A judgment in an action of tort, for damages and costs, was
rendered in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia at
special term. It was affirmed by the general term, with costs. The
latter judgment was
Page 140 U. S. 92
affirmed by this Court, with costs. Nothing was said about
interest in either of the three judgments. On the presentation of
the mandate of this Court to the general term, it entered a
judgment for the payment of the judgment of the special term, with
interest on it at the rate of six percent per annum from the time
it was originally rendered.
Held that the judgment on the
mandate should have followed the judgment of this Court, and not
have allowed interest.
As the amount of the interest was not large enough to warrant a
writ of error, the proper remedy was by mandamus, there being no
other adequate remedy and there being no discretion to be exercised
by the inferior court.
This Court does not decide whether a judgment founded on tort
bears or ought to bear interest in the Supreme Court of the
District of Columbia from the date of its rendition.
The fact that the judgment of this Court merely affirmed the
judgment of the general term with costs, and said nothing about
interest, is to be taken as a declaration of this Court that, upon
the record as presented to it, no interest was to be allowed.
A mandamus was issued to the general term commanding it to
vacate its judgment so far as concerned the interest and to enter a
judgment on the mandate, affirming its prior judgment, with costs,
without more.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
On the 16th of January, 1884, Lewis H. McDade brought an action
at law in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia against the
Washington and Georgetown Railroad Company to recover damages for
personal injuries alleged to have been inflicted upon him in
consequence of the negligence of the employees of the company and
of the unfit character and condition of the machinery used in the
shops of the company where McDade was employed at the time he
sustained the injuries. The cause was put at issue, and a trial was
had before a jury, which resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff on
the 18th of December, 1885, for $6,195. Upon that verdict a
judgment
Page 140 U. S. 93
was entered on the same day, in special term, that the plaintiff
recover against the defendant $6,195 for his damages, and that he
also recover his costs of suit and have execution thereof. The
defendant filed a motion for a new trial on a bill of exceptions,
and the case was heard by the general term of the court, which, on
the 28th of June, 1886, affirmed the judgment, with costs. 5 Mackey
144. Nothing was said in either of the judgments about interest.
The defendant brought the case to this Court by a writ of error,
and on the 19th of May, 1890, it affirmed the judgment of the
general term.
Washington &c. Railroad Co. v. McDade,
135 U. S. 554. The
judgment of this Court, in terms, was that the judgment of the
general term of June 28, 1886, "be and it is hereby affirmed, with
costs to be taxed by the clerk, and that the plaintiff have
execution thereof." Nothing was said about interest.
The mandate of this Court, issued May 27, 1890, recited the
judgment of the general term, and contained the judgment of this
Court, and then commanded the Supreme Court of the District "that
such execution and proceedings be had in said cause as, according
to right and justice and the laws of the United States, ought to be
had, the said writ of error notwithstanding." Afterwards the
mandate was presented to the Supreme Court of the District in
general term, and a motion was made to it, on behalf of McDade, to
enter up a judgment against the railroad company for interest on
the judgment of the special term at the rate of six percent per
annum thereon from the 18th of December, 1885. On the 9th of June,
1890, the court decided the motion in favor of McDade, and on that
day entered up a judgment against the railroad company for the
payment of the judgment, with interest on it according to the terms
of the motion. The mandate was filed on the same day, and the terms
of the order made thereon by the general term were that McDade have
execution of his judgment against the railroad company rendered by
the special term, to-wit, the sum of $6,195, "with interest thereon
from the date thereof until paid," and the costs of the plaintiff
in the suit in the Supreme Court of the District, to be taxed by
the clerk.
Page 140 U. S. 94
The railroad company at the time of the making of that order,
objected and excepted to the judgment in open court. It thereupon,
on the 23d of June, 1890, filed in the office of the clerk of this
Court a petition setting forth the foregoing facts and praying for
a writ of mandamus to the Supreme Court of the District, commanding
it to vacate the judgment of June 8, 1890, so far as it related to
interest on the judgment of December 18, 1885, and to enter a
judgment on the mandate of this Court in accordance with its terms
-- that is to say, a judgment affirming the judgment of the general
term of June 28, 1886, with costs, without more.
On that petition, on application of the railroad company, this
Court made an order at its present term, requiring the Supreme
Court of the District to show cause why the writ of mandamus prayed
for should not issue. A return to this order has been filed in
which the latter court states that by the mandate it was commanded
that such execution and proceedings be had in the cause as,
according to right and justice and the laws of the United States,
ought to be had, and that the order of June 9, 1890, was passed in
the cause because the court sitting in general term believed said
order was in accordance with right and justice and the laws of the
United States, and it annexes, as its reasons for passing the
order, the opinion of the general term, composed of Justices
Hagner, Cox, and James, 18 Washington Law Reporter 719, delivered
June 9, 1890, by Mr. Justice Hagner.
We are of opinion that the writ of mandamus prayed for must be
granted irrespective of the question largely discussed at the bar
and considered in the opinion of the general term, as to whether a
judgment founded on tort bears or ought to bear interest, in the
Supreme Court of the District, from the date of its rendition.
Upon the hearing on the writ of error, which resulted in the
judgment and mandate of this Court, the question of the allowance
of interest on the judgment from its date until it should be paid
was a question for the consideration of this Court. The fact that
the judgment of this Court merely affirmed the judgment of the
general term with costs, and said nothing
Page 140 U. S. 95
about interest, is to be taken as a declaration of this Court
that, upon the record as presented to it, no interest was to be
allowed. It was thereupon the duty of the general term to enter a
judgment strictly in accordance with the judgment strictly in
accordance to add to it the allowance of interest.
The judgment of the general term of June 28, 1886, made no
allowance of interest, nor did the judgment of the special term of
December 18, 1885. Those were the judgments which were affirmed by
this Court, and it affirmed them as not providing for any interest,
and this Court did not itself award any interest. The command of
the mandate of this Court, "that such execution and proceedings be
had in said cause as, according to right and justice and the laws
of the United States, ought to be had, the said writ of error
notwithstanding," did not authorize the general term of the Supreme
Court of the District to depart in any respect from the judgment of
this Court. Under these circumstances, the general term had no
authority to make its order of June 9, 1890, in regard to interest
on the judgment.
The amount of such interest, calculated at the rate of six
percent per annum from December 18, 1885, to June 9, 1890, was not
quite $1,700. The amount involved was therefore too small to be the
subject of a writ of error from this Court. The only relief which
the railroad company could obtain in the premises was therefore by
a writ of mandamus. A mandamus will lie to correct such an error
where there is no other adequate remedy and where there is no
discretion to be exercised by the inferior court.
Sibbald v.
United States, 12 Pet. 488;
Ex Parte
Bradley, 7 Wall. 364,
74 U. S. 376;
Virginia v. Rives, 100 U. S. 313,
100 U. S.
329.
In
Perkins v.
Fourniquet, 14 How. 328,
55 U. S. 330,
the circuit court had failed to carry out the mandate of this
Court, and the matter was brought to this Court by an appeal. A
motion having been made to dismiss the appeal on the ground that it
would not lie, this Court said:
"This objection to the form of proceeding involves nothing more
than a question of practice. The mandate from this Court left
nothing to the judgment and discretion of the circuit court, but
directed it to carry
Page 140 U. S. 96
into execution the decree of this Court, which was recited in
the mandate. And if the decree of this Court has been misunderstood
or misconstrued by the court below, to the injury of either party,
we see no valid objection to an appeal to this Court, in order to
have the error corrected. The question is merely as to the form of
proceeding which this Court should adopt to enforce the execution
of its own mandate in the court below. The subject might without
doubt be brought before us upon motion, and a mandamus issued to
compel its execution. But an appeal from the decision of the court
below is equally convenient and suitable."
The principle has been well established in numerous cases that,
on a mandate from this Court containing a specific direction to the
inferior court to enter a specific judgment, the latter court has
no authority to do anything but to execute the mandate.
Ex Parte Dubuque & Pacific
Railroad, 1 Wall. 69;
Durant v. Essex
Company, 101 U. S. 555,
101 U. S.
556.
The case of
Boyce's Executors v.
Grundy, 9 Pet. 275, is very much in point. In that
case, this Court had entered a decree simply affirming the decree
below, with costs, and had sent down a mandate commanding the
inferior court, in the terms of the mandate in the present
case,
"that such execution and proceedings be had in said cause as,
according to right and justice and the laws of the United States,
ought to be had, the said appeal notwithstanding."
On receiving the mandate, the court below varied its former
decree and, among other things, awarded an additional amount of
money intended to be interest upon the original sum decreed, from
the time of the rendition of the decree in the court below to the
time of the affirmance in this Court. This Court, on appeal, after
referring to the statute which authorized it, in case of
affirmance, to award to the respondent just damages for his delay,
and to the rules of this Court, made in 1803 and 1807, prescribing
an award of damages in cases where the suit in this Court is for
mere delay, said:
"It is therefore solely for the decision of the Supreme Court
whether any damages or interest (as a part thereof) are to be
allowed or not in cases of affirmance. If, upon the affirmance, no
allowance of interest or damages is made, it is
Page 140 U. S. 97
equivalent to a denial of any interest or damages, and the
circuit court, in carrying into effect the decree of affirmance,
cannot enlarge the amount thereby decreed, but is limited to the
mere execution of the decree in the terms in which it is expressed.
A decree of the circuit court allowing interest in such a case is,
to all intents and purposes,
quoad hoc a new decree,
extending the former decree,"
citing
Himely v. Rose,
5 Cranch 313, and
The Santa
Maria, 10 Wheat. 431,
23 U. S. 442.
See also Bank of United States v.
Moss, 6 How. 31.
We do not consider the question as to whether interest was
allowable by law, or rule, or statute, on the original judgment of
the special term, or whether it would have been proper for the
special term, in rendering the judgment or otherwise, to have
allowed interest upon it, or whether it would have been proper for
the general term to do so, but we render our decision solely upon
the point that, as neither the special term nor the general term
allowed interest on the judgment, and as this Court awarded no
interest in its judgment of affirmance, all that the general term
could do, after the mandate of this Court went down, was to enter a
judgment carrying out the mandate according to its terms, and
simply affirming the prior judgment of the general term, and
directing execution of the judgment of the special term of December
18, 1885, with costs, and without interest, and of the judgment of
the general term of June 28, 1886, for costs.
A writ of mandamus is granted commanding the general term to
vacate its judgment of June 9, 1890, in favor of McDade against the
railroad company so far as the same relates to interest upon the
judgment of the special term of December 18, 1885, and to enter a
judgment on the mandate of this Court of May 27, 1890, in
accordance with its terms -- that is to say, a judgment affirming
the judgment of the general term of June 28, 1886, with costs,
without more.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER did not sit in this case or take any part in
its decision.