The appellees, in their petitions for rehearing, argue that we have misconstrued and misapplied the recent rulings of the Supreme Court referred to in our opinion. They assert that the record sufficiently discloses that the necessary effect of the threatened activities of appellants would be to create or to tend to create a monopoly and to affect prices to the prejudice of consumers, to bring the case within the Sherman Act. Appellees in effect reargue what we have decided. If we have misconstrued the rulings of the Supreme Court referred to in our opinion or have misap *562 plied them to the facts of this case, it is reasonable to assume that that Court will grant certiorari and correct our mistake.
The petitions for rehearing are denied.
The appellees, by their motions to modify our opinion, judgment and mandate, have asked that, in the event their petitions for rehearing are denied, we eliminate from our opinion the direction that the complaint be dismissed for want of jurisdiction; that we substitute directions that the court below grant to the appellees who were plaintiffs in that court (Donnelly Garment Company and Donnelly Garment Sales Company) leave to dismiss this action without prejudice as to defendants who are сitizens of Missouri, and to amend the complaint so that it will show diversity of citizenship between the plaintiffs and the remaining defendants and that the action is one of a civil nature in equity wherе the amount in controversy exceeds $3,000; that we also direct the court below to confine the evidence upon a new trial, after the' complaint has been amendеd, to the question whether jurisdiction on the ground of diversity of citizenship exists; and that we authorize that court, if it finds the existence of such jurisdiction, to re-enter the decree which has beеn appealed from, with such modifications as we think should be made.
The appellants resist these motions. They challenge the power of the Court to grant the motions and the рropriety of their being granted if the Court has the power. They point to the fact that the cause of action was based solely upon a. law of the United States, namely, the Sherman Act. The appellants contend that to, now substitute a cause of action in equity based upon diversity of citizenship would not be an amendment to the cause of actiоn originally asserted, but would 'be equivalent to commencing a new and different action and conferring upon the court below jurisdiction of the persons of nonresident defendants who had appeared voluntarily, without according them any opportunity to question the right of that court to compel them to defend in Missouri against a new cause of action not based upon any law of the United States, but arising under the laws of Missouri! The appellants also contend that to authorize the court below to re-enter the present- deсree, which is now more than two years old and which the court was without jurisdiction to enter and which was based upon findings which that court was without jurisdiction to make, would not be justified and would havе the effect of depriving some of the appellants of their rights to defend against a cause of action of which they had no notice until after the decision of this Court in this cаse.
The tendency of the federal courts has been consistently towards greater liberality in the allowance of amendments to pleadings. Under the rule announced in Union Pacific R. Co. v. Wyler, 1895,
In New York Central & Hudson River R. Co. v. Kinney,
The defendants in this case have all had notice from the beginning of this action of the conduct upon which the plaintiffs base their claimed right to an injunction. This conduct and the proof of it contained in the record the plaintiffs now' assert will entitle them to retain their decree against some of the defendants in this action, under the law of Missouri, provided the complaint shall be amended to show jurisdiction based on diversity of citizenship. The authorities indicate that such an аmendment as is suggested would be permissible even after judgment if the amendment did not result in eliminating indispensable parties defendant. See Interstate Refineries, Inc. v. Barry, 8 Cir.,
We think that if the plaintiffs apply to the court below for leave to amend their complaint to show jurisdiction based upon diversity of citizenship, and if leave is granted, it will be for that court to determine initially whether the amendment allowed constitutes the commencement of a new action requiring a complete new trial; whether a new trial must be had in any event upon some or all of the issues under the amended pleadings; whether that court can or should base a decree upon the present record, with or without supplementation ; and what decree shall finally be entered. See and comрare Levering & Garrigues Co. v. Morrin, 2 Cir.,
We have no desire to prevent the appellees from taking further proceedings either in the court above or in the court .below. We have decided the question of the jurisdiction of the District Court under the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C.A. §§ 1-7, 15 note, the only questiоn of jurisdiction before us on this appeal; and to that extent and to that extent only have we established the law of this case. If that ruling stands and if no amendment to the complaint shоwing other grounds of federal jurisdiction is allowed by the court below, the complaint must be dismissed for want of jurisdiction. The. opinion of this Court in this case is not to be taken as finally determining any quеstion affect
*564
ing the merits of the litigation. Robertson v. Cease,
The judgment of this Court will be that the decree appealed from be reversed for want of jurisdiction and that the case be remanded to the court below for further proceedings not inconsistent with the opinion of this Court.
