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

275 U.S. 372, 48 S. Ct. 183, 72 L. Ed. 318, 1928 U.S. LEXIS 42
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 3, 1928
Docket194
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 275 U.S. 372 (Barber Asphalt Paying Co. v. Standard Asphalt & Rubber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barber Asphalt Paying Co. v. Standard Asphalt & Rubber Co., 275 U.S. 372, 48 S. Ct. 183, 72 L. Ed. 318, 1928 U.S. LEXIS 42 (1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Van Pevaistter;

delivered the opinion of the Court-.'

The principal questions to be considered relate to the steps whereby evidence in a suit in equity in a district court may be made a part of the record for the purpose of an appeal, and to the action which the appellate court appropriately may take where the requirements in that regard are not followed. To show how the questions arise and the circumstances, bearing on their solution, the case will be stated with some detail.

The suit was brought January 30, 1915, to obtain an ' injunction against the infringement of letters patent and to recover profits made out of the infringement. The answer put in issue the plaintiff’s title, the validity of' the letters patent and the infringement. A hearing, at which evidence both oral and documentary was received, resulted, February 20, 1917, ip an interlocutory decree whereby 'the issues were resolved in the plaintiff’s favor and the cause was referred to a master with directions to ascertain the profitsj to take evidence to that end and to ■ report' his"findings “together with all evidence” taken before him. - See 240 Fed. 749. The decree recited that the evidence underlying it was “filed ” in the cause.

The defendant neither did nor could appeal from the interlocutory decree; for it did not grant an injunction, the letters patent having expired shortly, before it. was entered. To have it reviewed the defendant must await the *375 final decree and appeal from that, which would bring under review the entire proceedings, if challenged in the assignments of error.

Up to ,and including the entry of the interlocutory decree the proceedings were had while Judge Humphrey was holding the district court. He died June 14,1918, while the master was proceeding with the accounting; and the subsequent proceedings in that court were had before Judge FitzHenry.

January 6, 1921, the master filed his report finding that the defendant’s profits from the infringement were $650,-044.83 and recommending that the plaintiff recover that sum. When filing the report the master also turned in the evidence taken before him, but omitted to say so in the report. He should have attached to the evidence á certificate stating, that it was the evidence and all the evidence taken before him, but he failed to attach any certificate. The clerk, although ^receiving the evidence as turned in by the master, omitted to put a filing endorsement thereon.

Both parties filed exceptions to the report, the exceptions purporting to be based on the evidence and treating it as duly reported. A hearing oh the exceptions resulted, April 30, 1924, in a final decree overruling the exceptions, confirming the réport and awarding the plaintiff the sum reported by.the master with' interest and costs. In a. memorandum opinion explaining the rulings the court indicated that the evidence taken by the' master was before it and was extensively examined.

July 1, 1924, the defendant sought and the district judge allowed an appeal .from the final decree to the Circuit Court of Appeals. '.Both that decree and the interlocutory decree were - challenged in the- assignments of error — each as being without support in and contrary to the evidence underlying it.

*376 At the appellant’s instance the time for filing a transcript of the record in the Court of Appeals was enlarged a year by successive orders of the district judge. During that period the Tappellant, on its own responsibility, prepared, printed and lodged with the clerk for certification a proposed- transcript. This transcript was in nine volumes, about 5,000 pages, and consisted mostly of evidence set forth without any approval or authentication by the court or judge and without appreciable attempt at condensation or narration, save as some exhibits may have been omitted.

April 24, 1925, after lodging the- proposed transcript with the clerk and delivering a printed copy thereof to the appellee, the appellant filed with the clerk and served on the appellee a praecipe designating what should be . included in the certified transcript — the designation conforming to what the appellant had embodied in the transcript proposed. The praecipe described the evidence to be included as “printed pages 24 to 1215 inclusive,” which were the pages of the proposed transcript purporting to set forth the evidence underlying the interlocutory decree, and certain other “ printed pages,” which were the pages of that transcript purporting, to contain the evidence taken before the master and accompanying his report. The appellee made no objection to the praecipe, to the designation of the evidence or to the form in which the same was set forth at the pages indicated; nor did.it file a praecipe for anything more. Accordingly, the clerk, on June 24, 1.925, attached to the proposed transcript his certificate stating that it was true, complete and prepared in accordance with the praecipe.

July 3, 1925, the appellant filed the certified transcript in the Court of Appeals, but omitted to file therewith the requisite copies. These were' supplied four months later.

*377 November 3,1925, the appellant requested the Court of Appeals to .divide the argument on the appeal by first hearing and deciding the questions arising on the interlocutory decree and, if it was sustained, then hearing and deciding the questions arising on the final- decree. The appellee objected to this, and in that connection suggested-(a) that all evidence appearing in the transcript be stricken therefrom because not stated in simple-and condensed, form and, where consiáting of the testimony , of witnesses, not stated in narrative form, but set forth in full in the original form contrary to nlle 75b of the Equity Rules, and (b) that the evidence received at the hearing which resulted in the interlocutory decree be stricken from the transcript for the further reason that it was not approved or authenticated by the court or judge as required’, by that rule. November 9, 1925, the request to divide the argument was denied and consideration of the sugges-' tions that the evidence be stricken from the transcript was postponed until the hearing on the merits.. „ .

January 29, 1926, at the appellant’s instance, the Court, of Appeals remitted the transcrjpt to the district court to enable it to “ amend its certificate of eyidence ” and to make “ such further amendment, correction or amplification as the district judge may, upon his attentiqn being brought to the matter, see fit to make respecting the certification of the record.” In this order the Court of Appeals expressly retained jurisdiction of the appeal, directed ; that the transcript when-corrected .be'returned to that court and reserved all. questions respecting the validity and effect of the correction until the hearing on the merits.

March 29, 1926, the appellant presented to the district court a motion asking it to “ append its- certificate of evidence ” to the remitted transcript ‘ and further to amend, correct or amplify the certification of the record *378 as it might deem proper. The appellee had due notice of this motion, appeared specially for the sole purpose of challenging the court's power to grant the motion, and declined to take any further part in that proceeding.

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Bluebook (online)
275 U.S. 372, 48 S. Ct. 183, 72 L. Ed. 318, 1928 U.S. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barber-asphalt-paying-co-v-standard-asphalt-rubber-co-scotus-1928.