Hall, Justice.
This case was before the court at the September term, 1888, under the name of Laurence et al. vs. The Mayor, etc., of the City of Savannah et al.
From his own pleadings and the proofs in the case, it appeared that he was anxious to dispose of this property and convert it into money, but could not do so, because of the claim set up by the Laurences to a portion of it; to [266]*266get this difficulty out of the way and to clear his title of this incumbrance, he allowed his ground rent and taxes to fall in arrear, and applied to the city to re-enter and to sell, not only a sufficiency to pay up these debts, but to sell the entire property, the lot having been divided and each separate part after the division having been improved by the erection of buildings and other structures thereon; in pursuance of this application, the city consented to do as it was asked, but beyond its acceptance of the terms proposed, it did not go at that time; subsequently, however, it re-entered and offered both parts of the lot for sale; two attempts were made before the sale was consummated. After the sale, the plaintiff in error filed a bill in Chatham superior court against the mayor and aldermen of the city of Savannah, to which the Laurences were not parties, to reach this fund. A decree was had by that court on this bill; it settled that Murphy was trustee of his minor children; that the trust under which he held was executory; and that the cestuis que trust being minors, he could not reduce the fund to possession without giving bond and security to account to them for it; but that he could not do this in any event, unless the city, after the satisfaction of its demands, saw proper to turn over the balance to him, as it was the absolute owner thereof, and had the right to dispose of it as it might see proper; no exception was taken by him to this decree; he acquiesced in it for more than two years; in the litigation with the Laurences over this fund, it seems to have been ignored. After the decis ■ ion of that case by this court, he sought by his cross-bill to review and reverse that decree not only for errors appearing on the face of the decree, (which was contrary to principles subsequently settled by the decision of this court), but also for facts, which he then set up, tending to show imposition and fraud upon the part of the city in conducting the sale from which the fund arose, and on account of which he contended he was entitled to recover damages. The court decreed in conformity with so much of the [267]*267prayer of the cross-bill as made the decree under review conform to the principle settled by the decision of the court, but refused to decree as to the other object sought to be attained by reviewing and opening this decree; and this refusal makes the question we are now called upon to determine.
1. There is no doubt but a bill of review may be brought for the purpose of procuring a “reversal, alteration or explanation’’ of a decree “ made in a former suit, upon error in law appearing on the face of the decree, without further examination of matters of fact,” as well as upon “ some new .matter.” But where it is brought upon the last ground, the “ new matter ” must be such as has “ been discovered since the decree, and as could not possibly have been used when the decree was made;” it must distinctly appear that it “ has come to the knowledge of the applicant and his agents for the first time since the period at which he could have made use of it in the suit, and that it could not, with reasonable diligence, have been discovered sooner.” 2 Daniell’s Ch. Pr., 1576, 1578, and cases cited in note 2.
In Smith vs. Hornsby et al., 70 Ga., 552, 557, we had this question under consideration, and said: “ There is no allegation, however, that the complainant was ignorant of these facts when the case was formerly before the court, or that he was prevented from availing himself of them by accident or mistake” (and we now add, by “ imposition,” Code, §8178), “ or the fraud or act of the adverse party, unmixed with negligence on his part. Code, §§3129,3595.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Hall, Justice.
This case was before the court at the September term, 1888, under the name of Laurence et al. vs. The Mayor, etc., of the City of Savannah et al.
From his own pleadings and the proofs in the case, it appeared that he was anxious to dispose of this property and convert it into money, but could not do so, because of the claim set up by the Laurences to a portion of it; to [266]*266get this difficulty out of the way and to clear his title of this incumbrance, he allowed his ground rent and taxes to fall in arrear, and applied to the city to re-enter and to sell, not only a sufficiency to pay up these debts, but to sell the entire property, the lot having been divided and each separate part after the division having been improved by the erection of buildings and other structures thereon; in pursuance of this application, the city consented to do as it was asked, but beyond its acceptance of the terms proposed, it did not go at that time; subsequently, however, it re-entered and offered both parts of the lot for sale; two attempts were made before the sale was consummated. After the sale, the plaintiff in error filed a bill in Chatham superior court against the mayor and aldermen of the city of Savannah, to which the Laurences were not parties, to reach this fund. A decree was had by that court on this bill; it settled that Murphy was trustee of his minor children; that the trust under which he held was executory; and that the cestuis que trust being minors, he could not reduce the fund to possession without giving bond and security to account to them for it; but that he could not do this in any event, unless the city, after the satisfaction of its demands, saw proper to turn over the balance to him, as it was the absolute owner thereof, and had the right to dispose of it as it might see proper; no exception was taken by him to this decree; he acquiesced in it for more than two years; in the litigation with the Laurences over this fund, it seems to have been ignored. After the decis ■ ion of that case by this court, he sought by his cross-bill to review and reverse that decree not only for errors appearing on the face of the decree, (which was contrary to principles subsequently settled by the decision of this court), but also for facts, which he then set up, tending to show imposition and fraud upon the part of the city in conducting the sale from which the fund arose, and on account of which he contended he was entitled to recover damages. The court decreed in conformity with so much of the [267]*267prayer of the cross-bill as made the decree under review conform to the principle settled by the decision of the court, but refused to decree as to the other object sought to be attained by reviewing and opening this decree; and this refusal makes the question we are now called upon to determine.
1. There is no doubt but a bill of review may be brought for the purpose of procuring a “reversal, alteration or explanation’’ of a decree “ made in a former suit, upon error in law appearing on the face of the decree, without further examination of matters of fact,” as well as upon “ some new .matter.” But where it is brought upon the last ground, the “ new matter ” must be such as has “ been discovered since the decree, and as could not possibly have been used when the decree was made;” it must distinctly appear that it “ has come to the knowledge of the applicant and his agents for the first time since the period at which he could have made use of it in the suit, and that it could not, with reasonable diligence, have been discovered sooner.” 2 Daniell’s Ch. Pr., 1576, 1578, and cases cited in note 2.
In Smith vs. Hornsby et al., 70 Ga., 552, 557, we had this question under consideration, and said: “ There is no allegation, however, that the complainant was ignorant of these facts when the case was formerly before the court, or that he was prevented from availing himself of them by accident or mistake” (and we now add, by “ imposition,” Code, §8178), “ or the fraud or act of the adverse party, unmixed with negligence on his part. Code, §§3129,3595. It is, on the contrary, quite apparent, from the record, that he was well apprised of all the facts now relied on to avoid the force of this decree before the filing of the bill on which it was rendered, and that he was not prevented by accident, mistake, fraud, or the act of his adversaries, Rom insisting upon them.” So in the present case, there is not- a single fact or circumstance now relied on as the basis for the recovery of damages from the citys [268]*268that was not well known to both the plaintiff in error and his able counsel, when he filed the bill on which the decree, now sought to be reviewed, was made; and nothing whatever appears to show that he could not then have availed himself of them as well as at the present time He was perfectly free to act in the matter, and deliberately chose his course. He voluntarily refused to bring them forward, and for two years and more acquiesced in a result that might have been different, had he -seen proper' to urge them to obtain the relief he now seeks. The decree has been “altered” in-the only particular in which it could have been so altered, under the law, to secure the rights of the parties; further than this, the court had no power to go, and the refusal to entertain the claim for damages was eminently proper. The part of the decree now assailed and sought to be set aside, in order to let in this claim, was not only made with the consent, but at the instance of the plaintiff in error, and it is familiar doctrine that such a decree cannot be set aside by bill of review, unless, by clerical error, something has been inserted therein, as by consent, which has not been consented to. The city undertook to sell this property at the request of the plaintiff in error, in order to relieve his title of an incumbrance that seriously impeded its free use and disposition. It acted, not so much for the protection of its own rights. — for, in any event, the property was bound for the claims it held against it, — as for his relief. He acquiesced in all that was done, and insisted, in the courts, upon his right (o have 1 he fund held by the city; he even went so far as to set up the right of the city to dispose of the fund, and to disregard the claims of others to the same. The city seems to have recognized his claim and to have aided him at every turn; it has been involved,on his account, in serious litigation, and has incurred expense in consequence thereof.
Surely this party is now estopped from undoing what has been done at his special instance and request, and which, upon consideration, he has, in various ways, rati[269]*269fled and. confirmed. Every presumption is in favor of so much of this record and decree as we have seen cannot be reviewed, etc. Code, §3753. To hold otherwise would be to enable him to take advantage of his own conduct, to the detriment of a party who had graciously and gratuitously served him.
2. While we cannot approve the finding of the jury, so far as it saddles the cost of this litigation upon the city, ■which is, from anything we can see in the case, free from the charge of being stubbornly litigious, or from the least imputation of bad faith, such as renders it liable for the counsel fees of the plaintiff in error, yet, on account of its failure to make any motion to get rid of this part of the verdict, we find ourselves unable to interfere for its relief, and must let both the verdict and the decree rendered on and pursuance of it stand. These views preclude the consideration of other questions made by this immense record.
Judgment affirmed.
See 71 Ga., 392, where the case is reported.