87 F. 415 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine | 1898
(orally). The question whether or not this would be a mandatory injunction, if granted to the entire extent asked for, affords no difficulty. The post office department, through the postmaster at Fairfield, or, so far as we are concerned here, the postmaster at Fairfield, has interrupted the usual course of business, and the injunction is to prevent the continuance of that interruption. If, incidentally, this would compel the postmaster to perform some minor things which, in the ordinary course of business, he would perform, this would not render it a mandatory injunction. This is well expressed in Lennon’s Case, 166 U. S. 548, 556, 17 Sup. Ct. 658.
The statutes might have provided that the postmaster general, on evidence sufficient to him as to what was and what was not nonmailable matter, — as to what matter in the mail formed a part of the alleged fraudulent scheme of the complainant in this case, — should direct that such matter should not be delivered to the complainant. The statute might have provided' — I do not say that it might constitutionally, but it might have provided — that all matter which was properly nonmailable should be withheld, and that the postmaster general, or his subordinates, should determine, by some rules satisfactory to themselves, as to what was mailable matter and what was nonmailable. It might have thus sought only to purge the mails from what, in the judgment of the officers connected with the post office department, was nonmailable. We would then have had the postmaster general dealing .with what was explained by Mr. Justice Field in Ex parte Jackson, 96 U. S. 727, 733, to the effect that the United States have
If I were free to follow my own judgment, I should say that congress, neither directly, nor through the postmaster general or any oue else, has any constitutional authority to impose the penalty of forfeiture of the use of the mails of the United States, at least without a trial. But I am not sure that I will be able to follow my own convictions in this case, even if on a final hearing they remain as they now stand. I am not sure that I will not be bound by the decision of the court of appeals in the Sixth circuit (Association v. Zumstein, 15 C. C. A. 153. 67 Fed. 1000), when the case comes to a final hearing. My own view is that the decisions of the court of appeals in one circuit should ordinarily be followed quite implicitly by the courts in other circuits. The case in the Sixth circuit does not seem to have been taken to the supreme court. I cannot find anything to indicate that it was taken up by writ of error or otherwise, and it seems to have been left on the decision of the court of appeals; so that it stands to-day the highest judicial authority which we have on the validity of the statute.
However, the case at bar, with the aid of the special orders which I propose to ask the parties to consent to, can be brought so quickly to a final hearing that I do not feel that equity justifies me in permitting this mail to accumulate meanwhile. Moreover, I must remember
Now, if the complainant can give the court to understand how rapidly it can expedite this case, I can give my conclusions on the motion for a temporary injunction. If the bill cannot be brought to a speedy hearing, I will simply let the restraining order stand; but, if the complainant will expedite the case, a temporary injunction will be granted as moved.