Hewitt v. Phelps

105 U.S. 393, 26 L. Ed. 1072, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2137
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 10, 1882
Docket229
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 105 U.S. 393 (Hewitt v. Phelps) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hewitt v. Phelps, 105 U.S. 393, 26 L. Ed. 1072, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2137 (1882).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Matthews

delivered the opinion of the court.-

Hewitt, Norton, & Company, the appellants, filed their bill in equity, April 17, 1869, in the Chancery Court-,of, Washington County,’"Mississippi;.against Phelps and wife; the appellees, --and Jonathan Pear-ce,' pruying .that eertain real estate in -that Staté, whióh had been'convey'éd by Sarhh Yich to Pearce upon *394 certain .trusts, and of which Mrs. Phelps was the sole beneficiary,' be charged with certain sums, which the appellants allege they had advanced to the trustee, and for which they claimed that the trust estate was liable.

■ The ■ appellees were served with process; Pearce was brought in by publication. The cause having been put at ■issue, the bill was, for want of equity, dismissed on final hearing, Nov. 7, 1874. From this decree an appeal was taken, but not until March 30, 1876, when it was thus removed to the Supreme Court of the State. I,t was disposed of in that Court May 21, 1877,-by a decree reversing.-the decree.of the court below, and remanding the cause, “with leave to both parties to .amend pleadings as they may be advised, and to take, testimony, and for an account to be .taken in accordance, with the views contained in the opinion ” of. the court, which is' to be found, reported under the name" of Norton v. Pkelps, j54 Miss/ 467. The mandate of the'Supreme Court.-was filed'in the Chancery Court of Washington County, June 7, 1877, and on the same day á petition for the removal of the cause to the' Circuit Court of" the United States for' that district was presented by Ph.élps and wife, on the ground that at -the time of the -commencement of the .suit they were citizens of Kentucky, .and had continued so to be at all times since, the plaintiffs during the same period being citizens of Louisiana, which was granted, bond given and approved, and transcript filed' in the Circuit- Court- on 'Aug. 4,. 1877. On. Nov. 20, 1877, the appellants-moved tQ remand the'cause, which the Circuit Court refused to do. This muling of the court is first assigned for error under the present appeal.

The contention of the appellants is that the Circuit Court had no jurisdiction to proceed' with the cause, because, first, the suit was-not pending at the time of the passage of the act of March 3-, '1875, c. 137. nor thereafter brought, and, therefore, not within the purview of that act; and-, second, because, at.the time the removal was effected, the trial of the cause in the State court had already taken place, or at least begun .and was in progress, whereas the. act requires that the petition for removal shall be filed before the trial thereof.

In our opinion neither of thése’ positions is tenable. Whe *395 ther, after final decree and before appeal is perfected, a purchaser of the subject of the suit is affected with the notice of lis pendens may be a question; although a distinction in this respect is made by some of the, authorities between an-appeal in equity and a writ of error, the latter being considered a new proceeding, not pending until service of citation, while the former is regarded as a step in the progress of the cause. But, in contemplation of the act above mentioned, there are and can be but two classes of suits: one, those pending at the time-of its passage; the other, those thereafter'brought. Of course, a suit terminated has ceased to be a suit. Confessedly the present is a suit, and could riot be said, at the time the act was passed, to have ended, although ,the decree was final in respect to the Court, of Chancery which had rendered it, and would have become so between , the parties if no appeal had been taken within the time limited by law. But until that period had elapsed it was .still a Us pendens, in the sense that the party against whom the decree had been rendered had the right by an appeal further to prosecute it. It was not the beginning of a new suit: it. was but one additional step in the progress of an existing one.

The second ground of exception to the removal' of the cause is maintained in argument upon the authority of Jifkins v. Sweetzer (102 U. S. 177) ; but that'case does not govern this. That decision turned upon the fact that the judgment of the Supreme Court of the State “ disposed of the case finally upon its merits, and nothing remained to be dorie but to-continue the hearing already begun-until the necessary accounts could be taken, and the details of a final decree settled.” But here, although the Supreme Court of Mississippi passed in its opinion upon the merits -of the case, as disclosed by the record then before it, nevertheless, in remanding the cause, “ with leave to both parties to amend pleadings as they may be advised, and to take testimony,” the whole matter was open and at large, as though. the cause had never'been at issue; and the clause providing “ for an account to be taken in accordance with the views contained in the opinion rendered. herein,” must be understood as .qualified by the previous part of.the order, and as obligatory, upon the’Court of Chancery only as a declaration of general *396 principles, to be applied as the facts should thereafter appear. It was not a judgment which -operated as an .estoppel between the parties. It was neither- final nor conclusive. In point of -fact, after the removal of the cause into the Circuit Court the parties availed themselves of the leave granted, and filed, new and amended pleadings. The cause then stood in that court just as it would have: stood in the State court, but for the removal ; i. e., for a rehearing upon the merits, and not for the purpose of merely executing the judgment of the appellate court, as in, the case of Duncan v. Gegan, 101. U. S. 810. Being’ properly removed, the parties are subject to that' administration of law which is approved in the judicial tribunals of the United States, whose jurisdiction is thus invoked, as washeld in King v. Worthington, 104 id. 44.

The Circuit Court having acquired jurisdiction, -on final hearing, upon demurrer, dismissed ■ the bill. We are now required by the appeal to. review that decree.

'The allegations upon which the alleged equity of the appellants is supposed to arise are, in‘substance, as follows: —

. "On May_ 4, 1850, Sarah Vick and Henry W., Vick, her husband, executed and delivered to Jonathan Pearce a deed, conveying to him alii the property which she then owned as separate property, including a plantation, slaves, utensils, and' 'stock in. Washington' County, Mississippi, the subject of the present, suit, upon trust, nevertheless, for-her sole and separate use during her life, ,and in remainder in fee for the use of her children living at the time of her death. It was provided that the;.proceeds of the’property in Washington and Issaquena ■ Counties, arid such parts of it as mi^ht be sold, should be ap- ■ plied, to the-payment of a debt, due to the Bank of the United States,- after the payment of which, 'the proceeds, over what w'as necessary to support the plantation and family, were .to be 'invested'for the benefit of all her children living at the time of her dealth.

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Bluebook (online)
105 U.S. 393, 26 L. Ed. 1072, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hewitt-v-phelps-scotus-1882.