1. Upon appeal from an order merely refusing a preliminary
injunction, under Jud.Code § 266, there is nothing upon which
a supersedeas may operate. P.
260 U. S.
215.
2. Under Jud.Code, § 266, a single judge, in allowing an
appeal from an order of the district court, constituted of three
judges, denying a preliminary injunction is without power to grant
a continuance of a temporary restraining order pending the appeal,
and his order to that effect is void. P.
260 U.S. 216.
3. Equity Rule 74, which authorizes a justice or judge who took
part in a decision granting or dissolving an injunction to suspend,
modify, or restore the injunction pending appeal, does not apply to
an appeal from an order refusing a preliminary injunction under
Jud.Code § 266. P.
260 U. S.
217.
4. Where an interlocutory injunction has been refused in a case
governed by Jud.Code § 266, an application for injunction
pending appeal must be presented to the three judges, and, except
in
Page 260 U. S. 213
extraordinary circumstances, only after notice, and its
allowance must be evidenced by their signatures or by announcement
in open court with the three judges sitting, followed by a formal
order tested as they direct. P.
260 U. S.
218.
5. The granting of such an injunction pending appeal is within
the power of this Court, but application therefor will generally be
referred to the Court of three judges who heard the case upon its
merits and are familiar with the record. P.
260 U. S.
219.
Motion by the appellees to set aside an order of supersedeas and
injunction granted by a district judge in connection with an appeal
from an order of the district court, constituted of three judges,
refusing an interlocutory injunction in appellant's suit to enjoin
appellees, members of a state commission, from reducing its rates
for telephone service. Application to this Court by appellant for
an injunction maintaining the
status quo. For the opinion
of the court below denying the interlocutory injunction,
see 283 F. 215.
Page 260 U. S. 214
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a motion by the appellees to set aside the supersedeas
and injunction granted by district judge Foster at the time he
allowed an appeal from an order of three judges, Circuit Judge
Bryan, District Judge Clayton, and himself, denying an application
for an interlocutory injunction under § 266 of the Judicial
Code..
The original bill was filed by the Cumberland Telephone &
Telegraph Company against the Louisiana Public Service Commission
seeking an injunction to prevent the latter, a state board of
competent authority, from reducing the existing telephone rates, as
it proposed, on the ground that such action would compel the
plaintiff to furnish service at rates which would be confiscatory,
and violate its rights secured by the Fourteenth Amendment.
District Judge Foster granted a restraining order, as permitted by
§ 266, to remain in force until the application for an
interlocutory injunction could be heard by three judges. The court
thus constituted heard the application on voluminous evidence, and
denied the application, Judge Foster dissenting. Upon the entry of
the order, the complainant applied to the district court for an
appeal and for an injunction against the defendant commission until
the determination of the cause on appeal. District
Page 260 U. S. 215
Judge Foster, sitting alone, made an order in the district court
allowing the appeal, granted a supersedeas, and continued the
original restraining order, made by him before the hearing by the
three judges, until the appeal could be determined, in order to
maintain the
status quo. A bond was required in $100,000,
which is conditioned that appellant shall prosecute its appeal to
effect and answer all damages and costs if it fails to make its
plea good, and also that it shall repay to defendants such damages
as they may suffer, and
"for repayment to plaintiff's subscribers and to each of them of
the excess charges collected from each of said subscribers as a
result of the issuance and continuance of the preliminary
restraining order issued herein, over and above what would have
been collected from said subscribers had said restraining order not
been rendered, the said payment to be made as, when, and if it
shall have been finally determined herein that the order of the
Louisiana Public Service Commission of May 13, 1922, is a legal
order binding upon the plaintiff herein."
The present motion is to set aside the supersedeas and the
restraining order. That was the form of the application in the
original proceeding for mandamus, which, by order of the court, has
been treated in argument as a motion on this appeal. So far as the
supersedeas to which the motion is directed is concerned, it had no
effect, because there was nothing to supersede, except an execution
for costs, and that was suspended by the mere allowance of the
appeal. There was no decree for money, there was no decree at all
in favor of the complainants upon which execution could issue.
Hovey v. McDonald, 109 U. S. 150,
109 U. S. 160.
The supersedeas would not continue the injunction or maintain the
status quo ante of restraint upon the defendant.
Slaughter House
Cases, 10 Wall. 273,
77 U. S. 297;
Hovey v. McDonald, supra, 109 U. S. 161;
Leonard v. Ozark Land Co., 115 U.
S. 465,
115 U. S. 468;
Knox
Page 260 U. S. 216
County v. Harshman, 132 U. S. 14,
132 U. S. 16;
Merrimack River Savings Bank v. Clay Center, 219 U.
S. 527. The effective part of the order of Judge Foster,
if valid, was the continuance of the restraining order, which is
called in the motion and argument the injunction. The motion to set
this aside must be granted.
Section 266 of the Judicial Code is a codification of § 17
of the Act of June 18, 1910, c. 309, 36 Stat. 557, amended by the
Act of March 4, 1913, c. 160, 37 Stat. 1013. The legislation was
enacted for the manifest purpose of taking away the power of a
single United States judge, whether district judge, circuit judge,
or circuit justice holding a district court of the United States,
to issue an interlocutory injunction against the execution of a
state statute by a state officer or of an order of an
administrative board of the state pursuant to a state statute, on
the ground of the federal unconstitutionality of the statute.
Pending the application for an interlocutory injunction, a single
judge may grant a restraining order to be in force until the
hearing of the application, but thereafter, so far as enjoining the
state officers, his power is exhausted. The wording of the section
leaves no doubt that Congress was. by provisions
ex
industria, seeking to make interference by interlocutory
injunction from a federal court with the enforcement of state
legislation regularly enacted and in course of execution, a matter
of the adequate hearing and the full deliberation which the
presence of three judges, one of whom should be a circuit justice
or judge, was likely to secure. It was to prevent the improvident
granting of such injunctions by a single judge, and the possible
unnecessary conflict between federal and state authority always to
be deprecated. This Court had occasion to consider the purport and
significance of § 17 of the Act of June 18, 1910, embodied in
§ 266, in
Ex parte Metropolitan Water Co. of West
Virginia, 220 U. S. 539, and
there held that, after a district judge had granted a
preliminary
Page 260 U. S. 217
restraining order in such a case as provided, the same judge
could not set aside his own order, and such act by him was without
jurisdiction. This Court therefore issued a mandamus directing him
to annul the order of vacation. We are of opinion that a single
judge has no power, in view of § 266, to affect the operation
of the order of the court constituted by the three judges granting
or denying the interlocutory injunction applied for. To hold that
he may grant a temporary injunction varying the order of the three
judges would be to make the legislation a nullity and work the
result which Congress was at great pains to avoid. Arguments to
show that the order only continued the
status quo, that a
disturbance of it will work irreparable injury, and that the bond
herein required secures all parties in interest are beside the
point. This is a question of statutory power and jurisdiction, not
one of judicial discretion or equitable consideration.
Equity rule No. 74, which authorizes a justice or judge who took
part in a decision of an equity suit granting or dissolving an
injunction to make an order suspending, modifying, or restoring the
injunction pending the appeal upon proper terms, does not apply to
such an appeal or to such a case as this. This appeal is not from a
final decree. It is a special proceeding, in which the power of a
single judge is definitely limited.
It is argued that the order of injunction pending the appeal
here was the act of the court of three judges. It is certain that
Judge Foster was the only judge sitting in the district court when
the
ex parte application was made by complainant company
for the allowance of the appeal, the granting of the injunction,
and the fixing of the amount of the bond. It is certain that these
orders were signed only by him, and did not purport to be
authorized by three judges. The claim is based on a quotation from
remarks made by Judge Foster in overruling the application made to
him by the defendant, the Public
Page 260 U. S. 218
Service Commission, to set aside the injunction. The judge
said:
"Now let us go a little further. Here is a question submitted to
three judges, let us say. This is not the action of an individual
judge. The question of supersedeas was a matter of discussion among
the court composed of Judge Bryan, Judge Clayton, and myself, and I
showed you, Mr. Long [counsel for the Public Commission], Judge
Bryan's letter in which he says that he thought the Cumberland
Telephone Company would be entitled to a supersedeas in this case,
but that was a matter to be taken up by the district court, by
myself."
"Now, when I granted an appeal with supersedeas, that is the
action of the court, it is merely a matter of practice that I
signed the order. Now that supersedeas ought always to be granted
to prevent irreparable injury."
This statement does not make the order here in question the act
of the three judges. John Bryan's letter, so far as we are able to
judge from this reference, was a mere expression of opinion that
Judge Foster, as district judge, had the power to grant the
injunction, an opinion with which we do not agree. The letter was
not an attempt by Judge Bryan to become a participant in the order.
Nor is there any showing that Judge Clayton took part in the
matter. A discussion in conference of the judges as to the granting
of an injunction pending an appeal, before it was applied for, does
not supply what is needed to give efficacy to such order by a
single judge. Compliance with the statute requires the assent of
the three judges given after the application is made, evidenced by
their signatures or an announcement in open court with three judges
sitting, followed by a formal order tested as they direct. Notice
of application for the injunction to opposing counsel should be
required except in extraordinary circumstances. We have no proper
evidence of the participation of the three judges in the injunction
here, and therefore grant the
Page 260 U. S. 219
motion to set it aside as void and made without
jurisdiction.
The appellees ask that, if we conclude to set aside the
injunction, we entertain a motion to grant one now to preserve the
status quo. The fact that a majority of the three judges
of the district court denied the interlocutory injunction suggests
the want of merit in the application here. We, of course,
appreciate that, notwithstanding a denial of an injunction on its
merits, a court may properly find that pending a final
determination of the suit on the merits in a court of last resort,
a balance of convenience may be best secured by maintaining the
status quo and securing an equitable adjustment of the
finally adjudicated rights of all concerned through the conditions
of a bond.
Hovey v. McDonald, 109 U.
S. 150,
109 U. S. 161;
Equity Rule No. 74. But the court which is best and most
conveniently able to exercise the nice discretion needed to
determine this balance of convenience is the one which has
considered the case on its merits, and therefore is familiar with
the record. Records in cases like this are often very voluminous.
Such is the record in this case. Without abdicating our
unquestioned power to grant such an application as this, and
conceding that exceptional cases may arise, we are generally
inclined to refer applications of this kind to the court of three
judges who have heard the whole matter, have read the record, and
can pass on the issue without additional labor. That was the course
taken by this Court in
Southern Railway Co. v. Watts, 259
U.S. 576. A similar order will be made here. The action of the
district court thus constituted, however, will not revive or
vitalize the order of injunction granted by Judge Foster, for that
was void, and the parties affected by it must be left to such
course as they may be advised. We are not now called upon to
construe or determine the validity or effect of the bond taken in
that proceeding.
Page 260 U. S. 220
The orders in this Court will be two:
First. The motion of appellees is granted, and the order of
injunction granted by Judge Foster when allowing the appeal is set
aside as without jurisdiction.
Second. The application to this Court for an injunction
maintaining the
status quo is referred to the district
court, constituted of three judges, for its determination.
The costs on this motion will be taxed to the appellant.