Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. Standard Asphalt & Rubber Co.

16 F.2d 751, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3942
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 13, 1926
DocketNo. 3614
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 16 F.2d 751 (Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. Standard Asphalt & Rubber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. Standard Asphalt & Rubber Co., 16 F.2d 751, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3942 (7th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

PAGE, Circuit Judge.

The suit by appellee, called plaintiff, against appellant, called defendant, charged infringement of Culmer patents, Nos. 635,429 and 635,430. Judge Humphrey’s decree, filed February 20, 1917, found infringement, ordered an accounting, and appointed a master to make an accounting. As the patents had expired, no injunction was ordered.

Judge Humphrey died in June, 1918. Judge FitzHenry, on April 30, 1924, entered a final decree on the accounting in favor of plaintiff. July 1, 1924, appeal was allowed, assignment of errors filed, and citation issued. Supersedeas bond was filed July 5, 1924. On defendant’s request, 12 30-day extensions of time for filing the record in this court were allowed, the last one expiring July 26, 1925.

On April 24, 1925, nearly 300 days after the citation, defendant served upon plaintiff a praecipe, in part as follows: “Please prepare a transcript of the record in the above-entitled cause for use on appeal, including therein copies of the following: * * * Certificate of evidence, consisting of printed pages 24 to 1215, inclusive, pages 1222 to 4591, inclusive, and the following exhibits. R * * ” Preceding that item were requests for the pleadings and some other items. Following it was a request for a portion of the exhibits. No condensed statement of the evidence was filed.

June 24, 1925, two days before the expiration of the last extension, the clerk of the District Court attached his certificate to the record. On July 3, 1925, one copy of the record was filed in this court. The required number of copies were filed November 2, 1925. November 9, 1925, plaintiff moved to dismiss the appeal because no proper record had been filed here, one reason being that there was no certificate of evidence as required by equity rule 75. Sixty days thereafter defendant moved to remit the record to the District Court for its certificate and for other purposes. January 29, 1926, that motion was allowed. April 13, 1926, two years after the final decree, the District Court’s certificate to the record was filed here.

As originally filed, the record, of nearly 5,000 pages, was printed in 9 volumes, apparently containing everything in the proceedings in the court below. Nothing was eliminated; nothing condensed. The court’s belated certificate neither required nor made any change in the record already here, except in two particulars: It did not certify, but directed the clerk of the District Court to certify, certain exhibits, which were already in the record, and to amend the record and add “any file marks appearing upon the original stenographer’s transcript,” etc. The clerk complied with the first direction, but we are unable to determine whether or not he complied with the second. The court or[752]*752dered, as a part of Ms certificate: “Upon the request of the said defendant * * * the court hereby directs that all the testimony in this cause be reproduced in the exact words of the witnesses, and not in narrative form.” The record is here, with, the judge’s certificate added, just as it came originally, exeept that the four exhibits, directed to be added by the clerk, are now in the record twice.

Plaintiff is insisting on its motion to dismiss for failure to comply with equity rule 75.1 Fourteen years ago, the Supreme Court, approving a record in a case then before it, said it was in compliance with the spirit of rules 75, 76, 'and 77, “which call for just such a winnowing out of the useless; the presentation of only the relevant parts of exhibits, documents, tables, and reports; and the elimination of all reduplications in written and oral testimony and a condensation into narrative form of what is material to the then issue before the court.” Louisville & Nashville R. R. Co. v. U. S., 238 U. S. 11, 35 S. Ct. 696, 698 (59 L. Ed. 1177). Since then the Supreme Court and many Circuit Courts of Appeals have pointed out the purpose of the rule and the necessity of observing it, but the condition of this record and of numerous other records before us at this term indicates that transition from the old practice to that under rule 75 has been neither accomplished nor commenced.

By order of the Supreme Court, the rule became effective February 1, 1913. In 1914, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, in Re General Equity Rule 75 and Our Rule 15, 222 F. 884, held that, without an order made at the term decree is entered, carrying the matter over to the next term, the court has the power, at a subsequent term, to approve and direct the filing of the statement of evidence required by rule 75 (see, also, Goodwin v. U. S. [6th C. C. A., 1924] 295 F. 856); that the perfection of the appeal by the approval of the bond and signing of citation yet leaves in the court the jurisdiction to settle the evidence, that proceeding being ministerial; that, where the rule is wholly disregarded, the drastic remedy of dismissal may be necessary, and, where the record reaches the court containing the evidence in full, general equity rule 76 provides a remedy which, at least during the transition- in general practice, will be sufficient. Struett v. Hill (9th C. C. A., 1920) 269 F. 247, adopted and followed the above practice. Sussex Land & Livestock Co. v. Midwest Refining Co. (8th C. C. A., 1923) 294 F. 597, 600, 34 A. L. R. 249, followed the Sixth and Ninth Circuit holdings, supra. The rule was before the court, in an incidental way, in U. S. v. Great Northern Ry. Co. (9th C. C. A., in 1918) 254 F. 522, 526. In Carson v. Hunt (5th C. C. A., 1918) 250 F. 30, 33, where a statement of the evidence was prepared by the parties, but not approved by the court, and there was nothing to show that it contained all the evidence, the court said it would be presumed that there was other evidence in the record to support the decree.

In Buessel v. U. S. (2nd C. C. A., 1919) [753]*753258 F. 811, 824, the equity practice prior to the rule is reviewed. The court said: “Whatever may or may not have been the practice in this circuit prior to 1912 in the matter of preparing the record in an appeal, the subject is governed by rules 75, 76, and 77, as framed by the Supreme Court, and there is no power in this court to exempt a particular case from their operation. The rules, having been promulgated under the authority of an act of Congress, have the authority of statutory regulation. Winter v. Ludlow, 104 [30] Fed. Cas. 331, No. 17,891.” The court further said: “As the testimony in the transcript in this ease is not there in conformity to rule 75, we cannot consider it.”

In Buckeye Cotton Oil Co. v. Ragland (5th C. C. A., 1926) 11 F.(2d) 231, 232, the court said: “We are of opinion that equity rule 75 does not contemplate that the trial court will order all the testimony in a case sent up in question and answer form. If particular answers of a witness are subject-to different interpretations, the questions which elicited such answers frequently aid in determining which interpretation is correct. For that reason the rule provides, by way of exception, ‘that if either party desires it, and the court or judge so directs, any part of the testimony shall be reproduced in the exact words of the witness.’ That rule was designed to prevent the imposition of such a record as this upon an appellate court. Newton v. Consolidated Gas Co., 258 U. S. 165, 42 S. Ct. 264, 66 L. Ed. 538; Houston v. Telephone Co., 259 U. S. 318, 42 S. Ct. 486, 66 L. Ed. 961.

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16 F.2d 751, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3942, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barber-asphalt-paving-co-v-standard-asphalt-rubber-co-ca7-1926.