Application to stay Court of Appeals' judgment and mandate
affirming applicants' criminal contempt convictions for violating
District Court's injunction is denied. The Court of Appeals
apparently has granted a stay with respect to other individuals who
were convicted of criminal contempt for violation of the same
injunction; it is uncertain whether applicants have sought a stay
from the Court of Appeals pending this Court's disposition of their
petition for certiorari; and this Court has granted certiorari in a
related case in which applicants' asserted basis for a stay will be
reviewed. Accordingly, it is the better exercise of discretion to
require applicants to apply to the Court of Appeals for a stay
pending this Court's disposition of their petition for
certiorari.
MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST, Circuit Justice.
Applicants Dolman and Wilson were convicted of criminal contempt
of court pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 401(3) for violation of an
injunction entered by the United States District Court for the
Western District of Washington. Their convictions were affirmed by
the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit on September 7, 1978,
and their application to stay issuance of the mandate of the Court
of Appeals pending determination by this Court of related petitions
for certiorari pending before it was denied on November 16.
Meanwhile, this Court granted certiorari on October 16 in No.
78-139,
Puget Sound Gillnetters Assn. v. United States District
Court, and No. 78-119,
Washington v. United States,
439 U.S. 909. There is no question, as the Government maintains in
the response which I have requested, that a conviction for criminal
contempt may be valid quite apart from the validity of the
underlying injunction which was violated, and that the invalidity
of an injunction may not ordinarily be raised as a defense in
contempt proceedings for its violation.
Walker
v.
Page 439 U. S. 1396
Birmingham, 388 U. S. 307,
388 U. S.
315-320 (1967);
United States v. Mine Workers,
330 U. S. 258,
330 U. S.
293-294 (1947).
Applicants' basic contention here is that, since they were not
named as parties in the action in the District Court in which the
United States was plaintiff and the State of Washington defendant,
they were not bound by any injunctive decree which was issued by
that court. The District Court rejected this contention, and the
Court of Appeals affirmed the convictions for criminal contempt
relying upon cases from this Court holding that, in some
circumstances, citizens of a State who claim rights pursuant to
state law may be deemed "in privity" with a State, and be bound by
an injunction or decree to which only the State was a party.
Tacoma v. Taxpayers of Tacoma, 357 U.
S. 320,
357 U. S.
340-341 (1958);
Wyoming v. Colorado,
286 U. S. 494,
286 U. S.
506-509 (1932).
One of the questions presented in No. 78-139 is this:
"Is an individual who conducts business in a state in such
privity to that state that a court may directly enjoin the citizen
without his being a party to or a participant in the cause of
action in which the State is a party? Assuming privity, if an
injunctive order is sought against an individual, is that
individual entitled to notice of and participation in the
injunctive hearing prior to its issuance?"
The Government, in its response to this application, simply does
not address that question, and the fact that certiorari has been
granted in No. 78-139 suggests that at least some Members of the
Court regard the question as being of substance.
Both
Walker, supra, and
Mine Workers, supra,
contain language limiting the doctrine that the validity of a
conviction for criminal contempt is not vitiated by the invalidity
of the underlying injunction to cases in which the court issuing
the injunction had jurisdiction of the parties. In
Page 439 U. S. 1397
Walker, the court quoted approvingly the following
language from
Howat v. Kansas, 258 U.
S. 181,
258 U. S.
189-190 (1922):
"An injunction duly issuing out of a court of general
jurisdiction with equity powers upon pleadings properly invoking
its action, and served upon
persons made parties therein and
within the jurisdiction, must be obeyed by them however
erroneous the action of the court may be. . . ."
388 U.S. at 314. (Emphasis supplied.)
See also Fed.Rule
Civ.Proc. 65(d). The claim made by these applicants is that they
were not, in fact, parties to the proceedings in the District
Court, and that the District Court did not have jurisdiction over
them merely because the State of Washington was a party. Since this
question will be reviewed in No. 78-139, and since there is some
possibility that applicants' convictions for criminal contempt
would be moot once having been served, even under cases such as
Sibron v. New York, 392 U. S. 40
(1968), I think there are substantial arguments which favor the
granting of a stay in this case.
Nonetheless, I have decided as of now to deny the application.
The information available to me as to related proceedings in the
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit may not be completely
accurate, but I am advised that that court granted a stay at the
request of Denne M. Harrington and Gary D. Rondeau, whose appeals
from convictions for criminal contempt for violation of the same
injunction were consolidated with those of applicants in the Court
of Appeals and decided by that court in the same opinion. While
applicants did seek a stay from the Court of Appeals of its
affirmance of their contempt convictions, it is not apparent from
the information available to me that they did so after this Court
granted certiorari in No. 7139, or that they requested the stay
pending disposition of a petition for certiorari in their own
cases, rather than pending disposition of No. 78-139. Our Rule 27
provides that applications for a stay here will not
Page 439 U. S. 1398
normally be entertained unless application for a stay has first
been made to a judge of the court rendering the decision sought to
be reviewed. On the basis of the information before me, I cannot
say that applicants have requested a stay from the Court of Appeals
for the Ninth Circuit pending disposition by this Court of their
petition for certiorari seeking to review the affirmance of their
contempt convictions, though I cannot say with certainty that they
have not. Because of this uncertainty on my part, because of our
grant of certiorari in No. 7139, and because the Court of Appeals
apparently has granted a stay with respect to Harrington and
Rondeau, I think it the better exercise of my discretion to require
applicants to apply to the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
for a stay pending this Court's disposition of their petition for
certiorari. In the event that such an application is denied, I
shall entertain a renewed application for a stay on behalf of
applicants Dolman and Wilson.
Denied.