A, being entitled to a fund in the hands of the agent of Great
Britain before the Mixed Claims Commission of 1873, B, his assignee
in bankruptcy, filed
Page 109 U. S. 151
a bill against him and C (C claiming the fund as purchaser), to
restrain them from collecting the money. A restraining order first,
and then a preliminary injunction, were issued. D was then
appointed receiver of the fund. Meanwhile, E commenced suit in the
same court against A and C, claiming one-fourth of the fund, and
obtained preliminary injunction restraining them from collecting
more than three-fourths. Subsequently an order was made in B's suit
in which, after reciting that it was made by consent of parties in
both suits, both restraining orders were vacated, payment of
one-half of the fund was ordered to C discharged of claims of the
plaintiffs in either suit, and the payment of the other half was
ordered to D, and D was directed to hold it subject to the claims
of B and E. This decree was carried out. Both bills were demurred
to, and in each suit decree of dismissal was entered at special
term on the demurrer. In B's suit, appeal was taken and the decree
was affirmed. In E's suit, the decree of dismissal was entered on
the 24th June, 1875, and an appeal was taken on the same day. On
the 28th of the same June, the decree was amended by adding an
order that the receiver pay the fund to C, and notice thereof was
at once given to the receiver with demand of payment. The receiver
repaired to court and asked the court what he should do. The court
directed him to obey the decree. He then surrendered the fund to C.
E's appeal was perfected on the 12th July by filing an appeal bond.
Judgment was reversed on appeal, and an order entered that the
receiver should pay the money into court. Failing to do this, he
was adjudged in contempt, and an order issued for an accounting.
The auditor took testimony and returned it with a report that the
receiver had done his duty in paying the money to C. This report
being confirmed, an appeal was taken from that decree. The receiver
moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground that he was not party to
the suit.
Held:
1. That though the receiver was not party to the suit, he was
principal party to a side issue which had arisen in it, which was
appealable, and that the judgment upon it was final, and the appeal
was properly taken.
2. That under the rules and practice of the Supreme Court of the
District of Columbia, the suspensive force of the appeal in E's
case was not operative until the filing of the bond.
3. That the completing of the decree in that suit by amendment
on the 28th June was within the power of the special term.
4. That these proceedings against the receiver being in equity,
are not governed by the rules regulating a supersedeas of
execution.
5. That a decree in equity dissolving an injunction is not
affected by a supersedeas, unless the court below order the
continuance of the injunction pending appeal. Whether that should
not have been done in this case,
quaere.
The facts are fully stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 109 U. S. 152
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
An award against the United States of nearly $200,000 having
been made to one A. R. McDonald, a British subject, by the mixed
commission appointed under the treaty of 1871, his bankrupt
assignee, Thomas J. Phelps, filed a bill in the Supreme Court of
the District of Columbia to restrain him from collecting the money
and to have it made subject to his debts, making one White also a
defendant, who claimed to have purchased the claim. A restraining
order, and subsequently a preliminary injunction, was granted
according to the prayer of the bill, and George W. Riggs was
appointed a receiver to collect and hold the money until the
further order of the court. In the meantime, a bill was filed by
Charles E. Hovey and William Dole (the present appellants) against
McDonald and White, setting up a lien upon one-fourth of the fund
under an alleged agreement by which they were to receive that
proportion as compensation for their services in aiding the
prosecution of the claim, and praying that the lien might be
established and that the defendants might be enjoined from
collecting or receiving more than three-fourths of the award. A
preliminary injunction was also granted in accordance with the
prayer of this bill. On the 16th of February, 1875, the following
consent decree, or order, was made, to-wit:
"
I
n the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia"
"THOMAS J. PHELPS, Assignee"
"v. In Equity. No. 3,910"
"AUGUSTINE R. MCDONALD and WILLIAM WHITE"
"This cause came on to be further heard on this 16th day of
February, A.D. 1875, and thereupon, and upon consideration thereof,
and with the consent of the parties to this suit, and of Charles E.
Hovey and William P. Dole, parties complainant in a certain cause
in equity in this Court, numbered 3,937, against the same
defendants, and claiming one-fourth of the award in the proceedings
mentioned:"
"It is, this 16th day of February, A.D. 1875, ordered, adjudged,
and decreed -- "
Page 109 U. S. 153
"1. That the restraining orders heretofore made in both said
causes are hereby vacated."
"2. That the decree made in this cause on the 28th day of
December, A.D. 1874, appointing George W. Riggs, Esq., receiver,
and granting a provisional injunction, is modified as follows,
viz., that the defendant William White may receive from
the agents of the British government the one-half of the net amount
of the award in the proceedings mentioned, free and discharged of
all claims of the plaintiffs in both the causes above mentioned, to
enable the said defendant to pay the expenses incurred by the
defendant A. R. McDonald in the prosecution of this claim; which
sum of one-half of said award the court finds to be the reasonable
expense incident to the prosecution of the said claim by said
defendant A. R. McDonald before said mixed commission, exclusive of
said claim of Hovey and Dole."
"3. That the remaining half of the net amount of said award
shall be paid to the said George W. Riggs, and it is ordered,
adjudged, and decreed that the defendants shall execute all such
orders, receipts, and acquittances necessary to enable the said
George W. Riggs to collect the same. And the said George W. Riggs
shall hold the said half of the said award subject to the claims,
liens, and rights of the said Charles E. Hovey and William P. Dole
and of the plaintiff in this cause, to be determined by the further
decree of this Court in this cause, and in the cause of said Hovey
and Dole, hereinbefore mentioned. It is further ordered that said
receiver be directed to invest the money so placed in his hands in
bonds of the United States, or in 3 65/100 bonds of the District of
Columbia, guaranteed by the United States, as he may deem best for
the interest of the parties concerned, and that a copy of this
decree be filed in this last-mentioned cause."
This decree was carried out; the money was collected from the
agent of the British government, one-half of it being received by
Mr. Riggs as receiver, and the suits progressed in due course. Both
bills were demurred to, and both demurrers were sustained, and the
bills dismissed by the court in special term.
In the case of Hovey and Dole, a decree was entered on Thursday,
the 24th of June, 1875, simply decreeing that the
Page 109 U. S. 154
demurrer to the bill be sustained and that the bill be dismissed
with costs. An appeal to the general term was entered the same day
on the minutes of the court.
On Monday, the 28th of June, 1875, the decree was amended by
adding thereto the clause
"that the receiver appointed in this cause, and in
Phelps,
Assignee v. McDonald and White, No. 3,910, be directed to pay
the funds belonging to said cause to the said defendants, McDonald
and White, or order, and thereon said receiver shall be
discharged,"
and at the same time a decree was entered in the suit of Phelps,
assignee, that the demurrer be sustained, and the bill dismissed
with costs, and the same direction was given to the receiver to
deliver the funds to McDonald and White. An appeal was entered in
this case also on the day the decree was rendered, but no appeal
bond or undertaking was filed in either case until the 12th of
July.
Soon after the entry of the last decree and on the same day, a
copy of it was served on the receiver by the attorney of McDonald
and White, and the fund in his hands, then consisting of district
bonds, was demanded of him; but before he delivered the bonds, the
attorney of Hovey and Dole appeared and gave him verbal notice that
an appeal had been taken, and insisted that it was a supersedeas of
the decree. Thereupon the receiver and the attorneys repaired to
the court, and the receiver asked the judge what he should do, and
was simply told to obey the decree, the complainants' attorney at
the same time offering to furnish the security named by the court
on the appeal. The receiver then delivered the bonds to the
defendants.
In the case of Phelps, the bankrupt assignee, the decree of the
special term was afterwards affirmed; but in that of Hovey and Dole
the decree of the special term was reversed, and the counsel for
the complainants obtained an order on the defendants to pay back
into court the money, or funds, which they had obtained from the
receiver. Failing to do this, they were adjudged in contempt, and a
decree
pro confesso was entered against them. Thereupon
the complainants obtained an order on the receiver to file his
account, and this being done, and if
Page 109 U. S. 155
appearing thereby that, in obedience to the decree of the
special term, he had delivered the fund to the defendants, the
account was referred to an auditor, and the complainants filed
exceptions thereto on the ground that he had delivered up the funds
without due authority. The auditor took testimony as to the
circumstances of the appeal, the notice given to the receiver, and
his conduct in the matter, and reported that in his opinion the
receiver had only done his duty. This report was confirmed by a
decree of the general term, and from that decree the present appeal
was taken.
The first matter to be determined is the motion on the part of
the receiver to dismiss the appeal for the reason that he was not a
party to the suit. This motion cannot prevail. The proceedings
instituted by the order requiring the receiver to file his account,
and the subsequent reference of that account to an auditor, and the
exceptions thereto, were all directed against the receiver for the
purpose of rendering him personally responsible for the fund which
had been placed in his hands, and which he had delivered over in
obedience to the original decree. It was a side issue in the cause,
in which the complainants on the one side, and the receiver on the
other, were real and interested parties. The decree confirming the
auditor's report was, as to this matter, a final decree against the
complainants and in favor of the receiver. We have so often
considered cases of this sort, arising incidentally in a cause, but
presenting independent issues to be determined between the parties
to them, that it is unnecessary to enter into a detailed discussion
of the subject at this time. The receiver, though not a party in
the principal suit, was an officer of the court appointed in the
suit and was a principal party to the particular question raised by
the proceedings referred to. It is only necessary to refer to some
of the cases that apply to the subject. It will be found fully
discussed in
Blossom v. Milwaukee Railroad
Company, 1 Wall. 655;
Butterfield v.
Usher, 91 U. S. 248;
Trustees v. Greenough, 105 U. S. 531,
and
Hinckley v. Gilman, Clinton & Springfield Railroad
Company, 94 U. S. 467. In
the case last cited, a decree was rendered against a receiver
directing him to pay into court a certain sum of money, being
the
Page 109 U. S. 156
balance found due from him on the settlement of his accounts. He
appealed from this decree and his right to appeal was sustained by
this Court. This case is a direct authority to show that the
receiver in the present case, had the decree been against him,
could have taken an appeal, and if he would have had a right to
appeal, surely the opposite parties have the same right.
We are brought, then, to consider the effect of the appeal taken
from the decree of the special term upon the efficacy of said
decree as a justification of the receiver in handing over to the
defendants the fund in his possession. To arrive at a satisfactory
conclusion, it will be necessary in the first place to take notice
of the question as to the power of the court in special term to
amend its decree after the appeal was entered.
By the laws relating to the District of Columbia, the Supreme
Court of the district has general terms and special terms, the
latter being held by a single judge and proceeding in the conduct
of causes as if it were a separate court. Rev.Stat.D.C. § 753. The
special term renders final judgments and decrees, and any party
aggrieved by an order, judgment, or decree of the special term, if
the merits are involved, may appeal to the general term. § 772. The
court in general term is authorized to adopt rules to regulate the
time and manner of making appeals and to prescribe the terms and
conditions upon which they may be made. § 770. Such rules have been
adopted. One is that executions may issue after judgment in special
term, unless the party condemned move the vacate it or set it aside
for fraud, deceit, surprise, or irregularity or resort to a review
of it before the general term. Rule 89. Another is that appeals
must be brought within thirty days after the judgment or decree is
made or pronounced, and that they shall not stay execution (as
between private parties) where the judgment is for a specific sum
unless, within twenty days after judgment or decree, an undertaking
be given, with security, to abide by, perform, and pay the judgment
or decree. Rule 91.
We do not perceive that there is anything peculiar in these
appeals from the special to the general term to take them out of
the operation of the general principles and rules which govern
Page 109 U. S. 157
appeals from one court to another. One general rule in all cases
(subject, however, to some qualifications) is that an appeal
suspends the power of the court below to proceed further in the
cause. This includes a suspension of the power to execute the
judgment or decree. But, of course, besides merely taking an
appeal, those additional things must be done which the law requires
to be done in order to give to the appeal a suspensive effect,
whether it be security for the payment of the claim or other
condition imposed by law.
One of the qualifications of the general rule as to the
suspensive effect of an appeal is that the inferior court may
perfect its judgment or decree, usually at any time during the term
at which it is rendered. If, when an appeal is taken or a writ of
error is sued out, the record has not been made up, it may be made
up in due form. If any obvious mistake has occurred, it may be
corrected -- as where the jury by mistake has given damages in a
penal action, or has given damages for a larger sum than the
declaration demanded, the plaintiff may enter a remittitur of the
damages on the record after a writ of error is brought. Tidd's
Pract. 942. And it is laid down as a general rule at law (the
principle of which is equally applicable to chancery proceedings)
that those things which are amendable before error brought are
amendable afterwards, so long as diminution may be alleged and
certiorari awarded, provided, of course, that the time for
amendment has not passed by. Tidd 714. In chancery proceedings, it
is a rule that when a clerical error has crept into the decree or
some ordinary direction has been omitted, the court will entertain
an application to rectify it even though it has been passed and
entered. Where a decree has omitted a direction that is of course
at the time it is made, it may be corrected by the insertion of
that direction, as where, in a creditor's suit, the decree has
omitted the usual direction to take an account of the personal
estate, it was ordered to be inserted. Daniell's Ch.Pr. c. XXV,
sec. 5. This rule is formulated in the eighth equity rule
established by this Court for the government of the circuit courts,
which declares that
"Clerical mistakes in decrees or decretal orders, or errors
arising from any accidental slip or omission,
Page 109 U. S. 158
may at any time before an actual enrollment thereof be corrected
by order of the court or judge thereof, upon petition, without the
form or expense of a rehearing."
Such corrections, by analogy to the practice in cases at law,
may undoubtedly, be made after an appeal is taken.
In the present case, the correction of the form of the decree by
adding the direction to the receiver to pay over the money in his
hands to the defendants was a thing of course; it was merely
expressing the legal effect and consequence of the decree. It was
an amendment which the court below (the special term) was competent
to make notwithstanding the appeal. The terms of the injunction
were that the defendants should be restrained from receiving the
money until the final hearing of the cause. Of course, when the
cause was finally heard and the bill dismissed, the injunction
ceased to have effect by its own terms. The appointment of Mr.
Riggs as receiver was for the purpose of holding the money as agent
of the court and withholding it from the defendants until the
decision. The words of his commission were, "to collect and hold
the money until and subject to the further order of the court." It
was therefore a necessary consequence of the decree of dismissal
that the injunction should be dissolved and that the receiver
should be discharged and directed no longer to withhold the money
from the possession of the defendants. The dissolution of the
injunction and the discharge of the receiver were directions, of
course, to be inserted in the decree of dismissal unless the court
should affirmatively order otherwise. The court below, it is true,
in view of the appeal, might have made an order to continue the
injunction and to retain the property in the receiver's hands; but
that was a matter of discretion, to be exercised according to the
justice of the case. If the judge did not see fit to exercise it,
it was, of course, to add to the decree of dismissal its legal
effect and consequence. The making of the correction without notice
to the complainants, if such notice was requisite, was an
irregularity of which the receiver was not bound to know. We are of
opinion, therefore, that the completion of the decree on the 28th
of June by adding the usual direction was within the power of the
special
Page 109 U. S. 159
term, and the rights of the parties to this appeal must be
determined as if the decree had originally contained that
direction.
This brings us to the question of the effect of the appeal as a
supersedeas or as a suspension of the decree thus corrected. The
appeal was taken in time, and verbal notice that it had been taken
and would be followed up by the proper undertaking was given to the
receiver at once, before he had parted with the funds in his hands.
At the same time, he was served with a copy of the decree ordering
him to deliver those funds to the defendants. The question is
whether, under these circumstances, he paid the money in his own
wrong notwithstanding the order of the court.
A supersedeas, properly so called, is a suspension of the power
of the court below to issue an execution on the judgment or decree
appealed from, or, if a writ of execution has issued, it is a
prohibition emanating from the court of appeal against the
execution of the writ. It operates from the time of the completion
of those acts which are requisite to call it into existence. If,
before those acts are performed, an execution has been lawfully
issued, a writ of supersedeas, directed to the officer holding it,
will be necessary; but if the writ of execution has been not only
lawfully issued, but actually executed, there is no remedy until
the appellate proceedings are ended, when, if the judgment or
decree be reversed, a writ of restitution will be awarded. To
remedy the inconveniencies that arose from an immediate issue of
execution before the appellate proceedings could be perfected, the
original Judiciary Act of 1789 provided, and the present Revised
Statutes now provide, that no execution shall issue upon judgments
in the courts of the United States, where a writ of error may be a
supersedeas until the expiration of ten days after the judgment.
Rev.Stat. § 1007. This regulation applies to proceedings in equity
as well as to cases at law. But it does not extend to the present
case. The regulation of appeals from the special to the general
term of the Supreme Court of the district is specially provided for
in the laws and rules before referred to, which cover the whole
subject. By these rules it is declared that after judgment is
Page 109 U. S. 160
entered in the circuit court, or at a special term, execution
may be issued unless the party condemned move to vacate or set it
aside, or resort to a review of it before the general term; but no
appeal shall operate as a stay of execution where the judgment is
for a specific sum of money unless the appellant, with surety,
within twenty days after the judgment or decree, execute and file
an undertaking in the form prescribed. The appellants insist that
this rule makes it unlawful to issue an execution within the twenty
days. We doubt very much whether that is the true meaning of the
rule. It would be more in accordance with the general mode of
construing such regulations to hold that the supersedeas does not
take effect until the condition is complied with, and will not take
effect at all unless complied with during the time limited.
But this case is not within the terms of the rule. There was no
decree for a specific sum of money; there was no decree at all in
favor of the complainants, and no execution was applicable to or
could be issued in the case, except an execution for the costs of
the defendants. The truth is that the case is not governed by the
ordinary rules that relate to a supersedeas of execution, but by
those principles and rules which relate to chancery proceedings
exclusively. It depends upon the effect which, according to the
principles and usages of a court of equity, an appeal has upon the
proceedings and decree of the court appealed from, and the
doctrines which apply to a supersedeas can only be brought in by
way of analogy.
In England until the year 1772, an appeal from a decree or order
in chancery suspended all proceedings; but since that time, a
contrary rule has prevailed there. The subject was reviewed by the
House of Lords in 1807, and an order was made establishing the
right of the Chancellor to determine whether and how far an appeal
should be suspensive of proceedings, subject to the order of the
House on the same subject.
See Palmer, Pract. H.L. 9, 10;
15 Vesey 184; 3 Paige 383-385.
In this country the matter is usually regulated by statute or
rules of court, and generally speaking an appeal, upon giving the
security required by law (when security is required), suspends
Page 109 U. S. 161
further proceedings, and operates as a supersedeas of execution.
This, as we have seen, is the case in the circuit courts of the
United States. But the decree itself, without further proceedings,
may have an intrinsic effect which can only be suspended by an
affirmative order either of the court which makes the decree or of
the appellate tribunal.
This Court, in the
Slaughterhouse
Cases, 10 Wall. 273, decided that an appeal from a
decree granting, refusing, or dissolving an injunction does not
disturb its operative effect. Mr. Justice Clifford, delivering the
opinion of the Court, said
"it is quite certain that neither an injunction nor a decree
dissolving an injunction passed in a circuit court is reversed or
nullified by an appeal or writ of error before the cause is heard
in this Court,"
and held that the same rule applies to writs of error from state
courts in equity proceedings, and the decision of the Court was
based upon that view of the law. It was decided that neither a
decree for an injunction nor a decree dissolving an injunction was
suspended in its effect by the writ of error, though all the
requisites for a supersedeas were complied with. It was not decided
that the court below had no power, if the purposes of justice
required it, to order a continuance of the
status quo
until a decision should be made by the appellate court, or until
that court should order the contrary. This power undoubtedly
exists, and should always be exercised when any irremediable injury
may result from the effect of the decree as rendered, but it is a
discretionary power, and its exercise or nonexercise is not an
appealable matter. In recognition of this power, and for the
purpose of facilitating its proper exercise in certain cases, on
appeals from the circuit courts, this Court by an additional rule
of practice in equity, adopted in October term, 1878, declared
that
"When an appeal from a final decree in an equity suit granting
or dissolving an injunction is allowed by a justice or judge who
took part in the decision of the cause, he may, in his discretion,
at the time of such allowance, make an order suspending or
modifying the injunction during the pendency of the appeal upon
such terms as to bond or otherwise as he may consider proper for
the security of the rights of the opposite party."
Rule 93.
Page 109 U. S. 162
Of course, where the power is not exercised by the court nor by
the judge who allows the appeal, the decree retains its intrinsic
force and effect.
Applying these principles to the present case, it is clear that
the force of the decree was not affected by the appeal, although it
was in the power of the special term to have continued the
injunction and to have retained the fund in its control in the
hands of the receiver had it seen fit to do so. Judging only from
what appears in the record, we cannot refrain from saying that in
this case the latter course would have been eminently proper. It
would have protected all parties and produced injury to none. But
if the court failed to do what it might properly have done, such
failure ought not to be visited upon the receiver, who was the mere
instrument and hand of the court, and subject to its order. It was
his duty to obey the decree as made.
This disposes of the case and requires that the decree appealed
from should be affirmed,
And it is so ordered.