Unless an appeal is perfected or a writ of error sued out and
served within sixty days, Sundays exclusive, after the rendition of
the decree or judgment complained of it is not within the power of
a Justice of this Court to allow a
supersedeas.
This is a motion by the appellee to vacate and set aside an
order made by an Associate Justice of this Court granting the
petition of the appellant for a
supersedeas directing a
stay of all proceedings, under a decree of the Circuit Court of the
United States for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, foreclosing
a mortgage on property of the Wilmington and Reading Railroad
Company, and ordering a sale of the same.
The bill for the foreclosure and sale was filed by Randolph, as
holder of coupon bonds of that company, secured by a certain deed
of trust and mortgage against the company, the trustees named in
the deed and two other junior mortgages, and the Baltimore,
Philadelphia, and New York Railroad Company, as original
defendants.
Subsequently Kitchen, a bondholder under a junior mortgage of
the Wilmington and Reading Railroad Company, was allowed to
intervene as a defendant and file an answer.
The case was heard on the bill, the answers of the original
defendants, and that of Kitchen, and, on the 6th of June, 1876, the
court below entered a decree foreclosing the mortgage as against
certain of the property and franchises covered by it and ordering a
sale by the trustees, after due advertisements for three months
prior to the day of sale.
The sale was accordingly fixed by due advertisements, as
prescribed by the decree, for the 2d of October, 1876.
No appeal from this decree, or any part of it, was prayed in the
court below by any of the defendants, but on the 29th of September,
1876, the appellant filed his petition for the allowance of an
appeal and for a
supersedeas, both of which were allowed
on that day by the Associate Justice, and a citation addressed to
the complainant below, returnable on the first day of the present
term of this Court, was issued.
Page 93 U. S. 87
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The only question presented by this motion is as to the power of
a Justice of this Court to allow a
supersedeas in cases
where an appeal was not taken or a writ of error sued out and
served within sixty days, Sundays exclusive, after the rendition of
the decree or judgment complained of.
The Judiciary Act of 1789, 1 Stat. 84, sec. 22, made provision
for a review by this Court of judgments and decrees in civil
actions and suits in equity in the circuit courts upon writs of
error accompanied by a citation to the adverse party, "signed by a
judge of such circuit court or Justice of the Supreme Court." By
the same section it was further provided that
"Every justice or judge, signing a citation on any writ of error
as aforesaid, shall take good and sufficient security that the
plaintiff in error shall prosecute his writ to effect and answer
all damages and costs if he fail to make his plea good."
The citation was essential to the validity of the writ, and
without it the writ would be quashed.
Lloyd v.
Alexander, 1 Cranch 365. The writ brought up the
record, and the citation the parties.
Cohens
v. Virginia, 6 Wheat. 410;
Atherton v.
Fowler, 91 U. S. 146.
As the security was to be given when the citation was signed, there
could be no valid writ without the security.
At common law, a writ of error was a
supersedeas by
implication. Bac.Abr., tit.
Supersedeas, D, 4. To avoid
the effect of this rule, the act of 1789, 1 Stat. 85, sec. 23,
provided that a writ of error
"shall be a
supersedeas, and stay execution in cases
only where the writ of error is served, by a copy thereof being
lodged for the adverse party in the clerk's office where the record
remains, within ten days, Sundays exclusive, after rendering the
judgment or passing the decree complained of,"
and in cases where a writ of error might be a
supersedeas, no execution could issue for ten days.
Page 93 U. S. 88
Under this section it was held, in
Hogan v.
Ross, 11 How. 297, that there was no authority
"to award a
supersedeas to stay proceedings on the
judgment of an inferior court upon the ground that a writ of error
is pending unless the writ was sued out within ten days after
judgment and in conformity with the provisions of the"
act, and in
Railroad Co. v.
Harris, 7 Wall. 575, that the effect of the writ as
a
supersedeas "depends upon compliance with the conditions
imposed by the act," and that "we cannot dispense with that
compliance in respect to lodging a copy for the adverse party."
The stay of proceedings followed as a matter of right from the
issue and service of the writ of error, in the manner and within
the time prescribed by the act. No special directions as to the
security were necessary, because, under the law as it originally
stood, security must be given in all cases when the writ was
issued, that the plaintiff in error would prosecute his writ to
effect, and answer all damages and costs if he failed to make his
plea good. It soon became manifest, however, that, in cases where
there was to be no
supersedeas, security to this extent
was unnecessary, and consequently, in 1794, it was enacted, 1 Stat.
404,
"that the security to be required and taken on the signing of a
citation on any writ of error, which shall not be a
supersedeas and stay execution, shall be only to such an
amount as, in the opinion of the justice or judge taking the same,
shall be sufficient to answer all such costs as, upon an affirmance
of the judgment or decree, may be adjudged or decreed to the
respondent in error."
After this, the form of the security became material, and the
supersedeas was made to depend upon the condition of the
bond executed at the time of the signing of the citation, as well
as upon the prompt issue and service of the writ.
Rubber
Co. v. Goodyear, 6 Wall. 156;
Slaughterhouse
Cases, 10 Wall. 289,
77 U. S.
291.
In 1803, appeals were granted in cases of equity and of
admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, and made "subject to the same
rules, regulations, and restrictions as are prescribed in law in
case of writs of error." 2 Stat. 244, sec. 2. It has accordingly
been held that an appeal to operate as a
supersedeas must
be perfected and the security given within ten days after the
rendition of the decree.
Adams v.
Law, 16 How. 148;
Hudgkins
Page 93 U. S. 89
v. Kemp, 18 How. 535;
French
v. Shoemaker, 12 Wall. 100;
Bigler
v. Walker, 12 Wall. 149. The allowance of the
appeal is the equivalent of the writ of error.
It thus appears that, under the statutes which regulated the
early practice, a
supersedeas could not be obtained except
by prompt action and strict compliance with all the requirements of
the law. Parties were, however, not unfrequently put to serious
inconvenience by so stringent a rule; and, to avoid this, it was
enacted in 1872, 17 Stat. 198, sec. 11,
"that any party or person desiring to have any judgment, decree,
or order of any district or circuit court reviewed on writ of error
or appeal, and to stay proceedings thereon during the pendency of
such writ of error or appeal, may give the security required by law
therefor within sixty days after the rendition of such judgment,
decree, or order, or afterward, with the permission of a justice or
judge of the appellate court."
In
Telegraph Company v.
Eyser, 19 Wall. 419, we held, in reference to this
statute, that where an appeal was taken and the requisite security
given after the expiration of ten days, but within sixty, a
supersedeas followed as a matter of right. In the course
of the opinion in that case it was said:
"It is expressly declared that the
supersedeas bond may
be executed within sixty days after the rendition of the judgment,
and later, with the permission of the designated judge. It is not
said when the writ of error shall be served. Its issuance must, of
course, precede the execution of the bond; and, as the judge who
signs the citation is still required to take the bond, we think it
is sufficiently implied that it may be served at any time before,
or simultaneously with, the filing of the bond. Indeed, the giving
of the bond alone is made the condition of the stay. The section is
silent as to the writ. . . . The execution, approval, and filing of
the bond are substantial. The filing of the writ is matter of
form."
In
Board of Commissioners v.
Gorman, 19 Wall. 661, decided at the same term, we
further held, that execution might issue after the expiration of
ten days, if a
supersedeas had not been obtained; but, if
one should issue, and a
supersedeas be thereafter
perfected, that would only operate to stay further proceedings
under the execution, and could not interfere with what had already
been done.
Page 93 U. S. 90
In this condition of the law, the Revised Statutes were adopted,
and sec. 1007 is as follows:
"In any case where a writ of error may be a
supersedeas, the defendant may obtain such
supersedeas by serving the writ of error, by lodging a
copy thereof for the adverse party in the clerk's office where the
record remains, within sixty days, Sundays exclusive, after the
rendering of the judgment complained of, and giving the security
required by law on the issuing of the citation. But if he desires
to stay process on the judgment, he may, having served his writ of
error as aforesaid, give the security required by law within sixty
days after the rendition of such judgment, or afterward, with the
permission of a justice or judge of the appellate court. And in
such cases where a writ of error may be a
supersedeas,
execution shall not issue until the expiration of the said term of
sixty days."
At the next session of Congress, an amendment to this section
was passed limiting the time for withholding execution to ten days.
18 Stat. 318. By sec. 1012, Rev.Stat., that part of the act of
1803, 2 Stat. 244, which placed appeals on the same footing as
writs of error was reenacted, and, by sec. 1000, provision was made
for security for costs only in cases where no
supersedeas
was desired, thus reproducing the old law on that subject.
It is evident that Congress intended in this revision to change
to some extent the law of 1872. The fair inference from the opinion
in
Telegraph Company v. Eyser is that as that law "was
silent as to the writ," and "it was not said when it must be
served," a
supersedeas could be obtained by the execution,
approval, and filing of the necessary security, even though the
writ of error should not be served or the appeal taken until after
the expiration of sixty days. In this way the old rule requiring
promptness of action to obtain a stay of proceedings was
substantially abandoned. A justice or judge could, in his
discretion, grant the stay at any time, if the writ should be
issued and served within the two years allowed for that
purpose.
The revised section is not "silent as to the writ," and it is
"said when it must be served." If a
supersedeas is asked
for when the writ is obtained, the writ must be sued out and served
within the sixty days, and the requisite bond executed when the
Page 93 U. S. 91
citation is signed. The policy of the old law is thus restored,
the only modification being in the extension of time allowed for
action. Sixty days are given instead of ten.
Had the section stopped here, a plaintiff in error or appellant
would have been compelled to elect, when he sued out his writ of
error, or took his appeal, whether he would have a
supersedeas or not, because it is made one of the
conditions of the stay of proceedings that the requisite security
shall be given upon the issuing of the citation. Having once made
his election, he would be concluded by what he had done. But
Congress, foreseeing undoubtedly that cases might arise in which
serious loss would result from such a rule, went further and, in a
subsequent part of the section, provided, that if a writ of error
had been served, as required in the first paragraph, a stay might
be had as a matter of right by giving the required security within
sixty days, and afterwards, as a matter of favor, if permission
could be obtained from the designated justice or judge. Thus prompt
action in respect to the writ was required, and indulgence granted
only as to the security.
It is contended, however, that the words "having served his writ
of error as aforesaid," as used in this part of the section, have
reference to the manner of service alone -- that is to say, by
lodging a copy thereof for the adverse party in the clerk's office,
where the record remains, and not to the time, sixty days. But time
is one of the necessary ingredients in the prescribed service to
secure a
supersedeas under the provisions of the first
part of the section. It cannot be dispensed with there any more
than it could have been under the act of 1789; and under that act,
as has been seen, it was essential. In fact, it was the one thing
upon which, more than all others, the relief sought for depended.
Service "as aforesaid" must, therefore, mean such a service as
would have perfected the stay, if the proper security had been
given. Relief is extended only in respect to the security.
What afterwards occurred is equally indicative of the intention
of Congress. As the section originally stood, no execution could
issue, when the writ of error might be a
supersedeas until
the expiration of sixty days, the time allowed for perfecting a
supersedeas without leave. If the writ had been issued and
served without the security required for a
supersedeas,
Page 93 U. S. 92
execution must still be withheld until the time had elapsed
within which the further security might be given as a matter of
right. This changed the law from what we held it to be in
Commissioners v. Gorman, and at once, upon the discovery
of the effect of what had been done, the amendment was adopted
limiting the time to ten days, as it originally stood. Nothing was
done, however, towards adapting the section as revised to the
liberal construction of the act of 1872, indicated in
Telegraph
Company v. Eyser.
We are therefore of the opinion, that, under the law as it now
stands, the service of a writ of error, or the perfection of an
appeal within sixty days, Sundays exclusive, after the rendering of
the judgment or the passing of the decree complained of, is an
indispensable prerequisite to a
supersedeas, and that it
is not within the power of a justice or judge of the appellate
court to grant a stay of process on the judgment or decree, if this
has not been done.
The appeal was taken in this case after the expiration of sixty
days, and the motion to vacate the
supersedeas must for
that reason be granted.
Motion granted.