Petitioners have pending before this court appeals from decrees of the district court, docketed as No. 26097, Belcher v. Birmingham Trust Nat’l Bank, as Trustee, but not yet calendared for hearing. In this separate proceeding for mandamus or writ of prohibition against the district judge they seek to have us decide that he was without jurisdiction in No. 26097. This we decline to do.
Charles Belcher, a citizen of Florida, is the beneficiary of a trust of which Birmingham.' Trust National Bank is trustee. The principal trust assets are minority interests in various enterprises of the W. E. Belcher family. Charles Belcher sued in the district court against: (1) the trustee bank, charging it with breach of fiduciary duties; (2) the “Brady Belcher group,” who hold the majority interests in the Belcher enterprises, charging them with fraud, mismanagement and dissipation of assets; (3) Mrs. Davis, another owner of a minority interest; (4) the enterprises themselves, chiefly one corporation and two partnerships. All these defendants are Alabama citizens. 1 *The bank by cross-claim made charges against the Brady Belcher group similar to those asserted by Charles. Mrs. Davis filed a cross-claim against the Brady Belcher group similar to that of the bank.
The district judge declined repeatedly to realign the bank as a party plaintiff, which would have destroyed diversity. In the decrees appealed from he made specific findings that there was an actual and substantial controversy between the plaintiff and the bank.
Decrees were entered granting to Charles extensive relief — an injunction, accounting, dissolution of two partnerships, and other relief, against the Brady Belcher group, and a substantial judgment, in the amount of several hundred thousand dollars, against the bank for negligence in administering the trust (the bank as cross claimant was given a right of indemnity for this judgment against two members of the Brady Belcher group). Effectuation of the decrees was commenced. The district court appointed receivers who proceeded to dissolve the two partnerships. The trustee and Mrs. Davis filed a motion for dissolution of the corporation. Meanwhile the Brady Belcher group appealed under 28 U.S.C.A. § 1292(a) (1), (2).
2
Several motions for stays have been denied in the district court and this court, including a motion (in No. 26097) submitted on briefs and oral argument to a panel of Tuttle- and Dyer, Circuit Judges, and Mehrtens, District Judge, and denied with written opinion on May 21, 1968.
*16 The Brady Belcher group then filed this action, No. 24466, and the court issued a show cause order. By various motions, all unsuccessful, petitioners have sought to delay the normal movement of No. 26097 toward calendaring for hearing and submission. The petitioners acknowledge, as they must, that their purpose is to shortcut the pending' appeal, by employing mandamus as a vehicle for decision of the jurisdictional issue, which they admit will, if decided in their favor, render the appeal substantially moot.
They are met at the threshold with the fact that in the opinion of May 21, 1968 denying a stay, Judges Tuttle, Dyer and Mehrtens decided,
inter alia,
that there was “a great likelihood that, as between plaintiff and Birmingham Trust, there were bona fide, hostile and adverse interests upon which diversity jurisdiction may have been properly founded * *
Petitioner’s argument is twofold. First, that there is “serious doubt” whether the district court had jurisdiction, therefore mandamus is available in aid of our appellate jurisdiction and to confine an inferior court to a lawful exercise of its prescribed jurisdiction, Roche v. Evaporated Milk Ass’n,
As to the first point, the panel which on May 21, denied a stay held: “We have found nothing to support the ultimate conclusion stated that
appellants
would be irreparably harmed by dissolving the partnerships * *
There is no lack of jurisdiction apparent on the fact of the record, no showing of a judicial usurpation of power, Will v. United States,
We decline to frustrate the ordinary process of appeal and to dilute the extraordinary circumstances under which mandamus is an appropriate remedy. In so deciding we need not pause to determine whether the May 21 denial of a stay is or is not the law of the case, for in any event the writ should not issue. Mandamus is a drastic and extraordinary writ reserved for genuinely extraordinary cases. Ex Parte Fahey,
This case is long and intricate, it involves great amounts of money and property, the losers disagree with the judge’s findings of fact and his application of the law thereto, and pending appeal they want to maintain such of the status quo ante helium as is left. All these matters are of great importance to the losers, but they are not extraordinary in the legal sense.
Neither the denial of the writ, nor anything we say in this opinion, is a determination of whether the district court did or did not have jurisdiction, or an indication of our views on that issue. The correctness of the trial court’s rulings on jurisdiction is an issue to be decided in the pending appeal under normal and ordinary appellate procedures, upon detailed consideration of the record, and application of established standards of judicial review.
On oral argument there has been speculation by counsel whether pending the appeal the trial judge proposes to require the corporation be dissolved. No basis has been shown for this court to interfere with his discretion in that regard, and we do not do so. We do suggest — and it is a suggestion and neither a mandate nor an indication that we feel there are grounds for a mandate — that he may wish to consider deferring dissolution until after disposition of the appeal. We make no such suggestion concerning other enterprises or disposition of assets of the partnerships.
The writ is denied.
Notes
. Another Florida citizen intervened as a plaintiff.
. The bank has cross-appealed from portions of the decrees adverse to it, entered pursuant to Rule 54(b), Fed.R.Civ.P.
. E. g., Goldstein v. Groesbeck,
. Following a prehearing conference, held before a judge of this panel to try to establish an understanding between this court and counsel of just what record was before the court in support of and in opposition to the application for a writ, the petitioners requested that the entire record in No. 26097 be considered. Both sides urged special consideration of identified parts of the record.
