A certificate from the circuit court of appeals consisting of
recitals of facts interblended with questions of law, or of
recitals which fail in themselves to distinguish between ultimate
and merely evidential facts, affords no basis under the statute
(Jud.Code § 239) either for answering the questions propounded
or for exercising the discretionary power to call up the whole
record, and must be dismissed.
Certificate dismissed.
Page 248 U. S. 179
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The certificate upon which this case is before us contains what
are denominated findings of fact grouped under eighteen paragraphs
covering eight pages of the record. Upon these findings, we are
asked to instruct as to six propositions of law, really amounting
to twelve, since each is two-fold -- that is, stated in the
alternative. But we are of opinion that we may not instruct as to
these propositions for the following reasons:
In the first place, because we think it is clear that the
statements which are declared in the certificate to be findings of
fact are in no true sense entitled to that characterization, since
the statements amount but to a narrative of facts mixed with
questions of law so interblended the one with the other as to cause
it to be impossible to conclude as to either the law or the facts
without a separation of the two, a duty which we may not be called
upon to perform in giving instructions upon questions of law
propounded under the statute controlling that subject.
In the second place, because, even if the admixture of law and
fact which inheres in the recitals in the certificate be
overlooked, the recitals nevertheless, in and of themselves, fail
to distinguish between facts which are merely evidential and those
which are ultimate and which, for that reason, would be susceptible
of furnishing support
Page 248 U. S. 180
for the legal propositions as to which instructions are
asked.
It is true, indeed, that the statute gives us the discretion,
when a case is certified, to direct the sending up of the whole
record, but obviously the exercise of that discretionary power is
not called for by a case where the certificate is of such a
character as not to be embraced by the statute.
It must be, therefore, that this case affords no ground for
directing the sending up of the whole record, since here, the
certificate is inadequate to sustain the right to answer the
questions stated. To hold to the contrary would be to cause a
mistaken exercise of the right to certify specific questions to
become the instrument by which the division of powers made by the
statute would be disregarded.
The views which we have stated are in accord with the settled
rules concerning the power to certify which have prevailed from the
beginning.
See Dillon v. Strathearn Steamship Co., post,
248 U. S. 182, and
the authorities therein cited. It follows that the certificate must
be and is dismissed.
MR. JUSTICE CLARKE, dissenting.
I greatly regret that I cannot concur in the conclusion of the
Court just announced.
That the certificate of the circuit court of appeals is longer
and more detailed than is usual is sufficiently explained by the
unusual character of the facts in the case and of the questions of
law involved. The certificate concludes with this statement:
"However, we consider that No. 5 presents a question of law
which is, in the view most favorable to plaintiff, the ultimate
one, and we desire that this question be answered, without
prejudice from the inclusion of others in this certificate, if it
shall be thought that the inclusion of the
Page 248 U. S. 181
others is not in accordance with the practice of the supreme
court in this respect."
Question No. 5 is in the alternative,
viz.:
"5a. When it appeared that the Cliffs had interests and desires
pertaining to the new lease which might conflict with the course
Kaufman and Breitung desired the Arctic to take, did the Cliffs and
Mather perform every duty which by law rested upon him as director
of the Arctic and through him upon the Cliffs when Mather withdrew
from any further participation in the matter and notified Kaufman
and Breitung that they could go ahead and make for the Arctic a
contract satisfactory to them, and that the Cliffs and Mather would
acquiesce therein? or"
"5b. Was it the duty of Mather as director in the Arctic, either
to disclose to Kaufman and Breitung what he had done and the
knowledge he had acquired as an officer of the Cliffs and on behalf
of the Cliffs, or else to resign as a director in the Arctic?"
While these two questions run into each other and could,
perhaps, have been written as one, nevertheless, in my judgment,
each presents a question of law, arising upon recited facts, and
each is stated with sufficient precision to bring it within the
terms of § 239 of the Judicial Code and Rule 37 of this Court,
and I therefore think that these two questions at least, should
have been answered, or that this Court should have required that
the whole record of the case be sent up for its consideration.