1. In the exercise of its appellate jurisdiction to issue writs
of mandamus, under Jud. Code § 234, and in fulfillment of its
power under Rev.Stats. § 917 to regulate the equity practice,
this Court has discretion to issue the writ directly to the
district court in a case of which it has ultimate power to review
the merits, for the purpose of inquiring into and correcting a
practice of assigning all patent causes to a master, adopted by the
district judges in alleged disconformity to the Equity Rules. P.
272 U. S.
705.
2. Under Equity Rules 46 and 59, trials are, generally, to be
oral, in open court, and references to a master exceptional, and
this applies to patent cases. P.
272 U. S.
706.
Page 272 U. S. 702
3. District courts must exercise a discretion in reference to
the order of business, and congestion of the calendar with many
cases, including a large number of criminal cases, ahead of the
patent cases may furnish cause for referring the patent cases to a
master. P.
272 U. S.
707.
Leave to file denied.
Original application for leave to file a petition for mandamus
directed to one of the district judges of the Southern District of
California.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a motion for leave to file a petition for mandamus by
the Los Angeles Brush Manufacturing Corporation against a judge of
the United States District Court for the Southern District of
California. The petitioner is a defendant in two patent suits
pending in that court, in one of which the Stabler Parker Company
is complainant, and W. B. Clancy and others are complainants in the
other. The suits are bills in equity brought to restrain the
defendant from infringement of a patent for a new and improved
brush. The defendant answered, and the complainants moved to set
the two cases for trial. Counsel for the complainants said that,
while his clients would prefer to try the case before the court, he
would ask, if the court had not time to try them, that the cases be
referred to a special master. Counsel for the defendant objected to
such a reference, and said that, if the reference was to be made,
he would like to have a notation in the record that no showing had
been made of exceptional circumstances, and that the cases were
referred to the master over his objection. Thereupon the following
order was made in each case:
Page 272 U. S. 703
"This cause now appearing on the call of the court's calendar to
be set for trial, and it being the desire of both counsel for the
plaintiff and defendant, as expressed in open court, that a date be
fixed for the trial hereof, and counsel for the plaintiff insists
that, because of alleged acts of infringement committed by the
defendant, plaintiff will suffer damage by reason of the great
delay in the hearing and determination of the issues herein, and it
appearing that, because of the congestion of the court's calendar,
there are many other causes entitled to be first heard, including a
large number of criminal causes which are entitled to preference
over civil matters as to the trial thereof, and it further
appearing that, because of the protracted length of patent trials,
the result has been and is that other civil litigants having causes
to be tried have not been accorded a fair proportion of the time of
the court, and it appearing that this condition will continue
unless many of the patent cases, including this cause, now pending
can be disposed of in the manner herein provided, and, hence, that,
in order to fairly and within a reasonable time dispose of the
business before the court, it is necessary that this order be
made:"
"It is now ordered that this cause be referred to Charles C.
Montgomery, Esq., standing master in chancery, to take and hear the
evidence offered by the respective parties and to make his
conclusions as to the facts in issue and recommend the judgment to
be entered thereon; the standing master in chancery is authorized
and empowered to do all things and to make such orders as may be
required to accomplish a full hearing on all matters of fact and
law in issue in this cause; the objection of counsel for the
defendant to the making of this order referring the cause to the
master is hereby noted, and an exception is allowed in favor of the
defendant."
Thereupon the defendant filed this petition asking a rule
against the judge to show cause why a mandamus may
Page 272 U. S. 704
not issue directing him to vacate the order of reference to the
master and to place the causes on the calendar for trial in open
court. He says that he is informed and believes that, at some time
prior to July 12, 1926, the judges of the United States district
court, Southern District of California, by mutual agreement,
appointed Montgomery as standing master to try patent causes; that,
at the calling of the term calendar in July, 1926, and at divers
times since, all the district judges have announced in open court
and in chambers that they would not personally try all causes
involving patents for invention, but would refer substantially all
such causes to said standing master; that the result is that the
standing master has set up a court with an extensive docket; that
the causes here in question are ordinary and extremely simple
patent causes which can be quickly and expeditiously tried, as will
appear from the records therein; that the principal reasons given
for the action by the court is that patent causes sometimes require
protracted trials, and that the court calendar is now, and has been
for some years, rather congested, but that this condition is not
exceptional, but quite usual in most of the district courts, and
promises to continue indefinitely. The petitioner avers that it has
an established right under the equity rules to a trial in open
court; that the petitioner has no other remedy than application to
this Court to act under the supervisory authority established by
§ 234 of the Judicial Code, 1 Stat. at Large 80, and in
accordance with
Virginia v. Rives, 100 U.
S. 313; that, unless this application is granted, the
litigants in patent causes in the Southern District of California
will be forced at their own expense to maintain a patent court set
up by the judges of the district court and operating in defiance of
the plain intent of the equity rules; that, by thus singling out
patent cases, such judges have unjustly and arbitrarily
discriminated against a certain class of litigants and
subjected
Page 272 U. S. 705
those litigants to unnecessary trouble and expense because
proceedings before a master are invariably protracted and
expensive, and the cost of such proceedings must be borne by the
litigants.
By § 917 of the Revised Statutes, this Court is given power
from time to time, in any manner not inconsistent with the laws of
the United States, to regulate the whole practice to be used in
suits in equity or admiralty by the district courts.
Wayman v.
Southard, 10 Wheat. 1. This was taken from §
13 of the original Judiciary Act, 1 Stat. 80, c. 20. The same
thirteenth section provided that the Supreme Court should have
appellate jurisdiction to issue writs of mandamus in cases
warranted by the principles and usages of law to any courts
appointed under the authority of the United States. This part of
the original § 13 became embodied in § 688 of the Revised
Statutes, and is now to be found in § 234 of the Judicial
Code.
In
Virginia v. Rives, 100 U. S. 313 at
p.
100 U. S. 323,
Mr. Justice Strong, speaking for the court in reference to writs of
mandamus which the Supreme Court might issue, said:
"In what case such a writ is warranted by the principles and
usages of law it is not always easy to determine. Its use has been
very much extended in modern times, and now it may be said to be an
established remedy to oblige inferior courts and magistrates to do
that justice which they are in duty, and by virtue of their office,
bound to do. It does not lie to control judicial discretion except
when that discretion has been abused, but it is a remedy when the
case is outside of the exercise of this discretion, and outside the
jurisdiction of the court or officer to which or to whom the writ
is addressed."
The hearing of these causes in review would normally be had in
the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Ninth Circuit, and they could
only come here in due course by applications for certiorari and the
granting of them. We do not need to decide whether the intervention
between
Page 272 U. S. 706
this Court and the district court of an intermediate appellate
court would prevent the issue of mandamus by this Court direct to
the district court in matters in which the circuit court of appeals
would or should ordinarily have power to issue a mandamus to the
same end in aid of its appellate jurisdiction. However that may be,
we think it clear that, where the subject concerns the enforcement
of the equity rules, which by law it is the duty of this Court to
formulate and put in force, and in a case in which this Court has
the ultimate discretion to review the case on its merits, it may
use its power of mandamus and deal directly with the district court
in requiring it to conform to them.
Ex parte Abdu,
247 U. S. 27,
247 U. S. 28;
Ex parte
Crane, 5 Pet.190,
30 U. S.
192-194. This is not to say that, in every case where
the equity rules are the subject of interpretation and enforcement
in the district court, such questions may as of course be brought
here and considered in a direct proceeding in mandamus. The
question of thus using the writ of mandamus would be a matter of
discretion in this Court, and it would decline to exercise its
power where the issue might more properly come up by mandamus in an
intermediate appellate court or in regular proceedings on review.
If it clearly appeared, however, that a practice had been adopted
by district judges as to the order or procedure in hearing causes
at variance with the equity rules, our writ might well issue
directly to such judges.
Rule 46 requires that, in any trials in equity, the testimony of
witnesses shall be taken orally in open court except as otherwise
provided by statute or the rules, and that the court shall pass
upon the admissibility of all evidence offered as in actions at
law. Equity Rule 59 provides that, save in matters of account, a
reference to a master shall be the exception, not the rule, and
shall be made only upon a showing that some exceptional condition
requires it. These rules were adopted by this Court
Page 272 U. S. 707
after a thorough revision. Committees of the bar from the nine
different circuits were invited to assist the Court in the matter.
The Court, after much consideration, concluded that the then method
of taking evidence in patent and other causes in equity had been
productive of unnecessary expense and burden to the litigants and
caused much delay in their disposition, and that the effective way
to avoid the making of extended records, unnecessary to a
consideration of the real issues of the causes, was to require, so
far as it might be possible and practicable, that the evidence
taken in patent and other cases should be taken in open court, and
that in only exceptional cases should be cause be referred after
issue to a special master. Though there has been some criticism and
complaint of the inconveniences that arise from this change of the
rules, the Court is strongly convinced that the change has
justified itself, and has no purpose to amend the provisions of
Rule 46 and Rule 59. Were it to find that the rules have been
practically nullified by a district judge or by a concert of action
on the part of several district judges, it would not hesitate to
restrain them. One of the causes for complaint of the general
administration of justice is the expense it entails upon the
litigations, and, so far as it reasonable may do so, this Court is
anxious to minimize the basis for such complaints. There is no
reason why a patent litigant should be subjected to any greater
expense than any other litigant, except as it may be involved in
the inherent and inevitable difference between the presentation of
the issues as to the merit and validity of a patent grant and that
which obtains in the litigation of an ordinary bill for relief in
equity, or of an action at law upon a debt or for a tort.
Of course, courts must exercise a discretion in reference to the
order of business to be conducted before them, and all the cases
cannot be heard at once. It is in the interest of economy of time
that there should be hearings, first
Page 272 U. S. 708
in one class of cases, and then in another, provided each class
may be given an opportunity within a reasonable time. Arguments
based on humanity and necessity for the preservation of public
order require that criminal cases should be given a reasonable
preference, but even this must be conceded with moderation, and
what time there is of the court in view of the whole docket must be
equitably distributed. The reason given in the order for referring
these cases to a special master is that there is congestion in the
court's calendar and that there are many other cases entitled to be
heard first, including a large number of criminal causes which
should be preferred over civil causes as to the trial thereof, that
other civil litigation has not been accorded a fair proportion of
the time of the court, and that the condition will continue unless
many of the patent cases, including this cause, be disposed of by
such a reference.
In view of the recitals of the order, we are not inclined to
infer that there has been any deliberate abuse of discretion in
this matter or to hold that there may not sometimes be such
congestion in the docket as to criminal cases as would justify a
district judge in not literally complying with the requirements of
the two rules in question. There was been an emergency due to a
lack of judges in some districts which we cannot ignore. We shall
therefore deny leave to file this petition, but are content to
state our views on the general subject, with confidence that the
district judges will be advised how important we think these two
rules are, and that we intend, so far as lies in our power, to make
them reasonably effective for the purpose had in view in their
adoption.
Leave denied.