35 F. 176 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan | 1887
(after stating the facts as above.") When the application contained in this letter was first made at the hearing by counsel then engaged in the trial, it was stated that, aside from any other embarrassments, the practice suggested might possibly he the re-examination of facts tried by a jury, otherwise than “ according to the rules of the common law,” and therefore in contravention of the seventh amendment of the constitution of the United States; and that the power of any other than the trial judge to determine a motion for new trial might be doubtful. It must be apparent that if this power exists it may be a matter
Yet, after as careful an investigation as I have been able to make into the common-law methods of hearing motions for new trial, in their relation to the trial judge, and of the cases which have considered the seventh amendment, I am not prepared to say that the practice proposed in this application is beyond the power of congress or the courts to adopt; and, of course, do not feel called on here to express an opinion on that question. But to any one who undertakes to interpret the constitutional amendment by the light of the common-law methods of re-examining a fact tried by a jury, it will become obvious that in the federal courts it is impossible to imitate the constantly growing disregard of those methods by the practice prevailing in the states of reviewing the verdicts of juries in some appellate tribunal, generally the supreme court, into which all disputed questions of fact.as well as of law are trundled, the trial court and jury being used only as a wheelbarrow with which to do the trundling. Reformers of the federal judiciary having that end in view will find that no more with intermediate courts of appeal than with the supreme court of the United States can the constitutional restriction be evaded, however intense may become the desire of having facts tried by a jury re-examined in 'as many ways and as many courts'as the legislature may choose, or the great American principle of the right of appeal may demand. Perhaps the fullest indulgence in this regard possible under the federal constitution, as amended since our existing system was established, would come from the adoption of •the. common-law system of judicatory organization, whether that of the
Under the common-law organization, to which these rules of the common law for the re-examination of facts tried by a jury were so nicely adjusted, the trial judge, as I understand it, whether the trial had been at nidprius or at bar, was not at all necessarily a constituent part of the court to hear the motion for a new trial, nor any other motion in the further progress of the case. lie might have been a justice of another' court, or no justice at all,—in some oases being a sergeant, a sheriff, or an under-sheriff,—or any one to whom the king’s commission to hold the assizes or sittings had gone, or to whom a writ of trial had issued. But the fundamental principle was that the motion for new trial must be hoard in the court where the record was pending. But even as tq that principle, by statutes passed before our Revolution, in some cases it came about’ that the motion for new trial could be heard in an entirely different court—in either the king’s bench, common pleas, or exchequer— from that to which the case belonged. But in all the mutations of the practice at common law it was an essential, though not under all circumstances an indispensable, requirement that the trial judge’s notes,—be lie whom ho might be, and to whatever court he belonged,—and his report of the trial, should be at hand, though not at all a part of the technical record; and these he might or might not furnish, as lie should choose. And, if the ground of the motion was that the verdict was against the evidence, his opinion on that subject was controlling; not absolutely, in technical theory, for sometimes the rule was departed from, but nearly always in actual practice. It seems, however, that upon any other grounds that might be alleged for a new trial, his opinion was not of so much consequence; but as to that, and the ground of excessive damages,— which is only a branch of the other,—the trial judge who had seen the witnesses, had heard them testify, and in all things observed the progress
Turning now to our federal organization, and avoiding all confusion of ideas growing out of the barest resemblance to its remote ancestor, and it cannot be said that we have any such system of courts as that to which “the common-law rules for the re-examination of a fact tried by a jury ” may be applied or adapted. Our judges bear no such relation as that to the court nor to each other. When sitting alone they try a case with the jury, and necessarily, however constituted at the particular trial, the court pro re nata, is entire within itself; has no superior court or. judge to supervise it; and, as now organized, can have none like the superior court at Westminster, supervising trials at nisi prius or the sittings for London and Middlesex, where the duties of the trial judge have been held to be ministerial, rather than judicial. The judges cannot, of themselves, by common practice, create such a sj^stem, nor distort the one we have into' that without usurping legislative functions, and doing violence to the rights of the parties. Nor is this an unimportant consideration here, for, taking our organization as we find it, and it is best to understand, as always in such matters, precisely what are the grounds of any judicial action, the relation of the parties and the court to it, and of the judges themselves; for courts do not exist for any one case, nor for the especial benefit or indulgence of one particular suitor, but for all cases and suitors, among whom there should be no favoritism or special dispensations from constitutional or legislative trammels that are felt to be irksome, and, perhaps, j ustly so. There are other embarrassments that preclude a goodnatured yielding to the eagerness' of disappointed suitors for the indulgences asked by this application, not the least of which is the almost certain result of having to grant it in every case, thereby annulling the provisions of the statutes for the disjeatch of business by a single judge. Most of the business is done that way, and must be; and a court of original cognizance, held by two or more judges, is almost an anomaly in American jurisprudence, and in the actual practice of our federal system it is but little more than a pretense, like that of selecting a president by an electoral college. Again, let us suppose a case tried by a circuit judge and a jury being reheard on a motion for a new trial before the circuit justice and the circuit judge, and that they differ in opinion. What is to be the result? Indeed, what is to be the result of such difference, on motion for new trial, if originally they heard the case together before the jury; and would there be any other rule of judgment in the one case than in the other? At common law the verdict would stand without reference to the opinion of either judge, except that the almost universal rule of practice was to permit the opinion of the trial judge to prevail on the question of the verdict being against evidence, and as to that, whether he be in the court that hears the motion or not, though as to other matters this was not the rule at ail; and hence, perhaps, we have the common notion that none but the trial judge can hear a motion for new trial,
Under our system, prior to the act of 1872, (Rev. St. §§ 650,652, 693,) the result of a difference between the two judges would have been the same as at common law, for it was not one of these questions which could have been certified to the supreme court. Lanning v. London, 4 Wash. C. C. 332. For constitutional reasons already mentioned, perhaps it remains a question that cannot be certified under the act of 1872, wherefore it may be that the opinion of the presiding judge could not prevail, and the result would still be the same, as at common law, and prior to the act of 1872. Practically, no doubt, the judge who did not hear the case would yield his judgment to the other, if insisted upon, for the same reasons precisely that the common law gave for the personal influence of the trial judge; but technically, perhaps, he would not he bound to do this, except upon the theory that technically he had no business in the court, and the trial judge liad absolutely the only power to determine the motion. Or the trial judge would, deferentially, submit to the other because it would be his rulings that were challenged by those of his brother judge, and a modesty that might bo exaggerated would control the question. Or another solution would be that the judges would grant a new trial only because of the difference of opinion, and this without reference to the merits of the motion; and that would be a situation for which the disappointed litigant,and his zealous counsel would struggle with might and main; and we should find every one going through a process which should be allowed to all, if allowed to any; for the importance of the case in the heated imagination of the defeated suitor and his counsel can furnish no satisfactory test of discrimination between cases that are and those that are not to be allowed this advantage. Rut, more than this, either of these solutions, except perhaps the first, would he a re-examination of a fact tried by jury, otherwise than by the rules of the common law, which, on a divided opinion, would protect the verdict. Moreover, this ■unconstitutional result, if 1 may so speak, is far more likely to happen when the judges, upon the call of counsel, sit to hear the motion informally and not as a court fully charged with the business in hand than under any other circumstances. There is, therefore, in tolerating such applications an extent of embarrassment that forbids the practice of making them, to say nothing of that which the trial judge feels of being suspected of an insufferable self-conceit if ho refuses the demand of counsel for what is somewhat inaccurately called a “full court,” it being already full with the trial judge on the bench. If these considerations arc correct, unless it can be determined that these applications are matters of right, in which case the court as constituted to hear the motion is the proper place to make the application, there is danger, if left to the trial judge to determine how the motion shall be heard, that he will too readily yield to the coercion of a fear that unpleasant imputations of resentment or sell-conceit control him in refusing it.
In what has beeii said there is no purpose to deprecate the practice that prevails so extensively amongst us as co-ordinate judges of the same
In the oath originally prescribed for the judges errant or itinerant, in' the time of Henry the Second, they' were to do all kinds of right and justice in their circuits, “unless the controversy were of such importance that it could not be determined but in the king’s presence, or so difficult that the judges doubted about it, and desired to refer it to the king.” Worth. Jur. 105, 29 Law' Lib. 35. By the common law' everything had to be determined by the full court, and it w'as considered the absolute right of the suitors in all cases to have the decision of the four judges, until parliament passed acts allowing them to sit apart for the dispatch of business, as our congress has done. But “cases of difficulty are, at the instance of the judge himself, ex mero motu, sometimes argued before the full bench. That, however, is only in the judge’s discretion, for the decision of the single judge is conclusive in all matters brought before him, unless be think fit to' open the case for rehearing.” 3 Chit. Pr. 6. And in an act of parliament providing for certain cases the judges were especially permitted to reserve questions of difficulty. But, says the author: “It will be observed that the desire of the suitor to appeal to the full court is not allowed to have any effect, but it rests entirely upon the discretion of the judge.” Id. 17.
So Mr. Justice Stephen tells us, in speaking of this informal practice
“At the request of the district judge, the motion for a new trial has been heard by the full bench. I mention this lest counsel might fall into the misapprehension that motions of this character are hoard by the circuit judge as a matter of course. It is only when the district judge requests it that they are so heard. If it were left to counsel, every case tried before the district judge would have to be reheard.”
And he might have added that every case tried before the circuit judge would be reheard before the circuit justice, or the district judge, and every case tried-hy the circuit justice before one or both of the other two, because there is no substantial distinction in this regard, growing out of any differences of relative rank between the judges, if one stops to think of it, to furnish any limitation; and counsel would never stop as long as there was any chance for another judge. Other expressions in the. books and cases could be abundantly cited to show that the judges have always discountenanced any practice which permits suitors to convoke this advisory court, if I may so call it, by an appeal to the trial judge, which in the nature of it is coercive, by introducing an element of undue influence, an indisposition, namely, to refuse that which, being refused, subjects him to the unpleasant imputations before referred to here. As in this case, there was no difficulty in it of a nature to suggest the necessity of a consultation for the purpose of solving the difficulty, and it seems to me that all that is said in favor of it is only magnifying its importance merely to have that review before the other judges, one or more, which counsel so earnestly desire. If I should grant it, it would be solely because counsel ask it, and that I do not shrink from the ordeal proposed; but, in my view, that is an utterly untenable rule of judgment in determining the application,—one that should' have no influence on the question, and of which suitors should not be allowed to take advantage.
A system which in any case furnishes no review of questions of law arising at a trial by jury, whether the trial be before one judge or more, he he circuit justice, circuit or district judge, may he conceded to he unsatisfactory and defective; hut the remedy is not with the judges, but with congress to provide an organization adapted to a constitutional amendment submitted the very day after the present judiciary system was established, and ratified several years after. If the judges are to mitigate the evil complained of, they should do it thoroughly and impartially, by uniform rules of practice which reserve every motion for a new trial for hearing before a full bench, and not confine the indulgence capriciously to those suitors who are most active and persistent in seeking it. No special favors to suitors or cases based upon any gradation of the relative importance of the cases can he shown in the administration
It is perhaps not proper now to consider in detail any of the arguments of this application that would somewhat involve the consideration of the grounds of the motion for a new trial; but it may be stated that they assume that the question of contributory negligence was one of law upon undisputed facts, which, however, was strenuously denied by the plaintiff, and at the trial it was submitted to a jury on the evidence, and found against the defendant. It is that ruling which the defendant wishes to review before other judges upon a stenographer’s notes. If it were solely a question of law, perhaps, there could be, other objections aside, no serious obstacle to such a review of it, however informally; but if it be one of fact, perhaps the constitution of the United States protects the verdict against the proposed review, even if directed by an act of congress. The pendency of another suit by other parties cannot affect the question we have here. The defendant cannot complain if it has another chance before another jury and another judge and obtains a verdict. This verdict cannot properly influence that trial, and would not be permitted to do 30. If it were proposed to try the other case upon the evidence or record here on this motion for a ne,w trial, and to have both go off upon the decision of the proposed court of review, there might be some force in that suggestion'; but, as it is, it seems to me unimportant. Application dismissed.
Hote by Judge Hammond. It has been my intention to append a note tracing with precision, so far as might be done from the law books, the practice to which the seventh amendment of the constitution of the United States has bound us, of re-examining a fact tried by a jury “according to the rules of the common law. ” I have before me the rough draft of such a note, and quite a mass of references to authorities that have been examined, but the subject is too extensive for so condensed a treatment as would be appropriate in this place.
The seventh amendment was submitted and ratified after our existing judiciary establishment was adopted, and there has never been any legislation with especial reference to that amendment, which has, of itself, a history that has a most important bearing on our subject. How that there is a probability that the federal courts may be soon reorganized, there may be some pertinency in a suggestion that the force and effect of that amendment should be carefully considered in its relation to any reorganization that may be had. The amendment is very peculiar, and in all the constitutions of all the states there is nothing like it, except in the constitution of West Virginia, which substantially copies it. They have one and all protected the right of trial by jury, but none of them has forbidden the re-examination of a fact tried by a jury “otherwise than according to the rules of the common law, ” except these two. Such re-examination is, in most if not all the states, a very wide de
The question arises whether congress is not confined by the amendment to some system of organization for the courts, wherein these rules of the common law may have full play, for nothing is plainer than that it has not the same freedom of action as the states, in providing for the re-examination of a fact tried by a jury. At all events, the courts should not be left during another century to flounder about as they have been left during that which will close September 24, 1889, the centennial of our judiciary act.
£. S. IT.