Bartlett Frazier Co. v. Hyde

65 F.2d 350, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2999
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 5, 1933
Docket4833
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 65 F.2d 350 (Bartlett Frazier Co. v. Hyde) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bartlett Frazier Co. v. Hyde, 65 F.2d 350, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2999 (7th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

ALSCHULER, Circuit Judge.

The appellants are Bartlett Frazier Company, grain dealers, who' are members of and trading upon the Board of Trade of Chicago in cash grain and grains for future delivery, and the similarly situated inter-veners asking the same relief. The appellees are Arthur M. Hyde, who was Secretary of Agriculture, L. A. Fitz, who was Grain Exchange Supervisor at Chicago for the Department of Agriculture, and the Board of Trade of Chicago.

The suit was brought by Bartlett Frazier Company to enjoin the defendants from requiring the plaintiffs therein, and others similarly situated, to file certain reports relative to future trading transactions, and to subject to inspection their books and records as authorized by the Grain Futures Act of September 21, 1922 (7 USCA §§ 1-17), and the regulations thereunder of the Department of Agriculture, on the ground that the act, or some of its parts, is unconstitutional.

While the opinion of Judge Wilkerson in the District Court, as reported in 56 F.(2d) 245, has our approval, we will submit some further discussion bearing on some of the propositions specially stressed on the appeal.

The contentions of appellants, as stated in the summary of their brief, are: (1) The acts of the defendants, Hyde and Fitz, in searching the records and books of plaintiffs and requiring reports of their contents violate the Fourth Amendment to the Federal Constitution; (2) the (Grain Futures) act is unconstitutional in that no notice of hearing or opportunity to be heard is afforded by its terms; (3) the act is unconstitutional in that no provision is made for testing the validity of orders, regulations, or requirements of the act, except under harsh and confiscatory penalties; (4) the act is unconstitutional in that no review of the validity of orders, regulations, or demands is afforded by its terms; (5) the act is unconstitutional in that it contains no provision for suspension of orders or for supersedeas pending test of validity; (6) the penalty provisions of the act are invalid because the offenses are so indefinite.

The constitutionality of the Grain Futures Act as a whole was definitely declared by the Supreme Court in Chicago Board of Trade v. Olsen, 262 U. S. 1, 43 S. Ct. 470, 67 L. Ed. 839, and so those allegations and assertions attacking the constitutionality of the act as a whole must here fail.

Appellants invoke the Fourth Amendment as a shield against the requirement that they subject their books and records to the inspection of the Department, and the making of the reports. The Amendment, which declares the right of the people to be secure in their persons and papers against unreasonable search, cannot be applied to regulations which require reports and dis-> *352 closures in respect to a business which is affected with a public interest, so far as such disclosures may be reasonably necessary for the due protection of the public. Were it otherwise, railroads and public utilities generally could not be required to make reports or to subject their records to inspection by agents of the government. Indeed, where public interest requires it, the right of visitation and disclosure has been extended even to business not charged with a public interest, as witness the taxing power, where the requirement of income reports and the right to inspect private books and papers have been definitely upheld. United States v. First National Bank of Mobile (D. C.) 295 F. 142, affirmed 267 U. S. 576, 45 S. Ct. 231, 69 L. Ed. 796 (where further authority is cited). In the Olsen Case it was said: “The Board of Trade conducts a business which is affected with a public interest and is, therefore, subject to reasonable regulation in the public interest.” Page 40 of 262 U. S., 43 S. Ct. 470, 478, 67 L. Ed. 839.

The contention that through the reports and inspections appellants’ business secrets and customers are more likely to disclosure, with the consequent tendency to injure appellants, cannot prevail against the paramount public interest requiring this control for the efficient exercise of which the disclosures through reports and right of inspection are quite indispensable. The statute (section 8 [7 USCA § 12]) forbids the revealing by the Secretary and his assistants of individual trades and of customers; and the findings here, predicated on the evidence, show that in the decade of experience since the act became operative no instances appear where any such confidence has been violated, or where appellants, or any other traders on the Board, have suffered from any such cause. No such official misconduct appears from the evidence to have been threatened or to be imminent.

It is argued that, because under the law inspections may be made and reports required where there is no charge, suggestion, or intimation of conduct contrary to the law, the act is unreasonable and void. It does not appear that appellants were charged with, or were suspected of, any transgression of the law. Assuming that by the declared statutory purpose of preventing corners and speculation in grains the public interest is subserved, this purpose would be seriously embarrassed if the government were powerless to require the information without regard to whether traders such as appellants were suspected of, or charged with, breaking the law. Indeed, the very requirement of the information would of itself have tendency to discourage the unlawful manipulations at which the act is aimed.

The suggestion that inspection of the books would cause disturbance among appellants’ employees, and that certain of the required reports would incur considerable expense in their preparation, are too trivial to merit serious consideration when weighed against the wise public policy manifested by the act. It might here be stated that the evidence discloses but very few instances where there have been inspections. The general requirement is that the reports be made, and this, being the usual practice in the business, could not have tendency to demoralize the working force.

The contention that by requiring these reports and permitting these inspections without first giving opportunity to be heard is violative of the constitutional “due process” provision (Const. Amend. 5) does not appeal to us. The public interest with which this business is impressed, and the evils at which the legislation is directed, well justify the statutory provisions for inspection and reports without first requiring a hearing in each case, and a finding that there has been such conduct as gives reasonable ground for making the inspection or requiring the reports.

Without the unqualified duty to report and the untrammeled right of inspection, the efficacy of the act would be unduly restricted; and if these features transgressed the Constitution, it is not conceivable that the constitutionality of the act would have been upheld as it was in the Olsen Case.

It is urged for appellants, as a major proposition in the ease, that the severity of the penalties, civil and criminal, imposed by the act upon violators thereof, is such that no one may with reasonable safety undertake a test in the courts of its validity by refusing to obey the act, except at risk of confiscation of his property and deprivation of his liberty in the event that he fails to sustain his contest; and that thereby the courts are, in effect, closed against contesting the validity of the act.

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Bluebook (online)
65 F.2d 350, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartlett-frazier-co-v-hyde-ca7-1933.