
    The Columbus Packing Co. v. The State, ex rel. Schlesinger, Prosecuting Attorney, et al.
    
      Injunction — Violation of Anti-trust Lazo — Sections 6390 to 6402, General Code — Statutes in pari materia — Smith Cold Storage Laza — Sections 1155-1 to 1135-19, General Code (107 O. L., 594) — What constitutes violation — Injunction and receivership lie, zahén — Error proceedings — "Judgment” construed.
    
    1. By the provisions of the Valentine Anti-trust Law, Sections 6390 to 6102, General Code, inclusive, jurisdiction is conferred on courts of common pleas to enjoin violations of that law, and in cases brought thereunder the court may make all such orders as are warranted by the rules and proceedings in equity.
    2. The Cold Storage Act (107 O. L., 591) and the Valentine Antitrust Law (Sections 6390 to 6-102, General Code) are to be construed in pari materia.
    
    3. Where it appears that articles of food have been held in cold storage by arrangement or contract between two or more parties for such period that the sale by the owner is prohibited by the provisions of the Cold Storage Act, such act constitutes a violation of the terms of the Valentine Anti-trust Law.
    4. In such case the court may enjoin the sale by the offending party of such food products, and may appoint a receiver to take and hold same, and if it deems it best for all concerned may order the receiver to sell them in such manner as may be just and as the court may prescribe.
    5. An order so made in such a proceeding is a judgment under the constitution, which may be made the predicate of a proceeding in error.
    (No. 16402
    Decided August 27, 1919.)
    Error to the Court of Appeals of Franklin county.
    The facts are stated in the opinion.
    
      Messrs. Bennett, Westfall & Bennett, for plaintiff in error.
    
      
      Messrs. Wilson & Rector, for cross-petitioner in error.
    
      Mr. Hugo N. Schlesinger, prosecuting attorney; Mr. Timothy S. Hogan and Mr. Oscar W. Newman, for defendants in error.
   Nichols, C. J.

On the 6th of August, 1919, the State of Ohio, acting through Hugo N. Schlesinger, Prosecuting Attorney of Franklin county, Ohio, filed its action in the common pleas court of Franklin county, Ohio, against The Columbus Packing Company and The Fairmont Creamery Company.

The Columbus Packing Company is an Ohio corporation engaged in the slaughtering of cattle, swine, sheep and other domestic animals and exposing same for sale as food. The Fairmont Creamery Company is an Ohio corporation licensed to operate under the provisions of Section 7 of the Cold Storage Act of March 21, 1917, 107 Ohio Laws, page 594.

The action is one for injunction, the appointment of a receiver, and other equitable relief. By the provisions of Section 6400, General Code, jurisdiction is conferred on courts of common pleas to enjoin violations of the Valentine Anti-trust Law, Sections 6390 to 6402, General Code, inclusive, and in cases brought therein the court may make all such orders as demanded by the rules, and proceedings in equity. By the terms of the Cold Storage Act it is made unlawful to sell or offer for sale certain food products therein named held in storage for a period longer than six months. By the terms of the Valentine Anti-trust Act it is made unlawful to create or carry out restrictions in trade or commerce. It is further made unlawful to prevent competition in the sale or purchase of a commodity.

It is charged in the petition that the defendant companies in respect to the storage of 150,000 pounds of pork have violated the provisions of both of said laws; that between the 29th of November, 1918, and the 5th of February, 1919, certain whole, carcasses of pork or parts thereof were delivered to the Creamery Company and that such food product remained in storage for a period longer than six months in violation of the express provisions of Section 13 of the Cold Storage Act. It is claimed that the storage of a food commodity for so long a period as to render it unsalable in Ohio by the owner is per se an act in restraint of trade, and that such storage acts as a preventive of competition.

The vital and controlling issue of fact in the case centers around the duration of time the pork in question had remained in cold storage prior to the institution of the suit.

The defendant Creamery Company expressly admits that the goods had been stored in its warehouse for the period of timé set forth in the petition. The defendant Packing Company, after admitting the delivery of certain parts of carcasses of pork to the Creamery Company for storage, denied the allegation as to length of time of storage in this language: “But not being advised as to the exact number of pounds or dates of delivery of each, it denies the allegation concerning the same.” Further along in the answer the Packing Company did, however, admit in substance the allegations in respect to the alleged unlawful storage. Its language in this respect is as follows: “That it has not sold, offered or exposed for sale any of said pork products after the expiration of said six months during which said pork products have been held in said cold storage warehouse.”

It is further alleged in this answer “That it has tried by its officers and agents in every possible way to dispose of the same at a fair market value, but that owing to the quantity of pork loins thus accruing, as hereinbefore described, in the hands of said defendant, it was unable to sell or dispose of the same within the time limit thus mentioned in said act of the General Assembly.”

At the hearing of the case in the court of common pleas, the defendant Packing Company introduced in evidence its answer, and the affidavits of J. D. Reed, A. S. Goddard and J. N. Mathy. These affiants claimed to represent parties that had purchased certain portions of the food in question before the expiration of the six months. Each of these affidavits contained the following statement of fact: “That the frozen, pork loins purchased thereunder were merely left in The Fairmont Creamer}^ Company so as to provide for the care and protection of the same from danger of decay.” It would appear, therefore, that the trial court was amply justified in treating the question as to the length of time of storage as fully established by the admissions of all the parties, including the representatives of the alleged purchasers of part of the property.

The Creamery Company expressly admits it. The representatives of the alleged purchasers admit it, for they say that after they purchased a portion of the property on the 9th of July it continued to remain in the warehouse. The Packing Company when reaching the stage of explanation and justification in its answer, avers that it was unable to find a purchaser for the remainder of the property within the time limit fixed by the general assembly. This language, construed as it must be most strongly against the pleader, is incapable of any construction other than an express admission that the unsold portion of the pork remained in storage in excess of six months.

The court of common pleas granted an injunction restraining the delivery of the pork to the Packing Company, and restraining the Packing Company from offering any part thereof for sale. It also appointed a receiver to take charge of the property. The defendant companies filed motions to discharge the order of injunction and to remove the receiver. At the hearing of these motions, all of the pleadings were introduced in evidence, together with certain affidavits. The court overruled the motions and.thereafter, issued its order to the receiver to. sell the property without delay. Exceptions were taken by the defendant companies, and error was prosecuted to the court of appeals of Franklin county. Here with slight modification the judgment was affirmed. Proceedings in error were forthwith prosecuted to the supreme court.

The fact of storage in excess of six months haying been established, the question remains, does the admitted conduct of the parties defendant constitute a violation of the Cold Storage Act and the Anti-trust Act, either or both?

If it does not, then what has been done in this instance, however injurious to the public welfare, is beyond any remedy that the judiciary may provide.

The two acts under consideration are in pari materia, both having been enacted for the protection of the public from certain evils of trade and commerce, the cold storage act having for its primary purpose the protection of the public health, while the anti-trust act has to do chiefly with relieving the people from commercial exactions and extortions.

The protection of the public health cannot be said to be the sole purpose of the cold storage act, for clearly the limitation of the time that food commodities may be offered for sale operates automatically to defeat the practice of food hoarding. The purpose must be ascribed to the general assembly of comprehending the' full scope and effect of its enactment. The effect of the cold storage act was to practically make contraband all such food stored longer than six months. Purveyors of food are not supposed to wilfully destroy their most accessible market. In reasonable contemplation then the limitation of the storage period with the penalty imposed, must have been reckoned a most efficient remedy against food hoarding for profiteering purposes..

While there is no express provision in the act making it unlawful to store food for a period longer than six months, there is an unmistakable declaration of public policy that in Ohio pork products ought not to be stored for a period greater than six months, and it, therefore, becomes the manifest duty of the courts to prevent such practices if in their power so to do.

It by not means follows that the cold storage act standing alone, with its secondary purpose so manifest and its public policy so obvious, would not justify the proceedings in the trial court.

However, we are not, in our review, limited to the terms of this act for the inter-related act' against' the creation and carrying out of trade restrictions furnishes adequate means to support the various steps already taken.

The, acts of the parties defendant in respect to the food in question constitute conduct in restriction of trade and have a patent tendency to increase the price of the commodity; and also remove competition in the sale and purchase of merchandise.

It is elementary of course that the withdrawal from the open markets of any considerable quantity of a food commodity necessarily increases in value similar food products then and there exposed for sale. This is especially true of a food so necessary' as pork. We are unwilling to believe that if the food supply' is equal tó the demand, the public cannot make its voice heard in fixing price. Whenever the demand exceeds the supply then a legitimate form of competition exists. Individuals desiring the food become unconscious rivals, and one community without knowing it bids against its neighbor, and often against itself. If this situation is brought about-by a natural shortage of the merchandise sought, there is no remedy and the purchaser must pay the price or do without. The law, however, has placed stern barriers against the creation of any artificial shortage. It forbids an unwholesome market where the buyer is left wholly to the conscience of the dealer.

The certain effect of the conduct of the parties in the case at bar was to create an artificial shortage in pork products. To retain food in storage, and to withhold it from the channels of trade for so long a time that the food, so far as the markets of Ohio are concerned, was, if left in the hands of the owner as effectually destroyed, as if it had been annihilated in a conflagration, is unexplainable, except on the theory of a form of conspiracy to cause similar food products to realize a higher scale of value. This food during the full period of storage was never worth less than $45,000. The most accessible market was Columbus and its immediate vicinity. No legitimate purpose can be ascribed to the owners of the property in knowingly contributing to the destruction of the commercial value of their own product. The necessary conclusion is that the object of the parties was to maintain as to similar products a very satisfactory if not over-profitable market, or, what- is more probable, to cause a still further increase in the selling value thereof.

It is alleged by the Packing Company that on the 9th of July, 1919, 27 days before the statutory time limit of storage had expired as to the very latest storage, it sold 60,000 pounds of the pork to certain Columbus dealers. These sales according to the statement of both buyer and seller were coupled with the privilege of retaining the goods so purchased in the same storage house, and furthermore, this privilege was exercised. Such a sale, so conditioned, especially if the goods were allowed to remain in storage, as they were, is of most doubtful validity. It would be one easy way, if allowed to stand, to defeat the purpose of the law by mere transfer of title. The only other effort to sell, according to the allegations of the answer, was one made in February, 1919. This offer of sale was made to the United States government.

The attempted justification of the Packing Company that the market for such product was congested during the entire period of storage is entirely unavailing under the law.

The claim is stoutly made by the counsel for the defendant companies that an affirmation of the judgment of the court of. appeals would be the ratification of judicial legislation, and that the correction of the evils sought to be remedied by this action should be left .to the general assembly.

We are in complete disagreement with counsel on this phase of the case. We feel that the laws already. enacted are full, ample and complete and furnish the equipment sufficient to cope with the situation presented.

The case at bar is clearly an action in equity and the application of well-recognized principles of equitable jurisdiction is all that is necessary. The mere fact that the steps already taken are without precedent is without persuasive force. Unprecedented conduct necessarily calls for new remedies. The authority to prescribe the remedy is vested in the courts by the grant of equitable powers. Equity to maintain the purpose of its establishment must continue to enlarge its field of action. To be the efficient and justice-seeking handmaiden of the law it was designed to be, it must not be timid, halt or backward, but, rather, progressive.

Many years ago it was most appropriately said by Lord Cottenham in the case of Taylor v. Salmon, 4 Myl. & Cr., 134, 141, that it is the duty of courts of equity (and the same is true of all courts and of all institutions) “to adapt its practice and course of proceeding as far as possible to the existing state of society, and to apply its jurisdiction to all those new cases which, from the progress daily making in the affairs of men, must continually arise, and not, from too strict an adherence to forms and rules established under very different circumstances, decline to administer justice, and to enforce rights for which there is no other remedy.’

At the same time we are convinced that the procedure adopted and orders already made are neither strange or novel. The court found itself under the necessity of enjoining the sale of certain semi-perishable foodstuffs by the owner at a time of a recognized food shortage, the most appalling in all recorded time. The owner appears in court and admits that by reason of his handling of the food in question, he cannot dispose of it in the state where it was produced and made ready for market.

Would it not be trifling with a perilous situation to permit a continued violation of the law by sanctioning a longer storage ?

It would be a monstrous confession of weakness if our courts were, driven to say that they were lacking in power to deal with a situation so acute and dangerous. Publicists, statesmen and professional food conservists are giving their best thought to the consummation of plans that will bridge over the chasm of impending starvation. The courts are not without their share of responsibility. It is their plain duty to enforce the law and to protect the public against any and every species of conduct that has a tendency to exaggerate an already acute situation. This they should do so far as the law reasonably construed and fairly interpreted, together with the exercise of its full equitable power, will permit.

The Packing Company further complains that what has been done and what it is proposed to do with this property is confiscation. We do not think so. It is quite true that the withdrawal from the owner of goods of the privilege of selecting the time, place and manner of selling his property deprives him of valuable insignia of ownership. We feel, however, that in permitting this property to remain in storage for such period of time that in the hands of the owner it is no longer salable here, the Packing Company is estopped by its own conduct in complaining of the procedure had. By the terms of the cold storage act, it has surrendered the right to sell its property. This property was prepared not for the private consumption of the Packing Company and its employes, but to sell to the public.

In connection with the claim of confiscation the charge is made that it is wholly inconsistent to enjoin the owner from selling the food product, and immediately order it to be offered for sale in Ohio by an officer of the court. We think this charge cannot be maintained. The cold storage act, it is to be remembered, did not provide for a forfeiture of the goods so stored beyond the time fixed by law. Neither did it make provision for the destruction thereof. As a preventive and as a penalty, it did provide that the goods so stored should not be sold by the owner. It was a personal penalty to be imposed on the violator of the law. Were it the intention of the general assembly, without reference to the actual physical condition of the meat so stored, to arbitrarily treat it as. tainted and, therefore, unfit for consumption, the law would have provided for its annihilation. It would seem the part of wisdom to provide for the rigid inspection of the pork, and if not unwholesome to have it sold by the receiver, and the proceeds brought into court for its further order.

The State, itself, by the letter of the law is not prohibited from selling the food product so stored, and since in the very nature of things the passage of time pending further disposition of this cause, will cause deterioration in the food value of the pork, it should be speedily placed in the channels of commerce.

By so doing, while visiting the penalty of the law on the owner to the extent of withdrawing from him the right of control, the court is conserving the rights of the owner as well as the public welfare.

We are not inclined to treat lightly the contention of the plaintiffs in error that the orders made deprive them of their property without due process. On the contrary we are impressed that it is by far the most important feature of the case. It deserves and has received our most serious consideration.

What is the situation concerning this contention? The State has averred that the parties have dealt with the property in question in such a manner as has resulted in restraint of trade and a violation of the provisions of the anti-trust law as well as common-law principles touching the subject.

The defendant companies have answered the petition and have set forth their contentions concerning the property itself and with reference to their treatment of and negotiations concerning it.

On the motion of the State for an injunction restraining the transfer of the goods and the appointment of a receiver to hold the same no arbitrary order was made. On the contrary, the parties were all before the court with full opportunity to support the allegations of their pleadings, and offered testimony touching the motions referred to.

As we have heretofore noticed Section 6400, General Code, confers the right to bring suit in the common pleas court and confers the power on the court to grant the writ of injunction to prevent the violation of the statute. The court in the exercise of this jurisdiction had full equity powers and if it deemed proper, after it had granted such injunction, it had the right to appoint a receiver to control the property pending the ultimate conclusion of the case. Moreover, in the exercise of its plenary equity powers, if the court deemed it for the best interests of all concerned, considering the nature of the goods and all the circumstances, that the property with which it was dealing should be sold by its receiver, it had the power to order the same sold and the proceeds brought into court to await its final order. Everything that was done was done with all the parties in court and before the court with full opportunity to be heard.

The case was presented to the court that the defendant companies had dealt with the pork in a manner prohibited by law. Their admitted conduct was such as to justify a court of equity in finding that their purpose was to hold it beyond the period allowed by law and for the purposes which the law prohibits.

There was not only no denial of due process of law, but there was the fullest opportunity for defendants in the court below to show that the allegations of the petition were not true.

Stripped of all irrelevant features there is nothing, unusual about the case. The defendant companies are still entitled to have the case set down for further hearing, although on the pleadings as they now stand judgment would have to be entered for plaintiff below. The defendant storage company may still assert its storage lien as against the proceeds of sale and the Packing Company may assert its full right to the proceeds of sale after payment of costs and the lien aforesaid.

It is further urged that there is a conflict between the federal and state laws applying to this case. When congress and the general assembly have concurrent jurisdiction, it is well understood that the state may legislate until such time as congress acts. When the power of congress is exercised that of the State is superseded, but it is equally well settled that when power was conferred upon congress to regulate commerce between the states, it was not intended to deprive the states from the exercise of their police power in prescribing legislation relating to the health, morals, safety and welfare of the citizens, although such regulations might indirectly affect the commerce of the nation.

The state statute fixes the maximum storage period at six months. But it must be noted that the question under consideration is whether the conduct of the parties in this case is such as to demonstrate that the purpose of the parties in withholding the commodity from the market was to accomplish the purposes or any of them which are prohibited by the Anti-trust Law of Ohio. As has been heretofore said in the course of this opinion, the Cold Storage Act merely prescribes a certain course of conduct to be complied with, and the violation of its provisions furnishes the convincing evidence of the illegal purposes to which reference has been made.

No evidence was offered at the hearing of the motions in the case which tended to prove that the owner of these goods had contracted or had any intention of contracting or disposing of them in interstate commerce, nor was there any evidence tendered at the time of hearing that the goods were being held pursuant to any order of the Federal Food Administration Board or any other federal agency or pursuant to or subject to any federal law.

The claim is advanced by the State that the things done and orders made in the court of common pleas do not constitute a judgment under the constitution, on which proceedings in error might be predicated. We are of the opinion that the authority of Thompson et al. v. Denton, 95 Ohio St., 333, settles this claim adversely to the State.

The judgment of the court of appeals is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

Matthias, Johnson, Donahue and Wanamaker, JJ., concur.

Wanamaker, J.,

concurring. I heartily concur in the judgment in this case.

The nature and novelty of the case, as well as its far-reaching importance .to the parties and the public, suggest some further statement of the grounds of my concurrence.

Our national constitution declares that one of the primary and paramount purposes of our national government is “to establish justice.”

Our Ohio Constitution of 1851, still in force, likewise declares for “justice administered without denial or delay.”

Courts, by their powers and procedure, are especially charged with this public duty.

It is admitted by all the parties hereto that there is no statute in Ohio specially authorizing the remedy ordered in the judgments below.

The Valentine Anti-Trust law denounces all combinations in restraint of trade, but authorizes no such remedy as is invoked in this case. The Smith Cold Storage act denounces storage of food products for a period longer than six months, but authorizes no such remedy as is invoked in this case.

These statutes, however, are very significant in arriving at the public policy of our law as to the matters in controversy. The very things complained of in the petition are denounced and prohibited in substance by the statutes, especially the Smith law. The law merely provides a criminal penalty for its violation, but provides nothing as to the foods or merchandise so stored — as to the disposition of the products thus wrongfully withheld from the markets and the public.

The law, therefore, clearly falls short of an adequate and complete remedy to place this food upon the markets.

Is this such a case in equity as to warrant first, the jurisdiction, and second, the order of sale heretofore made?

That there is no precedent for the judgment below, either in law, or equity, among the decided cases brought to the cotírt’s attention, is doubtless true. But is precedent indispensable? Who furnished the precedent for the precedent ?

Precedents are worth just as much, and no more, than they weigh in reason and justice. They are worth just as much, and no more, than their recognition of fundamental facts and their natural justice to all parties concerned in the particular case. If it were not so, precedent would be the natural and necessary enemy of all progress, and while the social, industrial and commercial conditions of any country were in a state of natural and necessary growth and evolutioji the fixed strict law of unchanging precedent would, like a strait-jacket, be an entire misfit, wholly unadaptable to the conditions and the situation in any modern case at bar.

Judge Ranney, that veteran of Ohio jurisprudence whom we all delight to honor, in C., C. & C. Rd. Co. v. Keary, 3 Ohio St., 201, makes some very pertinent observations at page 205:

“To it [the common law of England] we constantly resort, when the positive law is silent or insufficient. Built up, as it has been, from the experience of ages, and constantly adapting itself to the business and relations of men in society, we seldom fail to find principles which, if carried to legitimate results, are not altogether sufficient to settle every controversy. If no precedent is found for a remedy to enforce an acknowledged right, one of its own cherished principles requires us to adapt one to the exigency, and to make good the maxim, that there is no legal right, without a legal remedy.”

This is not true merely because Judge Ranney so said, but Judge Ranney so said because it is so evidently true and just.

Jurisdiction in equity is difficult to define, not because it is inherently vague and indefinite, but because of its nature as a supplement to the law. For want of a, better definition it may well be said that “Equity is that portion of remedial justice which was formerly administered in England by the high court of chancery by virtue of its extraordinary jurisdiction as extended, limited, and modified by statute, and adapted to our conditions by judicial construction.” 16 Cyc., 23.

Equity jurisdiction originally rested solely in the crown of England. Later it was transferred to the chancellor of the crown and became known as a chancery court. The first question addressed to such court was, has there been a substantial injury, a wrong committed against some person? Second, is the remedy provided by the law “full, adequate and complete” to do justice?

If such wrong were found to have been committed against the manifest rights of any person, and that the remedy provided by law was not “full, adequate and complete,” then the chancellor took jurisdiction, determined all questions, rendered all necessary judgments and made all necessary orders to provide such remedy, such redress. The conscience of the chancellor was his guide in determining his jurisdiction, and also in providing and enforcing the appropriate remedy.

Most of the jurisdiction in equity grew out of the universality, strictness, rigidity, of the law as applied by courts of law. Courts of law had too long and too strenuously held to the doctrine of precedent, stare decisis, and too often if there was no precedent, there could be no remedy.

The court of equity was not so limited, but being a court of conscience, rules of reason and righteousness were applied to the facts of the particular case.

Through centuries of the exercise of this jurisdiction and the application of appropriate remedies there has grown up a system of rules, and maxims that have become a part of the fundamental rules and principles of our equity jurisprudence.

One of the maxims most frequently applied is this: “Equity will not suffer a wrong to be without a remedy.”

The first question, therefore, to be determined before this maxim can have any application is, has. a wrong been committed as shown by the pleadings and proof in the case?

The petition alleges in substance that a statute of Ohio, known as the Smith Cold Storage Law, was violated by reason of the fact that certain pork loins were continuously in cold storage for a period of more than six months, contrary to such statute.

The defendant, The Fairmont Creamery Company, the bailee in this case, admits the storage of the property in question, that The Columbus Packing Company “at the time stated in the petition delivered to this defendant, at its cold storage warehouse in Columbus, Ohio, certain carcasses of pork or parts thereof; that this defendant received and stored the same for hire, and that the same or part thereof is now in possession of this defendant,” etc. So that so far as the bailee, The Fairmont Creamery Company, is concerned, the allegations of the petition in this behalf must be taken as true.

As to the owner of the pork loins, The Columbus Packing Company, it generally denies the allegations of the petition as to the violation of the law, but does admit the following, which is set forth in. its answer. It alleges that “it has not sold, offered or exposed for sale any of said pork products after the expiration of said six months during which said pork products have been held in said cold storage warehouse

The answer further says:

“Defendant further says that it has tried by its officers and agents in every possible way to dispose of the same at a fair market value, but that owing to the quantity of pork loins thus accruing, as hereinbefore described, in the hands of said defendant, it was unable to sell or dispose of the same within the time limit thus mentioned in said act of the General Assembly.”

If these two allegations mean anything at all, if simple English is understandable by layman and lawyer, here is a clear and conclusive admission by The Columbus Packing Company that their pork loins were kept in cold storage by The Fairmont Creamery Company for a period of more than six months, which is the limit fixed by the Smith law.

Now, the court below found this to be a violation of the statute known as the Smith law and proceeded to make an order of sale.

In view of these admissions it hardly seems credible for the defendant to contend that it had no trial. It would be equally as consistent for one accused of crime to come into court, plead guilty and then offer mitigating circumstances. in evidence, and after sentence insist that he had not had trial.

Let us remember that the power of the general assembly to pass the act in question under its police power has not been challenged. The public policy denounced by the Smith law has not been challenged as an invasion of the lawful liberty of contract, and, therefore, when the court of common pleas found that the law had been violated in the respect aforesaid, it would have been utter folly to have wasted any further time or labor in a so-called trial.

The court below did what it ought to have done upon the conceded essential facts of the pleadings. It determined that a wrong had been done and proceeded to provide a remedy suitable to said wrong.

One of the greatest cases ever tried in America was the famous case of the Colonists against Great Britain, in which the opinion of the court, the Congress of the United States, was drawn by Thomas Jefferson in 1776. There was no precedent, at least Jefferson cited none, to sustain the judgment of that court. But Jefferson did say some things that were pertinent. He said:

“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men,” etc.

These self-evident truths, these self-evident principles of government are available now as they were available then. The right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness are as unalienable now as they were then, and any course of conduct that tends to reduce or jeopardize that liberty, especially when denounced by a statute, is a wrong of which both law and equity should take cognizance.

If it be the paramount purpose of government “to secure these rights,” the unalienable rights of man, then all the branches of the government, particularly our courts, are charged with the imperative duty of promoting and protecting those unalienable rights.

Jefferson may have been short on precedent in writing that opinion, but he was long on principle, a principle that has become the very foundation of our American system of government.

I am quite aware that in the adjudicated cases of equity jurisprudence, the wrong or injury was suffered by some individual or individuals, a few of them as a rule, and not the public at large. But I do not understand that an injury to five million people resulting from the unlawful hoarding of foods is any less an injury under our Bill of Rights than an injury to one, two or three individuals. I do not understand the Ohio Bill of Rights to have any numerical limitation, especially I may say that I do not understand it to mean that the greater the number who are injured, the less the right to a remedy.

Section 16 of the Bill of Rights, among other things, declares: “That every person, for an injury done him in his land, goods, person, or reputation, shall have remedy by due course of law.”

If that injury be done to five million of people, as a body, is it any less an injury and is there any less right by the Constitution of Ohio to a remedy by due process of law ?

It may be said that there is equal right as to property, equal right as to liberty of contract with reference to property. I do not so read the Constitution of Ohio.

I have already referred to the Declaration of Independence and it is significant that in this great •Magna Charta of human rights, the word “property” is nowhere found. Neither is the word “property” found in the original constitution of the Union. It does appear in the early constitutions of Ohio, and in the Constitution of 1851, now in force, this language appears: “Private property shall ever be held inviolate, but subservient to the public welfare.” Section 19 of the Bill of Rights.

This word “subservient” is a strong, significant word. It is composed of two parts “sub” and “servient.” We use the word “servient” in law as something charged with a burden or servitude, so that with the prefix “sub” you have a double charge upon private property, in order that it shall serve the public welfare. .

But there is in this case nothing of confiscation. The property of the Packing Company is neither destroyed, confiscated nor appropriated by the public, but the order of the court below is simply to sell it, ás the law required them to sell it, at a reasonable market price, and the proceeds thereof not to go to Franklin county, or the state, but to the Packing Company.

This brings us to another maxim of equity: Equity regards as done that which ought to be done; or put in another form, Equity will require the parties to do what in law or good conscience they should have done.

This last maxim was under review by this court in the case of Klaustermeyer v. Cleveland Trust Co., 89 Ohio St., 142, decided in 1913, and I refer to the case for a discussion of this maxim and its application to the case at bar, especially because when that opinion was written conditions were more normal than they are now, though the principles of justice and equity were just as obligatory then and no more than they are now.

In the opinion in that case, which I had the honor to prepare, it was said at page 154:

“It is not improbable that there are no precedents for this holding. Indeed, there are many cases that seem to support the contrary view. But is it not better to regard a principle that does regard equity rather than a precedent that denies equity ?
“Equity is after all only a natural and necessary evolution of principle and policy to secure jústice where the law obviously fails.
“If the boundaries of equity are not broad enough to furnish the relief, it is manifest that the boundaries should be extended, as courts heretofore have not hesitated to do. If there be no precedent for this judgment, it is time that a precedent were made.
“There are too many hair-splitting distinctions in phrases where there is no honest difference in principle. What is a rule of equity worth that will not protect the equities of a case and the good conscience of the parties. ?
“If the maxim ‘Equity will presume to have been done what ought to have been done under the contract and in good conscience’ — if this maxim were not designed to meet just such cases under our com stitution and our laws as this one, what, pray, is its purpose? When jurisprudence becomes synonymous with justice, courts will be returned to that public confidence so necessary to stable and successful government.”

Something has been said about the pleadings of this case falling short of the allegation as to the Valentine Anti-Trust law, particularly when the affidavits offered in evidence are'considered.

It is unnecessary for this court to determine whether or not both the Valentine Anti-Trust law and the Smith law have been violated under the-pleadings and proof of this case. It is quite sufficient if the public policy announced in one of these statutes has been defied, in order to find that a wrong has been committed.

As before suggested, that wrong clearly appears from the pleadings as to the Smith Cold Storage law, and if it were necessary so to do, the court should hesitate a long while before holding that a contract existing between two parties to hoard food, to withhold it from the market for a period longer than allowed by law, was not a contract, a combination, in restraint of trade. Surely such food is for the time impounded, such food is for the time kept from the public markets, and no other reasonable or practical interpretation can be found for such acts.

True, the amount of food involved in any given case may be small, but the world is made up of littles, and the really important matter here is to decide the question touching similar instances of cold storage throughout the state, where in the aggregate millions of tons of food of various kinds are being stored.

It has been urged that the purpose of the Smith law is to furnish cold storage so as to preserve food, not hoard it. The intention of a statute may be ascertained by considering the natural and probable consequences that follow from the act.

The presumption naturally arises that the act was passed not merely to prevent hoarding, cornering of foods, but likewise that the wholesome palatable quality of foods could be better preserved by fixing a reasonable time within which they must be put upon the market.

But we are not concerned here with the purpose of the act, but only with its manifest violation. If, as Judge Ranney has said in the case cited, that even the law is “built up as it has been from the experience of ages and constantly adapting itself to the business and relations of men in society,” then clearly the same attributes must be applied to a court of equity, that has its very foundations in the shortages, defects, imperfections of the law, where a remedy is unknown to the law, in order to redress an injury that is known to the law and to the common experience of men.

No one, since the days of Lord Coke, who made a wonderful fight against the English courts of equity nearly three centuries ago, has doubted the right of a court of equity to extend its jurisdiction to meet modern day methods of jeopardizing the public welfare. It will neither harm the law nor lessen public confidence in courts to humanize their jurisdiction and their justice.

We hear much of profiteering these days. It is significant during- the last five years that America has made more millionaires than in any other ten years of her history, and that, too, in a period of five years when our many millions of men, women and children have been called upon to render a service and to make a sacrifice to conduct a world war greater than at any time for a half a century.. There is too much of our patriotism spelled with a “y”.

The public welfare must be paramount to private wealth, as declared in our constitution, and courts must not hesitate to extend the jurisdiction and the process of their equity powers to promoting and safeguarding the public rights of “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”

The charters of these two defendant corporations were grants of corporate power from the state obedient to the law of the state.

, Shall the creatures of our law now be above the law? Shall the exemption of liability by corporations be superior to enforcement of the law by the courts ?

To do otherwise Than to affirm the judgments below would put this court in a most pitiable plight before the people of Ohio.

There is crying need for more respect for law. Let the state begin with its own creatures, the corporations, no less than its sovereign citizens. Let us realize the great Hooker’s conception in “The least as feeling her care, the greatest as not exempt from her power.”

Robinson, J.,

dissenting. I regret that I cannot agree with the judgment of the majority of this court. However righteous the purpose, the end in my opinion does not justify an invasion of the legislative field by the judiciary, nor a violation of the provision of the Federal Constitution that no person shall be deprived of his property “without due process of law.”'

The legislature, by Seotions 1155-13 and 1155-19, General Code, has provided a penalty for storing pork more than six months, and has provided that such meat may not be sold thereafter. But nowhere has it provided that the owner shall thereby forfeit his ownership or control.

I raise no question as to the authority of the legislature to provide, with proper procedure, for such forfeiture, but not having done so, the judgment of the majority of this court creates a new and drastic penalty which the legislature has not-created, and is a usurpation of a legislative function.

The petition alleges that the defendant, The Columbus Packing Company, is the owner of the pork loins in controversy and that the same were placed in cold storage on certain dates more than six months prior to. the filing of the petition. To the latter allegation the defendant Packing Company files a denial. An issue is thus made which the defendant Packing Company is entitled to have tried.

The petition also alleges that the defendants, The Columbus Packing Company and The Fairmont Creamery Company, have, with respect to the pork loins in controversy, entered into a combination in restraint of trade, which allegation is denied by both defendants, and an issue is thus made which both defendants are entitled to have tried.

The record discloses the fact that the petition was filed on the 6th day of August; that the answer was filed on the 8th day of August;,that on the 9th day of August the court, over the objection of the defendants, ordered the sale of the pork loins in controversy without a trial having been had and the issues between the parties judicially determined, and without having found that the pork loins in controversy were liable to perish or depreciate in value pending the final hearing of the cause. Such order in my opinion was arbitrary, without authority of law, and amounted to a deprivation of the defendants of their property “without due process of law.”

For these reasons I dissent from the judgment of the majority of this court.  