hence we resolve the ambiguities of §
205(a) in favor of that interpretation which
affords a full opportunity for equity courts
to treat enforcement proceedings under this
emergency legislation in accordance with
their traditional practices, as conditioned
by the necessities of the public interest
which Congress has sought to protect.
United States v. Morgan, 307 U.S. 183, 194,
59 S.Ct. 795, 801, 83 L.Ed. 1211, and
cases cited.
We do not mean to imply that
courts should administer § 205(a)
grudgingly. We repeat what we stated in
United States v. Morgan, supra, 307 U.S.
page 191, 59 S.Ct. page 799, 83 L.Ed. 1211,
respecting judicial review of administrative
action: '* * * court and agency are not to
be regarded as wholly independent and
unrelated instrumentalities of justice, each
acting in the performance of its prescribed
statutory duty without regard to the
appropriate function of the other in
securing the plainly indicated objects of
the statute. Court and agency are the means
adopted to attain the prescribed end, and so
far as their duties are defined by the words
of the statute, those words should be
construed so as to attain that end through
co-ordinated action. Neither body should
repeat in this day the mistake made by the
courts of law when equity was struggling for
recognition as an ameliorating system of
justice; neither can rightly be regarded by
the other as an alien intruder, to be
tolerated if must be, but never to be
encouraged or aided by the other in
Page 331
the attainment of the common aim.' The
Administrator does not carry the sole burden
of the war against inflation. The courts
also have been entrusted with a share of
that responsibility. And their discretion
under § 205(a) must be exercised in light of
the large objectives of the Act. For the
standards of the public interest not the
requirements of private litigation measure
the propriety and need for injunctive relief
in these cases. That discretion should
reflect an acute awareness of the
Congressional admonition that 'of all the
consequences of war, except human slaughter,
inflation is the most destructive' (S.Rep.
No. 931, supra, p. 2) and that delay or
indifference may be fatal. Whether the
District Court abused its discretion in
dismissing the complaint is a question which
we do not reach. The judgment must be
reversed and the cause remanded to the Court
of Appeals for that determination.
Reversed.
Mr. Justice FRANKFURTER agrees
that § 205(a) of the Emergency Price Control
Act, apart from dispensing with any
requirement for a bond, does not change the
historic conditions for the exercise by
courts of equity of their power to issue
injunctions, according to which the Court of
Appeals should now dispose of this cause.
Mr. Justice ROBERTS is of
opinion that the judgment of the Court of
Appeals should be reversed and that of the
District Court affirmed.
1 Sec. 1499.2 provided in
part: 'Except as otherwise provided in this
General Maximum Price Regulation, the
seller's maximum price for any commodity or
service shall be: (a) In those cases in
which the seller dealt in the same or
similar commodities or services during March
1942: The highest price charged by the
seller during such month(1) For the same
commodity or service; or (2) If no charge
was made for the same commodity or service,
for the similar commodity or service, most
nearly like it; or (b) In those cases in
which the seller did not deal in the same or
similar commodities or services during March
1942: The highest price charged during such
month by the most closely competitive seller
of the same class(1) For the same commodity
or service; or (2) If no charge was made for
the same commodity or service, for the
similar commodity or service most nearly
like it. 'Highest Price Charged During March
1942'. For the purposes of this General
Maximum Price Regulation, the highest price
charged by a seller 'during March 1942'
shall be: (a) The highest price which the
seller charged for a commodity delivered or
service supplied by him during March 1942;
or (b) If the seller made no such delivery
or supplied no such service during March
1942 his highest offering price for delivery
or supply during that month.'
The seller's maximum price for a
commodity which cannot be priced under §
1499.2 was to be determined by the seller
pursuant to a formula prescribed in §
1499.3.
2 Sec. 1499.11 entitled
'Base-period records' provided in part:
'Every person selling commodities or
services for which, upon sale by that
person, maximum prices are established by
this General Maximum Price Regulation,
shall: (a) Preserve for examination by the
Office of Price Administration all his
existing records relating to the prices
which he charged for such of those
commodities or services as he delivered or
supplied during March 1942, and his offering
prices for delivery or supply of such
commodities or services during such month;
and (b) Prepare, on or before July 1, 1942,
on the basis of all available information
and records, and thereafter keep for
examination by any person during ordinary
business hours, a statement showing: (1) The
highest prices which be charged for such of
those commodities or services as he
delivered or supplied during March 1942 and
his offering prices for delivery or supply
of such commodities or services during such
month, together with an appropriate
description or identification of each such
commodity or service; and (2) All his
customary allowances, discounts, and other
price differentials.'
3 Sec. 1499.12 entitled
'Current records' provided: 'Every person
selling commodities or services for which,
upon sale by that person, maximum prices are
established by this General Maximum Price
Regulation shall keep, and make available
for examination by the Office of Price
Administration, records of the same kind as
he has customarily kept, relating to the
prices which he charged for such of those
commodities or services as he sold after the
effective date of this General Maximum Price
Regulation; and, in addition, records
showing, as precisely as possible, the basis
upon which he determined maximum prices for
those commodities or services.'
4 Sec. 1499.13(b) provided:
'On or before June 1, 1942, every person
offering to sell cost-of-living commodities
at retail shall file with the appropriate
War Price and Rationing Board of the Office
of Price Administration a statement showing
his maximum price for each such commodity,
together with an appropriate description or
identification of it. Such statement shall
be kept up to date by such person by filing
on the first day of every succeeding month a
statement of his maximum price for any
cost-of-living commodity newly offered for
sale during the previous month, together
with an appropriate description or
identification of the commodity.'
5 H.R. 5479, 77th Cong., 1st
Sess.
6 'Upon a showing that such
person has engaged or is about to engage in
any such act or practice, a permanent or
temporary injunction or decree or
restraining order shall be granted without
bond.' Investment Company Act of 1940, 54
Stat. 842, 15 U.S.C. § 80a-41, 15 U.S.C.A. §
80a41; Investment Advisers Act of 1940, 54
Stat. 853, 15 U.S.C. § 80b-9, 15 U.S.C.A. §
80b9.
7 Securities Act of 1933, 48
Stat. 86, 15 U.S.C. § 77t(b), 15 U.S.C.A. §
77t(b); Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 48
Stat. 899, 15 U.S.C. § 78u(e), 15 U.S.C.A. §
78u(e).
8 Fair Labor Standards Act, 52
Stat. 1069, 29 U.S.C. § 217, 29 U.S.C.A. §
217.
9 National Labor Relations
Act, 49 Stat. 453, 29 U.S.C. § 160(c), 29
U.S.C.A. § 160(c); Clayton Act, 38 Stat.
734, 15 U.S.C. § 21, 15 U.S.C.A. § 21;
Federal Trade Commission Act, 38 Stat. 719,
15 U.S.C. § 45(b), 15 U.S.C.A. § 45(b). |