Winham v. Crutcher

3 Tenn. Ch. R. 666
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 15, 1878
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Tenn. Ch. R. 666 (Winham v. Crutcher) 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
Winham v. Crutcher, 3 Tenn. Ch. R. 666 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1878).

Opinion

The Chancellor :

On February 11, 1868, the defend•ant Crutcher recovered a judgment, before a justice of the peace of this county, against A. B. Shankland and J. B. Mui-ray for f345.62. From this judgment an appeal was taken to the Circuit Court, the appeal-bond reciting that both defendants appealed, but showing that the name of Murray was signed thereto by Shankland. Complainant, Winham, signed this bond as surety. On November 9, 1868, the judgment of the justice was affirmed, and judg[667]*667ment rendered in tbe Circuit Court against both defendants, and complainant as their surety of appeal. The original bill was filed on August 7, 1875, against Crutcher, Shank-land, and Murray, to enjoin the collection of this judgment ■out of the property of the complainant on various grounds. An amended bill was filed on December 3, 1875, and thereupon, by consent, the cause was heard upon the motion of the defendant Crutcher to dismiss the original and amended bills for want of equity on their face. The motion was sustained by this court, and the bills dismissed as to the defendant Crutcher, with costs. The complainant prayed an appeal to the Supreme Court, which was granted, and the decree of this court was afterwards, on February 12, 1877, affirmed. The opinion of the chancellor, with the action of the Supreme Court, is reported in Winham v. Crutcher, 2 Tenn. Ch. 535.

The original bill being undisposed of as to the defendants Shankland and Murray, the latter, on March 1, 1877, Fled an answer, and, on March 14, 1877, a cross-bill against Winham and Shankland, which he asked might be taken as an original bill against the defendant Crutcher. In this answer and cross-bill Murray sought relief, as against Crutcher, on the ground of an alleged levy of an execution, issued on the judgment of the Circuit Court, on the realty •of defendant Shankland, and a subsequent abandonment of the levy; and also upon an equitable release by reason of the pointing out of property of Shankland sufficient to satisfy the execution, and the conversation and actions of the agent and attorney of the defendant Crutcher, alleged to have taken place in 1869. The answer and cross-bill of Murray also sought relief, as against complainant, Winham, upon the ground that the original liability of Shankland and Murray, on which the judgment of the justice was rendered, was as accommodation indorsers of a note of one W. E. Lucas, Shankland being the first and Murray the second indorser i that the appeal from the justice’s judgment was by Shankland alone, Murray having taken no appeal, and that complain[668]*668ant became surety of appeal at tbe request of .Shankland, and for him alone; and that complainant was, therefore, liable to tbe judgment-creditor before Murray. Thereupon tbe complainant, on March 26, 1877, filed what be calls bis second amended bill, and again enjoined tbe Crutcher execution. This bill goes upon tbe idea that tbe original cause was remanded to this court by ^he Supreme Court, and that tbe complainant is entitled to tbe defence embodied in tbe answer and cross-bill of Murray. This defence, as understood by tbe complainant, is that Murray states that an execution was issued on said judgment, and that he (Murray) went with tbe officer who bad tbe execution and pointed out sufficient property of Shankland to satisfy the-same, and that the officer, after some conversation with Sbankland, bad dismissed Murray with tbe assurance that Sbankland bad satisfied him that the execution would be paid by Sbankland. Tbe complainant admits that the record of tbe Circuit Court shows nothing of the kind, and no satisfaction, but suggests that, as Murray has sworn to tbe facts, be, complainant, ought to have the benefit of them. Tbe bill is not a bill of review upon newly discovered facts, being deficient in tbe necessary averments to sustain such a bill, and having been filed without leave of' the court. It is simply a second amended bill, based on the theory that tbe Supreme Court bad remanded tbe previous bills for further proceedings. Upon this supposition, tbe defendant Crutcher moved to dissolve tbe injunction for-want of. equity on tbe face of tbe bill, which was granted on tbe execution of a refunding bond. Afterwards, the-decree of tbe Supreme Court was filed, showing that the-decree of this court dismissing tbe original and amended bills was affirmed, without any remand, and that these bills-were out of court. Upon this fact appearing, I suggested to tbe learned counsel of tbe complainant that bis client,, having once bad bis day in court in regard to any equities, he might have against tbe judgment-creditor, could not. maintain a second bill for tbe same matter, even upon facts. [669]*669not tlien known to Mm. Lindsley v. Thompson, 1 Tenn. Ch. 272; Knight v. Atkisson, 2 Tenn. Ch. 384. The justness of this suggestion was, as I understood at the time, conceded, and the learned counsel said that he had filed his bill under a misapprehension as to the extent of the decree of the Supreme Court. I understood him to add that his client had already paid the judgment, and he proposed to dismiss the bill, and I supposed an order of dismissal would be drawn accordingly. That the counsel himself supposed he had done so, appears from the opening paragraph of his client’s answer to Murray’s bill, the answer being drafted by the counsel, and filed on June 11, 1877. He there takes the position that Murray had no right to file a cross-bill to bills which wore out of court by the decree of this court, and of the Supreme Court, and he relies upon the fact as a plea in bar to the right of Murray further to prosecute his cross-bill. The papers submitted to me do not show any dismissal of the second amended bill; but, on the contrary, they contain a memorandum of a pro confesso order taken as to all the defendants, including Murray. The cause is now before me upon the bills of Winham, and the answer and cross-bill of Murray, pro confesso as to Crutcher and Shankland, and proof.

If the second amended bill is to be treated as still pending against the defendant Crutcher upon a pro confesso, it cannot be maintained. If it be treated as merely an amendment of the original bills, it must share their fate. For, haying been filed upon the supposition that those bills were still in court by the remand of the Supreme Court, and it now appearing that there was no such remand, there is nothing for the second amendment to attach itself to. If it be treated as an original bill, the record shows that the complainant has had his day in court already for the same .matter, and cannot be heard again. And there is no pre-tence for sustaining it as bill of review for newly discovered matter, as before explained. Moreover, the bill concedes [670]*670that the record of the Circuit Court contradicts the supposed defence of Murray, and does not clearly show wbat the' defence is. The allegations of the bill cannot, as I have held, be supplemented by reference to Murray’s answer and cross-bill. A bill must be complete in itself by proper aver-ments and exhibits attached, and cannot, by a general reference to other pleadings, make the contents of such pleadings a part thereof. Wells v. Stratton, 1 Tenn. Ch. 328 ; Moses v. Brodie, 1 Tenn. Ch. 397. The reference in these cases was to pleadings in another cause, but it is obvious that the rule-must be the same, as between a complainant and a particular defendant, where the reference is to the pleading of' another party to the same cause.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Tenn. Ch. R. 666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winham-v-crutcher-tennctapp-1878.