Thomsen v. Sir Charles W. Cayser

243 U.S. 66
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 29, 1914
Docket2
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 243 U.S. 66 (Thomsen v. Sir Charles W. Cayser) 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
Thomsen v. Sir Charles W. Cayser, 243 U.S. 66 (1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKenna,

after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.

A motion to dismiss the writ of error is made, two grounds being urged: (1) The Circuit Court of Appeals was without jurisdiction to allow the writ on March 15, 1912, for the reason that its judgment had become executed and the judgment entered thereoh in the Circuit Court November 24, 1911, had become final and irrevocable before the petition for the writ was filed and the order allowed. (2) The judgment of the Circuit Court was entered in the form finally adopted at the request of plaintiffs and by their consent, and the errors assigned by plaintiffs were waived by such request and consent.

The argument to support the motion is somewhat roundabout. It gets back to the Circuit Court and charges that because that court had entered judgment on the original mandate and had adjourned for the term without any application having been made to recall that *83 judgment and because no writ of error to review it was sought, the judgment became a final disposition of the case.

We áre not concerned with what the Circuit Court might have done, but only with what the Circuit Court of Appeals did and the jurisdiction it possessed. It received and granted a petition for rehearing, ordered a recall of the mandate previously issued, set áside the judgment of the Circuit Court, and remanded the case with directions to dismiss the complaint. The plaintiffs did not consent to a judgment against them, but only that, if there was to be such a judgment, it should be final in form instead of interlocutory, so that they might come to this court without further delay.

Subsequently a petition for the writ of error was filed and allowed and all further proceedings upon the part of the defendants for the enforcement of the judgment were suspended and stayed until the final determination by this court upon the writ of error, in return to which the record was properly furnished. Atherton v. Fowler, 91 U. S. 143.

The motion to dismiss is denied.

The case in the courts below had a various fate, victory altérnating between the parties but finally resting with defendants.

The plaintiffs, dissatisfied, have brought the case here. We are confronted at the outset, in view of the proceedings in the courts below, with contentions as to what questions of law or fact are before us.

Notwithstanding two trials and two áppeals and reviews in the Circuit Court of Appeals, defendants insist the facts are yet in controversy. We cannot assent..

It will be observed from the excerpts from the opinions of the Circuit Court of Appeals that the case was decided upon the proposition of law that the combination charged against defendants was not in unreasonable restraint of *84 trade and that such character was necessary to make it illegal under the Federal Anti-trust Act. As to. the fact of combination and restraint and the means employed both trial and appellate courts concurred, and their conclusion is not shown to be erroneous.

There is a contention that “there is not in the record any direct proof whatever of the terms of any conference or agreement participated in by any of the defendants. All that appears is that certain steamship owners consisting of firms, the identity of whose members is not established, operated steamers in the trade from New. York to South African ports without competing with one another.” But more than that appears, and it cannot be assumed that the circulars that were issued and the concerted course of dealing under them were the accidents of particular occasions having no premeditation or subsequent unity in execution. The contention did not prevail with the courts below and we are brought to the consideration of the grounds upon which the Circuit Court of Appeals changed its ruling, that is, that it was constrained to do so by the Standard Oil and Tobacco Cases, 221 U. S. 1, 106.

It is not contended that the facts of those cases or their decision constrained such conclusion, but only that they announced a rule which, when applied to the case at bar, demonstrated the inoffensive character of the combination of defendants. In other words, it is contended that it was decided in those cases that “the rule of reason” must be applied in every case “for the purpose of determining whether the subject before the court was Within the statute,” to quote the words of the opinion, and, as explained in subsequent cases, it is the effect of the rule that only such contracts and combinations are within the act as, by reason of their intent or the inherent nature of the contemplated acts, prejudice the public interest by unduly restricting competition or unduly obstructing the *85 course of trade. Nash v. United States, 229 U. S. 373, 376; Eastern States Retail Lumber Dealers’ Association v. United States, 234 U. S. 600, 609.

But the cited cases did not overrule prior cases. Indeed, they declare that prior cases, aside from certain expressions in two of them 1 or asserted implications from them, were, examples of the rule and show its thorough adequacy to prevent evasions of the policy of the law “by resort to any disguise or subterfuge of form” or the escape of its prohibitions “by any indirection.” And we have since declared that it cannot “be evaded by good motives,” the law being “its own measure of right and wrong, of what it permits, or forbids, and the judgment of the courts cannot be set up against it in a supposed accommodation of its policy with the good intention of the parties and, it may be, of some good results.” Standard Sanitary Mfg. Co. v. United States, 226 U. S. 20, 49; International Harvester Co. v. Missouri, 234 U. S. 199.

The rule condemns the combination of defendants, indeed, must have a stricter application to it than to the combinations passed on in the cited cases. The defendants were common carriers and it was their duty to compete, not combine; and their duty takes from them palliation, subjects them in a special sense to the policy of the law. ■

Their plan of evasion was simple and as effective as simple. They established a uniform freight rate, including in it what they called a primage charge. This charge was refunded subsequently, but only to shippers who shipped exclusively by the Unes of the combining companies and who had not directly or indirectly made or been interested in any shipment by other vessels.

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Related

Thomsen v. Cayser
243 U.S. 66 (Supreme Court, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
243 U.S. 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomsen-v-sir-charles-w-cayser-scotus-1914.