delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case is a sequel to
Swift
&
Co.
v.
United States,
The suit-was commenced by the Government in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia on February 27, 1920, against the leading' packers to prevent a long feared monopoly in meat and other food products. On that day a consent decree was entered. Nearly five years later, two of the defendants, Swift & Co. and Armour & Co., filed in the cause motions to vacate that decree. From the denial of those motions appeals were taken to the Court of Appeals for the District. That court certified questions to us. We ordered the entire record sent here; and then held that, because the Expediting Act of February 11, 1903, c. 544, § 2¡ 32 Stat. 823, provides for a direct appeal to this Court in suits in equity brought by the United States under the Anti-Trust Act, the Court of Appeals was without jurisdiction. We also held that the Supreme Court of the District had jurisdiction of the subject matter and.of the parties; and that the consent decree entered by it was in all respects valid and enforceable. Its order denying the motions to vacate the consent decree was, therefore, affirmed.
An obstacle to the enforcement of the consent decree remains. An order of the Supreme Court of the District, entered May 1, 1925, suspends the operation of the consent decree as a whole
“
until .further order of the court to be made, if at all, after a full hearing on the merits according to the usual course of chancery proceedings.” That order (as we know judicially from our own records,
Aspen Mining & Smelting Co.
v.
Billings,
On April 29, 1922, the Canneries made a motion for leave to file an intervening petition. The petition accompanying the motion alleged that the consent decree interferes with the performance by Armour & Co. of a contract theretofore made with it, by which Armour agreed to buy large quantities of California canned fruit. The petition charged that the decree is void because the Supreme Court of the District lacked jurisdiction; and it prayed that the decree be vacated. The Supreme Court denied leave to intervene. The Canneries appealed to the Court of Appeals. That court, so far as appears, did not consider the question whether, in view of the Expediting Act, it had jurisdiction on appeal. It did not refer to the decisions which hold that an order denying leave to intervene is not appealable,
In re Cutting,
So far as appears, the Supreme Court of the District has not been requested by the Government since our decision in the
Swift,
case, to rescind the order of suspension. Instead the Government, upon the coming down of our mandate, moved in the Court of Appeals that its judgment of June 2, 1924, directing that the Canneries have leave to intervene and ordering further proceedings, be vacated. That motion the Court of Appeals denied without either an opinion or a statement of any reason therefor. This writ of certiorari was then granted, to review its. refusal.
Congress squghi-.by the Expediting Act to ensure speedy disposition of spits ip equity brought by the United States under the Anti-Trpst: AqU-: Before the passage of the Expediting Act ;the, opportunities for delay were many. From a final decree in the trial court under the Ánti-Trust Act an appeal lay to the Circuit Court of Appeals; and six months were allowed for taking- the appeal. From the judgment of the Court, of. Appeals an appeal lay to this Court; and one year was allowed for taking that appeal. Act of March 3, 1891, c. 517, §§ 6, 11, 26 Stat. 826, 828, 829. See
United States
v. E.
C. Knight Co.,
For the enforcement of the Anti-Trust Act within the 'District of Columbia, its Supreme Court has. jurisdiction
*559
corresponding to that which is exercised by the federal district courts in the several districts; and the appellate jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals of the District corresponds to that of the several Circuit Courts of Appeals. Compare
Federal Trade Commission
v.
Klesner,
The order of the Supreme Court of the District suspending the enforcement of the consent decree, was made pursuant to the judgment of the Court of Appeals of June 2,1924. When our opinion in the Swift case settled that by reason of the Expediting Act the Court of Appeals was without jurisdiction of an appeal in a suit in equity under the Anti-Trust Act in which the United States is the complainant-and that the. consent decree is valid, all obstacles, to the enforcement of the consent decree should have been promptly removed. In refusing to vacate its *560 judgment and mandate the Court of Appeals departed from the limits of admissible discretion.
Reversed.
Notes
See
Forbes
v.
Railroad,
Fed. Cas. No. 4,926;
Coffin
v.
Chattanooga Water & Power Co.,
Section 2. "That in every suit in equity pending or hereafter brought in any circuit [district] court of the United States under -. . [the Anti-Trust'Act], wherein the United States is complainant, . . an appeal from the final decree of the circuit [district] court will' lie only to the Supreme Court and must be taken within sixty days from the entry thereof. . . .”
