Bowles v. Hudspeth
This text of 62 F. Supp. 803 (Bowles v. Hudspeth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
I wonder if you realize what you are talking about when, in eighty-four District Courts in the country you put thousands and thousands, accumulating over a period of years, of businessmen under the tutelage of Judges to run their business in a certain way. You just used the expression “put him under the control of the Court.” If you had just a hundred lumbermen under the control of this Court, if you really mean what you are saying, there would not be time to do anything else except go in the lumber business.
One of the modern miracles is the utilization of the statutory injunction by every Government agency as a means of enforcing its legislation.1 You OPA lawyers are in Government service for a brief time. You will drop out and return to private practice and this will all be like a dream to you, when you get to practicing law for yourselves, but here I am expected to stay permanently running the Hudspeth Lumber Company, along with other business enterprises, to make sure they don’t cut dimension lumber one and one-half inch dressed on one side, instead of one and five-eighths.
Now that is the theory of the thing, and in this court we are very reluctant to add to the accumulated files in the Clerk’s office of the hundreds, maybe thousands of injunctions that have been asked, and in many cases have been given, to compel compliance with technical business practices.2
[804]*804So I repeat what I said a minute ago, before I sign the form of injunction you have prepared, as in every other injunction case — I am not treating it any differently — I will consider very carefully the language of the injunction, even though you have stipulated to it I may sign the injunction based upon the stipulation, or I may require testimony.3
A potential prosecution for criminal contempt inheres in every injunction that is issued.4 It is possible that some day I will come out here and a man, whose name I have forgotten, will be in for violation of an injunction issued five or ten years ago. I will be asked to fine him, possibly to send him to jail. Every time I sign one I must keep that in mind. It is a very convenient temporary device for the Government agency ; I understand that. You can then lay the case aside and start another. But when we sign it we take it on forever. We are married to it; and so, as in the marriage engagement, we enter into it solemnly.5 Just be[805]*805cause it is handy to you, and because the defendant is willing to do it, that is not the end of it at all.
No opinion for publication.
“To make the infraction of a criminal statute also a contempt of court is essentially an invention to evade the safeguards of criminal procedure and to change the tribunal for determining guilt”. Frankfurter and Greene, “The Labor Injunction” 107; citing to the same effect the address (1912) of the President of the American Bar Association. Compare as to jury trial Nye v. United States, 313 U.S. 33, 47, 53, 61 S.Ct. 810, 85 L.Ed. 1172; In the Matter of Michael, 66 S.Ct. 78.
Excepting Walling, Adm’r v. Men’s Hats, Inc., D.C., 1945, 61 F.Supp.
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62 F. Supp. 803, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowles-v-hudspeth-ord-1945.