ENGEL, Circuit Judge.
Winters National Bank & Trust Company (Winters) appeals from a judgment of the district court enforcing a subpoena
duces tecum
issued by the Federal Trade Commission (Commission). The subpoena directs Winters to produce a wide variety of documents and information relative to consumer purchase transactions financed by it.
The subpoena was purportedly issued in furtherance of a non-public investigation
into practices which may violate the Commission’s “Holder-In-Due-Course Rule”, 16 C.F.R. § 433 (1979).
That Rule, in brief, states that in connection with any sale or lease of goods or services to consumers, it is an unfair or deceptive trade practice for a seller to take or receive a consumer credit contract or accept the proceeds of a purchase money loan unless a notice that the holder of the credit contract is subject to all claims and defenses which' the debtor could assert against the seller of the goods is inserted in the credit contract.
From the point of view of Winters and of financing institutions generally, the effect of this Rule is, of course, to strip the ultimate holder of the paper of its traditional status as a holder-in-due-course and to subject it to any potential defenses which the purchaser might have against the seller. It is, therefore, not surprising that banks and others who would prefer the status of a holder-in-due-course should dislike it.
The wisdom of the Rule, however, is not here in dispute and no claim is made that its imposition upon retail vendors is beyond the rule-making authority of the Commission under the Federal Trade Commission Act, 15 U.S.C. § 41
et seq.
(1976).
In its brief, Winters frames the issue on appeal as follows:
Whether the FTC subpoena of Winters National Bank and Trust Company, issued pursuant to authority allegedly granted by 15 U.S.C. Section 49 in connection with an FTC investigation of compliance with its Holder-In-Due-Course Rule by retail sellers, constituted an unlawful investigation of and attempt to regulate a national bank, in violation of 15 U.S.C. Sections 45, 46(a) and 57a(f).
The essence of Winters’ argument is not that it is wholly exempt from the Commission’s subpoena powers
but rather that the overreaching scope of the subpoena establishes, in itself, that its “true purpose” is to make the bank the target of the investigation and thereby indirectly to regulate it, an objective clearly forbidden under 15 U.S.C. §§ 46 and 57a(f) (1976).
In enforcing the subpoena, the district court upheld its validity as a proper exercise of the Commission’s power by relying primarily upon the district court decision in
FTC v. Rockefeller,
441 F.Supp. 234 (S.D.N.Y.1977)
(Rockefeller I).
We affirm, although for reasons more akin to those subsequently expressed by the Second Circuit in
FTC v. Rockefeller,
591 F.2d 182 (2d Cir. 1979)
(Rockefeller II).
I.
The legal standard for enforcing a subpoena
duces tecum
issued by the Commission is set forth in 15 U.S.C. § 49 (1976)
and does not seem to be a point of contention on appeal. As Judge Rubin stated:
Where . . . the inquiry in question is within the authority of the Federal Trade Commission, the subpoena demand is not so indefinite that it amounts to an unreasonable burden, and the information sought is reasonably relevant, enforcement of such subpoena should be ordered.
United States v. Morton Salt Company,
338 U.S. 632, 70 S.Ct. 357, 94 L.Ed. 401;
F.T.C. v. Rockefeller,
441 F.Supp. 234 (S.D.N.Y.1977).
In this appeal Winters does not raise the latter two issues as grounds for not enforcing the subpoena. Rather, Winters argues that the Commission’s investigation is not within its authority.
Section 6 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, 15 U.S.C. § 46, confers certain investigative powers upon the Commission. That Section, in pertinent part, reads:
The Commission shall also have power—
(a) To gather and compile information concerning, and to investigate from time to time the organization, business, conduct, practices, and management of any person, partnership, or corporation engaged in or whose business affects commerce, excepting banks and common carriers subject to the Act to regulate commerce, and its relation to other persons, partnerships, and corporations.
(b) To require, by general or special orders, persons, partnerships, and corporations, engaged in or whose business affects commerce, excepting bank and common carriers subject to the Act to regulate commerce, or any class of them, or any of them, respectively, to file with the Commission in such form as the Commission may prescribe annual or special, or both annual and special, reports or answers in writing to specific questions, furnishing to the Commission such information as it may require as to the organization, business, conduct, practices, management, and relation to other corporations, partnerships, and individuals of the respective persons, partnerships, and corporations filing such reports or answers in writing. Such reports and answers shall be made under oath, or otherwise, as the Commission may prescribe, and shall be filed with the Commission within such reasonable period as the Commission may prescribe, unless additional time be granted in any case by the Commission.
Provided,
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ENGEL, Circuit Judge.
Winters National Bank & Trust Company (Winters) appeals from a judgment of the district court enforcing a subpoena
duces tecum
issued by the Federal Trade Commission (Commission). The subpoena directs Winters to produce a wide variety of documents and information relative to consumer purchase transactions financed by it.
The subpoena was purportedly issued in furtherance of a non-public investigation
into practices which may violate the Commission’s “Holder-In-Due-Course Rule”, 16 C.F.R. § 433 (1979).
That Rule, in brief, states that in connection with any sale or lease of goods or services to consumers, it is an unfair or deceptive trade practice for a seller to take or receive a consumer credit contract or accept the proceeds of a purchase money loan unless a notice that the holder of the credit contract is subject to all claims and defenses which' the debtor could assert against the seller of the goods is inserted in the credit contract.
From the point of view of Winters and of financing institutions generally, the effect of this Rule is, of course, to strip the ultimate holder of the paper of its traditional status as a holder-in-due-course and to subject it to any potential defenses which the purchaser might have against the seller. It is, therefore, not surprising that banks and others who would prefer the status of a holder-in-due-course should dislike it.
The wisdom of the Rule, however, is not here in dispute and no claim is made that its imposition upon retail vendors is beyond the rule-making authority of the Commission under the Federal Trade Commission Act, 15 U.S.C. § 41
et seq.
(1976).
In its brief, Winters frames the issue on appeal as follows:
Whether the FTC subpoena of Winters National Bank and Trust Company, issued pursuant to authority allegedly granted by 15 U.S.C. Section 49 in connection with an FTC investigation of compliance with its Holder-In-Due-Course Rule by retail sellers, constituted an unlawful investigation of and attempt to regulate a national bank, in violation of 15 U.S.C. Sections 45, 46(a) and 57a(f).
The essence of Winters’ argument is not that it is wholly exempt from the Commission’s subpoena powers
but rather that the overreaching scope of the subpoena establishes, in itself, that its “true purpose” is to make the bank the target of the investigation and thereby indirectly to regulate it, an objective clearly forbidden under 15 U.S.C. §§ 46 and 57a(f) (1976).
In enforcing the subpoena, the district court upheld its validity as a proper exercise of the Commission’s power by relying primarily upon the district court decision in
FTC v. Rockefeller,
441 F.Supp. 234 (S.D.N.Y.1977)
(Rockefeller I).
We affirm, although for reasons more akin to those subsequently expressed by the Second Circuit in
FTC v. Rockefeller,
591 F.2d 182 (2d Cir. 1979)
(Rockefeller II).
I.
The legal standard for enforcing a subpoena
duces tecum
issued by the Commission is set forth in 15 U.S.C. § 49 (1976)
and does not seem to be a point of contention on appeal. As Judge Rubin stated:
Where . . . the inquiry in question is within the authority of the Federal Trade Commission, the subpoena demand is not so indefinite that it amounts to an unreasonable burden, and the information sought is reasonably relevant, enforcement of such subpoena should be ordered.
United States v. Morton Salt Company,
338 U.S. 632, 70 S.Ct. 357, 94 L.Ed. 401;
F.T.C. v. Rockefeller,
441 F.Supp. 234 (S.D.N.Y.1977).
In this appeal Winters does not raise the latter two issues as grounds for not enforcing the subpoena. Rather, Winters argues that the Commission’s investigation is not within its authority.
Section 6 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, 15 U.S.C. § 46, confers certain investigative powers upon the Commission. That Section, in pertinent part, reads:
The Commission shall also have power—
(a) To gather and compile information concerning, and to investigate from time to time the organization, business, conduct, practices, and management of any person, partnership, or corporation engaged in or whose business affects commerce, excepting banks and common carriers subject to the Act to regulate commerce, and its relation to other persons, partnerships, and corporations.
(b) To require, by general or special orders, persons, partnerships, and corporations, engaged in or whose business affects commerce, excepting bank and common carriers subject to the Act to regulate commerce, or any class of them, or any of them, respectively, to file with the Commission in such form as the Commission may prescribe annual or special, or both annual and special, reports or answers in writing to specific questions, furnishing to the Commission such information as it may require as to the organization, business, conduct, practices, management, and relation to other corporations, partnerships, and individuals of the respective persons, partnerships, and corporations filing such reports or answers in writing. Such reports and answers shall be made under oath, or otherwise, as the Commission may prescribe, and shall be filed with the Commission within such reasonable period as the Commission may prescribe, unless additional time be granted in any case by the Commission.
Provided,
That the exception of “banks and common carriers subject to the Act to regulate commerce” from the Commission’s powers defined in clauses (a) and (b) of this section, shall not be construed to limit the Commission’s authority to gather and compile information, to investigate, or to require reports or answers from, any person, partnership, or corporation to the extent that such action is necessary to the investigation of any person, partnership, or corporation, group of persons, partnerships, or corporations, or industry which is not engaged or is engaged only incidentally in banking or in business as a common carrier subject to the Act to regulate commerce.
The Commission thus has broad investigatory powers, although it can be seen that, apart from the proviso cited,
Sections 46(a) and (b) clearly prohibit the Commission from investigating unfair or deceptive acts by banks. As Winters correctly points out, that power lies with the Comptroller of the Currency pursuant to 15 U.S.C. § 57a(f)(l) and (2)(A).
Despite the apparent authorization provided in Section 46, Judge Rubin, in enforcing the Commission’s subpoena, seemingly relied upon
Rockefeller I
and consequently upon Judge Lasker’s reasoning that Section 49 provides independent authority for issuing the subpoena.
In
Rockefeller I,
the Commission sought enforcement of several subpoenas
duces te-cum
which were issued to bank holding companies for the ostensible purpose of gathering information about the existence and effect of interlocking relationships between the petroleum industry and the financial sector. The investigation was undertaken pursuant to an express congressional direction to the Commission to conduct a study of the energy industry.
See Rockefeller J, supra,
441 F.Supp. at 236;
Rockefeller II, supra,
591 F.2d at 184. The defendants attacked the subpoenas on the ground,
inter alia,
that the Commission was expressly prohibited from investigating banks by 15 U.S.C. § 46. The district court did not decide this question, however, but enforced the subpoenas upon a finding that Section 49 conferred investigative power upon the Commission independent of the constraints of Section 46. The court stated:
Moreover, although neither side has briefed the point, the subpoena power of § 49 extends not only to those who are not targets of an investigation, but also to those who, because of an exemption such as is enjoyed by these respondents, can never be targets.
FTC v. Cockrell,
431 F.Supp. 561, 563, 564 (D.D.C.1977);
Freeman v. Brown Brothers Harriman & Co.,
250 F.Supp. 32, 34 (S.D.N.Y.1966),
aff’d
357 F.2d 741 (2d Cir.),
cert. denied
384 U.S. 933, 86 S.Ct. 1446, 16 L.Ed.2d 532 (1966);
Freeman v. Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Company,
248 F.Supp. 487, 492 (E.D.Pa.1965).
441 F.Supp. at 240 (footnote omitted).
The Second Circuit, while affirming the district court’s judgment in
Rockefeller I,
disagreed with the basis for the decision. In
Rockefeller II,
Judge Feinberg stated that Section 49 “ ‘is not an independent grant of authority to or source of substantive power for the Commission . . . .’ Rather, section 6 [§ 46] must govern, and subsection (a) exempts, ‘banks’ from Commission investigations.” 591 F.2d at 186.
The Second Circuit further held that the banks were more than mere repositories of documents and were in fact ancillary targets of the investigation.
Nonetheless,
the court considered the proviso to Section 46 to provide authority for the investigation, observing that the proviso:
clearly authorized the Commission to “gather and compile information” from, and to “investigate”, banks “to the extent that such action is necessary to the investigation” of non-banking targets.
*
*
* * * *
The Commission’s investigatory power is broad, see
United States v. Morton Salt Co.,
338 U.S. 632, 641-43, 70 S.Ct. 357, 94 L.Ed. 401 (1950);
FTC v. MacArthur,
532 F.2d 1135, 1140 (7th Cir. 1976), and an enactment clearly intended to augment it, such as the 1973 proviso, should not be strictly or narrowly construed. We believe that the proviso requires only that the ancillary investigation of appellants arise reasonably and logically out of the main investigation of competitive conditions in the energy industry. Cf.
Mourning v. Family Publications Service, Inc.,
411 U.S. 356, 369, 93 S.Ct. 1652, 36 L.Ed.2d 318 (1973);
United States v. Powell,
379 U.S. 48, 53-54, 85 S.Ct. 248, 13 L.Ed.2d 112 (1964).
591 F.2d at 188 (footnote omitted). The court thus upheld the district court’s enforcement of the subpoenas on the ground that the Commission was authorized to seek the material where the banks were not the subject of the principal investigation.
We note that while the Second Circuit’s findings that the banks were properly the subject of an “ancillary” investigation may be justified by the particular circumstances of that case, involving, as it did, a broad investigation specifically authorized by the Congress, no such specific authority supports the action here. Instead we are faced with a more generalized application of the language of Section 46 and of the amendment which Congress made to it in adding the proviso. Further, while the 1973 amendment to Section 46 appears to have been aimed immediately at preserving and defining the Commission’s investigative powers against the specifically contemplated investigation of interlocking relationship between the petroleum industry and the financial sector, the proviso obviously has and was intended to have a broader application.
Accordingly, we read Section 46, with its amendment, as providing a rather careful course of conduct by the Commission where its investigative powers necessarily collide with the protections accorded the banking industry generally and the primary right to regulate national banking institutions reposed in the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Board and in the Comptroller of the Currency, under Section 57a(f).
II.
Applying to the facts what we, therefore, perceive to be an appropriate construction of the applicable law, the task becomes essentially a factual one: was the true purpose of the investigation an attempt to investigate and regulate Winters National Bank? If Winters is not the object of the investigation, then the Commission has the power to subpoena documents from it as from any third party.
If it is the object, however, the Commission has exceeded its authorization under Section 46.
Winters claims that, as a matter of law, it is being so investigated and that this conclusion is compelled by the broad scope of the subpoena itself. Judge Rubin, however, held otherwise. Relying specifically upon
United States v. Morton Salt Co.,
338 U.S. 632, 70 S.Ct. 357, 94 L.Ed. 401 (1950), Judge Rubin held (1) that the investigation in question is within the authority of the Commission; (2) that the subpoena demand is not so indefinite that it amounts to an unreasonable burden, and (3) that the information sought is reasonably relevant.
Significantly, we observe that neither party disputes the specific finding of the district court which describes the genesis of the entire investigation:
an inquiry was begun on a national scale from the Denver Regional Office of the Commission. A primary, but not exclusive, inquiry was directed to the mobile home industry. In the process of investigation the Commission learned that a company known as Caboose Mobile Homes, located in Cincinnati, Ohio, utilized a contract form lacking appropriate notice as required by the Holder-In-Due-Course Rule. Such form may have been prepared by defendant Winters.
Nowhere in the record do we find any dispute of the specific facts as found by the court, although Winters, of course, disputes the court’s inferences therefrom. If, therefore, it is true that the Commission began by investigating the mobile home industry and that it thereby was led to Winters by the route indicated, it seems to follow that the industry and not the bank is the primary target of the investigation. Whether such an investigation under Section 46 has as its object a proper purpose consistent with the investigative authority conferred upon the Commission by the Congress, or whether it represents an unlawful investigation of a bank, is an issue of fact. We believe that the district court’s holding here that Winters was not the target of the investigation is not clearly erroneous and must, therefore, be sustained. Rule 52(a), Fed.R.Civ.P.;
United States v. Held,
435 F.2d 1361, 1364 (6th Cir. 1970),
cert. denied,
401 U.S. 1010, 91 S.Ct. 1255, 28 L.Ed.2d 545 (1971).
We recognize, of course, that the facts, and more particularly, the inferences from those facts, are hotly disputed. Thus, the district court, in resolving the question here, could properly have considered the breadth of the language of the Commission’s resolution, and also the broad language of the subpoena issued.
The court was entitled to recognize, as bearing upon the issue, the fact that the more effective the enforcement of the Holder-In-Due-Course Rule, the greater the inevitable impact upon lending institutions which must thereupon make the hard decision whether to accept paper which contains a waiver of its right as a holder-in-due-course, with all of the additional risk which such a waiver would entail to the bank. Further, the district court was entitled, in weighing inferences from the evidence, to recognize that the most efficient policing of the Rule would come by the direct policing of the lending institutions themselves, and that a powerful motive exists in the Commission to get around the express bans and roadblocks to this end, deliberately established by the Congress.
On the other hand, the district judge was entitled to consider the undisputed evi
dence before him that an investigation was under way of the mobile home industry and that the Commission had come upon evidence which indicated that one company in that industry, Caboose Mobile Homes, had been engaged in violations of the Rule through the use of Winters paper which did not contain the required notice. He was therefore entitled to consider that it was not unreasonable for the Commission to have subpoenaed the bank as the best and most efficient source of information to determine the extent to which Caboose and others participated in transactions violative of the Holder-In-Due-Course Rule.
He was entitled also to consider that the 1973 amendment to Section 46 appears expressly to have contemplated broad, industry-wide investigations and to have intended that any exemption for the bank, which might otherwise appear in subsections (a) and (b) of Section 46, would not interfere with the actual issuance of subpoenas. Of particular interest in this regard is the specific inclusion in the proviso to Section 46 of the term “industry”, indicating further a congressional intent that the subpoena power of the Commission could be and should be employed in its investigation, not only of individual companies or organizations suspected of violations of the Act and Rules thereunder, but of industry-wide practices which would in turn require a broader use of subpoena power.
In further support of Judge Rubin’s findings, we also note that, as much as it might be hindered by its inability to find a vendor who could be induced to negotiate paper in violation of the Holder-In-Due-Course Rule, Winters cannot itself be in violation of the Rule nor be liable for any sanctions for a violation of that Rule. One, therefore, must ask whether Winters could ever be a target of an investigation, since even if the Commission might take aim at it, the Commission could not hit Winters directly. Finally, we acknowledge the strong policy upholding the validity of the exercise of these powers by a government agency and the historic construction of the powers as broad under
United States v. Morton Salt Co., supra.
Taking into account all of the circumstances, we conclude that the Commission acted within its authority in issuing the subpoena and that the district court properly entered a judgment enforcing it. In so ruling, we take particular note that Winters has not in these proceedings claimed that enforcement of the subpoena is oppressive
under the circumstances.
Our ruling here, therefore, is necessarily confined to the express issue raised on this appeal, that is, the authority of the Federal Trade Commission to issue a subpoena to a national bank under the circumstances presented.
Affirmed.