after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
By the 32d rule as amended, (
Nor do we find sufficient reason for the allowance of oral argument in the character of the questions involved ; nor in the solicitude of appellants’ counsel to repel in that form suggestions in the briefs of counsel for appellee questioning the propriety of the application for the allowance of the appeal, as we perceive no ground calling for defence from imputation in that regard. It is sufficient to dismiss the rémarks referred to with the observation that they are lacking in 'the courtesy and temperance of language due from the members of the bar, and as such obnoxious to animadversion. The condition of the record justified the application, and the allowance of the appeal, although upon consideration we are of opinion:that it cannot- be sustained.
The contention is that the' appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals was unauthorized and void, because the allowance of the appeal to this court, -May 6, 1891, vested in it exclusive jurisdiction of the cause, which could not be divested by a vacation of that allowance by the Circuit Court; and also because the original final decree was entered October 20,1890, one of the days of the May term, 1890, of the Circuit Court, while the appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals was prayed, allowed, and perfected on July 2, 1891, and at the May term, *35 1891, of the Circuit Court, contrary, as insisted, to the rules and the statute.
1. The appeal to this court was allowed on condition that bond should be given as designated, but this was not done nor any other step in effectuation of the appeal taken, and the order of allowance was vacated on a subsequent day of the same term.
The general power of the Circuit Court over its own judgments, decrees, and orders during the existence of the term at which they are made is undeniable, and an order allowing an appeal is subject to that power so long as the appeal remains unperfected and the cause has not passed into the jurisdiction of the appellate tribunal.'
Ex parte
Roberts,
There is nothing to the contrary in
Feans
v.
State
Bank,
Equally unavailing is the reference- to the provision of the joint resolution of March 3, 1891, “to provide for the organization of the Circuit Courts of Appeals,” 26 Stat. 1115, that nothing in the act of March 3, 1891, 26 'Stat. 826, c. 517, should be held or construed to impair the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court in any case then pending before it, or in respect of any case wherein the appeal had been taken to that court before the first day of July, 1891, for this merely preserved the jurisdiction as stated, and did not operate to give jurisdiction as to appeals not perfected, which would not other■wise have existed.
In our judgment the Circuit Court had power to vacate the allowance of the 5th of May during the term and allow the appeal of July 2, and this, even if after March 3 and prior to *36 July 1, 1891, an appeal'might nave been taken either to this court or the Circuit Court of Appeals, a point suggested, but upon which'it is unnecessary to pass.
2. The decree dismissing complainants’ bill was entered on October 20, 1890, but an application for a rehearing was made shortly thereafter and during the same term, but not disposed , of until May 5, 1891.
The rule is that if a-motion or a petition for rehearing is made or presented in season and entertained by the court, the time limited for. a writ of error of appeal does not begin to run until the motion or petition is disposed of. Until then the judgment or decree does not take final effect for the purposes of the writ of error'or appeal.
Brockett
v. Brockett, 2 How: 238, 249;
Texas
&
Pacific Railway
v.
Murphy,
If this case falls within that category, then the six months within which the appeal had to be taken under section 11 of the Judiciary Act-of March 3, 1891, did not commence to run until May 5, 1891, and the appeal was in time.
It is true that equity rule 88 provides that “ no rehearing shall be granted after the term -at which the final decree of the court shall have been entered and recorded, -if' an appeal lies to the Supreme Court;” but if this petition for rehearing was filed in season and entertained by the court, then the • decree, although entered in form, did not discharge the parties ' from' their attendance in the cause, and they were bound to , follow the petition thus pending to the next term. The suit was thereby prolonged until' the application was disposed of in- the regular course of proceeding. This is expressly so ruled in Goddard v. Ordway, supra.
In Giant Powder Co. v. California Vigorit Powder Co., 5 Fed. Rep. 197; S. C. 6 Sawyer, 508, it was said by Mr. Justice Field that equity-rule 88 applies only where no petition is presented during the term, and the numerous cases in which it has been held that the time limited for an appeal does not begin to run until a petition for a rehearing properly presented has been disposed of, sustain that view. The decree does not in-legal effect remain final while the petition is pending, and *37 the prescription of rule 88 must be construed to mean that a rehearing cannot be granted after the lapse of the term unless application is made therefor during the. term, and being entertained, the decree is thereby prevented from passing beyond the control of the court. The entertaining of the petition keeps the jurisdiction alive, and the granting of the rehearing may be made absolute, or denied thereafter, as the court may determine.
But it is said this cannot be the result, under either statute or rule, of the mere, filing of a motion or petition for rehearing, and that it does not affirmatively appear in this case that the motion or petition was entertained by the court. But we should be inclined to hold, if a decision in that regard were called for, that, since the application was passed upon as having been duly made, the presumption must be indulged that it ivas entertained by the court in the first instance and during the term at which the decree was pronounced.
3. Apart from these considerations, however, this is an appeal from a decree entered by the Circuit Court in corn formity with' the mandate from the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit.' That court took jurisdiction, passed upon the case, and determined by its judgment that the appeal had been properly taken. If error was committed in so doing, it is not for the Circuit Court to pass upon that question. The Circuit Court could not do otherwise than carry out the mandate from the Court of Appeals, and could not refuse to do so on the ground of ivant of jurisdiction in itself or in the appellate court.
Skillern's Executors
v.
May’s
Executors,
