Grantham v. . Kennedy

91 N.C. 148
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 5, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 91 N.C. 148 (Grantham v. . Kennedy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grantham v. . Kennedy, 91 N.C. 148 (N.C. 1884).

Opinion

Merejiion, J.

After parties have litigated their alleged rights, and these have been settled and established by decrees and judgments in the course of judicial procedure, and the time has passed by within which such decrees and judgments may ordinarily be reviewed and corrected, either in the court making them or in the appellate court, courts are very reluctant to disturb them. This is necessarily so. Otherwise, there wrould be no end to litigating the same matter. It might be renewed as often as the caprice or advantage, however attained, of a party might suggest. Confidence in judicial proceedings would be destroyed. No one could be sure that his rights were settled and secure, or that a purchase at a judicial sale would be upheld, and there would be a constant tendency to tamper with and corrupt the administration of public justice. If courts may, at will, temporize and vacillate in deciding cases that come before them; if they may decide them one way this year, and rehear and decide them another way the next; or after the lapse of years, because of some new views of the law involved, or another state of facts that the parties might have established in the first trial and did not, they would certainly become corrupt and contemptible-, and an intolerable public evil. A greater calamity could scarcely happen to society.

*152 It is a fundamental principle in the law, that there shall be an end to every litigation, and when that end is honestly and fairly reached, it should never afterwards be interfered with, even though the court erred as to the law, or the parties failed to produce all the evidence attainable at the time of the trial. The law gives every litigant his day in court, fair and impartial opportunity to be heard both as to the law and the facts of his case; and it as certainly implies that when he has thus been heard and judgment is entered, this shall be the end of the matter. The rights of the parties to the litigation, the rights of all persons claiming and taking benefit directly or indirectly under it, the integrity and stability of judicial proceedings, the good order of society, and the-'general purpose and spirit of government, alike require that rights once honestly and fairly settled by a judicial proceeding according to the course of the law., shall never afterwards be disturbed.

•Hence courts of equity in this country and England have refused aid in all cases where their action would be tantamount to the exercise of appellate jurisdiction, or granting a second opportunity to present a case upon its merits, whether as to law or facts. Such a court will never set aside or enjoin the enforcement of a judgment on the ground of error or mistake in the judgment of a court of law. Other grounds must be assigned ' than error of law. All errors of decision and procedure must be settled in the tribunal in which they originated, or by some appellate tribunal. It is not the purpose of courts of equity, or courts having equitable jurisdiction, to correct the errors or reverse the judgments of courts of law, or to enable a party to get two trials, each-under different forms of procedure.

It is not meant by tnis that in no case- will a decree or judgment entered according to the forms of law be set aside, declared invalid, annulled or enjoined. On the contrary, a court of equity will take jurisdiction in many cases and *153 grant such relief. It will protect a party against an uncon-scientious advantage secured by his adversary through his own fraud, or fraudulent surprise, or because of some unavoidable accident or like mistake of his own. If it clearly appears in an action brought for the purpose of-setting aside, or nullifying a decree, or enjoining the enforcement of a judgment, that it is iniquitous and against conscience to enforce it, because the party injured failed to make proper proofs, or to avail himself of a good and just defence as he might and would have made but for the fraud ■of the adverse party, or surprise occasioned by him, or because of some accident or mistake on his part unattended with any fault or negligence on his part, relief will be granted. It must appear, however, that the party complaining was not negligent, but exercised reasonable diligence in prosecuting, or defending the action (as was his duty) in which the decree or judgment complained of was given. Hence in Woodfin v. Smith, 1 Dev. & Bat. Eq., 451, it was held, that a court of equity would not enjoin the collection of an execution because the defendant at law had paid it, when he might have proved that fact on the trial in the action in which the execution was issued, and was not by fraud or surprise prevented from doing so.

Relief will not be granted if matters material were known, or might by reasonable diligence have been known at the time of the trial. Equitable relief will not be granted to a party against a judgment, because of a good ground of defence, of which he was ignorant until after the judgment was given .against him, unless he shows that by the exercise of reasonable diligence he could not have discovered it in time'for the trial, or that he was prevented from the exercise of such diligence by fraud or surprise on the part of the opposing party, or by accident or mistake, unmixed with negligence on his part. Fraud, or fraudulent surprise, vitiates the judgment, as it does every *154 thing into which it enters. In Dudley v. Cole, 1 Dev. & Bat. Eq., 429, Chief Justice Ruffin said: “ We assume-that the judgment is right, so far as respects the action of the legal tribunals themselves; and if that were not so, this court will not undertake to revise them for the purpose of correcting either mistake of fact or error in law. .But when the party practices a deception upon the court of law, and thereby precludes the opposite party from all' defence; when, by means thereof, he gets a judgment for a sum of money, of which no part is due; and then further by concealment and falsehood defeats every fair effort made by the ordinary legal means for re-examining his judgment,a court of equity will restrain such party from the unconscientious use of legal ad vantage thus fraudulently obtained, and thus fraudulently kept up.” In truth, a judgment infected with fraud is in no just sense the judgment of the law, and when such fraud is made to appear, a court of equity upon application will not allow it to be enforced. The law abhors fraud, and defeats and thwarts its purposes through equitable jurisdiction.

It must be added, that reasonable diligence and good faith in applying for equitable relief are essential in all cases. In writing on this subject Mr. Spekce says : “ Negligence or delay in this, as in every other instance in which the court of chaucery is called upon to interfere, may extinquish or defeat the best founded claim. Nothing can- call forth this court into activity but conscience,good faith and reasonable diligence, but where these are wanting, the court is passive and does nothing.” 2 Spence’s Eq., Jur. 60.

In support of what we have here said, we cite Bissell v. Bozman, 2 Dev. Eq., 154; Radcliff v. Alpress, 3 Ired. Eq., 556; Pemberton v. Kirk, 4 Ired., Eq., 178 ; Deaver v. Erwin,, 7 Ired. Eq., 250; Stewart v.

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Bluebook (online)
91 N.C. 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grantham-v-kennedy-nc-1884.