Bradshaw v. Garrett

1 Port. 47
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1834
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 Port. 47 (Bradshaw v. Garrett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradshaw v. Garrett, 1 Port. 47 (Ala. 1834).

Opinion

By Mr. Justice Thornton :

This case comes into this court by appeal from a final decree of the chancellor below, dismissing a bill of review, allowed for the purpose of opening a decree pronounced, perpetuating the injunction of a judgment at law. The injunction was granted upon allegations that the note’upon which the judgment at law was obtained, was executed to the intestate of the appellants without any good or valuable consideration, but upon a false representation by him that he had advanced the amount of said note in satisfaction of a certain judgment, for which the estate of one Ogelvie, (of whom Garrett’s now wife, was late relict, and co-administratrix with Bradshaw) was liable; and that the false representations were not discovered in time to defend at law. The appellants answered the said bill, denying the alleged illegality in the consideration of the said note. Afterwards, upon the final hearing of the cause, the injunction was perpetuated by the decree of the chancellor. At the next term after this decree was rendered, the appellants, filed a bill praying for a review of the said cause, because of sundry errors assigned as apparent in the decree, as also because of new matter, discovered, as is alleged, too late to be available on the former trial.

The failure of the consideration of .the note upon which the judgment at law was obtained, rests upon the proof relative to the statement of the said Bradshaw to the appellees; that he had paid the amount towards the discharge of thejudg-toent above mentioned ; and the further proof, that the said [54]*54judgment was in fact, satisfied by otlicv moans, and not by Bradshaw. The new matter disclosed in the bill of review, is a receipt in the following words : “ Bee. 16th, 1822-Re- ceived of Lewi's Garrett one hundred and twenty-five dollars in full of all moneys paid by me as administrator of the estate ■ of Ogelvie, dec’d, to .the following persons, to-wit, &c.” specifying the amounts paid each, and tested by the hand and seal of the testator Bradshaw, and then the additional explanatory facts, supported by parol testimony, that Garrett held such receipt in his possession during the pendency of the former trial, and acknowledged that ho executed the note upon which the enjoined judgment was recovered, upon the execution of the receipt-the one hundred and twenty-five dollars named therein being paid by the said note, and not'in money as therein stated.

Tins new matter would,it is apparent, have had power- * > ful weight the former trial, if it had not produced an en- tirely different result; but before we can advance to an ex- amination of the whole evidence and to a decision upon it, we are mot by the .preliminary question (which arises in eve- ry case upon ¡appeal from the final decree on a bill of review) whether it was competent for the chancellor, according to the settled rules regulating his discretion in such cases, to grant the prayer of the bill and open the decree already pronounced between the parties. A bill of review

A bill of reviewmaybe granted either for errors of law ap-, parent in the decree, or for the discovery of new matter. The former ground not being relied on in this case, it rests upon the new matter disclosed in the bill. The settled rule in

The settled rule inrelation to bills of icview, and the new matter upon which they originate, is that no review ought to bo granted of a fact formerly in issue, on account of evidence newly discovered, unless that evidence be in writing or re cord, and does not consist in swearing oniy.

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Related

Ketchum v. Breed
26 N.W. 271 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1886)
McDougald's Adm'r v. Dougherty
39 Ala. 409 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1864)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Port. 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradshaw-v-garrett-ala-1834.