delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an application for a writ of mandamus requiring the federal district judge sitting in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
On March 10, 1932, a grand jury for the district, duly empaneled, returned an indictment against Wingert, charging him with violating certain provisions of the banking laws of the United States. No question is raised as to the regularity of the proceedings beforе the grand jury, or as to the sufficiency of the indictment. On March 22, the United States attorney presented to the court a written petition praying that a bench warrant issue for Wingert’s arrest. The district court, with nothing before it, so far as the record disclоses, but the petition and the indictment, denied the petition and refused to issue the warrant. The sole ground alleged in the return for such denial is that the matter was within the judicial discretion of the court, and, therefore, not subject to mandamus proсeedings.
It first is necessary to determine whether under these facts we have jurisdiction to issue the writ. Section 716, Rev. Stats. (§.262 of the Judicial Code, U. S. C., Title 28, § 377), provides that this court and other federal courts
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shall have power to issue all writs not specifically provided for by statute, which may be necessary for the exercise of their respective jurisdictions, and agreeable to the usages and principles of law.” As early as 1831 it was settled that this court had power to issue a mandamus dirеcted to a federal circuit court commanding that court to sign a bill of exceptions, such action being in the nature of appellate jurisdiction.
Ex parte Crane,
Perhaps it would be enough to satisfy the test affordеd by these decisions to point to the limited authority of this court under c. 2564, 34 Stat. 1246, U. S. C., Title 18, § 682 (U. S. C. Title 28, § 345) to exercise direct appellate jurisdiction to review a decision of the district court in the possible event that some action of. that court might give rise to a right of review at the instance of the government. We prefer, however, to put our determination upon the broader ground that, even if the appellate jurisdiction of this court could not in any view be immediately and directly invoked, the issue of the writ may rest upon the ultimate power which we have to review the case itself by certiorari to the circuit court of appeals in which such immediate and direct appellate jurisdiction is lodged.
It is true this court hаs held that it was without authority to issue a writ of mandamus to the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, because, since the creation of the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, this
“ The existence of ultimate discretionary power here to review the cause on its merits and the deterrent influence which the refusal to file must have upon the practical exertion of that power in a case properly made gives the authority to consider the subject which the rule presents.”
This statement, it is true, related to the refusal of a circuit court of appeals to direct its clerk to file the record in an appeal from a district court; but it was followed broadly in
Los Angeles Brush Corp.
v.
James,
“ However that may be, we think it clear that where the subject concerns the enforcement of the Equity Rules which by law it is the duty of this Court to formulate and put in force, and in a case in which this Court has the ultimate discretion to review the case on its merits, it may use its power of mandamus and deal directly with the District Court in requiring it to conform to them. Ex parte Abdu, 247 U. S. 27 , 28; Ex parte Crane,5 Peters 190 , 192, 193, 194. This is not to say that in every case where the Equity Rules are the subject of interpretation and enforcement in the District Court, such questions may as of course be brought here and considered in a direct proceeding in mandamus. The question of thus using the writ of mandamus would be a matter of discretion in this Court, and it would decline to exercise its pоwer where the issue might more properly come up by mandamus in an intermediate appellate court or in regular proceedings on review. If it clearly appeared, however, that a practice had been adopted by district judges, as to the order or procedure in hearing causes, at variance with the equity-rules, our writ might well issue directly to such judges.”
In other, and readily distinguishable, cases where the direct appellate jurisdiction was vested in the cirсuit court of appeals, this court, in the exercise of its discretion, has declined to issue the writ and relegated the applicant to his remedy in that court.
Ex parte Apex Electric Mfg. Co.,
The rule deducible from the later decisions, and which we now affirm, is, that this court has full рower in its discretion to issue the writ of mandamus to a federal district court, although the case be one in respect of which direct appellate jurisdiction is vested in the circuit court of appeals — this court having ultimate discretiоnary jurisdiction by certiorari — but that such power will be exercised-only where a question of public importance is involved, or
The theory of the court below is that its denial of the petition of the government for a bench warrant was an exercise of its judicial discretion, and, therefore, not reviewable by mandamus. This view of the matter cannot bе sustained. The question whether there was probable cause for putting the accused on trial was for the grand jury to determine, and the indictment being fair on its face, the court to which it was returned, upon the application of the United Stаtes attorney, should have issued the warrant as a matter of course. Cases are cited said to be to the contrary, but they are not in point. They are either cases where the warrant was sought from a magistrate upon complaint in the absence of an indictment, or
It reasonably cannоt be doubted that, in the court to which the indictment is returned, the finding of an indictment, fair upon its face, by a properly constituted grand jury, conclusively determines the existence of probable cause for the purpose of holding the accused to answer. Compare
McGrain v. Daugherty,
Rule made absolute.
