1. Under Jud.Code, § 262, this Court has power to suspend
or modify an interlocutory or final decree of the circuit court of
appeals, which is reviewable under § 240 by certiorari,
pending the disposition of a petition filed here for the issuance
of that writ. P.
262 U. S.
162.
2. The jurisdiction to bring up cases from the circuit court of
appeals by certiorari was given for the two purposes of securing
uniformity of decision in the circuits and of having questions of
importance decided by this Court when desirable in the public
interest, not for the purpose of giving the defeated party another
hearing. P.
262 U. S.
163.
3. An application to suspend a judgment of the circuit court of
appeals pending disposition of a petition for certiorari here
should be first made to that court, which is free to determine it
upon its own view of the likelihood of a certiorari's being granted
and of the balance of convenience. P.
262 U. S.
163.
4. If the application be refused by that court, a stay will be
granted here, pending the application for certiorari, only upon an
extraordinary showing, and, even after certiorari has been granted,
only in a clear case and upon a decided balance of convenience. P.
262 U. S.
164.
Petitions denied.
Page 262 U. S. 160
Applications for orders to suspend interlocutory decrees of the
circuit court of appeals pending petitions for certiorari.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
All these cases involved the question how far the purchasers of
perfumes made by manufacturers whose perfumes have gained a high
reputation with the public may use the name and trade-mark of such
manufacturers in rebottling or repacking and selling them, when as
claimed by the manufacturers and owners of the trademark, the
process of rebottling and repacking injures the perfumes and
impairs the value of the trademark and the reputation of the
manufacturers. In a case presenting a similar question, to-wit,
Prestonettes, Inc. v. Coty, 260 U.S. 720, this Court
granted a writ of certiorari, and applications in the above
entitled cases are now pending. They are also before us on
petitions praying that this Court issue orders suspending the
operation of the decrees of the circuit court of appeals and that,
pending the applications for certiorari in this Court, we restore
the temporary injunctions of the district court which the circuit
court of appeals enlarged.
The district court found that the defendants in all these cases
were infringing the rights of the complainants in their trademarks
and the use of their tradenames,
Page 262 U. S. 161
but thought it sufficient to permit the defendants to continue
their rebottling and repacking of complainants" perfumes and
powders if, in the form in which resold, the bottles or boxes bore
a legend reciting all the facts and not giving any more prominence
to the fact that these were complainants' perfumes or powders than
to the fact that they had been rebottled and repacked by
defendants. The circuit court of appeals found that such rebottling
and repacking as done by defendants so impaired the delicate odors
and qualities of the perfumes and powders that it unlawfully
injured the right of the complainants in their trademarks and
business, that such rebottling and repacking and resale with the
use of the original manufacturer's trademark and name were a
violation of a criminal statute of the state of New York, that the
proposed inspection of defendants' rebottling and repacking with a
view to preserving the excellence of the perfumes and powders would
entail such expense and burden upon complainants as to be
impracticable, and that the only complete and satisfactory remedy
to which complainants were entitled was an injunction against the
use of the complainants" trademarks or names upon the rebottled or
repacked articles for sale, and the temporary injunctions granted
by the district court were accordingly modified and the case was
remanded to the district court for final hearing. Applications were
then made to the circuit court of appeals to stay the mandate and
to grant an application upon proper bond to suspend its
modification of the district court's orders until applications for
certiorari and motions for a suspending order could be made to this
Court. After full consideration, these motions were denied by the
circuit court of appeals, its mandate has gone down and the
injunctions as enlarged by it are now in force. Meantime, these
applications for certiorari have been made here, and, in
advance
Page 262 U. S. 162
of our consideration of them in due course, motions for the
suspension of the orders of the circuit court of appeals have been
presented to us on affidavits and heard, and are now to be
decided.
It is objected for Houbigant, Inc., one of the respondents in
these petitions for certiorari, that this Court has no jurisdiction
to suspend the operation of the order or decree of the circuit
court of appeals pending a petition for certiorari and before it is
granted. The cases of
In re Massachusetts, 197 U.
S. 482,
In re Glaser, 198 U.
S. 171, and
McIntire v.
Wood, 7 Cranch 504, are cited to this point. They
are wholly without application. The first two were cases pending in
inferior courts which, under the Constitution and the statutes of
the United States, could never, by any possibility, come within the
jurisdiction of this Court. The third case was one of an
application to a Circuit Court for the issuing of a mandamus to the
register of the land office to compel him to issue a final
certificate of purchase of land to the relator. This Court found
that, under the statute, the Circuit Court was not given original
power to issue a mandamus in such a case when not necessary or
ancillary to the exercise of its jurisdiction otherwise
conferred.
Under § 262 of the Judicial Code, this Court is given power
to issue all writs not specifically provided for by statute which
may be necessary for the exercise of its jurisdiction, and
agreeable to the usages and principles of law. Here, the
jurisdiction of this Court to grant the application for certiorari
already made and pending is conferred by § 240 of the Judicial
Code. That section provides that, in any case, civil or criminal,
in which the judgment or decree of the circuit court of appeals is
made final, it shall be competent for this Court, by certiorari
upon the petition of a party thereto, to bring the case here for
review as if it had come by error or appeal. By § 128 of the
Judicial Code as amended by the Act of
Page 262 U. S. 163
Jan. 28, 1915, c. 22, § 2, 38 Stat. 803, the judgment or
decree of the circuit courts of appeals is made final in trademark
cases. Hence, if, in its discretion, this Court conceives that,
upon the showing made it should order the suspension or
modification of a judgment or decree of the circuit court of
appeals, interlocutory or final, to preserve or secure a status of
the case for the full and satisfactory exercise of its reviewing
power over it, it may make the necessary order of suspension or
modification upon such terms as seem equitable upon the filing of
the petition for certiorari and pending its disposition. So much on
the question of the power.
The question how the Court should exercise this power next
arises. The jurisdiction to bring up cases by certiorari from the
circuit courts of appeals was given for two purposes -- first to
secure uniformity of decision between those courts in the nine
circuits, and second to bring up cases involving questions of
importance which it is in the public interest to have decided by
this Court of last resort. The jurisdiction was not conferred upon
this Court merely to give the defeated party in the circuit court
of appeals another hearing. Our experience shows that 80 percent of
those who petition for certiorari do not appreciate these necessary
limitations upon our issue of the writ. When, therefore, after the
petition is filed and before its submission, an application is made
for a suspension of the judgment or decree of the circuit court of
appeals, a heavy burden rests on the applicant.
The petition should, in the first instance, be made to the
circuit court of appeals which with its complete knowledge of the
cases may with full consideration promptly pass on it. That court
is in a position to judge first whether the case is one likely,
under our practice, to be taken up by us one certiorari, and
second, whether the balance of convenience requires a suspension of
its decree and a withholding of its mandate. It involves no
disrespect
Page 262 U. S. 164
to this Court for the circuit court of appeals to refuse to
withhold its mandate or to suspend the operation of its judgment or
decree pending application for certiorari to us. If it thinks a
question involved should be ruled upon by this Court, it may
certify it. If it does not certify, it may still consider that the
case is one in which a certiorari may properly issue, and may, in
its discretion, facilitate the application by withholding the
mandate or suspending its decree. This is a matter, however, wholly
within its discretion. If it refuses, this Court requires an
extraordinary showing, before it will grant a stay of the decree
below pending the application for a certiorari, and, even after it
has granted a certiorari, it requires a clear case and a decided
balance of convenience before it will grant such stay. These
remarks, of course, apply also to applications for certiorari to
review judgments and decrees of the highest courts of states.
Coming now to the circumstances presented on the inquiry before
us, we find nothing to justify our granting the motion. It is clear
that the circuit court of appeals gave full consideration to a
similar motion and, with a much fuller knowledge than we can have,
denied it. As we have said, we require very cogent reasons before
we will disregard the deliberate action of that court in such a
matter. We have read the affidavits, and we do not find that the
petitioners have, in the light of what we have said, made a case
for the suspension of the order. On the contrary, the weight of the
evidence is clearly with the respondents.
The petitions are denied.