Master Supreme Court decision establishing that voluntary cessation does not moot a case and articulating the "cognizable danger of recurrent violation" standard for injunctive relief under the Clayton Act. with this comprehensive case brief.
United States v. W. T. Grant Co. is a foundational Supreme Court case at the intersection of antitrust enforcement and federal justiciability doctrine. It is most frequently cited for the voluntary cessation principle in mootness analysis: a defendant who halts challenged conduct while litigation is pending bears a "heavy burden" to show that the wrongful behavior cannot reasonably be expected to recur. The decision thus prevents strategic behavior by defendants who might otherwise pause unlawful activity to evade adjudication and then resume it once the case is dismissed.
Equally important, the Court clarified the standard governing prospective equitable relief in antitrust cases under Section 8 of the Clayton Act (interlocking directorates). Even where the alleged violation has ceased, the government may still obtain an injunction if there exists a "cognizable danger of recurrent violation," a determination entrusted to the district court's equitable discretion. Together, these holdings equip courts to both retain jurisdiction in the face of tactical cessation and to calibrate injunctive remedies to the realistic risk of future violations.
United States v. W. T. Grant Co., 345 U.S. 629 (1953) (U.S. Supreme Court)
The United States brought a civil action seeking to enjoin alleged violations of Section 8 of the Clayton Act, which prohibits individuals from serving simultaneously as directors of competing corporations beyond specified financial thresholds. The government alleged that certain individuals maintained interlocking directorates among large, competing corporations, including W. T. Grant Co., thereby running afoul of Section 8's prophylactic bar against anticompetitive structural ties. After suit was filed, the allegedly offending interlocks were voluntarily terminated by resignations. The defendants argued that these resignations rendered the case moot and that, in any event, there was no basis for injunctive relief because the challenged conduct had ceased and there was no likelihood it would recur. The district court declined to issue an injunction (and treated the matter as effectively moot or as presenting no current violation). The United States appealed directly to the Supreme Court, as then permitted in government civil antitrust cases.
Does voluntary cessation of allegedly unlawful interlocking directorates moot the government's antitrust enforcement action, and if not, what standard governs whether an injunction should issue after the conduct has ceased?
Voluntary cessation of allegedly illegal conduct does not, by itself, render a case moot; the defendant bears a "heavy burden" of persuading the court that the challenged conduct cannot reasonably be expected to recur. As to injunctive relief, the "sole function" of an injunction is to forestall future violations; thus, where the challenged conduct has ceased, an injunction may issue only upon a showing of a "cognizable danger of recurrent violation"—something more than a mere possibility—assessed within the district court's equitable discretion.
The controversy was not mooted by the defendants' voluntary termination of the interlocks. The proper inquiry for prospective relief is whether there exists a cognizable danger that the violations will recur. The case was remanded for the district court to apply this standard and exercise its equitable discretion accordingly.
The Court first rejected the contention that the resignations mooted the case. A case does not become moot merely because a defendant voluntarily stops the challenged conduct; otherwise, defendants could manipulate jurisdiction by ceasing and resuming unlawful behavior at will. To establish mootness in this posture, defendants carry a heavy burden to show there is no reasonable expectation that the alleged violation will recur. The record here did not make the controversy evaporate in that sense; the government sought prospective relief aimed at preventing future interlocks of the kind alleged. Turning to equitable relief, the Court emphasized that injunctions are forward-looking: their purpose is to prevent future violations, not to punish past ones. Past violations are probative, but they do not automatically warrant an injunction once the conduct has ceased; the key question is whether there is a realistic, cognizable danger of recurrence. That determination lies within the district court's sound discretion, informed by the totality of circumstances, including the bona fides of the discontinuance, the character and timing of the past violations, the defendants' assurances of future compliance, and the practical incentives or opportunities to resume the conduct. The Court articulated the governing standard and remanded so the district court could make adequate findings and apply the correct legal framework in deciding whether to issue injunctive relief.
W. T. Grant is a staple in both antitrust and federal courts curricula. It supplies the canonical articulation of the voluntary cessation doctrine used across subject matters—from antitrust to environmental law and First Amendment litigation—ensuring courts retain power to adjudicate disputes despite strategic halts in challenged behavior. It also provides the enduring standard for post-cessation injunctive relief: the government (or any plaintiff) must show a "cognizable danger of recurrent violation," with the decision committed to the trial court's equitable discretion. For law students, the case illustrates how justiciability doctrines structure remedies and how prophylactic antitrust provisions are enforced through forward-looking equitable standards.
When a defendant voluntarily stops the challenged conduct during litigation, the defendant must do more than simply assert that it will not resume; it must present evidence showing there is no reasonable expectation that the violation will recur. This is a stringent standard designed to prevent litigants from mooting cases through temporary compliance.
An interlocking directorate occurs when the same individual serves as a director or officer of two corporations that are competitors (subject to statutory thresholds). Section 8 prohibits such interlocks to prevent coordinated behavior and anticompetitive information flows that can arise from overlapping control.
The government must demonstrate a "cognizable danger of recurrent violation"—a realistic prospect, based on the facts, that the unlawful conduct will resume. Mere speculation is insufficient; however, proof of past violations, the circumstances of cessation, and the defendants' incentives and opportunities to reoffend can cumulatively satisfy this standard.
Courts routinely cite W. T. Grant for the voluntary cessation doctrine in cases involving environmental regulation, speech restrictions, and other constitutional or statutory claims. For example, environmental plaintiffs rely on its principle—later reaffirmed in Friends of the Earth v. Laidlaw—that a defendant's stopping of polluting activity does not automatically moot a case.
Appellate courts review the grant or denial of injunctive relief for abuse of discretion. The district court must apply the correct legal standard (here, the "cognizable danger of recurrent violation"), make adequate findings, and reasonably weigh the relevant equitable factors.
No. While bona fide cessation is relevant, it is not dispositive. Courts assess whether, despite resignations, there remains a realistic risk of future interlocks—considering defendants' past practices, assurances, control over corporate appointments, and market incentives.
United States v. W. T. Grant Co. powerfully guards against manipulative litigation tactics by holding that voluntary cessation does not moot a case absent a clear showing that the wrongful behavior will not reasonably recur. It ensures that courts retain authority to adjudicate and deter future violations even when defendants attempt to evade review by pausing challenged conduct.
At the same time, the Court carefully cabins equitable relief to forward-looking risks, instructing lower courts to grant injunctions only upon a demonstrated cognizable danger of recurrence. The decision thus harmonizes robust antitrust enforcement with principled limits on judicial remedies, a balance that remains central to modern injunction and mootness jurisprudence.
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