A reargument of a case decided by this Court will not be granted
unless a member of the Court who concurred in the judgment desires
it, and when that is the case, it will be ordered without waiting
for the application of counsel.
Page 55 U. S. 26
This was an appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States
for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, and was the conclusion of
the case of
Aspden v.
Nixon, reported in 4 How. 467.
It was affirmed by a divided Court in December, 1852, and in
February, 1853, a petition for a rehearing was filed by the
appellants.
Upon which petition MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TANEY delivered the
opinion of the Court.
A motion has been made for a rehearing in this case, and we have
been referred to the practice of the English Chancery Court in
support of the application. The argument presupposes that this
Court, in cases in equity, has adopted the rules and practice of
the English chancery. But this is a mistake. The English chancery
is a court of original jurisdiction, and this Court is sitting as
an appellate tribunal. It would be impossible, from the nature and
office of the two tribunals, to adopt the same rules of practice in
both.
Nothing could show this more strongly than the present
application. By the established rules of chancery practice, a
rehearing, in the sense in which that term is used in proceedings
in equity, cannot be allowed after the decree is enrolled. If the
party desires it, it must be applied for before the enrollment. But
no appeal will lie to the proper appellate tribunal until after it
is enrolled, either actually or by construction of law. And
consequently the time for a rehearing must have gone by before an
appeal could be taken. In the House of Lords in England, to which
the appeal lies from the Court of Chancery, a rehearing is
altogether unknown. A reargument indeed may be ordered, if the
house desires it, for its own satisfaction. But the chancery rules
in relation to rehearings, in the technical sense of the word, are
altogether inapplicable to the proceedings on the appeal.
Undoubtedly this Court may and would call for a reargument where
doubts are entertained which it is supposed may be removed by
further discussion at the bar. And this may be done after judgment
is entered, provided the order for reargument is entered at the
same term. But the rule of the Court is this -- that no reargument
will be heard in any case after judgment is
Page 55 U. S. 27
entered unless some member of the Court who concurred in the
judgment afterwards doubts the correctness of his opinion and
desires a further argument on the subject. And when that happens,
the Court will of its own accord apprise the counsel of its wishes
and designate the points on which it desires to hear them.
There is certainly nothing in the history of the English Court
of Chancery to induce this Court to adopt rules in relation to
rearguments analogous to the chancery practice upon applications
for a rehearing. According to the general practice of that court,
one rehearing, where the application has been sanctioned by the
signature of two counsel, is a matter of course. And this facility
in obtaining one rehearing has naturally led to others, and in
cases of interest or difficulty, two, or even three rehearings have
sometimes been allowed under the special leave of the court before
the decree was enrolled, and consequently before it could be
removed to the House of Lords. The natural result of this practice
is to produce some degree of carelessness in the first argument,
and hesitation and indecision in the court. But the great evil is
in the enormous expenses occasioned by these repeated hearings and
the delays which it produces in the decision, which often prove
ruinous to both parties before the final decree is pronounced. Nor
is the mischief confined to the particular suit in which such
proceedings and delays are permitted to take place. A multitude of
others are always behind it waiting anxiously to be heard. And the
result of the practice of which we are speaking has been such that
although the court has always been filled by men of the highest
order, distinguished for their learning and industry, yet the
expenses and delays of the court have become a byword and reproach
to the administration of justice, and Parliament has at length been
compelled to interpose.
And if this Court should adopt a practice analogous to that of
the English chancery, we should soon find ourselves in the same
predicament, and we should be hearing over again at a second term
almost all the cases which we had heard and adjudged at a former
one and upon which our own opinions would have been definitively
made up upon the first argument. We deem it safer to adhere to the
rule we have heretofore acted on. And no reargument will be granted
in any case unless a member of the Court who concurred in the
judgment desires it, and when that is the case, it will be ordered
without waiting for the application of counsel.
It is true that the decree of affirmance in this Court in the
case before us was upon an equal division of the members composing
the Court at the time of the argument, eight being
Page 55 U. S. 28
present. But the case was fully heard, more than a week being
occupied in the arguments of counsel. And when, upon conference and
a full interchange of opinion, it was found that the Court was
divided, the case was held over until the present term in order
that each member of the body might have an ample opportunity of
investigating the subject for himself. This has been done. And when
the Court reassembled it was found that the opinions of each member
of the tribunal was unchanged, and the decree was therefore
affirmed by a divided Court. Further arguments would be mere waste
of time when opinions have been formed after so much argument and
such deliberate examination.
Nor is the circumstance that a decree is affirmed by a divided
Court any reason for ordering a reargument before a full bench in
any case. In a body as numerous as this, it must often happen from
various causes that the bench is not full. And experience has shown
that it has rarely happened that every judge has been present every
day throughout anyone entire term. The case before us is certainly
an important one in its principles and in the amount in dispute.
But there are many cases on the docket at every term of the Court
much more important in both respects. And if it is to be understood
that cases of this description are not to be finally decided
without the concurrence of a majority of the whole bench, it would
be an useless consumption of time to hear them in the absence of
anyone judge, because it would be uncertain whether a judgment
could follow after the argument. And it is easy to foresee the
inconvenience, delay, and expenses to which a practice of that kind
would subject the parties and the uncertainty and confusion it
would produce to the great injury of other suitors in the order of
business as it stands on the docket of the Court.
Neither is there any difference between a decree in chancery and
a judgment at law as to its affirmance on a division of the Court.
In both cases, the motion is to reverse, and if that fails, the
judgment or decree necessarily stands, and must therefore be
affirmed. And in most of the cases affirmed in this manner, a
majority in fact of the judges who act judicially upon the case
concur in the judgment. For the circuit court is composed of two
members, and if both are on the bench, they must concur in the
judgment or decree; otherwise it could not be passed, and the point
would be certified by a divided Court.
In every view of the subject, we see no sufficient ground for
ordering a reargument, and the application is therefore
Refused.