Alexander Hodges v. New England Screw Co.

3 R.I. 9
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedSeptember 6, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 3 R.I. 9 (Alexander Hodges v. New England Screw Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander Hodges v. New England Screw Co., 3 R.I. 9 (R.I. 1853).

Opinion

*11 G-reeNE, Chief Justice,

This is the first application for a rehearing which has been made in this Court.

The decree was entered on the twenty-fourth day of March Term, 1851, and this petition was filed on the ninth day of March, 1852. The first question is whether the petition, considered as a mere petition for rehearing, was filed in season.

By the English practice the decree is drawn out and by order of the Court entered and subsequently enrolled. The application for a rehearing must be made after the decree is entered and before enrolment, and may be made at any time within these limits. The enrolment is at the instance of the party.

By our practice the decree is drawn out and the clerk is directed by the Court to enter it, of which order he makes a certificate on the decree and places it on the files of the Court, and thereupon it becomes a decree. The recording is not necessary to give effect to it.— The English practice is to incorporate into the decree the pleadings and proof in the cause. The practice of this Court is simply to refer to the pleadings and proof in general terms, which, by such reference, become a part of the decree in the same manner as if they were fully recited in it. The practice of enrolment has never been adopted here.

The entry of a decree, though of the same effect as an enrolment, so far as giving effect to the decree is concerned, still is no bar to an application for a rehearing : if it wore, the party would be deprived of the right altogether, inasmuch as he could not make the applica *12 tion until the decree was entered. Within what period, then, shall the application be made ?

We think the statute fixing the time within which petitions for new trials at law shall be filed, furnishes a pro-' per rule for the guidance of the Court in applications of this kind. An. equity cause is ordinarily more complex than a suit at law, and the Court decide upon the facts as well as the law. There is, therefore, a greater liability to mistake. And the jurisdiction of this Court being original in equity causes, without appeal, there is no mode of correcting errors, except by rehearing or bill of review. We think, therefore, as much time at least ought to be allowed to parties in equity to apply for a rehearing as to parties at law to apply for a new trial.

We adopt the time fixed by our statute as a rule of practice merely, and subject to future alteration by a new rule to be established by this Court, should experience prove any alteration to be necessary.

In relation to the causes for a rehearing, the English practice is to grant it on the certificate of counsel. The rule adopted in the Circuit Courts of the United States, and as far as we know in the Courts of the States, is to grant it, if the Court, in the exercise of its discretion, think the cause ought to be reheard.

We think this the better rule, but there being no appeal from the decrees of this Court, the discretion should be exercised liberally in favor of a rehearing.

The Supreme Court of the United States do not grant a rehearing unless a member of the Court w]io concurred in the decision desires it, and when that is the case, it will be ordered without waiting fpr the application of *13 counsel. Brown, Administrator of Aspden et al. v. Aspden’s Administrator et al. (14 Howard, 25.)

The first case assigned for a rehearing is stated as follows: “ Because the decision thereof was erroneous in this, that Courts of Equity have no jurisdiction over corporations as such at the suit of a stockholder for a violation of charter: — whereas Courts of Equity have jurisdiction over corporations as such at the suit of a stockholder for a violation of charter in certain cases, and in the case at bar.”

The jiu’isdiction sought to be exercised over the Screw Company was by decree ordering that all connection between them and the Iron Company should be dissolved, and that all endorsements by the Screw Company for the Iron Company should cease. The bill does not state specifically how the dissolution was to be effected, whether by an order on the Screw Company to sell the stock, or a reference to a master to effect the sale.

Since the decree in this, cause was rendered, the connection between the two companies has been dissolved, and endorsements by the Screw Company for the Iron Company have eeased. So far as these objects are concerned, there is nothing now for the decree to act upon, and the question of jurisdiction for these objects has become immaterial. Nevertheless, as the question is new and important, we think it proper to review the decision which we have made upon this point, and to state how far we consider that decision as authority.

At the argument of the cause we considered this question one of great difficulty'and importance. We were unable to find in the reports to which we had access an English or American case, in which such a jurisdiction *14 had been exercised or asserted, except the case of Solomon v. Lang et al., reported in the London Jurist for April and June, 1850.

The decision of the New York Courts was against it, upon the ground that a Court of Chancery had no power at common law to inquire into broaches of charter, whether at the suit of shareholders or on behalf of the State.

Up to the filing of the bill in this cause such a jurisdiction was unknown in Ehode Island. It was most important in its consequences, placing every corporation not of a municipal character, under the power of this Court at the suit of any stockholder, and that, too, upon now, unsettled and difficult questions touching the extent and limits of their corporate powers.

The mode in which this jurisdiction must be generally exercised, is by injunction, the strongest power of a Court of Chancery, exercised without the intervention of a jury, and the' Court in -exercising it having from the nature of the ease a larger discretion than in administering any other branch of chancery jurisdiction.

Under the influence of these views, and supposing the jurisdiction had not been exercised either in England-or this country, we did not feel ourselves justified in taking in Ehode Island the lead of the other States in the exercise of so important a power. We thought if the public good required that this Court should possess the power, the safe and wise course was to do as was done in New York, to confer it by a legislative act, in which its extent and limits could be accurately defined.

Since the argument of this cause in 1850, several cases have been decided in England and one in this country, *15 establishing the jurisdiction over a certain class of corporations so far as to administer a preventive remedy by injunction; and several decisions in England of a similar character and earlier, though recent, date, have been cited at the present hearing.

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13 A. 105 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1888)
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11 R.I. 600 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1877)

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Bluebook (online)
3 R.I. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-hodges-v-new-england-screw-co-ri-1853.