Sugar Institute, Inc. v. United States

297 U.S. 553, 56 S. Ct. 629, 80 L. Ed. 859, 1936 U.S. LEXIS 540
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 30, 1936
Docket268
StatusPublished
Cited by156 cases

This text of 297 U.S. 553 (Sugar Institute, Inc. v. United States) 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
Sugar Institute, Inc. v. United States, 297 U.S. 553, 56 S. Ct. 629, 80 L. Ed. 859, 1936 U.S. LEXIS 540 (1936).

Opinion

*570 Mr. Chief Justice Hughes

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought to dissolve The Sugar Institute, Inc., a trade association, and to restrain the sugar refining companies which composed it, and the individual defendants, from engaging in an alleged conspiracy in re *571 straint of interstate and foreign commerce in violation of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act. 15 U. S. C. 1. Final decree was entered, which, while it did not dissolve the Institute, permanently enjoined the defendants from engaging directly or indirectly in forty-five stated activities. Defendants bring a direct appeal to this Court under the Act of February 11, 1903, 15 U. S. C. 29.

The record is unusually voluminous. 1 The court rendered an exhaustive, opinion and made detailed findings of fact (218 in number) with conclusions of law, describing and characterizing the transactions involved. Numerous assignments of error broadly challenge its rulings, and the case has been presented here in extended oral arguments and elaborate briefs. We shall attempt to deal only with the salient and controlling points of the controversy. These involve (1) the special characteristics of the sugar industry and the practices which obtained before the organization of The Sugar Institute, (2) the purposes for which the Institute was founded, (3) the agreement and practices of the members of the Institute, and (4) the application of the Anti-Trust Act and the provisions of the decree.

First. 1 — The sugar industry and practices prior to the formation of The Sugar Institute. — Domestic refined sugar, beet sugar, and foreign and insular refined sugar, known in the trade as “off-shore” refined, constitute about 99 per cent, of the Nation’s supply. The remainder, consisting of domestic cane sugar, refined particularly in Louisiana, does not appear' to be an important factor in the national markets. The fifteen defendant companies, members of the Institute, refine practically all the im *572 ported raw sugar processed in this country. Their product is known as “domestic refined.” Prior to the organization of the Institute in 1927, they provided more than 80 per cent, of the sugar consumed in the United States, and they have since supplied from 70 to 80 per cent.' Their proportion of the supply is even greater in the New England and Middle Atlantic States, being more than 90 per cent., while in all but a few States their share is more than 55 per cent. Each of the refiners is engaged extensively in interstate commerce. Their refineries are in the vicinity of Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Savannah, New Orleans, Galveston and San Erancisco. The raw cane sugar which they use is imported principally from Cuba and to' some extent from the insular possessions.

Beet sugar for-many years has been an important factor in the domestic market. It is produced and sold chiefly in .the middle and far West, providing in some States over 75 per cent, of the supply, and it competes with other sugars in a number of Southern and Middle Atlantic States. Off-shore sugar is refined principally in Cuba and to some extent in the insular possessions. Its important trade areas have been the Middle, Atlantic and Southern States; in some States it constitutes from 25 to 40 per cent, of the total supply. Both beet sugar and off-shore sugar are sold at a small differential below' defendants’ sugar. The trial court found that there was no agreement between defendants and the beet sugar manufacturers, or with the off-shore interests, to maintain any differential.

The court found that the defendants’ refined cane sugar. “is a thoroughly standarized commodity in physical and chemical properties.” In .exceptional cases and localities,' certain of the defendants had built up a preference for brand names “sufficient before and after the Institute was organized to enable such brands to command a higher *573 price than the sugar of the other defendants in sales from sugar dealers to their trade.” In sales by refiners to manufacturers of products containing sugar — about one-third of the sugar consumed — “price, not brand, was always the vital consideration.” And in the other sales, “one refiner could not ordinarily, by virtue of preference for his brand, obtain a higher price except insofar as another refiner might be giving' a lower price by secret concessions.”

The court further found that the “basis prices,” 2 quoted by the several refiners in any particular trade area, “were generally uniform both before and after the Institute, because economically the defendants’ sugar, save for exceptional instances was .and is a thoroughly standardized product.”

It is a fundamental and earnest contention of defendants that the occasion for the formation of the Institute was the existence of grossly unfair and uneconomical practices in the trade, and that a proper appraisal of- the motives and transactions of defendants cannot be made without full appreciation of the sorry condition into which the industry had fallen.

During the years 1917 to 1919, when the industry was under governmental control, prices were fixed and all forms of concessions and rebates were forbidden. The court found that, perhaps as early as 1921 and increasingly thereafter, the practice developed on the part of some, but not all, refiners of giving secret concessions. There were five refiners 3 who never indulged in that prac *574 tice, but the others, called “unethical” refiners, did so to such an extent that at least 30 per cent, of all the sugar sold by the refiners in 1927 carried secret concessions of some kind. The need of secrecy was urgent, for as soon as it was known that a specific concession was.granted it would be generally demanded. That concessions were widély granted was generally known in the trade, and while each refiner was able to- find out in a general way the approximate prices and terms of his competitors, it was impossible to know with any degree of accuracy the actual prices and terms granted in the innumerable transactions. The court also found that various causes contributed to the development of these selling methods on the part of the unethical refiners, chief among which was an overcapacity since the war of at least 50 per cent. Other probable causes were, the lack of statistical information as to amount of production, deliveries and stocks on hand,, leading to over-production, the uncertainties prevailing in the market for raw sugar which made the refined sugar industry highly speculative, the fact that, since 1922,. most sugar has been sold , through brokers, and the standardization of defendants’ products which made their sales almost entirely dependent upon prices, terms and conditions. The concessions granted were largely, although not entirely, arbitrary.

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297 U.S. 553, 56 S. Ct. 629, 80 L. Ed. 859, 1936 U.S. LEXIS 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sugar-institute-inc-v-united-states-scotus-1936.