Full opinion text
KERNER, Circuit Judge. This is a criminal prosecution for a conspiracy to restrain interstate trade and commerce in violation of § 1 of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act. 26 Stat. 209, 50 Stat. 693, 15 U.S.C.A. § 1. The jury rendered a verdict acquitting all of the individual defendants and finding the four, corporate defendants guilty. This appeal is taken from the judgment entered upon the verdict fining each of the corporate defendants in the amount of $5,000. The errors relied on arise out of the overruling of the demurrer to the indictment, denial of a bill of particulars, denial of a motion to dismiss at the close of the Government’s opening statement, rulings on evidence, failure to grant defendants’ motions to direct a verdict, instructions to the jury, and refusal to grant a new trial. A. Theory Upon Which Case Tried. 1. Indictment. In essence the indictment charges that the defendants conspired to restrain unreasonably the interstate trade and commerce in Chevrolet, Pontiac, Oldsmobile, Buick, LaSalle and Cadillac cars; that their purpose was to control the financing essential to the wholesale purchase and retail sale of General Motors cars; and that in furtherance of this purpose the conspirators devoted themselves to concerted action by which GMAC financing was imposed on dealers who were engaged in the purchase and sale of the above described cars. Paragraphs 1 to 27 of the indictment explain the general background of the automobile industry including the manufacture of automobiles and their sale and financing at wholesale and retail. In particular it is alleged that GMC manufactures its products at plants in seven states and sells them through GMSC at wholesale to approximately 15,000 dealers located in all of the states. The dealers in turn sell these new automobiles, as well as used automobiles on hand, to retail purchasers. Generally the retail transactions are “time sales” where part of the price is paid in cash, a used car is taken in trade and the remainder of the price is paid in installments. The practice in the industry is to require dealers to pay cash before receiving the new cars, so that normally title and possession pass from the manufacturer or selling agent when the cars are transported and shipped from the factory. The wholesale and retail price of automobiles is high, and usually the dealer and retail purchaser are unable to pay on a cash basis. Consequently a large supply of ° money is regularly and continuously needed, so much so that it is absolutely necessary in most instances to finance (1) the wholesale purchase of the new car, (2) the retail sale of the new car and (3) the re-sale of the used car. As a result, approximately 375 independent finance companies and GMAC find themselves competing for the financing of these transactions. This financing is indispensable to the free movement of automobiles from the factory to the dealer as well as from the dealer to the ultimate purchaser. Paragraphs 28 to 33 of the indictment describe and name the corporate and individual defendants, and paragraph 34 charges them with a conspiracy to restrain unduly the interstate trade and commerce in General Motors automobiles. Paragraph 35 states that the purpose of the defendants was to monopolize and control the business of financing the trade and commerce in new and used General Motors automobiles. Paragraph 70 alleges that dealers have complied with the defendants’ coercive plan in order to save substantial investments in their businesses, paragraph 71 states that the effect of the conspiracy has been to restrain and burden unreasonbly the interstate trade and commerce in General Motors automobiles, and paragraph 72 is a restatement of paragraph 34. The specific conduct embraced within the illegal concert of action is described in paragraphs 36 to 67 of the indictment and may be summarized as follows: (1) Requiring dealers to promise to use GMAC exclusively as a condition to obtaining a franchise for the sale, transportation and delivery of automobiles; (2) Making contracts for short periods and cancellable without cause, canceling or threatening to cancel such contracts unless GMAC facilities are used; (3) Discriminating against dealers not using GMAC by refusing to deliver cars when ordered, delaying shipment and shipping cars of different number, model, color and style; (4) Compelling dealers to disclose how they finance their wholesale purchases and retail sales, examining and inspecting dealers’ books and accounts in order to procure this information, and requiring dealers to justify their using other financing media; (5) Giving special favoirs to dealers using the wholesale and retail ■ facilities of GMAC; (6) Granting special favors to GMAC which are denied to other discount companies; (7) Giving dealers a rebate from the GMAC finance charge paid by the retail purchaser, in order to induce use of GMAC financing facilities; and (8) Compelling dealers to refrain from using other finance companies by all other necessary, appropriate or effective means. 2. Opening Statements. The opening statements made by counsel in the trial of this case, throw considerable light upon the primary issues and make the respective positions of the parties stand out plainly. For this reason pertinent portions therefrom are either quoted or paraphrased substantially in the paragraphs that follow. Government counsel stated that the gist of the conspiracy alleged in the indictment was “to restrain and interfere with the right of General Motors dealers to finance cars sold by them in whatever manner they see fit,” to deny them “the right to finance the sales of their cars with whomever they see fit,” and “to force 15,000 independent business men” to use the financing facilities of GMAC. He added that the motive actuating the -conspirators was “profit. They wish to secure as much of the financing business as possible * * *' [because it] is a profitable business.” Then he concluded that the object in prosecuting the defendants was “to restore to a class of independent business men, namely, 15,000 General Motors Dealers, a right to conduct their automobile business in the way that they see fit.” Counsel for defendants expressed the following thesis: “From the very beginning and over a period of 20 years the original conception of GMAC * * *, the development of it and the way it is administered, is all for the purpose of selling automobiles and never for the purpose of making money out of the financing business.” He reasoned that everything done by the General Motors family was directed toward one end, the manufacture and sale of General Motors automobiles. In this connection it was necessary to establish GMAC “as a merchandising aid for General Motors as a producer and seller of automobiles,” because there were “variable and exorbitant charges being made by miscellaneous independent companies” and because General Motors goodwill faced “the risk of being wiped out by abuses in connection with financing in the case of time sales.” This necessity has continued and increased, for now there are “some 175 independent finance companies who are interested in only .one thing, and that is in making money out of finance.” He pointed to the history of GMAC as conclusive evidence that its purpose was to “implement the selling of General Motors cars” or to serve as a “selling tool, a means of getting more General Motors automobiles in the hands of time purchasers throughout the United States.” 3. Statements During Trial. At one period counsel for the Government stated “the theory of the case is that the defendants are forcing their dealers to use a particular type of financing, although there may be various other types available,” and counsel for defendants replied “our defense is that we are not forcing them, but they are using it because it is better.” When the defense sought to adduce evidence relating to rates and practices of independent finance companies, counsel for the Government objected because the “government’s case is predicated on the dealer’s right to make his own choice of finance companies, and not on a fight between GMAC and other discount companies.” In sustaining this objection the Court said that the jury in this case was neither “trying the respective merits of finance companies” nor deciding “whether a man would have been better off if he had accepted the facilities of another finance company other than GMAC.” 4. Closing Arguments. Although the closing arguments of counsel for the defendants were not included in the record on appeal, some reference and answer thereto was made in the Government’s summation to the jury. Counsel for the Government told the jury that the prosecution had proved three elements, namely (1) conspiracy, (2) interstate commerce and (3) unreasonable restraint of trade. As to (1) he pointed out that the instant case presented a nation-wide conspiracy “to restrain the movement of General Motors cars in interstate commerce” by restraining the “dealer selling General Motors products in the * * * free running of his own business affairs.” As to (2) he argued that General Motors cars were products in interstate commerce, being shipped from places of manufacture in seven states into the channels of trade across state lines and then being received and sold by 15,-000 dealers located in every state in the Union. As to (3) he reasoned that the concerted activity of the defendants, by which GMAC financing was imposed on independent dealers engaged in the purchase and sale of General Motors cars, unreasonably restricted trading in these automobiles. 5. Instructions. The charge to the jurors was an explanation in simple narrative form of (1) the applicable law, (2) the indictment and (3) the evidence. The Court explained topics (1) and (2) and ended discussion thereof with the statement that “So the essential thing in this case * * * is that charge; a conspiracy to restrain * * * unreasonably the commerce from state to state in General Motors automobiles in violation of the Sherman Act.” Presently the Court defined such terms as conspiracy, coercion, burden of proof and statute of limitations and instructed the jurors as to their consideration of “the question of conspiracy to restrict interstate commerce unduly and unreasonably.” Considerable attention was then given to topic (3) and also to the limits within which the defendants might promote GMAC. The Court pointed out that the defendants had the right to select any dealers they saw fit, determine upon what terms to sell General Motors cars, expound the advantages of GMAC and persuade dealers to use GMAC. But the Court added that they could not utilize existing and prospective contracts with dealers as “clubs or instruments” of coercion to compel acceptance of GMAC. As stated by the Court, “That almost is the fact question in this case, whether the dealer could act as a free man; whether he could act of his own free will.” Of course, on this fact question the defendants contended “they never used force of any character to compel the dealers to use GMAC” and the Government contended the evidence indicates the contrary. In closing the Court emphasized that “if you find coercion exists, then the ultimate question is: Has it resulted in unreasonable restraint of interstate commerce. That is the question you must determine from all of the evidence.” Later the jurors requested further instruction of the Court and in particular' they asked the following pertinent question: “If the evidence shows that they have coerced and conspired, would that mean that this conspiracy consisted of restraint of trade and commerce?” The explanatory answer contained two statements which merit deep consideration. The first of these struck at. the core of this case, that is, whether the theory underlying the indictment properly invokes the application of the Sherman Law: “The Government says, and the charge in this indictment is, that this coercion [which prevented free action by the dealers in the selection of a financing company] * * * has resulted in a situation where the commerce in General Motors cars, the products of General Motors, from state to state, has been unreasonably and unduly restricted and restrained.” The second of these statements posed the problem which falls within the exclusive province of the jury: “The ultimate question, after all, is whether, under all the facts and circumstances the acts of coercion mentioned in the indictment * * * have been proved beyond all reasonable doubt, and, second, if they have been so proved, whether they, as a result, effectuated an unreasonable restraint on the interstate commerce in General Motors automobiles. If they effectuated a restraint, then you have got to determine, from all the facts and circumstances, whether it was an unreasonable restraint.” After these instructions and in the presence of the jurors, defense counsel requested the Court to charge that if the jurors find “that General Motors dealers have been restrained as a result of an agreement entered into among the defendants, effectuated by the acts alleged in the indictment, they should find the defendants not guilty, unless they also find that the interstate trade and commerce in General Motors automobiles which moves through the retail outlet which those dealers constitute * * * have been unduly restrained as a result thereof.” The Court answered that the requested instruction was a correct statement of the law and that it already had been covered in the instructions to the jury. B. Evidence. 1. History of Corporate Defendants. GMC was organized in 1916 for the purpose of manufacturing and selling automobiles and other products, and is the largest manufacturer of automobiles in the United States and since 1928 has been conducting its operations through five motorcar divisions, namely, Chevrolet Motor Division, Pontiac Motor Division, Olds Motor Works Division, Buick Motor Division and Cadillac Motor Car Division. It is both an operating company owning the properties and assets of its motorcar divisions, and a holding company owning part or all of the capital stock of the other corporations connected with its activities. GMSC was organized in 1936 for the purpose of selling automotive products. It is a wholly owned subsidiary of GMC and since 1936 has been functioning as the exclusive distributor and sole selling outlet of General Motors automobiles. According to the GMC-GMSC contract dated December 1, 1936, GMC sells its cars to GMSC and title thereto passes at the factory. GMSC is also divided into motorcar divisions corresponding to the various manufacturing divisions of GMC. For example, there is a Chevrolet Division of GMC manfacturing Chevrolet cars and a Chevrolet Division of GMSC selling Chevrolet cars to General Motors dealer outlets. Prior to the creation in 1928 of motor car divisions as separate departments of GMC, the various makes of General Motors cars were manufactured by such corporations as the Chevrolet Motor Company . of California and the Chevrolet Motor Ohio Company. And prior to the organization of GMSC in 1936, the Chevrolet Motor Company (of various states), Pontiac Motor Company, Buick Motor Company and Cadillac Motor Car Company acted as sales agencies for the various makes of General Motors cars sold to General Motors dealers. These separate entities, now no longer functioning, were wholly owned subsidiaries of GMC. In 1919 the automotive industry was in its infancy and GMC was struggling with the problem of large scale production of its automobiles. It was handling a product the unit price of which was high, and to increase its volume and trade therein necessitated an extension of credit facilities to dealers and to ultimate purchasers. Since at that time few financing companies would loan money on arttomobiles, ,GMC created its own financing medium, GMAC, to finance the wholesale and retail sale of General Motors cars. In particular, GMAC was organized in 1919 for the purpose of supplying credit facilities to General Motors dealers purchasing cars at wholesale and to retail purchasers of new General Motors cars and of used cars of any make previously taken in trade by General Motors dealers. The original capital of GMAC was $2,000,000 and its surplus $500,000. Today GMAC has a net worth of $90,000,000. At all times GMAC has been a wholly owned subsidiary of GMC as well as a constant source of profit to it. From inception in 1919 through the year 1938 GMAC has made net earnings approximating $150,000,000 and its net income per year has increased from approximately $50,000 in 1919 to $12,000,-000 in 1938. GMAC (Ind.) was organized in 1929 for the purpose of carrying on the same functions in the state of Indiana as GMAC conducts in the remaining 47 states in the Union. GMAC (Ind.) is a wholly owned subsidiary of GMAC. The stock of GMAC (Ind.) is owned 100% by GMAC and the stock of GMAC and GMSC is owned 100% by GMC. These four corporations have interlocking directorates and the function of each is mutually complementary. Yet in the main these manufacturing, selling and finance activities operate on a highly decentralized scheme. Each manufacturing division of GMC and each selling division of GMSC conducts itself as an integral business with separate personnel and with its own distinct responsibilities. Of course this decentralization in operation and management is subject to central control with relation to a “coordination of policy and coordination of treatment” in the interests of GMC, but otherwise there is “great competition among the different divisions.” 2. Car Production and Distribution. General Motors automobiles are sold through some 15,000 dealer outlets located in every state in the country. These dealerships constitute independent economic units with an invested capital owned by the dealers. All dealers operate under written franchise agreements entered into with GMSC, and they are required to have a substantial investment in buildings, parts, accessories and signs, and to provide ample space and personnel for the sale and servicing of cars. Prior to the organization of GMSC in 1936 these franchise agreements, universally in use throughout the automotive industry, were between the dealers and the respective subsidiary sales companies wholly owned by GMC. The franchise contracts recite that they shall continue in force “until cancelled or terminated,” but in practice it is customary to “renew” them each time a new model is introduced. They are made cancellable on short notice and without cause, and under them dealers are not considered agents or legal representatives of GMSC “for any purpose whatsoever.” The dealers are required to keep a uniform accounting system, to permit audits of accounts and records by GMSC, and to furnish GMSC with certain estimates and reports, namely, an annual estimate, a monthly estimate, and a 10-day report. The annual estimate states in advance of retail orders what the dealer’s anticipated car needs by months for the coming calendar year will be. The monthly estimate states in advance of retail orders what the anticipated requirements for the following three months will be. The 10-day report shows retail sales of both new and used cars made during the period, new- and used car stocks, and unfilled retail orders on hand at the end of the period. The franchise agreements do not require dealers to use GMAC financing services, nor do they refer to GMAC in any way. It also appears that dealers are required to submit 30-day reports and monthly financial statements. The 30-day reports show the number of used cars junked or sold at retail, the number of new cars sold at retail for cash, and the number of new and used cars sold on time. The monthly financial statements cover operations for the preceding month and show the actual condition of the business. The 10-day reports, the 30-day reports and the financial statements are mailed to or otherwise received by the zone manager of the proper motorcar unit of GMSC. The data contained in these reports and statements are compiled and forwarded to the regional manager, who in turn makes a similar composite compilation pertaining to his territory and sends it to the General Sales Manager. All this data and information is consolidated, and in due time the final product represents a national picture on dealers’ operations, a document of value to the central office of GMSC. Obviously the efficiency of dealers is vital to the proper merchandising of General Motors automobiles and necessarily GMC and GMSC attach great importance to the retail outlets phase of the merchandising process. As a result GMSC exercises care in the selection of General Motors dealers and requires them to meet certain standards already described. The record also shows that many steps have been taken to improve and assist this dealer organization, e. g., the Dealer Council, the Dealer Relations Board, and schools of training for the dealership personnel. In order to keep constant contact with the dealers, it is necessary for GMSC to maintain a large field organization. For instance, there are approximately 9,000 dealers selling Chevrolet automobiles in the United States and aproximately 5,000 employees in the field organization of the Chevrolet Division of GMSC. This field organization may be illustrated by the Chevrolet organization which is typical. The general sales manager is at the head Of the Chevrolet Division of GMSC and under him are two assistant general sales managers. Under these two are nine regional managers, each of whom is in charge of a region comprising three or more states. Under each regional manager are approximately 45 zone managers, each in charge of a zone comprising a part of one or more states. Under each zone manager are field representatives or district managers, each of whom is assigned to a specific territory, usually a county or other small subdivision. These field representatives make frequent calls on dealers, inquire as to business and economic conditions, offer advice and suggestions, make periodical audits and collect data as required by the written franchise agreements, and in general obtain detail information concerning dealers’ business operations. Every year GMSC conducts a contract renewal meeting in each zone at which time all dealers within the zone assemble. After sales talks and formal speeches every dealer present is required to attend a series of personal interviews with representatives of .various departments of GMSC such as the parts department and accessories department. At the meeting there is always a representative of GMAC and usually he is the last person the dealer must see before the final interview with the zone manager. In the final interview the dealer’s car requirements for the coming model year are reviewed, normally the requirements for new cars are determined from previous dealer’s experience and from “price class” and “weight class” registration, and customarily on this basis the dealer orders his new cars. The dealer is required to secure the approval of each representative and to agree with the zone manager on the subject of car requirements, before the franchise contract is renewed. Car production is projected a minimum of eleven months before the new model is announced to the public. GMC anticipates (1) the number of cars to be produced in the model year and determines (2) the ornamental and mechanical changes to be made in the new model. Decision as to (1), the initial factory estimate, is essential because the various plants relating to the primary, machining and assembling operations may need enlargement or expansion. In this connection GMC is assisted by GMSC in that the latter contributes a tentative production schedule which is based on an analysis of economic and automotive conditions in current and past periods, and on a compilation of data secured fro/m General Motors dealers anticipating their car requirements for the new model season. Decision as to (2) is necessary because the engineering department must complete drawings for the parts that are in a car, the manufacturing department must prepare tools and plant facilities, and materials must be ordered. Thus, for eleven months prior to the new model announcement, GMC will be planning and preparing production for and actually producing such units of the new model as the motor, axle and transmission. Then, for the twelve months of the new model year, it will be producing finished cars on dealers’ orders or offering them for sale to GMSC. In addition to assisting GMC in estimating production, GMSC also assists GMC in regulating production. On the basis of the monthly estimate and the 10-day report and on an analysis of economic and automotive conditions in general, it obtains a projection of retail estimates for three months and compiles data pertaining to retail sales, unfilled retail orders and retail stock on hand. The various zone schedules or projections are consolidated into a national schedule or projection, and this in turn is sent to GMC. In this way production is closely matched up with the market situation for the three months following the date of the report, and production for the current month is regulated to conform with immediate market conditions. Except during the first month of production in the new model year when dealers’ orders exceed the schedule of production, no car is assembled and made ready for shipment until each dealer’s order arrives at the factory. When dealers’ orders exceed production, a situation which ordinarily occurs at the beginning of the model year, there is a car shortage and the problem of proper distribution becomes acute. It is normal in such event to allot the cars at hand by zones, with the consequent distribution of the cars to the dealers in each zone under the control of the zone manager. There is evidence that the zone manager utilizes the dealers’ 10-day reports and that in distributing the cars he gives consideration to the economic conditions and seasonal activity in the area of the particular dealers, their unfilled retail orders and their stock on hand. Defense witnesses state that dealers’ use of GMAC financing is never a factor in the distribution of cars. When production exceeds consumer demand, a situation which sometimes occurs, there is an overstocking in the hands of dealers and a serious problem of adjusting car production to the market arises. There is evidence adduced by the defense that in such a situation there is overproduction in the sense that dealers may not have retail orders to match their wholesale orders upon which production at the factory is based. Ordinarily GMC and GMSC anticipate a slump in retail orders some two or three weeks before the individual dealers do themselves. At such times, despite dealers’ wholesale orders already received, GMC seeks to curtail production of its cars. 3. Financing Sale of Cars. In the automotive industry financing is essential to the movement of automobiles from the factory through the dealer to the buying public. The record discloses that GMAC and independent finance companies are competing for the business of financing the movement of General Motors automobiles, and that they are ready to supply funds to dealers who purchase cars at wholesale and to customers who purchase cars at retail. In this connection GMAC employs a large personnel and at frequent intervals field representatives visit General Motors dealers for the purpose of securing their finance patronage and of collecting data pertaining to their business operations. GMAC maintains an organization which closely resembles the organizational structure employed by the sales units of GMSC. Two vice presidents are in charge of branch operations at the central office in New York, and under these two there are ten regional managers who are in charge of an area corresponding to that of the regional manager of the motorcar units of GMSC. Under each regional manager are ten or twelve branch managers who operate over an area corresponding to that of the zone managers of the motorcar units of GMSC. And under the branch managers are the territorial managers or field representatives who work in an area corresponding to that of the field representatives of the motorcar units of GMSC. One of the vice presidents of GMAC is also stationed at the General Motors building in Detroit where he associates with GMSC officials and watches day by day trends in the distribution and mechandising of cars. The other vice president of GMAC also mixes with GMSC officials and discusses with them the propriety of any proposed changes in GMAC financing plans. These functions enable GMAC to adjust itself to new financing requirements, permit a close cooperation between GMAC and GMSC, and secure for GMAC as much business as possible. The primary source of statistics relating to dealers is a report made out by the territorial managers of GMAC who call on all dealers at least once a month for the purpose of obtaining information, pertaining to the number of cars sold at retail, the number sold on time, and the division of time sales as between GMAC and other discount companies. This information is recorded on Form 5154 and forwarded to the branch managers of GMAC where the data is reassembled on Form 5171 and in turn sent to the central office. In due time all this dealers’ data is compiled, tabulated and made into a composite nation-wide report. Every dealer electing to use GMAC wholesale financing facilities is required to give a blanket power of attorney authorizing a representative at the factory to execute in his behalf certain GMAC documents, namely, a trust receipt and a promissory note. This power of attorney is subject to revocation at will, and only authorizes the execution of the GMAC documents upon receipt of the dealer’s signed order for the purchase and delivery of the cars for which the trust receipt and promissory note are to be given. It also appears that dealers electing to use GMAC financing services are required to have a franchise contract with GMSC and to file with GMAC a financial statement taken from their books of account. Dealers are ineligible for GMAC credit if their financial and business condition is not sound. In 1937 GMAC received financial statements from approximately 17,650 dealers and approximately 1,150 were marked ineligible. In 1938 the total number of financial statements received was about 15,000 and about 1,200 were marked ineligible. Normally dealers choose to have the cars they purchase shipped by rail or truck-away. In the beginning most shipments were made by rail, and a considerable amount of rail shipment is still employed throughout the mountain states and the middle west. In 1929 shipment by truck-away became popular with the dealers, and this popularity has increased until now shipment by way of truck moves the greatest portion of the total business. Several factors have combined to produce dealers’ preference for the latter means of transportation, namely, establishment of regional assembly plants cutting the distance from the factory to the dealer, the extension of highway facilities, and the permitting of more prompt and economic handling of cars. When a dealer purchases a car from GMSC, he may avail himself of three financial plans or arrangements, namely (1) he may finance the car at the factory through GMAC; (2) he may finance it at the place of shipping destination through GMAC or some other discount company; and (3) he may pay cash or give a check to GMSC for the car at the factory and before shipment. Plan (1) is the sight draft collection method, applies to rail and truck-away shipments, and is widely used by dealers. The giving of a blanket power of attorney is necessary before a dealer may use this plan. Plan (2) is the old rail or bill of lading collection method, applies to rail shipments, and is little used by dealers. Plan (3) may be called the cash method, applies to rail and truck-away shipments, and is little used by dealers. If a dealer selects shipment by truck-away, he may avail himself of plans (1) or (3). If (3) is employed, he must first forward checks or pay cash to GMSC before the car is delivered to the trucking company. If (1) is used, that is, if credit arrangements are established with GMAC, three documents are executed at the factory: (a) a bill of sale conveying title to the car from GMSC to GMAC; {b) a trust receipt executed to GMAC in the dealer’s name; and (c) a promissory note payable to GMAC for the invoice price of the car to be shipped. The GMAC documents are executed in the dealer’s name by virtue of the blanket power of attorney already mentioned, a convenience adopted to obviate frequent trips to the factory by the dealer and to facilitate shipping by truck-away. The cars are then delivered to the trucking company for delivery to the dealer, the original documents are mailed to the appropriate branch office of GMAC and copies are forwarded to the dealer by mail. The dealer is obligated to make payment to GMAC within a short fixed period of time after the date of the draft. He may either pay for the invoice price of the car shipped, in which event GMAC cancels the trust receipt and promissory note; or if the dealer wishes to hold the car against future demand, the trust receipt is continued in effect, the dealer pays 10% of the purchase price, and the promissory note for the 90% is payable on demand. Under this system GMAC takes title at the factory and the dealer has possession of the car subject to the lien of the trust receipt held by GMAC as security for the note in the amount of 90% of the purchase price. If a dealer elects to ship by rail, he may avail himself of the cash transaction, the sight draft collection plan or the bill of lading collection plan. The first two methods or systems were described adequately in the preceding paragraph. Under the latter plan, he may patronize GMAC or other discount companies. If he specifies the GMAC wholesale plan, the car is shipped to him on a sight draft bill of lading, the draft for 10% of the purchase price going to the local bank of the dealer’s choice. Accompanying the sight draft and bill of lading are the GMAC trust receipt and promissory note. When the car arrives, the dealer pays the bank the 10% deposit called for by the draft, signs the trust receipt and note covering the balance, secures the bill of lading and then unloads the car. If, however, the dealer fails to specify the GMAC wholesale plan, the car is shipped to him on a sight draft bill of lading, the draft calling for 100% of the purchase price. When the car arrives, the independent discount company pays the amount of the draft and takes a mortgage note, the dealer secures the bill of lading and then unloads the car. During the period from 1935 to 1938 approximately 75% of the dealers purchasing cars from GMSC (or its predecessor sales companies) used the power of attorney sight draft collection system. Under this system a dealer can not finance the car at the factory through a discount company other than GMAC. Instead he must (a) borrow the money from the discount company and pay GMSC in cash before shipment or (b) have the discount company upon delivery of the car pay off the invoice price owing to GMAC. Of course he may finance the car through other discount companies by ordering shipment under the old rail or bill of lading collection arrangement. During the indictment period from 1935 to 1938 approximately 25% of the dealers purchasing cars from GMSC did not use the power of attorney system but instead availed themselves of such methods as the cash transaction, the bill of lading collection plan and arrangement (a) mentioned above. When a retail customer has made his selection of a car and desires to close the transaction on the basis of an installment contract, the dealer normally executes with the customer a conditional sales agreement for the deferred balance secured by such agreement. This balance is determined by deducting from the retail delivered cash price of the new car any cash payments, as well as the allowance, if any, upon the trade-in of the customer’s used car. To this balance is added a finance charge. The dealer usually assigns to GMAC or some other discount company his interest in the car and his interest under the conditional sales agreement. In turn the dealer receives from the finance company the face amount of the contract less the finance charge. If the car sold to the retail purchaser has been held by the dealer on a trust receipt in the wholesale transaction, the title of the dealer must be cleared of the lien of the trust receipt. This release is accomplished by paying off the wholesale loan, and securing the cancellation and return of the note and trust receipt. In one respect the practice of GMAC differs from that adopted by all other finance companies. When dealers assign their conditional sales contracts to GMAC, they agree to repurchase the retail paper from GMAC in the event repossession by GMAC is necessary, but only upon redelivery of the repossessed car. In other words GMAC is a recourse company and dealers using its credit facilities must make good to GMAC any losses occasioned by repossession of cars sold on time, whereas most of the other discount companies operate on a non-recourse basis, that is, they themselves bear the losses incident to repossessions. In 1925 GMAC added a dealer’s reserve to its regular finance charge, thus offsetting the recourse liability assumed by the dealer and meeting the competition of non-recourse companies in this regard. Since 1935 the reserve has been 20% of the total finance charge of new cars, and the finance charge has been 6% per year or % of 1% per month flat of the original unpaid balance. In a typical transaction where a retail customer buys a new car for $800, pays $300 down and wishes to have $500 financed, GMAC’s finance charge for one year is $30. Out of this $30 finance charge, $6 would be set aside as dealer’s reserve, credited to the dealer on the books of GMAC, and paid to him as soon as the retail customer liquidates his obligation. There is evidence that a dealer’s reserve is not calculated on an actuarial basis, that the experience over a period of five years shows the reserve set up was twice the amount necessary to pay repossession losses, that it constitutes additional profit to the dealer and that it is so advertised to the dealer body. 4. Commerce in Cars. General Motors automobiles are manufactured at plants located in seven states, are sold and shipped from these states to some 15,-000 independent dealers doing business in every state in the land, and are there resold to the public.. The commerce in General Motors products is tremendous, the number sold for the years 1935 through 1937 averaging around 1,600,000 per year, and essential to the movement of by far the greater volume of these automobiles is the availability of credit facilities. GMAC finances approximately 65% of the General Motors cars sold to dealers on time and around 75% of the cars sold to retail purchasers on time. GMC sells the cars it manufactures to GMSC, and title to the cars passes to the latter at the factory. In turn GMSC sells and ships these cars to the various dealers in accordance with the franchise agreements, and payment in cash is required at the factory and before shipment in all cases except where the bill of lading plan is requested. The record indicates that GMSC surrenders all interest in these cars at the factory and before shipment, title passing to the dealers or to GMAC for security purposes. Certainly this is true for 75% of the dealers, those who purchase cars under the power of attorney system. And of the remaining 25% many pay cash or its equivalent at the factory and hence secure title before shipment. 5. Plan and Program. Defense counsel admitted in the opening statement that “every possible effort is made to persuade the dealer to use GMAC, because it is better.” He concedes in his main brief that there is “some direct testimony to the effect that the four corporations had an understanding that they would seek to induce dealers to use GMAC and * * * some direct testimony that the corporations did some of the things set forth in paragraphs 37 to 62 of the indictment.” The pertinent evidence on this point is related below. GMC first realized the importance of financing the commerce in automobiles in 1919, but at that time the position of the motorcar was not secure and discount companies were reluctant to loan money on automobiles except on exorbitant terms. Consequently GMAC was created to finance the wholesale and retail sales of General Motors cars, and from 1919 to 1925 it developed a retail plan of installment selling based on dealer indorsement of retail paper (recourse liability), adequate down payment (approximately one-third of the selling price), and payment of the balance within a reasonable period of time (usually twelve months). Generally and briefly, the objections to non-recourse and to “extreme terms,” that is, smaller down payments and longer terms, were that these features increased repossessions and losses incident thereto, enhanced finance charges and formed a “glut” on the used car market. In the beginning GMAC did not receive cooperation from the various selling companies wholly owned by GMC and, in the words of one defense witness, they would not “do anything to compel our dealer organization to use our service, so we had to fight our own way.” This attitude on the part of the selling companies soon changed and great progress was being made by this pioneer in the automobile financing field. In the meantime, however, the hesitancy of discount companies to loan money on automobiles had disappeared and by 1925 the competition in the field had increased to an alarming extent. Evidence adduced by the defense indicates that the GMAC rates were always lower or as low as the rates of other discount companies, yet despite this fact the longer term, the smaller down payment and the non-recourse feature offered by the other discount companies carried greater dealer appeal. For instance, a defense witness stated that late in 1924 the non-recourse companies started to compete for business in the territory covering Oregon, Washington and Idaho, that they were successful, and that they even “took a considerable amount of business away from us.” After GMAC had convinced the selling organizations of the utility of its time sales plan in the merchandising of General Motors automobiles, it encountered the competition above described and experienced great difficulty in selling its plan to the dealers. Hence it happened that in 1925 GMC, GMAC and the various selling organizations came to an understanding and agreed among themselves to promote GMAC in every way. And since the year 1925, to use the words of defense counsel in his opening statement, the corporate defendants (or their predecessors) have adhered firmly to the fundamental policy to make “every possible effort * * * to persuade the dealer to use GMAC, because it is better.” The various forms this persuasion assumed, and the many means adopted to enforce this policy, will now be related. Late in 1925 Chevrolet sales in southern California dropped to fourth place, the other cars outselling Chevrolet because they were being sold on a smaller down payment, longer terms and on a non-recourse basis. Moreover certain Chevrolet dealers had resorted to the facilities of non-recourse companies with the result that they were securing business at the expense of other Chevrolet dealers in the same area who were using the new GMAC sales time plan. There is evidence by a defense witness that the non-recourse company rates, were considerably higher than the GMAC rates, but despite this fact the non-recourse company terms appealed to many dealers and to the purchasing public generally. This situation in southern California disturbed the policy-making executives of GMC, GMAC and the Chevrolet Motor Car Company very much, presenting as it. did the imminent disruption of the Chevrolet dealer body on the issue of GMAC versus non-recourse company financing. Although the scene of action was localized, the moment was a critical one and the final outcome one which would have great repercussions over the country. To use the language of one of the executives, they realized “that in all likelihood if it [non-recourse company financing by General Motors dealers] took root in Southern California, it would spread all over the whole United States.” Consequently, the executives held a conference in Los Angeles in November of 1925 for the purpose of studying the crisis and of planning its immediate solution. The executives agreed that the sound finance policy to follow was to prevent the establishment of non-recourse financing among its own dealers. An executive stated the policy in this way: “So as far as the General Motors Corporation was concerned, our great worry was about allowing the establishment by our corporation of a plan of financing that would go to the nonrecourse basis * * *, and the decision finally arrived at was that the corporation would not deviate from its policy, which required the sales department to do everything in their power to convince the dealers that any plan of financing that would cost the customer more than the GMAC rates was not a sound policy.” Government witness Coats, at that time regional sales manager in the Pacific Coast area for the Chevrolet Motor Company of California, testified as follows: “Mr. Grant [at that time General Sales Manager of the Chevrolet Motor Company, and a conferee at the executives’ conference] said that it had been decided by these executives * * * that Chevrolet dealers on the Pacific Coast must use the General Motors Acceptance plan one hundred per cent on their retail paper, and that it was up to him now and to me to tell our dealers that, and if they didn’t do it, we would get a dealer that would.” This statement was corroborated by the testimony of Government witness Dreves, zone manager of the Los Angeles zone for the Chevrolet Motor Company of California in 1925. Obviously the executives were looking beyond the Los Angeles situation and planning in terms of nation-wide merchandising of General Motors products. They feared that if a finance policy based on non-recourse, lower down payments and longer terms were permitted to be used by General Motors dealers in southern California, “it would spread all over the United States and it would seriously jeopardize the whole installment plan of purchase, and we [the executives] felt, therefore, that we could not endorse that policy so far as General Motors Corporation was concerned.” Grant admitted that the Los Angeles plan of action was to be carried in any part of the country where similar circumstances prevailed. In this general connection evidence relating to three dealerships is pertinent and is noted below. In 1925 Robert A. Smith operated a Chevrolet dealership in San Francisco, financed his cars through his own finance company, and was making from $15,000 to $18,000 per month on the financing operations alone. Coats and Grant insisted that he give up the finance business, and directed him to use GMAC exclusively or suffer cancellation of his franchise contract. As a result Smith liquidated approximately $800,000 worth of retail paper with GMAC, and thereafter used GMAC financing facilities substantially 100%, i. e., “with the exception of the bad business” which GMAC would not accept. In 1925 and 1926 W. J. Stolz sold Chevrolet cars in St. Louis, Missouri, financed his purchases and sales through an independent discount company, and until late 1925 had had no trouble with GMAC. In 1925 and 1926 representatives of the Chevrolet Motor Company visited him constantly and insisted that he use GMAC facilities. He refused until the zone or assistant zone manager of Chevrolet directed him to give GMAC all his paper with the explanation that Chevrolet expected 100% of their dealers to do business with GMAC and that it was only a matter of time before all Chevrolet dealers would have to use GMAC. In 1925 and 1926 Thayer K. Morrow operated a Chevrolet dealership in Peoria, Illinois. Until late in 1925 he had financed some of his business through an independent discount company, but sometime in 1926 he turned to GMAC exclusively. He attributed this change in financing to two conversations which occurred late in 1925 or early in 1926 after a speech made by Grant in Chicago, Illinois in which Grant expounded and recommended the amended GMAC plan of 1925. The zone manager of the Chevrolet Motor Company told him “that GMAC was definitely a part of the picture and that we [the dealers] would be required to use it.” In the second conversation the road man for Chevrolet in the Peoria district informed him “that if we [the dealers] wanted to get cars when the new models came out we had better play ball and use GMAC.” At any rate, pursuant to the agreed plan of action for the southern California area, Coats (the regional sales manager) instructed the sales managers of the Los Angeles, Oakland, and Portland zones that the dealers in their areas must use GMAC financing facilities. In addition he issued bulletins to all Chevrolet dealers on the West Coast (including the states of California, Oregon, Washington, Montana, parts of Idaho, and the territory of Alaska), in which he called their attention to the new GMAC plan and stated that “it would be pleasing” if they financed the retail time sales of Chevrolet cars “on rates neither higher nor lower than the GMAC Plan suggests.” Soon thereafter Dreves, the sale manager of the Los Angeles zone, advised his dealers that “our program was such that we would require all of his [their] business to go on the GMAC plan.” It was not long after the executives’ meeting before substantially all of the dealers in the southern California area were using GMAC credit facilities. Since 1925 the cooperation between the parallel organizations of GMAC and GMSC has increased considerably and a detailed supervision over the business operations of dealers has been developed and maintained. At periodical meetings zone managers (GMSC) are instructed to secure dealers’ use of GMAC finance and branch managers (GMAC) are told to enlist the aid of GMSC representatives in procuring dealers’ use of GMAC credit. Manuals are distributed to GMAC and GMSC personnel directing full cooperation in order to obtain dealers’ patronage for GMAC, and the two sets of reports (the 10-day and 30-day reports made to GMSC, and the 5154 and 5171 reports made by GMAC) are inter-changed between the parallel organizations. If GMAC records indicate that a particular dealer is not financing a sufficient percentage of his time sales with GMAC, the aid of the zone manager of the proper sales unit is requested. The zone manager has authority to cancel a franchise contract, subject to confirmation by the regional manager, and controls the distribution of cars in times of car shortage and in periods of overproduction. Thereafter, a representative of GMAC -and the zone manager make a joint call on the dealer for the purpose of securing the additional patronage for GMAC. Every year dealers attend contract renewal meetings where they are interviewed by GMAC representatives in connection with the manner of financing cars. Unless the dealers’ use of GMAC has been satisfactory during the preceding year, he is unable to secure the approval of the GMAC representative. In such cases the signing of his contract is postponed indefinitely by the zone .manager until such time as the dealer makes satisfactory commitments for the coming year with respect to financing with GMAC. In this connection, Government witness McClain, a GMAC branch manager at Houston, Texas, from 1931 to 1935, made the following statement: “There were times when we [the GMAC representative and the zone manager at the annual interviews with dealers] would point out * * * the fact that the zone manager felt that he could help the dealer if he would give the business to GMAC much more than he could help him in any other way.” Obviously, such evidence as related above tends to disclose the tremendous influence exerted by appellants over dealers with respect to their use of GMAC. Supporting this evidence are some 56 dealer or unit reports covering the operations of 10 dealerships for the period from 1929 to 1938. ’ These reports are prepared by the field representatives of GMAC and summarize the results of visits made to dealers in connection with the solicitation of finance business for GMAC. They indicate whether the aid of the zone managers of the motorcar units is needed and whether the zone managers have made joint calls on the dealer with GMAC representatives. The following excerpts indicate the general nature of these reports. Excerpts from dealer or unit contact reports on Elledge and Barcroft, Oldsmobile dealers at Granite City, Illinois,, for certain periods in 1936 and 1937, follow: “* * * We are receiving considerable cooperation from the unit [the Zone Manager of the Oldsmobile Division of GMSC] * * * but knowing Mr. Bar-croft as I do, considerable more pressure will have to be brought in order to do us more good. “Mr. Cole of Olds [the Zone Manager] was at Dlrs. * * * learned later from Cole that he rode DBR. hard today, even to the point of giving business to us, or if he wasn’t satisfied to give up the contract. “* * * I told Mr. Barcroft that we must have some retail business to compensate for the cost of handling wholesale sight drafts and before I could finish what I had in mind, namely of telling him that wholesale would not be available unless we did get retail, he informed me that he has a new Oldsmobile deal * * * which he will give to us.” Excerpts from dealer or unit contract reports on Verney J. Reynolds, Chevrolet dealer located at Allegan, Michigan, for certain periods in 1935 and 1936, read as follows: “* * * Kleist, Chev. Dist. Mgr., was at dealers, and gave him a talking to about not giving GMAC more business. * * * A. I. C. is meeting our rates at this dealers, and he is giving them the majority of his business for two reasons— non-recourse on most deals, and a preferred collection service on those he guarantees. “* * * Mr. Reynolds requested his dealer reserve but I explained to him that since he had been giving considerable of his business to A. I. C. and that Chevrolet Motor Company were not entirely satisfied with the results of his operation because of the high receivables and lack of working capital, we would continue to hold his reserve * * * until such time as he showed a desire to cooperate with us.” Excerpts from dealer or unit contact reports on Bel-Park Motors, handling Oldsmobile at Chicago, Illinois, for certain periods in 1936, read as follows: “* * * Unit [Oldsmobile Division of the Sales Company] assistance is about the only recommendation that I can offer now in an endeavor to get more of this profitable business. “Found the dealers more willing to sit down and talk GMAC. * * * While they have the fear of the Unit in them at present, they freely admit that it is not their choice to sell GMAC.” There are other dealer or unit contact reports in the record, but the excerpts from reports shown above are indicative of their general nature. In addition to the 56 dealer or unit contact reports, there is the testimony of 48 dealers from 18 states which related to discrimination and coercion practised by the appellants for the purpose of compelling dealers’ use of GMAC wholesale and retail financing services. Of these 48 dealers, 38 were ex-dealers on May 27, 1938, the date on which the indictment was returned, and 10 were still in business as General Motors dealers. The testimony covered the years from 1919 to 1938, and no defense was offered as to any of the 10 present dealers or as to 18 of the ex-dealers. Vaughn E. Dollahan was a Pontiac dealer at Urbana, Illinois, from 1935 to 1937. He desired to finance his wholesale purchases and retail sales through a discount company owned by a personal friend, but he was required to agree to use GMAC 100% as a condition precedent to securing his franchise contract. C. C. Disher operated a Chevrolet deal- ' ership at Winston-Salem, North Carolina, from 1932 to 1936. He had accepted his franchise with the understanding that he would be allowed to finance through the Commercial Credit Company, but hardly a month had passed before the Chevrolet zone manager told him to use GMAC. Disher refused to use GMAC, whereupon his books were inspected and his contract cancelled, all within a period of two months after the acceptance of the franchise. Shortly thereafter he promised to use GMAC and consequently was reinstated. Later he discontinued the use of GMAC, the periodical inspection of books commenced and the GMAC representative observed that “if I [he] wanted to get along with Chevrolet I [he] had better use GMAC.” At the contract renewal meeting the signing of his contract was postponed until he promised to give GM AC his business. In April of 1935, during a period of car shortages, he was again using Commercial Credit and was also having difficulty obtaining cars. At that time the Chevrolet zone manager, road man and accountant, told him that if he would use GMAC, he would receive cars “more promptly,” and he was asked “Which do you think most of, your franchise or Commercial Credit?” Later the zone manager paid Disher another visit and said, “We broke one dealer in this town * * * and damned if we don’t fix you. Your contract is cancelled.” He then appealed his case to the general sales manager who extended his franchise for 6 months, requested him to “get lined up with GMAC and forget these differences,” and informed him that they wanted him to use GMAC because the profits of that company helped to build cars cheaper. However, he continued to use Commercial Credit facilities and was soon cancelled as a Chevrolet dealer. Roy Underwood was a Chevrolet dealer at Fairmont, Indiana, from 1926 to 1931 and at Gas City, Indiana, since 1932. He financed his purchases and sales through a local company in which he was interested as stockholder. In 1935 he was cancelled as a dealer, but later he was reinstated upon condition that he would comply with the five requisites of a “good-Chevrolet dealer,” namely, price class, weight class, orderly shop, genuine parts and GMAC finance. Underwood also attended a national dealers’ meeting in 1934 where either the General Sales Manager or one of the regional sales managers made a speech in which he stated “that he had no use or patience * * * for a dealer that would not avail himself of the services of GMAC” and “that they needed the profits in GMAC, and he was not interested in filling the pockets of independent finance companies.” Jack N. McCrary was a Buick dealer at Cleburne, Texas, from 1930 to 1931 and at Waco, Texas, from 1931 to 1937. In 1934 there was a “continuous squabble” about not giving GMAC more paper, in 1935 GMAC held back McCrary’s dealer’s reserve and in 1936 GMAC withdrew his wholesale credit because of his failure to give GMAC a sufficient amount of retail paper. Consequently he organized his own finance company and started using CIL, whereupon the Buick zone manager informed him that he was making a “big mistake” and that he “should go and get back with GMAC.” Thereafter he experienced a great deal of trouble receiving the models he ordered, whereas other dealers in the area had no such difficulty, and later in 1937 he was given a written notice