As Amended Dec. 7, 1959.
Messrs. Edward Bennett Williams, David Previant, Harold Ungar
and Raymond W. Bergan, for petitioners.
Mr. Godfrey P. Schmidt, for respondents (except Cunningham).
Mr. Martin F. O'Donoghue, for the Board of Monitors.
Mr. Raymond R. Dickey, for Distinti and others.
Mr. Justice FRANKFURTER has filed the following memorandum:
For me, the reasons that govern the normal practice of the Court
is not recording votes on dispositions of petitions for certiorari
are controlling against departures from that practice. On
appropriate occasions, however, I deem
Page 361 U.S.
905 , 906
it desirable to indicate the issues presented by such a petition
and the legal significance of its denial. Here, this will become
manifest from the following memorandum in which on August 4, 1959,
19, as a Circuit Justice, I denied the application for a stay of
the judgment, review of which is sought in this petition for
certiorari:
'This is an application for a stay of
the decree entered on July 9, 1959, by the United States Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit against the
International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen,
and Helpers of America, hereafter called the Teamsters, and certain
of their officers, who, together with the Teamsters, will be called
defendants. The litigation was initiated by thirteen members of
locals of the Teamsters (one of whom has dissociated himself from
the rest ), to be called plaintiffs. This application is in effect
a review of the refusal of the Court of Appeals to grant such a
stay.
'The basis of the application is to
enable defendants to file a petition for certiorari to review the
decree of the Court of Appeals, the validity of which they propose
to challenge and the enforcement of which, pending potential review
and potential reversal here, will, they claim, cause them
irreparable damage. Since the contemplated petition for certiorari
cannot be considered prior to the reconvening of this Court on
October 5, 1959, the threshold question on this application is
whether the issues which defendants plan to bring before the Court
are not of such a legal nature that they may fairly be deemed so
lacking in substantiality as to preclude a reasonable likelihood of
satisfying the considerations governing review on certiorari, as
guided by Rule 19, 28 U.S.C.A., and the practice of the Court.
Informed by the illuminating opinion of Judge Fahy, 106
U.S.A.pp.D.C. 70, 92,
269 F.2d
517, 539, and having had the advantage to hear elucidation of
the issues by counsel for the parties and by the Chairman of the
Board of Monitors appointed
Page 361 U.S.
905 , 907
by the United States District Court for the District of
Columbia, as consent decree entered January 31, 1958 (the scope of
which underlies the immediate litigation), I cannot say, on a
balance of probabilities, that these issues may not commend
themselves to at least four members of this Court as warranting
review here of the decree below. I am confirmed in this view by the
candid acknowledgment of the Chairman of the Board of Monitors and
counsel for plaintiffs that serious legal questions are at
stake.
'Accordingly, the matter before me is
reduced to the very narrow question whether I should overrule the
discretion exercised by the Court of Appeals in refusing a stay of
its mandate until October 12, which is the earliest day when this
Court, in the normal course of affairs, will determine whether to
grant the prospective petition for certiorari ( assuming that it
will have duly come before the Court) and also determine, in case
the petition be granted, that the decree to be reviewed is not to
be enforced pending final adjudication.
'As already indicated, at the core of
this litigation is the scope of a consent decree entered in the
District Court on January 31, 1958, and the power of the District
Court, in enforcing that decree, to order the defendants to carry
out the specific directions defined by the Court of Appeals in its
decree of July 9, 1959, in accordance with the procedure defined in
that decree and in the opinion which gave rise to it, rendered on
June 10, 1959. By the consent decree, the defendants, as officers
of the Teamsters, undoubtedly assumed certain obligations
judicially enforcible. Whatever may or may not have been the
freedom of action of these officers prior to this consent decree,
by it their freedom of action was circumscribed to the extent that
the consent decree imposed upon them enforcible obligations. The
legal issue growing out of this voluntary restriction of
defendants' action is the validity
Page 361 U.S.
905 , 908
of specific recommendations by the Board of Monitors as
judicially defined and approved. Such orders, as they have been
defined by the Court of Appeals, are concededly unconsented and are
challenged as unwarranted, unilateral modifications of the consent
decree.
'I have said that these specific
commands, about half a dozen in number, restrict what is asserted
to be the freedom of the power of officers of the Teamsters,
claimed to be theirs under the constitution of the union. According
to the Court of Appeals, these judicial commands upon the
defendants are merely enforcement of the obligations which they
undertook by the consent decree and are not one-sided modifications
of it. This is the controversy to be raised by the petition for
certiorari which the defendants plan to file. But, in any event,
they claim that by denying a stay until the matter can duly come
before this Court, the Court of Appeals has commanded them to take
action of an irreparable nature claimed to be outside the scope of
the consent decree and in derogation of the powers of the officers
under the constitution of the Teamsters, before this Court has had
an opportunity to pass on the petition for certiorari, with the
derivative problem whether to keep matters in status quo until such
a petition, if granted, could be disposed of on its merits.
'If it were clear that between now
and October 12, which is the earliest day for the disposition of
the proposed petition for certiorari, what the Court of Appeals has
directed to be done would be capable of being carried out so as to
change, irrevocably and adversely, the rights and powers claimed by
defendants, before this Court had an opportunity to determine the
validity of what the defendants have been ordered to do, I would
feel constrained to grant the stay. It may well be that the Court
of Appeals, after due consideration, on July 15, 1959, denied this
stay on its forecast that its decree could
Page 361 U.S.
905 , 909
not, in view of all the circumstances, be effectuated before
this Court could pass on a petition for certiorari, with the
ancillary question of a stay in case such petition were granted. In
any event, my appreciation of the intrinsic elements in carrying
out the various items of the decree still left in controversy
(several of them have become either moot or taken out of contest by
agreement) leads me to conclude that, in the setting of the
immediate circumstances, they are not of a nature to cause
irreparable harm between now and October 12. I am reinforced in
this conclusion by the responsible assurances of the Chairman of
course of events which will control such matters. The details of
the half- dozen items in controversy are so specialized and
technical that nothing would be gained by particularizing them.
'One thing more does need to be
said.
'As is recognized by all concerned,
judicial supervision of a union with a membership of 1,500,000 and
some 800 locals through the agency of a mechanism like the Board of
Page 361 U.S.
905 , 910
Monitors is an unusual manifestation of equity powers.
Defendants seek to enlarge the significance of the immediate items
in controversy by their anticipation of an expansion of the powers
of the Board of Monitors and their resulting fear of disruption of
forces within the Teamsters as well as a heavy drain on the
Teamsters' treasury in the course of such far- flung judicial
administration. These are matters not immediately involved in the
decree of the Court of Appeals now before me. But I deem it
appropriate to say that the Court of Appeals, in its decision of
June 10, 1959, as well as on preliminary proceedings and in the
procedure which it followed in formulating its decree of July 9,
1959, has manifested an alert understanding of the gravity of the
litigation, and has made manifest its sense of the high importance
of assuring the most protective procedure on the part of the Board
of Monitors in making recommendations and of the District Court in
issuing orders on the basis of such recommendations; it has been
mindful of the importance of working out problems between the
Monitors and the Teamsters on the basis of the ample consultation,
with full regard for the interests of the membership of the union
of which, after all, the union is the collective expression. As to
the fear of excessive drain on the Teamsters' treasury, one may
safely rely on the Court of Appeals in affording a shining example
in the spending of other people's money. A court should be the most
sensitive of fiduciaries. In sanctioning fees and other
expenditures it will be guided by frugality and not
generosity.'