United States v. United States Steel Corporation

251 U.S. 417, 40 S. Ct. 293, 64 L. Ed. 343, 1920 U.S. LEXIS 1630
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 1, 1920
Docket6
StatusPublished
Cited by198 cases

This text of 251 U.S. 417 (United States v. United States Steel Corporation) 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
United States v. United States Steel Corporation, 251 U.S. 417, 40 S. Ct. 293, 64 L. Ed. 343, 1920 U.S. LEXIS 1630 (1920).

Opinions

Mr. Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the. court.

Suit against the Steel Corporation and certain other companies which it directs and controls by reason of the ownership of their ^stock, it and they being separately and collectively charged as violators of the Sherman AntiTrust Act.

It is prayed that it and they be dissolved because engaged in illegal restraint of trade and the exercise of monopoly.

Special charges of illegality and monopoly are made and special redresses and remedies aré prayed, among others, that there be a prohibition of stock ownership and exer[437]*437cise of rights under such ownership, and that there shall be such orders and distribution of the stock and other properties as shall be in accordance with equity and good conscience and “shall effectuate the purpose of the AntiTrust Act.” General relief is also prayed.

The Steel Corporation is a holding company only; the other companies are the operating ones, manufacturers in the iron and steel industry, twelve in number. There are, besides, other corporations and individuals more or less connected with the activities of. the other defendants that are alleged to be instruments or accomplices in their activities and off endings; and that these activities and off endings (speaking in general terms) extend from 1901 to 1911, when the bill was filed, and have illustrative periods of significant and demonstrated illegality.

Issue is taken upon all these charges, and we see at a glance what, detail of circumstances may be demanded, and we may find ourselves puzzled to compress them into an opinion that will not be of fatiguing prolixity.

The case was heard in the District Court by four judges. They agreed that the bill should be dismissed; they disagreed as to the reasons for it. 223 Fed. Rep. 55. One opinion (written by Judge Buffington and concurred in by Judge McPherson) expressed the view that the Steel Corporation was not formed with the intention or purpose to monopolize or restrain trade, and did not have the motive or effect “to prejudice the public interest by unduly restricting competition or unduly obstructing the course of trade,” The corporation, in the view of the opinion, was an evolution, a natural consummation of the tendencies of the industry on account of changing conditions, practically a compulsiqn from “the metallurgical method of making steel and the physical method of handling it,” this method, and the conditions consequent upon it, tending to combinations of capital and energies rather than diffusion in independent action. And the [438]*438concentration of powers (we are-still representing- the opinion) was only such as was deemed necessary, and immediately manifested itself in improved methods and products and in an increase of domestic and foreign trade. Indeed an important purpose of the organization of the corporation was the building up of the export trade in steel and iron which at that time was sporadic, the mere dumping of the products upon foreign markets.

Not monopoly, therefore, was the purpose of the organization of the corporation but concentration of efforts with resultant economies and benefits.

The tendency of the industry and the purpose of the corporation in yielding to it were expressed in comprehensive condensation by the word "integration,” which signifies continuity in the processes of the industry from ore mines to the finished product.

All considerations deemed pertinent were expressed and their influence was attempted to be assigned and, while conceding that the Steel Corporation, after its formation in times of financial disturbance, entered into informal agreements or understandings with its competitors to maintain prices, they terminated with their- occasions, and, as they had ceased to exist, the court was not justified in dissolving the corporation.

The other opinion (by Judge Woolley and concurred in by Judge Hunt, 223 Fed. Rep. 161) was in some particulars, in antithesis to Judge Buffington’s. The view was expressed that neither the Steel Corporation nor the preceding combinations, which were in a sense its antetypes, had the justification of industrial conditions, nor were they or it impelled by the necessity for integration, or compelled to unite in comprehensive enterprise because such had become a condition of success under the new order of things. On the contrary, that the organizers of the corporation and the preceding companies had illegal-purpose from the very beginning, and the corporation [439]*439became “a combination of combinations, by which, directly or indirectly, approximately 180 independent concerns were brought under one business control,’’..which, measured by the amount of production, extended to 80% or 90% of the entire output of the country, and that its purpose was to secure great profits which were thought possible in the light of the history of its constituent combinations, and to accomplish permanently what those combinations had demonstrated could be accomplished temporarily, and thereby monopolize and restrain trade.1

[440]*440The organizers, however (we are still representing the opinion), underestimated the opposing conditions and at the very beginning the Corporation instead of relying upon its own power sought and obtained the assistance and the cooperation of its competitors (the independent companies). In other words the view was expressed that the testimony did “not show that the corporation in and of itself ever possessed or exerted sufficient power when acting alone to control pricesx>f the products of the industry.” Its power was efficient only when in cooperation with its competitors, and hence it concerted with them in the expedients of pools, associations, trade meetings, and finally in a system of dinners inaugurated in 1907 by the president of the company, E. H. Gary, and called “the Gary Dinners.” The dinners were congregations of producers and-“were nothing but trade meetings,” successors of the other means of associated action and control through such action. They were instituted first in ‘ ‘ stress of panic,” but, their potency being demonstrated, they were afterwards called to control prices “in periods of industrial calm.” “They were pools without penalties” and more efficient in stabilizing prices. But it was the further declaration that “when joint action was either refused or withdrawn the Corporation’s prices were controlled by competition.”

The Corporation, it was said, did not at any time abuse the power or ascendency it possessed. It resorted to none of the brutalities or tyrannies that the cases illustrate of [441]*441other combinations.

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Bluebook (online)
251 U.S. 417, 40 S. Ct. 293, 64 L. Ed. 343, 1920 U.S. LEXIS 1630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-united-states-steel-corporation-scotus-1920.