United States v. American Surety Co.

126 F. 811, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5205
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine
DecidedDecember 22, 1903
DocketNos. 513, 182
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 126 F. 811 (United States v. American Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. American Surety Co., 126 F. 811, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5205 (circtdme 1903).

Opinion

PUTNAM, Circuit Judge.

These cases were heard together on sundry motions yesterday. At that time we intimated orally to the parties our conclusions on the various matters presented to us, but, to avoid the mistakes which are liable to arise from the complications involved in these cases, we will put on file this opinion.

The condition of both cases is sufficiently shown by the opinions of this court in American Surety Company v. Lawrenceville Cement Company, 110 Fed. 717, and in United States of America v. American Surety Company of New York, 110 Fed. 913, and in the opinions of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals in The Thomas Laughlin Company v. American Surety Company of New York, 114 Fed. 627, 51 C. C. A. 247, and American Surety Company of New York v. United States of America, 123 Fed. 287.

The first application submitted to us in the equity case was in behalf of the surety company, to the substantial effect that, among other things, we should enjoin the United States from proceeding in the suit at law without first submitting themselves to the jurisdiction of this [812]*812court in the pending equity case. For reasons already fully stated in our previous opinions, showing that the right to recoup against the United States as a litigant does not go so far as to authorize us to grant such relief, we dismissed this application. There was also submitted a petition in behalf of the respondents, as claimants, for a final distribution on the principles stated in our previous opinion, no Fed. 717. That' we have granted, as will appear by the order at the close of this opinion.

There was also an application in behalf of the United States to be permitted to appear specially in the equity suit to raiáe certain questions of jurisdiction. The attorney for the United States for this district, having been inquired of by the court whether the United States would intervene further than as stated in this application, replied in the negative, whereupon the application was denied.

In the suit at law, as appears by the opinion already referred to (123 Fed. 287), a mandate had been filed as follows:

“The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, and this case is remanded to that court, with directions to set aside the order adjudging sufficient the plaintiff’s plea to defendant’s motion after verdict, to reinstate the defendant’s motion as to the amount of judgment, and to take further proceedings not inconsistent with our opinion filed this day.”

Judgment was accordingly entered setting aside the order adjudging the plaintiff’s plea sufficient, reinstating the defendant’s motion, and giving time to the United States to answer the same. It was also stated orally that, if the answer of the United States raised an issue of fact, the case would necessarily be held for the jury, unless the parties agreed to waive the jury as provided by statute. We also said that, in the event further distribution was made by the American Surety Company in the chancery suit, according to the order entered therein appended hereto, an opportunity would be given the American Surety Company to set up that fact, acting seasonably, either by a new motion of the kind discussed in the opinion of the Circuit Court of Appeals in American Surety Company of New York v. United States of America, or by an amendment to that motion — this with the view of making sure that all questions were got into the record in the suit at law, so that all rights might be properly settled therein.

In disposing, however, of the substantial questions before us, we are embarrassed by the line of reasoning found in the opinion of the Circuit Court of Appeals in American Surety Company of New York v. United States of America. Our attention is specially directed to the fact that that opinion observes that the Court of Appeals was “unable fully to comprehend the course of procedure.” This reference, as well as certain omissions in that opinion, accentuates the difficulty which we have in dealing with both cases. The defendant’s motion referred to in the mandate is quite fully stated in the opinion of •the Court of Appeals, and it is treated in that opinion as an attempt to bring into the suit at law payments made according to the decrees in equity subsequent to the verdict in the suit at law, for the purpose of reducing the amount for which judgment should be rendered in the suit at law'to the extent of these payments. The opinion, therefore, necessarily holds th'e mere fact of payment is a matter of substance, [813]*813which, consequently, as it occurred subsequent to the verdict, should properly have been taken cognizance of in the Circuit Court on a plea of puis darrein continuance. Following this out to its logical conclusion, the result might be that the United States would secure judgment to the extent of the balance of the penal sum of the bond which the proceedings would thus show remaining unpaid, and thus, by a mere matter of priority, defeat the possibility of the respondents and claimants in the suit in equity receiving anything beyond the percentage already in their hands. Inasmuch as all the claims, including that of the United States, were pending at the same time; this would be equitable, unless the rule of pro rata among all pending claimants, adopted by us in the opinions which we have passed down, already referred to, and in the proceedings in the suit in equity, are rejected. Even then the result would be unjust, because the respondents in the suit in equity commenced suits against the American Surety Company long before "the suit of the United States was begun, and would have obtained their judgments in those suits, except for the fact that we held them under injunction. Thus, in any view of the case, their obedience to the process of this court in equity would subject them to a .gross injustice.

On the other hand, in the decree entered in the cause in equity on the 13th day of September, 1901, which is the same referred to in the order appended to this opinion, and in the opinion accompanying that' decree, we maintained, so far as we had jurisdiction so to do, the rule of equality on the pro rata basis as among all pending claims, and directed distribution accordingly. All this occurred before the trial of the suit at law in behalf of the United States, in which the verdict of September 24, 1901, was rendered, although, on account of appeal being taken, the payments thus ordered were not made until after the decision of the Court of Appeals on the appeal, which was in 1902. In our disposition of the motion of the American Surety Company in the common-law suits which came before the Court of Appeals, and with reference to which our action was reversed, we regarded the time when payments were made as wholly immaterial; assuming that the decree of September 13, 1901, establishing the rights of all the claimants, to which decree the American Surety Company was a party, was the only substantial thing. For the reasons already stated, however, to carry out to its logical conclusion that the mere fact of the payment we have referred to was a substantial matter would do such gross injustice that, under the peculiar circumstances which we have stated, we are forced to assume that all the conditions were not brought to the attention of the Court of Appeals, and that that court has not in fact rejected our theory of a pro rata equality. Consequently we are making our present orders such as to give full effect to that theory.

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Bluebook (online)
126 F. 811, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-american-surety-co-circtdme-1903.