A statute the evident purpose of which is to save expense in
litigation will be construed in the light of this manifest
purpose.
Repeals by implication are not favored, and only in cases of
clear inconsistency will a later act be held to repeal an earlier
one on the same subject, but if there is clear inconsistency, as in
this case, the earlier act cannot stand.
King v. Cornell,
106 U. S. 395.
Even if it might be true that the earlier act prescribed the
better rule, where Congress, having full authority, has acted, it
is the duty of the courts to enforce the legislation with a view of
effecting the purpose for which it was enacted.
When the appellant in a cause in admiralty causes to be printed
and presented to the circuit court of appeals under the Act of
February 13, 1911, printed copies of the apostles on appeal, each
of which contains a printed index of the contents thereof and is
prepared and printed under a rule of the lower court adopted in
pursuance of the said act, the circuit court of appeals is
authorized to hear and determine the cause on such copies and to
dispense with the requirement of the payment of fees to its clerk
by the appellant as prescribed by its rules and which are the same
as those prescribed by this Court under the Act of February 19,
1897.
The first section of the Act of February 13, 1911, sets aside by
implication
Page 231 U. S. 704
the provision of the fee bill prescribed by this Court so far as
it relates to the fee to the clerk of the Circuit Court of Appeal
for indexing the record when the same has already been properly
printed and indexed in pursuance of a rule of the lower court.
The facts, which involve the construction of the acts and rules
of court regulating fees of clerks of the circuit courts of appeals
for indexing records on appeal, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case is here on certificate from the Circuit Court of
Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. The facts stated show that the
appellant caused fifty or more copies of the apostles on appeal in
an admiralty case to be printed under the first section of the Act
of Congress of February 13, 1911, 36 Stat. 901, c. 47. The appeal
was taken from the District Court of the United States for the
Western District of Washington, and the copies of the apostles were
printed and indexed under a rule of that court adopted June 13,
1911, in pursuance of the Act of February 13, 1911. In due time,
the appellant filed one of the printed copies, certified by the
clerk, and under the seal of the court below, in the circuit court
of appeals, and moved that court to hear the case without the
payment by the appellant of the fees of the clerk of the circuit
court of appeals for indexing the record, as prescribed by § 9
of Rule 23 of that court, and without the payment by the appellant
of the fees of the clerk for indexing the record and distributing
copies, as provided in that section. Section 9 provides:
"In all cases, including cases in which the record may have been
printed under the Act of Congress approved
Page 231 U. S. 705
February 13, 1911, or otherwise, the fee of the clerk of this
court for performing the services herein required shall be
twenty-five cents for each printed page of the record and index, as
provided by law."
On this statement, the circuit court of appeals certifies to
this Court two questions, namely:
"1. When the appellant in a cause in admiralty causes to be
printed and presented to this Court under said Act of February 13,
1911, printed copies of the apostles on appeal, each of which
copies contains a printed index of the contents thereof, and is
prepared and printed under a rule of the lower court adopted in
pursuance of said act, is this Court authorized to hear and
determine the cause on such copies, and to dispense with the
requirement of the payment of fees to the clerk of this Court by
the appellant, as prescribed by § 9 of Rule 23 of this Court,
which is the fee bill prescribed on February 28, 1898, by the
Supreme Court under the Act of Congress of February 19, 1897, 29
Stat. 536, c. 263, which provides as a fee for 'preparing the
record for the printer, indexing the same, supervising the printing
and distributing the copies, for each printed page of the record
and index, twenty-five cents'?"
"2. Does the first section of the Act of Congress of February
13, 1911, 36 Stat. 901, c. 47, set aside by implication said fee
bill so prescribed by the Supreme Court, which is referred to in
the first question herein certified?"
The answer to these question requires a construction of the Act
of Congress of February 13, 1911, which is, in part, as
follows:
"That in any cause or proceeding wherein the final judgment or
decree is sought to be reviewed on appeal to, or by writ of error
from, a United States circuit court of appeals, the appellant or
plaintiff in error shall cause to be printed under such rules as
the lower court shall prescribe, and shall file in the office of
the clerk of such circuit
Page 231 U. S. 706
court of appeals at least twenty days before the case is called
for argument therein at least twenty-five printed transcripts of
the record of the lower court, and of such part or abstract of the
proofs as the rules of such circuit court of appeals may require,
and in such form as the Supreme Court of the United States shall by
rule prescribe, one of which printed transcripts shall be certified
under the hand of the clerk of the lower court and under the seal
thereof, and shall furnish three copies of such printed transcript
to the adverse party at least twenty days before such argument:
Provided, That either the court below or the circuit court
of appeals may order any original document or other evidence to be
sent up in addition to the printed copies of the record, or in lieu
of printed copies of a part thereof, and no written or typewritten
transcript of the record shall be required."
And a construction of the act requires a consideration of prior
statutes on the subject. On February 19, 1897. 29 Stat. 536, c.
263, Congress passed an act amending the Circuit Court of Appeals
Act of March 3, 1891, 26 Stat. 826, c. 517, providing:
"The costs and fees in each circuit court of appeals shall be
fixed and established by said court in a table of fees, to be
adopted within three months after the passage of this Act:
Provided, That the costs and fees so fixed by any court of
appeals shall not, with respect to any item, exceed the costs and
fees now charged in the Supreme Court. Each circuit court of
appeals shall, within three months after the fixing and
establishing of costs and fees as aforesaid, transmit said table to
the Chief Justice of the United States, and within one year thereof
the Supreme Court of the United States shall revise said table,
making the same, so far as may seem just and reasonable, uniform
throughout the United States. The table of fees, when so revised,
shall thereupon be in force for each circuit. "
Page 231 U. S. 707
On February 28, 1898, this Court, by order, fixed a table of
fees and costs in the circuit courts of appeals, one paragraph
providing:
"Preparing the record for the printer, indexing the same,
supervising the printing and distributing the copies, for each
printed page of the record and index, $0.25."
This is the charge provided for in Rule 23 of the circuit court
of appeals referred to in the certificate.
Before the passage of the Act of February 13, 1911, the clerks
of the district and circuit courts charged for a transcript of the
record in preparing the case for review in the circuit court of
appeals, which transcript was usually written or typewritten, and
not required to be printed, the fee for such service being fixed
(§ 828, Rev.Stat.). The printing was done under the
supervision of the clerk of the circuit court of appeals after the
allowance of appeal or writ of error under the regulations above
set forth.
In this state of the law, Congress came to deal with the subject
in the Act of February 13, 1911. The act is entitled: "An Act to
Diminish the Expense of Proceedings on Appeal and Writ of Error or
of Certiorari," and, especially when read in the light of the
report of the Chairman of the Judiciary Committee in the House,
which accompanied its introduction into that body, shows that its
main purpose is to reduce the expense of records upon which cases
may be taken to and considered in the circuit courts of appeals and
this Court. This was to be accomplished by dispensing with a
written or typewritten transcript of the record of the lower court,
and substituting therefor a certified copy of the printed record,
other copies of which should be available for use in the further
consideration of the case in the appellate courts. With these ends
in view, the act provides that the appellant or plaintiff in error
shall cause to be printed under such rules as the lower court (the
circuit or district court) shall prescribe,
Page 231 U. S. 708
and shall file in the office of the clerk of the circuit court
of appeals, twenty-five printed transcripts of the record. The form
in which the transcript shall be printed, the act provides, shall
be prescribed by this Court, which, on March 13, 1911, made the
following order:
"It is ordered by the court that the provisions of Rule 31 of
the rules of this Court shall apply to all records to be printed as
provided in the Act of Congress entitled, 'An Act to Diminish the
Expense of Proceedings on Appeal and Writ of Error or of
Certiorari,' approved February 13, 1911."
Rule 31 prescribes:
"
Form of printed Records and Briefs: All records,
arguments, and briefs, printed for the use of the court, must be in
such form and size that they can be conveniently bound together, so
as to make an ordinary octavo volume; and, as well as all
quotations contained therein, and the covers thereof, must be
printed in clear type (never smaller than small pica) and on
unglazed paper."
Section 2 of the Act provides for the use of such printed
transcripts of the record, should the case be taken from the
circuit court of appeals to this Court. The evident purpose of the
Act is therefore, among other things, to save expenses incurred
under the former system in printing records, the clerks' fees for
supervising, etc.
In view of this history of the legislation and its manifest
purposes, we think that, when the court below by its rule had, as
in the present case, provided for the printing and indexing of the
record, which had been done, and the printed transcript had been
filed under the statute with the clerk of the circuit court of
appeals, no fee for the like service can be charged by the clerk of
the circuit court of appeals. To permit this would be subversive of
the purposes of the statute and a continuance of the system which
the act was designed to change.
It is true that there is no express repeal of the Act of
Page 231 U. S. 709
February 19, 1897, granting authority to this Court to fix the
fees in the circuit courts of appeals, under which the rule
referred to in the certificate was adopted, and under which it is
contended by the clerk of the circuit court of appeals he is
entitled to a fee for indexing, etc., and under which rule, if the
clerk performs any of the services designated, he is entitled to
the entire fee (
Bean v. Patterson, 110 U.
S. 401). It is equally true that repeals by implication
are not favored, and that it is only in cases of clear
inconsistency that a later act will be held to repeal a former one
on the same subject. We think that in the present case clear
inconsistency exists, and that the rule invoked in the certificate
of the circuit court of appeals cannot stand consistently with the
Act of Congress of February 13, 1911, on the same subject.
See
King v. Cornell, 106 U. S. 395.
It may also be true that the supervision by clerks of the
circuit courts of appeals will tend to uniformity of printing,
better indexing, and consequent greater facility in hearing cases
upon appeal and writ of error. But Congress, with full authority,
has regulated the matter, and it is the duty of the courts to
enforce the legislation with a view to effecting the purposes for
which it was enacted.
We are therefore of the opinion that the later act, that of
February 13, 1911, repeals the table of fees as to the fees of the
clerk of the circuit court of appeals in the case mentioned under
the facts certified. It follows that the first question certified
by the circuit court of appeals must be answered in the
affirmative, and the second question also in the affirmative so far
as the fee in question to the clerk of the circuit court of appeals
is involved.
It is so ordered.