A suit to compel the Commissioner of Patents to issue a patent
abates by the death of the Commissioner, and cannot be revived so
as to bring in his successor, although the latter gives his
consent.
The Act of Maryland of 1785, c. 80, is not applicable to such a
case.
Page 169 U. S. 601
This was a motion to substitute Mr. Duell, Commissioner of
Patents as defendant in the place of Mr. Butterworth, Commissioner,
deceased. The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
On March 23, 1895, John S. Seymour, Commissioner of Patents, on
appeal in an interference proceeding between the applications of
Alfred S. Bernardin and William H. Northall, decided that Bernardin
was entitled to a patent for the invention involved in the
interference. From this decision an appeal was taken by Northall to
the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, and the decision
of the Commissioner was by that court reversed.
Bernardin then instituted proceedings in the Supreme Court of
the District of Columbia, seeking to compel the Commissioner to
issue a patent in accordance with his previous decision, claiming
that the Act of Congress approved February 9, 1893, which, in form,
confers jurisdiction upon the Court of Appeals of the District of
Columbia to hear appeals from the action of the Commissioner of
Patents, is unconstitutional and void, in that it attempts to
confer jurisdiction upon that court to review or reverse the action
of the Commissioner.
The Supreme Court of the District of Columbia dismissed the
petition for mandamus, and, on appeal, the Court of Appeals of the
District sustained the judgment of the supreme court.
United
States v. Seymour, 10 App.D.C. 294.
Thereafter John S. Seymour resigned his office as Commissioner
of Patents, and, on April 12, 1897, Benjamin Butterworth was
appointed his successor. On April 17, 1897, Bernardin filed a new
petition for mandamus in the Supreme Court of the District of
Columbia, which was dismissed, and that decision was, on appeal to
the Court of Appeals of the District, on May 11, 1897,
affirmed.
Page 169 U. S. 602
On May 25, 1897, a writ of error was allowed from this Court,
and, while the case was here pending, on January 16, 1898, Benjamin
Butterworth died, and C. H. Duell was thereafter appointed to the
office thus left vacant, and a motion has been made for leave to
substitute Duell in the stead of Butterworth, notwithstanding that,
by the death of the latter, the action had abated.
The question thus presented is not a novel one. In
Secretary v.
McGarrahan, 9 Wall. 298, it was held that a
judgment in mandamus ordering the performance of an official duty
against an officer as if yet in office, when in fact he had gone
out after service of the writ, and before the judgment, is void,
and cannot be executed against his successor. In
United
States v. Boutwell, 17 Wall. 604, it was held that
in the absence of statutory provision to the contrary, a mandamus
against an officer of the government abates on his death or
retirement from office, and that his successor in office cannot be
brought in by way of amendment of the proceeding, or on an order
for the substitution of parties. The conclusion reached was put
upon two independent grounds, and we quote the reasoning of the
Court, expressed in its opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Strong, as
follows:
"The office of a writ of mandamus is to compel the performance
of a duty resting upon the person to whom the writ is sent. That
duty may have originated in one way or in another. It may, as
alleged in the present case, have arisen from the acceptance of an
office which has imposed the duty upon its incumbent. But, no
matter out of what fact or relations the duty has grown, what the
law requires, and what it seeks to enforce by a writ of mandamus,
is the personal obligation of the individual to whom it addresses
the writ. If he be an officer and the duty be an official one,
still the writ is aimed exclusively against him as a person, and he
only can be punished for disobedience. The writ does not reach the
office. It cannot be directed to it. It is therefore a personal
action, and it rests upon the averred and assumed fact that the
defendant has neglected or refused to perform a personal duty, to
the performance of which by him the relator has a clear
Page 169 U. S. 603
right. Hence it is an imperative rule that, previous to making
application for a writ to command the performance of any particular
act, an express or distinct demand or request to perform it must
have been made by the relator or prosecutor upon the defendant and
it must appear that he refused to comply with such demand, either
in direct terms or by conduct from which a refusal can be
conclusively inferred. Thus it is the personal default of the
defendant that warrants the impetration of the writ, and if a
peremptory mandamus be awarded, the costs must fall upon the
defendant. It necessarily follows from this that on the death or
retirement from office, the writ must abate in the absence of any
statutory provision to the contrary. When the personal duty exists
only so long as the office is held, the court cannot compel the
defendant to perform it after his power to perform has ceased. And
if a successor in office may be substituted, he may be mulcted in
costs for the default of his predecessor, without any delinquency
of his own. Besides, were a demand made upon him, he might
discharge the duty and render the interposition of the court
unnecessary. In all events, he is not in privity with his
predecessor, much less is he his predecessor's personal
representative. . . ."
"And even if the retirement of the defendant from office and his
consequent inability to perform the act demanded to be done does
not abate the writ or necessitate its discontinuance, there is
still an insuperable difficulty in the way of our directing the
substitution asked for. We can exercise only appellate power. We
have no original jurisdiction in the case. But any summons issued,
or rule upon the successor in office, requiring him to become a
party to the suit would be an exercise of original jurisdiction
over both a new party and a new cause, for the duty which he would
be required to perform would be his own, not that of his
predecessor."
In
Thompson v. United States, 103 U.
S. 480, the distinction is pointed out between
proceedings where the obligation sought to be enforced devolves
upon a corporation or continuing body and those where the duty is
personal with the officer. In the former case, there is no
abatement. The duty is perpetual
Page 169 U. S. 604
upon the corporation. In the latter, the delinquency charged is
personal, and involves no charge against the government, against
which a proceeding would not lie.
United States v. Chandler, 122 U.S. 643, was the case
of a writ of error in review of a judgment of the Supreme Court of
the District of Columbia refusing a mandamus against William E.
Chandler, Secretary of the Navy, to require of him the performance
of certain alleged official duties. When the case was called, it
appeared that Mr. Chandler was no longer Secretary, and that the
office was filled by his successor. Thereupon this Court, upon the
authority of
United States v. Boutwell, held that the suit
had abated and dismissed the writ of error.
A similar view prevailed in
United States v. Lochren,
164 U.S. 701.
In
Warner Valley Stock Company v. Smith, 165 U. S.
28, the subject was considered at some length. There, a
bill had been filed against Hoke Smith, as Secretary of the
Interior, to compel him to cause patents to be issued to the
plaintiff for certain tracts of land. The Supreme Court of the
District sustained a demurrer to the bill and dismissed the suit.
While an appeal to this Court was pending, Hoke Smith resigned his
office, and it was held that the bill could not be amended by
making his successor a defendant, because he was not in office
before the bill was filed, and had no part in the doings complained
of, and accordingly the cause was remanded, with directions to
dismiss the bill. In discussing the case, MR. JUSTICE GRAY cited
the cases just mentioned, and several others to the same effect,
and again pointed out the difference between the case of a public
officer of the United States and that of a municipal board, which
is a continuing corporation, although its individual members may be
changed, to which, in its corporate capacity, a writ of mandamus
may be directed, and in respect to which the language of Chief
Justice Waite in
Commissioners v. Sellew, 99 U.
S. 626, was quoted:
"One of the objects in creating such corporations, capable of
suing and being sued and having perpetual succession, is that the
very inconvenience which manifested itself in
Boutwell's
case may be avoided. "
Page 169 U. S. 605
In the absence, therefore, of statutory authority, we cannot,
after a cause of this character has abated, bring a new party into
the case. Nor is the want of such authority supplied by the consent
of a person not a party in the cause.
It is, however, contended that an Act of the State of Maryland
enacted in 1785, c. 80, section 1, and which, it is claimed, became
the law of the District of Columbia when the territory thereof was
ceded to the United States, is applicable. The terms of said
section are as follows:
"No action brought or to be brought in any court of this state
shall abate by the death of either of the parties to such action,
but upon the death of any defendant in a case where the action by
such death would have abated before this act, the action shall be
continued, and the heir, devisee, executor or administrator of the
defendant, as the case may require, or other person interested on
the part of the defendant, may appear to such action."
It is suggested that the attention of this Court was not called
to this statute in the previous cases. However that may have been,
we are unable to perceive that this statute, either in its terms or
its spirit, is applicable to cases like the present one. Neither
the heir, devisee, executor, nor administrator of a deceased
official would have any legal interest in such a controversy. Nor,
in the case of a resignation, could the successor be said to be "a
person interested on the part of the defendant."
In view of the inconvenience, of which the present case is a
striking instance, occasioned by this state of the law, it would
seem desirable that Congress should provide for the difficulty by
enacting that, in the case of suits against the heads of
departments abating by death or resignation, it should be lawful
for the successor in office to be brought into the case by
petition, or some other appropriate method.
The motion is refused, and the judgment of the Court of
Appeals is reversed, the costs in this Court to be paid by the
plaintiff in error, and the cause remanded to that court with
directions to reverse the judgment of the Supreme Court of the
District of Columbia, and remand
Page 169 U. S. 606
the cause to that court with directions to dismiss the
petition for the writ of mandamus because of the death of the
defendant, Butterworth.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, MR. JUSTICE BREWER, and MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM
dissented.