Krauss Brothers Lumber Co. v. Mellon

276 U.S. 386, 48 S. Ct. 358, 72 L. Ed. 620, 1928 U.S. LEXIS 291
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 9, 1928
Docket342
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 276 U.S. 386 (Krauss Brothers Lumber Co. v. Mellon) 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
Krauss Brothers Lumber Co. v. Mellon, 276 U.S. 386, 48 S. Ct. 358, 72 L. Ed. 620, 1928 U.S. LEXIS 291 (1928).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Taft

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Krauss Brothers Lumber Company is a corporation engaged in the wholesale lumber business, to whom the Interstate Commerce Commission, on the complaint of the •company, ordered the respondent railroad companies, the Mobile & Ohio Railroad and the Alabama Great Southern Railroad Company, to pay reparation in the amount of $10,356 because of unlawful demurrage charges illegally collected. The sole issue was whether any such power had been vested in the Commission as would give it juris *387 diction to decide that the charges should be refunded. Upon the Commission’s decision that it had such power, the parties, following its suggestion, filed formal stipulations under Rule V of the Commission’s practice admitting the amounts of the charges, the illegality of which had been declared by the Commission; and thereupon the reparation order was made.

The view of the defendants was that the Commission had no power to order a return of these demurrage charges, since by the.common law, quite outside the functions and powers of the Commission, a carrier could reject a tender of goods for initial transportation while there were existing embargoes, and in the same way could reject a demand for reconsignment to points embargoed at the time of initial acceptance for shipment, and so demurrage had accrued until the consignees accepted actual delivery of the goods. Payment not having been made on or before December 28, 1922, as directed by the Commission,-the present suit was filed by the petitioner as plaintiff against the respondents as defendants on March 20, 1923, in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama. The complaint conformed to the provisions of § 16 of the Interstate Commerce Act, and contained the findings and order of the Commission as a part thereof.

The case came on for trial, demurrers to the complaint were overruled, additional counts were inserted by amendment and a demurrer to them was also overruled. Thereupon the shipper, as plaintiff, duly introduced in the evidence the Commission’s original finding and other Commission proceedings, and closed its case. The respondents, over the shipper’s objection that the same were incompetent, were permitted to put in evidence the original pleadings before the Commission, and the testimony and other exhibits taken and filed in the Commis *388 sion’s proceedings. Thereupon the respondents closed their case and the shipper duly moved for a directed verdict, which motion was overruled by the District Court and an exception noted. The respondents thereupon moved for a directed verdict, which motion was granted and the shipper duly excepted.

A writ of error from the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit was then duly taken. The exhibits filed by the respondents were exceedingly voluminous, there being, among other things, a complete file of embargo circulars included as a part of the evidence which had been placed before the Commission in the hearings before it. The defeated party was anxious to avoid the printing of exhibits, which it did not deem of use to the reviewing court in passing on what it considered the only issue in the case, and attempted to secure this through stipulation of counsel and by an order of court. When the case reached the Circuit Court of Appeals, it declined to pass upon the merits of the case, for the following reason:

“ From the above it is plain that all of the evidence upon which the case was tried is not in the bill of exceptions. The order of Court sending up the documents in the original does not purport to make them a part of the bill of exceptions, the rule of this court could not incorporate them therein, and the agreement of counsel expressly excludes them.
“As applicable to the deficiency of the record here shown the well settled rule is this. Depositions, exhibits or certificates not contained in the bill of exceptions can not be considered even though found in the printed transcript. The parties by their affidavits or agreements can not cause that to become a bill of exceptions which is not such in a legal sense. Where instructions of the court are assigned as error on a motion to direct a verdict or otherwise, unless the entire evidence pertinent to the *389 question is in the bill, the Appellate Court must presume that the omitted evidence justified the instruction.”

Except as modified by statute, the rules as to bills of exceptions in the federal courts áre the same as they were at common law. By § 17 of the Judiciary Act of 1789, ch. 20, 1 Stat. 73, 83, all the courts of the United States were given power to grant new trials in cases where there had been a trial by jury, for reasons for which new trials had usually been granted in the courts of law. This was held to adopt the common law rule on the subject. Parsons v. Bedford, 3 Pet. 433. Prior to the statute of Westminster II, 13th Edw. I, ch. 31, a writ of error at common law could be had only for an error apparent on the face of the record, or for an error in fact such as the death of a party before judgment, but by that old statute, which is now to be treated as common law, it was provided that exceptions might, by bills of exceptions, be made a part of the record and so be reached by the writ of error. In this way so much of the facts of the case as was necessary to malee plain the question of law on which the exception was founded, was incorporated in the record, but the trial justice, as a witness to the bill, had to put his seal to the instrument and, in the reviewing court, might be commanded to appear at a certain date either to confess or deny his seal, and then if' he could not deny his seal the court of review proceeded to judgment according to the same exception as it ought to be allowed or disallowed. Nalle v. Oyster, 230 U. S. 165, 176, 177; Duncan v. Landis, 106 Fed. 839, 844; Defiance Fruit Co. v. Fox, 76 N. J. L. 482, 489.

By the Act of June 1, 1872, ,ch. 255, 17 Stat. 196, 197, it was provided that a bill of exceptions allowed in any cause should be deemed sufficiently authenticated if signed by the judge of the court in which the cause was tried or by the presiding judge thereof, if more than one judge sat *390 at the trial of the cause, without any seal of the court annexed thereto, and this became § 953 of the Revised Statutes. Since the passage of that Act, it is not necessary to seal a bill of exceptions. Herbert v. Butler, 97 U. S. 319, 320; Maloney v. Adsit, 175 U. S. 281, 285, but the signature is still necessary. Origet v. United States, 125 U. S. 240; United States ex rel. Kinney v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 222 U. S. 283.

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Bluebook (online)
276 U.S. 386, 48 S. Ct. 358, 72 L. Ed. 620, 1928 U.S. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krauss-brothers-lumber-co-v-mellon-scotus-1928.