48 F.2d 122 | 2d Cir. | 1931
On August 28,1930, the libellant, the owner of a scow, filed its libel in rem against the tug “Number 35,” which had the scow in- tow, and against the tug, “Moran,” of another company, to recover for injuries resulting from a collision in the Kill van Kull. The “Number 35” answered on September twenty-ninth, the “Moran” on October seventh, and the cause stood upon the docket awaiting trial. Thereupon on December second, over the protest of the claimants, the court directed that the cause be referred to a commissioner “to hear the testimony offered by the parties hereto and to report his conclusions on the issues of law and fact to this court on or before the second day of January, 1931.” This order merely recited that the cause had appeared on a “special” docket, called to determine whether the cases there listed should be referred. The libellant brought on the issues before the commissioner on December twenty-third, when the claimants again protested and refused to take part in the proceedings, which thereupon went along to a conclusion. The commissioner exonerated the “Moran,” found the “Number 35” at fault, liquidated the damages, and recommended a decree for the libellant. The “Number 35” excepted to the report on the ground that the court was without jurisdiction to refer the issues without consent, and that the proceedings before him were for this reason non eoram judiee. The court overruled the exceptions and entered a final decree from which the “Number 35” has now appealed.
The case is pressed to test the power of the district court to refer the issues generally in an admiralty cause to a commissioner to hear the proofs and to file an advisory report with his conclusions, for final disposition by the court. The occasion does not appear in the record, but we may take notice of some of the facts. The admiralty docket in the Southern District of New York has been much in arrears for many years, and the judges have been unable with the time available to bring to trial causes upon it without great delay. This has been to the advantage of respondents and claimants, who thus obtain a moratorium of over a year if the claims against them prove to be valid. Judge Woolsey, conceiving that some advance might be made in the disposition of the court's business, called a list of five hundred cases from the foot of the docket, and passed orders of general reference in a certain number, how many does not appear. His power to do so depends upon the meaning to be given the Admiralty Rides 43 and 46 (28 USCA § 723).
The first provides that, “where the court shall deem it expedient or necessary for the purposes of justice, it may refer any matters arising in the progress of the suit to one or two commissioners or assessors, to be appointed by the court, to hear the parties and make a report therein.” The second, that “in all trials in admiralty the testimony of witnesses shall be taken orally in open court, except as otherwise provided by statute, or agreement of parties.” If read literally the exception in Rule 46 would forbid any reference whatever under Rule 43, except when the parties agree; so understood, it would differ from Equity Rule 46 (28 USCA § 723), which is the same, ipsissimis verbis, save that it concludes, “except as otherwise provided by statute or these rules.” It is quite true that hitherto the practice has been not to refer the “merits” of an admiralty cause without consent, though that was apparently not the case in all other districts before 1921. The Guy C. Goss (D. C.) 53 F. 826. On the other hand the liquidation of damages before a commissioner has long been as Of course here as elsewhere, and the consent of the parties has been as little required since 1921 as before. Unless we have been wrong in this, Rule 46 is to be read with Rule 43 as an implied exception. We understand the law to be that while for a reference there must be some special circumstances which make it “expedient or necessary for the purposes of justice,” if the parties do not consent, the exception in Rule 46 is not literally absolute. We have to decide whether the size of the dockets, and the occupation of the judges otherwise, make an excuse within the extremely general words of Rule 43.
It must be owned that there are expressions in our opinions which countenance the claimants’ position, though we have never decided the point. Thus in The Bronx, 246 F. 809, 810, we said that the court may not
The procedure in the admiralty was taken from the civil law, and, as in equity, in early days evidence was by deposition. The original Judiciary Act (section 30 of the Act of September 24, 1789 [1 Stat. 88]), changed this as to both, and while the ancient practice became optional in equity after 1802 (section . 25, Act of April 29, 1802 [2 Sta(. 166]), the statute remained unchanged as to admiralty until the whole procedure was put into the hands of the Supreme Court in 1842. The rules of 1844 — in which Rule 43 appears as Rule 44 — do not seem to have expressly provided for trials, probably assuming that the original practice prescribed by the act of 1789 was to continue. Although therefore the procedure of equity and the admiralty differed between 1802 and 1913 (when the new equity rules went into effect), since 1913 they have again become the same. There is no reason any longer to impute a higher sanction to trials in open court on one side of the court than on the other, and the same discretion would seem to exist in each.
The appellant indeed concedes that there may be issues such that because of their intricacy the court may refer them for report. Its position is that it is the nature of the inquiry alone which justifies that course, and that in an ordinary cause, involving questions with which the judges are-familiar, delay in coming to trial will not serve. Yet, except when he calls assessors to help him— a practice substantially unknown — the judge must in the end decide the dispute on the evidence taken, as much when it is hard as when it is easy. His power to refer troublesome issues depends, not upon his escape from the difficulties they raise, but because their trial will take a long time. If so, we cannot see why crowded dockets do not come within the same excuse. Suits must somehow be decided, and delay may be nearly as bad as no decision at all. A court, finding itself' permanently in arrears and unable to gain upon its work, staffed as it is, is forced to-select the most available means at hand. Whether it is more “expedient or necessary for the purposes of justice” to deny seasonable access to suitors, or to impose upon-them the expense of a reference, appears to-us a matter exclusively for their determination.
We agree of course that if it appeared' that they used the practice merely as a fetch to evade the rule, we should be called upon to-intervene. Against that possibility we need do no more than recur to the caution of the-Supreme Court. That is beside the point here. We cannot close our eyes to the situation as it exists, or deny that it may be an occasion for action out of the common. Obviously we cannot now say what circumstances might induce us to interpose. The matter is primarily one for the District Judges; and we must assume that they feel themselves as mueh bound by the law' as we. All we need now decide is that on the showing before us
As the appellant does not dispute the propriety of the decision upon the merits, but merely wishes to raise the point of jurisdiction, we affirm the decree without more.
Decree affirmed.