Hendryx v. Perkins

114 F. 801, 52 C.C.A. 435, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4142
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedFebruary 13, 1902
DocketNo. 378
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 114 F. 801 (Hendryx v. Perkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hendryx v. Perkins, 114 F. 801, 52 C.C.A. 435, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4142 (1st Cir. 1902).

Opinions

PUTNAM, Circuit Judge.

This case arises by an appeal from a decree on a bill, sometimes styled in the record a “bill of review,” filed pursuant to leave granted by the circuit court. Although, as [804]*804Mr. Perkins, the appellee, justly says, the bill is one of the class which may be filed without leave first obtained, we also may, for convenience, at various points, name it a bill of review. Perkins commenced a proceeding of some nature against the appellants in the courts of Massachusetts. The appellants removed this litigation to the circuit court, where the docket entries commence: “May term, 1884, May 15th, entered by defendants. Removed from state court.” The next entry to which we need call attention is that of April 14, 1885: “Bill for discovery filed. Defendants to answer within two weeks. Declaration at law filed, and transferred to law docket.” On June 12, 1885, what was styled a “supplemental bill” was “presented to the court,” and, on June 23d, “leave to file supplemental bill” was granted. On July 21, 1885, appears the following entry: “Answer to bill, amended so as to become a bill for relief, filed.” From this we draw the conclusion that what was styled the “supplemental bill” was, in effect, an amendment to concert the bill of discovery into a bill for relief. The next docket entry is, “Heard on bill and answer.” This occurred at Providence, in the absence of the clerk, so no date is given; 'but it was between July 21, 1885, and January 13, 1886, and, probably, on July 28th. This was followed by an opinion, on January 13, 1886, to the effect that the bill must be dismissed. The subsequent proceedings will be referred to hereafter so far as necessary. On June 29, 1885, it is alleged that an answer of some kind was filed by the present appellants, the then respondents, the true nature of which will be given hereafter.

No replication had been filed, and the record before us does not show that the complainant moved to have the case set down for hearing. Therefore in that particular the record is, on its face, defective ; and unless, either expressly or by inference, this was waived by the complainant, he was entitled as a matter of right to a bill of review for error of law. But, ordinarily, the right to file a bill of review of this nature expires with the time limited by statute for an appeal. Thomas v. Brockenbrough, 10 Wheat. 146, 6 L. Ed. 287; Central Trust Co. v. Grant Docomotive Works, 135 U. S. 207, 10 Sup. Ct. 736, 34 L. Ed. 97; Reed v. Stanley, 38 C. C. A. 331, 97 Fed. 521; Id., 179 U. S. 682, 21 Sup. Ct. 915, 45 L. Ed. 384; Blythe Co. v. Hinckley (C. C. A.) in Fed. 827, 837; Story, Eq. Pl. (10th Ed.) § 410. The decisions with reference to this rule happen to have been applied to cases where, by the statute, there was an existing right of appeal. In the present case there is nothing in the record to show whether the amount involved permitted an appeal to the supreme court; but, assuming that it did not, there is, as we will see further on, nothing justiciable in the present proceedings with reference to any such error of law.

The final decree in the original cause was entered on March 31, 1888, and, on October 13, 1897, after a lapse of more than nine years, the appellee presented his petition for leave to file the bill the proceedings on which are now before us. The bill, in some particulars, departs from the petition, and also it may be defective in some of its details. The appellants made a motion to strike it from the files by reason of these irregularities, and the motion was refused. We do [805]*805not, however, perceive any proper assignment of error on this point. The assignments to which our attention is called are of a too general character to raise technical questions of this nature. However, ⅛⅛ will all disappear as we go on.

The gravamen of the present bill is that in the original cause the respondents filed an answer on June 29, 1885; that the complainant did, in fact, consent to a hearing on bill and answer, although the docket entries do not show it, but that it was his understanding that the hearing was to be on the bill and the answer of June 29th; that subsequently, and before the hearing, the respondents fraudulently withdrew that answer, and fraudulently interposed in its place the answer of July 21st; that the court, as well as the complainant, was unaware of the fraudulent substitution of one answer for the other; that the court understood that the complainant’s consent to a hearing applied to the answer filed on July 21st; and that it proceeded to hear and dispose of the case on the bill and that answer. The bill alleges that the court, as well as the complainant, was deceived, to use its language, by “the fraud, and trickery which were practiced upon him and upon the court.” What has been said constitutes the pith of this bill, although it contains enlargements of allegations which put the matter in somewhat different forms. These are confused, as will appear from the following extracts:

“Your complainant did not know of this fraud and trickery which was practiced upon him and upon the court until January, 1886, when the court ordered complainant’s bill to be dismissed. The false and unlawful answer filed on July 21, 1885, denied every right claimed by complainant, and the true and correct amended answer to the hill for discovery and relief was never seen by the court. On July 28, 1885, complainant protested against any consideration being given to the so-called amended answer, filed on July 21, 1885, it being a second answer to the same matter, and was unlawfully interpolated among the papers in this suit after the cause was submitted to the court on hill and answer, and was not filed with the consent of the court, as it could only have been lawfully filed and considered.” “As the case now stands, defendants have, as a practical fact, been allowed to put in new testimony in their behalf, and destroy the old and correct testimony after the cause has once been submitted to the court; and this without the knowledge and consent of the court, and against the protest of complainant”

These allegations do not weaken our statement that the gravamen of this bill is fraud. Although the complainant alleges that he protested against a hearing on the answer of July 21st, yet nothing of that character is made the basis of a specific and independent proposition ; and everything rests, on the background of the claim that the interposition of that answer was fraudulent.

The decree on the bill of review was entered o.n December 13, 1900, in the following language :

“This cause came on to be heard at the October term. A. D. 1899, upon the pleadings and proofs, and was argued by counsel for the respective parties, and now, upon consideration thereof, to wit, December 33, 1900, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed as follows:
“First That the final decree entered on the 31st day of March, A. D. 1888, in the cause in equity No. 2,023, he, and the same is hereby, set aside and vacated.
“Second. That the copy of the amended answer filed on the 31st day of March, A. D. 1888, in cause No. 2.023, stand, and he treated in all respects as the amended answer to the bill for' discovery, ordered by the court on [806]*806June 23, 1885, and directed to be filed on or before June 29, 1885, and -which has been lost from the files of tile court.
“Third. That all other papers, motions, and orders made or entered subsequent to the 21st day of July, A. D.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 F. 801, 52 C.C.A. 435, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendryx-v-perkins-ca1-1902.