Pennsylvania Steel Co. v. New York City Ry. Co.

221 F. 440, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1593
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 10, 1915
DocketNos. 2-9, 2-33, 2-149, 3-37
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 221 F. 440 (Pennsylvania Steel Co. v. New York City Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennsylvania Steel Co. v. New York City Ry. Co., 221 F. 440, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1593 (S.D.N.Y. 1915).

Opinion

D ACOMBE, Circuit Judge.

The motions were noticed by Benjamin S. Catchings, Ésq., as solicitor of “Accident Creditors’ Fund, a corporation.” No such person has heretofore intervened in this proceeding or made any application to be allowed to do so. It has no present standing to notice motions such as these. Mr. Catchings, however, also gave notice on behalf of the “Tort Creditors’ Committee,” which was long ago recognized in these proceedings. Such notice therefore entitled [442]*442him to'a heáring ás solicitor or counsel for the committee, of which, indeed, he is himself a member.

. [1] When the first motion was called for hearing, counsel for the Tort Creditors’ Committee raised the objection that the judge then sitting could not hear the motion because it dealt with the question of seting aside orders he had himself made; it being stated that, when a similar motion was made a week before to the Circuit Court of Appeals, he had withdrawn from the bench, stating that he was disqualified to hear it. As member of an appellate court, a judge cannot sit on a review (in whatever form) of his own order. The present motion, .however, in the District Court, is directed to the vacation of four orders (one in each of the above causes) made by this same judge and entered in the District Court. A motion to set aside an order, on the alleged ground that it was improvidently made, may always be heard by the judge who made it. It not infrequently happens that some order is made in the District Court, which one party or the other wishes to modify or set aside, and makes a motion so to do. If when that motion appears on the motion calendar, some other judge is hearing that calendar, it is common practice in the District Court to send the parties to the judge who made the order. If they satisfy him that he had made a mistake, he corrects it himself; if they fail to do so, he denies the motion to vacate or modify, and from his refusal appeal may be taken, as it might have been from the original order. The protest now made by the moving party is noted, and his exception to the hearing of the motion is allowed, whereupon he presents his motions, without prejudice to his rights.

[2] The first motion is described in the notice as one “to vacate designation of Hon. E. Henry Eacombe tq hold District Court (in these proceedings) to exclusion of all other judges.” Incidentally it may be noted that the designation was not exclusive. It merely empowered the Circuit Judge designated in the orders “to hold the District Court in all matters pertaining to above-entitled cause.” Since the entry of the orders matters connected with these proceedings have occasionally come before one or other of the District Judges and been by them disposed of.

The four orders (one in each suit) which it is sought to vacate were made in conformity with the provisions of the Judicial Code:

“Sec. 18. Whenever, .in the judgment of the senior Circuit Judge of the circuit in which the district lies, or of the Circuit Justice assigned to such circuit, or of the Chief Justice, the public interest shall require, the said Judge, or Associate Justice, or Chief Justice, shall designate and appoint any Circuit Judge of the circuit to hold said District Court.”

■ This provision for designation of a Circuit Judge was not in the original bill. It was inserted, while said bill was under consideration in Congress, on application of the United States attorney for the Southern district of New York. Attention was called to the fact that, on whatever day the existence of the Circuit Court should terminate and its business be transferred to the District Court, there would probably be found on the equity side of court suits which had been in part tried and disposed of by interlocutory decrees or decretal orders before some [443]*443Circuit Judge, but in which his work had not yet been terminated by final decree. It was suggested that in such cases it would be better, involving- less delay, if the Circuit Judge were allowed to finish his incomplete work, rather than to require a District Judge to take up the unfinished cause and familiarize himself with its prior history. It was also suggested that, at least in this district, there would sometimes be occasions when the business of the court, increased as it was by old Circuit Court work, part of which had been theretofore done by Circuit Judges, might be so great that the District Judges could not promptly dispose of it, while at the same time some of the Circuit Judges might be able to spare time from the. work of the Circuit Court of Appeals. These suggestions apparently commended themselves to Congress, for the bill was amended so as to include the provision above quoted.

The old Circuit Court ceased to exist December 31, 1911. As had been expected, at that time there were, besides those above entitled, soiue causes in the Southern district of New York a.nd one or more in Connecticut which had been theretofore conducted each before a single Circuit Judge, and which had been well-progressed towards conclusion, but not yet completed. In each of these an order was made by the senior Circuit Judge, designating the particular Circuit Judge who had bad it. in charge to finish the cause. A like condition existed in this street surface railroad receivership. All prior proceedings had been had before the senior Circuit Judge. Many decrees and decretal orders had been made, which had been reviewed by the Circuit Court of Appeals. Very many claims had been liquidated. On December 31, 1911, at midnight the property which receivers had operated was turned over to purchaser at foreclosure sale. Further liquidations and accountings remained to be disposed of. The situation was like that in the other unfinished causes, and designation of the Circuit Judge was as desirable in the one case as in the others. The circumstance that, since he was the senior Circuit Judge, he would thereby designate himself seemed unimportant. There was no selection involved in the appointment, that was determined by the condition of the causes, and it seemed unnecessary to trouble the Circuit Justice or the Chief Justice of the United Plates with a mere detail of local administration. Had any one at the time advanced this technical objection, an order of designation with a statement of the situation could have been presented to one or other of them. But no one objected, the proceedings have gone on as usual for three years, much has been done, and the end of the voluminous and complicated proceeding is now in sight.

The notice of motion is accompanied by a statement of grounds on which it is asked that the orders of designation be vacated or the designation revoked. The proposition that the senior Circuit Judge could not designate himself in a case where conditions were such that designation should be made has been already considered. The suggestion that a Circuit Judge should not sit in a District Court, because appeal from his decision will come before his associates in the Court of. Appeals, is sufficiently disposed of by section 18, supra, and by a reference to the debates on the Judicial Code. One objection seems to be that, when a single judge has sat for a long time in the disposal of the [444]*444varying questions which arise in some extended proceeding such as a receivership, and has made numerous orders and decrees therein, he has formed and expressed opinions about questions which have been presented, and will be likely to conform his decision of future questions to the ideas of the law and practice he has already expressed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
221 F. 440, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-steel-co-v-new-york-city-ry-co-nysd-1915.