LAW.coLAW.co

MATTON STEAMBOAT CO., INC. et al. v. MURPHY, ACTING INDUSTRIAL COMMISSIONER, et al.

Supreme Court of the United States1943-06-01No. No. 783
319 U.S. 41287 L. Ed. 148363 S. Ct. 11261943 U.S. LEXIS 582SCDB 1942-139

Summary

Holding. The Supreme Court held that appellants' applications for appeal made after expiration of the three-month statutory period were untimely and dismissed the appeals for lack of jurisdiction.

Matton Steamboat and related companies appealed to the Supreme Court from New York court judgments upholding the New York Unemployment Insurance Law. The appellants timely filed applications with the New York Court of Appeals' Chief Judge within three months of the lower court's decision, but the Chief Judge denied these applications before the three-month period expired. The appellants then filed new applications with a Supreme Court Justice after the three-month window had closed, and those applications were granted.

The Supreme Court addressed whether these late applications could save the appeals. The Court held that while a timely application to a state judge or Supreme Court Justice can preserve appeal rights, a denied application does not satisfy the statutory requirement. Once the Chief Judge rejected the initial applications, any subsequent applications had to be made within the original three-month period. The Court reasoned that allowing later applications after denial would undermine the statute's purpose of providing finality and would enable appellants to circumvent time limits by filing successive applications to different judges.

Summary generated by law.co from the public-domain opinion. The opinion text itself is public domain.

Key issues

  • Timeliness of appeals under the three-month application requirement in 28 U.S.C. § 350
  • Whether a denied application to a state judge can be revived by subsequent application to a Supreme Court Justice after the statutory deadline
  • Scope of authority to allow appeals under Supreme Court Rule 36

Procedural posture

The appellants sought to appeal from New York Court of Appeals judgments upholding the state unemployment insurance law, first applying to the state court's Chief Judge and then, after denial, to a Supreme Court Justice outside the statutory time limit.

Authorities cited

No cited authorities resolved to law.co cases yet.

Opinion

majority opinion

Pee Cueiam.

In these cases appellants have sought to appeal under § 237 (a) of the Judicial Code, 28 U. S. C. § 344 (a), from judgments of the New York courts sustaining the validity of the New York Unemployment Insurance Law (N. Y. Labor Law, § 500 et seg.). The applicable section, 28 U. S. C. § 350, provides that “no appeal . . . intended to bring any judgment or decree before the Supreme Court for review shall be allowed or entertained unless application therefor be duly made within three months after the entry of such judgment or decree.”

The question for our decision is whether the appeals to this Court in these cases were timely. In each, within three months after the judgment of the Court of Appeals (see Department of Banking v. Pink, 317 U. S. 264), the appellant made timely application for allowance of the appeal to the Chief Judge of the New York Court of Appeals who, being in doubt as to the finality of the judgments, denied the applications shortly before the expiration of the three months period. On application to an Associate Justice of this Court, made shortly after the three months had expired, the appeals were allowed by him with the Court’s approval, in order that we might resolve an unsettled question of our practice (see Robertson and Kirkham, Jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of the United States, pp. 717-18). When we set the cases for argument together with two companion cases, Standard Dredging Corp. v. Murphy, ante, p. 306, and Interna tional Elevating Co. v. Murphy, ante, p. 306, we requested counsel to discuss the question whether the appeals were “applied for within the time provided by law.”

By Rule 36 of our Rules, an appeal to this Court from a state court of last resort may be allowed “by the chief justice or presiding judge of the state court, or by a justice of this court.” But such an appeal may not be allowed when no application is made to the judge or justice authorized to allow it within the period prescribed by the statute. Here appellants’ applications to the Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals were timely, and could have been allowed by him either before or after the expiration of the three months period. Cardona v. Quiñones, 240 U. S. 83; Latham v. United States, 131 U. S. Appendix, xcvii; United States v. Vigil, 10 Wall. 423, 427. The appeals could also have been allowed, on such timely applications, by a justice of this Court. And there is nothing in.the statute or Rules to preclude application within the three months to both the state judge and a justice of this Court at the same time, where shortness of time makes that necessary to preserve the right of appeal. Cf. Spies v. Illinois, 123 U. S. 131, 142.

But when the Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals denied appellants’ applications and disallowed the appeals, the applications were no longer pending before him and, at least in the absence of any reconsideration by him, appeals could be allowed only on a new application either to him or to a justice of this Court. The time within which such applications could be made is that prescribed by the statute. Its language is peremptory — “no appeal . . . shall be allowed or entertained unless application therefor be duly made within three months.” The purport of the words is that the appeal allowed must be one that is applied for within the three months period. An application which has been made within that period and denied does not satisfy that requirement, nor does a later application filed after the time limit has expired even though it be allowed.

The purpose of statutes limiting the period for appeal is to set a definite point of time when litigation shall be at an end, unless within that time the prescribed application has been made; and if it has not, to advise prospective appellees that they are freed of the appellant’s demands. Any other construction of the statute would defeat its purpose. Would-be appellants could prolong indefinitely the appeal period, by making application to one judge within the three months and upon its denial by applying successively to other judges even after the prescribed time for appeal had ended. Moreover, in such cases extension of the period for appeal could be limited only by recourse to the doctrine of laches applied in the particular circumstances of each case.

We conclude that appellants’ applications for allowance of the appeals, after the expiration of the three months period, were too late, and that this Court is without jurisdiction to entertain the appeals, which are accordingly

Dismissed.