An order made by a district judge on his own motion during the
term at which a decree has been entered, reciting the need for an
amendment of the decree and extending the term to a future day for
the declared purpose of allowing such amendment, without specifying
the change in contemplation, has the effect of suspending the
operation of the decree so that no appeal can be taken from it
until it has been amended or confirmed. P.
298 U. S.
169.
79 F.2d 703 reversed.
Certiorari, 297 U.S. 701, to review a judgment dismissing an
appeal.
MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question in this case is whether the petitioners appealed to
the Circuit Court of Appeals within the time prescribed by law.
The United States brought suit to set aside a deed by Samuel
Zimmern to his wife, and another deed, in which the wife joined, to
his children, a separate parcel of real estate being the subject of
each. At the time of the conveyance, Samuel Zimmern was indebted to
the complainant for a deficiency of income taxes duly assessed
against him. The deeds were attacked upon the ground that they
Page 298 U. S. 168
had been made without consideration and with fraudulent intent.
The District Court, after a trial, sustained the charge of fraud
and gave judgment in favor of the complainant for the relief prayed
for in the bill. Its decree, which was entered on March 3, 1934,
directed a sale of the two parcels, and the payment of the proceeds
to the United States to be applied upon the taxes after deducting
what was due to the wife by reason of a homestead exemption allowed
by the local law. Nothing was said in the decree as to the
exception or reservation from the sale of her inchoate right of
dower.
The term at which the cause was tried would have expired, unless
extended, on May 28, 1934. However, before that date, the judge
made an order extending the term for 90 days, the order being
prefaced with the following recital:
"It appearing to the court that a decree was entered in this
cause on March 3rd, 1934, and, for good reason shown, it will be
necessary to modify or amend said decree.
*"
No petition for rehearing in behalf of the wife, Leila Zimmern,
appears in the record, nor any motion for an amendment. A petition
in behalf of Samuel Zimmern does appear, but it was filed on August
11, 1934, when the time to appeal had already gone by if the
original decree was then presently in force.
Cf. Conboy v.
First National Bank of Jersey City, 203 U.
S. 141,
203 U. S. 145.
Two
Page 298 U. S. 169
days later, the judge made an order amending the decree by
directing that the sale be subject to any dower rights of the wife,
and in all other respects denying whatever motions were before him.
Appeals by all the defendants were taken and allowed. Under the
applicable statute (28 U.S.C. § 230), the appeals were too
late if the time is to be computed from the date of the decree as
originally entered. They were regular if the time is to be computed
from the date of the amendment. The Court of Appeals held that what
had been corrected by the amendment was an accidental slip or
omission, not affecting the issues in suit (Federal Equity Rule
72), and inoperative to toll the statute. Accordingly, the appeals
were dismissed, two opinions being written, one upon the original
hearing and the other upon rehearing. 79 F.2d 703; 80 F.2d 993.
This Court granted certiorari to review a ruling as to practice
that might tend, if erroneous, to introduce confusion into the
law.
We think the decision misapprehends the effect of the order of
May 11, 1934, in which the judge who had tried the cause declared
himself dissatisfied with the decree that he had made, and to give
himself an opportunity to make the necessary changes extended the
term then drawing to a close. He did not limit the amendment to
matters of form only, as distinguished from those of substance. He
did not act, so far as the record shows, at the instance of the
defendants, still less upon a showing of error in only one
particular. He stated broadly, and, for all that appears, of his
own motion that changes must be made, and without a word to
indicate whether he meant them to be great or little. We think the
effect of that order was to suspend the operation of the decree so
that no appeal could be taken from it until it had been amended or
confirmed, and its vigor thus restored. Until such action had been
taken, it was no longer a decree at all. The judge had plenary
power while the term was in existence
Page 298 U. S. 170
to modify his judgment for error of fact or law, or even revoke
it altogether.
Doss v. Tyack,
14 How. 297,
55 U. S. 313;
Bassett v. United
States, 9 Wall. 38,
76
U. S. 41;
Bronson v. Schulten, 104 U.
S. 410,
104 U. S. 415;
Henderson v. Carbondale Coal & Coke Co., 140 U. S.
25,
140 U. S. 40.
Finality was lacking until his choice had been announced.
The appeals being timely, the decree which dismissed them should
be reversed, and the cause remanded to the Court of Appeals for the
Fifth Circuit for further proceedings in harmony with this
opinion.
It is so ordered.
* For greater certainty, the terms of the order are here stated
in full:
"It appearing to the Court that a decree was entered in this
cause on March 3rd, 1934, and for good reason shown, it will be
necessary to modify or amend said decree,"
"It is therefore ordered and adjudged by the Court that the
November Term of this Court which expires on the 28th day of May,
1934, be, and the same is, extended for ninety (90) days from that
date, in which time all matters and orders in connection with this
cause and the amendments of the decree may be entered."
"Done this 11th day of May, A.D., 1934."
"ROBERT T. ERVIN, Judge."