Unless the repeal be express or the implication to that end be
irresistible, a general law does not repeal a special statutory
provision affording a remedy for specific cases.
Petri v.
Creelman Lumber Co., 199 U. S. 48.
The special provisions of the Expedition Act of February 11,
1903, 32 Stat. 823, c. 544, requiring in a particular class of
cases the organization of a court constituted in a particular
manner, were not repealed by the Judicial Code of 1911.
The new district court created by the Judicial Code of 1911 is
the successor of the formerly existing Circuit Court, and as such
is vested with the duty of hearing and disposing of cases under the
Expedition Act of 1903, § 291.
Section 291 of the Judicial Code of 1911 expressly confers
powers of the Circuit Court upon the now existing district
courts.
Under the Expedition Act of 1903 a court composed as required by
that act may be organized at the request of the United States to
consider the plan to carry out the decree of this Court holding a
combination unlawful under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act.
In this case, the district judge having refused to organize a
court under the Expedition Act to determine the form of decree to
be entered under the mandate of this Court, this Court issues its
writ of prohibition directed to the district judge against entering
a decree.
The facts, which involve the construction of the Expedition Act
of 1903 and the question of whether certain provisions of the
Judicial Code of 1911 conflict therewith, are stated in the
opinion.
Page 226 U. S. 421
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The matter before us concerns the execution of the decree in
United States v. Terminal Railroad Association of St.
Louis, 224 U. S. 383.
That case, which involved violations of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act,
was commenced in the Circuit Court of the United States for the
Eastern District of Missouri, was there decided by four circuit
judges in consequence of the filing by the Attorney General of the
United States of the certificate provided for by the Act of 1903,
commonly known as the Expedition Act, c. 544, 32 Stat. 823. While
the case was here pending, the Judicial Code of March 3, 1911, 36
Stat. 1087, c. 231, was adopted, and hence our mandate was directed
to the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District
of Missouri, the successor of the circuit court.
Upon the filing of the mandate in that court, the judge of the
district court being disqualified, District Judge Trieber, of the
District Court of Arkansas, was assigned to sit in the cause.
Disagreement between the parties having arisen as to what plan of
reorganization should be adopted to carry out the mandate of this
Court, and the court below having expressed its intention to adopt
by a final decree a plan to which the government did not assent,
objection was made by the United States to proceeding further, upon
the ground thus stated by the court below in its opinion:
". . . as a certificate under the Expedition Act was filed when
the action was originally instituted, the decree on the mandate
could not be entered by a single judge, but only by at least three
circuit judges, in conformity with the Expedition Act above
referred to."
The suggestion having been overruled by a formal order, and
fruitless effort having been made to induce action
Page 226 U. S. 422
by the senior circuit judge, who was also the senior circuit
judge who had participated in the original decision of the cause,
the interposition of this Court by the proceeding before us was
invoked. The judge below, evidently only desirous of being informed
as to his duty, after leave to file the application for prohibition
was here granted, has submitted the issue on the opinion of the
court below and upon printed argument for both parties, as if on a
return to a rule to show cause why the writ should not issue.
In refusing to apply the Expedition Act, the court below,
"assuming, without deciding, that the Judicial Code does not repeal
the Expedition Act," based its refusal upon the ground that the
proceeding to enforce the mandate of this Court was not within the
intendment of the Expedition Act because not a matter requiring the
hearing contemplated by that act. This view was maintained by
conclusions as to the general nature of the duty to give effect to
a decree already rendered, and by considerations based upon the
opinion that the decree of this Court was so specific as to leave
no room for discussion, and therefore to afford no occasion for
organizing a tribunal constituted in accordance with the
requirements of the Expedition Act. In the printed argument,
however, upon which the matter has been here submitted, the action
of the court is sought to be sustained upon a much broader ground
--
viz., that as, by the Judicial Code, the circuit courts
were abolished, it has become no longer possible to organize a
court in accordance with the Expedition Act, because that act, by
implication, has been repealed by the Judicial Code. Thus, after
commenting upon the provisions of the Judicial Code, it is
said:
"The Judicial Code (Sec. 1, Chap. I) provides for a district
judge for each district court."
"There is no provision for the exercise of any judicial
authority by any circuit judge, except by special appointment,
pursuant to the provision of Sec. 18, Chap. I, of
Page 226 U. S. 423
the Code. He then derives his power from such appointment, and
from no other source. As circuit judges, they have no authority in
the enforcement of the jurisdiction of the district courts."
"After devolving upon the district courts the jurisdiction
formerly possessed by the abolished circuit courts, the Code (Chap.
VI) creates a circuit court of appeals, and provides (Sec.
117):"
" There shall be in each circuit a court of appeals which shall
consist of three judges, . . . which shall be a court of record
with appellate jurisdiction as hereinafter limited and
established."
"It must be conceded, in view of this legislation, if this suit
was now instituted, it could only be heard by a district judge
unless some circuit judge should be appointed under the provisions
of Sec. 18, Chap. I, to discharge the functions of a district
judge, and the case be brought before him in that capacity."
But the contention is faulty, because, although the premise upon
which it rests be conceded, the deduction drawn from it is
unwarranted. It is, of course, undoubted that Chap. XIII of the
Judicial Code, while not interfering with the tenure of office of
the circuit judges, abolished the circuit courts. It is also
undoubted that, by that act, the district courts provided for were
made the successors of both the circuit and districts courts which
had theretofore existed, and were in a general sense endowed with
the jurisdiction and power theretofore vested in such prior courts.
It is moreover, beyond question that the statute, while
contemplating as a general rule the holding of district courts by
district judges, and as a general rule for holding circuit courts
of appeal by circuit judges, nevertheless expressly directs when
the occasion requires (§ 18) the assignment by the senior
judge, or the circuit justice, or the chief justice, of a circuit
judge to hold a district court, and endows a judge so assigned with
all
Page 226 U. S. 424
the authority of a district judge (§ 19), giving power in
case of such designation to hold separately at the same time a
district court in such district, and to discharge all the judicial
duties of the district judge therein (§ 14). The statute
therefore clearly gives to the circuit judges the rights and powers
of judges of the new district courts, and calls such powers into
play when assigned according to law.
The question therefore reduces itself to this: were the special
provisions of the Expedition Act, requiring in a particular class
of cases the organization of a court constituted in a particular
manner, repealed by the Judicial Code? This is the only question,
because if that act was not repealed by the Code, then its
provisions amount to an assignment by operation of law of the
circuit judges to sit as judges of the district court for the
purpose of discharging the duties imposed by the act. When the
issue is thus narrowed, solution is readily reached by the
application of the elementary rule that a special and particular
statutory provision affording a remedy for particular and specific
cases is not repealed by a general law unless the repeal be express
or the implication to that end be irresistible.
Petri v.
Creelman Lumber Co., 199 U. S. 487,
199 U. S. 497.
That the new district court created by the judicial act was vested
with the duty of hearing and disposing of the cases provided for in
the Expedition Act as the successor of the formerly existing
circuit court, as we have already stated, is undoubted. The mere
fact that the Expedition Act in terms refers to the organization of
a circuit court would be, as a general rule, under the
circumstances, of no importance, and becomes absolutely without
significance, in view of the express provision of Chap. XIII,
§ 291, of the Judicial Code, saying:
"Wherever, in any law not embraced within this Act, any
reference is made to, or any power or duty is conferred or imposed
upon, the circuit courts, such reference shall,
Page 226 U. S. 425
upon the taking effect of this act, be deemed and held to refer
to, and to confer such power and impose such duty upon, the
district courts."
The Expedition Act being therefore still in force, and its
provisions being applicable to the district courts which the
Judicial Code created, we think the court below erred in concluding
that the United States was not entitled to a district court
organized in the mode pointed out in the Expedition Act, unless it
be, as stated by the lower court in its opinion, the subject in
hand was of such a character as not to be within the scope of the
Expedition Act. Coming to consider that question without going into
any elaboration, we are of opinion that error was committed is so
holding. While it is true that the mandate of this Court gave
certain specific directions as to the scope and character of the
decree to be entered, it afforded an opportunity to the defendants
to submit a plan in order to carry out the decree, and gave to the
United States an opportunity to be heard in opposition to that
plan, and left to the court a serious and important duty to be
discharged in any event, and especially in case of controversy on
the subject. These considerations, we think, brought the subject
within the scope of the Expedition Act, and justified the request
of the United States that the case be considered and a decree
entered by a court composed as provided in that act.
Writ of prohibition to issue.