Images (3)
दस्तावेज़
| id |
id
16618912
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| source |
source
import
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 3PSF
Justice Dept.: Homer Cummings
1938-39-1944
friend.
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
WASHINGTON
January 3, 1938.
My dear Mr. President:
You will recall that Mr. Justice Brandeis
did not concur in the new Supreme Court Rules. Since
then I have ascertained, upon reliable authority, that
apparently his objection grew out of his belief in
the efficiency of the Massachusetts Rules, which
he did not like to have displaced in the Federal Courts
by the new rules.
It strikes me that this is a rather narrow
point of view when we consider that the new rules
also apply to forty-seven other States and the District
of Columbia.
Sincerely yours,
Home havings
The President,
The White House.
File
OF JUSTICE DEPAR /
Office of the Attorney General
Mashington, B.C.
S*/P*
January 3, 1938.
My dear Mr. President:
The principal decisions rendered by the Supreme Court at its
session today were those in Alabama Power Co. V. Ickes and Duke Power
Co. V. Greenwood County. In these cases the Court ruled that the util-
ity companies had no legal standing to question the constitutional
validity of the public works provisions of the federal statutes or the
compliance by the Administrator with those statutes. The Court held that
the threatened loss of business by the companies, being attributable to
lawful municipal competition, afforded no basis to attack the loan and
grant of federal funds to the municipalities. Decisions favorable to
the Government were also rendered in three tax cases, two criminal cases
and a forfeiture case.
In Railroad Commission of California V. Pacific Gas and Elec-
tric Co. the Court, by a six to two decision, reversed a decree of the
District Court which had set aside a rate order of the California Com-
mission. The Court did not, however, pass upon the question argued in
the brief filed by the Federal Power Commission as amicus curiae, i. e.,
whether the rule of prudent investment or historical cost should be
substituted for the rule of fair present value as a basis for rate making.
The Court also decided to review on certiorari the case of
Electric Bond and Share Co. V. Securities and Exchange Commission, which
involves the validity of the registration provisions of the Public
Utility Holding Company Act of 1935. A motion to advance this case
for early argument will be made by the Government.
Respectfully,
Home Thermings
Attorney General.
The President,
The White House,
Washington, D. C.
Homen Cummy
Jan. 10, 1938.
In re-unsigned memo to Homer Cummings
Subject--information that Justice McReynolds will leave
Court within the year etc.
SEE--Supreme Court folder- Drawer 2-1938
PSF: Instice
fle Cummung
January 17, 1938.
Memo for Attorney Gen. Cummings
From J. Edgar Hoover
Subject: Information received to effect that there
has been formed in N. Y. City an organ-
ization known as the Continuation Committee of
the Trade Union Conference Against Un-
employment which is sponsoring a "march 'bn
Wall Street to be effective Feb. 19, 1938.
SEE-Justice folder-Drawer 1--1938
you
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
atter
January 18, 1938.
MEMORANDUM FOR
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
I think you have the following
vacancies; or will shortly have them:
2 Assistant Attorney Generals
District Attorney, District of Columbia
District Attorney, Eastern, N. Y.
District Attorney, Northern, W. Va.
Marshal, Second, Alaska
Marshal, Fourth, Alaska
Marshal, Eastern, N. Y.
F. D. R.
THE ATTORNEY WASHINGTON GENERAL Justice
January 27, 1938.
P.F.
My dear Mr. President:
The attached is a personal and
confidential memorandum from Mr. Hoover.
Sincerely yours,
Thankings
The President,
The White House.
HN EDGAR HOOVER
OFFICE OF TEE
DIRECTOR
Federal Bureau of Investigation
JAN 27 1938
United States Department of Justice
ATTORNEY
GENERAL
Mashington, D.C.
January 26, 1938.
Personal and
Confidential
MEMORANDUM FOR THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
Information has been obtained from a confidential source to the
effect that Charles Krumbein, New York State Secretary of the Communist
Party and member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party, U. S. A.,
has disclosed plans of the Communist Party to commence the military train-
ing of its members. The courses of instruction are to include theory and
practice and are to commence on or about February 15, 1938.
During the winter months it is intended that the training will
be in theory only, but during the spring and summer months training in
the practical aspects of military drill will be given to each member for
a period of three months. It has been learned that approximately 200 mem-
bers of the Communist Party are presently receiving military instruction at
the Workers School, 12 East 13th Street, New York City, from 10 a. D. to
4 P. m. daily. The persons who are presently being trained in New York are
to constitute the future military instructors for the Party membership.
New members of the Party, with less than six months' membership,
are exempt from this course of training. It has been decided, however,
that when such new members have remained in the Party for a period of six
months or more, which constitutes a probationary period, and should their
Party activities warrant it, they will be recommended for such training.
The reason for caution in recommending such training for new members, accord-
ing to Krumbein, is to safeguard the "privacy of our military training from
undesirable publicity."
It has been reported that all Party districts will soon receive
instructions from the Central Committee of the Communist Party to prepare
the registration of membership for this course of training and to obtain
places to conduct such training classes.
I have likewise received information from a confidential source,
imparted by an intellectual member of the Communist Party in New York City,
to the effect that the purpose of the Communist Party in sending men to
Spain to fight in the ranks of the Loyalists is to train such individuals
in the art of military science so that they can be returned to the United
States to lead the vanguard of the revolution in this country. The source
of this information pointed out that in numerous instances Americans have
been brought back to the United States after serving in the Loyalist
forces and their positions have been filled by new recruits from this
Memorandum for the
Attorney General
- 2 -
1-26-38
country; that the purpose in returning them is to preserve their lives
for the "American revolution"; and that the purpose in refilling their
positions in Spain 1a to train new military leadership for the coming
"American revolution."
I wish to point out that I have also received confidential in-
formation of & similar nature from an entirely different source connected
in no way with the source mentioned hereinbefore.
I thought that in view of the nature of this information you
might desire to bring it to the attention of the President.
Respectfully,
J. John odgan Director. Edgan Hoover, Moover
OFFICE OF
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
OF
V
NEW
Jan17/
138
Dear m Presedent:
are hot goong & read
ofcourae you
The endost speed-
but Ferhaps you and
look arth marsal
pravages, They develop
fm theme from a
olight different
stand
Sincerely
havings
TReserving Democracy
PSF
(mm/yyyy)
sycral
andra
No your from of
110ml
person 20 kertyoy
lumn
almor- 10g
CVT good that fivor X
Remover has
your himmi pwift
LIVE questions COMME
-
-
PRESERVING
DEMOCRACY
HOMER CUMMINGS
PSF
Justice
To the Present,
Wm The offichmak fully.
7
Home Tommys
Jan 27/38
PRESERVING
DEMOCRACY
Address delivered at the JACKSON DAY BANQUET
held at the Stevens Hotel, Chicago, Illinois
Saturday, Fanuary 8, 1938
by
Honorable HOMER CUMMINGS
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES
Broadcast over the network of the Mutual
Broadcasting System. Reprinted in the Congressional Record
for January 11, 1938
United States Government Printing Office
Washington, D. C., 1938
PRESERYING
DEMOCRACY
Mr. Chairman, Distinguished Guests
Ladies and Gentlemen:
O
NE hundred and eight years ago an historic
event took place at a banquet held at Brown's
Indian Queen Hotel in the City of Washington. The
air was tense with anticipation. Statesmen, politi-
cians, and men of business, by common consent, re-
garded the long-awaited moment as one of national
significance. When, following the custom of the day,
the appropriate time arrived, a tall, gaunt man, much
hated and much loved, arose to offer a toast to America.
It was Andrew Jackson, and this is what he said:
"Our Federal Union; it must be preserved."
We have just heard another message to the American
people. It was from the lips of President Franklin D.
Roosevelt, who, perhaps more completely than any
other Chief Executive, has vitalized and carried for-
ward the Jacksonian tradition. Under conditions
strangely dissimilar and yet strangely alike, it is as if
he had raised his glass and said, "Our Federal Union;
it must and shall be preserved-as an instrument of
progress, a servant of justice, a guardian of the happi-
ness and general welfare of the people."
I
The voice of Jackson was heard by a small group
assembled in but one room; and it took weeks, even
months, for his message to filter out to the people.
The words of Roosevelt were instantly heard through-
out the length and breadth of the land. Thus is
symbolized the change that has come over America
and the unchanging purposes of those who love
democracy.
Do not for a moment assume that it is a simple task
to preserve democracy and to make it an efficient
instrument of government. Great reforms do not
come easily. Even after the people have determined
upon them, the attempt to enact them into law
precipitates a terrific struggle.
Let me tell you a brief but significant story. Those
who stood amid the wreckage of the Hoover adminis-
tration will recall that 6,067 banks had been forced
to close their doors. Simultaneously, there was a
great demand for money of all kinds for hoarding, not
only in safe deposit boxes, but in mattresses and in
holes dug in the cellar.
Early on Monday, the sixth of March 1933, President
Roosevelt issued his first proclamation which sus-
pended the operation of all our banking institutions
and preserved them from destruction. Thereafter,
the President, acting in close cooperation with the
Congress, approved a series of acts, and promulgated
Executive Orders that effected a sweeping change in
the financial structure of our country.
2
Moreover, the Administration secured the enactment
of a law insuring deposits to the extent of $5,000 each
in all of the banks within the Federal system. Fifty-
eight million accounts come within the protecting
folds of that beneficent law; and their owners do not
have to lie awake nights worrying about their deposits.
These measures were but a part of the inspiring story
of a troubled nation finding its way successfully out
of financial chaos.
Do you suppose that these great reforms were
brought about without a battle? Not for a moment
did the great financial interests that center in Wall
Street relax their resistance, or forego any opportunity
to poison the minds of the people against the policies
of the Administration.
When the anti gold-hoarding measures were pro-
mulgated, there was a great hue and cry in ultra-
conservative quarters. They were assailed as a wicked
and unconstitutional encroachment upon private
rights. But surely there can be no right to hoard in
time of national peril any more than there can be a
right to seize the best life boats in a storm at sea, or
sequester food in a city under siege. The Administra-
tion was obliged to defend these measures in court-
and defended them successfully.
Did the struggle end there? Not at all. Those who
maintained that the whole financial policy of the
Administration was unconstitutional instituted a series
of suits, and the Government was obliged to resist in
3
the courts the attempts of private litigants to destroy
the system that the President and the Congress had
created.
It was not until the Supreme Court, by a 5 to 4
decision, upheld the position of the Administration
that the battle subsided; and, even now, we hear
muffled rumblings of it from time to time, in irrecon-
cilable quarters. The last case that finally rung down
the curtain on these subversive efforts was decided
less than a month ago. Had this crucial litigation
gone against the Government it would have added ten
billion dollars to the public debt. It would have
written up the public and private obligations of our
country by sixty-nine billion dollars, and would,
overnight, have reduced the balance in the Treasury
of the United States by more than two billion five
hundred million dollars. It would have spelled chaos
in every quarter of the land.
And what has been the actual result? Our credit
never stood higher than it does today, and the Ameri-
can dollar is the soundest monetary unit on the face
of the earth.
The same forces that fought the gold clause legisla-
tion were active and recalcitrant as each new reform
was put forward. They lobbied in the Congress,
they advertised in the newspapers, and they fought in
the courts. For fully three years municipal power
projects have been blocked in 23 States by the injunc-
tive process. The national will as expressed in the
4
Public Works legislation, the desires of the affected
communities, and the hopes of those who counted
upon work or planned to sell materials were alike set
at naught while this unwarranted litigation dragged
its weary length through the courts. It was not until
last Monday that a Supreme Court decision in the
Duke and Alabama Power cases brought to a close
this wholesale campaign of obstruction.
To prevent the operation of the Public Utility
Holding Company Act seven major suits were brought
simultaneously in the District of Columbia and over
forty similar suits in twelve different judicial districts,
when one test suit would have served every legitimate
purpose. There seemed to be, and I say it with
regret, a deliberate purpose to engage the Government
upon so many fronts that effective defense would be
rendered difficult or impossible.
In September 1935, a group of fifty-eight eminent
lawyers solemnly admonished the Nation that the
Wagner Labor Relations Act was unconstitutional
and not worthy of obedience. They formulated an
elaborate opinion covering one hundred and twenty-
six pages, published it in the newspapers everywhere,
sent copies of it to lesser legal lights, and did incalcu-
lable harm in fostering litigation and disregard of
law. They spoke as if from on high, they entertained
no doubts, they acted with superb confidence, and,
as the opinion of the Supreme Court subsequently
disclosed, they were completely wrong.
5
It is something of an anomaly that when great
problems are to be met we expect our public servants
to supply the legislative solutions, while at that very
moment many of the most gifted members of the bar
exercise their ingenuity and their experience to break
down the structure thus created.
Naturally there is a growing distaste for the elaborate
tactics of obstruction that make it so difficult for a
democracy to function. The public is fully persuaded
that what was unplanned or selfishly guided in the
past must take its place in an orderly governmental
process and that a great cleansing and rebuilding
program must go forward. It is increasingly irritated
by those refinements of logic which are calculated to
render attempts at social reconstruction sterile or
abortive.
And still the struggle goes on. So long as there are
evils to be corrected, there will be beneficiaries of
evils to resist the measures of correction.
Of late years there has been an increasing trend
toward an undue concentration of wealth and
economic control. It is a situation of which any
responsible government must take notice.
While our antitrust laws have checked the growth of
monopoly, they have not prevented it. We have come
into an era of price control by concerted group action
and that, I undertake to say, is an intolerable situation.
We cannot be expected to permit such practices to
impair our prosperity or to throw it out of balance.
6
A Nation as capable as ours of producing an abun-
dance of wealth is not adequately using its powers if
there is an insufficient distribution of such wealth
amongst the masses of the people. If their incomes
are depleted by unjust prices and inequitable wages,
there will be precisely that much less to spend for the
good things of life. The purchasing power of the
future lies in the standard of living of those on the
lower rung of the ladder; and there will be found the
answer to our hope of a well-ordered national home.
Mass production and all the advantages that flow
from operations on a large scale may be, and often
are, the sources of great public service. That fact
has been demonstrated over and over again. Indeed,
it is one of America's outstanding achievements. It
must not be forgotten, however, that the control of the
vast power involved carries with it not only high re-
ponsibilities, but also dangers of misuse against which
we must safeguard our Democracy.
In dealing with these problems our purpose should
be constructive, not merely destructive. Monopolistic
practices should be more clearly defined. This would
be helpful to a just administration of law, and would
be a mantle of protection to those whose honest desire
it is to live within the law. Let it be remembered
that the well-intentioned business man is desirous of
knowing not only what he is forbidden to do, but also
what he is permitted to do. I repeat what I stated on
November 29th in a formal address:
7
In rewriting the antitrust laws, thought should
be devoted not only to strengthening them and
making them more intelligible, but attention
should also be given to providing protection and
encouragement to legitimate efforts of enlightened
business men to increase production and employ-
ment, to improve working conditions, to eliminate
waste, to provide more effective methods of
distribution, and to supply better services to
consumers and to the public.
I say with all the earnestness at my command that
until agriculture, labor, and capital, with the aid of the
government, have learned the lesson of friendly and
intelligent cooperation our Democracy will not rest
on a safe foundation.
Most of those in charge of great enterprises realize
the significance of this problem and are patriotically
concerned about it. There are minorities, however,
within these groups that blindly resent any activity
upon the part of the Government and insist upon a
free hand to deal with industry and labor as they
see fit.
They have not grasped the idea or the ideals of a
modern democracy. They do not realize that a new
day has dawned and that the yesterdays will not return.
The Moving Finger writes and having writ
Moves on. Nor all your piety nor Wit
Shall lure it back to cancel half a line
Nor all your tears wash out a Word of it.
8
In these modern days our industrial and financial
system is so delicately poised that the creation of a
morbid psychology may have injurious results. Those
who spread disturbing rumors or indulge themselves
in forebodings of disaster, curiously enough, end by
terrifying themselves. They remind me of children
who tell ghost stories around the fireplace and frighten
themselves so much that they are afraid to go to bed.
The opposition to the President's policies does not
come from the people; it comes from relatively small
but very influential and powerful groups.
It is, perhaps, not strange that those who have long
controlled the affairs of Government and have turned
their power to private advantage, should be resentful
of a leadership that is less concerned with their privi-
leges than with the needs of the country as a whole.
No tribune of the people ever stored up love for
himself in the House of Privilege. Every great leader
we have ever had has been the victim of calculated
slander and reckless invective. All of our great
Presidents have had their detractors. Washington
knew them. Jefferson knew them; and so on down
the list of the illustrious men who gave all they had
in the service of their country. No one knew them
better than the Great Emancipator, whose body lies
not far from here and whose mighty spirit still broods
over a troubled people. He knew them in all their
meanness, all their malice, and all their venom.
These wretched traducers proclaimed him a tyrant, a
9
dictator, and a usurper. They said that he had loaded
the country with intolerable taxes and had "piled an
enormous debt incalculably high." They said that
he was an enemy of our form of government and had
"torn the Constitution to tatters."
The struggles of Andrew Jackson with political and
financial privilege; his sturdy attempts to make the
doctrines of Jefferson living and breathing things; his
titanic battle with Nicholas Biddle and the Bank of
the United States; and the unbridled criticism to
which he was subjected have their counterparts today.
The popularity of Jackson survived all his battles,
and such was the reverence in which he was held, it
is said, that many people went on voting for him fifty
years after his death-even in the State of Vermont.
And so it is with Roosevelt. After each struggle he
emerges stronger than before.
Nor has the Administration been less successful in
foreign affairs. Through international understandings
skillfully arranged by a great Secretary of State, our
languishing trade across the seas has been expanded
and revived. The doctrine of "the Good Neighbor"
was promulgated and a feeling of friendliness fostered
amongst the nations on this side of the Atlantic which
has not been known for generations.
So hard put to it are the critics of the Administra-
tion that they suggest that affairs in Europe have been
better handled than here and that the unemployment
problem abroad no longer creates a serious menace.
IO
I think it was Josh Billings who, with reference to a
certain person, remarked that "the difficulty with him
is that he knows so many things that are not so." If
you look across the waters to the troubled peoples in
foreign lands, you will find little encouragement for
the criticism of conditions in this country. To mop
up unemployment by putting millions into the army
and setting more millions to work manufacturing
munitions may be one way to meet the unemployment
situation, but it does not accord with American ideals.
And let me add this too! With millions of storm
troops set upon a hair trigger for release into another
international conflict, with constantly accumulating
bombing planes ready to destroy the cities and the
populations of Europe, with supplies of poisonous
gas being feverishly prepared for their hideous pur-
pose, with one country already plunged into the
vortex of a ghastly fratricidal conflict, and with two
great nations slaughtering thousands upon the field
of battle and destroying countless numbers of innocent
noncombatants, we are justified in uttering a fervent
prayer of thanks to Heaven that we have in the White
House a man who loves peace, and, above all men
else, knows how to preserve it with honor.
We face the future with high courage. Our country
will go on and it will prosper. It will contribute
increasingly to the happiness of its people and gain in
dignity and in influence amongst the nations of the
world. I sometimes think that the people are wiser
II
than the wise men of finance and industry. They
know a great leadership when it comes to them, and
just as they loved and trusted Jackson, so they love
and trust Roosevelt.
The rich and the powerful may have forgotten
what he did for them, but the lowly and the dis-
possessed have not abated one iota of their faith.
The people have not forgotten. They could not
forget. No one can make them forget. They know
what they have been through with him, and they
propose to go with him to the end of the road.
11999-31
I2
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
WASHINGTON
February 4, 1938.
My dear Mr. President:
There have been so many requests for copies
of my recent report to the Congress, that a portion of
the report has been reprinted. I enclose herewith a
copy of it.
I think you will find pages 1 to 6 inclusive
especially interesting. This report forms the basis
of pending Bills which are now before the Judiciary
Committee of the Senate and House, and which have ap-
parently excellent chances of enactment. If these Bills
can be successfully piloted to enactment, I think we
shall have made a great contribution to the improvement
of the administration of law in the Federal Courts.
Sincerely yours,
John havings
The President,
The White House.
"Stateman and Recommendations'
<
w
THE i of E N 2 o STATE 2 no - . a It SUBT M OF
E 2020 $ STATE ⑇ E E8 \ & 8 : 1 a of and WE in E
%
* 4 1 12.
< 1838
STATEMENT AND
RECOMMENDATIONS
of Honorable Homer Cummings
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES
EXPEDITED FROM ANNUAL REPORT OF THE ATTURNEY
GENERAL TO THE CONGRAMS FOR THE FINCAL THAN 1937
PSF
Justice
STATEMENT AND
RECOMMENDATIONS
OF HONORABLE HOMER CUMMINGS
Attorney General of the United States
REPRINTED FROM ANNUAL REPORT OF
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
TO THE CONGRESS
FOR THE FISCAL YEAR 1937
United States
Government Printing Office
Washington : 1938
STATEMENT AND RECOMMENDATIONS
OF Homer Cummings
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE,
Washington, D. C., January 3, 1938.
To the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress Assembled:
I have the honor to submit a report of the business of the Depart-
ment of Justice for the year ending June 30, 1937, as detailed in
the reports of the heads of the principal offices, divisions, and bureaus,
together with various exhibits.¹
CONGESTION AND DELAYS IN THE FEDERAL COURTS
Delay in the administration of justice is still the outstanding de-
fect of our Federal Judicial system. The principal types of delay
(aside from those incident to perfecting appeals), may be divided
into three classes:
First-the gap between the date of filing of suit and the time
that the case is in shape for trial, i. e., the date on which issue is
joined by the filing of the final pleading. This period is protracted
beyond all reason in almost every jurisdiction. It is the stage char-
acterized by dilatory pleas, motions to dismiss, demurrers, and other
technical proceedings. In many districts this defect is accentuated
because matters of this kind are heard only once a month and some-
times only on the first day of the term. In places, and there are
many, in which only one or two terms of court are held annually,
the filing of a dilatory plea, a motion to dismiss or a demurrer may
result in a postponement of the trial for at least 6 months or perhaps
a year. I brought this situation to the notice of the Judicial Con-
ference which announced in its report that "this matter was con-
sidered by the Conference and will be taken up by the senior cir-
cuit judges with respect to each district within their circuits." A
further remedy lies in an increase of judicial personnel.
Second-delay arises because of the time elapsing between joinder
of issue (the date on which the final pleading is filed) and the earliest
date on which the case can be reached for trial in due course, even
1 The reports of the heads of the various offices, divisions and bureaus, and exhibits
are omitted in this edition.
I
if no attempt to postpone it is made by any of the parties thereto.
Even when measured by this standard in 17 districts the trial
dockets are in arrears. In three of them (the District of Columbia,
the Eastern District of Michigan, and the Western District of Wash-
ington), the congestion is so severe that the time-lag is between 1
and 2 years. A table annexed to this report shows the length of this
waiting period. This computation, of course, does not include the
time consumed in the preliminary stages of the case prior to joinder
of issue.
We must not be misled by the statement that in the other districts
the trial dockets are said to be "current." All that this means is
that after the final pleading is filed in any case, the trial may be had
at the next ensuing term of court, if the parties and the court coop-
erate. It does not follow, therefore, that in such districts the business
is actually "current" in any true sense, for the word "current" does
not take into account the time consumed during the preliminary
period before the case is in shape for trial or the time lost between
the time when a case may theoretically be tried and the time when
it is actually tried; nor does it make any allowance for the fact that
in many divisions and at many places of holding court, terms are
convened but once or twice a year. The interval elapsing between
terms of court may alone account for a delay of as much as a year
between the time the case is in shape for trial and the earliest date
upon which it can actually be heard. That this is an important fac-
tor may be deduced from the fact that sessions of the United States
District Courts are held at 376 different places. At 115 of these
places there is only one term a year, while at 242 of them there are
only two terms annually. At only 19 places are there more than
two terms a year. Ingenious counsel are frequently able to postpone
actual trial despite the utmost efforts of adversary parties to bring
matters to a hearing. Overworked judges are at a disadvantage in
their efforts to drive forward the business of the courts.
The existence of actual delay even in districts where the trial
dockets are reported to be in a so-called current condition is con-
clusively demonstrated by the large number of pending cases that
were filed more than 2 years ago and are still undisposed of. For
example, in New Jersey and in the western district of Wisconsin
over 60 percent of the pending cases are more than 2 years old, while
in the northern district of Indiana and in the southern district of
Illinois this is true of over 59 percent of the pending cases. In
Delaware this is true of over 46 percent of the cases; in Vermont of
over 42 percent; in the western district of Missouri of over 39 per-
cent; in Kansas of over 37 percent; in the southern district of Ala-
These computations were made as of September 30, 1937.
2
bama of over 32 percent. Yet, in all of these districts the trial dockets
are reported as being in a so-called "current" state.
Third-delay arises out of the intervals frequently elapsing be-
tween the final submission of a matter for judicial decision and the
date upon which a decision is rendered. Some of the judges have
called attention to this unfortunate situation and have asserted that
the volume of business confronting them is so great and the time
during which they are not actually sitting on the bench is so limited
that they do not have adequate opportunity to study the cases or
prepare their decisions.
It must not be forgotten that our problem has to do with the
quality as well as the quantity of the judicial output.
The situation that I have depicted is manifestly inconsistent with
any sound idea of judicial efficiency. The problem will remain with
us until we make shift to remedy the conditions that have created it.
The fault does not lie with individual judges. Almost without excep-
tion they are conscientious and hard-working. The defects are in
the system and may be summarized under three heads:
(a) An insufficient personnel.
(b) A tolerance of technicalities and lack of a unified, simple, and
coherent system of procedure.
(c) A lack of efficient administrative methods.
A
The need of an increase in personnel is recognized in the report
of the Judicial Conference at the session that convened on September
23, 1937, and which I have the honor to submit herewith. The con-
ference recommended the following permanent increases in judicial
personnel:
One circuit judge for the second circuit.
One circuit judge for the fifth circuit.
One circuit judge for the sixth circuit.
One circuit judge for the seventh circuit.
One district judge for the northern district of Georgia.
One district judge for the eastern district of Louisiana.
One district judge for the western district of Louisiana.
One district judge for the southern district of Texas.
One district judge for the eastern district of Michigan.
One district judge for the northern district of Ohio.
One district judge for the western district of Washington.
One district judge for the southern district of California.
One district judge for the district of Kansas.
Three district judges for the District of Columbia.
The foregoing recommendations are amply justified, and I shall
3
be glad to submit to the appropriate committees of the Congress
data bearing upon the propriety and wisdom of still further in-
creases, as follows:
One associate justice for the United States Court of Appeals
for the District of Columbia.
One district judge for the eastern and western districts of
Arkansas,
One district judge for the northern district of California.
One district judge for the southern district of Florida or jointly
for the northern and southern districts of Florida.
One district judge for the northern district of Illinois.
One district judge for the district of Massachusetts.
One district judge for the district of New Jersey.
One district judge for the southern district of New York.
One district judge for the eastern district of Pennsylvania.
One district judge for the eastern, middle, and western districts
of Tennessee.
One district judge for the western district of Virginia.
B
Distinct progress has been made in the matter of eliminating
technicalities and in coordinating the rules of practice. In 1792,
the Supreme Court was empowered by statute to adopt uniform
rules of practice for the Federal courts in equity and admiralty
cases, and in 1898 for bankruptcy cases. Under these statutes rules
were promulgated by the Supreme Court as to these groups of
cases and have been in effect for many years. The results have been
highly satisfactory. On the other hand, the Conformity Act of 1872
barred progress along this line in respect of actions at law, for it
required the Federal courts to conform as near as may be to State
practice. The result has been that as to actions at law, there are
49 different procedures in the Federal courts-one for each State
and for the District of Columbia. In some instances the practice
is archaic and cumbersome, and still enforces the technical intricacies
and refinements that prevailed in England in the seventeenth and
eighteenth centuries, but have long been abandoned in the land that
gave them birth.
I strongly urged the Congress to authorize the Supreme Court
to adopt and promulgate uniform rules of practice for the Federal
courts for actions at law, as it had done for suits in equity and
admiralty, and proceedings in bankruptcy. The Supreme Court was
granted this power by the act of June 19, 1934 (48 Stat. 1064).
The Supreme Court thereupon appointed an advisory committee,
consisting of eminent members of the bar and teachers of law, to
4
carry forward the preliminary work. The Department of Justice
heartily cooperated with this committee. A thorough study of the
matter was made, innumerable suggestions were examined, and a
report was submitted to the Supreme Court. It was a monumental
and difficult task, deserving of the utmost praise. When these rules,
as modified by the Supreme Court, are promulgated and submitted
to the Congress, another milestone will have been passed in the weary
progress toward judicial reform.
C
Permanent additions to the judicial personnel in circuits and dis-
tricts where they are urgently needed and reforms of procedure will
be of enormous help, but will not entirely solve the age-long problem
of the law's delays. Congestion is apt to be a temporary phenomenon,
making its appearance sporadically in various districts as a result of
special conditions that are not necessarily lasting. For example, the
illness or incapacity of a judge, the filing of a large number of actions
of special kind, such as war risk insurance cases or suits for damages
affecting a great many persons, may temporarily clog the dockets.
A protracted trial of a mail fraud case or a prosecution under the
Sherman Act, may postpone the disposition of other business and
cause an accumulation of arrears that will take months to dispose of.
Circumstances of this kind frequently recur, making their appear-
ance when least expected. A system of some degree of flexibility is
indispensable. It is gratifying to note that at the last session of the
Congress the rigidity of the old rules was somewhat relaxed. Never-
theless, serious thought should be given to increasing that flexibility
by appropriate measures that will involve a greater coordination of
the judicial machinery, a better method of assembling data and con-
tinuous oversight by the judiciary itself of its functions and efficiency.
An efficacious administrative machinery is as necessary in the
courts as it is in other branches of Government and in private enter-
prise. Individual judges must of necessity confine their time and
energy principally to the transaction of judicial business. The senior
circuit judges are occupied with their judicial labors and can give
but scant time to the performance of administrative duties. The
conference of senior circuit judges meets but once a year and con-
tinues in session only three days. It performs a valuable and useful
function, but obviously it does not and cannot act as a continuous
administrative body. It is highly desirable that provision be made
for a permanent administrative officer, with adequate assistance, to
devote his entire time to supervision of the administrative side of the
courts; to studying and suggesting improvements in the matter of
handling dockets; to assembling data and keeping abreast of the
5
needs of the various districts for temporary assistance; and to ascer-
taining what judges are available for such assignments, as well as
performing other incidental functions. Such an officer should be
appointed by the Supreme Court and act under the supervision of
the Chief Justice. It is interesting to note that the appointment of
an officer of this kind was recommended in England in January 1936,
in a Report of the Royal Commission on the Despatch of Business at
Common Law.
I believe, too, that there is something inherently illogical in the
present system of having the budget and expenditures of the courts
and the individual judges under the jurisdiction of the Depart-
ment of Justice. The courts should be an independent, coordinate
branch of the Government in every proper sense of the term.
Accordingly, I recommend legislation that would provide for the
creation and maintenance of such an administrative system under the
control and direction of the Supreme Court.
CRIME
Changes in social and economic conditions and modern inventions
greatly facilitating interstate travel, transportation, and intercom-
munication between distant points, have radically modified many
features of the crime problem. Crime has taken on national aspects.
The automobile has enabled roving bands of desperate criminals
rapidly to shift their zone of operations from one State to another,
and quickly to make their departure from the scene of their depre-
dations. State and local law enforcement agencies are no longer
able to cope without assistance with this type of crime.
At my recommendation legislation was enacted by the Congress to
extend Federal jurisdiction over a number of grave and serious types
of crimes, which theretofore had been within the exclusive cognizance
of the States. Thus interstate transportation of stolen property
valued at $5,000 or over; robbery of a national bank, a member bank
of the Federal Reserve System, or a bank insured by the Federal De-
posit Insurance Corporation; the murder of or assault on certain
Federal officers; fleeing from one State to another to escape prosecu-
tion for certain specified crimes, or to escape testifying as a witness
in cases involving such crimes; and the transmission in interstate
commerce of extortion letters, were made Federal offenses. Traffic in
machine guns, sawed-off shotguns and rifles, and silencers was placed
under Federal regulation. Moreover, the scope of the Federal kid-
naping statute was considerably broadened and extended.
This substantive legislation gave rise to problems of administration
and enforcement. The Federal Bureau of Investigation of the De-
partment of Justice is no longer a purely investigative unit; it is a
6
law enforcement agency. Authority was sought and granted by the
Congress to the personnel of the Bureau to make arrests and carry
arms-an essential function which, surprisingly enough, had been
previously lacking. With a very moderate increase of personnel, the
integrated branch offices, through which the Bureau functions, were
augmented, until as of June 30, 1937, the Bureau had 47 regional
offices, at as many different points.
The criminal fingerprint file, built up by a system of exchange of
information with police departments and other law enforcement
agencies, penal institutions, and the courts, not only throughout the
United States, but in all parts of the world, was greatly augmented.
On June 30, 1937, there were 6,422,959 fingerprints on file at the
headquarters of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Washington,
representing approximately 4,000,000 different individuals. A civil
fingerprint filing system was also established in which, as of June
30, 1937, there were 393,207 fingerprints voluntarily submitted by
interested citizens. The daily average of fingerprints received during
the year was 4,955.
The facilities and activities of the criminal laboratory were ex-
panded and it has become an indispensable aid in the solution of
many crimes that would otherwise have remained a mystery. The
facilities of the fingerprint file and the criminal laboratory are used
not only for the work of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, but
are extended to all State and local law enforcement agencies, many
of which have taken advantage of the opportunity and have found
the assistance thus rendered of great aid in the detection and appre-
hension of criminals.
The personnel standards are on the basis of merit and have been
at a high level. Graduation from a law school is a prerequisite to
appointment to a position as special agent, except as to a certain per-
centage of agents who are required to be competent accountants. New
appointees are required to undergo an intensive training course of
14 weeks in duration. Members of the staff are brought back to
Washington for a short retraining course every year or two.
A police academy has been established to which law enforcement
officers are sent by State and local agencies for the purpose of
receiving training in methods developed by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation. Many graduates of the academy have been assigned
by their superiors to establish local training schools in their respec-
tive departments.
State and local responsibility and authority are not superseded
by the Federal Government. The keynote of the program is coop-
eration. The activities of Federal, State, and local authorities must
be coordinated in a friendly spirit without an attempt on the part
of any to encroach on the proper sphere of the others. In most
7
respects the crime problem is a local problem and the Federal
Government can concern itself only with interstate aspects, and with
those phases of it which affect Federal activities.
The treatment and punishment of the offender after he has been
apprehended, convicted, and sentenced, are likewise problems to
which this Department has given a great deal of care and attention.
It must be borne in mind that sooner or later the prisoner will be
returned to society, and the aim of penal treatment must be to en-
deavor to return him in a state of mind and body which is likely
to enhance his chances of a law abiding existence. Undoubtedly a
certain percentage of criminals are beyond reasonable hope of reha-
bilitation, but as to a great majority of them an effort at reform is
fruitful.
The Department of Justice has developed a series of institutions
graded according to types of prisoners, so as to permit classification
of inmates as far as possible. Early in my administration as At-
torney General, I secured the establishment of a special institution
on Alcatraz Island in the San Francisco Harbor for the more dan-
gerous prisoners and those who present disciplinary problems at other
institutions, and who hamper the efforts at rehabilitating the offenders
for whom there is hope for reform. It is an essential part of our
prison system and has amply justified itself. Several of the peni-
tentiaries are devoted to the average person convicted of a felony
and sentenced to penitentiary treatment. One penitentiary-the
Northeastern, located at Lewisburg, Pa.-is restricted principally
to first offenders and others for whom the chances of rehabilita-
tion appear to be especially bright. Two reformatories also constitute
a part of the Federal penal and correctional system. To them are
committed young men and first offenders generally, as well as con-
victed persons whose crimes are not sufficiently grave in character to
require incarceration in a penitentiary. Road camps are also used
with good results. In addition there is an institution for women
prisoners.
Activities are carried on in each institution for the purpose of
giving constructive occupation to every inmate insofar as possible.
The industries are so diversified as to cause the least possible competi-
tion with free labor. Prison products are not sold on the open mar-
ket, but are disposed of solely to governmental agencies. It is essential
that habits of industry be inculcated in all prisoners, so that they may
be accustomed to performing useful labor regularly and may, there-
fore, have a better opportunity to earn an honest living upon their
release. At the reformatories, trades are taught to young prisoners
capable of benefiting by such instruction.
Short-term prisoners serve their sentences either at one of the sev-
eral Federal jails maintained by the Department, or at one of the
8
numerous local jails. The problem of jails has been a troublesome
one, in view of the fact that many of the local institutions are unsafe
and permit easy escape; while others are insanitary and permit in-
humane conditions to prevail. Our system of jail inspection has
worked exceedingly well. Additional Federal jails are, however,
needed and I am elsewhere requesting appropriations for the con-
struction of such new institutions. A similar problem exists in respect
of women prisoners for whom the Federal institutions do not have
sufficient accommodations, and new facilities for that purpose are
required.
One of the vital subjects in connection with the administration of a
penal system is the matter of parole. A properly administered parole
system represents an efficacious means for effectuating the transition
between imprisonment and freedom. It protects society by placing
the paroled prisoner under supervision and by summarily returning
him to the institution if he fails properly to conduct himself. At the
same time it assists a prisoner to make his adjustment in the com-
munity to which he returns.
In order to be successful, however, it is indispensable that the deci-
sion as to who should receive parole, and when paroles should be
revoked, should be made by an impartial board actuated by no con-
sideration other than the merits of the cases before it; that the pris-
oners receiving parole should be carefully and prudently selected,
the test in each instance being the likelihood of the beneficiary of
such treatment becoming a law-abiding member of society, and only
those for whom the prospect of rehabilitation is good, should be
favorably considered; and that the parolees should be constantly
under supervision by an adequate and efficient staff of officers. These
principles govern the Federal parole system, which is efficiently ad-
ministered by a board of three members, devoting their entire time
to this activity, and by probation officers located in practically every
judicial district. During the past fiscal year, approximately 36 per-
cent of Federal prisoners eligible for parole were paroled before the
expiration of their sentences. Only approximately 6.9 percent of
those paroled have failed to live up to the conditions on which they
were released. It should be noted that these violators are frequently
returned for breaches of the rules which do not necessarily involve
the commission of any criminal offense.
FIREARMS LEGISLATION
I have heretofore called attention to the fact that one of the press-
ing problems in connection with the enforcement of the criminal
law arises out of the traffic in and possession of firearms by members
of criminal groups. In 1934, at my request, the Congress, through
9
the exercise of its taxing power, placed machine guns, sawed-off
shotguns, sawed-off rifles, and silencers under Federal regulations. In
my opinion, this law should be extended to cover all firearms, but, at
the very least, revolvers and pistols should be brought within its
scope. I strongly urge legislation in this direction. The honest and
law-abiding citizen is caused no greater hardship by a requirement
that he register his firearms than by the requirement that he register
his automobile. On the other hand, a general system of registration
of firearms would place a potent weapon against crime in the hands
of law-enforcement officers.
CRIME PREVENTION
Society does not completely fulfill its duty in respect of the crime
problem if it devotes its attention solely to efforts at crime suppres-
sion, no matter how well directed and efficient such endeavors may
be. Just as preventive medicine plays an important role in main-
taining the physical health of the community, so must preventive
methods be used in the field of crime. One of the startling features
of the crime problem is the alarming number of juvenile delinquents
and the appalling proportion of young men among the offenders that
become inmates of Federal penal and correctional institutions. Affirm-
ative steps to prevent the growing child from becoming an offender
against the law constitute a far greater service to the community,
and needless to say of much greater benefit to the individual, than
punishment, no matter how sure, swift, and severe, after the crime is
committed. Many commendable efforts have been made along this
line by private organizations. The subject is, however, far too vast
to be left solely to private initiative. The Government must ulti-
mately enter upon an intensive study of means of crime prevention
and the correlation of efforts in that direction on the part of govern-
mental agencies-Federal, State, and local-on the one hand, and
private agencies on the other. How far the Department of Justice
should enter this field is a matter for present consideration. Much
useful information will be found for such work in the Survey of
Release Procedures, which was completed during the past fiscal year
under my supervision, and the results of which are now being
assembled.
ANTITRUST LAWS
The Sherman antitrust law dates back to 1890. Subsequent amend-
ments have related largely to matters of detail but the basic provisions
of the act of 1890 stand as originally enacted. In the meantime, how-
ever, it has undergone many modifications by judicial interpretation.
During the 47 years that the statute has been in effect our economic
and social structure has undergone a vast change. Though aimed at
TO
the suppression of monopolies and restraints of trade, efforts to en-
force the law have been only partially successful. Obviously, the
statute, in its present form, is not adequate for the purpose of deal-
ing with the many ramifications of the problem. A thorough and
comprehensive study is necessary. I recommend the inauguration of
such an inquiry with a view to analyzing the various phases of
the subject and suggesting legislation needed to bring the antitrust
laws into harmony with present needs.
In considering this subject it must not be forgotten that the pres-
ent system or any plan that may be devised will not operate automati-
cally. It is quite useless to pass laws with the expectation that they
will be enforced unless the Department of Justice is supplied with
personnel and appropriations adequate to the task.
OTHER LEGISLATION
At my request a number of bills drafted in the Department of Jus-
tice were introduced and are now pending before the Congress. Their
purpose is to eliminate archaic technicalities and to make possible
greater expedition in the disposition of criminal cases without de-
priving defendants of any substantial rights to which they should be
entitled. Among such measures are the following:
To permit the defendant to waive indictment by grand jury and
to consent to prosecution by information.
To require a defendant who proposes to rely on the defense of
alibi to give to the prosecution notice of that fact before the trial,
To permit comment on the defendant's failure to testify.
To abolish appeals in habeas corpus proceedings instituted to test
the validity of a warrant for the removal of the defendant from one
district to another.
I urge the enactment of the foregoing measures as well as certain
other bills of a technical nature which I have heretofore submitted
to the Congress and which are now pending.
HOMER CUMMINGS,
Attorney General.
40620-38
11
38
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
WASHINGTON
February 5, 1938.
My dear Mr. President:
I receive letters from time to time from Judge
Denman who, as you know, is intensely interested in our
attempts to improve the administration of justice. He
is lavish in his words of commendation and in his last
letter says: "Great luck to you in the most important
piece of legislation affecting the courts in the 65 years
since the formation of the Department of Justice."
I think I ought to add that in this campaign for
judicial improvement, Judge Denman has rendered service of
marked importance. He has been indefatigable in assembling
data, in supplying arguments and in writing for law publi-
cations.
Strange as it may seem, I think we shall have the
support of leading factors in the American Bar Association.
President Vanderbilt of this organization has taken a very
progressive and liberal viewpoint and is helping a lot.
Sincerely yours,
The President,
The White House.
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
WASHINGTON
February 10, 1938.
file
My dear Mr. President:
The arguments in the Electric Bond
and Share Company case have been finished
and the matter is in the hands of the Supreme
Court.
Excellent arguments were made by
both Mr. Jackson and Mr. Cohen and the sit-
uation seems to be satisfactory.
Sincerely yours,
Nome Througs
The President,
The White House.
OFFICE OF
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
8 PAUSTICE
Filme
Fas 14 138
Dear The Prement:
Here is a nice letter
form India Parker - which
indicates math Thanks
four propram
Name Grangs
UNITED STATES CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS
FOURTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
February 7, 1938.
Hon. Homer Cummings,
Attorney General of the United States,
Washington, D. C.
My dear Mr. Attorney General:
You have made three outstanding contributions to
the administration of justice in this country: you have organ-
ized the Department of Justice to combat organized crime,
securing from Congress the necessary legislation for the
punishment of crime affecting interstate commerce; you have
secured the reform of federal civil procedure by rules of the
court, when those who had been advocating the reform had
abandoned it in discouragement; and you have had introduced
and will secure the passage of a bill which will establish the
judiciary on an independent financial basis as one of the three
coordinate branches of the government.
I want you to come to Asheville to the Judicial
Conference this year and tell us about these things and tell the
country about them. Of course you can talk about anything you
want to; but we really should like you to come and see our
Conference in session and let us see you. We will be in session
June 2nd, 3rd and 4th; and, of you will come, my idea is to plan
our entire program around your presence. I hope that you will
write that we may expect you and that Mrs. Cummings will be with
you. She made many friends when she was with us before who have
been hoping she would come again.
With highest regards and best wishes always, I an
Respectfully yours,
JOHN J. PARKER
File
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
WASHINGTON
Personal
February 14, 1938.
My dear Mr. President:
Should the so-called Pyramid Lake cases
in Nevada be brought again to your attention by
Senator McCarran or by anyone else interested, I
thought you might like to have before you my let-
ter of the twenty-eighth of January, 1938 which
I wrote to Secretary Ickes on the subject, and
which sets forth the attitude of the Department
of Justice towards these matters.
Sincerely yours,
Nother Things
The President,
The White House.
Justs with
FOR
CMcF:gn
90-2-10-70
January 28, 1938
Honorable Harold L. Ickes
Secretary of the Interior
Weshington, D. c.
My dear Mr. Secretary:
You will recell your telephone cell to me on
January 22, from which I gethered that, DO for 08 the
Department of the Interior wee concerned, the so-ealled
Pyremid Lake cases in Neveda might be held in abeyance
pending the consideration of legislation on the metter
introduced by Senator McCarren.
After your cell, I examined the record. It
appears that the United States first undertock
litigation in 1909. Thereafter bills were introduced
in Congress from time to time for the relief of those
in possession of the Indian lands involved. By Act of
June 9, 1924, the Secretary of the Interior was
authorized to fix the terms and sell the lands to the
possessors. Seven of them finelly paid for and secured
patents to certain of the lands. On November 30, 1934,
you directed certain other entrymen to comply with reduced
terms; and on May 13, 1936, none of them having complied,
their entries were formally canceled.
Then, pursuant to your request, the United
States Attorney was directed to file actions in ejectment;
but, after the receipt of 9. memorandum from the White
House dated October 26, 1936, enclosing a memorandum from
Senator McCerran asking that the suits be withheld "until
16 can nsk Congress to pass en Act to relieve the white
settlers", the ouits were held in aboyence. You were
saked for your views; and on January s, 1937, you advised
as that in arriving at your decision you had taken
account of all elements, and you urged that the suits
be prosecuted immediately. A few days thereafter
Senator McCarren introduced a bill (s. 640, 75 Cong.
1 Seas.) which, as amended, later passed the Senate
and was referred to the House Committee on Indian
Affaire.
You then wrote the President on September 11,
1937, stating that
a outs in ejectment vas filed by the
Department of Justice as early ⑉
1909. Subsequently, repeated efforts
were made by this Department to bring
the case to issue, but each time legal
representatives of the squatters or
members of the Novada Congressional
Delegation succeeded in permanding the
Department of Justice to defer action
until Congress night have on opportunity
to pass remedial legislation. The Act
of June 9, 1924, gave these squatters
the right to file entries on lands
admittedly belonging to the Pyremid Lake
Indians.
On October 20, the President sent as the papers in his
possession, with a note to speak to him about the matter.
Examination of our file disclosed no reason why the
Department of Justice should withhold the suits and the
United States Attorney was accordingly directed to
prossed. On November 4, I returned the file to the
President together with a memorandum setting forth the
whole history of the matter. The memorandum indicated
that the United States Attorney bed been directed to
proceed.
Thereupon Senator McCarren again took the
question up with representatives of this Department and
requested delay until he could present the matter to the
President. The suite were therefore held in abeyance
+
pending this further appeal by the Benator. On January
11, 1938, Wiss Durand telephoned from the White House
to convey a message from the President through Kr.
McIntyre to "go shoud with the Pyremid Lake cases
immediately." The United States Attorney vis thereupon
directed to file the actions.
Accordingly, since the matter has been brought
to the sitention of the President repeatedly, since he
has My assurance that the cases will be prosecuted, and
since he has directed that the mits be instituted, I
- hardly in a position to consent to any further delay.
Sincerely
Attorney General
+
PSF Justice mings
filersonal
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
M.Presidents
md 4/38
Than inturned
the wou who is to
He as well pleased
lala Joseson's place. *
tylos specipt - Gut
must get cutain
charances at yall.
Hh is at work at I &
and why me.
PH looks ok - -
HIC
&
rettim KE/H
HOUSE 3TIHW 3HT
3
maha
to Dr. ash won it
welf shol
hereby there it
thairs bags
use hig Thun
A To The 10 Prendent 2 wt
Personal MM trating in
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
P.F.
WASHINGTON
March 5, 1938.
My dear Mr. President:
You will recall that sometime ago I spoke
to you about taking a vacation. Cecilia and I are
planning to leave Washington tomorrow, Sunday, at
5:25 P. M. for Boca Raton, Florida.
I hope that
this has your approval.
I think everything is in good shape. Mr.
Jackson will, of course, be Acting Attorney General
during my absence and I shall be in constant touch
with the office.
Sincerely yours,
hanny
The President,
The White House.
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
PSF: 1
March 16, 1938.
MEMORANDUM FOR
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
I understand that Circuit
Judge Bingham of the First
Circuit may retire. He is a
fine type of liberal New
Hampshire Democrat. If he does
so, will you please consider
his son -- an equally fine type
and even more liberal. While
young he might be a solution
of the problem.
Please do not talk with
anyone else about it.
F. D. R.
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
PSF:
justice
April 8, 1938.
MEMORANDUM FOR
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
will you read this and come
to see me with it at two o'clock?
It is not to be used except in
conjunction with another Message
of "peace and good-will" and,
therefore, will not scare the
country to death.
F. D. R.
Message to Congress
OFFICE OF
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
OF JUSTI DEPA
freesmal
OMA
DOMINA JUSTITIA
*
aArs/
138
Dran the Prevident /
The is an
)
Wistratins you
ralue of an not &
issued same walcs ag.
harrings
P.S.
Noh expecials p.2.
T.D. QUINN
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT TO
THE
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
Department of Justice
APR 4 - 1938
Washington
ATTORNEY
GENERAL
April 1, 1938.
MEMORANDUM FOR THE ATTORNEY GENERAL.
I thought you would be interested in the case
of Deputy Marshal Joseph Flanagan.
You will recall that some weeks ago the procedure
was initiated of having the fingerprints taken of all United
States Marshals and their deputies and forwarded to the Depart-
ment and searched through the Identification Division of the
FBI.
In Mr. Flanagan's case we received information
that his record reflected by the FBI files was as follows:
PD, New York, N.Y. Joseph Flanagan
1897 P.L.
#E-4626
4-11-30 (revolver)
11
II
11
11 "
1915, drugs; Warwick Farms.
11
"
"
II "
2-21-17, NYC., drugs; on 11-22-17, sentence
suspended.
11
If
"
"
=
9- 4-18, NYC., hypo needle; on 12-9-18
sentence suspended.
11
If
"
" "
1920, NYC, drugs; 90 days workhouse.
=
=
"
11 II
2-2-21, NYC, petty larceny; on 7-16-21, 4 mos.
workhouse.
If
11
II
= II
5-31-22, NYC., drugs; on 6-5-22, 6 mos.
workhouse.
=
II
II
=
11
1925, NYC, drugs; on 1-19-25, workhouse.
Upon ascertaining this information Marshal John J.
Kelly, Southern District of New York, was communicated with by
letter on March 14, 1938, and requested to secure the resignation
of Mr. Flanagan immediately.
-2-
Congressman O'Connor of New York conferred
with me several times in an effort to see if something could
not be worked out in this case whereby Mr. Flanagan could
be permitted to remain on the payroll as a Deputy Marshal.
I, also, conferred with Mr. Flanagan. Congressman O'Connor,
as well as Mr. Flanagan, was informed that in view of all of
the circumstances the Department's action would have to stand
and his resignation has been submitted and accepted.
Administrative Assistant
to the Attorney General
& JUSTICE
Office of Attorney General
V
JUSTITA
file presonal
Washington,A.C.
(1)
April 22, 1938.
The President,
The White House.
My dear Mr. President:
A large number of investigations and a considerable amount
of litigation have been handled by the Department of Justice in connection
with violations of the statutes and Executive Orders relating to the hoard-
ing of gold. You may be interested to receive this brief resume of the
work done by the Department of Justice in that connection.
As you of course recall, beginning with the Act of Congress of
March 9, 1933, Executive Orders and Acts of Congress prohibited the with-
drawal, hoarding and exportation of gold, and required all persons to sur-
render gold bullion, gold coin and gold certificates in exchange for other
currency. Provision was made for the punishment of violators and the seizure
and forfeiture of such gold unlawfully withheld, acquired, transported, ex-
ported or earmarked.
After full opportunity had been given to all persons to comply
voluntarily with the Executive Order of April 5, 1933, I instructed the
Federal Bureau of Investigation of this Department to undertake a comprehen-
sive investigation of failures or refusals to fulfil the requirements of the
Order. The result was the discovery of numerous gold hoarders, many of whom,
upon discovery, voluntarily surrendered their gold, while some remained recal-
citrant, making further action necessary.
In the course of their work, the Agents interviewed 5,629 persons.
By September 28, 1933, when the investigations had been completed, the amount
of gold which was returned and can be attributed directly or indirectly to
these activities was $38,901,009.95. Of this amount $8,700,597.26 was
definitely due to the activity of Special Agents in particular cases. There-
after legal proceedings, civil and criminal, were instituted to reach persons
who remained obdurate.
In the aggregate, seventeen criminal prosecutions were instituted.
In nine of them defendants returned their gold to the Treasury, after the
commencement of proceedings, and thereupon the cases were nolle prossed.
-2-
Two cases were dismissed for lack of sufficient evidence. Five cases
went to trial, in four of which there were convictions, one terminating
in an acquittal. One defendant was fined $50; another fined $10,000
and sentenced to 40 days' imprisonment in jail; one was given a suspended
sentence of one year in jail and a fine of $500; and one was sentenced to
imprisonment in jail for six months.
Three actions were filed to recover the double penalty provided by
the Gold Reserve Act of 1934. All three were eventually dismissed. Ten
libel proceedings were instituted under the Gold Reserve Act of 1934, against
gold held by defendants named in such proceedings. Decrees of forfeiture
were entered in nine of these cases, involving in the aggregate over $17,000.
In the tenth case, which involved $200,000, 8. settlement has been recently
consummated.
In two instances, the Government intervened in equity suits between
private parties involving title to & large amount of gold coin, which was
eventually turned over to the Treasury.
Except for small cases which may occasionally arise, we may consider
the matter brought to & close.
Respectfully,
Attorney General.
freesmal
& JUSTICE Kiad
Office of the Attorney General
11
Mashington, D.C.
1
April 25, 1938
My dear Mr. President:
At its session today the Supreme Court decided six cases
on the merits in favor of the Government and four against it. In
two cases no disposition on the merits was made by the Court, the cases
being remanded for further proceedings in the trial court. In another
case in which the Government was not formally a party its position was
stated to the Court and the Court's decision was contrary to such posi-
tion.
In United States V. Bekins the Court held that Chapter X of
the Bankruptcy Act, added by the Act of August 16, 1937, and known as
the new municipal bankruptcy act, is constitutional in so far 8.8 it
provides for the composition of the indebtedness of state taxing agen-
cies, in this case an Irrigation District, with the consent of the
State. Although the case of Ashton V. Cameron County District, 298 U.S.
513, was not expressly overruled, the Court rejected each of the grounds
which formed the basis of that decision. Justices McReynolds and Butler
dissented. In United States V. Carolene Products Co. the Court upheld
the constitutionality of the Filled Milk Act of March 4, 1923, which
prohibits the shipment in interstate commerce of skimmed milk compounded
with any fat or oil other than milk fat, so as to resemble milk or
cream. In Tennessee Electric Power Co. V. Ickes the Court, upon the
authority of Alabama Power Co. V. Ickes, 302 U. S. 464, affirmed the
decision of the lower court dissolving a temporary injunction, issued
by consent several years ago, which restrained the Administrator of Pub-
lic Works from making a loan and grant to the City of Chattanooga to
build a municipal light plant. In United States and Interstate Commerce
Commission V. Pan American Petroleum Corp. and Same V. Humble Oil and
Refining Co. there were upheld orders of the Interstate Commerce Commis-
sion which commanded the railroad or railroads serving industrial plants
of the appellees to cease and desist from the payment of allowances for
switching services performed by plant facilities. In Baltimore & Ohio
Railroad V. United States and Interstate Commerce Commission the Court
sustained orders of the Interstate Commerce Commission affecting the rate
structure on coke moving into central territory from southern points.
- 2 -
In Hinderlider V. La Plata River and Cherry Creek Ditch Co.
the Court held valid a compact by which Colorado agreed to furnish to
New Mexico a certain proportion of the flow of the La Plata River. In
carrying out this compact, the Colorado Court held that the State by
compact could not deprive the ditch company of the water to which it was
entitled under an earlier court decree. The Supreme Court reversed, hold-
ing that New Mexico was entitled to its fair share of the water of the
river, and that all private water rights were held subject to such a
recognition by Colorado, by compact or otherwise. The Government's con-
tention (presented by memorandum on certification by the Court of a
constitutional question) that the consent of Congress made the compact
an "act of Congress" was rejected.
In Guaranty Trust Co. V. United States the Court held, against
the contentions of the Government, that the New York statute of limita-
tions applies in an action by the United States to recover a bank deposit
of $5,000,000 made by a former Russian government in 1917 and assigned
to the United States by the Soviet Government in 1933. The holding in-
cluded decisions that a foreign sovereign is not exempt from a state
statute of limitations and that, on the question of limitations, the
United States, as assignee, was in no better position than the Soviet
Government. The case has been remanded to determine whether the evidence
discloses an issue of fact as to repudiation which must be tried. In
Morgan V. United States the Court held that the right to a hearing under
the Packers and Stockyards Act of 1921 embraces not only the right to
present evidence but also a reasonable opportunity to know the claims
of the opposing party and that this was not accorded appellants because
the findings prepared by government officials who conducted the general
inquiry were not served on appellants before being signed by the Secretary
of Agriculture. The Court agreed with the Government's contention that
it was not the function of the court to probe the mental processes of
the Secretary in reaching his conclusions, if he had given the required
hearing. In United States V. Shoshone Tribe of Indians, in which the
Court had previously held that the Government, in 1878, had taken the
Tribe's land by putting upon its reservation, without its consent,
another band of Indians, the Court today ruled that under its treaty
with the Government the Indians' right of use and occupancy was equiva-
lent to a fee simple ownership and that, therefore, they were entitled
to the value of all the timber and minerals upon or in the land taken.
In United States V. The Klamath Tribe the Court held that an exchange
by the Government of tribal lands for other lands in 1906 constituted a
taking for which the Government must pay just compensation, including
interest from the date of taking. The Court also held upon the authority
of the Shoshone case that the Indians were entitled to recover the value
of the timber upon the land taken. The result of the decisions in the
Shoshone and Klamath cases is the affirmance of judgments against the
Government totaling over ten million dollars.
- 3 -
In Interstate Circuit V. United States and Paramount Pictures
Distributing Co. V. United States the Court did not dispose of the case
on the merits but, two Justices dissenting, remanded it to the District
Court for the entry of findings of fact and conclusions of law. In this
case the Government sued for an injunction against the carrying out of
an alleged conspiracy in restraint of interstate commerce between dis-
tributors and exhibitors of motion picture films.
In Federal Power Commission V. Metropolitan Edison Co. the
Government succeeded in frustrating an attempt in the Supreme Court by
certain power companies to delay disposition of the case at the present
term. The case involves the review of a decision by a Circuit Court of
Appeals which had the effect of halting an investigation by the Federal
Power Commission of inter-company charges within the Associated Gas
and Electric System.
The Court acted upon petitions for writs of certiorari in
eight cases filed by opponents, granting only one of them. The Court
also denied a petition by the Government in a tax case for a writ of
certiorari.
Respectfully,
Home Thamings
Attorney General.
The President
The White House
Washington, D. C.
PSF
DE VUSTICE s JUSTICE
Justice
Office of the Attorney General
Cummurgs
V
MUSTITA
Washington.,A.C.
April 26, 1938.
The President,
The White House.
My dear Mr. President:
Today I received a visit from six of the seven Democratic Con-
gressmen in Philadelphia, to wit:
James P. McGranery
Leon Sacks
Frank J. G. Dorsey
Michael J. Bradley
Ira W. Drew
J. Burwood Daly.
They say that the seventh Congressman from Philadelphia, namely Michael
J. Stack, is not in their group and is a sort of a lone wolf. Incidentally
they told me that Mr. Stack was against the Reorganization Bill and has been
against the Administration's measures off and on at many crucial moments.
They asserted that the six mentioned have been pro-Administration
and strong supporters of all your policies. They said also they were a unit
in active and open support of the Reorganization Bill. They also asserted
they were endeavoring, so far as possible, to keep out of the political
struggle now going on in Pennsylvania.
Incidentally they stated that, in their judgment, the organization
ticket headed by Governor Earle would be overwhelmingly successful in the
Primaries to be held on the seventeenth of May. They insisted it would
not even be a semblance of a struggle and that the result would be so one-
sided that it would be ludicrous. They maintained that their chief interest
was in the Party and its success in the November election. They deplored
the present situation in Pennsylvania and went into great detail with refer-
ence to it.
The primary purpose of their visit was to suggest that no Judicial
appointments should be made until after May 17. They had heard that Senator
Guffey had recommended Judge Maris for a place on the Circuit Court of Ap-
peals. Apparently they had nothing against Judge Maris and had no alternative
candidate to suggest. In fact they said they were not particularly inter-
ested in this position nor concerned as to the eventual appointee. They were
concerned, however, as to the time when the appointment should be made. They
maintain that it would be highly unfortunate if a nomination should be made
before the seventeenth of May, which is the date of the Primaries. They said
The President
2
April 26, 1938.
that this would be immediately seized upon and widely advertised as indi-
cating that you had taken sides in the primary struggle and that this would be
an unfortunate outcome all around. They felt that the fairest way to deal
with the matter was to do nothing about it until the present political turmoil
subsides.
They also suggested that in the entire Democratic Delegation from
Pennsylvania not more than about six could be found supporting the Guffey
ticket and that some of the six were quiescent about it. They said that Con-
gressman Faddis and Congressman Walter were the only two Congressmen vocifer-
ous in the matter and that Walter, although he knew the vote was coming up
on the Reorganization Bill, absented himself and that Faddis was active in
his opposition to the bill.
All in all they seem to feel they are entirely warranted in making
the suggestion not that something should be done, but that nothing should be
done in the matter of the judicial appointments until after the Primaries.
That, they felt, would be to the advantage of the Administration and of the
Party as a whole. They also said they felt they spoke in disinterested
fashion. Only one of the six has any opposition in the matter of renomination
and that opposition is so slight as to be of no consequence. They did feel,
therefore, that All will be renominated and they also felt they will be
re-elected no matter what the outcome of the Primaries may be. They said
their opposition is only in the party interest and has to do with the general
results in November next, and for that matter in 1940.
Sincerel Nome yours, Thangs
INTERIOR UMPT
RECEIVED
17. :: :- - 1938
& JUSTICE
OFFICE
Office of leAttorney General
THE SECRETARY
V
Mashington, B.C.
April 27, 1938
The Honorable,
The Secretary of the Interior.
My dear Mr. Secretary:
I have your letter of April 13, 1938, requesting my opinion as
to the extent of your "supervisory authority with respect to the
activities of the United States Housing Authority under section 3 (a)
of the United States Housing Act of 1937."
The United States Housing Authority is a body corporate of perpetual
duration created by the United States Housing Act of 1937 (c. 896, 50
Stat. 888), which provides for the eradication of slums and the erection
of decent, sufe, end sanitary dwellings for families of low income.
The statute vests the powers of the Authority in an Administrator appointed
by the President by and with the consent of the Senate and all other
officers and employees are appointed by the Administrator. The act pro-
vides for a three year program, authorizing the making over such period
of loans not exceeding the total amount of $500,000,000 to public-housing
agencies to assist in the development, acquisition and administration of
low-rent-housing or slum-clearance projects by such agencies and the
making of annual contributions or cup tal grunts in prescribed amounts
- 2 -
to assist in achieving and maintaining the low-rent character of the under-
takings. Section 6 (d) provides that no annual contribution, grant, or
loan, and no contract for any annual contribution, grant or loan, under
the act, shall be undertaken by the Authority except with the approval of
the President.
Section 3 (a) to which you refer provides as follows:
"There is hereby created in the Department of the Interior
and under the general supervision of the Secretary thereof a
body corporate of perpetual duration to be known as the United
States Housing Authority, which shall be an agency and in-
strumentality of the United States."
The act contains no definition of the term "general supervision" or of
its extent and scope. Insofar as your supervision pertains to any annual
contribution, grant, or loan, or any contract therefor, it expressly is
subordinated by section 6 (d) to the approval of the President. Any
action by you in respect of those matters, therefore, necessarily must be
in the nature of intermediate general supervision. The situation thus
differs from that discussed in the case of Knight V. United States Land
Association, 142 U. S. 161, in which the Court held that the Secretary of
the Interior had full power to superintend and control the sale and disposal
of public lands. There the Secretary's supervisory power over proceedings
affecting titles to lands was made final by statute; whereas here should the
Authority or the Secretary undertake any of the activities enumerated in
section 6 (d) the nower of neither would be final. Here the Congress has
placed the President in complete control by making him the final arbiter
-
to determine in what manner the funds and credit, as provided in the
act, best may be employed to assist the several States and their
political subdivisions in carrying out the purposes of the act.
While the President may not delegate to the Secretary the power of
final approval so expressly conferred upon the President, the act
is sufficiently broad to enable him to determine the extent and scope
of the Secretary's duties in respect to the functions mentioned in
section 6 (d).
In respect to the extent of your supervisory authority over
activities of the United States Housing Authority other than those
heretofore considered, the words "general supervision" in section 3
(a) must be taken to have been used by the Congress in their commonly
accepted sense, there being nothing in the statute to indicate a
contrary intention. "To supervise" is defined in Webster's New
International Dictionary as "to oversee for direction; to superintend;
to inspect with authority; as to supervise the printing of a book,"
and the word is defined in the Standard Dictionary as meaning "to
have general oversight of, especially as an officer vested with
authority; superintend; inspect."
The decisions of the courts substantially adopt the above definitions,
holding that "general supervision" implies more than & mere power to advise
and suggest and that it includes po er to superintend and oversee the
acts and proceedings of those subject to such general supervision. Snyder V.
- 4 -
Sickles, 98 U. S. 203; Knight V. United States Lund Association, supra;
Hawley V, Diller, 178 U. S. 476, 495; Vantongeren V. Heffernan, 5 Dak.
180; State V. F., E. & E. V. R. R. Co., 22 Neb. 313, 328; Great Northern
R. Co., V. Snohomish County, 48 Wash. 478, 485.
Ori. inally the Housin Aut ority vus planned as an independent
agency, but during consideration of the bill in the Senato, section 3
(a) was a wonded by placin the Authority in the Department of the
Interior and under the general supervision of the Secretary thereof.
This action was deemed advisable in order that the Authority should have
the full benefit of the housing experience of the Public Works Administration,
and should conform to the organization recommendations of the President
by boing placed within one of the permanent Depart onts (H. Rept. 1545,
75th Cong., lst sess).
Only a few: Senators took nart in tl discussion of the scope and of Sect
of the proposed amendment, and their views were strongly divergent. Some
were of the opinion t at the amend at would -ive to the Secretary of the
Interior control and aut arity wer the activities of the Mousing Authority.
The sponsor of the amend ent, on the other hand, stated th t the term
"general supervision" meant the gonerol. direction, not the ancoiric control,
of the Aut ority end that in 113 judgrent the amount ent medit "in an
advisory caracity" (Cong. Rec. vol. £1, pr. 8354-6357, 0330). The jority
of the Senutors voting reve no expression of their understandin of the
significance of the words "genoral supervision." The debite moit the
- 5 -
amendment, therefore, discloses no intention of the Congress to use the
words in other then their ordinary meaning.
Accordingly, it is my opinion that, subject to the requirement that
no annual contribution, grant or loan, and no contract for any annual
contribution, grant or loan may be undertaken by the United States
Housing Authority either directly or under your supervision except with
the approval of the President, you are empowered to superintend and oversee
the activities of the Housing Authority.
Respectfully,
Nome Attorney General. Through
OF fillional JUSTICE
Office of the Attorney General
-
Washington,
May 2, 1938
MAY RECEIVED THE 3 WHITE 9 AM HOUSE *38
My dear Mr. President:
Only two Government cases were decided upon the merits
by the Supreme Court at its session today. In these cases (Pacific
National Co. V. Welch, Former Collector of Internal Revenue and
United States V. Kaplan) the Court sustained the Government's con-
tentions, holding that a taxpayer who in one year reports the total
income from the sale of property, to be paid in installments in
later years, makes a binding election and cannot change to the
installment basis of reporting income in seeking refunds.
Two petitions for certiorari filed by opponents were
denied.
In Federal Power Commission V. Metropolitan Edison Co.
the Court on Thursday last, after frustrating an attempt by certain
power companies to delay disposition of the case at the present term,
granted the Government's petition for writ of certiorari and the case,
pursuant to direction of the Court, is being heard today. It in-
volves the review of a decision by a Circuit Court of Appeals which
had the effect of halting an investigation by the Federal Power Com-
mission of inter-company charges within the Associated Gas and Elec-
tric System.
After its session today the Court will recess until
Monday, May 16th.
Respectfully,
Home Thomas
Attorney General.
The President,
The White House,
Washington, D. C.
GREAT OF JUSTICE DEPART
Office of the Attorney General
MAY RECEIVED 17 THE 2 WHITE 44. PM HOUSE *38
Mashington, D.C.
May 16, 1938
My dear Mr. President:
The Supreme Court at its session today decided fifteen cases
on the merits in favor of the Government and one against it.
In Heiner, former Collector of Internal Revenue V. Mellon (two
cases) it was held that surviving partners are taxable on their distribu-
tive shares of the profits of & partnership in liquidation, after disso-
lution upon the death of a partner, during the year in which the profits
are received by the partnership and not after a completed liquidation
discloses the profits of the business venture as a whole. In National
Labor Relations Board V. Mackay Radio and Telegraph Co., the Court again
upheld an order of the Labor Board which had been held invalid by a
Circuit Court of Appeals. The case establishes the principle that em-
ployees who voluntarily go on strike continue to be protected by the
National Labor Relations Act, and that unfair discrimination against
them at the conclusion of the strike may be remedied by an order of re-
instatement. The case also demonstrates that the Board has been correct
in its contention that the recent decision in the Kansas City Stockyards
case has only narrow, if any, application to Labor Board proceedings.
In Commissioner of Internal Revenue V. National Grocery Co. the Court,
reversing a judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit,
held that the Company had been availed of for the purpose of escaping the
surtax on its sole stockholder and that, therefore, a fifty per cent
penalty tax was properly assessed. The opinion discusses and sustains
the constitutionality of the provision of the Revenue Act imposing such
liability. Justices McReynolds and Butler dissented. In Taft V. Com-
missioner of Internal Revenue the Court agreed with the Government that
promises to make gifts to charitable institutions by the decedent, even
though enforceable against the estate, are not deductible from the value
of the gross estate either as claims incurred for an adequate and full
consideration in money or money's worth or as transfers to charitable
institutions. In Federal Trade Commission V. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.
the Court held that a proceeding instituted by the Federal Trade Commis-
sion against the Company for violation of Section 2 of the Clayton Act,
- 2 -
prohibiting sales at discriminatory prices, did not become moot by virtue
of the amendment embodied in the Robinson-Patman Act of 1936, or by virtue
of discontinuance of the practice which the Commission found to be illegal.
The case was therefore remanded to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the
Sixth Circuit for decision on the merits. In Zerbst, Warden V. Kidwell
et al (a group of eight cases) the Court held that the Parole Board had
power to require complete service of a Federal sentence where the prisoner
had been paroled and had committed a second Federal offense during the
period of parole for which he was reincarcerated in & Federal institution.
In Lowe Bros. Co. V. United States the Court held that the District Courts
are without jurisdiction to entertain a suit against the United States
to recover income and excess profits taxes in excess of $10,000 when
they were collected through a credit by the Commissioner of an over-
payment of taxes for another year. In Lang V. Commissioner of Internal
Revenue the Court, answering questions certified by the Circuit Court
of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, ruled (contrary to the Government's
contention) that only half of the proceeds of insurance policies, premiums
on which were paid out of the community funds, can be included in the
deceased husband's gross estate for inheritance tax purposes. The deci-
sion adds another to the numerous tax advantages enjoyed by spouses for-
tunate enough to live in community property states.
In the Republic Steel case the Court granted the motion of the
National Labor Relations Board for leave to file a petition for original
writs of prohibition and mandamus, and issued a rule returnable next
Monday to the judges of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.
The Court's ultimate action upon the Board's petition will finally settle
the question, much litigated recently, of the power of the Board to vacate
its orders after proceedings for review have been commenced in a court,
but before the record has been filed.
In California V. Latimer the Court, without opinion, gave leave
to the State to file an original bill of complaint against the members of
the Railroad Retirement Board and the Commissioner of Internal Revenue
seeking an injunction against collection of taxes under the Carriers
Taxing Act, and against making orders under the Railroad Retirement Act,
with respect to the operations of the State Belt Road, a railroad owned
and operated by the State of California. Exemption is claimed because
the Railroad is said to be an instrumentality in the State's governmental
functions.
The Court also granted one petition for writ of certiorari filed
by the Government in a tax case. Eight petitions for writs of certiorari
filed by opponents were denied and three granted, as to one of which, how-
ever, the Government concurred in the issuance of the writ.
Respectfully,
Home hang
Attorney General.
The President,
The White House,
Washington, D. C.
(1) PSF
Justice
May 20, 1938. cummany
Dear Cecilia:-
Thankyou over 80 much for that very
amusing and interesting letter and also for the
stamps which are a real addition to my collection.
I think the description of your dinner
party in Florida is priceless. Go to it and bite
them every chance you get!
I had a grand cruise to the Virgin
Islands -- some fishing, no work and lots of rest.
My best wishes to you and I hope to
see you very soon.
As ever yours,
Mrs. Cummings,
2700 Tilden Street, N.W.,
Washington, D. c.
MEMO FOR THE P. S.
Please prepare a nice line of
thanks for letter and stamps and
tell her to go to it and bite them
every chance she gets.
III / F 2
& R n
If the
/ I / 7
/ is /
F
E
COTT 94043 opirace Rife
1164 20% 20 So 20 TODDOL If Sere. virg PT20 type
to bns onli equato ooin bits 4 ease.,IT
BOB on :- in
may 4, 1938.
Hear THA President
From un. Same E. woods
I received there state for issued
a bond march 17th in Hungary
in connection with the (athelic
Cangress a bont to be held
there and to hower Hungary's
patron saint, S/. Stephens. I
hope they add to your collutine.
you are now out
in the middle of some rean
and I've just returned from
the wars, that is, II oversing repairs our
the Greenwich house & in the biew ing
real in to to men with a view to
Hing a tenant - our former he had are to
got 95 80 many in laws in
get more while bedreoms in you york I
heard "Parsifal" of The met and saw
Bonowed Tune a charming I think
"On tasy and a play wonderful that
fan one 7 the I have most ever plen I were in the TiTn,
Theatre- thing On Town." of was
Sam Goldwyn If ay it out
colossal. I came and from 80
super under a pell was The
it w here it received that
P.W.A. play Lash year sliot and
Pulitzer "Our third I I aw "Munder is
Lappy Prize I hear No fire" the
eplendid the Cathedrol" by J.S.
"Macheth" in done by coloud actors. The
former was bean titully written and
played. you would III have enjoyed the
latter seeing the Seottish mtcle
turned into Voodoo dictors with Haitian
palms waving over their prancing Why
don't we have them all done in Washington
Before I went kith Hower Y I
went to Hrida. For 2½ weeks we were
at The Boca Raton club where everyous
is down to his last 40 millious.
Lordy, are they mad at Whitney! are a
former utility girl man his right. a desirer We
night X in the on middle 7 soup asked
when were just stuce out (not I this time) W.
him hut 0 foremen ti need Mister the
He about a had a stroke and
that rught was to green my hunged, one so I said quan in my
of since with with drawn sherry f "/te this,
curtre piece got a good prinkling -
most dulcet tones "why, mr. Minner
at that he had 1/2 a plinks making 1/2,
knowng he was good for 3 before
passing out I still persisted. why,
why why, why because his a traitor
x rught to be hanged."
" TTo, says I, still in dulect times,
I don't agree with you. TIIA. Whitney
didn't do very much - he / tole ruly
from the inch; No me is missing not a
meal on his account, ee tainly his
brother who is mr. J.P. Mr. gains partier;
mn his wife - not the mem bees 7 The my.
your Club. Really Mr. Minure,
if, you wanted to carry the analogy
for enough, Robin he was Hood. and He half S dole ofa from the
the modern hire he didn't give to to
inh, but I can't feel he right the Insull
poor, he in pricon 80 long mitchell as are
and mr. Charles E.
out."
"Oh, no, all no, that different
mr. Insull X mr. Mitchell just made
an error."
"they cel tainly did;" said
Sweetness + Light - they were found
out."
By that time he suddenly
diseased he had to dance with one
of the ladies way across the table
he was on the verge 7 the fatal I
& Iwas glad to see him go third because
didn't want to be in at the death.
stroke Y not heing a her tsman
I'm what is known as The
Death 7 The Party when I get with new
the crowd, Y I've dis coulsed a
tecnique: I shoot my barbs ou
dulect trues. They stick deeper and
they can't repute the facts nor
resent the tone.
I had a lovely time
The old blood pressure
jumped up a lih, but is steadily the
declining 190 the other day at -
doctor hopes to ptatilize it 175
which will be normal for me.
The news about the
results in Florida has just came in-
Isal it wonderful?
Hower and In enjoyed
your last Fine tide Chad, It was
plendid.
mr. Edsel Ford pat
next to me at a hundred a L
mr. Sene Tunney in Ilorida.
He's a nice, quit little man
who never pay a word to
anyone, but we kept going
because I suddenly because
interested in his father's
antiques and even went back
to The Peace ship to reep
conversation giving. It just
prover you don't have to have
any Grains to make money. He's
so afraid 7 kidneffers he won't
build a house down there, hit
lines on a boat tid up to the
property he twns, I liked him-
he was so simple
In getting to he a sylph!
Wouldn't it he my luck to
have Zieg feld dead jus L when
I'm trying to he a Glamour
Girl! Shucks.
Homer has given we
your various messages kind and
thank you for your
ingines
with every good
wis L.
(scilia.
his and cumming Drance it
Rudist- (mmmass.
conference for Holyvills
POSTCA
5
I are attending Judicial
4 -PM
POST The Thank (
1938
<<<<<<<
CORRESPONDENCE
TENN.
CENT
Geilin
5mp mp my m
this most
more bring
Jank risited I.
The President
The White House,
Washin ston,
att. Miss Le Hand.
D.T.
PSF
Justice
THE WHITE HOUSE
ammungs
WASHINGTON
June 17, 1938.
MEMORANDUM FOR
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
Please obtain a personal
and confidential recommendation
in this case from Judge Revill
at Greenville, Georgia, but it
is important that this be obtained
in strictest confidence. He can
be told that it is for me.
I believe Judge Revill is
with the R. F. C. in Atlanta.
F. D. R.
Case from the Department of Justice
MOZART STRICKLAND
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
personal
file
WASHINGTON
June
18, JUN 1938 THE WHITE
RECEIVED 20 9 AM HOUSE '38
My dear Mr. President:
A few days ago I was speaking to you
about the successful operation of the Judicial
Conference in the Fourth Circuit. Enclosed here-
with you will find a copy of the Court Rule
adopted by the Fourth Circuit which established
the Conference.
The session I attended was the
Eighth Annual Conference.
You may have noticed that the idea is
beginning to take hold as evidenced by the action
of Judge Groner and his associates in calling a
Judicial Conference in the District of Columbia.
This conference, the first of its kind, occurred
on Thursday, June 16. I was in attendance
during & portion of the proceedings and I am hopeful
that a beginning has been made for effective work
in the District of Columbia. It is my purpose
to encourage the holding of similar conferences in
all of the Circuits.
Sincerely yours,
Nom hammy
The President,
The White House.
UNITED STATES CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS,
FOURTH CIRCUIT
JANUARY TERM, 1938
It is hereby ordered by this Court that the following Rule,
be, and the same is hereby, adopted as a Special Rule of this
Court, viz:
SPECIAL RULE-JUDICIAL CONFERENCE
(a) There shall be held each year at the Asheville term of
this Court a Conference of all of the Circuit and District
Judges of the Circuit for considering the state of business in
the various Districts, for devising means for relieving con-
gestion of dockets where this may be necessary, for improv-
ing procedure in the courts and for exchanging ideas with
respect to the administration of justice. It shall be the duty
of every Judge of the Circuit to attend such Conference.
(b) The first day of the Conference shall be for the Judges
alone and shall be devoted to a discussion of matters af-
fecting the state of the dockets and the administration of
justice in their respective Districts. Members of the Bar
to be chosen as set forth in the succeeding paragraph shall
be members of the Conference and shall participate in its
discussions and deliberations on the second and third days.
(c) Members of the Conference from the Bar shall be
composed of the following:
(1) The Presidents of the State Bar Associations of the
States of the Circuit, and five delgates from each of such
State bar associations to be appointed by the President
thereof.
(2) All United States Attorneys of the Circuit.
(3) One representative of each Grade A Law School
within the Circuit.
(4) Lawyers of the Circuit appointed as Members of the
Conference by the Circuit Judges. Each Circuit Judge shall
42406-38
2
annually appoint three lawyers as Members of the Confer-
ence for that year.
(5) Members of Committees on Rules and Procedure
appointed by District Judges. Each District Judge shall
appoint two members of a Committee on Rules and Pro-
cedure to serve within his District for a period of 3 years,
and all such committee members shall during their periods
of service be Members of the Conference.
If any State Bar Association President or District Judge
shall fail, upon request, to appoint the delegates or members
of committees which he is herein designated to appoint,
the Senior Circuit Judge of the Circuit shall make such
appointments.
(d) The Clerk of this Court shall be Secretary of the Con-
ference and shall make and preserve an accurate record of
its proceedings.
JANUARY 15TH, 1938.
JOHN J. PARKER,
Senior Circuit Judge.
ELLIOTT NORTHCOTT,
U. 8. Circuit Judge.
MORRIS A. SOPER,
U. S. Circuit Judge.
A true copy:
Teste:
CLAUDE M. DEAN, Clerk,
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.
U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTIES REFICE 1938
PSF
&
Justice
d-1
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
filmate
6/24/38
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
Both the Attorney General and I feel that
the Moving Picture prosecution should not be
started without first conferring with you.
However, there is a great deal of talk
now going on among the Independent's which
bothers me because sooner or later some sort
of story is coming out that the Moving Picture
prosecution is being stopped. I am at present
dodging the attorney for the Independent's
after having stopped a set of resolutions which
they contemplated passing at the last meeting.
There is, therefore, need for an early
decision and early announcement.
Vhurmay THURMAN ARNOLD Arnold
HURMAN W. ARNOLD
ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL
Department of Justice
first
Mashington
June 24, 1938
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
I as informed by Mr. Jackson that there is
a possible conference with prominent individuals con-
nected with the moving picture industry. For your
information in connection with matters that may arise
at that conference, I show you a tentative statement
which has been prepared for release If an when the
court action is taken. This statement has not been
passed or approved as yet, and it is given you only as
our tentative ideas of what it should contain in case
they should be useful to you.
Thrman THURMAN ARNOLD Armold
Assistant Attorney General
For immediate release.
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
, 1938.
In accordance with its previously announced policy, the Department
of Justice today issued the following statement:
A petition in equity was filed today in the District Court of the
United States for the Southern District of New York against the major
motion picture companies, their associated and subsidiary companies
and numerous individuals connected with the industry. The petition was
filed under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act and it alleges that the defend-
ants jointly and severally violated the Act.
Parties Defendant. The defendants named in the petition are the
eight major motion picture companies; viz., Paramount Pictures, Inc.,
Loew's, Incorporated, Irving Trust Company, New York, New York, as
Trustee in Bankruptcy for Radio-Keith-Orpheum Corporation, Warner Bros.
Pictures, Inc., Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation, Columbia Pictures
Corporation, Universal Corporation, and United Artists Corporation, 25
subsidiary or associated corporations and 132 individuals, officers or
directors of the corporate defendants. The Motion Picture Producers and
Distributors of America, Inc., a trade association commonly referred to
in the industry as the Hays organization, as well as its principal offi-
cers, are also made party defendants. The membership of this association
is made up, for the most part, of the major companies who are the other
defendants in this suit. Its activities are wholly financed by those
companies through a system of fees and dues which are levied upon them
in accordance with their gross annual revenues.
Reasons That Led Department to Make Investigation. The investiga-
tion by the Department of Justice was made in response to numerous com-
plaints by independent producers, distributors, and exhibitors and by
the theatre-going public. Independent companies complained that the
defendants were threatening their complete exclusion from the business.
The Department of Justice was interested on its own initiative because
the motion picture business is not & private affair, but a matter of
vital concern not only to those immediately interested but to 85 to 90
million people who attend the picture theatres every week.
I. ECONOMIC CONDITIONS IN THE INDUSTRY WHICH
CREATED MONOPOLISTIC CONTROL
Producer-Exhibitor Combinations. The public theatres constitute
the only market for the commercial distribution of motion picture films.
The finer theatres and theatre chains are now under the domination of
five of the major companies, Paramount Pictures, Inc., Loew's, Incorpo-
rated, Radio-Keith-Orpheum Corporation, Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., and
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation, who, together with the three
other major companies, United Artists, Columbia Pictures Corporation
and Universal Corporation, control about 65% of all pictures produced.
The actual control of product is even greater than would appear
from this figure, because from 80% to 90% of the quality feature films
upon which exhibitors are dependent for the successful operation of
their theatres are produced or distributed by the eight major companies.
The control of the finer theatres by the five major producer-
exhibitors has given them the actual power to exclude other producers
- 2 -
from those markets. This is the very essence of monopolistic power
forbidden by the Sherman Act.
Absence of Competition between Major Companies. In acquiring
theatres and chains of theatres, the major companies have not occupied,
to any great extent, the same territory. Indeed, there is a virtual di-
vision of territory. Operating in their separate divisions of territory,
the theatres of each major company afford a market for the pictures pro-
duced by the others. As the aggregate annual production of the major
companies is sufficient to fill comfortably the theatre programs of
their respective theatres, outside pictures are put under an impossible
handicap. So close is the combination that these companies have pooled
their most valuable assets and made them available to each other. These
assets consist of stars and feature players of known drawing power, as
well as directors, technicians and physical properties such as sets and
scenes. Seldom are these facilities made available to independent pro-
ducers.
Suppression of Independent Theatres. So far as ownership is con-
cerned, there are enough independent theatres to furnish the basis for
substantial competition with the theatres controlled by the major com-
panies. This competition, however, is suppressed by the major companies
by denying to independents equal access to the films distributed by them.
A theatre affiliated with a major company is given first access to the
product of all the major companies before the independent is permitted
to exhibit it on any terms. Thus, in a territory where an independent
exhibitor is in competition with a theatre affiliated with a major pro-
- 8 -
ducer, he can not obtain first-run pictures. He must wait until the
affiliated theatre has skimmed the cream by prior exhibition. This is
true regardless of the price which the independent might be willing to
pay for the film. This is not the only handicap. There are special
types of contracts and contract modifications, including various possible
reductions in film rentals where pictures turn out to be unpopular, which
are given to the affiliated theatre. The independent theatre is denied
such contracts.
The independent theatre is also subject to numerous discriminations
such as block booking, full line forcing, the imposition of preferred
playing time, and discriminatory rentals which are most oppressive.
This monopolistic power has a tendency to force independent theatres
into bankruptcy or to sell to the producer-owned theatre chains at the
latters' terms. The power of life or death in the hands of the major
producers as exercised today goes even further than government's power
of eminent domain, because it is controlled by no judicial hearing.
Economic Effects of the Combination. The broad effects of the ex-
ercise of this arbitrary power may be summarized as follows:
(1) Theatre patrons in any community are given no choice of the
pictures they desire to see. It is impossible for the taste of any com-
munity to find expression in its own local theatre. Each community is
regimented into accepting the kind of picture which will make the most
profits on a nationwide scale.
(2) There is no opportunity for new forms of artistic expression
which are not approved by those in control of the major companies, even
though there exist communities which would support them.
- 4 -
(3) The charge on independents for the use of the films is all the
traffic will bear and they have no place to turn for relief. They are
in a virtual state of peonage through the control exercised by the major
companies. Pictures may be withheld for any reason, or no reason at all.
The best summary of the evils of this producer-exhibitor control has been
made by Mr. Adolph Zukor, now chairman of the board of directors of the
defendant Paramount Pictures, Inc., in a statement published in 1918 in
which he predicted exactly what has happened since that day:
The evil of producing and exhibiting coalitions
is one of the gravest perils that has ever confronted
the motion picture industry. For some time past this
condition has been developing and now threatens to
halt the industry's progress, if indeed it does not
set it back beyond the point at which it first took
its place among the organized industries of the day.
It has been permitted to develop this far because no
one individual, either producer or exhibitor, has
dared face the facts himself, and compel other pro-
ducers and exhibitors to face them with him.
*
*
We should all realize that the most effective
way to develop the industry to its largest capacity
is to maintain a broad open field of endeavor in its
every branch. The exhibitors now enjoy the advantage
of having the choice of several well-established
feature programs from which they can select any range
of subjects suitable to their individual requirements.
Also because these producing firms are well established
they are in a position to produce pictures far ahead
of release date, giving the exhibitor an added advan-
tage in being able to arrange his bookings far in ad-
vance, and therefore avail himself of a careful selec-
tion of subjects. The producers, in feeling that they
have all the exhibitors in the country as prospective
customers, are encouraged to make greater efforts and
expend bigger sums for their productions and equipment.
On the other hand, the exhibitors, in keeping all their
lines open, have the choice of all the productions on
the market. In this manner the business opportunities
of both factors are unrestricted and permissible of
any possible expansion. The moment exhibitors limit
-5-
the market of producers, or the producers limit
the buying opportunities of the exhibitor, the busi-
ness is retarded and its growth is stunted. ...
*
*
*
*
*
If the business is to progress it must advance upon
the basis of free and unhampered selection of product
for exhibitors, large and small, and the exhibitors
alone can cure this evil by a resolute refusal to
be drawn into any allied scheme, even if the results
promised are of temporary benefit to themselves. ...
(4) The monopolistic control of the defendants has resulted in
colossal waste and fantastic salary scales on the part of the producers
which, through the prices charged, are a direct tribute levied upon the
public.
Growth of Combination During Last Twenty Years. In the early days
of the industry, the three branches of production, distribution and ex-
hibition were to a large extent operated separately. A struggle for
industry control developed between producers and exhibitors, as & result
of which some producers entered the exhibition field--as in the case of
the defendants Paramount Pictures, Inc., and Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.--
and some exhibitors entered the production field, as in the case of Loew's,
Incorporated. In 1919, the very next year after issuing his prophetic
statement of the evils expected from such a combination, Adolph Zukor,
then a leading producer, determined to obtain control of as many theatres
as possible. He moved swiftly. Other companies moved to keep up with
him. The period of the 1920's became one of constant and aggressive ac-
quisition by major companies of independent theatres. That struggle has
resulted in complete domination and control of moving picture theatres
on a nationwide scale by the major companies.
-6-
II. REASONS FOR PROCEEDING IN EQUITY
The petition in equity which has now been filed comes as a result
of an investigation conducted by the Department and its observation of
the operation of the motion picture industry over a period of years. The
Department has concluded after long and careful study that there can be
no hope of restoring free competition to the industry (both in production
and exhibition) until the business of production and distribution is
divorced from that of exhibition. Such a result can be accomplished only
through an equity decree which will require the major companies to divest
themselves either of their ownership of theatres or of production and
distribution facilities. One reason for determining to proceed first in
equity rather than criminally is, therefore, the fact that only an equity
decree can accomplish the result which the Department believes to be
essential.
A further reason for instituting equity rather than criminal pro-
ceedings at this time should be noted. In the course of its study of the
motion picture industry the Department attempted, through the voluntary
cooperation of the major producers, to adjust the difficulties of inde-
pendent exhibitors who brought their problems to the Department and who
consented to such a course. This effort on the part of the Department to
secure relief for independent exhibitors was almost wholly unsuccessful.
The major producers were advised approximately a year ago that although the
Department would continue to submit the problems of independent exhibitors
to them for adjustment, it would do so upon the distinct understanding that
it was to have an entirely free hand in instituting such proceedings under
-7-
the antitrust laws as it might in its discretion determine to be necessary
and proper. The Department believes that in the light of its dealings
with the industry in the past, it would be inequitable to institute a
general criminal proceeding at this time.
It should, however, be understood that the quity proceeding which
has now been instituted may be followed by criminal prosecutions in
specific instances of deliberate and aggravated violations of the law
which have continued subsequent to the date upon which the producers wore
notified that further efforts to make voluntary adjustments would not
prejudice the Department in its choice of remedies.
III. ECONOMIC RESULTS TO BE ANTICIPATED
FROM THE PRESENT ACTION
Restoration of Competition Is Primary Aim. Restoration of free
enterprise and open competition amongst all branches of the motion picture
industry is the primary objective of this proceeding. To this end, and
as a first step, a separation of production and exhibition interests is
sought in order that all motion picture theatres shall be free from the
domination and control of any producer or any group of producers, and
shall be immediately responsive and responsible to the tastes and demands
of their respective patrons. Freed from producer control, it is
believed that the theatres of the country will constitute a free, open
and untrammeled market to which all producers may have access for the
distribution and licensing of films based upon merit. Exhibitors
likewise will have access to all available motion picture product in
accordance with their respective abilities to pay for and utilize that
product.
-8-
Permanent injunctions to restrain all discriminatory practices
against independent producers and exhibitors are also sought. It is
firmly believed that the public interest will be served by restoring
free enterprise to an industry which affects so vitally the welfare
and morals of large sections of our citizenship.
Suit May Throw Light on Application of Antitrust Laws to Other
Industries. In addition to the benefit to this particular industry and
its patrons, the present suit may settle questions that are vital in the
application of the antitrust laws to other industries in which manufacturers
or producers knit together through & common trade association, seek directly
or indirectly to dominate and control markets.
Suit May Develop Need For Congressional Action. Until the evidence
is produced, itis too early to state whether the antitrust laws by
themselves are sufficiently effective to restore competitive conditions.
If it appears from such evidence that further aid is needed, the results
of the investigation and trial will be brought to the attention of
Congress.
Assistant Attorney General,
Approved,
Attorney General.
- 9 -
Pristrie
file
HSC:MOB
July 7, 1938.
The President,
The White House.
My dear Mr. Presidents
I return you herewith the letters received by you from
Norman Thomas, dated respectively June 25 and July 5. It does
not appear to me to be desirable for you to answer these letters
personally. If any answer et all is made, it would, I think,
be preferable to have the reply made by one of your Secretaries.
With this end in view I enclose herewith draft of &
proposed letter which may be of service. In this proposed letter
you will note that I refer to Mr. Arthur T. Vanderbilt as the
attorney for Mr. Thomas. I know that he does represent Mr. Thomas
because the latter wrote to ne and informed me that he had employed
Mr. Vanderbilt and, on his advice, was making a complaint before
the United States Commissioner in connection with the so-called
kdinaping charges.
In view of the fact that Mr. Thomas had
thus taken decisive steps, under advice of counsel, to prefer
criminal charges against certain police officers it seemed to me
that no particular action was required by the Department of Justice
pending such proceedings.
It is my understanding that the Commissioner heard the
matter and rather unexpectedly held the defendants for 6. Grand Jury.
It now appears, from the letter of July 5, that Mr. Thomas went before
the Grand Jury and discouraged action by the Grend Jury on his own
complaint.
Ithave reason to doubt, from certain letters that have
come from Mr. Thomas, whether he has any faith in his complaint
that he was kidnaped under the terms of the Federal Statute. That
Statute, as you know, was under consideration by the Supreme Court
of the United States in the case of Gooch V. Us S., 297 U.S. 124,
which seemed to indicate that to support a Federal prosecution there
should not only be an interstate kidnaping or transportation, but
that it shoul be for the purpose of benefit, tgain, or advantage to
the kidnaper.
The President
2.
July 7, 1938.
I assume that what happened was that the officers put Mr. Thomas
on c. ferry boat in Jersey City and that the boat seiled away with him. It
has also been held in the case of U. S. V. Wheeler, 254 U. S. 281, that
the deportation of individuals by an aroused community, or its police
authorities, without any specific notive or purpose of selfish benefit
or gain, except the desire to rid the community of such individuals or
to avoid public disorder, cannot be brought within the Federal Statutes.
This latter decision was, of course, prior to the passage of the so-celled
Lindbergh Kidnaping Act.
Moreover, for yourinformation, May I add that there is & New
Jersey Statute which such more clearly covers the situation than any
Federal Statute that could be cited. No doubt Mr. Thomas has been
advised by his attorney with reference to the legaldifficulties involved
in making his kidnep charge effective.
In addition to all the foregoing, we have obtained copies of the
proceedings before Judge Clark and are having them very carefully analyzed
to see whether any other Federal Statute is involved which would warrant
action by the Department of Justice.
To say the least Mr. Thomas is a very unreasonable person and,
in my judgment, one of the most mentally dishonest uen in public life and
his primary purpose in bombarding you and me with letters is for propaganda
and public consumption. I am perfectly willing, and indeed would be glad,
to receive from Mr. Vanderbilt, who is a high-class man and & fine attorney,
a coherent statement of any claim that he can make in behalf of Mr. Thomas
and any suggestions that he may care to submit which would indicate &
violation of any Federal Statute. The moment this arrives it will be
given full, complete, and courteous consideration.
In view of the foregoing it rather seems to ne that 4 short
letter along the lines of the draft enclosed, written by one of your
Secretaries to Mr. Thomas, would fully meet the situation.
Sincerely yours,
Signed
HOMER OUMMINGS
bleer
PROPOSED LETTER FOR SIGNATURE OF ONE OF THE SECRETARIES
TO THE PRESIDENT
Honorable Norman Thomas,
206 East 18th Street,
New York, N. I.
Dear Sir:
The President has directed no to reply to your
recent letters.
It is my understanding that you have employed
Mr. Arthur T. Vanderbilt, an eminent attorney of New Jersey,
to represent you. I would, therefore, suggest that Mr.
Vanderbilt communicate directly with the Attorney General,
setting forth any suggestions that he may have to make
relative to the law and facts as they say be pertinent to
the acts of which you complain. In this way it will be
possible to dispose of the matter in orderly fashion.
Very truly yours,