Tomlinson v. Dilliard

3 Va. 199
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 15, 1808
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Va. 199 (Tomlinson v. Dilliard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tomlinson v. Dilliard, 3 Va. 199 (Va. 1808).

Opinion

JUDGE TUCKER.

Mr. Hay moved to dismiss the appeal in this case, as being improvidently granted by this Court, after the expiration of the vacation next after the term in which the decree was rendered. This will require a review of the several acts passed on the subject of appeals at different periods.

The Committee of Revisors, in 1792, reported to the General Assembly two bills among others ; the first for reducing into one act the several acts concerning the Court of Appeals ; the second, those concerning the Court of Chancery. (Revisal of 1792, c. 63, and c. 64.) The former passed the 26th day of October, 1792; and, in the 14th section (in which the 12th section of the act of 1788, c. 68, is incorporated) declares, “that appeals, writs of error, and su-persedeas, may be granted, heard, and determined by the Court of Appeals, to and from any final decree or judgment of the High Court of Chancery, General Court, and District Courts, in the same manner and on the same principles as appeals, writs of error, and supersedeas, are to be granted, heard, and determined by the High Court of Chancery, and District Courts, to and from any final judgment or decree of a County Court; and the party shall proceed in like manner.”

The act of May, 1788, c. 7, had declared “that any party thinking himself aggrieved by the decree of a County Court in Chancery, and not having entered an appeal from the decree at the time it was pronounced, might appeal from such decree at any time within one month after the decree pronounced, lodging for that purpose with the Clerk of the High Court of Chancery a copy *of the proceedings in the suit, and a petition, suggesting error in the decree, signed by some counsel attending the High Court of Chancery, and also lodging with the petition an appeal-bond, &c. And the Clerk shall thereupon issue a summons,” &c. This clause was inserted in the Chancery law, sect. 16.

The act of 1787, c. 9, declares, “that the High Court of Chancery, or any Judge thereof, out of term time, shall have power for good cause shewn, to allow a petition of appeal, and if necessary, order a supersedeas to stop the execution of any decree pronounced by an inferior Court, at any time within three years after pronouncing the same; the party praying such appeal complying with the terms which the Court or Judge shall annex to such order.” The same act declares that whenever an appeal is prayed for from any inferior Court, or bond is given for the removal of any suit in Chancery, in any manner whatsoever, it shall be sufficient if the bond be executed by good and sufficient securities, although the appellant, or party, shall not execute it. These provisions were inserted in the bill which the Committee of Revisors had prepared and laid before the General Assembly, and will be found, sect. 16,17, 18, of the act reducing into one the several acts concerning the High Court of Chancery. Ed. 1794, c. 64.

Had the bill passed in the same form that it was prepared, no doubt, perhaps, would have been entertained upon the subject. But after the Eegislature had finally disposed of the act concerning the Court of Appeals, which passed as before noticed, on the 26th of October, they seem to have taken up the act concerning the High Court of Chancery, the final passage of which is noticed as of the [637]*63729th of November following'. In that act, after having probably approved of the rules contained in the 16th, 17th, and 18th sections, as applicable to appeals from the Inferior to the Superior Court of Chancery, and after going through the *whole bill reported by the Committee of Revisors, they appear to have thought it necessary to provide for two particular cases, for which there was either no provision, or not such as the Legislature on more mature consideration approved of; and accordingly added the 59th and 60th sections of the bill; the former relative to appeals from the High Court of Chancery; the latter relative to bills of review. It is remarkable that the provisions in both these clauses are introduced with a preamble indicative of the intention of the Legislature to give to both subjects a due consideration and to provide for them accordingly.

The former recites, (sect. 59,) “whereas many persons against whom decrees may have been rendered in the High Court of Chancery, may desire to appeal from such decrees, but have been hindered from doing so, at the term in which the said decrees were pronounced, be it enacted, that if upon a petition to any Judge of the Court of Appeals, or the Judge of the High Court of Chancery in vacation next after the term when such decree shall have been rendered for relief, in such a case, it shall appear to his satisfaction, that the failure to appeal from his decree at the time, or during the term when it was pronounced, did not arise from any culpable neglect in the petitioner, or that, upon the whole circumstances of the case, the petitioner ought to have the benefit of an appeal, it shall be lawful for the said Judge to grant the said appeal,” &c.

This section appears to me as fully to embrace, and provide for 1 he time, manner, terms, and conditions upon which appeals might be granted from the High Court of Chancery to the Court of Appeals, by any Judge of this Court, or any Judge of the High Court of Chancery in vacation, as the 18th section embraces and provides for the granting of an appeal by the Judge of the High Court of Chancery in vacation, to any decree of an Inferior Court. Nor can I discover any difference whatsoever in the interpretation of the words “for good cause shewn,” in the former section, and those used in the latter, “upon the ®whole circumstances of the case.” To my apprehension, they import precisely the same thing, and, of course, ought to receive the same construction ; the first as applicable to the decrees of County Courts, of which the Legislature were then speaking, in sect. 18th ; the second as applicable to those of the High Court of Chancery, of which they meant to speak in the 59th section. There is, therefore, no necessity to turn back to the 18th section to know what the Legislature meant when they added the 59th section, as to that particular ; but, with respect to the power of the Court to allow a petition of appeal, at any time within three years, the 59th section is altogether silent. The 18th section, then, may receive a construction totally independent of, and unconnected with the 59th section, as far as relates to the power of the Court in term time ; although we must resort to the latter, to determine the power of the Judges in vacation.

That case is not now before us ; and extrajudicial opinions have generally been deemed improper in this Court. I shall, therefore, confine my opinion at present, to the case before us. And, in doing so, I have no hesitation in deciding that the Court had power to allow the appeal in this case, at the time it was allowed. In this case the decree was pronounced July 26, 1803, and the petition of appeal was allowed by the Court of Appeals, in Court, November 10, 1803. The act of 1806, c. 22, declaring that no appeal, writ of error, or supersedeas, shall be granted by the Court of Appeals in Court, did not pass till three years afterwards : and consequently, the motion to dismiss it, asimprovi-dently granted, ought to be overruled.

JUDGE ROANE. By the 14th section of the act constituting the Court of Appeals,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

M'Call v. Peachy
5 Va. 48 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1798)
Gaskins v. Commonwealth
5 Va. 168 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1797)
Jones v. Commonwealth
5 Va. 482 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1799)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Va. 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tomlinson-v-dilliard-va-1808.