Hammond Packing Co. v. Arkansas

212 U.S. 322, 29 S. Ct. 370, 53 L. Ed. 530, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1817
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 23, 1909
Docket54
StatusPublished
Cited by407 cases

This text of 212 U.S. 322 (Hammond Packing Co. v. Arkansas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hammond Packing Co. v. Arkansas, 212 U.S. 322, 29 S. Ct. 370, 53 L. Ed. 530, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1817 (1909).

Opinion

Mb. Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Hammond Packing Company, an Illinois corporation— hereafter called the Hammond Company — seeks to reverse a judgment for ten thousand dollars as penalties for alleged violations of a state law referred to as the Anti-Trust Act of 1905.

The Hammond Company challenged the authority which the act purported to exert and the forms of procedure which the statute authorized and which were employed to enforce its requirements, because of their alleged repugnancy to the Constitution of the United -States, in particulars which were enumerated. The Supreme Court of Arkansas held that the acts which the Hammond Company was charged with having committed were within the prohibitions of the law of 1905, and that the statute was in no respect repugnant to the Constitution of the United States. These conclusions were sustained by considering prior cognate legislation, and a construction given thereto, as well as by an analysis of the act of 1905, elucidated by a prior decision made concerning the same. Before recurring particularly to the procedure and judgment in this case we advert *331 to these subjects, as they are essential to a comprehension of the matters, here arising for decision.

The constitution of Arkansas of 1874 (§ 11, art. 12) authorized foreign corporations to do business in the State,- subject to the same regulations and with the same rights as those enjoyed 'by domestic corporations. Carrying these provisions into effect, the legislature (Kirby’s Digest Laws, Ark., §§ 824 to 827)' authorized permits to be issued to foreign corporations, subjecting them to.like control and entitling them to the same privileges as domestic corporations on payment of the same fees as were exacted from a domestic corporation and on compliance with other statutory requirements.. In § 6, art. 12, of the same constitution there was contained a reservation of the power of the legislature to repeal, alter or amend charters of incorporation, subject, however, to the limitation that thereby “no injustice shall be done to the corporators.”

The Hammond Company obtained a permit and engaged in business within the State of Arkansas.

In 1899 what was known as the Rector Act was enacted for the punishment of pools, trusts and conspiracies to control prices, etc. Under this law an action was commenced to recover penalties against the Lancashire Fire Insurance Company, a foreign corporation, doing business under a permit. The case was in 1899 decided by the Supreme Court of Arkansas against the State. 66 Arkansas, 466. The court held that “ it [the statute] did not intend to prohibit or .punish acts done or agreements made in foreign countries by corporations doing business here, when such acts or - agreements' have reference only to persons or property or prices in such foreign countries.”

In January, 1905, the Rector Act was repealed and the statute now in question was enacted. The first section of the new lav/, which is in the margin, 1 reenacted the first section of the old act, with certain additions, which are in italics. Various sec *332 tions were added in the new law, of which only §§ 8 and 9 are particularly relevant to this controversy. As we shall hereafter have occasion to specially consider these sections, they are presently put out of view.

The Hartford Fire Insurance Company — a Connecticut corporation — was proceeded against for alleged violations of the act of .1905.' The~company defended on the ground that it was not a member of or a party to any pool, etc., made in Arkansas, and that it was not a member of any pool, etc., which in any manner affected the premium for insuring property within that State.

In disposing of the case the Supreme Court of Arkansas (76 Arkansas, 303) considered two questions: First, the proper construction of the act; and second, its constitutionality as construed. The first question was thus stated:

“1. Does the act prohibit, under the penalty named therein, a foreign insurance corporation from doing business in Arkan *333 sas while such corporation is a member of a pool, trust or combination to fix insurance rates anywhere, although such pool, trust or combination is not' created or maintained in Arkansas, and does not affect or fix, or attempt to do so, rates of insurance in Arkansas. To state the proposition by illustration: Assume that the appellant is a member of a trust — called a rating bureau — created and maintained in New York city, to fix and maintain insurance rates in New York city and St. Petersburg, but which does not fix or affect rates in Arkansas, is it guilty of a violation of the act if it transacts an insurance business in Arkansas upon complying with all the statutes of the State,' except the one at bar?”

In solving this question the court deemed that the correct meaning of the statute was to be ascertained by its text as illustrated by the history of the times indicating the motives which led to the adoption of the act. On this subject it was pointed out that after the decision in the Lancashire case public agitation concerning the effect of that decision had arisen and had occasioned an introduction in the legislature at different times of a proposed bill, known as the King bill, intended to counteract the effect of the decision in the Lancashire case, but which bill had failed of passage. The court said:

“ In 1904 the dominant political party in this State, through its party platform, demanded of the next general assembly the passage of the King bill, and of the purpose of said bill said: ‘Whereby all foreign corporations shall be prevented from doing business in this State, if they are members of any trust, pool, combination, or conspiracy against tradé, whether such' trust, pool, combination, or conspiracy affects or is intended to affect prices or rates in Arkansas or not.’ The general assembly elected in 1904, composed almost entirely of members of the political party-whose platform is quoted, with remarkable unanimity and rapidity passed the King bill, which had been rejected by the -two preceding general' assemblies, and .in less than a fortnight of its organization it was approved, and it is the statute now at bar.”

*334 It was decided (Wood and Battle, JJ., dissenting) “that the general assembly intended by this act to subject to the penalty of it any foreign corporation doing business in this State while a member of a trust formed to fix prices anywhere.”

The act as thus interpreted was sustained upon the theory that “the State has dictated these terms upon which foreign insurance companies can do business in this State,” and the State “possesses the right to declare that foreign insurance corporations cannot do business in this State while belonging to a pool, trust, combination, conspiracy, or confederation, to fix or affect insurance rates anywhere.”

Shortly after the decision in the Hartford case this action was commenced by the State against the Hammond Company for a forfeiture of its permit to' do business in Arkansas and for money penalties. As finally amended the complaint consisted of four paragraphs or counts.

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Bluebook (online)
212 U.S. 322, 29 S. Ct. 370, 53 L. Ed. 530, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammond-packing-co-v-arkansas-scotus-1909.