FARMER v. ARABIAN AMERICAN OIL CO.
No. 32
Supreme Court of the United States
Decided December 14, 1964
Argued November 9-10, 1964
227, 228, 229, 230, 231, 232, 233, 234, 235, 236, 237, 238, 239, 240
Chester Bordeau argued the cause for respondent in No. 32 and petitioner in No. 33. With him on the briefs were Lowell Wadmond, William L. Owen and Thomas F. Barry.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
The questions presented in this case relate to the power and discretion of a United States district court to tax as costs against the loser in a civil lawsuit expenses incurred by the winner in carrying on the litigation.
Howard Farmer, a physician from Texas specializing in ophthalmology, started this litigation against the Arabian American Oil Company in a New York state court, claiming $4,000 damages1 for breach of an employment contract. The complaint alleged that in April 1955 the company entered into an agreement to employ Farmer as an ophthalmologist in Saudi Arabia at an annual salary of $16,000 plus a $4,000 living allowance per year, so long as the company continued its oil-well operations there, and that although he began work and properly performed his duties, the company wrongfully discharged him in March 1956. On the company‘s motion the case was removed to federal court because of diversity. The company admitted that it had employed Farmer but defended on the grounds that the discharge was not wrongful both because he had been employed at will rather than for a definite term, and because he had been discharged for good cause. At the trial Farmer attempted to show that the company discharged him because he had
The company, in order to refute Farmer‘s charge, brought three witnesses from Saudi Arabia to New York to testify in support of its version of the dispute. The jury failed to agree, after which District Judge Palmieri granted the company‘s motion for a directed verdict, 176 F. Supp. 45, and approved the clerk‘s taxation of costs against Farmer in the amount of $6,601.08, which included among other things transportation expenses for the witnesses from Arabia and costs of daily stenographic transcripts of the trial record furnished to the company‘s lawyers at their request. Holding that a verdict should not have been directed, the Court of Appeals reversed and remanded the case for a new trial, thereby upsetting the judgment and the taxation of costs. 277 F. 2d 46.
On remand to the District Court the company obtained an order directing Farmer to put up security for costs in the sum of $6,000. Because Farmer was unable to post so large a bond, Judge MacMahon dismissed the case. The Court of Appeals reversed in an opinion that strongly
Farmer petitioned for certiorari to review the Court of Appeals’ refusal to affirm Judge Weinfeld‘s taxation of costs. The company sought certiorari to review those parts of the Court of Appeals’ judgment refusing to allow all costs taxed by Judge Palmieri on the first trial and
I.
We deal first with Farmer‘s contention that the District Court was wholly without power to tax costs against him to reimburse the company for expenses incurred in bringing the witnesses from Arabia to this country. His argument runs this way. It has long been the law in this country, as now set out in
We cannot accept either the extreme position of the company that the old 100-mile rule has no vitality for any purpose or Farmer‘s argument that a federal district court can never under any circumstances tax as costs expenses for transporting witnesses more than 100 miles. In this case, however, where taxation of such expenses is being denied, we need not set out the specific circumstances under which such costs can be taxed nor mark precisely the limits of a district court‘s power to tax them. It is sufficient here to point to
II.
The Court of Appeals held, and the company argues here, that, even if Judge Weinfeld did have discretion, it was nevertheless error for him to undertake “an independent determination de novo of the costs allowed at
III.
Finally, we think that Judge Weinfeld‘s taxation of costs as to both trials was an appropriate exercise of his discretion and should have been allowed to stand. The two disputed expenses that are most important in principle and largest in amount are (a) approximately $3,000 for stenographers’ fees in supplying company counsel with daily transcripts of the trial, and (b) approximately $7,000 for expenses incurred in transporting witnesses from and back to Arabia.
(a) In denying the allowance for daily transcripts, Judge Weinfeld pointed out that while these might have
(b) Judge Weinfeld “in the exercise of discretion” refused to tax the actual transportation expenses of the witnesses from Arabia, limiting those costs to the per diem fees fixed by law and to expenses for travel for a distance not to exceed 100 miles to and from the courthouse. He undoubtedly was influenced to some extent by the longstanding 100-mile rule. That rule, we think, is a proper and necessary consideration in exercising discretion in this field. The century-and-a-half-old special statutory provision4 relating to service of subpoenas more than 100 miles from the courthouse is designed not only to protect witnesses from the harassment of long, tiresome trips but also, in line with our national policy, to minimize the costs of litigation, which policy is strongly emphasized in the
“Upon an appropriate motion, the means of obtaining the testimony of the witness would have rested with the Court which, in its discretion, could have imposed conditions with respect to which party initially was to bear the expense and provided for its ultimate taxation in favor of the prevailing party.” 31 F. R. D. 191, 195.
Having failed to bring this problem to the court‘s attention in any manner, the company went ahead and piled up what Judge Weinfeld quite understandably referred to as this “huge bill of costs.” We think that, under the circumstances, Judge Weinfeld could not be charged with any improper exercise of the discretion vested in him by
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE GOLDBERG, concurring in the result.
I agree with the Court that Judge Weinfeld did not abuse his discretion in limiting the costs for transcripts in both trials. The issues, as Judge Weinfeld properly found, were not extraordinarily complicated nor were the trials of great length, and Judge Weinfeld‘s decision that much of this expense was not really necessary seems to me entirely correct, let alone not so erroneous as to constitute an abuse of discretion. I likewise agree with the Court that it was Judge Weinfeld‘s responsibility to decide the cost question and that he was not compelled to agree with Judge Palmieri‘s prior opinion which was set aside by the Court of Appeals’ reversal of the first trial judgment. Also, if I believed that Judge Weinfeld had discretion to tax costs for travel beyond the “100-mile limit,” I would agree that he did not abuse his discretion in reducing the travel allowances of the defendant‘s witnesses to the equivalent of mileage for 100 miles.
But I do not agree that the 100-mile limit is a matter for even the narrow discretion which the Court would allow the lower federal courts to exercise. I would not depart from the strong precedents and long-continued custom that the 100-mile rule is a limitation to be uniformly observed and not to be departed from in taxing costs.
Judges Smith, Clark, and Hays, dissenting in the Court of Appeals on this point, have stated reasons which to me are both persuasive and compelling. Judge Smith succinctly summarized the rationale of the dissenters in stating that the decision of the majority of the Court of Appeals
“not only breaks with the overwhelming weight of authority, and creates a different rule for costs in
civil cases from that in admiralty, but also, as the majority indeed appears to admit, abandons the traditional scheme of costs in American courts to turn in the direction of the English practice of making the unsuccessful litigant pay his opponent‘s litigation expense as well as his own. It has not been accident that the American litigant must bear his own cost of counsel and other trial expense save for minimal court costs, but a deliberate choice to ensure that access to the courts be not effectively denied those of moderate means.” 324 F. 2d 359, 365.
No undue burden is imposed upon a litigant by the American rule, for depositions may be taken of witnesses who live outside the district where a case is pending. If the litigant feels that the personal appearance in court of such a witness is necessary, it is reasonable that he bear the cost involved.
That a discretionary application of the 100-mile rule violates other sound policy is shown by this very case. Two able and experienced District Court Judges applying discretion came to opposite results in the application of the rule; a learned Court of Appeals divided 5 to 4 on this issue. I fear that, in place of the certainty and uniformity of treatment of this important cost item, which has heretofore prevailed throughout the federal system, the opinion of the Court will spawn considerable litigation seeking review of the discretion which the Court now holds is vested in the lower courts. This type of litigation in itself is both time consuming and expensive to the parties and will further add to the burdens of litigation, which even under the traditional 100-mile rule were heavy. Moreover, it will unduly prolong litigation, for appeals over costs may be decided well after a final judgment has been entered.
The fact is that the defendant, in all probability, would not have seriously raised this issue, in light of the uniform
Moreover,
For these reasons, I would adhere to the traditional formulation of the rule as set forth by the Ninth Circuit that the “mileage allowable should be that which was traveled within the district, or actual mileage traveled in and out of the district up to 100 miles, whichever is the greater.” Kemart Corp. v. Printing Arts Research Laboratories, Inc., 232 F. 2d 897, 904.
Even the narrow decision of the Court today, in the words of Judge Clark, dissenting in this case, “represents an approach to the English system, never accepted by us because of our conviction that it ‘favored the wealthy and unduly penalized the losing party.‘” 324 F. 2d, at 370.
Judge Learned Hand once properly observed: “After now some dozen years of experience I must say that as a litigant I should dread a law suit beyond almost anything else short of sickness and death.”3
I would not intensify that dread.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, with whom MR. JUSTICE STEWART joins, dissenting.
The only possible justification for bringing this case here was to settle the question of whether the 100-mile
