On July 12, the plaintiffs in a “reverse discrimination” suit pending in the district court — a civil rights suit that several white Chicago policemen had brought against city officials — asked us to vacate Judge Plunk-ett’s order (1) discharging the jury that had been selected to hear the case, (2) ordering that a new jury be selected, and (3) forbidding the parties to exercise any peremptory challenges in the selection of the new jury. Judge Plunkett based this order on his finding that both sides had exercised peremptory challenges on racial grounds — the plaintiffs to exclude blacks from the jury, the defendants to exclude whites. Because Judge Plunkett had announced that he was planning to discharge the jury on July 15, we had to act quickly on the plaintiffs’ motion, and on July 14, in a brief unpublished order, we granted it. This opinion explains the basis of our action more fully.
The plaintiffs both challenge the correctness of the judge’s conclusion that they exercised their peremptory challenges on racial grounds and argue that, in any event,
Batson v. Kentucky,
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Interlocutory rulings ordinarily are unappealable until the end of the proceedings in the district court; and this principle is not to be evaded by facile invocation of mandamus,
In re City of Springfield,
In the present case the district judge did not deny either side its Seventh Amendment right to trial by jury, but he did deny a statutory incident to jury trial; more important, he deliberately refused to enforce a peremptory (pun intended) statutory command. Section 1870 of the Judiciary Code provides, in words that could not be clearer, that, “In civil cases, each party shall be entitled to three peremptory challenges.” (There is additional language relating to multi-party cases, such as this one, and to challenges for cause, but it does not qualify the simple and clear imperative that we have quoted.) Cases deeming the denial of a party’s right to exercise his peremptory challenges reversible error are legion, see, e.g.,
Carr v. Watts,
Ordinarily even a clear error in an interlocutory ruling is not a ground for the extraordinary remedy of mandamus. Clear error is a necessary condition, and one easily satisfied here as we have just seen, but it is not a sufficient condition. Not only must the error be clear; it must be irremediable by the regular appellate remedies. See, e.g.,
Allied Chemical Corp. v. Daiflon, Inc.,
The application of the “black letter” rules for when mandamus will be issued has not been unwavering. We have mentioned cases involving the right to trial by jury; they break the mold. And mandamus is used routinely against judges who refuse to recuse themselves when required by statute to do so, see, e.g.,
United States v. Balistrieri,
The present case is less dramatic, but there is more than the usual inconvenience of an unnecessary trial. Whoever lost at the trial in the district court would, if that court’s order were allowed to stand, have a sure-fire ground for appeal, and the trial would have to be done over. This would be just the beginning, and would not be enough by itself. But this new trial (the almost certain consequence if we declined to issue the writ of mandamus) would be before the fourth jury in the case. An earlier trial ended in a mistrial, and that jury was discharged. Then a new jury was picked — the one Judge Plunkett wants to discharge. If the jury that replaces it is selected without either party being allowed any peremptory challenges, there will have to be another trial before still another jury. And that need not be the end, for merely to reverse the denial of peremptory challenges would leave unresolved the question whether, in a civil case, including any subsequent trials in this civil case, race may play any part in the decision to exercise a peremptory challenge.
Indeed, if a new jury is selected in a process in which neither side is allowed any peremptory challenges, it is not clear whether the
Batson
issue will be preserved. If the plaintiffs lose and appeal, they will be met with the argument that it would be pure conjecture to suppose that they would have done better before a different jury or even that they would have exercised any peremptory challenges, on racial or other grounds, to members of the jury panel. See
Goldstein v. Kelleher,
With the applicability of Batson to the present case an unsettled question, discharging an already impaneled jury on the eve of trial is a wasteful and inappropriate method of preserving the question. Should the defendants lose at trial before the already impaneled jury they can raise the Batson question on appeal. Allowing Judge Plunkett’s order to stand might be misunderstood by other district judges as an expression of this court’s view that Bat-son does apply in all cases, a question we leave open; we express no view on that question, or on whether there might be legal grounds other than equal protection for restricting the use of peremptory challenges notwithstanding section 1870.
The exceptional burdens that Judge Plunkett’s order would place on the orderly *156 resolution of this lawsuit, and the manifest infringement of the parties’ statutory right to exercise peremptory challenges in a jury trial, have persuaded us that this is a proper case for the extraordinary remedy of mandamus, and therefore we have granted the plaintiffs’ petition and have directed Judge Plunkett to proceed to trial before the already impaneled jury.
