This Court does not sanction the procedure of the trial court in
virtually declining to examine the merits of the case and entering
a
pro forma decree for the sake of expediting the hearing
of the case on appeal, even though the court were actuated in so
doing by a sense of public duty.
Under § 120 of the Judicial Code, which is a reenactment of
a provision to the same effect in the Act of March 3, 1891, a judge
who has heard the case in the first instance may not sit in the
Circuit Court of Appeals for the purpose of reviewing his own
action, even though in the court below he merely entered a decree
pro forma without expressing any opinion on the merits and
no objection was raised by either party to his sitting in the
circuit court of appeals.
The trial and disposition of a case by a court organized in
violation of a direct provision of statute is such a grave error,
and involves consideration
Page 228 U. S. 646
of such public importance, as makes it the duty of this Court to
allow a writ of certiorari without considering the merits.
Where it is manifest on the petition for certiorari that the
judgment sought to be reviewed was rendered by a court not properly
organized, this Court need proceed no further; in such a case, the
writ of certiorari may be granted, the petition stand as a return
to the writ, the judgment reversed, and the cause remanded.
The facts, which involve the construction of § 120 of the
Judicial Code prohibiting the judge passing on the cause in the
first instance from sitting in the circuit court of appeals, and
the procedure of this Court in regard to a case here on petition
for certiorari in which such a condition exists, are stated in the
opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Curtis Marine Turbine Companies, the respondents, as the
owners of several United States letters patent, sued the Cramp
& Sons Ship & Engine Building Company, the petitioner, for
infringement, because that company had contracted with the Navy
Department to build certain torpedo boat destroyers, to be
propelled by turbine engines which were to be constructed by the
Cramp Company in accordance with specifications which, it was
alleged, would cause the engines, when built in accordance with the
contract, to infringe the patents sued upon.
The Cramp Company questioned the jurisdiction of the court on
the ground that, as it had made or proposed to make no engines
which could, under any possible view, be
Page 228 U. S. 647
an infringement of the patents sued on except the engines which
it was engaged in making for the United States for use in its war
vessels, there was no right to an injunction, and therefore no
jurisdiction in equity. Defenses as to the merits of the cause were
also set up challenging the novelty of the matters covered by the
patents sued upon and denying, in any event, that the engines to be
built under the contracts would infringe the patents relied upon.
When the case was ripe for hearing, on February 1, 1911, it was
argued and taken under advisement by the court. On April 10th, the
court announced the following memorandum opinion:
"Since the argument of this case, the current business of the
court has engaged my time so fully that I have not been able to
consider it. If it is to receive the study it requires, at least
two or three weeks' continuous attention would be necessary. Other
matters also, to which I need not refer more particularly, have
concurred to prevent me from taking it up, and I have therefore
decided to enter a
pro forma decree in order to send the
controversy to the court of appeals as speedily as possible. I wish
to add with emphasis that the decree now to be entered in favor of
the defendants is not to be construed as affording the slightest
intimation of my opinion concerning the merits. I have formed no
opinion whatever on that subject, but, as the unusual importance of
the suit will certainly carry it to the appellate courts, I feel
justified under the circumstances in making a purely formal
disposition of the matter in its present stage."
"The clerk is directed to enter a decree dismissing the bill.
For the present, no order concerning costs will be made in this
Court."
A
pro forma decree was entered against the
complainants, dismissing the bill. The case having been taken to
the circuit court of appeals, that court found that one of the
patents sued upon was valid and had been infringed. The
Page 228 U. S. 648
decree of the district court was therefore reversed, and the
case was remanded with directions to enter a decree for damages,
but without allowing an injunction. For the purpose of hearing and
disposing of the case, the court of appeals was composed of two
circuit judges and of the district judge who had heard the case
below, had announced the memorandum opinion, and had entered the
pro forma decree of dismissal. In disposing of the case,
the court, referring to the action of the trial court in entering
the
pro forma decree, said:
"In order to secure an early hearing by a full bench of this
court, and with its consent, a formal decree was entered by
stipulation. On appeal, the cause is now really heard at first
instance, and finally, by this Court."
On the refusal by the court below of an application to rehear,
the application for certiorari, which we are now considering, was
made. It is based upon the following grounds, which it is insisted
involved considerations, apart from questions of mere error, of so
grave a character and of such general importance as to justify the
allowance of the writ of certiorari for their correction. First,
the action of the trial court in failing to examine and pass upon
the case, and in entering a merely
pro forma decree as a
means of expediting the ultimate and final decision of the cause in
the circuit court of appeals. Second, the participation by the
district judge, who had heard the case below and had entered the
decree which was under review, in the hearing and decision of the
case in the circuit court of appeals. Third, the public
consideration which the decision of the cause involves, as
demonstrated by the fact that the only act of infringement relied
upon consisted in the execution by the defendants of a contract
with the government for the construction of vessels of war.
As to the first ground, however much we may appreciate the sense
of public duty which led the trial court virtually to decline to
examine the merits of the case, and enter the
Page 228 U. S. 649
pro forma decree so that no time might be lost in
taking the case to the circuit court of appeals, we do not wish to
be understood as giving our sanction to such procedure. Although we
say this, we nevertheless think the contention which is based upon
the action of the court in this respect is without merit, first,
because no objection seems to have been made concerning the matter
in the trial court, and none, it also seems, was raised on the
hearing in the circuit court of appeals. Indeed, that court, as we
have pointed out, considered that the action of the trial court was
the result of a stipulation between the parties. While it is true
the accuracy of this conception of the situation is questioned in
the brief filed on this hearing by the petitioners, it is not
suggested that any objection was made in the trial court to the
entry of a merely
pro forma decree, or that any error was
predicated upon such action when the case was heard in the circuit
court of appeals.
The second proposition is of graver moment because of the
proviso to § 120, of the Judicial Code saying
"that no judge before whom a cause or question may have been
tried or heard in a district court, or existing circuit, shall sit
on the trial or hearing of such cause or question in the circuit
court of appeals. This provision is but a reenactment of a
prohibition found in the judiciary Act of 1891, 26 Stat. 827, c.
517, and its controlling application to this case is not open to
controversy.
Rexford v. Brunswick-Balke-Collender Co.,
228 U. S.
339,
228 U. S. 344, and cases
cited."
But, it is said, although the strict letter of the prohibition
may be here applicable, its spirit and purpose is not here
controlling, because the judge who heard and disposed of the case
in the first instance, and who sat in the Circuit Court of Appeals
for the purpose of reviewing his own action, did not in substance
form or express an opinion on the case in the first instance, but
merely entered a
pro
Page 228 U. S. 650
forma decree for the purpose of enabling the case to be
heard for the first time by the reviewing court, acting
pro hac
vice as a court of first instance. This contention is devoid
of merit, since it must rest upon the conception that a trial
judge, despite the express prohibition of the statute, may endow
himself with power to sit in the court of appeals, and review a
decree by him rendered, if only from a mistaken sense of duty he
has adjudicated the merits of a case without considering them. It
is urged, however, that, as no objection was made to the
participation of the trial judge in the hearing and decision of the
case in the circuit court of appeals, and indeed, that consent was
given to his doing so, the objection is not now open, and the
statute therefore should not be applied. Conceding, however, that
the asserted consent was given, the error of the conclusion based
upon it is conclusively demonstrated by the construction long since
affixed to the statute, and quite recently reiterated and enforced
in
Rexford v. Brunswick-Balke-Collender Co. supra. Indeed,
as pointed out in the
Rexford case, the comprehensive and
inflexible character of the prohibition was intended to prevent
resort to consent of the party or parties as a means of qualifying
a judge to participate in the decision of a case in the circuit
court of appeals when, without such consent, because of the
prohibition of the statute, he would be disqualified from so doing
-- a purpose whose public policy is not difficult to
understand.
As the considerations just stated demonstrate that the case was
tried and disposed of below by a court organized not in conformity
to law, but in violation of the express prohibitions of the
statute, we think it plainly results that an error of so grave a
character, and involving considerations of public importance, was
committed as to cause it to be our duty to allow the writ of
certiorari without at all considering, for the purpose of such
allowance, the questions urged concerning the merits of the
cause.
Page 228 U. S. 651
In view, however, of the character of the error which causes us
to allow the writ -- that is, the mistaken organization of the
court below -- the question naturally arises, what is our immediate
and further duty? That is, must we, after granting the writ, permit
the case to remain on the docket until in turn it is reached for
hearing, or should we at once, on the allowance of the writ, remand
the case so that it may be heard and disposed of in the court below
conformably to the statute? If the first course be pursued, it is
obvious not only that delay must follow, but that, when the merits
are heard, we will be virtually exerting the powers of a court of
first instance, since we will be called upon not to review the
action of a court below, organized conformably to law, but to
decide, virtually in the exercise of original jurisdiction,
questions which the law contemplated should be previously passed
upon by an inferior court lawfully constituted. Under such
circumstances, we think, as pointed out in
Lutcher & Moore
Lumber Co. v. Knight, 217 U. S. 257,
217 U. S.
267-268, our duty is not to hold the case upon the
docket, for ultimate decision upon the merits, but to at once
reverse and remand to the court below, so that the case may be
heard by a competent court conformably to the requirements of the
statute. When, on approaching in the
Lutcher & Moore
case the consideration of the merits of the case, pending because
of a previous allowance of a writ of certiorari, it developed that
the court of appeals had virtually failed to decide the case, and
therefore that a review of the merits here would be in substance
but the exercise of original jurisdiction, it was held that the
duty was not to do so, but to remand the cause to the circuit court
of appeals, so that that court might properly discharge the duty
cast upon it by law. Such conclusion is, of course, cogently
applicable here, where the question is not merely an error
committed by the circuit court of appeals in failing to decide the
merits, but an error resulting from the fact
Page 228 U. S. 652
that the circuit court of appeals which passed upon the case was
virtually no court at all, because not organized in conformity to
law.
Our orders will therefore be:
Writ of certiorari granted; the record of such writ to stand
as a return, and
The decree of the circuit court of appeals will be reversed
and the cause remanded, with directions for further proceedings in
conformity to this opinion.