1. Where, upon an appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals from a
judgment of the District Court, the record contains no properly
authenticated statement of the evidence or agreed statement of the
case as required by Equity Rules 75(b) and 77, and the judgment is
affirmed on that ground, although the cause was heard without
objection to the record, denial by the Circuit Court of Appeals,
upon a petition for rehearing, of an opportunity to secure proper
authentication of the record is an abuse of discretion. P.
300 U. S.
54.
2. While orderly procedure demands that the Equity Rules be
enforced with the strictness necessary to effectuate their
essential purpose, yet when, as here, there is mere omission of
some step which has escaped the attention of both parties, and when
rigorous enforcement without fair opportunity to correct the error
would defeat hearing on the merits and entail unnecessary hardship,
appropriate relief promptly asked for should be afforded. P.
300 U. S.
54.
3. In this case, permission to supply authentication of the
record would have occasioned no material injury to any party, nor
interfered seriously with the business of the court. P.
300 U. S. 55.
83 F.2d 783, 84 F.2d 541, reversed.
Certiorari, 299 U.S. 528, to review a judgment affirming a
judgment, 12 F. Supp. 11, which disaffirmed an order of the Referee
in Bankruptcy and allowed a claim of the United States for income
taxes against the estate of a bankrupt. The tax liability had
previously been sustained by the Board of Tax Appeals, 29 B.T.A.
514.
Page 300 U. S. 51
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the Court.
In a proceeding begun January 9, 1934, the District Court,
Western District of Washington, adjudged the Carlisle Packing
Company bankrupt, February 9, 1934. The United States presented
their claim for income taxes for 1927, 1928, and 1929, and the
trustee filed objections, June 18, 1934. He asserted that the
Company received no taxable income during 1927, but suffered loss
sufficient to offset any gains for 1928 and 1929. The referee
received copy of the duly authenticated judgment by the Board of
Tax Appeals, which sustained the tax in question, took other
evidence, and upon the whole record concluded that the Company lost
as averred during 1927. He disallowed the claim and explained this
action by an opinion.
Exceptions challenged the referee's refusal to treat the
decision of the Tax Board as conclusive and hold the bankruptcy
court lacked power to consider the merits of the assessments. A
petition for review by the District Court alleged finality of the
Board's judgment, lack of power in the bankruptcy court, and asked
disallowance of the claim.
From an abstract of the proceedings returned by the referee, it
appears:
That the United States had unsuccessfully objected to the
introduction of any testimony concerning the merits of the
questioned tax upon the ground that the Board's
Page 300 U. S. 52
judgment in respect of the same matter had become final and
conclusive.
That the bankrupt had borrowed large sums from the Bank of
California, and in 1927, when unable otherwise to meet its
obligations, had transferred to the Bank much property and received
therefor its own cancelled notes for $650,000 . The Company claimed
no profit arose from this transaction, and that it sustained large
losses during 1927. The collector ruled to the contrary, and
assessed delinquencies for three years. The Board of Tax Appeals
sustained him, approved the assessments, and adjudged accordingly,
January 4, 1934. On January 12, 1934, he made summary assessments.
The time for contesting the Board's judgment had not expired when
petitioner was adjudged bankrupt.
Upon motion of the United States, the District Court directed
that the bankrupt's tax returns be made parts of the record. It
then heard the cause, considered whether the decision of the Board
was conclusive, and held:
"To reach the conclusion that a deficiency determined by the
Board of Tax Appeals may be reexamined and redecided by the Judge
of a District Court or a Referee in Bankruptcy is, on its face,
inconsistent with the intent and purpose on the part of Congress
shown that a review of the Board's decision should be by such an
appellate court."
Accordingly, it rendered an opinion, disaffirmed the referee's
action, and allowed the claim.
Thereupon, the trustee appealed to the Circuit Court of Appeals.
Among other things, he assigned as error the ruling that the
bankruptcy court lacked power to determine anew questions which the
Board of Tax Appeals had adjudicated. Portions of the record in the
District Court, certified as correct by the clerk, were filed.
Counsel for the United States obtained leave to make part of the
transcript the District Court's opinion. This was
Page 300 U. S. 53
omitted, he said, through inadvertence only recently
discovered.
It is asserted and not denied that the cause was heard by the
Court without objection to the record, and that both sides treated
the statement of the evidence as correct. Undoubtedly the record
was not properly authenticated within the requirements of Equity
Rules 75(b) [
Footnote 1] and
77. [
Footnote 2]
Upon its own motion, the Circuit Court of Appeals raised the
point and decided,
"appellant has not complied
Page 300 U. S. 54
with either of these rules, but has disregarded them both. There
is no statement of the evidence, nor is there any agreed statement
of the case. In the absence of any such statement, we indulge the
presumption that the evidence supports the judgment and warrants
its affirmance."
The trustee asked for a rehearing, also that the record be
returned to the District Court for settlement and proper
authentication. Both things were denied. One of the judges
dissented, and from his unquestioned statement it appears:
"Neither party raised the point on which the opinion was based.
The point took its origin from the bench without suggestion from or
reference to either party and in the face of extended argument and
voluminous briefs based upon the statement of evidence contained in
the abstract."
He thought the petition for rehearing should have been granted
and opportunity afforded to secure proper authentication of the
record.
Manifestly the equity rules should be enforced with the
strictness necessary to effectuate their essential purpose; orderly
procedure so demands. But when, as here, there is mere omission of
some step which has escaped the attention of both parties, and when
rigorous enforcement without fair opportunity to correct the error
would defeat hearing on the merits and entail unnecessary hardship,
we think appropriate relief promptly asked for
Page 300 U. S. 55
should be afforded. Permission to supply authentication of the
record would have occasioned no material injury to any party, nor
interfered seriously with the business of the Court. In the
circumstances, we must regard the denial of an opportunity to amend
as an abuse of discretion -- a violation of the spirit if not the
letter of the rules.
The judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals must be reversed.
The cause will be remanded there for further proceedings in harmony
with this opinion.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
Equity Rule 75(b), as amended, 286 U.S. 570, 28 U.S.C. §
723:
"The evidence to be included in the record, except expert
testimony, shall not be set forth in full, but shall be stated in
simple and condensed form, all parts not essential to the decision
of the questions presented by the appeal being omitted and the
testimony of witnesses being stated only in narrative form, save
that, if either party desires it, and the court or judge so
directs, any part of the testimony shall be reproduced in the exact
words of the witness. The duty of so condensing and stating the
evidence shall rest primarily on the appellant, who shall prepare
his statement thereof and lodge the same in the clerk's office for
the examination of the other parties at or before the time of
filing his praecipe under paragraph (a) of this rule. He shall also
notify the other parties or their solicitors of such lodgment, and
shall name a time and place when he will ask the court or judge to
approve the statement, the time so named to be at least ten days
after such notice. At the expiration of the time named or such
further time as the court or judge may allow, the statement,
together with any objections made or amendments proposed by any
party, shall be presented to the court or the judge, and if the
statements be true, complete and properly prepared, it shall be
approved by the court of judge, and if it be not true, complete or
properly prepared, it shall be made so under the direction of the
court or judge and shall then be approved. When approved, it shall
be filed in the clerk's office and become a part of the record for
the purposes of the appeal."
[
Footnote 2]
Equity Rule 77, 226 U.S. 672, 28 U.S.C. § 723:
"When the questions presented by an appeal can be determined by
the appellate court without an examination of all the pleadings and
evidence, the parties, with the approval of the District Court or
the judge thereof, may prepare and sign a statement of the case
showing how the questions arose and were decided in the District
Court and setting forth so much only of the facts alleged and
proved, or sought to be proved, as is essential to a decision of
such questions by the appellate court. Such statement, when filed
in the office of the clerk of the District Court, shall be treated
as superseding, for the purposes of the appeal, all parts of the
record other than the decree from which the appeal is taken, and,
together with such decree, shall be copied and certified to the
appellate court as the record on appeal."