The plaintiff appeals from an order fining him $250 f.or contempt of court and directing that he be committed un-til he pays. ' He had sued the New York Stock Exchange, the Curb Exchange, and over six hundred other defendants to recover damages for a conspiracy under the Anti-Trust Acts; the action is at issue in the District Court. Meanwhile he has kept up a sporadic fusillade of broadsides sent to all members of the exchange, of whom many are defendants, abusing the exchange and its officers, the Better Business Bureau, a defendant, and some of the attorneys retained to defend the action. Becoming annoyed at the violence and continuance of these attacks, the defendants applied to the District Court to enjoin the plaintiff from circulating them, and on April 18, 1935, procured an order forbidding him to communicate with them except with, the consent of their attorneys, or to circulate among them or their attorneys or counsel “any threatening or derogatory communications.” The plaintiff did not appeal from that order, but on April 27, 1935, sent out a leaflet, which was “derogatory” to the governors' of the exchange and might be considered “threatening.” Thereupon the defendants moved to punish him for contempt. Without preliminary consultation with, or authorization of, the judge, they served a notice of motion for an order, (1) “punishing the plaintiff for contempt of court through willful violation” of the’ injunction; (2) “for obstructing and attempting to obstruct, the administration of justice” by doing those things which the injunction had forbidden. The notice was supportéd by affidavits setting forth the order of April 18 and the leaflet of April 27, 1935; the plaintiff appeared and filed an affidavit in opposition; the judge entered an order declaring that he had “willfully knowingly and understandingly violat *213 ed” the injunction, and had “committed contempt of this court in that under date of April 27,” he had “issued * * * to and circulated among * * * many of the defendants herein,” including those who had retained certain named attorneys, “a printed communication or letter * * * which * * * was threatening and derogatory and was sent * * * in willful violation of the said order.” It then ordered that “because of such contempt of court the plaintiff be * * * fined the sum of $250 and that such fine be paid to the clerk of this court * * * and * * * upon plaintiff’s default” he “shall stand committed.” This is the order appealed from.
The defendants seek to support it on two grounds: First, because the plaintiff violated the order of April 18th; second, because his communication was ipso facto a contempt of court. The second is thought to follow from the powers of the District Court granted by the original statute of which section 385 of title 28, U.S. Code (28 U.S.C.A. § 385), is the present form. The question turns upon the meaning of the phrase, “so near thereto as to obstruct the administration of justice,” introduced (4 Stat. 487), in 1831, after the failure of the impeachment of Judge Peck, and intended to circumscribe the powers of the court as they had existed both under the original statute and at common law. Ex parte Robinson,
*214
So far as it punished the plaintiff for disobedience of the order of April 18th, other considerations apply. Although, as we have indicated, that order was erroneous, the plaintiff was nevertheless bound to obey it, provided the judge had jurisdiction. Brougham v. Oceanic Steam Nav. Co.,
But though the order of April 18th was therefore coram judice and a prosecution for disobedience of it would lie, the prosecution as actually conducted would not support a criminal punishment. Indeed, the defendants argue that the order did not impose any criminal punishment. In this they are certainly wrong, however ambiguous the character of the prosecution until its end. The affidavits did not suggest that the defendants had suffered any pecuniary damage from the leaflet, nor could they have done so, except that they might have asked that the plaintiff be fined to compensate them, .for the expense of the prosecution. But they did not even ask that, and the order, which was presumably drawn by them provided, not that they should receive any part of the fine, but that the plaintiff should pay it to the clerk of the _ court. It is suggested that we might now amend it so as to make it payable to' them; but even if we have the power, we should not be disposed to use it for the violation of an order which ought never to have passed.
Nor can we affirm it as punishment for a criminal contempt. The lower federal courts have not been very clear about the proper practice in such applications since Gompers v. Buck’s Stove & Range Co.,
Order reversed.
