De Soto Coal, Mining & Development Co. v. Hill

65 So. 988, 188 Ala. 667, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 235
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 21, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 65 So. 988 (De Soto Coal, Mining & Development Co. v. Hill) 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
De Soto Coal, Mining & Development Co. v. Hill, 65 So. 988, 188 Ala. 667, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 235 (Ala. 1914).

Opinion

GARDNER, J.

By this bill appellant (complainant in the court below) seeks to enjoin the enforcement of a judgment recovered against it by respondent in a suit at law in the city court of Birmingham, and affirmed by this court.—De Soto Coal Mining & Development Co. v. Hill, 179 Ala. 186, 60 South. 583. The averments of the bill as amended and the demurrers interposed thereto will sufficiently appear in the report of the case. Demurrer to the bill as amended was sustained, hence this appeal.

[672]*672As grounds for relief, and in support of the equity of the bill, complainant seems to rely upon the averments of newly discovered evidence, knowledge of which Avas not obtained until after a motion for. a neAV trial had been heard and overruled. There is no fraud or misconduct charged on the part of the appellee, but the bill is, in effect, in short, what has been termed “an application in chancery in the nature of a new trial at law.” In support of the equity of the bill, appellant cites three cases from this state as follows: Waters v. Creagh, Executors, 4 Stew. & P. 410; Cox v. Mobile & Girard R. Co., 44 Ala. 611, and Wilson v. Wilson, 21 South. 67. This latter case (reported as a memorandum decision in 113 Ala. 670) was a bill filed to review an equity decree. No demurrer was interposed, the opinion stating that: “The sufficiency of the bill was not in any Avise questioned, but it was treated by the defendant, by filing her answer to and taking issue on it, as altogether sufficient.”

The other two cases cited sought the injunction of a judgment at law, and are more nearly in point.

While the exigencies of this case may not require it, as will hereinafter appear, yet due to the importance of the question presented by this record, Ave deem a brief revieAV of the authorities both proper and timely.

Anciently courts of laAV did not grant neAV trials, and in those days courts of equity exercised that jurisdiction over trials at law, and compelled the successful party to submit to a neAV trial Avhen justice required it. But even then the chancery court proceeded Avith great caution. The history of the exercise of this jurisdiction over proceedings of courts of law, by courts of equity, by way of injunction, may be found in the note to the case of Oliver v. Pray, 19 Am. Dec. 608, wherein it is shoAvn to have created some unrest and much jeal[673]*673ousy of the common-law judges. In the same note (page 609) we find the following quotation: “Applications to a court of chancery for a new trial at law are in our time very rare. The practice, except in cases most extraordinary, has long since gone out of use, because courts of law are now competent to grant new trials, and are in the constant exercise of that right to a most liberal extent.”

On the next page the author of the note cites instances in which the jurisdiction may still be exercised. He states, citing authorities, that in some particular cases a new trial has been decreed, because the evidence of the facts constituting the complete defense was not discovered until after judgment at laAv and the lapse of time in Avhich he could then move for a new trial, making the following comment: “In some of these cases it appeared that the complainant, since the trial at law, had discovered a receipt in full for the demand on which the judgment was rendered against him, but, even in cases of this extreme character, it is now questionable whether jurisdiction in equity can be maintained. There must, in the language of the most eminent judges, toe' an end of litigation.’ ”

In the note to the case of Little Rock, etc., Ry. Co. v. Wells, 54 Am. St. Rep. 227, the author says: “The principle that equity will not enjoin a judgment because of newly discovered evidence merely is almost of universal application.”

Mr. Pomeroy, in his Avork on Equity Jurisprudence (3d Ed., vol. 4, § 1365), says: “The jurisdiction of the English chancery to enjoin judgments at law, not by reason of any equitable right involved in the controversy itself, but on account .of wrongful acts or omissions accompanying the trial at laAv, originated at a time Avtoen the law courts had little or no poAver to grant [674]*674new trials for such causes. To prevent a failure of justice, a distinct head of equitable jurisdiction was admitted, that of virtually granting néAV trials, of entertaining suits for a new trial, when a judgment at law had been thus obtained by fraud, mistake, or accident; and the injunction against further proceedings on the judgment Avas a mere incident of the broader relief which set aside the judgment and granted a rehearing of the controversy in the court of chancery. The original occasion for this special jurisdiction has disappeared.”

The author then states that in England, and most, if not all, of the American states, .either by statutes or by judicial action, courts of law have acquired and constantly exercised full power to grant new trials. To again employ his language: “In other words, the powers of the-laAv courts to set aside verdicts or judgments are so ample as to meet all requirements of equity and justice, and the special equitable jurisdiction with respect to this matter has become obsolete in the very large majority of the states, if not all of them. * * * A court of equity in general no longer assumes control over a legal judgment for the purpose of a new trial or any similar relief; it will, in a proper case of fraud or mistake, set aside such judgment, and Avhereever it Avill grant this final remedy, it will, as a preliminary and incidental relief, restrain by injunction all proceedings upon the judgment.”

This question was given consideration by our courts in the case of Norwood v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 149 Ala. 151, 42 South. 683, and much of the above quotation from Mr. Pomeroy is found in the opinion. In addition .is found a quotation from Chancellor Kent from which, for convenience, we take the following extract: “Anciently courts of equity exercised a familiar jurisdiction [675]*675over trials at law, and compelled the successful party to submit to a new trial or to he perpetually enjoined from proceeding on his verdict. * * * But this practice lias long since gone out of use, and such jurisdiction is rarely exercised in modern times, because courts of law are now in the competent and liberal exercise of the power of granting new trials.”

In the case of Hardeman v. Donaghey, 170 Ala. 362, 54 South. 172, is also found a discussion as to Avhen equity will interfere with the judgment at laAV. We can do no better than to take from this opinion a feAv quotations, Avhich will be in point, as folloAVs: “Our court, in discussing the rights to equitable relief against judgments in courts of law, in the case of Noble n. Moses, 74 Ala. 616, speaking through Somerville, J., says: ‘There can be no controversy as to the general rule on the subject. It is settled to he that the fraud Avhich is imputed to the plaintiff in the judgment, and for Avhich alone a court of equity will intervene to vacate or enjoin, must be fraud in the rendition or procurement of the judgment itself ’—Cromelin v. McCauley, 67 Ala. 542. Or, as expressed by Mr. Story, ‘the fraud must have been practiced in the very act of obtaining the judgment,’ there must be ‘fraud in its concoction.’—2 Story’s Eq. Jur. § 1575.

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Bluebook (online)
65 So. 988, 188 Ala. 667, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-soto-coal-mining-development-co-v-hill-ala-1914.