Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad v. United States

54 Ct. Cl. 35, 1919 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 249, 1919 WL 1070
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJanuary 6, 1919
DocketNo. 30364
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 54 Ct. Cl. 35 (Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad v. United States, 54 Ct. Cl. 35, 1919 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 249, 1919 WL 1070 (cc 1919).

Opinion

Campbell, Chief Justice,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The court having been directed by order of the Supreme Court to make findings of fact relative to some matters not included in the findings heretofore made upon which the court’s decision was based, additional findings have been made.

The rules of the court, as well as orderly procedure, are so frequently overlooked or ignored by parties that we take occasion to quote the rules, and because of the reasons assigned for the motion to remand this case the court feels justified in making a statement from the record of its course through this court. Assuming the importance, materiality, and existence of the matters concerning which we are directed to make findings of fact, the record will demonstrate why they were not included in the findings originally made. They were not requested to be found, nor was there any evidence to support them if they had been requested before trial or when the case was decided. Incorporated with plaintiff’s motion for a new trial were certain questions designated a motion to amend the findings, and to these attention will be called.

The rules of the Supreme Court regulating appeals from, and governing the findings of fact in, the Court of Claims were promulgated at the December term, 1865 (3 Wall., vii; 3 C. Cls., xviii). Additional rules were promulgated in 1869 (rules 4 and 5, 9 Wall., vii), and a substitute for rule 5 was [37]*37promulgated January 29, 1879 (97 U. S., ii). Rule 2 was materially changed in 1873 (17 Wall., xvii).

These rules now provide for a finding of the facts “ established by the evidence in the nature of a special verdict, but not the evidence establishing them.” The findings, together with the court’s conclusion thereon, are to be filed, according’to rule 4, in open court at or before the time judgment is entered. Rule 5, as promulgated in 1879, is as follows:

“ In every such case, each party, at such time before trial and in such form as the court may prescribe, shall submit to it a request to find all the facts which the party considers proven and deems material to the due presentation of the case in the findings of facts.” (Italics ours.)

To give effect to this rule this court prescribed the form and the time for filing the requests. Rule 73, promulgated January 1,1916, contemplates their filing by plaintiff within 60 days after the completion of taking the testimony. Rule 74, promulgated many years ago, provides for their form as follows:

“ Such request must be in the following terms: ' The claimant, considering the facts hereinafter set forth to be proven, and deeming them material to the due presentation of this case in the findings of fact, requests the court to find the same as follows.’ ”

It then prescribes that following this request must be a statement in the form of distinct, numbered propositions of the facts which the party desires to have found, so arranged as to present a concise statement, in orderly sequence, of the whole case as the party desires it to appear in the findings of fact, and subjoined to each proposition of fact shall be references to the pages of the record, or the unprinted evidence, relied on in its support.

The same rule applies to defendant’s requests, and provision is made for objections by either party to requests by the other. The rules require requests for findings to be filed “before trial” and prescribe their form. Rule V of the Supreme Court' contemplates their filing “ before trial.” Cases do not go upon the court’s trial calendar until the requests and briefs of parties on both sides are filed, unless ordered to the calendar by the court.

[38]*38The court’s practice under Rule V and its own rules was stated in 1885 by Chief Justice Richardson in Union Pac. Ry. Co. case, 20 C. Cls., 508, where the rules are considered. He says:

“ The requests required to be submitted by the parties are for the assistance of the court in making up its findings and not for the purpose of obtaining specific rulings on each one separately in the form by them presented. The practice of the court is to give to the requests of the parties the fullest consideration and the most careful scrutiny, and without-finding or ruling upon each one separately, to make up an accurate and connected finding, in its own language, in such way as to cover each material fact asked for on either side, and to present to the Supreme Court on appeal a clear and concise statement of the case upon which questions of law may be there reviewed.”

This practice has continued, and there is a recognition that the question of the materiality of a requested fact, established by the evidence, may not rest alone in this court’s judgment. When upon the face of its findings it is stated, as uniformly is, that “upon the evidence the court makes the following findings of facts,” it is assumed that the facts found are those sustained by the evidence. As stated by Judge Richardson: “Facts alleged on the one side and.the other which the court does not find to be established are omitted as not proved.” (Roche's case, 18 C. Cls., 289.) But motions to amend are allowable as provided' for in the rules (see Lockwood case, 14 C. Cls., 648, 654), and they are granted where the party points to the evidence which the court on examination finds to have escaped its attention, or to have been omitted from its consideration. Formerly such motions could come in at any time during the term at which the case was decided and much delay occurred. The later rules seek to obviate such delays by requiring motions to amend findings or for a new trial to be filed within 60 days from the date of judgment.

The court must be governed by the evidence, and the purpose in requiring references in the requests to where it is to be found in the record is to aid the court’s investigation. If it were allowable for a plaintiff to rely upon defendant’s [39]*39mere request for a finding as an admission of the fact requested, the court would run counter to a rule, which it found necessary to announce years ago, to the effect that it would not be bound by admissions of representatives of the Government to its prejudice. (Jones & Laughlin’s case, 42 C. Cls., 178; Campbell's case, 19 C. Cls., 426, 429.) The reason for the ruling is obvious, and it does not prevent proper stipulation by the Attorney General or the Assistant Attorney General, duly signed and filed, when deemed appropriate. Not long since the Assistant Attorney General was allowed to disaffirm and withdraw, as improvidently made, a stipulation entered into by an attorney in the Department of Justice.

Under the rules of the court and its decisions it is not difficult for parties to make requests for findings in accordance with the well-established practice. But these requests are frequently mere conclusions of fact or of law intermixed with argument, find no support in the evidence adduced, and omit the references required by the rules. The present case is not exceptional as regards some of these objections.

Another objectionable course consists in omitting the form of request prescribed by rule 74 and asking the court to find “ whether or not ” stated propositions are true. This form has been criticised by the Supreme Court, and condemned by our own, as not complying with the purpose of the rule. (Winton case, 52 C.

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Bluebook (online)
54 Ct. Cl. 35, 1919 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 249, 1919 WL 1070, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delaware-lackawanna-western-railroad-v-united-states-cc-1919.