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STADELMAN ET AL. v. MINER ET AL., 1918 — 246 U.S. 311 · caselaw · US
Contracts · MBE-tested
STADELMAN ET AL. v. MINER ET AL.
246 U.S. 31162 L. Ed. 737·Supreme Court of the United States·1918
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Opinion
STADELMAN ET AL. v. MINER ET AL.
ERROR TO THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON.
No. 644.
Petition for rehearing. Leave to file granted, petition allowed and former dismissal vacated March 18, 1918.
The case having been dismissed for want of a federal question, the court grants leave to file, and treats as filed, a petition for rehearing and orders that the case stand for consideration on the prior submission, the fact that a federal question was raised and decided on a former hearing in the state court being shown' by the official report of its opinion and the failure of counsel to include that opinion in the record, as should have been done, or to refer to the decision in their briefs and arguments, being due to excusable inadvertence.
Mr. John M. Gearin and Mr. Harry G. Hoy, for plaintiffs in error, in support of the petition.
See post, 544.
[MAJORITY — Mr. Chief Justice White.]
Memorandum opinion by direction of the court, by
Mr. Chief Justice White.
There being nothing in the récord to establish that the federal question relied upon was raised, considered or decided below, and indeed it appearing so far as the record is concerned that the federal question was for the first time stated in. the assignments made for the purpose of the writ of error from this court, the case was dismissed for want of jurisdiction upon authorities cited. 245 U. S. .636. On this application it is stated that in a previous hearing of the case in the court below the federal question relied upon in this court was pressed and moreover was expressly decided, reference being made to the opinion- so showing reported in 83 Oregon, 351. The application for leave prays that the clerk below 'be directed to certify the opinion as part of the record and thus correct, the inadvertence in not having previously included it and the oversight of counsel in not having referred to it in their briefs onarguments as affording in this court the basis of authority to review.
As the opinion referred to establishes that the federal question was considered and decided and as that opinion should have properly been included in |he record, it follows that if the mistake of the. parties in' failing to include or refer to it, be overlooked ahd corrected, which we think should be done, it would, result also that the ground upon which the order of dismissal was made would be without foundation and therefore should be set aside. To that end leave to file the petition is granted and, acting upop it as filed, our former judgment of dismissal will be set aside and the case will stand for consideration under the prior submission. Moreover, for the purpose of disposing of the eause, the:opinion of the court, below rendered on the previous hearing will be considered as part of the record without further formal order to the court below to supply the same.
And it is so ordered.