Swift & Co. v. United States
United States Supreme Court
196 U.S. 375 (1905)
Relevant factsFree
The United States government (plaintiff) sued Swift & Company and other major meat processors (defendants) under the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890, alleging the processors colluded to manipulate livestock pricing by coordinating the market at individual slaughterhouses. The defendants argued that any such agreements affected only local, intrastate transactions at each slaughterhouse and thus did not implicate interstate commerce or the Act.
IssueFree
Whether, to fall under the Commerce Clause, conduct's effect on interstate commerce must be direct.