after stating the case, delivered ■ the opinion of the court,
It appears from the opinion of the Circuit Court, sent up as part of the certificate and reported in 64 Fed. Rep. 241, that that court was impressed with the conviction that the complainant had been defrauded, but that the court could see no way to accord relief under the decision in
United States
v. Throckmorton,
' But when this had been accomplished the Court of Appeals apparently -found itself in a similar quandary, and this resulted in the certificate under consideration.
Doubtless the determination of contested questions in cases properly brought before us involves the resolution of doubts, *437 if any are entertained, in respect of the scope of particular decisions, but we cannot approve of the mode ¿dopted in this case of ascertaining the precise bearing of former judgments.
In civil cases the intention of Congress as to the certification provided for in sections five and six of the act of March 3, 189.1, 26 Stat. 826, c. 517, is to be arrived at in the light of the rules prevailing prior to that date in relation to certificates of division of opinion under sections 650, 652 and 693 of the Revised Statutes.
Maynard
v.
Hecht,
By the sixth section of the Judiciary Act, the Circuit Court of Appeals is not permitted to certify the whole case to us, though we may require that to be done when questions are certified, or may bring up by certiorari any case in which the decision of that court would otherwise be final. But here the entire record is transmitted as part of the certificate, and the answer to the question propounded contemplates an examination of the whole case. If is true that the Court of Appeals asks us to assume the bill of complaint to be “in other respects sufficient,” that.is, sufficient to entitle complainant to relief, if the fraud alleged were available. But if we should find that the bill was insufficient when tested by principles accepted in both the cases referred to, wé should be indisposed to return an answer not required for the disposition of the case. In any viéw we should be compelled, in answering, to analyze the facts charged, in order to determine whether in legal effect they raise the question involved in Marshall v. Holmes or that involved in United States v. Throckmorton, assuming that, the *438 legal effect of the facts, in those two cases was not the same; or, if it were, to determine whether the facts set up here fall within the same category, and direct which decision should govern.
This practically requires us to pass upon the whole case as it stands, and to decide whether the demurrer was properly sustained or not.
But the whole case is not before us for decision, and the certificate discloses that the doubt of the courts below is based on the assumption that this court has applied well-settled general principles of law differently in two different cases upon the same state of facts. "While some hesitation in decision may temporarily result until it is finally determined whether that assumption is justified, and, if justified, the anomaly is corrected, we think such determination ought not to be attempted save where the point must be disposed of on a record after final decree.
In the absence.of potter to.deal with the whole case, the question amounts to no. more than an inquiry as to whether in oiir opinion there is an irreconcilable conflict between two of our previous judgments, and a request, if we hold that to be so, that we put an end to that conflict. ¥e do not regard these as questions or propositions of law in a particular case on which we are required to give instruction.
Certificate dismissed.
