Philadelphia Coke Co. v. Bowles

139 F.2d 349
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 15, 1943
Docket47, Nos. 50-53
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 139 F.2d 349 (Philadelphia Coke Co. v. Bowles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Emergency Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philadelphia Coke Co. v. Bowles, 139 F.2d 349 (eca 1943).

Opinion

139 F.2d 349 (1943)

PHILADELPHIA COKE CO.
v.
BOWLES, Price Adm'r. CONNECTICUT COKE CO.
v.
SAME. RAINEY-WOOD COKE CO.
v.
SAME. KOPPERS CO. (MINNESOTA DIVISION)
v.
SAME. KOPPERS CO. (SEABOARD DIVISION)
v.
SAME.

Nos. 47, Nos. 50-53.

United States Emergency Court of Appeals.

Heard October 4, 1943.
Decided December 15, 1943.

*350 *351 Gilbert W. Oswald, of Philadelphia, Pa. (William A. Schnader, of Philadelphia, Pa., on the brief), for complainants.

Morton Meyers, Atty., Office of Price Administration, of Washington, D. C. (George J. Burke, Gen. Counsel, Thomas I. Emerson and Nathaniel L. Nathanson, Associate Gen. Counsels, and Maurice Alexandre and Irving Schwartz, Attys., all of Office of Price Administration, all of Washington, D. C., on the brief), for respondent.

Before MARIS, Chief Judge, and MAGRUDER and LAWS, Judges.

Heard at Philadelphia October 4, 1943.

MARIS, Chief Judge.

The complainants are independent[1] manufacturers of coke and coke oven gas and represent the major independent production of coke oven gas in the United States. Their practice is to sell coke oven gas to utility companies under long term contracts which specify a basic price for the gas and contain an adjustment clause under which the price of the gas sold is varied on a fixed scale in proportion to increases or decreases in the cost of the coal from which the gas is produced. Contracts of this type are presently in force in the case of each of the complainants except the Philadelphia Coke Company. For reasons which need not here be set out that company's contract with the Philadelphia Gas Works Company for the sale of coke oven gas contains an adjustment clause which is based on increases in the cost of the production of water gas by the Gas Works Company rather than in the cost of coal to the Coke Company.

On April 28, 1942 the Price Administrator issued the General Maximum Price Regulation under which the prices of commodities generally, including the complainants' coke oven gas, were frozen at the highest prices charged by the sellers during March, 1942. Within sixty days thereafter complainants filed their protests against the General Maximum Price Regulation as applied to the sale and delivery of coke oven gas by them under their existing contracts. Thereafter the Administrator denied the complainants' protests, whereupon they filed the complaints now before us.

At the outset we are met with the question whether the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix, § 901 et seq., authorized the issuance by the Administrator of a general overall regulation of prices such as the General Maximum Price Regulation here complained against. While the complainants disclaim *352 any intention of making a general attack upon that regulation, such an attack is implicit in their contention that the act does not authorize the application of the regulation to their sales of coke oven gas. They base this contention upon the proposition that the General Maximum Price Regulation may, under the terms of the act, only be applied to a commodity if the prices of that commodity have risen or threatened to rise to an abnormal unwarranted or excessive extent and upon the asserted fact that the prices of their coke oven gas have not risen or threatened to rise to that extent.

Passing, for the moment, the question of the validity of the complainants' assertion that the prices of their product have not risen or threatened to rise to an extent inconsistent with the purposes of the act, it will be observed that if the General Maximum Price Regulation is construed as applicable only to prices which are affirmatively shown to be rising or threatening to rise it ceases to be an overall price regulation, but is in effect merely an aggregation of regulations of the prices of those individual commodities whose prices have been shown to have risen or threatened to rise to an extent inconsistent with the act. We must, therefore, consider whether the act authorizes the Administrator to issue an overall regulation fixing maximum prices for all commodities upon a finding of a general threat of inflationary price increases throughout the economy but without an individual finding in the case of each commodity regulated that its prices have risen or threatened to rise to an abnormal, unwarranted or excessive extent.

In the early stages of an inflationary movement it may well be that the individual regulation of those commodity prices which are more particularly affected will be sufficient to halt the movement. There comes a time, however, in the course of an unchecked inflationary movement when it gains such momentum that inflationary pressures with their resulting rises and threats of rises in prices make themselves felt throughout the whole economy. Does the act authorize a general overall regulation of all commodity prices if and when this stage is reached? Section 2(a) of the act specifically provides that "Whenever in the judgment of the Price Administrator * * * the * * * prices of * * * commodities have risen or threaten to rise to an extent or in a manner inconsistent with the purposes of this Act, he may by regulation or order establish such * * * maximum prices as in his judgment will be generally fair and equitable and will effectuate the purposes of this Act." This is a specific authorization to the Administrator to establish maximum prices by a single regulation when the prices of commodities generally have risen or threaten to rise to an undue extent. That Congress contemplated the exercise of this authority through the imposition of a general overall price ceiling, if it should be found necessary, appears from the legislative history of the act.[2]

The complainants strongly contend that the act is intended to prevent only those price rises which are found to be abnormal, unwarranted and excessive and that it is not intended to confer and does not confer power to prevent all rises in prices. Section 1(a) of the act states it to be among the purposes of the act "to stabilize prices and to prevent speculative, unwarranted, and abnormal increases in prices and rents;" and "to assure that defense appropriations are not dissipated by excessive prices". The act contains no definition of the terms thus used, however, and they must, therefore, be given their ordinary meaning in the light of the kind of danger which the act is intended to combat. Since it is the danger of uncontrolled inflation with which the act is concerned we may assume that only those price increases are to be deemed abnormal, unwarranted or excessive which may have a tendency to bring on or accelerate an inflationary movement. Since in the early stages of such a movement small increases in the prices of some commodities may have no such tendency, they may for that reason be considered as normal and not excessive. When the movement reaches a point, however, at which inflationary pressures begin to appear in commodity prices generally throughout the entire economy it becomes true that any increase, however small, in the price of a single *353 commodity may be inflationary both in origin and effect and may, therefore, fairly be described as abnormal within the meaning of the act. See Lincoln Savings Bank v. Brown, Em.App.1943, 137 F.2d 228; Spaeth v. Brown, Em.App.1943, 137 F.2d 669.

As we have seen, the first stated purpose of the act is "to stabilize prices".

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Bluebook (online)
139 F.2d 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-coke-co-v-bowles-eca-1943.