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UNITED
STATES v. SOUTH-EASTERN UNDERWRITERS ASSOCIATION ET AL. No.
354 SUPREME
COURT OF THE UNITED STATES 322
U.S. 533; 64 S. Ct. 1162; 88 L. Ed. 1440; 1944 U.S. LEXIS 1199; 1944 Trade Cas.
(CCH) P57,253 January
11, 1944, Argued June
5, 1944, Decided SUBSEQUENT
HISTORY: As Amended. PRIOR
HISTORY:
APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE NORTHERN
DISTRICT OF GEORGIA. APPEAL
under the Criminal Appeals Act from a judgment sustaining a demurrer to an
indictment for violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act. DISPOSITION:
51 F.Supp. 712, reversed.
CASE SUMMARY PROCEDURAL
POSTURE: Appellant government sought review of an order from the District Court
of the United States for the Northern District of Georgia that sustained
appellee insurance association's demurrer that appellee was not required to
conform to the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C.S. @ 1, on the ground that the business of
insurance was not commerce, either intrastate or interstate. OVERVIEW:
The Supreme Court reversed the district court's order sustaining appellee
insurer's demurer that appellee was not required to comply with the Sherman Act.
Appellee argued that the business of insurance was not engaged in commerce among
the states and did not come under the commerce clause or the Sherman Act. On
review the court held that a contract of insurance itself did not constitute
interstate commerce, but after the entire transaction was examined, there was a
chain of events that became interstate commerce. The court reasoned that the
allegations of monopoly and interference with trade, virtually admitted to by
appellant, was just the type of activity that Congress intended to prevent by
enacting the Sherman Act. The court held that the powers conferred by the
commerce clause were not confined to the instrumentalities of commerce known or
in use when the constitution was adopted, but were to keep pace with the
progress of the country and adapt themselves to the new developments of time and
circumstances. OUTCOME:
The district court order sustaining appellee insurance association's demurrer to
the indictment charging violations of the Sherman Act was reversed because,
while the contract for insurance itself was not interstate commerce, there was a
chain of events such as transfer of funds, information, and communication over
state lines that brought the activity under the commerce clause and Sherman Act. CORE
CONCEPTS Antitrust
& Trade Law : Sherman Act See 15 U.S.C.S. @1. Antitrust
& Trade Law : Sherman Act See 15 U.S.C.S. @ 2. Constitutional
Law : Congressional Powers & Duties : Commerce Clause Congress can regulate
traffic though it consist of intangibles. Constitutional
Law : Congressional Powers & Duties : Commerce Clause A nationwide business
is not deprived of its interstate character merely because it is built upon
sales contracts which are local in nature. Constitutional
Law : Congressional Powers & Duties : Commerce Clause For Constitutional
purposes, certain activities of a business may be intrastate and subject to
state control, while other activities of the same business may be interstate and
subject to federal regulation. There is a wide range of business and other
activities which, though subject to federal regulation, are so intimately
related to local welfare that, in the absence of congressional action, they may
be regulated or taxed by the states. In marking out these activities the primary
test applied by the court is not the mechanical one of whether the particular
activity affected by the state regulation is part of interstate commerce, but
rather whether, in each case, the competing demands of the state and national
interests involved can be accommodated. The fact that particular phases of an
interstate business or activity have long been regulated or taxed by states has
been recognized as a strong reason why, in the continued absence of conflicting
congressional action, the state regulatory and tax laws should be declared
valid. Constitutional
Law : Congressional Powers & Duties : Commerce Clause Commerce is traffic,
but it is something more: it is intercourse. It describes the commercial
intercourse between nations, and parts of nations, in all its branches Commerce
is interstate when it concerns more states than one. Constitutional
Law : Congressional Powers & Duties : Commerce Clause Commerce comprehends
intercourse for the purposes of trade in any and all its forms, including the
transportation, purchase, sale, and exchange of commodities, and intercourse or
communication between persons in different states, by means of correspondence
through the mails, is commerce among the states within the meaning of the
constitution, especially where such intercourse and communication really relates
to matters of regular, continuous business and to the making of contracts and
the transportation of books, papers, etc., appertaining to such business. Constitutional
Law : Congressional Powers & Duties : Commerce Clause The power confided to
congress by the commerce clause is declared to be for the purpose of securing
the maintenance of harmony and proper intercourse among the States. But its
purpose is not confined to empowering congress with the negative authority to
legislate against state regulations of commerce deemed inimical to the national
interest. The power granted congress is a positive power. It is the power to
legislate concerning transactions which, reaching across state boundaries,
affect the people of more states than one; to govern affairs which the
individual states, with their limited territorial jurisdictions, are not fully
capable of governing. This federal power to determine the rules of intercourse
across state lines was essential to weld a loose confederacy into a single,
indivisible nation; its continued existence is equally essential to the welfare
of that nation. Constitutional
Law : Congressional Powers & Duties : Commerce Clause The powers conferred
by the commerce clause are not confined to the instrumentalities of commerce
known or in use when the constitution was adopted, but they keep pace with the
progress of the country, and adapt themselves to the new developments of time
and circumstances. They are intended for the government of the business to which
they relate, at all times and under all circumstances. Antitrust
& Trade Law : Sherman Act The provisions of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C.S. @
1, are just as broad, sweeping, and explicit as the English language can make
them to express the power of Congress over this subject under the constitution
of the United States. SYLLABUS: 1.
A fire insurance company which conducts a substantial part of its business
transactions across state lines is engaged in "commerce among the several
States" and subject to regulation by Congress under the Commerce Clause. P.
539. 2.
A conspiracy to restrain interstate trade and commerce by fixing and maintaining
arbitrary and noncompetitive premium rates on fire and allied lines of
insurance, and a conspiracy to monopolize interstate trade and commerce in such
lines of insurance, held violations of the Sherman Antitrust Act.
P. 553. 3.
Congress did not intend that the business of insurance should be exempt from the
operation of the Sherman Act. Pp. 553, 560. COUNSEL: Attorney General Biddle,
with whom Solicitor General Fahy, Assistant Attorney General Berge, and Messrs.
Robert L. Stern, Frank H. Elmore, Jr.,
and Manuel M. Gorman were on the brief, for the United States. Messrs.
John T. Cahill and Dan MacDougald, with whom Messrs. Thurlow M. Gordon, Neil C.
Head, Jerrold G. Van Cise, and Howard C. Wood were on the brief, for appellees. Briefs
were filed (1) on behalf of the States of Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado,
Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada, New
Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon,
Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin and
West Virginia, and (2) on behalf of the State of Virginia, as amici curiae,
urging affirmance. JUDGES: Stone, Black,
Frankfurter, Douglas, Murphy, Jackson, Rutledge; Roberts, Reed took no part in
the consideration or decision of this case OPINIONBY:
BLACK OPINION: [*534]
[**1164] [***1446]
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court. For
seventy-five years this Court has held, whenever the question has been
presented, that the Commerce Clause of the Constitution does not deprive the
individual states of power to regulate and tax specific activities of foreign
insurance companies which sell policies within their territories.
Each state has been held [***1447]
to have this power even though negotiation and execution of the
companies' policy contracts involved communications of information and movements
of persons, moneys, and papers across state lines. Not one of all these cases,
however, has involved an Act of Congress which required the Court to decide the
issue of whether the Commerce Clause grants to Congress the power to regulate
insurance transactions stretching across state lines.
Today for the first time in the history of the Court that issue is
squarely presented and must be decided. Appellees
-- the South-Eastern Underwriters Association (S. E. U.A.), and its membership
of nearly 200 private stock fire insurance companies, and 27 individuals -- were
indicted in the District Court for alleged violations of the Sherman Anti-Trust
Act. The indictment alleges two conspiracies. The first, in
violation of @ 1 of the Act, was to restrain interstate trade and commerce by
fixing and maintaining arbitrary and non-competitive premium rates on fire and
specified "allied lines" n1 of insurance in
[*535] Alabama, Florida,
Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia; the second, in
violation of @ 2, was to monopolize trade and commerce in the same lines of
insurance in and among the same states. n2 n1
The "allied lines" of insurance handled by appellees are described in
the indictment as "inland navigation and transportation, inland marine,
sprinkler leakage, explosion, windstorm and tornado, extended coverage, use and
occupancy, and riot and civil commotion insurance." n2
The pertinent provisions of @@ 1 and 2 of the Act of July 2, 1890, 26 Stat. 209,
as amended, 15 U. S. C. @@ 1 and 2, commonly known as the Sherman Act, are as
follows: "Sec.
1. Every contract, combination in
the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce
among the several States, or with foreign nations, is hereby declared to be
illegal: ... Every person who shall
make any contract or engage in any combination or conspiracy declared by
sections 1-7 of this title to be illegal shall be deemed guilty of a
misdemeanor. .. combine or conspire with any other person or persons, to
monopolize any part of the trade or commerce among the several States, or with
foreign nations, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, ..." The
indictment makes the following charges: The member companies of S. E. U. A.
controlled 90 per cent of the fire insurance and "allied lines" sold
by stock fire insurance companies in the six states where the conspiracies were
consummated. n3 Both conspiracies consisted of a continuing agreement and
concert of action effectuated through S. E. U. A.
The conspirators not only fixed premium rates and agents' commissions,
but employed boycotts together with other types of coercion and intimidation to
force non-member insurance companies into the conspiracies, and to compel
persons who needed insurance to buy only from S. E. U. A. members on S. E. U. A.
terms. Companies not members of S.
E. U. A. were cut off from the opportunity to reinsure their risks, and their
services and facilities were disparaged; independent sales agencies who
defiantly represented [*536]
non-S. E. U. A. companies were punished by a withdrawal of the right to
represent the members of S. E. U. A.; and persons needing insurance who
purchased from non-S. E. U. A. companies were threatened with boycotts and
withdrawal of all patronage. The
two conspiracies were effectively policed by inspection and rating bureaus in
five of the [**1165] six states,
together with local boards of insurance agents in certain cities of all six
states. n3
The indictment does not state the proportion of fire insurance and "allied
lines" sold by stock companies, as distinguished from mutuals, etc., in the
six states involved. But it does
state that "stock companies receive approximately 85% of the total premium
income of all fire insurance companies operating in the United States." [***1448]
The kind of interference with the free play of competitive forces with
which the appellees are charged is exactly the type of conduct which the Sherman
Act has outlawed for American "trade or commerce" among the states. n4
Appellees n5 have not argued otherwise. Their
defense, set forth in a demurrer, has been that they are not required to conform
to the standards of business conduct established by the Sherman Act because
"the business of fire insurance is not commerce." Sustaining the
demurrer, the District Court held that "the business of insurance is not
commerce, either intrastate or interstate"; it "is not interstate
commerce or interstate trade, though it might be considered a trade subject to
local laws, either State or Federal, where the commerce clause is not the
authority relied upon." 51 F.Supp. 712, 713, 714. n4
See, e. g., Fashion Guild v. Trade Comm'n, 312 U.S. 457, 465-468; United
States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co., 310 U.S. 150, 210-224; Sunshine
Anthracite Coal Co. v. Adkins, 310 U.S. 381, 394; United States v. Trenton
Potteries Co., 273 U.S. 392,
395-402; United States v. Patten, 226 U.S. 525; Swift & Co. v. United
States, 196 U.S. 375. n5
The appellees include all of the individuals and companies named as defendants
in the indictment except the Universal Insurance Company and the Kansas City
Fire and Marine Insurance Company, neither of which joined in the demurrer to
the indictment. [***HR1]
The District Court's opinion does not contain the slightest intimation
that the indictment was held defective on a theory that it charged the appellees
with restraining and monopolizing nothing but the making of local contracts.
[*537] There was not even a
demurrer on that ground. The
District Court treated the indictment as charging illegal restraints of trade in
the total "activities complained of as constituting the business of
insurance." 51 F.Supp. 712,
713. And in great detail the indictment set out these total activities, of which
the actual making of contracts was but a part.
As recognized by the District Court, the insurance business described in
the indictment included not only the execution of insurance contracts but also
negotiations and events prior to execution of the contracts and the innumerable
transactions necessary to performance of the contracts.
All of these alleged transactions, we shall hereafter point out,
constituted a single continuous chain of events, many of which were multistate
in character, and none of which, if we accept the allegations of the indictment,
could possibly have been continued but for that part of them which moved back
and forth across state lines. True,
many of the activities described in the indictment which constituted this chain
of events might, if conceptually separated from that from which they are
inseparable, be regarded as wholly local. But
the District Court in construing the indictment did not attempt such a
metaphysical separation. Looking at all the transactions charged, it felt
compelled by previous decisions of this Court to hold that despite the
interstate character of many of them "the business of insurance is not
commerce," and that as a consequence this "business," contracts
and all, could not be "interstate commerce" or "interstate
trade." In other words, the District Court held the indictment bad for the
sole reason that the entire "business of insurance" (not merely the
part of the business in which contracts are physically executed) can never under
any possible circumstances be "commerce," and that therefore, even
though an insurance company conducts a substantial part of its business
transactions across state lines, it is not engaged in "commerce among the
States" within the meaning of [*538]
either the Commerce Clause or the Sherman
[***1449] Anti-Trust Act. n6 Therefore
[**1166] to say that the
indictment charges nothing more than restraint and monopoly in the "mere
formation of an insurance contract," as has been suggested in this Court,
is to give it a different and narrower meaning than did the District Court, --
something we cannot do consistently with the Criminal Appeals Act which permits
the case to come here on direct appeal. n7 n6
Although the District Court also sustained two additional grounds of demurrer
(that the indictment did not state facts sufficient to constitute a federal
offense, and that the court lacked jurisdiction of the subject matter), the
opinion makes clear it did so because of the conclusion that "the business
of insurance is not commerce." Two further grounds of demurrer, based upon
the Fifth, Sixth, and Tenth Amendments, were not considered by the District
Court. n7
See 56 Stat. 271 amending 34 Stat. 1246; 18 U. S. C. 682; United States v.
Borden Co., 308 U.S. 188, 192-193. Appellees contend that the District Court
read both counts of the indictment as alleging that the trade or commerce sought
to be restrained and monopolized was the business of selling fire insurance,
that the Court rightly decided that such business was not commerce, and that
therefore its judgment should be affirmed.
The Government denies that the Court construed the indictment so
narrowly. It insists that the first
count of the indictment charges a violation of @ 1 of the Act regardless of
whether the insurance business itself be commerce, since that count charges that
the practices of the fire insurance companies constituted an unlawful restraint
of interstate trade or commerce in such fields as transportation and industry
which must purchase fire insurance. Cf. Polish Alliance v. Labor Board, post, p.
643. In the view we take of the case it is unnecessary to pass upon this
question. We consider the case on the assumption that appellees' contention on
this point is correct. The
record, then, presents two questions and no others: (1) Was the Sherman Act
intended to prohibit conduct of fire insurance companies which restrains or
monopolizes the interstate fire insurance trade?
(2) If so, do fire insurance transactions which stretch across state
lines constitute "Commerce among the several States" so as to make
them subject to regulation by Congress under the [*539]
Commerce Clause? Since it is our conclusion that the Sherman Act was
intended to apply to the fire insurance business we shall, for convenience of
discussion, first consider the latter question. I. [***HR2] Ordinarily
courts do not construe words used in the Constitution so as to give them a
meaning more narrow than one which they had in the common parlance of the times
in which the Constitution was written. To
hold that the word "commerce" as used in the Commerce Clause does not
include a business such as insurance would do just that.
Whatever other meanings "commerce" may have included in 1787,
the dictionaries, encyclopedias, and other books of the period show that it
included trade: business in which persons bought and sold, bargained and
contracted. n8 And this meaning has persisted to modern times. Surely,
therefore, a heavy burden is on him who asserts that the plenary power which the
Commerce Clause grants to Congress to regulate "Commerce among the several
States" does not include the power to regulate trading in insurance to the
same extent that it includes power to regulate other trades or businesses
conducted across state lines. n9 n8
See Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1; also, Hamilton and Adair, The Power to Govern
(N. Y. 1937), pp. 53-63. n9
Alexander Hamilton, in 1791, stating his opinion on the constitutionality of the
Bank of the United States, declared that it would "admit of little if any
question" that the federal power to regulate foreign commerce included
"the regulation of policies of insurance." 3 Works of Alexander
Hamilton (Fed. Ed., N. Y. 1904) pp. 445, 469-470.
Speaking of the need of a federal power to regulate "commerce,"
Hamilton had earlier said, "It is, indeed, evident, on the most superficial
view, that there is no object, either as it respects the interests of trade or
finance, that more strongly demands a federal superintendence." Federalist
No. XXII, The Federalist (Rev. Ed., N. Y. 1901) 110. [***HR3]
The modern insurance business holds a commanding position in the trade
and commerce of our Nation. Built
[*540] upon the sale of
contracts of indemnity, it has become one of the largest and most important
branches of commerce. n10 Its total assets
[**1167] exceed $
37,000,000,000, or the approximate equivalent of the value of all farm lands and
buildings in the United States. n11 Its annual premium receipts exceed $
6,000,000,000, more than the average annual revenue receipts of the United
States Government during the last decade. n12 Included in the labor force of
insurance are 524,000 experienced workers, almost as many as seek their livings
in coal mining or automobile manufacturing. n13 Perhaps no modern commercial
enterprise directly affects so many persons in all walks of life as does the
insurance business. Insurance touches the home, the family, and the occupation
or the business of almost every person in the United States. n14 n10
According to figures gathered by the National Resources Committee, each of the
three largest legal reserve life insurance companies in 1935 had assets greater
than any one of the three largest industrial corporations, viz., the Standard
Oil Company of New Jersey, the United States Steel Corporation, or the General
Motors Corporation. Report to the
President by the National Resources Committee, June 9, 1939: The Structure of
the American Economy, Part I, pp. 100, 101 (U.S. Government Printing Office). n11
U.S. Department of Commerce, Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1942,
pp. 335-342, 694. n12
Ibid., pp. 195, 335-342. n13
Sixteenth Census of the United States -- 1940; Part 1: United States Summary,
Vol. III, The Labor Force, pp. 180, 181. n14
"We have shown that the business of insurance has very definite
characteristics, with a reach of influence and consequence beyond and different
from that of the ordinary businesses of the commercial world, to pursue which a
greater liberty may be asserted. ... Insurance
... is practically a necessity to business activity and enterprise.
It is, therefore, essentially different from ordinary commercial
transactions, and, as we have seen, according to the sense of the world from the
earliest times -- certainly the sense of the modern world -- is of the greatest
public concern." German Alliance Ins. Co. v. Kansas, 233 U.S. 389, 414-415. [*541]
This business is not separated into 48 distinct territorial compartments
which function in isolation from each other. Interrelationship, interdependence,
and integration of activities in all the states in which they operate are
practical aspects of the insurance companies' methods of doing business.
A large share of the insurance business is concentrated in a
comparatively few companies located, for the most part, in the financial centers
of the East. n15 Premiums collected from policyholders in every part of the
United States flow into these companies for investment.
As policies become payable, checks and drafts flow back to the many
states [***1451] where the
policyholders reside. The result is
a continuous and indivisible stream of intercourse among the states composed of
collections of premiums, payments of policy obligations, and the countless
documents and communications which are essential to the negotiation and
execution of policy contracts. Individual
policyholders living in many different states who own policies in a single
company have their separate interests blended in one assembled fund of assets
upon which all are equally dependent for payment of their policies. The decisions which that company makes at its home office --
the risks it insures, the premiums it charges, the investments it makes, the
losses it pays -- concern not just the people of the state where the home office
happens [*542]
to be located. They concern people living far beyond the boundaries of that
state. n15
The five largest legal reserve life insurance companies, owning total assets of
approximately $ 15,000,000,000, have their home offices in or near New York
City. Best's Life Reports, 1939, as
summarized in Monograph 28 printed for the use of the Temporary National
Economic Committee, Appendix A (U.S. Government Printing Office, 1940).
Each of these companies is licensed in every state of the Union except
that two of them are not licensed in Texas.
Life Insurance Year Book, 1942-3. The
five largest stock fire and marine insurance companies, owning total assets of
approximately $ 550,000,000, are similarly located.
Best's 1943 Digest of Insurance Stocks, xxxii.
And each does business in every state of the Union.
Ibid. That
the fire insurance transactions alleged to have been restrained and [**1168]
monopolized by appellees fit the above described pattern of the national
insurance trade is shown by the indictment before us.
Of the nearly 200 combining companies, chartered in various states and
foreign countries, only 18 maintained their home offices in one of the six
states in which the S. E. U. A. operated; and 127 had headquarters in either New
York, Pennsylvania, or Connecticut. During
the period 1931-1941 a total of $ 488,000,000 in premiums was collected by local
agents in the six states, most of which was transmitted to home offices in other
states; while during the same period $ 215,000,000 in losses was paid by checks
or drafts sent from the home offices to the companies' local agents for delivery
to the policyholders. n16 Local agents solicited prospects, utilized policy
forms sent from home offices, and made regular reports to their companies by
mail, telephone or telegraph. Special
travelling agents supervised local operations.
The insurance sold by members of S. E. U. A. covered not only all kinds
of fixed local properties, but also such properties as steamboats, tugs,
ferries, shipyards, warehouses, terminals, trucks, busses, railroad equipment
and rolling stock, and movable goods of all types carried in interstate and
foreign commerce by every media of transportation. n16
The amounts given as premiums collected and losses paid during the period
1931-1941 are for all stock fire insurance companies operating in the six states
involved. The companies which were
parties to the alleged conspiracies probably collected and paid about 90% of
these amounts since they controlled that percentage of the total business. Despite
all of this, despite the fact that most persons, speaking from common knowledge,
would instantly say that of course such a business is engaged in trade and
[*543] commerce, the
District Court felt compelled by decisions of this Court to conclude that the
insurance business can never be trade or commerce within the meaning of the
Commerce Clause. We must therefore consider these decisions. In
1869 this Court held, in sustaining a statute of Virginia which regulated
foreign insurance companies, [***1452] that
the statute did not offend the Commerce Clause because "issuing a policy of
insurance is not a transaction of commerce." Paul v. Virginia, 8 Wall. 168,
183. n17 Since then, in similar cases, this statement has been repeated, and has
been broadened. In Hooper v.
California, 155 U.S. 648, 654, 655, decided in 1895, the Paul statement
was reaffirmed, and the Court added that, "The business of insurance is not
commerce." In 1913 the New York Life Insurance Company, protesting against
a Montana tax, challenged these broad statements, strongly urging that its
business, at least, was so conducted as to be engaged in interstate commerce.
But the Court again approved the Paul statement and held against the company,
saying that "contracts of insurance are not commerce at all,
[*544] neither state nor
interstate." New York Life Ins. Co. v. Deer Lodge County, 231 U.S.
495, 503-504, 510. n18 n17
"The defect of the argument lies in the character of their business.
Issuing a policy of insurance is not a transaction of commerce. The policies are
simple contracts of indemnity against loss by fire, entered into between the
corporations and the assured, for a consideration paid by the latter.
These contracts are not articles of commerce in any proper meaning of the
word. They are not subjects of
trade and barter offered in the market as something having an existence and
value independent of the parties to them. They
are not commodities to be shipped or forwarded from one State to another, and
then put up for sale. They are like
other personal contracts between parties which are completed by their signature
and the transfer of the consideration. Such
contracts are not inter-state transactions, though the parties may be domiciled
in different States. The policies
do not take effect -- are not executed contracts -- until delivered by the agent
in Virginia. They are, then, local
transactions, and are governed by the local law." 8 Wall. 168, 183. n18
Other cases which have repeated or relied upon the Paul generalization are Ducat
v. Chicago, 10 Wall. 410, 415; Liverpool Insurance Co. v. Massachusetts, 10
Wall. 566, 573; Philadelphia Fire Assn. v. New York, 119 U.S. 110, 118; Noble v.
Mitchell, 164 U.S. 367, 370; New York Life Ins. Co. v. Cravens, 178 U.S. 389,
401; Nutting v. Massachusetts, 183 U.S. 553; Northwestern Mutual Life Ins. Co.
v. Wisconsin, 247 U.S. 132; National Union Fire Ins. Co. v. Wanberg, 260 U.S.
71, 75; Bothwell v. Buckbee, Mears Co., 275 U.S. 274, 276-277; and Colgate v.
Harvey, 296 U.S. 404, 432. For a collection and analysis of the cases see Gavit,
The Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution (Bloomington, Indiana,
1932), pp. 134-139. In
all cases in which the Court has relied [**1169]
upon the proposition that "the business of insurance is not
commerce," its attention was focused on the validity of state statutes --
the extent to which the Commerce Clause automatically deprived states of the
power to regulate the insurance business. Since Congress had at no time
attempted to control the insurance business, invalidation of the state statutes
would practically have been equivalent to granting insurance companies engaged
in interstate activities a blanket license to operate without legal restraint.
As early as 1866 the insurance trade, though still in its infancy, n19
was subject to widespread abuses. n20 To meet the imperative need for correction
of these abuses [*545]
the various state legislatures, including that of Virginia, passed
regulatory legislation. n21 Paul v. Virginia upheld one of Virginia's statutes.
To uphold insurance laws of other states, including tax laws, Paul v.
Virginia's generalization and reasoning have been consistently adhered to. n19
For statistics illustrative of the tremendous expansion of the fire and marine
insurance business between 1860-1941, see New York Insurance Report for 1942,
Vol. II, Table A. In 1860 fire and
marine insurance companies reporting to the New York Superintendent of Insurance
listed assets of $ 44,500,000 and premiums written of $ 13,500,000.
In 1941 they listed assets of almost $ 3,000,000,000, and premiums
written of $ 1,150,000,000. Ibid. n20
See generally Insurance Blue Book (Centennial Issue 1876-77), c. VI, " Fire
Insurance, 1860-1869"; Patterson, The Insurance Commissioner in the United
States (Camb. 1927), pp. 519-537; Nehemkis, Paul v. Virginia, The Need for
Re-examination, 27 Georgetown L. J. 519 (1939). n21
Ibid. Today,
however, we are asked to apply this reasoning, not to uphold another state law,
but to strike down an Act of Congress which was intended to regulate certain
aspects of the methods by which interstate insurance companies do business; and,
in so doing, to narrow the scope of [***1453]
the federal power to regulate the activities of a great business carried
on back and forth across state lines. But
past decisions of this Court emphasize that legal formulae devised to uphold
state power cannot uncritically be accepted as trustworthy guides to determine
Congressional power under the Commerce Clause. n22 Furthermore, the reasons
given in support of the generalization that "the business of insurance is
not commerce" and can never be conducted so as to constitute "Commerce
among the States" are
inconsistent with many decisions of this Court which have upheld federal
statutes regulating interstate commerce under the Commerce Clause. n23 n22
See, e. g., Wickard v. Filburn, 317 U.S. 111, 121-122; Binderup v. Pathe
Exchange, 263 U.S. 291, 311; Stafford v. Wallace, 258 U.S. 495, 525-528; Bacon
v. Illinois, 227 U.S. 504, 516-517; Swift & Co. v. United States, 196
U.S. 375, 400. n23
That the decisions of this Court upholding state insurance laws do not
necessarily constitute a denial of federal power to regulate insurance has, upon
occasion, been recognized both by insurance executives and lawyers.
See, for example, An Address on the Regulation of Insurance By Congress,
by John F. Dryden, President, Prudential Insurance Company of America, delivered
November 22, 1904, pp. 12-13: "The decision [Paul v. Virginia], and those
that have followed, did not relate to the real point involved in a consideration
of the regulation of the insurance business as interstate commerce by the
Federal government. ... It is the
opinion of qualified authorities who have given most careful consideration to
this aspect of the subject ... that under the implied and resulting powers of
the Constitution the Supreme Court would not withhold the verdict of
constitutionality from an act of Congress declaring interstate insurance to be
interstate commerce." See, similarly, Insurance is Commerce, by George F.
Seward, President, The Fidelity and Casualty Company of New York (1910) pp.
15-16; S. S. Huebner, Federal Supervision and Regulation of Insurance, Annals,
Amer. Acad. of Pol. and Soc. Science, Vol. xxvi, No. 3 (1905) 681-707.
But see, e. g., contra: Vance, Federal Control of Insurance Corporations,
17 Green Bag (1905) 83, 89; Randolph, Opinion on the Proposal for Federal
Supervision of Insurance (N. Y. 1905) pp. 12-20. The
report of the Committee on Insurance Law of the American Bar Association, in
1906, discussing the constitutionality of federal supervision of insurance,
stated flatly that Paul v. Virginia and the cases which follow it "do not
bar Congressional action." Reports of American Bar Association, Vol. XXIX,
Part 1 (1906), pp. 538, 552-567. [***HR4] [***HR5]
One reason advanced for the rule in the Paul case has been that insurance
policies "are not commodities to be shipped
[**1170] or forwarded from
one State to another." n24 But both before and since Paul v. Virginia this
Court has held that Congress can regulate traffic though it consist of
intangibles. n25 Another reason much stressed has been that insurance policies
are mere personal contracts subject to the laws of the state where executed.
But this reason rests upon a distinction between what has been called
"local" and what "interstate," a type of mechanical
criterion which this Court has not deemed controlling in the measurement of
federal power. Cf.
Wickard v. Filburn, 317 U.S. 111, 119-120; Parker v. Brown, 317 U.S. 341,
360. [***1454] We may grant that a contract of insurance,
considered as a thing apart from negotiation and execution, [*547] does
not itself constitute interstate commerce. Cf.
Hall v. Geiger-Jones Co., 242 U.S. 539, 557-558. But it does not follow
from this that the Court is powerless to examine the entire transaction, of
which that contract is but a part, in order to determine whether there may be a
chain of events which becomes interstate commerce. n26 Only by treating the
Congressional power over commerce among the states as a "technical legal
conception" rather than as a "practical one, drawn from the course of
business" could such a conclusion be reached. Swift & Co. v. United States, 196 U.S. 375, 398. In
short, a nationwide business is not deprived of its interstate character merely
because it is built upon sales contracts which are local in nature.
Were the rule otherwise, few businesses could be said to be engaged in
interstate commerce. n27 n24
See Note 17, supra. n25
See for illustration Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1, 189-190, 229-230; Pensacola
Telegraph Co. v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 96 U.S. 1; Lottery Case, 188 U.S.
321; Jordan v. Tashiro, 278 U.S. 123, 127-128; Electric Bond & Share Co . v.
Securities & Exchange Comm'n, 303 U.S. 419, 432-433; and American Medical
Assn. v. United States, 317 U.S. 519. n26
Cf. Hoopeston Canning Co. v. Cullen, 318 U.S. 313, 317. "The contracts of
insurance may be said to be interdependent.
They cannot be regarded singly, or isolatedly, and the effect of their
relation is to create a fund of assurance and credit, the companies becoming the
depositories of the money of the insured, possessing great power thereby and
charged with great responsibility." German
Alliance Ins. Co. v. Kansas, 233 U.S. 389, 414. And see Furst v.
Brewster, 282 U.S. 493, 497-498. n27
Appraising the Swift case, Mr. Chief Justice Taft had this to say: "That
case was a milestone in the interpretation of the commerce clause of the
Constitution. It recognized the
great changes and development in the business of this vast country and drew
again the dividing line between interstate and intrastate commerce where the
Constitution intended it to be. It refused to permit
local incidents of great interstate movement, which taken alone were
intrastate, to characterize the movement as such.
[Italics supplied.] The Swift case merely fitted the commerce clause to
the real and practical essence of modern business growth." Chicago Board of
Trade v. Olsen, 262 U.S. 1, 35. Compare
Indiana Farmer's Guide Co. v. Prairie Farmer Co., 293 U.S. 268,
274-277; Stafford v. Wallace, 258 U.S. 495, 518-519. [***HR6]
[***HR7]
[***HR8] Another reason advanced to support the result of the cases
which follow [**1171]
Paul v. Virginia has been that, if any aspects
[*548] of the business of
insurance be treated as interstate commerce, "then all control over it is
taken from the States and the legislative regulations which this Court has
heretofore sustained must be declared invalid." n28 Accepted without
qualification, that broad statement is inconsistent with many decisions of this
Court. It is settled that, for
Constitutional purposes, certain activities of a business may be intrastate and
therefore subject to state control, while other activities of the same business
may be interstate and therefore subject to federal regulation. n29 And there is
a wide range of business and other activities which, though subject to federal
regulation, are so intimately related to local welfare that, in the absence of
Congressional action, they may be regulated or taxed by the states. n30 In
marking out these activities the primary test applied by the Court is not the
[***1455] mechanical one of whether the particular activity affected by
the state regulation is part of interstate commerce, but rather whether, in each
case, the competing demands of the state and national interests involved can be
accommodated. n31 And the fact that particular
[*549] phases of an
interstate business or activity have long been regulated or taxed by states has
been recognized as a strong reason why, in the continued absence of conflicting
Congressional action, the state regulatory and tax laws should be declared
valid. n32 n28
New York Life Ins. Co. v. Deer Lodge County, 231 U.S. 495, 509. n29
See, e. g., Crutcher v. Kentucky, 141 U.S. 47, 59-61; Atlantic Refining
Co. v. Virginia, 302 U.S. 22, 26; McGoldrick v. Berwind-White Co., 309
U.S. 33. n30
See Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1, 200, 203-210; Willson v. Black Bird
Creek Marsh Co., 2 Pet. 245, 250-252; License Cases, 5 How. 504, Opinion
of Mr. Chief Justice Taney, 578-586; Cooley v. Board of Wardens, 12 How. 299,
318-321; Kelly v. Washington, 302 U.S. 1, 9-10. Cf.
Sturges v. Crowninshield, 4 Wheat. 122,
192-196; Houston v. Moore, 5 Wheat. 1, Opinion of Mr. Justice Story, 48-50. n31
Parker v. Brown, 317 U.S. 341, 362-363; cf.
California v. Thompson, 313 U.S. 109, 112-116; South Carolina State
Highway Dept. v. Barnwell Brothers, 303 U.S. 177, 184-192, and cases cited
therein in footnote 5; Hall v. Geiger-Jones
Co., 242 U.S. 539, 558-559; Bowman v. Chicago & North Western Ry.
Co., 125 U.S. 465, 482-483. That different members of the Court applying this
test to a particular state statute may reach opposite conclusions as to its
validity does not argue against the correctness of the test itself.
Such differences in judgment are inevitable where solution of a
Constitutional problem must depend upon considered evaluation of competing
Constitutional objectives. See, e.
g., McGoldrick v. Berwind-White Co., 309 U.S. 33, 48, 59; McCarroll v. Dixie
Greyhound Lines, 309 U.S. 176, 183; Duckworth v. Arkansas, 314 U.S. 390,
397; cf. Gwin, White & Prince
v. Henneford, 305 U.S. 434, 442. n32
See, e. g., Cooley v. Board of Wardens, 12 How. 299; New York Life Ins.
Co. v. Deer Lodge County, 231 U.S. 495; cf.
Bowman v. Chicago & North Western
Ry. Co., 125 U.S. 465, 482-483. [***HR9]
The real answer to the question before us is to be found in the Commerce
[**1172] Clause itself and
in some of the great cases which interpret it.
Many decisions make vivid the broad and true meaning of that clause.
It is interstate commerce subject to regulation by Congress to carry
lottery tickets from state to state. Lottery
Case, 188 U.S. 321, 355. So also is it interstate commerce to transport a woman
from Louisiana to Texas in a common carrier, Hoke v. United States, 227 U.S.
308, 320-323; to carry across a state line in a private automobile five quarts
of whiskey intended for personal consumption, United States v. Simpson, 252 U.S.
465; to drive a stolen automobile from Iowa to South Dakota, Brooks v. United
States, 267 U.S. 432, 436-439.
Diseased cattle ranging between Georgia and Florida are in commerce, Thornton v.
United States, 271 U.S. 414, 425; and the transmission of an electrical impulse
over a telegraph line between Alabama and Florida is intercourse and subject to
paramount federal regulation, Pensacola Telegraph Co. v. Western Union Telegraph
Co., 96 U.S. 1, 11. Not only, then, may transactions be commerce though
non-commercial; they may be commerce though illegal and [*550]
sporadic, and though they do not utilize common carriers or concern the
flow of anything more tangible than electrons and information.
[***1456] These activities having already been held to constitute
interstate commerce, and persons engaged in them therefore having been held
subject to federal regulation, it would indeed be difficult now to hold that no
activities of any insurance company can ever constitute interstate commerce so
as to make it subject to such regulation; -- activities which, as part of the
conduct of a legitimate and useful commercial enterprise, may embrace integrated
operations in many states and involve the transmission of great quantities of
money, documents, and communications across dozens of state lines. [***HR10] The
precise boundary between national and state power over commerce has never yet
been, and doubtless never can be, delineated by a single abstract definition.
n33 The most widely accepted general description of that part of commerce which
is subject to the federal power is that given in 1824 by Chief Justice Marshall
in Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1, 189-190: "Commerce, undoubtedly, is
traffic, but it is something more: it is intercourse. It describes the
commercial intercourse between nations, and
[*551] parts of nations, in
all its branches. ..." Commerce is interstate, he said, when it
"concerns more States than one." Id., 194.
No decision of this Court has ever questioned this as too comprehensive a
description of the subject matter of the Commerce Clause. n34
[**1173] To accept a
description less comprehensive, the Court has recognized, would deprive the
Congress of that full power necessary to enable it to discharge its
Constitutional duty to govern commerce among the states. n35 n33
Lottery Case, 188 U.S. 321, 363; cf. Kirschbaum Co. v. Walling, 316 U.S. 517,
520. This particular difficulty was recognized by the authors of the Federalist
Papers: "All new laws, though penned with the greatest technical skill, and
passed on the fullest and most mature deliberation, are considered as more or
less obscure and equivocal, until their meaning be liquidated and ascertained by
a series of particular discussions and adjudications. ...
Here, then, are three sources of vague and incorrect definitions:
indistinctness of the object, imperfection of the organ of conception,
inadequateness of the vehicle of ideas. Any
one of these must produce a certain degree of obscurity. The Convention, in
delineating the boundary between the federal and State jurisdictions must have
experienced the full effect of them all." Federalist No. XXXVI, The
Federalist (Rev. Ed., N. Y. 1901), pp. 193-194. n34
"Commerce is intercourse: one of its most ordinary ingredients is
traffic." Brown v. Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419, 446. "And although
commerce includes traffic in this narrower sense, for more than a century it has
been judicially recognized that in a broad sense it embraces every phase of
commercial and business activity and intercourse." Jordan v. Tashiro, 278
U.S. 123, 127-128. Commerce
"comprehends intercourse for the purposes of trade in any and all its
forms, including the transportation, purchase, sale, and exchange of
commodities. ..." Welton v. Missouri, 91 U.S. 275, 280. And
"intercourse or communication between persons in different States, by means
of correspondence through the mails, is commerce among the States within the
meaning of the Constitution, especially where ... such intercourse and
communication really relates to matters of regular, continuous business and to
the making of contracts and the transportation of books, papers, etc.,
appertaining to such business." International Textbook Co. v. Pigg, 217
U.S. 91, 107. n35
See Pensacola Telegraph Co. v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 96 U.S. 1, 9. "A
government ought to contain in itself every power requisite to the full
accomplishment of the objects committed to its care, and to the complete
execution of the trusts for which it is responsible, free from every other
control, but a regard to the public good and to the sense of the people."
Federalist No. XXX, The Federalist, supra, 154. [***1457] [***HR11] The
power confided to Congress by the Commerce Clause is declared in The Federalist
to be for the purpose of securing the "maintenance of harmony and proper
intercourse among the States." n36 But its purpose is not confined to
empowering Congress with the negative authority [*552] to
legislate against state regulations of commerce deemed inimical to the national
interest. The power granted
Congress is a positive power. It is
the power to legislate concerning transactions which, reaching across state
boundaries, affect the people of more states than one; -- to govern affairs
which the individual states, with their limited territorial jurisdictions, are
not fully capable of governing. n37 This federal power to determine the rules of
intercourse across state lines was essential to weld a loose confederacy into a
single, indivisible Nation; its continued existence is equally essential to the
welfare of that Nation. n38 n36
Federalist No. XL; Federalist No. XLI; The Federalist, supra, pp. 220, 231. n37
Compare Federalist No. XXIII, The Federalist, supra, 121: "Shall the Union
be constituted the guardian of the common safety? Are fleets and armies, and
revenues, necessary to this purpose? The
government of the Union must be empowered to pass all laws, and to make all
regulations which have relation to them. The
same must be the case in respect to commerce, and to every other matter to which
its jurisdiction is permitted to extend. ...
Not to confer in each case a degree of power commensurate to the end,
would be to violate the most obvious rules of prudence and propriety, and
improvidently to trust the great interests of the nation to hands which are
disabled from managing them with vigor and success." See
Note (1943), 32 Georgetown Law Journal 66. n38
The powers conferred by the Commerce Clause "are not confined to the
instrumentalities of commerce ... known or in use when the Constitution was
adopted, but they keep pace with the progress of the country, and adapt
themselves to the new developments of time and circumstances. ...
They were intended for the government of the business to which they
relate, at all times and under all circumstances." Pensacola Telegraph Co.
v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 96 U.S. 1, 9. Compare Federalist No. XLIII, The
Federalist, supra, 248. Our
basic responsibility in interpreting the Commerce Clause is to make certain that
the power to govern intercourse among the states remains where the Constitution
placed it. That power, as held by
this Court from the beginning, is vested in the Congress, available to be
exercised [*553]
for the national welfare as Congress shall deem necessary.
No commercial enterprise of any kind which conducts its activities across
state lines has been held to be wholly beyond the regulatory power of Congress
under the Commerce Clause. We cannot make an exception of the business of
insurance. [**1174]
II. [***HR12]
We come then to the contention, earnestly pressed upon us by appellees,
that Congress did not intend in the Sherman Act to exercise its power over the
interstate insurance trade. Certainly
the Act's language affords no basis for this contention.
Declared illegal in @ 1 is "every contract, combination in the form
of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce among
the several States ..."; and "every person" who shall make such a
contract or engage in such a combination or conspiracy is deemed guilty of a
misdemeanor. Section 2 is not less
sweeping. "Every person"
who monopolizes, or attempts to monopolize, or conspires with "any other
person" to monopolize, "any part of the trade or commerce among the
several States" is, likewise, deemed guilty of a misdemeanor. Language more
comprehensive is difficult to conceive. On
its face it shows a carefully studied [***1458] attempt
to bring within the Act every person engaged in business whose activities might
restrain or monopolize commercial intercourse among the states. A
general application of the Act to all combinations of business and capital
organized to suppress commercial competition is in harmony with the spirit and
impulses of the times which gave it birth.
"Trusts" and "monopolies" were the terror of the
period. n39 Their power to fix [*554] prices, to restrict production, to crush small independent
traders, and to concentrate large power in the few to the detriment of the many,
were but some of numerous evils ascribed to them. n40 The organized opponents of
trusts aimed at the complete destruction of all business combinations which
possessed potential power, or had the intent, to destroy competition in whatever
the people needed or [*555] wanted.
n41 So great was the strength of the anti-trust forces that the issue of trusts
[**1175] and monopolies
became non-partisan. The question [***1459] was not whether they should be abolished, but how
this purpose could best be accomplished. n42 n39
A historian of the Wheel, one of the strongest of the farmers' organizations in
the '80's, had this to say about its origin: "The question has often been
asked, what gave rise to the Wheel? This
question is as easily answered as asked, Monopoly! ...
Monopoly aspires to make the people its servants, politically,
financially and socially, and demands that we offer on its golden altar all that
we are and have, souls, bodies, lives, liberty, and common country, unreservedly
and without complaint." Morgan, History of the Wheel and Alliance (Fort
Scott, Kan. 1889), p. 56. Compare
Slaughter-House Cases, 16 Wall. 36
(1873), Dissenting opinions of Justices Field and Bradley, pp. 83, 101-110, 111,
119-121. n40
See Apex Hosiery Co. v. Leader, 310 U.S. 469, 491-493, 497-498; Standard Oil Co.
v. United States, 221 U.S. 1, 58; United States v. Trans-Missouri
Freight Assn., 166 U.S. 290, 322-325. See also Paramount Famous Lasky
Corp. v. United States, 282 U.S. 30, 42-43. Nor
was the opposition to trusts limited to the monopolization of "goods and
services." At the instance of Senator Ingalls of Kansas an amendment was
added to the Sherman bill designed to tax out of existence the business of
dealing in futures contracts. 21
Cong. Rec. 2613. The Ingalls
amendment was adopted by the Senate without a record vote.
Id. Subsequently the Sherman
bill, as amended, was redrafted by the Senate Judiciary Committee which used
substantially the same broad and sweeping language which Sections 1 and 2 of the
Act contain today. With that
language the Sherman bill had the support of Senator Ingalls and other
proponents of the Ingalls amendment. 21
Cong. Rec. 3145, 3153. And see
United States v. Patten, 226 U.S. 525; Peto v. Howell, 101 F.2d 353; cf. Chicago Board of Trade v. Olsen, 262 U.S. 1; Stafford v.
Wallace, 258 U.S. 495. See,
generally, Ashby, The Riddle of the Sphinx (Des Moines 1890); Morgan, History of
the Wheel and Alliance (Fort Scott, Kan. 1889); Buck, The Granger Movement (Camb.
1913); Cloud, Monopolies and the People (Davenport, Iowa 1873); Weaver, A Call
to Action (Des Moines 1892); Hicks, The Populist Revolt (Minneapolis 1931). n41
Representative of anti-trust platforms, resolutions, etc., of contemporary
agrarian-political movements are the following: "We demand ... the passage
of a law prohibiting the formation of trusts and combinations by speculators to
secure control of the necessaries of life for the purpose of forcing up prices
on consumers, imposing heavy penalties" (Texas Farmers' State Alliance,
Report of Committee on Industrial Depression (1888)); "The objects of the
National Alliance are ... to oppose all forms of monopoly as being detrimental
to the best interests of the public" (National Farmers' Alliance,
Constitution (1887)); "We hold to the principle that all monopolies are
dangerous ... , tending to enslave a free people ..." (National Farmers'
Alliance and Industrial Union, Constitution (1889)); "We oppose the tyranny
of monopolies" (National Grange, Declaration of Purposes (1874)). n42
The platforms of both the Republican and the Democratic parties in 1888 stated
unqualified opposition to monopolies and trusts.
Brandon, Platforms of the Two Great Political Parties 1856-1928.
The recorded vote in the House on the final conference report on the
Sherman Act shows 242 ayes, no nays, and 85 not voting.
21 Cong. Rec. 6314. Combinations
of insurance companies were not exempt from public hostility against the trusts.
Between 1885 and 1912 twenty-three states enacted laws forbidding
insurance combinations. n43 When, in 1911, one of these state
[*556] statutes was unsuccessfully challenged in this Court, the Court
had this to say: "We can well understand that fire insurance companies,
acting together, may have owners of property practically at their mercy in the
matter of rates, and may have it in their power to deprive the public generally
of the advantages flowing from competition between rival organizations engaged
in the business of fire insurance. In order to meet the evils of such
combinations or associations, the State is competent to adopt appropriate
regulations that will tend to substitute competition in the place of combination
or monopoly." German Alliance Ins. Co. v. Hale, 219 U.S. 307, 316. n44 n43
Four of these statutes were enacted before 1890.
L. N. H. 1885, ch. 93, p. 289; L. Ohio 1885, No. 284, p. 231; L. Mich.
1887, No. 285, p. 384; L. Kan. 1889, ch. 257, p. 389, and L. Kan. 1897, ch. 265,
p. 481; L. Ga. 1890-91, No. 745, p. 206; L. Maine 1893, ch. 285, p. 339; L. Mo.
1895, p. 237; L. Iowa 1896, ch. 22, p. 31; L. Ala. 1896-97, No. 634, p. 1428; L.
Neb. 1897, ch. 79, p. 347; L. Neb. 1897, ch. 81, p. 354; L. Neb. 1913, ch. 154,
pp. 393, 419; L. Wis. 1897, ch. 356, p. 908; Acts Va. 1898, ch. 644, p. 683;
Acts S. C. 1902, No. 574, p. 1057; L. S. D. 1903, ch. 158, p. 183; G. L. Tex.
1903, ch. 94, p. 119; Ark. Acts 1905, No. 1, p. 1, as amended by Ark. Acts 1907,
No. 184, p. 430; P. L. N. C. 1905, ch. 424, p. 429, and P. L. N. C. 1915, ch.
166, p. 243; Acts Tenn. 1905, ch. 479, p. 1019; Miss. Code 1906, @ 5002, adopted
L. Miss. 1906, ch. 101, p. 78; Gen. L. Ore. 1909, ch. 230, pp. 388, 399; Sess.
L. Wash. 1911, ch. 49, pp. 161, 195, and Sess. L. Wash. 1915, ch. 97, p. 278; L.
Ariz. 1912, ch. 73, p. 354; Acts La. 1912, No. 224, p. 509. n44
The farm organizations of this period did not rely solely upon prohibitory
legislation to protect themselves from combinations of insurance companies.
"In 1886, tired of the extortions of the old-line insurance
companies, the Territorial Alliance appointed a committee ... to devise and put
in operation a system of mutual insurance ... , the result of which has been
eminently successful." Report of Alonzo Wardall, President of the Alliance
Insurance Companies of the Dakotas, printed in Ashby, The Riddle of the Sphinx
(Des Moines 1890), p. 363. Appellees
argue that the Congress knew, as doubtless some of its members did, that this
Court had prior to 1890 said that insurance was not commerce and was subject to
state regulation, and that therefore we should read the Act as though it
expressly exempted that business. But
neither by reports nor by statements of the bill's sponsors or others was any
purpose to exempt insurance companies revealed.
And we fail to find in the legislative history of the Act an expression
of a clear and unequivocal desire of Congress to legislate only within that area
previously [*557]
declared by this Court to be within the [**1176]
federal power. n45 Cf. Helvering
v. Griffiths, [***1460]
318 U.S. 371; Parker v.
Motor Boat Sales, 314 U.S. 244. We have been shown not one piece of reliable
evidence that the Congress of 1890 intended to freeze the proscription of the
Sherman Act within the mold of then current judicial decisions defining the
commerce power. On the contrary,
all the acceptable [*558] evidence
points the other way. That Congress
wanted to go to the utmost extent of its Constitutional power in restraining
trust and monopoly agreements such as the indictment here charges admits of
little, if any, doubt. n46 [*559]
The purpose was to use that [**1177]
power to make of ours, so far [***1461]
as Congress could under our dual system, a competitive business economy. n47 Nor
is it sufficient to justify our reading into the Act an exemption for insurance
that the Congress of 1890 may have known that states already were regulating the
insurance business. The Congress of 1890 also knew that railroads were subject
to regulation not only by states but by the federal government itself, but this
fact has been held insufficient to bring to the railroad companies the
interpretative exemption from the Sherman Act they have sought.
United States v.
Trans-Missouri Freight Assn., 166 U.S. 290, 314-315, 320-325. n45
We have been pointed to only one reference made to the business of insurance in
the Congressional discussions preceding passage of the Sherman Act, and that is
a statement of Senator Turpie which flatly challenged the reasoning of this
Court in holding that insurance was not commerce, and further predicted that in
the future the Commerce Clause would not be given such a limited construction: "The
Senator from Missouri [Mr. Vest] spoke the other day about the difficulty of
defining the word 'commerce,' especially as contained in the phrase 'interstate
commerce.' I recollect one judicial decision upon this subject very definitely.
The Supreme Court has decided that insurance is not commerce, and I
suppose by following the circle of negations long enough and excluding all the
things not commerce we should come at last to the residuum, which must be
commerce or interstate commerce, because it can be nothing else. A fortiori,
judging from this principle, I should myself have decided that transportation is
not commerce nor interstate commerce either. ... "I
feel inclined to make the prediction, as one of the things to come in this vast
domain, scarcely touched, of cases arising under the Constitution and laws of
Congress, that the whole mass of merchantable paper known as negotiable by the
law merchant, made at one place, negotiable at another, payable at another,
transcending in its negotiation State lines, will be remitted to Congressional
action, and with respect to its creation, its formation, its negotiation, with
respect to all the rights and liabilities which may arise under it, the people,
stunned with the eternal dissonance of conflicting decisions and judgments of
forty-eight or fifty tribunals of last resort in the States upon the subject of
interstate negotiable paper, will require Congress to act therein, and that,
unconstitutional as I now deem it or think it, it will as a matter of necessity
be done, and in any such legislation with respect to that paper, the whole bulk
of it, the personal and peculiar conditions of litigants will not be inquired
about, but simply whether the one party or the other is entitled to relief or
liable to recovery against him by reason of being a party to interstate
commercial paper, negotiable and payable and suable under the action of Congress
which may finally take place upon that subject. ... "Nor
do I think with the Senator from New York that we are discharged from duty or
released from our obligation to legislate upon the subject of trusts because the
States have a right to do so." 21 Cong. Rec. 2556-2557. And
see Note 48, infra. n46
Senator George, a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee which redrafted the
Sherman Act before its final passage, stated on the floor of the Senate that,
"The bill has been very ingeniously and properly drawn to cover every case
which comes within what is called the commercial power of Congress. ...
It is well known that the great evil of these combinations, these
conspiracies, as they are called, these monopolies, as they are denominated by
the bill, consists in the fact that by combination, by association, there have
been gathered together the money and the means of large numbers of persons, and
under these combinations, or conspiracies, or trusts, this great aggregated
capital is wielded by a single hand and guided by a single brain, or at least by
hands and brains acting in complete harmony and co-operation, and that in this
way, by this association, by this direction of this immense amount of capital,
by one organized will, to a very large extent, these wrongs have been
perpetrated upon the American people." 21 Cong. Rec. 3147. Earlier,
Senator Sherman had explained, "I do not wish to single out any particular
trust or combination. It is not a
particular trust, but the system I aim at." 21 Cong. Rec. 2457.
And in the House, Representative Stewart, delivering the last speech
preceding the unanimous adoption of the present Act, stated "... The
provisions of this trust bill are just as broad, sweeping, and explicit as the
English language can make them to express the power of Congress over this
subject under the Constitution of the United States. ..." 21 Cong. Rec.
6314. Compare
Kidd v. Pearson, 128 U.S. 1 and United States v. E. C. Knight Co.,
156 U.S. 1, with Addyston Pipe & Steel Co. v. United States, 175 U.S.
211 and United States v. American Tobacco Co., 221 U.S. 106. n47
Senator Sherman, explaining his bill to the Senate, stated, "It is to arm
the Federal courts within the limits of their constitutional power that they may
co-operate with the State courts in checking, curbing, and controlling the most
dangerous combinations that now threaten the business, property, and trade of
the people of the United States." 21 Cong. Rec. 2457. Appellees
further argue that, quite apart from what the Sherman Act meant in 1890, the
succeeding Congresses have accepted and approved the decisions of this Court
that the business of insurance is not commerce. They call attention to the fact
that at various times since 1890 Congress has refused to enact legislation
providing for federal regulation of the insurance business, and that several
resolutions proposing to amend the Constitution specifically to authorize
federal regulation of insurance have failed of passage. In addition they emphasize that, although the Sherman Act has
been amended several times, no amendments have been adopted which specifically
bring insurance within the Act's proscription.
The Government, for its part, points to evidence that various members of
Congress during the period 1900-1914 considered there were "trusts" in
the insurance business, and expressed the view that the insurance business
should be subject to the anti-trust [*560]
laws. n48 It also points out that in the Merchant Marine Act of 1920
Congress specifically exempted certain conduct of marine insurance companies
from the "antitrust" laws. n49 n48
For example, the following colloquy occurred in the House during the debate in
passage of the Clayton Act: "Mr.
BARTON. We had an illustration
recently where a big fire insurance company came into the State where local
insurance companies have been doing business, not confined to the border of the
State, and cut prices in that immediate locality until we had in three States 40
or 50 local companies put out of business, and then the price was put back where
it was profitable to the company. Might
not this same condition exist where we started a wholesale house in a State
where their territory was confined to the State -- might it not be a reduction
of prices for putting that institution out of business? "Mr.
WEBB. If the purpose is to
wrongfully injure or destroy a competitor, this section will cover such
practice; but insurance companies are not reached, as the Supreme Court has held
that their contracts or policies are not interstate commerce. "Mr.
BARTON. Is it not right that they
should come within the law? "Mr.
WEBB. Yes." 51 Cong. Rec.
9390. So
far as appears, this was the only mention of the insurance cases during the
discussions leading to passage of the Clayton Act. And, as in 1890, when the Sherman Act was under
consideration, the reference to these cases showed dissatisfaction with them.
See note 45, supra. n49
@ 29 (b), 41 Stat. 988, 1000. The
most that can be said of all this evidence considered together is that [**1178]
it is inconclusive as to any point here relevant.
By no means does it show that the Congress of 1890 specifically intended
to exempt insurance companies from the all-inclusive scope of the Sherman Act.
Nor can we attach significance to the omission of Congress to include in its
amendments to the Act an express statement that the Act covered insurance.
From the beginning Congress has used language broad enough to include all
businesses, and never has amended [***1462]
the Act to define these businesses with particularity.
And the fact that several Congresses since 1890 have failed to enact
proposed legislation providing for more or less comprehensive federal regulation
[*561] of insurance does not even remotely suggest that any Congress has
held the view that insurance alone, of all businesses, should be permitted to
enter into combinations for the purpose of destroying competition by coercive
and intimidatory practices. [***HR13]
Finally it is argued at great length that virtually all the states
regulate the insurance business on the theory that competition in the field of
insurance is detrimental both to the insurers and the insured, and that if the
Sherman Act be held applicable to insurance much of this state regulation will
be destroyed. The first part of
this argument is buttressed by opinions expressed by various persons that
unrestricted competition in insurance results in financial chaos and public
injury. Whether competition is a
good thing for the insurance business is not for us to consider.
Having power to enact the Sherman Act, Congress did so; if exceptions are
to be written into the Act, they must come from the Congress, not this Court.
And as was said in answer to a similar argument that the Sherman Act
should not be applied to a railroad combination: "It
is the history of monopolies in this country and in England that predictions of
ruin are habitually made by them when it is attempted, by legislation, to
restrain their operations and to protect the public against their exactions. ... "But
even if the court shared the gloomy forebodings in which the defendants indulge,
it could not refuse to respect the action of the legislative branch of the
Government if what it has done is within the limits of its constitutional power.
The suggestions of disaster to business have, we apprehend, their origin
in the zeal of parties who are opposed to the policy underlying the act of
Congress or are interested in the result of this particular case; at any rate,
the suggestions imply that the court may and ought to refuse the enforcement of
the provisions of the [*562]
act if, in its judgment, Congress was not wise in prescribing as a rule
by which the conduct of interstate and international commerce is to be governed,
that every combination, whatever its form, in restraint of such commerce and the
monopolizing or attempting to monopolize such commerce shall be illegal.
These, plainly, are questions as to the policy of legislation which
belong to another department, and this court has no function to supervise such
legislation from the standpoint of wisdom or policy. ..." Harlan, J.,
Affirming decree, Northern Securities Co. v. United States, 193 U.S. 197,
351-352. The argument that the Sherman Act necessarily invalidates many state
laws regulating insurance we regard as exaggerated. Few states go so far as to permit private insurance
companies, without state supervision, to agree upon and fix uniform insurance
rates. Cf.
Parker v. Brown, 317 U.S. 341, 350-352. No states authorize combinations
of insurance companies to coerce, intimidate, and boycott competitors and
consumers in the manner here alleged, and it cannot be that any companies have
acquired a vested right to engage in such destructive business practices. n50 n50
Whether reliance on earlier statements of this Court in the Paul v. Virginia
line of cases that insurance is not "commerce" could ever be pleaded
as a defense to a criminal prosecution under the Sherman Act is a question which
has been suggested but one it is not necessary to discuss at this time. Reversed. MR.
JUSTICE ROBERTS and MR. JUSTICE REED took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case. DISSENTBY:
STONE; FRANKFURTER; JACKSON (In Part) DISSENT: [**1179]
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE STONE, dissenting: [***1463]
This Court has never doubted, and I do not doubt, that transactions
across state lines which often attend and are incidental to the formation and
performance of an insurance contract, such as the use of facilities for
interstate [*563]
communication and transportation, are acts of interstate commerce subject
to regulation by the federal government under the commerce clause. Nor do I
doubt that the business of insurance as presently conducted has in many aspects
such interstate manifestations and such effects on interstate commerce as may
subject it to the appropriate exercise of federal power.
See Polish Alliance v. Labor Board, post, p. 643. But
such are not the questions now before us. We
are not concerned here with the power of Congress to do what it has not
attempted to do, but with the question whether Congress in enacting the Sherman
Act has asserted its power over the business of insurance. The
questions which the Government has raised, advisedly it would seem (cf. New York
Life Ins. Co. v. Deer Lodge County, 231 U.S. 495, 499), by the indictment in
this case, as it has been interpreted by the District Court below, are quite
different from the question, discussed in the Court's opinion, whether the
incidental use of the facilities of interstate commerce and transportation in
the conduct of the fire insurance business renders the business itself "
commerce" within the meaning of the Sherman Act and the commerce clause.
The questions here are whether the business of entering into contracts in one
state, insuring against the risk of loss by fire of property in others, is
itself interstate commerce; and whether an agreement or conspiracy to fix the
premium rates of such contracts and in other ways to restrict competition in
effecting policies of fire insurance, violates the Sherman Act. The court below
has answered "no" to both of these questions.
I think that its answer is right and its judgment should be affirmed,
both on principle and in view of the permanency which should be given to the
construction of the commerce clause and the Sherman Act in this respect, which
has until now been consistently adhered to by all branches of the Government. [*564]
The case comes here on direct appeal by the Government from the District
Court's judgment dismissing the indictment. Under the provisions of the Criminal
Appeals Act, 18 U. S. C. @ 682, the only questions open for decision here are
whether the District Court's constructions of the commerce clause and of the
Sherman Act, on which it rested its decision, are the correct ones. United
States v. Borden Co., 308 U.S. 188, 193; United States v. Wayne Pump Co., 317
U.S. 200, 208; United States v. Swift & Co., 318 U.S. 442, 444. For
the particular facts to which the court below applied the Constitution and the
Sherman Act we must look to the indictment as the District Court has construed
it. And we must accept that
construction, for by the provisions of the Criminal Appeals Act the District
Court's construction of the indictment is reviewable on appeal not by this Court
but by the Circuit Court of Appeals. United States v. Patten, 226 U.S. 525, 535;
United States v. Colgate & Co., 250 U.S. 300, 306; United States v. Borden
Co., supra. The
District Court pointed out that the offenses charged by the indictment are a
conspiracy to fix arbitrary and non-competitive premium rates on fire insurance
sold in several named states, and by means of that conspiracy to restrain and to
monopolize trade and commerce in [***1464]
fire insurance in those states. The
court went on to say: "To
constitute a violation of the Sherman Act, the restraint and monopoly denounced
must be that of interstate trade or commerce, and, unless the restraint and
monopoly charged in the indictment be restraint or monopoly in interstate trade
or commerce, the indictment must fall. "It
is not a question here of whether the defendants participated in some incidental
[**1180] way in interstate
commerce or used in some instances the facilities of interstate commerce, but is
rather whether the activities complained [*565]
of as constituting the business of insurance would themselves constitute
interstate trade or commerce, and whether defendants' method of conducting same
amounted to restraint or monopoly of same.
It is not a question as to whether or not Congress had power to regulate
the insurance companies or some phases of their activities, but rather whether
Congress did so by the Sherman Act. "Persons
may be engaged in interstate commerce, yet, if the restraint or monopoly
complained of is not itself a restraint or monopoly of interstate trade or
commerce, they may not be convicted of violation of the Sherman Act. The fact
that they may use the mails and instrumentalities of interstate commerce and
communication, and be subject to Federal regulations relating thereto, would not
make applicable the Sherman Act to interstate commerce or to activities which
were not commerce at all. "The
whole case, therefore, depends upon the question as to whether or not the
business of insurance is interstate trade or commerce, and if so, whether the
transactions alleged in the indictment constitute interstate commerce." In
short the District Court construed the indictment as charging restraints not in
the incidental use of the mails or other instrumentalities of interstate
commerce, nor in the insurance of goods moving in interstate commerce, but in
the "business of insurance." And by the "business of
insurance" it necessarily meant the business of writing contracts of
insurance, for the indictment charges only restraints in entering into such
contracts, not in their performance, n1 and the Court deemed it irrelevant that
in [*566]
the negotiation and performance of the contracts appellees "may use
the mails and instrumentalities of interstate commerce." It held that that
business is not in itself interstate commerce, and that the alleged conspiracies
to restrain and to monopolize that business were not, without more, in restraint
of interstate commerce and consequently were not violations of the Sherman Act. n1
It charges an agreement (a) to fix premium rates, (b) to fix commissions paid,
(c) to adopt reclassifications of risks on the basis of which premium rates are
fixed, (d) to adhere to standard terms, conditions, and clauses, in the
insurance contract, (e) to withhold reinsurance facilities from non-members of
the South-Eastern Underwriters Association, (f) to withdraw from and refuse to
enter agencies representing non-members, (g) to boycott and withhold patronage
from purchasers of insurance from non-members, (h) to disparage the services and
facilities of non-members, (i) to establish and maintain rating bureaus to
police and maintain these agreements, (j) to establish and maintain boards and
groups of agents for the same purpose. There
is no allegation that commissions are paid otherwise than on the entering into
of the contracts. The indictment
thus charges only restraints in the terms of the insurance contracts and
restraints, by boycotts, in competition in entering into such contracts and in
entering into contracts of reinsurance. This
construction of the indictment as confined in its scope to a conspiracy to fix
premium rates and otherwise restrain competition in the business of writing
insurance contracts, and to monopolize that business -- a construction requiring
decision of the question whether that [***1465]
business is interstate commerce -- is adopted by the Government.
Its brief in this Court states the "questions presented" as
follows: "1.
Whether the fire insurance business is in commerce. "2.
Whether the fire insurance business is subject to the constitutional power of
Congress to regulate commerce among the several states. "3.
Whether, if so, the Sherman Act is violated by an agreement among fire insurance
companies to fix and maintain arbitrary and non-competitive rates and to
monopolize trade and commerce in fire insurance, in part through boycotts
directed at companies not part of the conspiracy and the agents and purchasers
of insurance who deal with them." [*567]
The numerous and unvarying decisions
[**1181] of this Court that
" insurance is not commerce" n2 have never denied that acts of
interstate commerce may be incidental to the business of writing and performing
contracts of insurance, or that those incidental acts are subject to the
commerce power. Our decisions on
this subject have uniformly rested on the ground that the formation of an
insurance contract, even though it insures against risk of loss to property
located in other states or moving in interstate commerce, is not interstate
commerce, and that although the incidents of interstate communication and
transportation which often attend the formation and performance of an insurance
contract are interstate commerce, they do not serve to render the business of
insurance itself interstate commerce. See Hooper v. California, 155 U.S. 648,
655; New York Life Ins. Co. v. Deer Lodge County, 231 U.S. 495, 508-9. n2
E. g., Paul v. Virginia, 8 Wall. 168; Ducat v. Chicago, 10 Wall. 410; Liverpool
Insurance Co. v. Massachusetts, 10 Wall. 566; Philadelphia Fire Assn. v. New
York, 119 U.S. 110; Hooper v. California, 155 U.S. 648; Noble v. Mitchell , 164
U.S. 367; Orient Insurance Co. v. Daggs, 172 U.S. 557; New York Life Ins. Co. v.
Cravens, 178 U.S. 389; Nutting v. Massachusetts, 183 U.S. 553; New York
Life Ins. Co. v. Deer Lodge County, 231 U.S. 495; Northwestern Mutual
Life Ins. Co. v. Wisconsin, 247 U.S. 132; National Insurance Co. v. Wanberg, 260
U.S. 71; Bothwell v. Buckbee, Mears Co., 275 U.S. 274. See also Doyle v.
Continental Ins. Co., 94 U.S. 535, overruled on other grounds by Terral v. Burke
Construction Co ., 257 U.S. 529. If
an insurance company in New York executes and delivers, either in that state or
another, a policy insuring the owner of a building in New Jersey against loss by
fire, no act of interstate commerce has occurred.
True, if the owner comes to New York to procure the insurance or after
delivery in New York carries the policy to New Jersey, or the company sends it
there by mail or messenger, such would be acts of interstate commerce. Similarly
if the owner pays the premiums by mail to the company in New
[*568] York, or the
company's New Jersey agent sends the premiums to New York, or the company in New
York sends money to New Jersey on the occurrence of the loss insured against,
acts of interstate commerce would occur. But
the power of the Congress to regulate them is derived, not from its authority to
regulate the business of insurance, but from its power to regulate interstate
communication and transportation. And such incidental use of the facilities of
interstate commerce does not render the insurance business itself interstate
commerce. Nor is the nature of a single insurance transaction or a few such
transactions not involving interstate commerce altered in that regard
[***1466] merely because
their number is multiplied. The power of Congress to regulate interstate communication
and transportation incidental to the insurance business is not any more or any
less because the number of insurance transactions is great or small.
The Congressional power to regulate does not extend to the formation and
performance of insurance contracts save only as the latter may affect
communication and transportation which are interstate commerce or may otherwise
be found by Congress to affect transactions of interstate commerce. And even
then, such effects on the commerce as do not involve restraints in competition
in the marketing of goods and services are not within the reach of the Sherman
Act. That such are the controlling principles has been fully recognized by this
Court in the numerous cases which have held that the business of insurance is
not commerce or as such subject to the commerce power.
See, for example, New York Life
Ins. Co. v. Deer Lodge County, supra, 508-9. These
principles are not peculiar to insurance contracts.
They are equally applicable to other types of contracts which relate to
things or events in other states than [**1182] that of their execution, but which do not contain any
obligation to engage in any form of interstate commerce. The [*569] parties
to them are not engaged in interstate commerce, for such commerce is not
necessarily involved in or prerequisite to the formation of such contracts and
they do not in their performance necessarily involve the doing of interstate
business. The mere formation of a
contract to sell and deliver cotton or coal or crude rubber is not in itself an
interstate transaction and does not involve any act of interstate commerce
because cotton, coal and crude rubber are subjects of interstate or foreign
commerce, or because in fact performance of the contract may not be effected
without some precedent or subsequent movement interstate of the commodities
sold, or because there may be incidental use of the facilities of interstate
commerce or transportation in the formation of the contract. Ware & Leland v. Mobile County, 209 U.S. 405, 411-13;
Western Live Stock v. Bureau of
Revenue, 303 U.S. 250, 253. Compare Dahnke-Walker Co. v. Bondurant, 257 U.S.
282, 292. That the principle underlying that conclusion is the same as that
underlying the decisions of this Court that the business of insurance is not
interstate commerce, has been repeatedly recognized and affirmed.
Paul v. Virginia, 8 Wall. 168, 183; Hooper v. California, 155 U.S.
648, 654; Ware & Leland v. Mobile County, supra, 411; Engel v.
O'Malley, 219 U.S. 128, 139; New
York Life Ins. Co. v. Deer Lodge County, supra, 511-12; Blumenstock Bros. v.
Curtis Publishing Co., 252 U.S. 436, 443; Hill v. Wallace, 259 U.S. 44, 69;
Chicago Board of Trade v. Olsen, 262 U.S. 1, 32-3; Moore v. New York Cotton
Exchange, 270 U.S. 593, 604; Western Live Stock v. Bureau of
Revenue, supra; and see Hopkins v. United States, 171 U.S. 578, 588-9,
602. The
conclusion that the business of writing insurance is not interstate commerce
could not rightly be otherwise unless we were to depart from the universally
accepted view that the act of making any contract which does not stipulate for
the performance of an act or transaction of
[*570] interstate commerce
is not in itself interstate commerce. And this has
[***1467] been held to be
true even though the contract be effected by exchange of communications across
state lines, see New York Life Ins. Co. v. Cravens, 178
U.S. 389, 400; Ware & Leland v. Mobile County, supra; New York Life
Ins. Co. v. Deer Lodge County, supra, 509, a point which need not be considered
here for the indictment makes no charge that the policies written by appellees
are thus effected, but alleges only that they are "sold" by the
defendants in certain named states. Undoubtedly
contracts so entered into for the sale of commodities which move in interstate
commerce may become the implements for restraints in marketing those
commodities, and when so used may for that reason be within the Sherman Act, see
Northern Securities Co. v. United States, 193 U.S. 197, 334, 338; United States
v. Patten, supra, 543-4; Standard Oil Co. v. United States, 283
U.S. 163, 168-9. Compare Thames & Mersey Ins. Co. v. United States,
237 U.S. 19. But it is quite another matter to say that the contracts are
themselves interstate commerce or that restraints in competition as to their
terms or conditions are within the Sherman Act, in the absence of a showing that
the purpose or effect is to restrain competition in the marketing of the goods
or services to which the contracts relate.
Compare Hill v. Wallace, supra, 69, with Chicago Board of Trade v. Olsen,
supra, 31-3; Blumenstock Bros. v. Curtis Publishing
Co., supra, with Indiana Farmer's [**1183]
Guide Co. v. Prairie Farmer
Co., 293 U.S. 268; Moore v. New York Cotton Exchange, supra, with United States
v. Patten, supra. In
this respect insurance contracts do not in point of law stand on any different
footing as regards the Sherman Act. If contracts of insurance are in fact made
the instruments of restraint in the marketing of goods and services in or
affecting interstate commerce, they are not beyond the reach of the Sherman Act
more than contracts [*571]
for the sale of commodities, -- contracts which, not in themselves
interstate commerce, may nevertheless be used as the means of its restraint. But since trade in articles of commerce is not the subject
matter of contracts of insurance, it is evident that not only is the writing of
insurance policies not interstate commerce but there is little scope for their
use in restraining competition in the marketing of goods and services in or
affecting the commerce. The
contract of insurance makes no stipulation for the sale or delivery of
commodities in interstate commerce or for any other interstate transaction.
It provides only for the payment of a sum of money in the event of the
loss insured against, and it is no necessary consequence of the alleged
restraints on competition in fixing premiums that interstate commerce will be
restrained. We have no occasion to
consider the argument which the court below rejected, that the indictment
charges that the conspiracy to fix premiums adversely affects interstate
commerce because in some instances the commodities insured move across state
lines, or because interstate communication and transportation are in some
instances incidental to the business of issuing insurance contracts. This is so
both because, as we have said, we are bound by the District Court's construction
of the indictment, and, more importantly, because such effects on interstate
commerce, as will presently appear, are not within the reach of the Sherman Act. [***1468]
The conclusion seems inescapable that the formation of insurance
contracts, like many others, and the business of so doing, is not, without more,
commerce within the protection of the commerce clause of the Constitution and
thereby, in large measure, excluded from state control and regulation. See
Hooper v. California, supra, 655; New York Life Ins. Co. v. Deer Lodge County,
supra. This conclusion seems, upon analysis, not only correct on
[*572] principle and in complete harmony with the uniform rulings by
which this Court has held that the formation of all types of contract which do
not stipulate for the performance of acts of interstate commerce, are likewise
not interstate commerce, but it has the support of an unbroken line of decisions
of this Court beginning with Paul v. Virginia, seventy-five years ago, and
extending down to the present time. In
1913 this Court was asked, on elaborate briefs and arguments, such as are now
addressed to us, to overrule Paul v. Virginia, supra, and the many cases which
have followed it. New York Life
Ins. Co. v. Deer Lodge County, supra. See also New York Life Ins. Co. v.
Cravens, supra. In the Deer Lodge
case the mode of conducting the insurance business was almost identical with
that alleged here (231 U.S. at 499-500); it was strenuously urged, as here, that
by reason of the great size of insurance companies "modern life insurance
had taken on essentially a national and international character" (231 U.S.
at 507); and, as here, that the use
of the mails incident to the formation of the contract and the interstate
transmission of premiums and the proceeds of the policies "constitute 'a
current of commerce among the states'" (231 U.S. at 509). All these
arguments were rejected, and the business of insurance was held not to be
interstate commerce, on the grounds which we have stated and think valid -- but
which the Government's brief and the opinion of the Court in this case have
failed to notice. If
the business of entering into insurance contracts is not interstate commerce, it
seems plain that agreements to fix premium rates, or other restraints on
competition in entering into such contracts, are not violations of the Sherman
Act. As we have often had occasion to point out, the restraints prohibited by
the Sherman Act are of competition in the marketing of goods or services
whenever the competition occurs in or affects interstate commerce in [**1184]
those goods or services. See
Apex Hosiery Co. v. Leader, 310 U.S. 469,
495-501, and cases cited. The
contract of [*573]
insurance does not undertake to supply or market goods or services and
there is no suggestion that policies of insurance when issued are articles of
commerce or that after their issue they are sold in the market as such, or, if
they were, that the formation of the contract would itself be interstate
commerce. See Hooper v. California, supra;
New York Life Ins. Co. v. Deer Lodge County, supra, 510; cf.
Ware & Leland v. Mobile
County, supra; Moore v. New York Cotton Exchange, supra. No
more does the performance of an insurance contract involving the payment of
premiums by the insured and the payment of losses by the insurer involve the
marketing of goods or services. The
indictment here, as the District Court pointed out, charges restraints on
competition in fixing the terms and conditions of insurance contracts.
And even if we assume, although the District Court did not mention it,
that the indictment also charges restraints on the [***1469] performance of such contracts, it is plain that such
restraints on the performance as well as the formation of the contracts cannot
operate as restraints on competition in the marketing of goods or services.
Such restraints are not within the purview of the Sherman Act. Compare
Federal Club v. National League,
259 U.S. 200, 209; United Mine Workers v. Coronado Coal Co., 259 U.S. 344,
410-411; Blumenstock Bros. v. Curtis Publishing Co., supra; Moore v. New York
Cotton Exchange, supra. The practice of law is not commerce, nor, at least
outside the District of Columbia, is it subject to the Sherman Act, and it does
not become so because a law firm attracts clients from without the state or
sends its members or juniors to other states to argue cases, or because its
clients use the interstate mails to pay their fees.
Federal Club v. National League,
supra. It
would be strange, indeed, if Congress, in adopting the Sherman Act in 1890, more
than twenty years after this Court had supposedly settled the question, had
considered that the business of insurance was interstate commerce [*574]
or had contemplated that the Sherman Act was to apply to it. Nothing in its legislative history suggests that it was
intended to apply to the business of insurance. n3 The legislative materials
indicate that Congress was primarily concerned with restraints of competition in
the marketing of goods sold in interstate commerce, which were clearly within
the federal commerce power. n4 And while the Act is not limited to restraints of
commerce in physical goods, see e. g., Atlantic Cleaners & Dyers v. United
States, 286 U.S. 427, there is no reason to suppose that Congress intended the
Act to apply to matters in which, under prevailing decisions of this Court,
commerce was not involved. On the
contrary [**1185]
the House committee, in reporting the bill which was adopted without
change, declared: "No attempt is made to invade the legislative authority
of the several States or even to occupy doubtful grounds.
No system of laws can be devised by Congress alone which would
effectually protect the people of the [*575] United States against the evils and oppression of trusts and
monopolies. Congress has no authority to deal, generally, with the subject
within the States, and the States have no authority to legislate in respect of
commerce between the several States or with foreign nations." n5 n3
The decisions of this Court that the negotiation of a contract between citizens
of different states is not interstate commerce were known to and accepted by
Congress. In the course of the
debates in the Senate on the original bill introduced by Senator Sherman,
Senator Turpie, discussing the extent of the federal commerce power, stated,
"I recollect one judicial decision upon this subject very definitely.
The Supreme Court has decided that insurance is not commerce. ..."
21 Cong. Rec. 2556. During
subsequent debates on that bill Senator Hoar, who later took charge of the
revised bill reported by the Judiciary Committee and ultimately enacted, 21
Cong. Rec. 3145 et seq., denied the existence of federal substantive power,
under the commerce clause or Article III, @ 2, over contracts between citizens
of different states, asserting that Senator Sherman's bill could be supported
only as a regulation of the "importation, transportation, or sale of
articles. ..." 21 Cong. Rec. 2567. See
also the statements of Senator Eustis at 21 Cong. Rec. 2646, 2651-2. n4
See Senator Sherman's original bill, S. 3445, 50th Cong., S. 1, 51st Cong., and
his statement at 21 Cong. Rec. 2562. Texts
of the bill throughout its various amendments are set out in Bills and Debates
Relating to Trusts, Sen. Doc. No. 147, 57th Cong., 2d Sess. (1903). n5
H. R. Rep. No. 1707, 51st Cong., 1st Sess., p. 1.
See also the statement on the floor of the House by Mr. Culberson, in
charge of the bill, "There is no attempt to exercise any doubtful authority
on this subject, but the bill is confined strictly and alone to subjects over
which, confessedly, there is no question about the legislative power of Congress
..." 21 Cong. Rec. 4089. And
see the statement of Senator Edmunds, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee
which reported out the bill in the form in which it passed, that in drafting
that bill the committee thought that "we would frame a bill that should be
clearly within our constitutional power, that we should make its definition out
of terms that were well known to the law already, and would leave it to the
courts in the first instance to say how far they could carry it or its
definitions as applicable to each particular case as it might arise." 21
Cong. Rec. 3148. Similarly Senator Hoar, a member of that committee who with
Senator Edmunds was in charge of the bill, stated "Now we are dealing with
an offense against interstate or international commerce, which the State can not
regulate by penal enactment, and we find the United States without any common
law. The great thing that this bill
does, except affording a remedy, is to extend the common-law principles, which
protected fair competition in trade in old times in England, to international
and interstate commerce in the United States." 21 Cong. Rec. 3152. [***1470]
In 1904 and again in 1905 President Roosevelt urged "that the
Congress carefully consider whether the power of the Bureau of Corporations
cannot constitutionally be extended to cover interstate transactions in
insurance." n6 [*576]
The American Bar Association, executives of leading insurance companies,
and others joined in the request. n7 Numerous bills providing for federal
regulation of various aspects of the insurance business were introduced between
1902 and 1906 n8 but the judiciary committees of both House and Senate concluded
that the regulation of the business of marine, fire and life insurance was
beyond Congressional power. Sen.
Rep. No. 4406, 59th Cong., 1st Sess.; H. R. Rep. No. 2491, 59th Cong., 1st Sess.,
12-25. The House committee stated
that "the question as to whether or not insurance is commerce has passed
beyond the realm of argument, because the Supreme Court of the United States has
said many times for a great number of years that insurance is not
commerce." (p. 13.) n9 n6
Messages of the Presidents, 6901, 6986-7. See
the Report of the Commissioner of Corporations, 1905, p. 5, urging that Congress
"so legislate upon the subject as to afford an opportunity to present to
the Supreme Court the question whether insurance as now conducted is interstate
commerce, and hence subject to Federal regulation." See
also Sen. Doc. No. 333, 59th Cong., 1st Sess. (1906), for a message of President
Roosevelt proposing an insurance code for the District of Columbia and enclosing
a report of a convention of State officers called by him to investigate wrongful
insurance methods. n7
See, e. g., 29 American Bar Association Reports 538 (1906); 24 Annals of
American Academy of Political and Social Sciences (1904) 69, 78-83; 26 Id.
(1905) 681; Dryden, An Address on the Regulation of Insurance by Congress
(1904); 1 Moody's Magazine (1905-6) 271 et seq.; 38 American Law Review (1904)
181. n8
H. R. 7054, 58th Cong., 2d Sess. (1903); H. R. 13791, 58th Cong., 2d Sess.
(1904); H. R. 16274, 58th Cong., 3d Sess. (1904); S. 7277, 58th Cong., 3d Sess.
(1905); H. R. 15092, 59th Cong., 1st Sess. (1906); H. Res. No. 417, 59th Cong.,
1st Sess. (1906). See footnote 9
infra. See also S. 1743, 56th
Cong., 1st Sess. (1899). n9
Compare the debates in the House on the bill, S. 569, to establish a Department
of Commerce and Labor. As reported by the House Committee on Interstate and Foreign
Commerce, @ 6 of the bill provided for the creation of a bureau of insurance to
"exercise such control as may be provided by law" over insurance
companies and to "foster, promote, and develop" the insurance business
by collecting and compiling statistics. H. R. Rep. No. 2970, 57th Cong., 2d Sess., 12, 15.
After extended debate, in which the provision was objected to for want of
power in the federal government to regulate the insurance business and as a
threat to the continuance of existing state regulation, 36 Cong. Rec. 868-9,
872-3, 908-11, 919-21, and in which it was insisted by proponents of the bill,
as now, that insurance is commerce, 36 Cong. Rec. 876-7, amendments to strike
all reference to insurance from the bill were adopted.
36 Cong. Rec. 911, 921. A
proposed amendment to prohibit the use of the mails by insurance companies doing
business in violation of state law was likewise defeated.
36 Cong. Rec. 922-3. The
conference committee then inserted the provision, adopted as @ 6 of the Act, 32
Stat. 828, authorizing the Bureau of Corporations to compile and publish useful
information concerning corporations doing business in the United States and
engaged in interstate or foreign commerce, "including corporations engaged
in insurance." Upon assurances that this section "simply authorizes
information being secured" and that "there is nothing in this measure
that contravenes the votes of the House on that subject," 36 Cong. Rec.
2008, the conference report was adopted. The
insurance provisions were not in the bill as it had originally passed the
Senate, and the conference report was adopted by that body without debate.
36 Cong. Rec. 1990, 2035-6. The
Commissioner of Corporations made a study of state legislation, but reported
that "in view of the decisions of the Supreme Court I have not felt
warranted in trying to assume jurisdiction over insurance companies for the
purpose of investigation." Report of the Commissioner of Corporations,
1905, p. 5; see Report of the Commissioner of Corporations, 1904, pp. 29-33;
Report of the Secretary of Commerce and Labor, 1903, p. 26. [*577]
[**1186] [***1471]
And when in 1914, one year after the decision in New York Life Ins. Co.
v. Deer Lodge County, supra, Congress by the Clayton Act, 38 Stat. 730, amended
the Sherman Act and defined the term "commerce" as used in that Act,
it gave no indication that it questioned or desired this Court to overrule the
decision of the Deer Lodge case and those preceding it.
On the contrary Mr. Webb, who was in charge of the bill in the House of
Representatives, stated that "insurance companies are not reached as the
Supreme Court has held that their contracts or policies are not interstate
commerce." 51 Cong. Rec. 9390. n10 n10
Mr. Webb's statement was made in answer to an inquiry by Mr. Barton as to
whether the proposed section 2 of the Clayton Act would render illegal certain
practices if engaged in by wholesalers, in the course of which Mr. Barton
referred to an instance of such practices committed by insurance companies.
The colloquy continued: "Mr.
BARTON. It is not right that they
should come within the law? Mr.
WEBB. Yes." Assuming
that Mr. Webb's answer related to insurance companies, and expressed a desire
that such companies should be included within the prohibitions of the Sherman
and Clayton Acts, but were not, nothing was done to amend those Acts so as to
carry out that desire or which would require this Court to reexamine the scope
of federal power over insurance. [*578]
This Court, throughout the seventy-five years since the decision of Paul
v. Virginia, has adhered to the view that the business of insurance is not
interstate commerce. n11 Such has ever since been the
[**1187] practical construction by the other branches of the
Government of the application to insurance of the commerce clause and the
Sherman Act. Long continued practical construction of the Constitution or a
statute is of persuasive force in determining its meaning and proper
application.
[***1472] Pocket Veto Case, 279
U.S. 655, 688-90; Federal Trade Commission v. Bunte Bros., 312 U.S. 349,
351-2; United States v. Cooper Corp., 312 U.S. 600, 613-14. It is
significant that in the fifty years since the enactment of the Sherman Act the
Government has not until now sought to apply it to the business of insurance,
n12 and that Congress has continued to regard
[*579] insurance as not
constituting interstate commerce. Although often asked to do so it has
repeatedly declined to pass legislation regulating the insurance business and to
sponsor constitutional amendments subjecting it to Congressional control. n13 n11
For cases arising under the Anti-Trust laws in which this Court has so stated
see Hopkins v. United States, 171 U.S. 578, 602; Blumenstock Bros. v. Curtis
Publishing Co., 252 U.S. 436, 443; Federal Club v. National League, 259
U.S. 200, 209; Standard Oil Co. v. United States, 283 U.S. 163, 168-9;
and see Northern Securities Co. v. United States, 193 U.S. 197, 372, 377
(dissenting opinion). See also
United Mine Workers v. Coronado Coal Co., 259 U.S. 344, 410; United Leather
Workers v. Herkert & Meisel Co., 265 U.S. 457, 470-71, relying on Ware &
Leland v. Mobile County, 209 U.S. 405, a case applying the insurance rule to
cotton futures contracts not calling for interstate shipment or delivery. n12
One private suit was brought in the District of Columbia to enjoin rate-fixing
by an underwriters' association; the suit was dismissed on the ground that
insurance was not commerce. Lown v. Underwriters' Assn., Sup. Ct. D. C. June 23,
1915, reported in 6 Federal Anti-Trust Decisions 1048. Over
252 criminal prosecutions and 272 suits at equity have been instituted by the
United States under the Sherman Act, Hamilton, Antitrust in Action, Monograph
No. 16, prepared for the Temporary National Economic Committee (1940) 76, 78,
and over 103 private actions have been brought, Note, 49 Yale L. J. 284, 296
(1939). n13
In addition to the bills at note 8, supra, see H. J. Res. 31, 60th Cong., 1st
Sess. (1907); S. J. Res. 103, 63d Cong., 2d Sess. (1914); H. J. Res. 194, 63d
Cong., 2d Sess. (1914); S. J. Res. 58, 64th Cong., 1st Sess. (1915); S. J. Res.
51, 73d Cong., 1st Sess. (1933), all proposing constitutional amendments. The
decision now rendered repudiates this long-continued and consistent construction
of the commerce clause and the Sherman Act. We do not say that that is in itself
a sufficient ground for declining to join in the Court's decision. This Court
has never committed itself to any rule or policy that it will not "bow to
the lessons of experience and the force of better reasoning" by overruling
a mistaken precedent. See cases
collected in Justice Brandeis's dissenting opinion in Burnet v. Coronado Oil
& Gas Co., 285 U.S. 393, 406-9, notes 1-4, and in Smith v. Allwright, 321
U.S. 649, 665, n. 10; and see Legal Tender
Cases, 12 Wall. 457, 553-54. This is especially the case when the meaning of the
Constitution is at issue and a mistaken construction is one which cannot be
corrected by legislative action. To
give blind adherence to a rule or policy that no decision of this Court is to be
overruled would be itself to overrule many decisions of the Court which do not
accept that view. But the rule of stare decisis embodies a wise policy because
it is often more important that a rule of law be settled than that it be settled
right. This is especially so where,
as here, Congress is not without regulatory power. Cf. Penn Dairies
v. Milk Control Comm'n, 318 U.S. 261, 271, 275. The question then is not whether
an earlier decision should ever be overruled, but whether a
[*580] particular decision
ought to be. And before overruling
a precedent in any case it is the duty of the Court to make certain that more
harm will not be done in rejecting than in retaining a rule of even dubious
validity. Compare Helvering v.
Griffiths, 318 U.S. 371, 400-4. From
what has been said it seems plain that our decisions that the business of
insurance is not commerce are not unsound in principle, and involve no
inconsistency or lack of harmony with accepted doctrine.
They place no field of activity beyond the control of both the national
and state governments as did Hammer v. Dagenhart, 247 U.S. 251,
[**1188] overruled three
years ago by a unanimous Court in United [***1473]
States v. Darby, 312 U.S. 100, 117. On the contrary the ruling that
insurance is not commerce, and is therefore unaffected by the restrictions which
the commerce clause imposes on state legislation, removed the most serious
obstacle to regulation of that business by the states. Through their plenary
power over domestic and foreign corporations which are not engaged in interstate
commerce, the states have developed extensive and effective systems of
regulation of the insurance business, often solving regulatory problems of a
local character with which it would be impractical or difficult for Congress to
deal through the exercise of the commerce power.
And in view of the broad powers of the federal government to regulate
matters which, though not themselves commerce, nevertheless affect interstate
commerce, Wickard v. Filburn, 317 U.S. 111; Polish Alliance v. Labor Board,
supra, there can be no doubt of the power of Congress if it so desires to
regulate many aspects of the insurance business mentioned in this indictment. But
the immediate and only practical effect of the decision now rendered is to
withdraw from the states, in large measure, the regulation of insurance and to
confer it on the national government, which has adopted no legislative [*581]
policy and evolved no scheme of regulation with respect to the business
of insurance. Congress having taken no action, the present decision substitutes,
for the varied and detailed state regulation developed over a period of years,
the limited aim and indefinite command of the Sherman Act for the suppression of
restraints on competition in the marketing of goods and services in or affecting
interstate commerce, to be applied by the courts to the insurance business as
best they may. In
the years since this Court's pronouncement that insurance is not commerce came
to be regarded as settled constitutional doctrine, vast efforts have gone into
the development of schemes of state regulation and into the organization of the
insurance business in conformity to such regulatory requirements.
Vast amounts of capital have been invested in the business in reliance on
the permanence of the existing system of state regulation. How far that system
is now supplanted is not, and in the nature of things could not well be,
explained in the Court's opinion. The
Government admits that statutes of at least five states will be invalidated by
the decision as in conflict with the Sherman Act, and the argument in this Court
reveals serious doubt whether many others may not also be inconsistent with that
Act. The extent to which still
other state statutes will now be invalidated as in conflict with the commerce
clause has not been explored in any detail in the briefs and argument or in the
Court's opinion. Certainly
there cannot but be serious doubt as to the validity of state taxes which may
now be thought to discriminate against the interstate commerce, cf. Philadelphia
Fire Assn. v. New York, 119 U.S. 110; or the extent to which conditions may be
imposed on the right of insurance companies to do business within a state; or in
general the extent to which the state may regulate whatever aspects of the
business are now for the first time to be [*582]
regarded as interstate commerce. While this Court no longer adheres to the
inflexible rule that a state cannot in some measure regulate interstate
commerce, the application of the test presently applied requires "a
consideration of all the relevant facts and circumstances" in order to
determine whether the matter is an appropriate one for local regulation and
whether the regulation does not unduly burden interstate commerce, Parker v.
Brown, 317 U.S. 341, 362 -- a determination which can only be made upon a
case-to-case basis. [***1474] Only
time and costly experience can give the answers. Congress
made the choice against so drastic a change when in 1906 it rejected the
proposals to assume national control over the insurance business. The report of
the House Committee on the Judiciary pointed out that "all of the evils and
wrongs complained of are subject to the exclusive regulation of State
legislative power" and added: "assuming that Congress declares that
insurance is commerce and the Supreme Court holds the legislation
constitutional, how much could Congress [**1189] regulate,
and what effect would such legislation have? It would disturb the very
substructure of government by precipitating a violent conflict between the
police power of the States and the power of Congress to regulate interstate
commerce. To uphold the Federal power would be to extinguish the police power of
the State by the legislation of Congress. In
other words, Congress would admit corporations into the respective States and
have the entire regulating power." H. R. Rep. No. 2491, 59th Cong., 1st
Sess., 13, 15-16. See id. 18. Had
Congress chosen to legislate for such parts of the insurance business as could
be found to affect interstate commerce, whether by making the Sherman Act
applicable to them or by regulation in some other form, it could have resolved
many of these questions of conflict between
[*583] federal and state
regulation. But this Court can decide only the questions before it in particular
cases. Its action in now
overturning the precedents of seventy-five years governing a business of such
volume and of such wide ramifications, cannot fail to be the occasion for
loosing a flood of litigation and of legislation, state and national, in order
to establish a new boundary between state and national power, raising questions
which cannot be answered for years to come, during which a great business and
the regulatory officers of every state must be harassed by all the doubts and
difficulties inseparable from a realignment of the distribution of power in our
federal system. These considerations might well stay a reversal of
long-established doctrine which promises so little of advantage and so much of
harm. For me these considerations
are controlling. The
judgment should be affirmed. MR.
JUSTICE FRANKFURTER: I
join in the opinion of the CHIEF JUSTICE. The
relations of the insurance business to national commerce and finance, I have no
doubt, afford constitutional authority for appropriate regulation by Congress of
the business of insurance, certainly not to a less extent than Congressional
regulation touching agriculture. See,
e. g., Smith v. Kansas City Title Co., 255 U.S. 180; Wickard v. Filburn, 317
U.S. 111. But the opinion of the CHIEF JUSTICE leaves me equally without doubt
that by the enactment of the Sherman Act in 1890, Congress did not mean to
disregard the then accepted conception of the constitutional basis for the
regulation of the insurance business. And the evidence is overwhelming that the
inapplicability of the Sherman Act, in its contemporaneous setting, to insurance
transactions such as those charged by this indictment has been confirmed and not
modified by [*584] Congressional
attitude and action in the intervening fifty years.
There is no Congressional warrant therefore for bringing about the
far-reaching dislocations which the opinions of the CHIEF JUSTICE and MR.
JUSTICE JACKSON adumbrate. MR.
JUSTICE JACKSON, dissenting in part: I. The
historical development of public regulation of insurance underwriting in this
country has created a dilemma which confronts this Court today.
It demonstrates that [***1475]
"The life of the law has not been logic: it has been
experience." For
one hundred fifty years Congress never has undertaken to regulate the business
of insurance. Therefore to give the public any protection against abuses to
which that business is peculiarly susceptible the states have had to regulate
it. Since 1851 the several states,
spurred by necessity and with acquiescence of every branch of the Federal
Government, have been building up systems of regulation to discharge this duty
toward their inhabitants. n1 n1
Insurance commissions were established by New Hampshire in 1851 (N. H. Laws
1851, c. 1111); by Massachusetts in 1852 (Mass. Laws 1852, c. 231); by Rhode
Island in 1855 (R. I. Laws, October 1854, p. 17, @ 17).
By 1890, when the Sherman Act became law, seventeen states had
established supervisory authorities. Patterson,
The Insurance Commissioner in the United States (1927), p. 536, n. 62. [**1190]
There never was doubt of the right of a state to regulate the business of
its domestic companies done within the home state.
The foreign corporation was the problem. Such insurance interests resisted state regulation and
brought a series of cases to this Court. The
companies sought to disable the states from regulating them by arguing that
insurance business is interstate commerce, an argument almost identical with
that now made by the [*585]
Government. n2 The foreign companies thus sought to vest insurance control
exclusively in Congress and to deprive every state of power to exclude them, to
regulate them, or to tax them for the privilege of doing business. n2
See particularly argument of New York Life Insurance Company in New York
Life Ins. Co. v. Deer Lodge County, 231 U.S. 495, 496 (1913), and that
for Paul in Paul v. Virginia, 8 Wall. 168 (1868). The
practical and ultimate choice that faced this Court was to say either that
insurance was subject to state regulation or that it was subject to no existing
regulation at all. The Court
consistently sustained the right of the states to represent the public interest
in this enterprise. It did so,
wisely or unwisely, by resort to the doctrine that insurance is not commerce and
hence is unaffected by the grant of power to Congress to regulate commerce among
the several states. Each state thus
was left free to exclude foreign insurance companies altogether or to admit them
to do business on such conditions as it saw fit to impose.
The whole structure of insurance regulation and taxation as it exists
today has been built upon this assumption. n3 n3
Paul v. Virginia, 8 Wall. 168, 183 (1868); Hooper v. California, 155 U.S. 648,
655 (1895); Noble v. Mitchell, 164 U.S. 367, 370 (1896); New York Life Ins. Co.
v. Cravens, 178 U.S. 389, 401 (1900); New York Life Ins. Co. v. Deer Lodge
County, 231 U.S. 495 (1913); Bothwell v. Buckbee, Mears Co., 275 U.S.
274; Ducat v. Chicago, 10 Wall. 410; Liverpool Insurance Co. v. Massachusetts,
10 Wall. 566; Philadelphia Fire
Assn. v. New York, 119 U.S. 110; Nutting v. Massachusetts , 183 U.S. 553;
Northwestern Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Wisconsin, 247 U.S. 132. The
doctrine that insurance business is not commerce always has been criticized as
unrealistic, illogical, and inconsistent with other holdings of the Court.
I am unable to make any satisfactory distinction between insurance
business as now conducted and other transactions that are held to constitute
interstate commerce. n4 Were we considering
[*586]
[***1476] the question for the first time and writing upon a clean
slate, I would have no misgivings about holding that insurance business is
commerce and where conducted across state lines is interstate commerce and
therefore that congressional power to regulate prevails over that of the states.
I have little doubt that if the present trend continues federal
regulation eventually will supersede that of the states. n4
E. g., Champion v. Ames, 188 U.S. 321 (lottery tickets); Electric Bond &
Share Co. v. Securities & Exchange Comm'n, 303 U.S. 419 (holding
companies). The
question therefore for me settles down to this: What role ought the judiciary to
play in reversing the trend of history and setting the nation's feet on a new
path of policy? To answer this I
would consider what choices we have in the matter. II. The
Government claims, and we must approve or reject the claim, that the antitrust
laws constitute an exercise of congressional power which reaches the insurance
business. That might be true on either of two different bases.
The practical as well as the theoretical difference is substantial, as
this case will show. 1.
If an activity is held to be interstate commerce, Congress has paramount
regulatory power. If it acts at all
in relation to such a subject, it often has been held
[**1191] that it has "occupied the field" to the exclusion
of the states, that the federal legislation defines the full measure of
regulation and outside of it the activity is to be free. n5 This Court now is
not fully agreed as to the effects of the Commerce Clause on state power, n6 but
at least the Court always has considered that if an activity is held to be
interstate in character a state may not exclude, burden, or obstruct it, n7
[*587] nor impose a license
tax on the privilege of carrying it on within the state. n8 The holding of the
Court in this case brings insurance within this line of decisions restricting
state power. n5
E. g., Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Public Service Comm'n, 250 U.S. 566. n6
McCarroll v. Dixie Greyhound Lines, 309 U.S. 176; Duckworth v. Arkansas,
314 U.S. 390. n7
Furst v. Brewster, 282 U.S. 493, and cases cited. n8
Alpha Portland Cement Co. v. Massachusetts, 268 U.S. 203; Cudahy Packing
Co. v. Hinkle, 278 U.S. 460. 2.
Although an activity is held not to be commerce or not to be interstate in
character, Congress nevertheless may reach it to prohibit specific activities in
its conduct that substantially burden or restrain interstate commerce. Wickard
v. Filburn, 317 U.S. 111. When this power is exercised by Congress, it
impairs state regulation only in so far as it actually conflicts with the
federal regulation. Terminal Railroad Association v. Brotherhood of Railroad
Trainmen, 318 U.S. 1. This
congressional power to reach activities that are not interstate commerce
interferes with state power only in a milder, narrower, and more specific way. Instead
of overruling our repeated decisions that insurance is not commerce, the Court
could apply to this case the principle that even if it is not commerce the
antitrust laws prohibit its manipulation to restrain interstate commerce, just
as we hold that the National Labor Relations Act prohibits insurance companies,
even if not in commerce, from engaging in unfair labor practices which affect
commerce. Polish Alliance v. Labor Board, post, p. 643.
This would require the Government to show that any acts it sought to
punish affect something more than insurance and substantially affect interstate
transportation or interstate commerce in some commodity. Whatever problems of
reconciliation between state and federal authority this would present -- and it
would not avoid them all -- it would leave the basis of state regulation
unimpaired. The
principles of decision that I would apply to this case are neither [***1477]
novel nor complicated and may be shortly put: 1.
As a matter of fact, modern insurance business, as
[*588] usually conducted, is commerce; and where it is conducted
across state lines, it is in fact
interstate commerce. 2.
In contemplation of law, however, insurance has acquired an established
doctrinal status not based on present-day facts.
For constitutional purposes a fiction has been established, and long
acted upon by the Court, the states, and the Congress, that insurance is not
commerce. 3.
So long as Congress acquiesces, this Court should adhere to this carefully
considered and frequently reiterated rule which sustains the traditional
regulation and taxation of insurance companies by the states. 4.
Any enactment by Congress either of partial or of comprehensive regulations of
the insurance business would come to us with the most forceful presumption of
constitutional validity. The fiction that insurance is not commerce could not be
sustained against such a presumption, for resort to the facts would support the
presumption in favor of the congressional action.
The fiction therefore must yield to congressional action and continues
only at the sufferance of Congress. 5.
Congress also may, without exerting its full regulatory powers over the subject,
and without challenging the basis or supplanting the details of state
regulation, enact prohibitions of any acts in pursuit of the insurance business
which substantially [**1192] affect
or unduly burden or restrain interstate commerce. 6.
The antitrust laws should be construed to reach the business of insurance and
those who are engaged in it only under the latter congressional power.
This does not require a change in the doctrine that insurance is not
commerce. The statute as thus construed would authorize prosecution of all
combinations in the course of insurance business to commit acts not required or
authorized by state law, such as intimidation, disparagement, or coercion,
[*589] if they unreasonably
restrain interstate commerce in commodities or interstate transportation. n9 It
would leave state regulation intact. n9
The Government contends that at least Count One of the present indictment
conforms to this interpretation of the antitrust laws.
Under the Criminal Appeals Act we have no jurisdiction to construe or
reconstrue the indictment. My view would require remand to the District Court or
the Circuit Court of Appeals for consideration in the light of our opinion. III. The
majority of the sitting Justices insist that we follow the more drastic course.
Abstract logic may support them, but the common sense and wisdom of the
situation seem opposed. It may be
said that practical consequences are no concern of a court, that it should
confine itself to legal theory. Of
course, in cases where a constitutional provision or a congressional statute is
clear and mandatory, its wisdom is not for us.
But the Court now is not following, it is overruling, an unequivocal line
of authority reaching over many years. We
are not sustaining an act of Congress against attack on its constitutionality,
we are making unprecedented use of the Act to strike down the constitutional
basis of state regulation. I think we not only are free, but are duty bound, to
consider practical consequences of such a revision of constitutional theory.
This Court only recently recognized that certain former decisions as to
the dividing line between state and federal power were illogical and
theoretically wrong, but at the same time it announced that it would adhere to
them because both governments had accommodated the structure of their laws to
the error. Davis v. Department of
Labor, 317 U.S. 249, 255. It seemed a common-sense course to follow then, and I
think similar considerations should [***1478]
restrain us from following a contrary and destructive course now. [*590]
The states began nearly a century ago to regulate insurance, and state
regulation, while no doubt of uneven quality, today is a successful going
concern. Several of the states,
where the greatest volume of business is transacted, have rigorous and
enlightened legislation, with enforcement and supervision in the hands of
experienced and competent officials. Such state departments, through trial and error, have
accumulated that body of institutional experience and wisdom so indispensable to
good administration. The Court's decision at very least will require an
extensive overhauling of state legislation relating to taxation and supervision.
The whole legal basis will have to be reconsidered. What will be irretrievably lost and what may be salvaged no
one now can say, and it will take a generation of litigation to determine.
Certainly the states lose very important controls and very considerable
revenues. n10 n10
In 1943, gross premiums taxes on insurance companies yielded 40 states an
aggregate of $ 96,108,000 and the remaining eight an estimated $ 26,892,000,
making a total of $ 123,000,000. State
Tax Collections in 1943, pamphlet published by Bureau of the Census, p. 8. The
recklessness of such a course is emphasized when we consider that Congress has
not one line of legislation deliberately designed to take over federal
responsibility for this important and complicated enterprise. n11 There is no
federal department or personnel with national experience
[*591] [**1193] in the subject on which Congress can call for counsel in
framing regulatory legislation. A
poorer time to thrust upon Congress the necessity for framing a plan for
nationalization of insurance control would be hard to find. n11
It is impossible to believe that Congress, if it ever intended to assume
responsibility for general regulation of insurance, would have made the
antitrust laws the sole manifestation of its purpose. Its only command is to refrain from restraints of trade.
Intelligent insurance regulation goes much further.
It requires careful supervision to ascertain and protect solvency,
regulation which may be inconsistent with unbridled rate competition.
It prescribes some provisions of policies of insurance and many other
matters beyond the scope of the Sherman Act. Also
it requires sanctions for obedience far more effective than the $ 5,000 maximum
fine on corporations prescribed by the antitrust laws.
Violation of state laws are commonly punishable by cancellation of
permission to do business therein -- a drastic sanction that really commands
respect. The
antitrust law sanctions are little better than absurd when applied to huge
corporations engaged in great enterprise. In
the two related Madison Oil cases (see United States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co.,
310 U.S. 150) fifteen of the seventeen corporations convicted had combined
capital and surplus reported to be $ 2,833,516,247.
The total corporate fines on them were $ 255,000, making a ratio of fines
to corporate capital and surplus of less than 1/100 of 1 per cent.
In addition, fines of $ 180,000 were assessed against individuals.
In the automobile financing case (see United States v. General Motors
Corp., 121 F. 2d 376, cert. denied, 314 U.S. 618) General Motors Corporation,
three wholly owned subsidiaries and no individuals were convicted.
The fines were $ 20,000. Capital and surplus were then reported at $
1,047,840,321, the fine being somewhat less than 1/500 of 1 per cent thereof. In
each case the corporate fines were $ 5,000, the maximum permitted by the
statute. 15 U. S. C. @ 1. Moreover,
we have not a hint from Congress that it concurs in the plan to federalize
responsibility for insurance supervision. Indeed, every indication is to the
contrary. n12 [*592] It was
[***1479] urged to do so by
one President, n13 and by the insurance companies. n14 The decisions of this
Court confirming state power over insurance have been paralleled by a history of
congressional refusal to extend federal authority into the field, n15 although
no decision ever has explicitly denied the power to do so. n12
The last agency to investigate insurance problems was the Temporary National
Economic Committee. It made no
recommendation of federal control. Its
chairman, Senator O'Mahoney, after reviewing carefully the problems caused by
the concentration of economic power in the hands of the insurance companies and
the abuses of the business, said: "Therefore I say again that personally I
would not support any law that would undertake to do away with state regulation
of insurance, and there never has been suggested to me or to any member of the
TNEC or to the committee as a whole any thought of doing away with state
regulation or imposing federal supervision." 26 American Bar Association
Journal 913. Both dominant
political parties have supported the present system.
In 1940, the Democratic platform contained this provision: "We favor
strict supervision of all forms of the insurance business by the several States
for the protection of policyholders and the public." The Republican
platform of that year contained this provision: "We favor a continuance of
regulation of insurance by the several States." n13
President Theodore Roosevelt twice recommended that Congress assume control of
insurance. Message of December 6,
1904, 39 Cong. Rec. 12, and Message of December 5, 1905, 40 Cong. Rec. 95. n14
See Insurance Blue Book (Centennial Issue, 1876) Ch. VI, Fire Insurance, p. 32. n15
In 1866, a bill was introduced in the House, providing for creation of a
national bureau of insurance in the Treasury Department.
It was not passed. H. R.
738, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. In
1868, a bill was introduced in the Senate proposing a national bureau of
insurance, but never passed. S. 299, 40th Cong., 2d Sess. In
1892, a bill was introduced in the House creating the office of Commissioner of
Insurance. It was never reported
out of committee. H. R. 9629, 52d
Cong., 1st Sess. In
1897, a bill was introduced in the Senate to declare that insurance companies
doing business outside of the states of their incorporation were to be deemed to
be engaged in interstate commerce. It was not reported out of committee.
S. 2736, 55th Cong., 2d Sess. After
President Roosevelt's recommendation of 1904, Senator Dryden introduced a bill
in the Senate to establish a bureau of insurance in the Department of Commerce.
The bill died in committee. S.
7277, 58th Cong., 3d Sess. After
President Roosevelt's second recommendation, the House Judiciary Committee
reported that Congress had no power to regulate insurance, and said: "The
views of the Supreme Court have practically met the approval of the bar and
business men of the United States as being in accordance with law and common
sense." H. R. Rep. 2491, 59th Cong., 1st Sess., March 23, 1906, p. 14. The
Senate Committee on the Judiciary made a similar report.
Sen. Rep. 4406, 59th Cong., 1st Sess., 1906. In
1914-15, resolutions were introduced in both the House and the Senate proposing
an amendment to the Constitution to the effect that Congress should have power
to regulate the business or commerce of insurance throughout the United States
and its territories or possessions. The
resolutions were not reported out of the Judiciary Committee.
S. J. Res. 103, 63d Cong., 2d Sess.; H. J. Res. 194, 63d Cong., 2d Sess.;
S. J. Res. 58, 64th Cong., 1st Sess. In
1933, a resolution was introduced for a similar constitutional amendment which
died in committee. S. J. Res. 51, 73d Cong., 1st Sess. Moreover,
by exceptions and exemptions Congress has indicated a clear intent to avoid
interference with state supervision. Insurance corporations are excepted from
those who may become bankrupts. 11
U. S. C. @ 22. Insurance issued by any issuer under state supervision is
exempted from the Securities Act. 15
U. S. C. @ 77c (a) (8). Insurance
companies supervised by state authority are exempted from regulation as
investment companies. 15 U. S. C.
@@ 80a-2 (a) (17) and 80a-3 (c) (3). [*593]
The [**1194]
orderly way to nationalize insurance supervision, if it be desirable, is
not by court decision but through legislation.
Judicial decision operates on the states and the industry retroactively.
We cannot anticipate, and more than likely we could not agree, what
consequences upon tax liabilities, refunds, liabilities under state law to
states or to individuals, and even criminal liabilities
[***1480] will follow this
decision. Such practical
considerations years ago deterred the Court from changing its doctrine as to
insurance. n16 Congress, on the other hand, if it thinks the time has come to
take insurance regulation into the federal system, may formulate and announce
the whole scope and effect of its action in advance, fix a future effective
date, and avoid all the confusion, surprise, and injustice which will be caused
by the action of the Court. n17 n16
In New York Life Ins. Co. v. Deer Lodge County, 231 U.S. 495, 502, the Court
said: "To reverse the cases, therefore, would require us to promulgate a
new rule of constitutional inhibition upon the States and which would compel a
change of their policy and a readjustment of their laws.
Such result necessarily urges against a change of decision." n17
In resisting pressure to federalize insurance supervision Congress has followed
the advice of some of the best informed champions of the public interest on
insurance problems. One was Louis
D. Brandeis. Speaking as counsel
for the Protective Committee of Policy-holders in the Equitable Life Assurance
Society, before the Commercial Club of Boston, on October 26, 1905, Mr. Brandeis
said: "The
sole effect of a Federal law would be -- the sole purpose of the Dryden bill
[see note 15, supra] must have been -- to free the companies from the careful
scrutiny of the commissioners of some of the States.
It seeks to rob the State even of the right to protect its own citizens
from the legalized robbery to which present insurance measures subject the
citizens, for by the terms of the bill a Federal license would secure the right
to do business within the borders of the State, regardless of the State
prohibitions, free from the State's protective regulations. With a frankness
which is unusual -- and an effrontery which is common -- among the insurance
magnates -- this bill is introduced in the Senate by John F. Dryden, the
president of the Prudential Life Insurance Company -- the company which pays to
stockholders annual dividends equivalent to 219.78 per cent. for each dollar
paid in on the stock; the company which devotes itself mainly to insuring the
working men at an expense of over 37.28 cents on every dollar of premiums paid;
the company which, in 1904, made the worst record of lapsed and surrendered
industrial policies. ... "Federal
supervision is also advocated by Mr. James M. Beck (formerly Assistant Attorney
General of the United States), the counsel for the Mutual Life Insurance
Company, and his main argument against State supervision appears to be that the
companies pay, in the aggregate, for fees and taxes in the several States $
10,000,000, which he says is twice as much as is necessary to cover the expense
of proper supervision. Ten million dollars is a large sum in itself, but a very
small one compared with the aggregate assets or the aggregate expense of
management. Mr. Beck's company paid
in 1904 $ 1,138,663 in taxes and fees. Its
management expenses were $ 15,517,520, or nearly fourteen times as much.
Our Massachusetts savings banks paid in the year ending October 31, 1904,
$ 1,627,794.46 in taxes to this Commonwealth: that is $ 80,890.02 more than the
whole expense of management, which was $ 1,546,904.44. "Doubtless
the insurance departments of some States are subjects for just criticism.
In many of the States the department is inefficient, in some doubtless
corrupt. But is there anything in
our experience of Federal supervision of other departments of business which
should lead us to assume that it will be freer from grounds of criticism or on
the whole more efficient than the best insurance department of any of the
States? For it must be remembered
that an efficient supervision by the department of any State will in effect
protect all the policyholders of the company wherever they may reside.
Let us remember rather the ineffectiveness for eighteen long years of the
Interstate Commerce Commission to deal with railroad abuses, the futile
investigation by Commissioner Garfield of the Beef Trust, and the unfinished
investigation into the affairs of the Oil Trust in which he has since been
engaged. Federal supervision would
serve only to centralize still further the power of our Government and to
increase still further the powers of the corporations." Mr.
Justice Brandeis for a unanimous Court wrote, in Bothwell v. Buckbee,
Mears Co., 275 U.S. 274, 276 (1927): "A contract of insurance,
although made with a corporation having its office in a State other than that in
which the insured resides and in which the interest insured is located, is not
interstate commerce." He joined in other similar decisions in Northwestern
Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Wisconsin, 247 U.S. 132; National Union Fire Ins. Co. v.
Wanberg, 260 U.S. 71. [*594]
A [**1195]
judgment as to when the evil of a decisional error exceeds the evil of
[***1481] an innovation must
be based on very practical and in part upon policy considerations.
When, as in this problem, such practical and political judgments can be
made by the political branches of the Government, it is the part of wisdom and
self-restraint and good government for courts to leave the initiative to
Congress. Moreover,
this is the method of responsible democratic government.
To force the hand of Congress is no more
[*595] the proper function
of the judiciary than to tie the hands of Congress.
To use my office, at a time like this, and with so little justification
in necessity, to dislocate the functions and revenues of the states n18 and to
catapult Congress into immediate and undivided responsibility for supervision of
the nation's insurance businesses is more than I can reconcile with my view of
the function of this Court in our society. n18
Thirty-five states of the Union have filed amicus curiae briefs with us,
protesting against the decision which the Court is promulgating.
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