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Asst. Atty. Gen. Pradt, for the United States.
F. P. Dewees, W. W. Dudley, and L. T. Michener, for appellee. [170 U.S. 527, 528]
Mr. Justice BREWER delivered the opinion of the court.
This case, like the two preceding (18 Sup. Ct. 701, 703), is one brought by a district attorney to recover for services rendered in a court of appeals. There is this difference, however, between them: The plaintiff in the court below was district attorney for the Northern district of Callfornia. The court of appeals was held at San Francisco, within the limits of that district, though the case in which he was employed, and in which he rendered the services, was one coming to that court from the district court of Alaska.
In a geographical sense, the services were rendered in a government case pending in the of California. The court of appeals was held technically, therefore, it may be said that those services were within the statutory designation of his duties. But we are of the opinion that this fact is not decisive, and for these reasons: At the time the sections defining his duties were enacted, there was no court of appeals, and therefore no service in such court could have been within the contemplation of congress in their enactment. Undoubtedly, the fact that congress thereafter added to his duties would not, of itself, change the measure or limits of compensation. But the question is whether a fair construction of the court of appeals act casts upon him any duties in respect to cases pending in that court. That act was a new and great departure in the judicial system of the United States. It divided the appellate jurisdiction theretofore vested in this court, and distributed it between this and the newly-created courts of appeals. To accommodate suitors, it provided that the sessions of those courts should be held within their respective circuits; but for all practical purposes those courts became, for several classes of cases, practically the supreme court, and this notwithstanding the fact that there was reserved to this court a control over their proceedings. They were, as we held in the opinion just filed, in no sense courts in or for a district, but distinctively appellate courts for the entire circuit. No express provision was made for appearances in those courts by the district attorneys of the several districts, and the control [170 U.S. 527, 529] of cases in them comes within the general jurisdiction of the attorney general, as head of the department of justice.
While one city in each circuit was named as a place for holding at least one term of the court, authority was given to the judges to hold terms at other places within the circuit, and in fact in several circuits the courts of appeals are held at more than one place. Obviously, great practia l inconvenience would result if the management and control of a case pending in a court of appeals was adjudged the duty of the district attorney of the district in which the court is held; for if the case was placed on the docket for one term, and the district attorney of the district in which that term was held should assume the management and control of the case, it might often be that before the case was reached for argument the court would have finished its term there, and adjourned to a place in some other district, and then upon the district attorney of that district would rest the duty of undertaking the management and control. So not merely the nature of the court, and its relations to the entire circuit, but the practical difficulties which would attend the matter, concur in compelling the conclusion that it is not a part of the official duties of the district attorney of the district in which at the time a session of the court of appeals is held to assume the management and control of government cases in that court.
As we indicated in U. S. v. Winston,
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Citation: 170 U.S. 527
No. 274
Decided: May 09, 1898
Court: United States Supreme Court
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