The Chateaugay Ore & Iron Co.

128 U.S. 544, 9 S. Ct. 150, 32 L. Ed. 508, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 2249
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 10, 1888
Docket3. Original
StatusPublished
Cited by103 cases

This text of 128 U.S. 544 (The Chateaugay Ore & Iron 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
The Chateaugay Ore & Iron Co., 128 U.S. 544, 9 S. Ct. 150, 32 L. Ed. 508, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 2249 (1888).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Blatchford,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

We are. of opinion that the writ of mandamus must issue. By rules 67 and 69 of the Circuit Court for the Southern District of New York, which took effect on the first Monday of August, 1838, it is provided that, when exceptions to the opinion of the court are taken by either party on the trial of . a cause, he shall not be required to prepare his bill of exceptions át the trial, but shall merely reduce the exceptions to •writing, or the court will, on request, note' the point, and the bill of exceptions shall afterwards be drawn up, amended, and settled, under the following regulations: The bill of exceptions shall be prepared and a copy thereof served upon the opposite party before judgment is rendered on the verdict; the oppo *552 site party may, within, four days after such service, propose amendments to the bill and serve a copy upon the party who prepared it; if the parties cannot agree in regard to the amendments, then, within four days after such service of a copy of the amendments, either party may give to the other notice to appear within a convenient time, and not more than four days after .service of such notice, before the-judge who tried the cause, to have the bill and amendments set-, tied; the judge shall thereupon correct and settle the same as he shall deem to consist with the truth of the facts; but, if ■ the parties shall omit, within the several times above limited, unless the same shall be enlarged by a judge, the one to propose amendments, and the other to notify an appearance before the judge, they shall respectively be deemed, the former to have agreed to the bill as prepared, and the latter to have agreed to the amendments as proposed; and if the party omit to make a bill within the time above limited, unless the same shall be enlarged as aforesaid, he shall be deemed to have waived his right thereto.

A corresponding practice prevails in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, by its rules, with variations as to time. Under .those rules, a case, or a case and exceptions^ or a case containing exceptions, on a trial before a jury, is to be made, and a copy thereof served on the opposite party, within ten days after the trial. The party served may, within ten days thereafter, propose amendments thereto and serve a copy on the party proposing the case or exceptions, who may within four days thereafter serve the opposite party with a notice that the case or exceptions, witli the proposed amendments, will be submitted at a time and place to be specified in the notice, not less than four nor more than twenty days after service of such notice, to the justice before whom the' cause was tried, for settlement.

It is apparent that both parties in this case acted upon the view that "the rule of' practice of the Supreme Court of the State applied to the case; because the plaintiff, instead of serving on the defendant his proposed amendments to the bill within four days after the 3d of March,, as required by *553 the rule of the Circuit Court, waited ten days, under the rule of the Supreme Court of the State, and then, on the 13th of March, obtained a stipulation from the * defendant giving ten days’ additional time to prepare and serve amendments. It may be that the defendant, in serving, on the 27th of March, a notice of settlement of fourteen days, for the 10th of April, on the plaintiff, intended to comply, as it in fact did comply, with the requirement of the rule of the state court that such notice should be a notice of not less than four nor more than twenty days; yet it also sufficiently complied with rule 67 of the Circuit Court, which réquired a notice of not more than four days, because a notice of four days, served on the 27th of March, would have been for the 31st of March, and Judge Shipman was not then within the Southern District of New York, so as to be able to perform any judicial act there, nor did he come there, so as to be able to do so, until the 2d of April, 1888. Under these circumstances, the notice for the 10th of April was a reasonable compliance with the rule of the Circuit Court.

We are of opinion that the practice and rules of the state court do not apply to proceedings in the Circuit Court taken for the purpose of reviewing in this court a judgment of the Circuit Court, and that such rules and practice, embracing the preparation, perfecting, settling, and signing of a bill of exceptions, are not within the “ practice, pleadings, and forms and modes of proceeding” in the Circuit Court which are required, by § 914 of the Revised Statutes, to conform as near as may be ” to the practice, pleadings, and forms and modes of proceeding existing at the time in like causes in the courts of record of the State ” within which the Circuit Court is held, “ any rule of court to the contrary notwithstanding.”

This court has had occasion several times to construe § 914. In Nudd v. Burrows, 91 U. S. 426, a state statute required a judge to instruct a jury only as to the law of a case, and provided that the written instructions of the court should be taken by the jury in their retirement and returned with the verdict, and that papers read in evidence might b¿ carried from the bar by the jury. The court charged the jury upon the facts *554 and refused to permit them to take to their room the written instructions given by the court or papers read in evidence. This court held that this was not error, because the personal conduct and administration of the judge in the discharge of his separate functions was not practice or pleading, or a form or mode of proceeding, within the meaning of those terms in ■the act of Congress.

In Indianapolis Railroad Co. v. Horst, 93 U. S. 291, a state statute prescribed that the judge should require the jury to answer special interrogatories in addition to finding a general verdict. This court held that that provision did not apply to the courts of the United States; and that the act of Congress did not apply to a motion for a new trial, nor affect the power of the Circuit Court to grant or refuse a new trial in its discretion. This last point was again so ruled in Newcomb v. Wood, 97 U. S. 581.

In harmony with the foregoing decisions, we are of opinion that § 914 does not extend to the means of enforcing or revising a decision once made by the Circuit Court. Section 914 does not extend to proceedings to enforce a judgment, because by § 916 special provisions are made as to a remedy by execution or otherwise, to reach the property of a judgment debtor, by borrowing from the laws of the State only those remedies then already existing, or which should thereafter be adopted by general rules of the Circuit Court. Lamaster v. Keeler, 123 U. S. 376.

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Bluebook (online)
128 U.S. 544, 9 S. Ct. 150, 32 L. Ed. 508, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 2249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-chateaugay-ore-iron-co-scotus-1888.