United States v. American Can Co.

230 F. 859, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1011
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedFebruary 23, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 230 F. 859 (United States v. American Can Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. American Can Co., 230 F. 859, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1011 (D. Md. 1916).

Opinion

ROSE, District Judge.

The United States, hereinafter called the “government,” brings this proceeding under the fo'urth section of the Anti-Trust Act of July 2, 1890. It says that the American Can Company, a New Jersey corporation, was formed and has since been maintained in violation of the first and second sections of that statute. Originally, there were 9 other corporate and 27 individual defendants. By consent at the hearing the petition was dismissed as to 5 of the former and 8 of the latter. All of the defendants other than the American Can Company were brought into the case because the gov-émment thought they had taken part, either in its illegal organization, or in its subsequent unlawful acts. It will be referred to many times. The other defendants will be mentioned much .less frequently. For brevity, it will be called the “defendant,”

It has put 516 witnesses on the stand; the government 346. Be- • tween 1,500 and 1,600 exhibits have been filed. The record covers more than 8,700 printed pages. Nevertheless, an ordinary collision [861]*861case on the admiralty side of the court, or a moderately contested proceeding in bankruptcy, would raise more issues of fact. The government proved one set of circumstances. By cross-examination the defendant sought to minimize their effect, but it offered no evidence in contradiction. When its turn came, it proved other things. The government attempted to show from defendant’s witnesses that, either they were not as well informed as they supposed themselves to be, or that there were many things in economics undreamt of in their philosophy; but, as a rule, it did not undertake to show that they were wrong as to any actual fact of real materiality or importance.

What Has Been Proved.

What has been proved is: First, that the defendant was organized to monopolize interstate trade in cans, and to attain that object such trade was unlawfully rest rained by it, and by those who formed it and directed its earlier activities, and that some of those individuals still participate in its management and control. Second, for some time before the filing of the petition in this case, it had done nothing of which any competitor or any consumer of cans complains, or anything which strikes a disinterested outsider as unfair or unethical.

Legal Contentions of the Parties.

The government says that certain restraints once illegally imposed by the defendant upon the trade are still in force, in part at least. The defendant replies that, if in any sense so> much is true, such restraints have long ago become theoretical rather than real, and, if the court thinks it worth while, the defendant has no objection to their being declared illegal, or even to an injunction forbidding their further enforcement.

The real controversy between the parties goes much deeper. The government says the defendant, by its size, its wealth, and its power, exerts a great influence upon the entire trade in cans, and that this influence, in some very important respects, notably as to the fixing of the price of packers’ cans, is so great that it may, without straining words, be said to dominate the market.

The defendant answers its size is not a crime. The government replies, in substance:

“True, provided such size is the result oí natural and legitimate growth, but not when it is the outcome of unlawful means used for the very purpose of securing a control of the market. In the latter case, so long as the control continues, the illegal purpose is still in process of execution, and, if nothing short of dissolving the defendant into a number of smaller companies will completely emancipate the trade, the court must decree such dissolution.”
“The combination among the once independent concerns might have been otherwise effected. They might have subjected themselves to control of a singlo will, while each still preserved its individual existence. In that event, it would be clear that the court could and should put an end to the agreement among them.”

Reference is made to those cases which hold that the way in which the combination is brought about is immaterial. If it seeks an end forbidden by the anti-trust acts, and that end is attained in whole or [862]*862in part, the government has a right to demand that it be dissolved. The defendant’s answer may be thus summed up :

“With a very few exceptions, only one of which is of any real importance, all the units which have at any time come under its control are dead, beyond the hope of resurrection. The court cannot call back to life the many can-making concerns which died that the defendant might come into being, or which have since yielded up their lives to it. No order of court can make the dead breathe again.”
“The number of once’independent concerns absorbed by it can, it is true, be ascertained. If the court is bound to come as near as it can to putting things back as they were, it must dissolve the defendant into a like number of parts. Everybody feels that it is under no such Obligation. The government does not ask that the defendant shall be divided into more than about half a dozen separate corporations. Why will it be content with a dissolution perhaps one-twentieth as drastic as would be required to restore the original status? Obviously, because it recognizes that a court of equity neither will, nor should, cause loss, destruction, or inconvenience, unless it has reasonable and probable grounds to believe that by so doing it will accomplish affirmative good. Its business is to prevent and remedy, not to punish. If it will not order a dissolution into 100 parts because nothing would be gained thereby, it will not decree a division into 6 or even into 2, unless it believes that good will follow. It must deal with facts as it finds them. If an illegal agreement is- still in force, it must end it. If the agreement has long since been executed, and is itself at an end, the court may, if it can, put things back where there were before the agreement was made; but, if Humpty Dumpty cannot be set up again, the court must do the best it may with conditions as they are. The record shows that any dissolution will do more harm than good.”

To this the government replies that:

“Even if for the sake of the argument the soundness of defendant’s statement of legal principles should be admitted, it remains true that defendant acquired its controlling position in the trade as the result of an unlawful combination; that such control, even when legitimately acquired, if not illegal, is at the best a danger; and that, by the dissolution asked for, it can and should be ended.”

Why the Facts Are Reviewed.

It is upon the answers which the law requires to be given to these contentions that the judgment of this court must turn. Any statement of facts, in addition to that already made, other than those which bear upon the present relation of.the defendant to the can trade, and upon the probable effect of its dissolution, or of its remaining undissolved, upon .the public interests, is therefore, strictly speaking, unnecessary. The case may not stop here. It is not probable that either side will accept the conclusions above stated as being at once both accurate and complete. The court of first instance should give the appellate tribunal the benefit of its examination of the evidence, whenever the facts are disputed, or the inferences which should be drawn from them are contested.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
230 F. 859, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1011, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-american-can-co-mdd-1916.