Ambrouse's heirs v. Keller

22 Gratt. 769
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 28, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 22 Gratt. 769 (Ambrouse's heirs v. Keller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ambrouse's heirs v. Keller, 22 Gratt. 769 (Va. 1872).

Opinion

Bouldin, J.

delivered the opinion of the court.

The decrees complained of in the petition for appeal were rendered, one of them on the 23d day of July [772]*77218 68, and the other on the 28th of January 1869. A subsequent decree finally disposing of the cause and dismissing the bill was rendered on the 12th day of June 1869. The appeal was not allowed until the 26th day 0f October 1871; but it is conceded by the parties, by counsel, as a fact in the cause to be considered by the court, that the petition was presented to one of the judges of this court at Staunton during the August term of the court, 1871, which commenced August 10th and closed September 20th, 1871.-

On this state of facts it has been earnestly and ably contended by the counsel for the appellee that the petition was not presented within the time prescribed by law, and that the appeal should, therefore, be dismissed as improvidently awarded.

Under the statutes existing when these decrees were rendered, and still in force, no appeal can be allowed from any final judgment or decree, unless the petition shall be presented within two years after the date of the decree or judgment; and it is obvious that more than that time elapsed between the date of the latest of the three decrees and the presentation of the petition for an appeal. It does not appear from the concession of the parties on what day of August term 1871, the petition was presented, but as it was presented at Staunton during that term, it could not have been earlier than the 10th day of August 1871, being the 1st day of the term. Assuming that to be the true date, it was two years and fifty-nine days after the last decree, two years six months and thirteen days after the decree of January 28th, 1869, and three years and eighteen days after the decree of July 23d, 1868.

But by the act of the 5th of November 1870, Session Acts 1869-70, chapter 399, pp. 553-4, passed within two years from the dates of the decrees of January and June 1869, and amending the law limiting appeals to two years, it is enacted “that the time from the 26th day of [773]*773January eighteen hundred and seventy, to the passage of this act, shall be excluded from, the computation of said period of two years.” The time thus required to be deducted amounts to nine months and ten days, and when the deduction is made in this case, the time between the dates of the decrees of January and June 1869, and the presentation of the petition, will be less than two years; and the case would be the same were the last instead of the first day of Staunton term assumed as the day on which the petition was presented.

The appeal, then, from those decrees was taken in due time, notwithstanding the court should be of opinion that the decree of July 1868, is a final decree and no longer subject to appeal.

At the next term after that decree was rendered the appellants presented to the court their bill of review, duly supported by affidavit, seeking to have the decree reviewed and reversed, and asked leave to file the same; but the court, by decree of January 28th, 1869, refused to allow the bill of review tó be filed, decreed adversely thereto, and re-affirmed the decree of July 1868; and not only from the decree of July 1868, but from this decree of January 1869, the appeal to this court was allowed. This appeal from the last decree is, as wre have seen, in time, and, of necessity, it presents for our consideration the propriety of the decree of July 1868, sought to be reviewed. If that decree was final and ■erroneous on its face, the bill of review should have been allowed and the decree reversed. If the decree was interlocutory merely, and erroneous, then the bill of review should have been treated by the court as a petition for a rehearing, and the decree should have been reheard and reversed; and in either event, the refusal of the court below to entertain the application was a proper subject of appeal to this court; and as we have already said, the appeal is in time. See 2 Rob. old practice, p. 418, citing the cases of Lees v. Braxton, 5 [774]*774Call, 459, and Williamson v. Ledbetter, 2 Munf. 521. But as the result of a reversal of the decree of January were that decree alone to be considered by this-court, would probably be to send the case back to the oircuit court, with instructions either to allow the bill of review to be filed, or to rehear the cause, as the case-may be, and would thus be attended with additional expense and delay: it is proper to consider and decide the-question so ably and elaborately argued at the bar, viz: whether the decree of July 1868, is final or interlocutory.. If that decree is not final, but interlocutory merely, then it is properly before us on the appeal in this case, notwithstanding more than two years have elapsed from its rendition.

The court is of opinion, that the decree of July 1868, was not a final decree, but was merely interlocutory.

The distinction between final and interlocutory decrees has been a subject of frequent discussion before this tribunal, and is now well established by the decisions of the court.

In Cocke's adm'r v. Gilpin, 1 Rob. R. 20, 46, Judge Cabell, adopting the language of Judge Carr iu Harvey & wife v. Branson, 1 Leigh, 108, said:. “When a decree makes an end of a case, and decides the whole matter in controversy, costs and all, leaving nothing further for the court to do, it is certainly a final decree.” And in the same case, p. 27-8, Judge Baldwin said: “Where the further action of the court in the cause is necessary to give completely the relief contemplated by the court, then the decree is to be regarded not as final but as-interlocutory.”

Here we have very briefly and clearly presented the-characteristic features of a final and an interlocutory decree ; and the definitions thus given have been approved and adopted by this court in the subsequent case of Fleming & als. v. Bolling & als., 8 Gratt. 292, Moncure, J. delivering the opinion of the court.

[775]*775Let us apply the test to the decree of July 1868.

The suit was for the specific performance of a contract in writing, signed and sealed by the parties, for the sale and purchase of land ; and performance was resisted mainly on the ground of inadequacy and failure of consideration; the consideration being Confederate States treasury notes. The decree merely set forth, that in the opinion of the court, upon the principles of a court of equity, the contract ought not to be enforced; but it did not dismiss the bill. On the contrary, it goes on to declare, that the only relief to which the plaintiffs were entitled, was to have the value of the Confederate States treasury notes paid by their ancestor for the land, repaid to bis personal representative ; and that upon his being made a party the court loould proceed to ascertain through one of its commissioners, the value of said notes at the date of payment, and would decree accordingly ; but should the plaintiffs elect to proceed at law, the bill would be dismissed without costs to either party. And the cause teas continued to the next term to give the plaintiffs a reasonable time to make their election. This is the substance of the decree; and it certainly cannot be said of it, that it "makes an end of the case, and decides the whole matter in controversy, costs and all, leaving nothing further for the court to do;”

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Bluebook (online)
22 Gratt. 769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ambrouses-heirs-v-keller-va-1872.