Reynolds Trading Corp. v. United States
Decision Date | 23 May 1974 |
Docket Number | Customs Appeal No. 74-1 to 74-6. |
Parties | REYNOLDS TRADING CORP. et al., Appellant(s), v. The UNITED STATES, Appellee. T. H. GONZALES and A/C Florafil, S.A., et al., Appellant(s), v. The UNITED STATES, Appellee. UNITED SILVER & CUTLERY CO. et al., Appellant(s), v. The UNITED STATES, Appellee. The AKRON et al., Appellant(s), v. The UNITED STATES, Appellee. EDWARD HYMAN CO. et al., Appellant(s). v. The UNITED STATES, Appellee. GAMBLE IMPORT CORP. et al., Appellant(s), v. The UNITED STATES, Appellee. |
Court | U.S. Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (CCPA) |
Stein & Shostak, Los Angeles, Cal., attorneys of record, for appellants; James F. O'Hara, Los Angeles, Cal., of counsel.
Irving Jaffe, Asst. Atty. Gen., Andrew P. Vance, Chief, Joseph I. Liebman, New York City, for the United States.
Before MARKEY, Chief Judge, and RICH, BALDWIN, LANE and MILLER, Judges.
This is a consolidated appeal from six separate orders of the United States Customs Court, each denying appellants' motion for an order granting a rehearing and vacating and setting aside separate orders of dismissal entered in the above cases and also in numerous other cases listed on schedules recited as being annexed to said six separate orders. The schedules annexed to the motions are not shown, as such, in the transcript; but separate schedules of cases are attached to the six separate orders and are certified by the clerk of the Customs Court to be identical to those recited as annexed to the motions. We affirm.
The appeals were consolidated by order of this court dated November 16, 1973, upon appellants' motion to consolidate, which included a request to limit the printed transcript of record on appeal to certain specified documents from Appeal No. 74-6 and to include in said transcript a statement that the specified documents are representative of the documents which comprise the records in the other appeals, Nos. 74-1 through 74-5. Said order granted the request but directed that the transcript also include certain specified papers and documents associated with each of the appeals, Nos. 74-1 through 74-5.
The motions for rehearing and vacating and setting aside separate orders of dismissal were filed in response to orders entered by the clerk of the Customs Court, each of which recited that the action, previously placed in the October 1970 reserve file, had not been removed therefrom by October 31, 1972, the expiration date of the two-year period for removal required by Rule 14.6 of the Customs Court, and dismissed the action for lack of prosecution.
Appellee has moved to dismiss the appeals, contending that this court does not have jurisdiction to consider them since they are from orders denying motions for rehearing and vacating and setting aside the separate orders of dismissal. It cites this court's opinion accompanying a decision which denied appellee's earlier motion to dismiss one of these appeals for failure to specify with sufficient particularity the names of the cases being appealed. Reynolds Trading Corp. v. United States, 486 F.2d 1077, 61 CCPA ___ (1973).1 In that case this court determined that the only action of the Customs Court on appeal was its order denying appellants' motion for rehearing and vacating and setting aside the separate orders of dismissal. This court made it clear that the subject matter of the appeal is not the separate orders of dismissal enumerated on the schedule annexed to the order, but the order itself. This is confirmed by appellants' notice of appeal.
It is the generally-accepted doctrine that an appeal must be taken from the judgment of the lower court and that an appeal will not lie from an order denying a motion for a new trial, a motion for rehearing, or a motion to vacate a judgment. 6A Moore's Federal Practice (2d Ed.) ¶ 59, pp. 266-267, and cases cited therein. However, the doctrine is not without exception, particularly where an abuse of discretion by the trial court may be involved.2 This court has indicated that the Customs Court is entrusted with the exercise of its sound discretion in ruling on a petition for rehearing and that such a ruling will not be disturbed unless it is "manifestly erroneous." Commonwealth Oil Refining Company, Inc. v. United States, C.A.D. 1105, 480 F.2d 1352, 60 CCPA 162 (1973).3 Appellants argue that the Customs Court, in denying the motion for rehearing and vacating and setting aside the separate orders of dismisal, committed error that is manifest.
In considering this argument, we note the allegations of appellants' counsel in the affidavit in support of each of said motions, particularly the allegation that while a motion for rehearing was pending before the Customs Court in a related action4 affecting the same cases involved here, orders of dismissal were entered by the clerk of the Customs Court.5 Also pertinent to our consideration is appellants' assignment of error on the part of the Customs Court in promulgating, implementing, and applying Rule 14.6 of the court. The question, then, is whether denial of the motions for rehearing was "manifestly erroneous" under these circumstances.
Rule 14.6, which became effective October 1, 1970, provides as follows (emphasis added to show amendatory language added effective July 1, 1972):
Rule 14.6 Reserve File
It was pursuant to paragraph (c) that the orders of dismissal were entered.
In its opinion in the Applied Research Laboratories case, supra, the Customs Court said that the period of two years provided by Rule 14.6 for removing cases from reserve file status to avoid automatic dismissal after October 31, 1972, "provided all counsel a reasonable and sufficient time to protect the interest of their respective clients." It noted that on January 10, 1972, the Chief Judge of the Customs Court had transmitted a letter to all counsel having cases in the October 1970 reserve file which letter pointed out that any action not removed from this reserve file on or before October 31, 1972, would be dismissed; also that in April of 1972 the clerk of the court sent a notice to all parties having actions not previously removed from the October 1970 reserve file advising that each action would be dismissed in accordance with Rule 14.6(c) unless removed within the applicable period.
It is appellants' position that the same cases which were the subject of the orders of dismissal6 involved here were also before the Customs Court in the alleged related action in which appellants had moved on October 13, 1972, for an extension of time or other alternative relief. Appellants point out that this relief was requested with respect to all cases undesignated "which may not have been voluntarily removed from the October, 1970 Reserve File . . . on or before October 31, 1972" except certain specifically designated cases listed in two attached schedules which counsel desired to abandon; and they argue that Rule 4.12(b) and Rule 14.6(e) of the Customs Court disclose no requirement that there be a specific designation of the cases covered by their motion of October 13, 1972. Therefore, they conclude, they were denied substantive rights7 by the "arbitrary and unwarranted" ruling of the Customs Court that all cases (except the captioned case of Applied Research Laboratories v. United States and certain specified cases in the two attached schedules...
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