EX PARTE COLLETT
No. 206, Misc.
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued February 7, 1949.—Decided May 31, 1949.
337 U.S. 55
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE VINSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case we must decide whether the venue provisions of the Judicial Code1 render applicable the doctrine of forum non conveniens to actions under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act.2 Petitioner instituted such an action against the Louisville and Nashville Railroad in October, 1947, in the court below, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Illinois. No trial was had before September 1, 1948, the effective date of the present Judicial Code.3 Thereafter the Railroad filed a motion to transfer the case to the District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky.
The court below found that all 35 witnesses and the petitioner himself live in Irvine, Kentucky, which also was the scene of the accident; that Irvine is 420 miles, “approximately twenty-four hours . . . by public transportation,” from East St. Louis, where the court below sits, but only 26 miles from Richmond and 48 from Lexington, in which two cities the District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky sits. Furthermore, the court below determined that jury schedules at both Richmond and Lexington made early trial possible. Thus concluding that the transfer would serve the convenience of parties and witnesses, and would be in the interest of
Prior to the current revision of Title 28 of the United States Code, forum non conveniens was not available in Federal Employers’ Liability Act suits. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co. v. Kepner, 314 U. S. 44 (1941); Miles v. Illinois Central R. Co., 315 U. S. 698 (1942); see Gulf Oil Corp. v. Gilbert, 330 U. S. 501, 505 (1947). The new Code, however, provides that “For the convenience of parties and witnesses, in the interest of justice, a district court may transfer any civil action to any other district or division where it might have been brought.” This is § 1404 (a). The reviser‘s notes, which accom-
First. The court below relied on the language of § 1404 (a), supra, which it regarded as “unambiguous, direct, clear.” We agree. The reach of “any civil action”6 is unmistakable. The phrase is used without qualification, without hint that some should be excluded. From the statutory text alone, it is impossible to read the section as excising this case from “any civil action.”
The only suggestion petitioner offers in this regard is that “any civil action” embraces only those actions for which special venue requirements are prescribed in §§ 1394-1403 of Revised Title 28,7 since these sections
Second. Although petitioner wishes to restrict the literal meaning of “any civil action,” he would expand the sense of “may transfer . . . to any other district or division where it might have been brought” beyond the exact scope of those words. Obviously, the express language gives no clue as to where the action “might have been brought.” Yet the essence of petitioner‘s position is that the order below, transferring his suit, effects a repeal of § 6 of the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, which granted him the right to sue in any district “in which the defend-
Section 6 of the Liability Act defines the proper forum; § 1404 (a) of the Code deals with the right to transfer an action properly brought. The two sections deal with two separate and distinct problems.10 Section 1404 (a) does not limit or otherwise modify any right granted in § 6 of the Liability Act or elsewhere to bring suit in a particular district. An action may still be brought in any court, state or federal, in which it might have been brought previously.
The Code, therefore, does not repeal § 6 of the Federal Employers’ Liability Act. We agree with petitioner that Congress had no such intention, as demonstrated by its failure to list the section in the meticulously prepared schedule of statutes repealed.11 We cannot agree that the order before us effectuates an implied repeal. The inapplicability of forum non conveniens to Liability Act
Third. Petitioner‘s chief argument proceeds not from one side or the other of the literal boundaries of § 1404 (a), but from its legislative history. The short answer is that there is no need to refer to the legislative history where the statutory language is clear. “The plain words and meaning of a statute cannot be overcome by a legislative history which, through strained processes of deduction from events of wholly ambiguous significance, may furnish dubious bases for inference in every direction.” Gemsco v. Walling, 324 U. S. 244, 260 (1945). This canon of construction has received consistent adherence in our decisions.12
Nevertheless, we need not rest our decision on it solely. For the legislative history does not support petitioner‘s position. Petitioner‘s argument is based on these twin premises: Congress intended no “controversial change” to be incorporated in the Code; and § 1404 (a) is such a change.
Petitioner does not offer any definition of “controversial,” but he does point to one concrete example of what he regards as a “controversial” measure. This is the
This was scarcely hasty, ill-considered legislation. To the contrary, it received close and prolonged study. Five years of Congressional attention supports the Code.20 And from the start, Congress obtained the most eminent expert assistance available. The spadework was entrusted to two lawbook-publishing firms, the staffs of which had unique experience in statutory codification and revision.21
That these experts assisted in drafting the Code does not mean that Congress blindly approved what outsiders did. This is demonstrated, for example, by the statement of Representative Robsion, Chairman of the House Judiciary Subcommittee, at the hearing conducted by his
Petitioner almost seems to imply that this very careful Committee consideration vitiates the legislation. But the Committee system is integral in typical legislative procedure; Congress could not function without it.26 A canon of construction which would discount statutory words pro tanto, the greater the expertise or the more meticulous the Committee consideration devoted thereto, or the longer and more complex the legislation, would be absurd, not least because it would make mockery of the techniques of statutory interpretation which have heretofore been used by the courts.
The experts and the Committees did not attempt to conceal the proposed revisions. “The committee on revision of the laws in the preparation of those preliminary
The initial appearance of § 1404 (a) was in the Second Draft of the Code, adopted by the meeting of May, 1945. Its text has remained unchanged. It was accompanied by a reviser‘s note, which recited that “Subsection (a) is new. It was drafted in accordance with a memorandum of Mar. 7, 1945, from the author of Moore‘s Federal Practice, stating that recognition should be given the doc-
A preliminary draft of the Code was printed late in 1945 for the use of the House Committee on Revision of the Laws. In this draft, the reviser‘s notes appear directly below each related section or subsection. Section 1404 (a) and its note were in this draft, which, as noted above, was given very wide circulation.
July 24, 1946, the House ordered to be printed the Report submitted by Representative Keogh of New York, Chairman of the House Committee on Revision of the Laws, on the codification of Title 28.30 This Report consisted of a preliminary statement and a full printing of the reviser‘s notes. Section 1404 (a) appears in that Report, together with its note. There was no further action on the Code in the Seventy-Ninth Congress.
In the Eightieth Congress, under the Legislative Reorganization Act of 1946,31 the Code revision passed to
After this painstaking consideration, with its references to § 1404 (a), the House initially passed the bill on July 7, 1947.35 At that time and in the subsequent consideration in the Senate, the Tax Court provisions occasioned the most discussion; but other specific sections did not pass unnoticed. Attention was directly called to § 1404 (a) by one witness at the hearings before the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee, although his interest was not in the Federal Employers’ Liability Act issue.36 No change in § 1404 (a) was included in the Senate amendments; and the revision of Title 28 was enacted by the Congress in June, 1948.37
Fourth. Petitioner suggests that his action may not be transferred because it was instituted prior to the effective date of the Code. Clearly, § 1404 (a) is a remedial provision applicable to pending actions. And “No one has a vested right in any given mode of procedure . . . .” Crane v. Hahlo, 258 U. S. 142, 147 (1922).38
What we hold is that the plain meaning of the statutory words and the consistent course of the legislative history are opposed to petitioner‘s contention that we must disregard § 1404 (a) because Congress knew not what it did. If petitioner‘s showing could sustain a decision that this section was not really enacted, after all, little law would remain.
The motion is
Denied.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK and MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS dissent for the reasons stated in the dissenting opinion of MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS in United States v. National City Lines, post, p. 84.
MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE.*
I concur in the result. But in doing so I feel impelled to say two things.
One is that in my view § 1404 (a), taken broadly to include “any civil action,” does effect a partial repeal of
* [This is also a concurrence in the result in No. 233, Misc., Kilpatrick v. Texas & P. R. Co., post, p. 75, and No. 269, Misc., United States v. National City Lines, post, p. 78.]
The legislative history, for example, of the Clayton Act venue provisions demonstrates that the change § 1404 (a) is said to have made was more than the mere removal of a judicial gloss. I think we should not now impugn the validity of our decisions in National City Lines, supra, and in Kepner and Miles1 by characterizing each as a mere “judicial gloss” upon the pertinent statute. Those decisions in my opinion were true reflections of congressional intent as stated in the respective statutes and, accordingly, the changes made in them by § 1404 (a) were in the nature of repeals, to the extent that the plaintiffs were deprived of their rights under the pre-existing statutes to have their causes of action tried in the forums where they were properly brought.
In the second place, those changes, although entirely within Congress’ power to make, were neither insubstantial nor noncontroversial, in view of the legislative history of the original provisions, for example, the venue provisions of the Clayton Act. Nor do I think the legislative history of § 1404 (a) demonstrates either the insubstantial or the noncontroversial nature of the changes in § 1404 (a), although they seem to have been so treated by those in charge of the bill.2 It is to be noted, moreover, that
These matters make it impossible for me to concur in the view that Congress was in fact “fully informed as to the significance of § 1404 (a).” This, however, is a matter affecting congressional procedure and the manner of conducting legislative business. Accordingly, notwithstanding my doubts that Congress intended to go so far, I acquiesce in the Court‘s decisions.
