Mandamus. On a rule on the judges of the Circuit Court of the
District of Maryland to show cause why a mandamus should not be
awarded commanding them to issue execution on a judgment obtained
in that court which had been removed by writ of error to this
Court, it was
held:
That an injunction may issue on a judgment obtained on the law
side of the circuit court to stay proceedings on the judgment,
although a writ of error had been issued in the case from the
Supreme Court.
An injunction awarded by a district judge expires at the next
term of the circuit court unless continued by order of the
court.
Where the defendant in the injunction and the court supposed the
injunction had not expired, and frequent applications had been made
to the court to dissolve it which were refused, this was under the
circumstances considered as equivalent to renewing the injunction.
Mandamus refused.
Page 25 U. S. 562
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the
Court.
A rule was made upon the judges of the Court of the United
States for the Fourth Circuit and District of Maryland to show
cause why an execution should not issue on a judgment rendered in
that court in favor of Parkin, Parker & Clough against John E.
Rigden. A writ of error had been sued out to this judgment, which
had been affirmed in this Court, and the usual mandate had been
awarded. On affidavit that the clerk of the circuit court had
refused to issue an execution and that the judges of that court had
refused to direct one, this rule was made.
The cause shown is that after suing forth the writ of error to
the original judgment, Rigden had determined to abandon it. That
the counsel who had obtained the judgment took the record from the
clerk's office, filed it in this Court, and obtained an affirmance
of the judgment. Before this affirmance, John E. Rigden obtained an
injunction to stay all proceedings at law on the said judgment
which the counsel for Parkin, Parker & Clough have made two
ineffectual attempts to dissolve, and that the said judges were and
are of opinion that to issue execution during the continuance of
the injunction would be a violation thereof.
The record of the proceedings in chancery is annexed to this
return, which shows that an injunction was awarded by Elias Clenn,
the district judge, on 19 February, 1825, at which time the writ of
error was depending in this Court.
The subpoena was returnable to the May term of the circuit
court, but the record does not state that any order was made in the
cause at that term. In December, a rule was made on the defendants
in equity to answer the bill. In
Page 25 U. S. 563
May, 1826, an answer was filed for Parkin, Parker & Clough
by William Gwynn and Daniel Raymond, their agents and attorneys,
who moved to dissolve the injunction, which motion was rejected.
Afterwards, in December, 1826, on the suggestion that there is no
bond for the performance of any decree which might be pronounced in
the cause, it was ordered by the court that the injunction be
dissolved unless cause be shown to the contrary on or before 23
December instant. On the 22d, this rule was extended. The bond
given on obtaining the injunction, which had been mislaid, was
found, and on the 26th, the court, on argument, again refused to
dissolve the injunction.
The cause shown on the return consists of two parts: 1st, the
supposed incorrect conduct of the counsel for the plaintiff at law
in bringing up the record after the defendant had abandoned his
intention to prosecute the writ of error; 2d, the pendency of the
injunction.
The first cause shown is entirely insufficient. The plaintiff in
error having given bond to prosecute his writ, was at liberty at
any time to bring up the record, and although the writ constituted
no supersedeas, yet the party who had obtained the judgment would
remain exposed to the hazard of its being reversed at a distant
day. To obviate such an inconvenience, one of the rules of this
Court authorizes the defendant in error, where the plaintiff has
failed to file the record within the time prescribed, to docket the
cause and file a copy of the record with the clerk. The defendant
in error has only conformed to this rule, and can be liable to no
censure for doing so.
The second cause assigned for refusing to issue the execution
has been contested on two grounds:
1. It is contended that an injunction could not be awarded while
the record was before this Court on a writ of error.
We do not think this a valid objection. The suit in chancery
does not draw into question the judgment and proceedings at law or
claim a right to revise them. It sets up an equity independent of
the judgment which admits the validity of that judgment but
suggests reasons why the
Page 25 U. S. 564
party who has obtained it ought not to avail himself of it. It
proposes to try a question entirely new, which has not been and
could not be litigated at law. It may be brought before the
commencement of a suit at law pending such suit or after its
decision by the highest law tribunal. The bill is an original bill,
and may be filed although an injunction should not be awarded. The
injunction arrests proceedings at law, and may be dissolved or
continued without making any final decree in the case. The
condition of the suit at law may be a reason for imposing terms on
the party who applies for an injunction, but can be no reason for
refusing it. The subpoena and injunction act on the person to whom
they are directed, not on the record, and it can be of no
consequence where the record is.
2. The second objection to the pendency of the injunction has
more weight. It was awarded in December, 1825, by the district
judge, and no order appears to have been made for its continuance
at the succeeding term. That act, which authorizes the district
judges to grant writs of injunction, provides, "that the same shall
not, unless so ordered by the circuit court, continue longer than
to the circuit court next ensuing." An order for its continuance
therefore ought to have been made, and after the close of the term
without such order an execution might have been sued out on the
judgment without any contempt of the court.
But if in point of law the injunction ceased to exist, the court
could reinstate it at will. The judges acted obviously on the
opinion that the injunction still continued and ought to continue.
Two successive motions to dissolve it were overruled. The same view
of the case which induced the court thus to continue the injunction
must have induced a reinstatement of it, had it been supposed to be
discontinued by the omission to make an order in it at the term to
which the subpoena was returnable. If, upon the ground of this
omission, the mandamus should be awarded, it might be rendered
useless by granting a new injunction. It ought to be granted if the
case, as it now appears, shows that the plaintiff in equity is
entitled to relief. We must suppose that in the opinion of the
court he is so entitled
Page 25 U. S. 565
or the injunction would have been dissolved on motion. The
continuance of the injunction is, in substance, equivalent to a
renewal of it.
Under these circumstances, some difference of opinion exists on
the motion for a mandamus. Some of the judges think that it ought
to be awarded; others are of opinion that as the injunction is
still continued by the court, and as the judges who have a right to
give it force have returned that it is in force, it ought not to be
awarded. The motion is overruled.
Rule discharged.