PLATT, CHIEF JUDGE, U. S. DISTRICT COURT, v. MINNESOTA MINING & MANUFACTURING CO.
No. 113
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued January 9, 1964. - Decided March 9, 1964.
376 U.S. 240
John T. Chadwell argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief were Glenn W. McGee, Jean Engstrom, Allan J. Reniche and John L. Connolly.
Rule 21 (b) of the
I.
A grand jury sitting at Danville, in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Illinois, returned an indictment charging the respondent with violating
The Court of Appeals found, in contradiction to the finding of the District Court, that a trial in the Eastern District of Illinois would result in unjustifiable increased expenses to the respondent of “at least $100,000, great inconvenience of witnesses, serious disruption of business and interference of contact between the [respondent‘s] executives and its trial attorneys . . . .” 4 It also found that respondent had no office, plant, or other facility in the Eastern District and that there was less congestion in the docket of the Minnesota District than in the Eastern District of Illinois. The court concluded that this was a “demonstration by proof or admission of the essential elements of convenience, expense and early trial, consti-
In awarding the mandamus the Court of Appeals placed particular weight on the trial judge‘s finding that it “would be more difficult to get a fair and impartial jury in the Minnesota District than in the Eastern District of Illinois.” The Court of Appeals stated that this finding, if true (which it doubted), “would not justify a refusal to make a transfer otherwise proper under rule 21 (b)...”6 and concluded that “it would be an unsound and dangerous innovation in our federal court system for a judge in any district to appraise or even speculate as to the efficacy of the operations of a federal court of concurrent jurisdiction in another district. It follows that no order in any way based upon such reasoning can stand, even under the guise of an exercise of discretion.”7 The Court of Appeals, by way of footnote, then characterized the consideration of this factor by the trial judge as “the most important item”8 despite the trial judge‘s statement in his answer to the rule to show cause that it “was but one of a number of factors which led respondent to his conclusion.”
II.
The trial judge in his memorandum decision listed a number of items as pertinent in the determination of whether the case should be transferred to Minnesota “in the interest of justice” as required by Rule 21 (b). As Chief Judge Hastings pointed out in his dissent, these “factors were (1) location of corporate defendant;
It appears that both parties and the Court of Appeals agree that the first nine factors enumerated were appropriate. As we have noted, the Court of Appeals struck the fair and impartial jury finding as not being a proper factor and the Government does not challenge that action here. Nor has the Government challenged the use of the extraordinary writ of mandamus as an appropriate means to review the refusal to transfer. We shall, therefore, not consider those matters here, assuming, without deciding, their validity for the purposes of this case. This leaves before us the question of whether the Court of Appeals erred in considering the motion to transfer de novo on the record made in the District Court and ordering transfer to the District of Minnesota.
III.
We cannot say, as did the Court of Appeals, that “the most important item” in the trial judge‘s mind when he ruled against transfer was the finding of difficulty in the selection of a fair and impartial jury in Minnesota. The weight that Judge Platt gave this factor is a matter so peculiarly within his own knowledge that it seems more appropriate to have him resolve it. He has represented in his answer that this “was but one of a number of factors.” The District Court‘s use of an inappropriate factor did not empower the Court of Appeals to order the transfer.
IV.
Since the trial court must reconsider the motion, effective judicial administration requires that we comment upon the erroneous holding of the Court of Appeals that criminal defendants have a constitutionally based right to a trial in their home districts.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is therefore reversed and the cause is remanded to that court with instructions to vacate the judgment of the District Court and to remand the case for reconsideration of the motion for transfer, without reference to the ability of the United States to receive a fair and impartial trial in Minnesota.
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, concurring.
I join the Court‘s opinion with the following brief comments.
First, for myself I wish to make explicit what is indeed implicit in the Court‘s opinion, namely, that the Court of Appeals was entirely correct in holding that the District Court‘s speculation that the Government might not be able to obtain an impartial jury in the Minnesota District was wholly out of bounds.
Second, while the Court of Appeals’ outright reversal of the District Court understandably reflects its view that the other factors making for a change of venue, when stripped of the impermissible “impartial jury” consideration, are indeed strong, such action cannot well be regarded as other than a de novo determination of the change of venue motion on the part of the Court of Appeals. Such a course inescapably contravenes accepted principles governing the exercise of appellate jurisdiction.
