Chester v. Apperson

51 Tenn. 639
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 17, 1871
StatusPublished

This text of 51 Tenn. 639 (Chester v. Apperson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chester v. Apperson, 51 Tenn. 639 (Tenn. 1871).

Opinion

FREEMAN, J.,

delivered tbe opinion of the Court.

The bill in this case is -filed for the purpose of having a judgment at law enjoined, obtained at January Term, 1867, of the Circuit Court for Shelby county, 'against complainant, Robert I. Chester, as maker, and ¥m. B. Chester as indorser, of a note for $4,133.83, dated 15th April, 1860, and to have an investigation of the matters between complainants and defendants in a court of chancery.

The first ground for relief, as stated in complainant’s bill, which we notice, is the excuse given for not making his defense at law. It is in substance, that when suit was brought in the Circuit Court against the parties, complainant Robert I. Chester employed an attorney to make his defense to said suit, but before the trial of said cause, the said attorney quit attending the court, and engaged other attorneys to attend to the case, and said attorneys, without a correct knowledge of complainant’s defense, and without the knowledge of complainant, made an agreement in regard to the suit, and suffered judgment against the parties. The [642]*642bill charges, that complainants knew nothing of said agreement until after the rendition of said judgment, and too late to have it corrected.

A court of equity has jurisdiction, unquestionably, to enjoin a judgment at law, but after a trial of the case in such court, there are well settled rules that define and limit the action of courts of equity, within which a party must bring himself, before he is entitled to ask such relief. The rule is thus laid down by this court, and sustained by a uniform current of authorities in this State, and our sister States, as well as in the Court of Chancery in England, that “a party will not be aided by a court of chancery, after a trial at law, unless he can impeach the justice of the verdict, on grounds of which he could not avail himself at law, or of which he was prevented from availing himself by fraud or accident, or the act of the opposite party, unmixed with negligence on his piart:” See 3 Yer., 127; Rice v. R. R. Bank, 7 Hum., 42. And a remedy or defense lost by default of the party himself, will never be restored by a court of chancery, unless it has been so lost by the fraud or undue advantage taken by the other party: 6 Hum., 248. But a court of equity cannot grant relief against a verdict obtained against a party by his own negligence, where his defense was not prevented by fraud or fault of the other party.

It is not enough that the circumstances constituting the obstacle, were beyond the control of the party at the time; it must be shown that no rea[643]*643sonable degree of care and diligence could have prevented their occurrence. The party would not, therefore, be entitled to relief, unless he has used every reasonable effort to ascertain the nature and bearing of his defense before the trial, and has taken the proper steps to make his defense effectual at the time the case is tried: See 3 Lead. Cases in Eq., 193, and cases cited. The principle that runs through all the modern cases, and is now the settled doctrine of a court of equity is, that when a party is sued at law, he has notice of the plaintiff’s purpose to obtain a judgment against him on the claim, or demand, the subject of the litigation, and if he fails, with the active diligence of a prudent man, thus notified of the purpose of his opponent, to take all the necessary steps demanded, to make good whatever defense • he may have against such claim, he cannot ask the aid of another court to relieve him from the consequences of his neglect: 3 Lead. Cases in Eq., 195..

Does the complainant bring himself within these stringent but well settled, and as we hold, sound rules, for the action of a court of equity? We are bound to say he has not done so.

He says he had employed an attorney, but that said attorney had ceased to attend the court, and procured other attorneys to take charge of the case, without the knowledge of complainant; and said attorneys, without a correct knowledge of complainant’s defenses, and without his knowledge, made an agreement in regard to said suit, and suffered judg[644]*644ment to go against Mm for tbe amount complained of. He does not even allege tbat be bad furnished bis attorney with tbe evidences or grounds of bis defense, or tbat pleas bad been put in, presenting the grounds on which bis defense rested. In a case so complicated as tbe one presented in this bill, and involving' tbe amount shown in this judgment, ordinary diligence even, would have required tbat tbe plaintiff should have been present at the court, at any rate until tbe issues were made up in the case; and it was then tbe duty of tbe party to have furnished bis attorney with such evidences as were in bis possession to sustain bis defense, and to have been diligent in tbe procurement of such other evidence as was in bis power, and tbe nature of tbe case required.

“We can see no such diligence in this case; on tbe contrary, we can see, taking tbe allegations of complainant’s bill as all true, as they stand admitted by tbe demurrer, tbat there was evidently a total neglect of bis case, except simply tbe employment of an attorney to defend tbe ■ case, tbe complainant, as far as tbe bill shows, giving no further attention to bis case, nor attending tbe court to see what might be demanded of him by way of making good bis defense. Ve bold tbat, if complainants have presented no other ground on which they can ask tbe intervention of a court of equity than tbe fact tbat tbe judgment has been rendered against him, under tbe circumstances as alleged, be must be repelled, because of bis own [645]*645laches and neglect in maintaining bis alleged rights in a court which had jurisdiction over his person by service of process, by which he had notice that this judgment was sought against him on the very note now alleged to be a wrongful, unjust and iniquitous claim.

One branch of the rule which we have cited above, however, is, that a party will not be aided by a court of equity, after a trial at law, unless he can impeach the correctness of the judgment on grounds of which he could not avail himself at law. In other words, although he may have been negligent in making his - defense at law, still, if the defenses to the claim of the party against him are of such a character that he could not have availed himself of them in a court of law, however diligent, or where from the facts alleged in the bill, the court can see that his defense at law would have been so embarrassed, or complicated, as that if presented in an original bill for relief, and demurred to, the court of equity would have jurisdiction because of the embarrassment of the remedy at law, or the complication of the account required in making out said defense, and the difficulty of presenting the same before a jury; then, notwithstanding a trial at law, a court of equity will take jurisdiction, and give the party the benefit of its modes of investigation, better adapted to meet the exigences of such a case, and to do complete justice to the parties. This is done not to enable the party to make his legal [646]*646defense, blit to enable Mm to set up and establish independent equities not available at law, and is not in contravention of, but in accordance with the rule, now almost an axiom, as laid down by Chief Justice Marshall, in Smith v. McIver, 9 Wheat., Curtis’ Ed., U. S.

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Bluebook (online)
51 Tenn. 639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chester-v-apperson-tenn-1871.