110 F. 486 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Hampshire | 1901
The question now before the court arises from the intervention of the attorney general for the state of New Hampshire. On August 31, 1900, the following petition was offered and filed:
“To the Honorable the Judges of the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of New' Hampshire; Respectfully represents Edwin G.*487 Eastman, attorney general for the state of New Hampshire, that the above-entitled action is one in which the citizens of New Hampshire are vitally interested; wherefore he prays that your honors will direct that his name be entered upon the docket as appearing for the state of New Hampshire.
“Edwin G. Eastman, Attorney General.”
Thereupon, without notice to the complainant, the court, on September 8, 1900, entered the following: “Leave to appear granted.” October 1, 1900, the complainant moved to vacate this order for several reasons stated in the motion. Its brief in support of its motion has amplified those reasons, and, perhaps, added to them. However, the practice with reference to such interventions is so thoroughly settled in the federal courts that the propositions of the complainant need not be noticed except as appears in this opinion.
It is, first of all, objected that the order was unauthorized, becartse it was ex parte, and without notice to the complainant. As to that, it may well be said that, as the record stood when the order was entered, the authority of the court to enter it, and the practice in reference thereto, were each so clear and so thoroughly settled that the court might well have understood that no objection to it would be brought forward by the complainant, and that the order might well be entered as a'matter of course. However, inasmuch as the parties have now been fully heard, it would be merely superfluous to strike out the original order, inasmuch as we find that we would be obliged to re-enter it if stricken out.
The bill, as originally framed, alleges, in substance, that the complainant is the owner in fee simple of a lake in Nevv Hampshire, about one mile in length, from 30 to 80 rods in width, and covering about 200 acres; that, as such owner, the complainant is entitled to the exclusive right of fishery therein; and that the respondents trespassed on those exclusive rights, with various other allegations usual in bills in equity seeking relief against trespassers, which need not be referred to. The lake, therefore, is one of that class commonly known as “great ponds” within those jurisdictions in New England where the public and private rights with reference to “great ponds” have been determined in colonial or provincial times. This, as the bill was originally drawn, was entirely clear, because it charged that the respondents claimed that the lake in question is public property, belonging to the people of New Hampshire, and also that they maintained that the)'’ have right to fish in the lake by virtue of legislation of New Hampshire declaring all ponds in that state containing, more than 20 acres to be public waters. Thus the bill on its face showed originally that it related to a subject-matter in which New Hampshire, both as a sovereign state and as representing the body of its people, has an interest, affecting not only this pond, but a common interest with reference to this pond and all other ponds of more than 20 acres in extent.
In this particular the case differs entirely from Potter v. Beal (decided by the circuit court of appeals for this circuit) 2 C. C. A. 60, 50 Fed. 860, in which, on the face of the papers, the controversy was of a purely personal and private character, and in which the attorney of the United States for the district of Massachusetts had
The complainant confuses its propositions, at one place alleging that New Hampshire has been made a party to the cause, and asking certain orders growing out of that assumption, and at another that there is no occasion for intervention in behalf of the people of the state, because a judgment against the two individual respondents in this cause would bind no one else. As to the first proposition, neither the petition of the attorney general nor the order of the court assumes to make the state a party. The cause is left in that particular on the basis usual where interventions of this nature are allowed, as will be more fully understood from the decisions to which we will refer. So far as the other proposition is concerned, there can be no question that neither the state nor any of its citizens except those who are parties to this bill would be technically estopped by the result of this suit if adverse to the respondents. 'Nevertheless, the practical 'effect in that event would be prejudicial, and might substantially conclude further litigation, even though against other individuals. It is especialfy in consideration of this •fáct that this class of interventions are allowed, and it is on this ac- . count that the supreme court observed, though with relation to other circumstances, in California v. Southern Pac. Co., 157 U. S. 229, 257, 15 Sup. Ct. 591, 602, 39 L. Ed. 683, 693, as follows:
“We have no hesitation in holding that, when an original cause is pending-in this court, to he disposed of here in the first instance, and in the exercise of an exceptional jurisdiction, it does not comport with the gravity and finality which should characterize such an adjudication to proceed in the absence of parties whose rights would be, in efiEeet, determined, even though they might not be technically bound in subsequent litigation in some other tribunal.”
It would be especially unbecoming for the federal courts to pass on a great question in which a sovereign state of the Union has a 'direct interest, if not as lord paramount, at least as representing all its citizens, without affording it an opportunity to be heard before ’the legakproceedings in which the question is involved are concluded. -It is in accordance with these principles of justice that interventions of the class in question have beeri, as already stated, most freely allowed in federal courts. The earliest, as well as the most interesting, precedent is The Exchange, 7 Cranch, 116, 3 L. Ed. 287,
Another instance of permitted intervention by a sovereignty in what was, in form, merely the litigation of private parties, is found in Re Cooper, 138 U. S. 404, 11 Sup. Ct. 289, 34 L. Ed. 993; Id., 143 U. S. 472, 12 Sup. Ct. 453, 36 L. Ed. 232. There a petition to the supreme court for a writ of prohibition to the judge of the district court for the territory of Alaska, with a suggestion in support of the petition from the attorney general of Canada, with the approval of the imperial government of Great Britain, were filed and heard. The court expressly authorized the filing of the suggestion in 138 U. S., at page 414, 11 Sup. Ct. 290, 34 L. Ed. 997, and the same is briefly explained again in 143 U. S., at page 474, 12 Sup. Ct. 453, 36 L. Ed. 233. There the interest of Great Britain was of the character of the alleged
Indeed, the rule is often applied where only private interests are at stake. It is the constant practice before the high courts of record — especially before the supreme court — to permit private parties who may be practically affected by the conclusions in particular causes, although not technically estopped thereby, to be heard in their own behalf on the most informal suggestions. Instances of this character, where the same question is involved in a suit later on the docket than that under argument, are numerous, and a notable example is found in the late Porto Rico Cases, 182 U. S. 1-397, 21 Sup. Ct. 742-829, 45 L. Ed. 1065, where the court went so far as to permit the intervention of certain local interests, which claimed that they would be prejudiced by the unrestricted importation of Porto Rican products.
It is not necessary that we should now determine the precise status with reference to the cause which will be occupied by the attorney geheral for New Hampshire, nor how far he can interfere with the conduct thereof. As the questions are practically developed as the cause proceeds, they can probably be easily determined with the assistance of Florida v. Georgia, 17 How. 478, 15 L. Ed. 181; Stanley v. Schwalby, 147 U. S. 508, 13 Sup. Ct. 418, 37 L. Ed. 259; South Carolina v. Wesley, 155 U. S. 542, 15 Sup. Ct. 230, 39 L. Ed. 254 (already referred to); Belknap v. Schild, 161 U. S. 10, 16 Sup. Ct. 443, 40 L. Ed. 599; and Stanley v. Schwalby, 162 U. S. 255, 16 Sup. Ct. 754, 40 L. Ed. 960. It is enough for the present to say that, as the record stood at the time the order in question was entered, there was no doubt of either the power or the duty of-the court to make it.
Subsequently to its entry, the complainant made substantial amendments to its bill, and it maintains that, as it now stands, the bill involves no public interest whatever. In its original form ft was a bill of peace, or substantially so, and therefore, both with reference to the question of jurisdictional amount and with reference •.to the nature of the proceeding, it was, perhaps, sustainable as a ■suit in equity in the circuit court of the United States, unless barred ’by the proposition, sometimes maintained, that a bill of peace will ■not lie in contradiction to what is claimed to be strictly a public ¡right. If the amendments made by the complainant had so broad :an operation as to exclude the possibility of a question of a public nature being involved in the result, it Is quite probable that the bill would thus be stripped to bare poles, and brought down to an attempt to restrain ordinary trespassers, and to a controversy involving only a nominal amount, and therefore, in either respect, not within our jurisdiction as chancellor. Before, however, we can accede to the proposition that no question of a public character remains, the bill would require further amendments, — among other
In conclusion, it should be said that, while the action of the court in passing the order in controversy cannot be questioned, judicial tribunals can hold the scales equally between the complainant and any sovereignty, no matter how powerful, as well as between the complainant and the humblest citizens of New Hampshire; and no just interests of the complainant are involved in the question we have considered. We have, perhaps, carried this discussion to an unnecessary length, the rules appertaining thereto being so well known, and so commonly practiced, in the federal courts; but the careful and thorough presentation by the complainant of the question involved has invited us to do so.
The order entered on September 8, 1900, granting the petition of the attorney general of New Hampshire that his name may be entered as appearing for the state of New Hampshire, is affirmed.