Metcalf v. Williams

104 U.S. 93, 26 L. Ed. 665, 14 Otto 93, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 1973
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 14, 1881
Docket68
StatusPublished
Cited by83 cases

This text of 104 U.S. 93 (Metcalf v. Williams) 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
Metcalf v. Williams, 104 U.S. 93, 26 L. Ed. 665, 14 Otto 93, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 1973 (1881).

Opinion

Me. Justice Bradley

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a bill in equity filed for setting aside a judgment at law, the rendering and entry of which, as alleged, were a surprise upon the. complain ant, who was misled by certain proceedings which took place in the court.. The complainant-was sued personally upon a check drawn by him, as he contends, officially, as the vice-president of the Montpelier Female Humane Association of Orange County, Virginia, an incorporated association of that State, having its office in the city of Alexandria. The check was in these words, to Wit: —

“ No. .] Alexandria, Va.j Oct. 2, 1875.
“Th.e First National Bank of Alexandria, Va., pay to the order of A. E. & C. E. Tilton seven thousand ]$, dollars.
“ E. P. Aistrop, Sec'y. W. 6. Williams, V. PresH.”

The action was brought in the Circuit Court of the United. States in the name of Charles E. Tilton, as surviving partner of himself and Alfred E. Tilton [the payees of the check], for the use and benefit of Ferdinand Metcalf. The writ was returnable on the first Monday of July, 1877, declaration filed at that time, and judgment ordered unless defendant should appear and plead to issue at the next rules, namely, first Mon *94 day of August, 1877. At the latter day the rule was confirmed, and on the 17th of October, 1877, during the sitting of the court at Richmond, final judgment was moved and entered. The circumstances on which the bill relies for setting aside this judgment are, that the complainant does not owe the money, and made arrangement to have the claim properly litigated ; that In September, 1877, he employed counsel to appear and plead to the action; that the said counsel, appearing at the clerk’s office, was informed by the clerk that it was usual to file the pleas in open court; that when the court came on in October, and before the judgment was entered, the said counsel called the attention of the judge to the case, and stated that he desired to have entered the plea of nil debet, and to call the attention of the court to some preliminary questions which would have to be settled before a trial could be had on the merits: that the judge informed him that he had ordered all cases against persons living in the congressional district in which defendant resided to-be tried in Alexandria; and that the counsel for plaintiffs were residents of Alexandria and were not then in court, and probably kept away from the knowledge of the fact that this .suit under the rule would be tried there :■ that thereupon the counsel said he would not press the-matter further, but would wait until the court commenced its term in Alexandria to have said preliminary questions disposed of; that he supposed that the formal plea of.nil debet had been noted by the clerk, it not being usual in the State courts to write out the plea of the general issue, but simply for the clerk to note it on the record. The judgment was afterwards entered without the knowledge of complainant br his counsel. When the court came on at Alexandria, in January following, the complainant’s counsel attended for the purpose of trying the cause, and was informed that no plea had been entered on the record at Richmond, and the case was not on the docket for trial. Being taken by surprise, he moved the court to reinstate the cause upon the docket; but the judge, doubting his authority to do this, refused the motion. By an amendment to the bill, the complainant states that the check sued on was not his check, but the check of the Montpelier Female Humane Association, the corporation before referred to, of which Met- *95 calf, for whose use the action was. brought, was general agent in tbe city of New York, and of which the complainant was vice-president, and E. P. Aistrop was secretary, — which asso-_ ciation was doing business as a public corporation, and all persons dealing with it dealt with it as such; that the check was signed by complainant and by-Aistrop in- their official characters, of which Metcalf was fully cognizant, and knew that the check was not the individual paper of complainant. Letters of Metcalf, dated in December, 1875, are annexed to the bill, showing that he recognized and treated the check as the check of the association. Tilton, the nominal plaintiff in the action at lav/, • and Metcalf, for whose use it was prosecuted, were made defendants to the bill, and filed a demurrer thereto. Upon the argu-. ment, the demurrer was overruled, and'thereupon it was agreed by the counsel of both parties that the court should finally dispose of the case upon the merits,, and a decree was rendered for the complainant on two grounds: first, that he was not personally bound by the check, — in other words, that it was not his check, but the check of the corporation ; and, secondly, tliat Aistrop was not joined in the action. The latter ground is untenable, because non-joinder of a defendant in an action ex contractu can be taken advantage of only by a plea in abatement. But, upon the other ground, we think that the decree Avas correct.

First, however, it is proper to inquire whether sufficient cause Avas shewn in the bill for setting aside the judgment. It is manifest that the judgment Avas a surprise upon complainant. After what passed in the court at Richmond, his counsel had a right • to suppose that the cause Avould be tried in the ensuing term at Alexandria. The practice in Virginia as to entering pleas of general issue on th.e record sufficiently accounts for the omission to file a formal plea. Had not the term passed by, the district judge Avould undoubtedly have set aside the judgment, and reinstated the cause on the docket for trial. If, as he supposed, the passage of the term deprived him of power to do this, it became a proper case for equitable interference by bill. When a party has been deprived of his right by fraufi, accident, or mistake, and has no remedy at law, a court of. equity will grant relief. Perhaps, in vieAV of the equitable *96 control over tlieir own judgments which courts of law have assumed in modern times, the judgment might have been set aside, on motion, for the cause set forth in the bill; but if this were true, the remedy in equity would still be open; and the fact that the court declined to exercise the power upon motion, rendered the resort to a bill necessary and proper. Formerty bills in equity were constantly filed to obtain new trials in actions at law, a practice which still obtains in Kentucky, and perhaps in some other jurisdictions; but the firmly settled practice by which courts of law entertain motions for new trial, and the dislike of one court unnecessarily to interfere with proceedings in another, has caused an' almost total disuse of that jurisdiction. Courts of equity, however, still .entertain bills to set aside judgments obtained by fraud, accident, or mistake.

As to the merits of the case, we agree with the court below in holding that, according to the showing of the bill, and as between the parties, the check sued on was the check of the Montpelier Female Humane Association, and not the individual check of the defendant. There is nothing on its face to preclude this construction.

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Bluebook (online)
104 U.S. 93, 26 L. Ed. 665, 14 Otto 93, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 1973, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metcalf-v-williams-scotus-1881.