Boston & Maine Corp. v. Town of Hampton

                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

                                     

No. 92-1832

                  BOSTON AND MAINE CORPORATION,
                      Plaintiff, Appellant,

                                v.

                         TOWN OF HAMPTON,
                       Defendant, Appellee.

                              BEFORE

                Torruella and Cyr, Circuit Judges,
                                                 
                   and Keeton,* District Judge.
                                              

                                     

                          ORDER OF COURT

                     Entered October 19, 1993

          On March 5, 1993, this court entered judgment affirming
the judgment of the United States District Court for the District
of  New Hampshire.   An  Order denying  appellant's petition  for
rehearing was entered on April 9, 1993.

          On  or about October 1,  1993, the Clerk  of this court
received  from Appellant Boston and Maine Corporation ("B & M") a
Motion  to Enlarge Time in  Which to File  a Renewed Petition for
Rehearing,  a Petition  for  Rehearing, and  a  Motion to  Recall
Mandate.    The Clerk  received  from  Appellee  Town of  Hampton
("Hampton"), on or about October 7, 1993, its Objection to Motion
to  Enlarge Time, and on or  about October 12, 1993, received its
revised Objection to Motion to Recall Mandate.   

* Of the District of Massachusetts, sitting by designation.

          Calling attention  to the Opinion of  the Supreme Court
of  New Hampshire in Schoff  v. City of  Somersworth, handed down
                                                    
August 31, 1993 (explicitly declaring erroneous two parts of this
court's  assessment  of  the  substantive law  of  New  Hampshire
regarding  municipal liability),  B  & M  moves  that this  court
recall  its mandate  and  enlarge the  time  for a  petition  for
rehearing.  Citing Braniff Airways, Inc. v. Curtiss-Wright Corp.,
                                                                
424 F.2d 427 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 400 U.S. 801 (1970), B &  M
                                    
asserts that, under Fed. R. App. P. 26(b) and 40, this court "has
the  power  to accept  a petition  for  rehearing which  is filed
beyond   the  stated  14  day  time  limit  for  filing  of  such
pleadings."  B & M's Motion to Enlarge Time, p. 4.

          Although  Rule  40  does  grant  the  appellate  courts
authority to extend the time for filing a petition for rehearing,
a  court can do so only while  it has jurisdiction over the case.
We lack jurisdiction  here.   The mandate issued  in this case on
April 20, 1993, and "[i]ssuance of the mandate formally marks the
end of  appellate jurisdiction."   Johnson v.  Bechtel Associates
                                                                 
Professional Corp., 801 F.2d 412, 415 (D.C. Cir. 1986).
                  

          Braniff  Airways, the sole support  cited by B  & M for
                          
its  proposed enlargement of  time, is not  to the contrary.   In
Braniff  Airways, the  Second  Circuit determined  that the  case
                
before  it was still "sub judice."   Braniff Airways, 424 F.2d at
                                                    
429.  The court then based  its decision in part on Huddleston v.
                                                              
Dwyer, 322 U.S. 232 (1944), in which the Supreme Court "indicated
     
that so  long as the case  was 'sub judice' the  court of appeals
should  have entertained  the petition  for rehearing based  on a
change  in state law" after  its decision.   Braniff Airways, 424
                                                            
F.2d  at 429.    Mandate having  issued in  the  case before  us,
however, it is  no longer  sub judice  and we  lack authority  to
consider a petition for rehearing.

          Other  circuits have similarly  declined to  consider a
petition  for rehearing  when no  part of  the case  remained sub
judice.   See, e.g., Johnson,  801 F.2d  at 415 (D.C.  Cir. 1986)
                            
(court  did not  have  jurisdiction over  petition for  rehearing
after  mandate  had  been  issued); Iverson  v.  Commissioner  of
                                                                 
Internal Revenue, 257  F.d 408,  409 (3d. Cir.  1958) ("With  the
                
mandates  on  the  judgments  here involved  outstanding,  it  is
doubtful whether this court would have jurisdiction to consider a
petition for rehearing.").

          Precedents  suggest,  however,  that  even   after  the
judgment of a court of appeals has become final and  the court no
longer has jurisdiction to consider a subsequently filed petition
for  rehearing,  the  court   may  reestablish  jurisdiction   by
recalling  its  mandate   (either  on  motion   or  on  its   own
initiative).   See  Johnson,  801  F.2d at  416;  Greater  Boston
                                                                 
Television  Corp. v. FCC, 463 F.2d 268 (D.C. Cir. 1971); see also
                                                                 
Powers v. Bethlehem Steel Corp., 483  F.2d 963 (1st Cir. 1973).  
                               

                                2

B & M has moved for a recall of mandate in this case.

          We   are   troubled   by   the   "intricate   maze   of
relationships," Goncalves v. INS,  Nos. 92-1122 and 92-2272, slip
                                
op. at 15 (1st Cir. Sept.  28, 1993), that would be created, were
we  to assert  this suggested  "inherent  authority" to  recall a
mandate.   What, for example, would be the effect on jurisdiction
in  the  district court,  after a  mandate  is recalled  and then
reissued?    And  what  reasoned explanation  would  justify  the
divergence  between fixed  time  limits on  the district  court's
ability to  amend a  judgment under  Fed. R. Civ.  P. 60  and the
absence of like  time limits on the  suggested inherent authority
of the  appellate courts to recall  a mandate, even  if acting on
precisely the same grounds?  Would vesting such exceptional power
solely  in  courts  of  appeal  create  an  area  of  essentially
original, rather than appellate, jurisdiction in courts of appeal
over closed cases?

          Another troubling thought about this procedural maze is
that  the precedents for recalling a mandate may have been rooted
in practices developed  before adoption of the  Federal Rules (of
Civil  Procedure and Appellate Procedure),  and at a  time when a
court retained jurisdiction over cases decided in a term of court
until that  term ended.  To continue this practice of recalling a
mandate  now,   when  an   appellate  court's  "term"   has  less
significance, risks extending  indefinitely the authority of  the
court over closed cases.  Neither the courts  nor the parties who
rely upon the finality  of their judgments would welcome  such an
extension.

          We conclude,  however, that  we need not  resolve these
concerns to  decide this  case.   Instead, we assume  in B  & M's
favor,  without so deciding, that a court of appeals may reassert
jurisdiction over  a case  by recalling  its mandate, and,  after
jurisdiction is  thus  reestablished, may  consider an  otherwise
untimely petition for rehearing.   See Johnson, 801 F.2d  at 416;
                                              
Greater Boston Television  Corp., 463  F.2d at 275-80.   Even  if
                                
this  authority to recall a  mandate still exists,  it "should be
exercised  sparingly,  and only  upon  a  showing of  exceptional
circumstances."  Dilley  v. Alexander,  627 F.2d  407, 411  (D.C.
                                     
Cir.  1980) (internal  citations omitted);  see also  Powers, 483
                                                            
F.2d at 964.  Resort to  recall power is an "extraordinary step,"
and "should not  be used  simply as  a device  for granting  late
rehearing."  Johnson, 801 F.2d at 416.
                    

          In  denying a  motion to recall  mandate in  a previous
case  (before  the  Federal  Rules of  Appellate  Procedure  were
adopted),  this court emphasized the need to bring an orderly end
to litigation:

          If  we were in error [in this case], of which
          we are not presently persuaded, we believe it

                                3

          would   be  far   greater  error   to  permit
          reconsideration now after denial of petitions
          for rehearing and certiorari.   There must be
          an  end to  dispute.   If a  situation arose,
          such as a subsequent decision  by the Supreme
          Court,   which   showed  that   our  original
          judgment  was demonstrably wrong, a motion to
          recall  mandate might  be  entertained.   The
          present case is far from that.

Legate v. Maloney, 348 F.2d 164, 166 (1st Cir. 1965).
                 

          This earlier declaration retains its full force today. 
The judgment in  the case  before us is  not demonstrably  wrong.
Indeed,  as  Hampton  correctly  argues, the  precise  issues  of
substantive law  presented  by  this case  were  not  before  the
Supreme Court of New Hampshire in either of the two  recent cases
brought to  our attention by B  & M.  Thus,  although the Supreme
Court  of  New Hampshire  has  explicitly declared  parts  of our
reasoning in  this case  erroneous, we  would  only compound  our
         
error  by reopening  a  dispute in  which  our judgment  was  not
                                                       
demonstrably wrong.  

          Moreover, as  Hampton observes, all parties  were aware
that  the Schoff case was pending when  this case was filed, and 
                
plaintiff

          was  free  to  file  this  action   in  state
          court...,  to seek  to  certify the  question
          presented in  this case to  the New Hampshire
          Supreme  Court while this case remained open,
          to move to have this court stay consideration
          of  this  matter  until  the   New  Hampshire
          Supreme Court  decided Schoff,  or to seek  a
                                       
          writ  of  certiorari  to  the  United  States
          Supreme Court following this Court's March 5,
          1993  decision.  Instead, the plaintiff chose
          not  to  pursue  these  alternatives  and  no
          manifest injustice would result  in requiring
          the plaintiff  to be  bound by the  ruling of
          the forum it did select.

Hampton's (revised) Objection  to Motion to  Enlarge Time, p.  7.
In these circumstances,  we conclude  that it would  be not  only
unwarranted but unjust to recall the mandate in this case. 

           Appellant's motion  to enlarge time to  file a renewed
petition for  rehearing and appellant's motion  to recall mandate
are denied.

                                4