One Roach, a tenant of residential property belonging to appellee, brought this suit in the district court alleging that the property was within a “defense rental area” established by the Price Administrator pursuant to §§ 2 (b) and 302 (d) of the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942,56 Stat. 23; that the Administrator had promulgated Maximum Rent Regulation No. 8 for the area; and that the rent paid by Roach and collected by appellee was in
Before entry of the order dismissing the complaint, the Government moved to reopen the case on the ground that it was collusive and did not involve a real case or controversy. This motion was denied. The Government brings the case here on appeal under § 2 of the Act of August 24, 1937, 50 Stat. 752, 28 U. S. C. § 349a, and assigns as error both the ruling of the district court on the constitutionality of the Act, and its refusal to reopen and dismiss the case as collusive.
The appeal of the plaintiff Roach to this Court was also allowed by the district court and is now pending. But this appeal has not been docketed here because of his neglect to comply with the Rules of this Court. As the record is now before us on the Government’s appeal, we have directed that the two appeals be consolidated and heard as one case. We accordingly find it unnecessary to consider the question which we requested counsel to discuss, “whether any case or controversy exists reviewable in this Court, in the absence of an appeal by the party plaintiff in the district court.”
The affidavit of the plaintiff, submitted by the Government on its motion to dismiss the suit as collusive, shows without contradiction that he brought the present pro
Appellee’s counter-affidavit did not deny these allegations. It admitted that appellee’s attorney had undertaken to procure an attorney to represent the plaintiff and had assured the plaintiff that his presence in court during the trial of the cause would not be necessary. It appears from the district court’s opinion that no brief was filed on the plaintiff’s behalf in that court.
The Government does not contend that, as a result of this cooperation of the two original parties to the litigation, any false or fictitious state of facts was submitted to the court. But it does insist that the affidavits disclose the absence of a genuine adversary issue between the parties, without which a court may not safely proceed to judgment, especially when it assumes the grave responsibility of passing upon the constitutional validity of legislative action. Even in a litigation where only private rights are involved, the judgment will not be allowed to stand where one of the parties has dominated the conduct of the suit by payment of the fees of both. Gardner v. Goodyear Dental Vulcanite Co., 131 U. S. Appendix, ciii.
Here an important public interest is at stake — the validity of an Act of Congress having far-reaching effects
So ordered.
