Long v. Long

149 S.W. 662, 104 Ark. 562, 1912 Ark. LEXIS 301
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 662 (Long v. Long) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long v. Long, 149 S.W. 662, 104 Ark. 562, 1912 Ark. LEXIS 301 (Ark. 1912).

Opinion

Frauenthal, J.

This was originally an action in the nature of a bill of review, seeking to annul a decree rendered at a former term of the same court for errors of law appearing in the record and for newly discovered evidence. Subsequently an amendment was filed to the bill seeking to annul the decree on the ground of fraud. The bill was filed by Henry Long against the heirs at law of Lucretia Long. The court in effect sustained a demurrer to the bill and the amendment thereto, and ordered same stricken from the files, and dismissed the case.

In August, 1906, Lucretia Long instituted a suit in the Arkansas Chancery Court against Henry Long, her son, seeking to set aside and cancel a deed executed by her to him in 1902. In her complaint she alleged that she was old and infirm, and not mentally capable of making the contract conveying the land to her son; that, through the undue influence and false representations of her said son, she was induced to sign the deed; that it expressed a consideration of $600, when in fact there was no consideration; that her son promised to support and maintain her during her life, but within a few months after the execution of the deed she was forced to leave his home, and that he failed and refused to maintain and support her. The complaint in detail made allegations that the deed was obtained without consideration and by the fraud and false representations of her said son.

To this complaint an answer was filed by Henry Long, and soon thereafter the deposition of Lucretia Long and other witnesses were taken on the part of the plaintiff in that suit. The defendant employed as his attorneys in that suit Messrs. Coleman & Menard, a firm composed of H. Coleman and L. K. Menard. They filed his answer, and were present and cross examined the witnesses whose depositions were taken by the plaintiff. Thereafter, and during the pendency of said suit, said Lucretia Long died, and the cause was duly revived in the name of her heirs as parties plaintiff.

At the regular September term, 1910, of said chancery court, the case was called for trial, and was submitted for final adjudication. The court entered a decree in which it made and recited certain findings of fact sustaining the allegations of said complaint, and thereupon adjudged and decreed a cancellation of said deed.

In May, 1911, the present plaintiff, Henry Long, filed this bill of review in which he alleged that the above decree was rendered at the September term, 1910, of said court, and asked that it be set aside and cancelled. The grounds therein alleged upon which he sought this relief are that no testimony had been taken in his behalf in that case; that he had employed said Coleman & Menard to make a defense for him immediately after the institution of the said suit by Lucretia Long, and that one of them, Mr. Coleman, died in August, 1910, and that his other attorney, Mr. Menard, had not notified him that he should produce witnesses or take his testimony in the case. He alleged that he could prove by himself and other witnesses facts sustaining his defense to said suit; that the consideration of the deed was his agreement to support and maintain his said mother during her life, and that he fully complied with that agreement until she left his home without any fault on his part, and against his protest; and that he did not obtain the deed by fraud or misrepresentation.

At the September term, 1911, of said court, the defendant filed a motion to strike the bill of review from the files on the ground that permission of the court had not been first obtained to file same. Without any action being taken by the court upon this motion, the cause went over to the following February term of said court. In the meanwhile, the plaintiff and defendants herein took testimony by depositions, developing the issues made by said bill on both sides. At the February term, 1912, of said court, the plaintiff filed an amendment to his bill, in which he alleged that said attorney. L. K. Menard, did not notify him that plaintiffs had closed their testimony in said case, and that, if he had told him of the taking of said depositions or the closing of said testimony, he would then and there have produced his proof in said cause. He also alleged that his said attorney allowed the case to be submitted upon plaintiff’s testimony without making defense thereto; that he appeared at the submission of the case asking and obtained the allowance of an attorney’s fee and a lien for its enforcement.

Thereupon, the court passed upon said motion to strike said bill from the files, and the demurrer to said bill and amendment thereto. In its decree it is recited that, after reading the pleadings and being advised, it found that no leave to file said bill of review or amendment to the bill of review was asked or obtained of the court; that there is no error of law appearing upon the face of the record, and that there was no newly discovered evidence which was not known to the plaintiff at the time of the former trial, and that there was no fraud practiced in rendering said decree. It thereupon ordered that the motion to strike and the demurrer should be sustained, and that the bill and amendment thereto be stricken from the files and dismissed.

The bill of complaint as originally filed herein was a bill to review the former decree of the chancery court; and it was subsequently amended so as to make it also an original bill seeking to annul the former decree on the ground of fraud. In the case of Webster v. Diamond, 36 Ark. 532, it was held that “such compound bills are permissible in equity practice where the relief sought would in each view be the same, and the chancellor may mould the relief according to the proof.” We will, therefore, consider the bill in both of these aspects, as a bill of review and one seeking to annul the former decree on the ground of fraud.

As a bill of review, it was sought to annul the former decree for errors apparent on the record, and also for newly discovered evidence. In order to file a bill of review based on newly discovered evidence, it is necessary to first obtain leave of the court in which the decree was rendered. But it is not necessary to obtain such leave of the court where the bill of review is founded on errors of law apparent on the face of the record. Cornish v. Keese, 21 Ark. 528; White v. Holman, 32 Ark. 753; Wood v. Wood, 59 Ark. 441.

In this case, the bill was based on both grounds. While the court sustained the motion to strike it from the files, it also sustained the demurrer to the bill. Therefore, it in effect held that the bill failed to state facts entitling the plaintiff to the relief asked for therein. If the ruling of the court on said demurrer is correct, the action of the court in also sustaining the motion to strike could not be prejudicial; because the court did actually consider the bill and act thereon, and thus in effect gave leave to its filing.

■ Where a former decree is attacked upon the ground that errors of law are apparent on the face of the record, the court is confined to the pleadings, proceedings and decree in the case in which the decree was rendered. It can not look into the evidence to see whether or not the decree is based on a correct finding of facts.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 662, 104 Ark. 562, 1912 Ark. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-long-ark-1912.