Long v. Granberry

2 Tenn. Ch. R. 85
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 15, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Tenn. Ch. R. 85 (Long v. Granberry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long v. Granberry, 2 Tenn. Ch. R. 85 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1874).

Opinion

The Chancellor :

— This is an application by the complainants for leave to file a bill of review, “ upon new proof that has come to light after the decree made, and could not possibly have been used at the time when the decree passed.” Upon such proof a bill of review can only, under the ordinance of Lord Bacon, ‘ ‘ be grounded by the special license of the court, and not otherwise.” Beames’ Orders in Chancery, 1. The application was made by motion, based upon the bill sought to be filed, and the affidavits of the persons whose testimony was relied on attached [86]*86thereto. It was subsequently more formally made by petition under oath, upon my suggestion that the case ought not to turn upon any question of form, and that this was the better practice, as laid down by text-writers and recognized by our supreme court. 2 Dan. Ch. Pr. 1638, 3d ed.; Winchester v. Winchester, 1 Head, 460, 464; Frazer v. Sypert, 5 Sneed, 100. “ The practice of the court of chancery in England (said McKinney, J., in Colville v. Colville, 9 Head, 525) remains unchanged in this state.” That practice was uniformly by petition sworn to, or affidavit separate from the bill. Norris v. Le Neve, 3 Atk. 33; Coop. Eq. Pl. 92; Story’s Eq. Pl. 412; Dan. Ch. Pr. 1638. This is the reason why the rule as to the particularity of the statement of the newly-discovered evidence in the petition is well settled, while left in some uncertainty as to the like statement in the bill, as noticed by Judge McFarland, in Burson v. Dosser, 1 Heisk. 761. The importance of the original practice is obvious, because it enables the applicant to bring before the court all the facts and circumstances touching the new evidence necessary to the settlement of the preliminary question of granting or refusing the leave asked for, withoxit burdening the record by matter only material on this point, and having no bearing on the merits of the bill when filed. Nevertheless, there has been a tendency of late years to ignore the distinction, and make the bill itself answer the purposes of the petition. And it is easy to see that the bill might, in most cases, be so drafted as to embody all the requirements of the petition, in which event, if properly verified, the application might be made by motion. In this, as in other matters, a court of chancery looks to substance, not form. Massie v. Graham, 3 McLean, 43. It ought to require that all the facts necessary to-enable it to decide the preliminary question should be presented in the one form or the other; for then only can it exercise the discretion given, with full knowledge. If this be done, the bill, when allowed to be filed, will rarely be liable to a demurrer. Story’s Eq. Pl. § 636. Undoubtedly, [87]*87however, the defendant may rely upon a demurrer even after formal leave given. Id.; 1 Heisk. 754. For leave may be granted upon an ex parte application, or improvidently, and yet the bill be clearly defective.

Upon the reading of the bill it struck me that it was not up to the full requirements of the law, and I suggested the propriety of the petition. But, in the hurry of preparation, the petition is not as full in some respects as the bill, and the affidavits attached. In order, therefore, that the application may be disposed of on its merits, and no injury be done to the complainants by the form adopted, I will consider the bill, petition, and affidavits as constituting an entirety.

The petition, or bill, as the one or the other may be resorted to, must show with particularity the nature of the new matter, in order that the court may exercise its judgment upon its relevancy and materiality. It must show that the matter is new, and could not, with reasonable diligence, have been produced or used by the party claiming the benefit of it in the original cause, and state the time when it was discovered. Young v. Keighly, 16 Ves. 350; Young v. Henderson, 4 Hayw. 189. The facts and circumstances should be set out so as to enable the court to draw its own conclusions, and it will not do to deal in allegations which are merely the conclusions of the party himself. Bingham v. Dawson, Jac. 243; Frazer v. Sypert, 5 Sneed, 100. The new matter must be so stated, to use the words of McFarland, J., in Burson v. Dosser, 1 Heisk. 761, as to enable the court to determine, upon a demurrer (and it may be added as upon a demurrer at the preliminary hearing), whether or not the newly-discovered testimony, when produced, will be of such a character as will make it controlling in the cause, or merely cumulative, and such as will not necessarily change the result; and so that the court may determine, from the nature of the new matter, whether the party has been guilty of any negligence in not discovering [88]*88and producing the evidence on the first trial. Dexter v. Arnold, 5 Mas. 309; Story’s Eq. Pl. § 412.

To this extent all the authorities are in accord. But some courts have held that the new evidence must not consist of additional testimony of witnesses, but of stringent written evidence or newly-discovered papers. Livingston v. Hubbs, 3 Johns. Ch. 124; Respass v. McClanahan, Hard. 342; Story’s Eq. Pl. § 415, note. And, if the testimony of witnesses is admitted, it should he done with great caution ; should not be merely cumulative, and, as intimated by Judge McFarland, in Burson v. Dosser, 1 Heisk. 763, should be sufficiently strong to change the result without being taken and considered with the evidence in the original case. And, at any rate, the new evidence should be clearly such as would have induced the court to have made a different decree. Thomas v. Rawlings, 34 Beav. 50; Hungate v. Gascoyne, 2 Phillips, 25.

The facts presented to the court by the complainants in the present application are, in substance, as follows : In the year 1867 Sabra T. Lawrence died intestate, leaving children and grandchildren as heirs at law and distributees, the complainants being grandchildren by a deceased daughter. The defendant Granberry qualified as administrator of her estate, and on the 10th of March, 1868, filed a bill against the heirs and distributees for a collation of advancements and settlement of his administration. On the same day complainants filed their cross-bill against said administrator, heirs, and distributees, and one Washington Boddie, a negro freedman, at one time a slave of the intestate, alleging, in substance, that Willis H. Boddie, a brother of the intestate, had died in Maury county, in July, 1841, seized of a large estate, real and personal; that the intestate, being the only sister and heir of the said Boddie, took possession of his property as such heir, and appropriated the same to her own use, and afterwards gave off large portions of the corpus to her children and grandchildren. That complainants were then small boys, ignorant of their rights, and, upon arriving [89]*89•of age, found their grandmother in possession, claiming the property as her own, and received some of the property as •gifts from her. That they remained in ignorance of the real •facts until a short time before filing their cross-bill. That they were now satisfied that said Boddie died having a will at the time of his death, which will ‘ ‘ was wilfully and designedly •suppressed and destroyed by Mrs.

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Related

Livingston v. Hubbs
3 Johns. Ch. 124 (New York Court of Chancery, 1817)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Tenn. Ch. R. 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-granberry-tennctapp-1874.