The clerk below is not required to furnish a transcript of the
record in a cause in error until a writ of error has issued to
which it can be annexed.
In error to a state court, it has been the prevailing custom
from the beginning for the clerk of this Court or the clerk of the
circuit court for the proper circuit to issue the writ, and for
such writ to be lodged with the clerk of the state court before he
could be called on to make the necessary transcript to be lodged in
this Court.
This Court is without jurisdiction to vacate a supersedeas
granted where no writ of error was sued out, as it has no legal
effect.
These were applications to the Court as a court of original
jurisdiction (1) for a writ of mandamus to compel the clerk below
to send up a transcript of a record, and (2) to vacate a
supersedeas. The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an application for a writ of mandamus requiring the
Clerk of the Supreme Court of the State of Louisiana to transmit to
this Court a true copy of the record in that court of a judgment in
the suit of the British and American Mortgage Company against Mrs.
E. J. Ralston and her husband, omitting
Page 119 U. S. 614
therefrom certain portions not material to the federal question
involved. From the showing made, it sufficiently appears that the
judgment was rendered April 5, 1886, and that on the 31st of May,
1886, the chief justice of the state court allowed a writ of error
to this Court, "on furnishing bond, with security, according to
law, for one thousand dollars, not to operate as a supersedeas." No
writ was, however, issued in fact, but the order of allowance, with
the petition therefor, was filed in the office of the clerk of the
state court, "and a demand made on the clerk . . . for a copy of
the record." According to the statements in the petition, the clerk
refused to give such a transcript unless it should include
everything used on the trial in the state court, but the petitioner
wanted only such parts of the record as were necessary to present
the single question of which this Court had jurisdiction.
After the allowance of the writ by the chief justice of the
state court, on application of the petitioner, MR. JUSTICE WOODS,
the Associate Justice of this Court allotted to the Fifth Circuit,
made this order, evidently supposing that a writ of error had
actually been issued:
"A writ of error having been allowed in this case, and a bond
given and duly approved, without an allowance of supersedeas,
though the right of supersedeas is claimed by Mrs. E. J. Ralston,
the plaintiff in error, it is ordered that further proceedings to
enforce executory process in execution sought to be enforced in
this case in the Supreme Court of Louisiana, or in the district
court from which the case was appealed to said Supreme Court of
Louisiana, be suspended until the further order of the Supreme
Court of the United States."
From this statement it is apparent that we have no authority
over the clerk in the matter about which the mandamus is asked. As
no writ of error has in fact been issued, we have no jurisdiction
of the suit.
Mussina v
Cavazos, 6 Wall. 358;
Bondurant v. Watson,
103 U. S. 278.
Waiving the question whether the clerk of the state court could
issue the writ on the allowance of the chief justice of that court,
which, to say the least, has never yet been held by this Court,
McDonogh v.
Millaudon, 3 How. 693, it is sufficient to say that
he never has
Page 119 U. S. 615
done so, and, so far as this record shows, he has never been
asked to do it. Certainly it has been the prevailing custom from
the beginning for the clerk of this Court or the clerk of the
circuit court for the proper district to issue the writ, and for
such a writ to be lodged with the clerk of the state court before
he could be called on to make the necessary transcript for use in
this Court. Consequently the simple lodging of the allowance with
him cannot be considered as a demand for the writ, and besides,
this proceeding is not to require him to issue the writ, but to
furnish a transcript to be annexed to and returned with the writ
(Rev.Stat. ยง 997), which it is not his duty to give until there is
a writ to which it can be annexed, and with which it can be
returned. The application for the mandamus is consequently
denied.
Pending these proceedings for mandamus, the British and American
Mortgage Company has filed a motion to vacate the supersedeas
allowed by MR. JUSTICE WOODS. But, as no writ of error has ever
been issued, that order has no legal effect. A supersedeas cannot
be allowed except as an incident to an appeal actually taken or a
writ of error actually sued out. We, however, are as much without
jurisdiction to vacate the order of the Justice as he was without
jurisdiction to grant it. Consequently the motion to vacate must be
denied, although the order as it stands is of no validity.
Both motions denied.