Chambers v. Hodges

3 Tex. 517
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 3 Tex. 517 (Chambers v. Hodges) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chambers v. Hodges, 3 Tex. 517 (Tex. 1848).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Hemphill,

upon the application for a rehearing, delivered the opinion of the court.

An application was made at the last term to have the judgment, rendered in this cause at a former term, reconsidered. And we then stated, in substance, that the question of the authority of this court to reconsider a judgment given at aformer term, being for the first time presented, and being important in practice, the application would be granted, in order that the subject might be fully considered, and the question settled for the government of all future causes.

The cause was argued some weeks since by counsel for the defendant in error (the plaintiff not being represented), and we now proceed to deliver the opinion of the court upon the point presented and reserved for consideration.

The jurisdiction of this court is exclusively appellate, but its revisory power is to be exerted, not over its own judgments, but over those of inferior jurisdiction. These it has the power to affirm, reverse and reform, or to remand the cause-for a new trial and more definite decision; but the statute has conferred upon it no authority to revise its own judgments upon the merits, or to affect any material modification in any material thing therein determined. There must be some period at which litigation shall cease, and controverted rights be^, formally disposed of and settled; and this period seems, on principle, to be contemporaneous with the accomplishment of the act for which the power has been exerted. The statute forbids no such conclusion,- and we may safely hold that when the judgment of the court is fully settled, its minutes entered and authenticated as a record, and the term is closed, the court has no further power over the decree for the purpose of [529]*529revision or modification upon tifie merits; and that the matters therein disposed of are finally settled, and the rights adjudicated irrevocably concluded and established.

This limitation upon the authority of the court will not prevent the correction of clerical errors or mistakes, or defects of form, or the addition of such clause as may be necessary to carry out the judgment of the court or to declare a judgment null and void which was rendered in a case not legally before the court.

These doctrines are in entire conformity with the principles established in decided cases of the highest authority. In the case Ex parte Sibbald vs. The United States [12 Peters, 492], it was declared that the supreme coui’t had no power to review their own decisions, whether in a case at law or equity. That no principle was better settled, or of more universal application, than that no court can reverse or annul its own final decrees or judgments for errors of fact or law, after the term in which they have been rendered, unless for clerical mistakes [3 Wheat. 591; 3 Peters, 431]; or to reinstate a cause dismissed by mistake [12 Wheat. 10]; and that no substantial change or modification could be made affecting the judgment in any material thing. To this rule, as a general one applicable to all courts, bills of review in equity and writs of error coram nobis at law were stated to be exceptions. That inferior courts could not vary the decree, or examine it for any other purpose than execution, or give any other or further relief, or review it upon any matter decided on appeal for error apparent, or intermed-dle with it further than to settle so much as has been remanded. That after a mandate, no rehearing has ever been granted in the House of Lords [4 Dow. P. C. 157]; and, on a subsequent appeal, nothing is brought up but the proceeding subsequent to the mandate. [5 Cranch, 316; 7 Wheat. 58, 59; 10 Wheat. 443.]

In the case of The People ex relatione The Attorney General vs. The Mayor and Aldermen of the City of Hew York [25 Wend. 253], an application was made at the next term after the decision, for a rehearing, and the question of the [530]*530legal and constitutional rights of the court to open and reverse its judgments was fully considered; and it was held that the court had no legal right, or power, to grant a rehearing-upon a writ of error after a final judgment has been pronounced, upon the merits of the case, and has been regularly settled and entered of record in the form required by law.

It is stated that no rehearing has been granted in the house-of lords, upon writs of error, for several hundred years past;, that upon appeals from the court of chancery, the house of lords exercised” the power of granting rehearings down to the latter end of the 17th century; that since that time, a case had. not been found in which a rehearing was granted, even in an equity case, upon the merits. But in some few cases, mere defects in form have been corrected, or a new clause added to the decree, to carry out the judgment of the house of lords upon the appeal. In the opinion, reference is made to “ Sydney on-Appeals,” and “Palmer’s Practice of the House of Lords,” and it is stated that these writers consider it the settled-practice in the house of lords for nearly a century and a half past, that there can be no rehearing or review of the cause upon the merits after the minutes of the judgment have been settled and directed to be entered. That, according to Sidney, when the minutes of an order have been read at the table of the house of lords, it is considered final and unalterable, even upon appeals from chancery.

In Bernal vs. The Marquis of Donegal, where a mistake, in drawing up the order on appeal, was corrected, it was said by Lord Redesdalb that the judgment upon the merits could not be reversed, although from misapprehension of counsel, in supposing that the case would be disposed of upon a matter of form merely, the merits of the case had not been fully argued by such counsel at the hearing. It was also stated as the uniform practice of the court of errors in New York, so long as the writer of the opinion had been a member, to refuse an application for a rehearing after the final judgment of the court has been drawn up and settled; although as to mere clerical errors and mistakes of form only, the order has been eonsid-[531]*531ered amendable, so long as the remittitur remained under the control o'f the court.

"We have referred to this case the more fully as the works treating of the practice in the house of lords are not accessible to the court, and perhaps not to the profession generally, and because the application is parallel to the one before the court. In the case of Thomas Jackson et al. vs. Wm. E. Ashton [10 Peters, 481], it was held that after a case has been dismissed for want of jurisdiction, the pleadings having been technically defective, the court will not, at a subsequent term, allow them to be amended and the case to be reinstated on the docket, as this would be, in effect, a reversal of the former decree; and that the court had no power over its decrees, after the term had passed, and the cause has been dismissed, or otherwise finally disposed of. [See Fontenbery vs. Foquer et al. 5 Arkansas Rep. 202.] On Ex parte Anderson Crenshaw [15 Peters, 119], the supreme court of the United States declared a judgment, rendered at a former term, null and void, and revoked their mandate issued to the circuit court, on the ground that the appellee, having not been cited, the case was not legally before the court, and the judgment, for want of jurisdiction, an absolute nullity.

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3 Tex. 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chambers-v-hodges-tex-1848.