This сase presents irregularities in practice which we think should not be overlooked.
The suit was brought by electric utility corporations to restrain the defendants, Greenwood County, South Carolina, and its officials, from constructing and operating a local electric power plant and from issuing bonds and making сontracts for that purpose. Harold L. Ickes, as Federal Emergency Administrator of Public Works, was permitted to intervene. He filed an answer showing an agreement dated December 8, 1934 (after the commencement of the suit) between the Government and Greenwood County for the making of a loan by the Govеrnment to aid the County in financing its project upon stated terms and conditions. By amended and supplemental bill, plaintiffs challenged the constitutional authority of the Federal Government to make the loan. Defendants’ motion to dismiss for want of equity was denied.
Appellant Ickes informed the appellate court that, since the taking of the appeal, the contract of December 8, 1934, had been terminated and a new agreement substi
“The above entitled cause coming on to be heard on the motion of Harold L. Ickes, Federal Emergency Administrator of Public Works, one of the appellants, that the said cause be remanded to the District Court for the Western District of South Carolina to the end that that court may reconsider its dеcision in the light of the contract entered into between the United States and the County of Greenwood, South Carolina, dated November 30, 1935:
“It is ordered that said cause be remanded to the said District Court to the end that that court may reconsider its decision in the light of the said contract and may take such further аction as maybe appropriate in the premises.
“The court below is requested to hear the cause thus remanded with all convenient dispatch and to certify his findings of fact and conclusions of law to this court as soon as possible, to the end that the cause may be heard by this court upon appeal on the first Monday in January 1936 in accordance with the agreement of counsel this day made in open court to the effect that they would press for a speedy hearing of the cause and docket the appeal from the decision of the court below for hearing on the date аforesaid without reference to the rules regulating appeals, filing and printing of briefs, etc.”
The order was ambiguous. While without a vacatur of the final decree the District Court could not reconsider the cause and determine it anew, the Circuit Court of Appeals
Defendants then moved that the record on appeal be supplemented by adding all the testimony “offered, heard or excluded by the court,” together with the exhibits. The motion was granted. Defendants further moved that their answers “be taken as amended and supplemented in аccordance with the above mentioned proof and evidence.” That motion was denied. Defendants then moved that the answers of the' defendant “be taken as supplemented and/or amended by adding thereto the contract of November 30, 1935,” between the United States and Greenwood County. That motion was also denied.
The court filed its decision entitled “Report to Circuit Court of Appeals of findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to order of remand.” The court recited the proceedings and in particular adverted to the fact that plaintiffs’ counsel prior to the introduction of testimony had stated that the only pleadings and issues before the court were the pleadings and issues “prior to the entry of the final decree,” that no supplemental pleadings had been filed, and that defendants’ counsel had admitted that the issues were those “formed by the present pleadings, and that under the terms of the order of remand there was not time to file supplemental pleadings.” The court' said that it was pursuant to that understanding that the testimony had been heard. After reciting the final motions of the parties and its rulings, the court explained that it had overruled the motion to amend the pleadings because the сourt thought that it did not come “within the scope of the order” and that it had no right “to allow an amendment under the status of this case, and, particularly, that it would be an abuse of discretion
The court then made findings of fact the first of which embraced the statement: “No motion was made in the trial court after the filing of the final decree and prior to the end of the term when the Court had lost jurisdiction, nor has any since been made before it to reopen the case because of after-discovered evidence, or because of a chаnge of the law, or because of its overlooking any material point of law or fact.” Following its findings of fact as to the new contract, the court presented its views of the “legal issues,” saying: “As thorough an investigation of the authorities as has been possible under the circumstances since the order of rеmand was issued, taken in connection with considerable previous investigation on the issues involved, has convinced me that the law does not permit a reopening of the evidence in this case as to the aims and purposes of the Public Works Administration, nor as to the reasonableness of the rates сharged by plaintiffs, as to the adequacy of plaintiffs’ service, and other issues about which evidence was taken, and which were fully determined upon that evidence, at the former trial. Furthermore, the promptness required for the rehearing by this Court, and its determination, indicates conclusively to my mind that the Circuit Court оf Appeals did not intend by its order that the pleadings should be amended and the evidence reopened to allow the pres
The District Court then set forth its conclusion of law that the substitution of the new contract did not call for a modification of its former conclusions. The court added that it was its judgment that if the excluded testimony at the last hearing should have been admitted, “it would be insufficient, as a matter of law, to furnish a basis for any modification of my former conclusions of law”; that “whatever might be the purposes, poliсies, and practices of the Public Works Administration in reference to competitors, in financing the instant enterprise the result to the plaintiffs would be the same” and that the lower rates which the enterprise might be able to charge because of Government aid through its loan and grant “would effectively establish a ‘yardstick’ or rate of charge which plaintiffs must inevitably meet, or have their business pro tanto destroyed.”
The climax of misunderstanding was reached in the court’s decree. It recited the application of defendant Ickes “that the court reconsider” its former decree in the light of the new contract “and set aside and vаcate said decree,” and thereupon adjudged that “the application to set aside and vacate the decree for injunction entered and filed herein under date of August 26, 1935, be, and the same is hereby, denied.”
On a certification of these proceedings, the Circuit Court of Appеals interpreted its order of remand. The court said that it thought that “in view of the changed situation, the lower court should be revested with jurisdiction of the entire cause with power to enter such decree as might be deemed appropriate.” Ignoring the fact that the District Court had not so regarded the order, that the pleadings had not been amended and the case properly retried, the Court of Appeals proceeded to pass upon the question of the validity of the Act of Congress under which the federal loan was to be made, and of the action of the Public Works Administrator, reversed the deсree appealed from and directed the dismissal of the bill for want of equity. 81 F. (2d) 986. We granted certiorari.
We thus have a situation in which both courts below have failed to act in accordance with the standards of proper procedure. Where it appears upon appeal that the controversy has become entirely moot, it is the duty of the appellate court to set aside the decree below and to remand the cause with directions to dismiss. See
United States
v.
Hamburg-American Co.,
Delusive interests of haste should not be permitted to obscure substantial requirements of orderly procedure. There is no exigency here which demands that these requirements should not be enforced. The cause was heard in the Circuit Court of Appeals upon a record improperly made up. That the cause may be properly heard and determined, we reverse the decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals and remand the cause with directions that the decrees entered by the District Court be vacated, that the parties be permitted to amend their pleadings in the light of the existing facts, and that the cause be retried upon the issues thus presented.
We express no opinion on the relevancy or effect of the evidence, or otherwise upon the merits.
Reversed.
