Court Opinion

ID: 8126194
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 15:06:42.260309+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:39:14.135969
License: Public Domain

Brown, J.
I am constrained, by the weight of authority, to decline to entertain this proceeding by mandamus. A long line of decisions of the supreme court has affirmed the broad doctrine that the circuit court has no jurisdiction to issue a writ of mandamus as an original proceeding, hut only as ancillary to some other proceeding or right of which it has iurisdietion.
*310Considering that the fourth subdivision of section 629 of the Revised Statutes gives the circuit court express jurisdiction “of all causes arising under the postal laws,” (Act March 3, 1845; 5 St. at Large 739,) and that the fourteenth section of the judiciary act (section 716, Rev. St.) authorizes the federal courts to issue such writs whenever “necessary for the exercise of their respective jurisdictions, and agreeable to the uses and principles of law,” it might have been inferred, in the absence of authority, that if the relator was entitled to the relief demanded, according to the general usage and practice of the law, and if a writ of mandamus was the proper remedy for such relief, the writ might have been issued in the exercise of the proper jurisdiction of the court; inasmuch as the cause is one arising exclusively “under the postal laws.” Upon repeated examination of the decisions of the supreme court, however, I cannot find myself authorized to treat this question as an open one. In most of the cases, in which the question has arisen, the circuit court had undoubted original jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the proceedings, under some one or other of the express provisions of the statutes, quite as clear as is its authority to determine “all causes arising under the postal laws.” Nevertheless, the right to pursue the remedy by means of an original writ of mandamus has been uniformly denied. McIntire v. Wood, 7 Cranch, 504; McClung v. Silliman, 6 Wheat. 598; Bath Co. v. Amy, 13 Wall. 244; Graham v. Norton, 15 Wall. 427; County of Greene v. Daniel, 102 U. S. 187 ; Davenport v. County of Dodge, 105 U. S. 237; Rosenbaum v. Board, 28 Fed. Rep. 223; U. S. v. Smallwood, 1 Chi. Leg. N. 321.
Without considering, therefore, in what cases, or to what extent, a review of the decision of the postmaster or of the assistant postmaster general, as respects the determination of a question of fact upon which the rating of postal matter depends, is either reviewable at all, or under a proceeding by mandamus, (see Carrick v. Lamar, 116 U. S. 423, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 424,) I must dismiss the application upon the ground first stated.