54 N.C. 10 | N.C. | 1853
The bill is filed in this Court for the purpose of reviewing a decree of this Court, heretofore made in the case of Taylor and Taylor, executors of Hollister, against the American Bible Society and others, reported in
Upon the filing of the bill, copies and subpoenas issued, some of the defendants answered, and others put in a demurrer. The decrees of this Court are not enrolled, strictly speaking, but are recorded, which is allowed to have the same effect. Judge Story says: "In the State Courts of the United States all decrees in Equity are matters of record, and are deemed to be enrolled as of the term of the Court at which they are passed, whether actually enrolled or not." Story's Eq. Pl., sec. 403. Accordingly, there (11) are several bills of review among the decisions of this Court, which bills are filed in the Courts of Equity below, to review decisions of these Courts, and brought to this Court by appeal, in which it is held that the passing and recording a final decree has the effect of enrollment and presents a case for a bill of review. So the bill under consideration is applicable to the case presented by it. But the plaintiffs are metin limine by the objection that a bill cannot be filed and have its origin in this Court, because of its limited jurisdiction.
It appears that this is the first bill of the kind that has ever been filed in this Court. The case is a new one, and we have given it much consideration. This Court is one of limited jurisdiction, and derives its powers from the statute by which it was created. So the question depends upon the construction of that statute. It should, however, not be considered as isolated and standing alone, but as forming a part of a system established by the Legislature for the administration of the law.
The Revised Statutes, ch. 32, sec. 1, entitled an act concerning Courts of Equity, provides as follows: "Each Superior Court of Law within the State shall also be and act as a Court of Equity for the same county, and possess all the powers and authority within the same that the Court of Chancery, which was formerly held in this State under the colonial government, used and exercised, and that are properly and rightfullyincident to such a Court, agreeably to the laws of this State." And in sec. 2, as follows: "Such Court, in all equity proceedings, shall be styled and called The Court of Equity for the county in which it is held." And in sec. 17: "No bill of review, or petition for rehearing, shall lie or be allowed upon a final decree in any of the Courts of Equity *18 within this State but within five years," etc. In Rev. Stat., ch. 33, sec. 6, entitled an act concerning the Supreme Court, it is (12) provided, that "the Court shall have power to hear and determine all questions at law brought before it by appeal from a Superior Court, and to hear and determine all cases of Equity brought before itby appeal from a Court of Equity, or removed there by the parties thereto; and in every case such Court may render such sentence, judgment and decree as, on inspection of the whole record, it shall appear to them ought in law to be rendered thereon; and shall have original and exclusive jurisdiction in repealing letters patent, and shall also have power to issue writs of certiorari, scire facias, habeas corpus,mandamus, and all other writs which may be proper and necessary for the exercise of its jurisdiction, and agreeable to the principles and usages of law: and it may, in its own discretion, make the writs of execution, which it may issue, returnable either to the said Court, or to the Supreme Court," etc., "provided, that, in criminal cases, the decision of the Supreme Court shall be certified to the Superior Court, which Court shall proceed to judgment."
Thus it is seen that the Courts of Equity for the several counties have original and general jurisdiction, and the statute confers upon them thepowers and authorities that were formerly exercised by the Chancellor, and that are properly and rightfully incident to such a Court. The statute assumes that to entertain a bill of review is a power properly and rightfully incident to such a Court, and limits the time to five years, instead of twenty years, as it was formerly.
Whereas the Supreme Court has no original jurisdiction, except to repeal letters patent, and its jurisdiction is limited and expressly confined to the power to hear and determine questions of law upon appeal, and cases in equity brought before it by appeal or removal: no incidental power or authority is conferred, save only that of issuing such (13) writs and other process as is necessary and proper for the exercise of the limited jurisdiction given to it, that is, to hear and determine cases brought before it by appeal or removal.
So the question is narrowed to this: What is meant by the power to "hear and determine" a case? Both of the words have a fixed meaning, and beyond all question a case is heard and determined when a final decree has been passed and entered upon the records of the Court. The case is then ended, the parties are dismissed, and the Court has fully discharged its functions so far as their case is concerned.
It is said that a bill of review is not, strictly speaking, an original bill, but is treated of in the books as a bill in the nature of an original bill, being an incident to some former suit. To call a bill of review an incident to a former suit requires some latitude of expression; but it is *19 sufficient for us to say, when a case has been heard and determined, this Court is functus officio as to the case itself, and all its incidents.
Sec. 17, ch. 32, is expressly confined to Courts of Equity (which means the Courts below.) It is from the act of 1828, which was ten years after the Supreme Court was established. This shows that, in the opinion of the Legislature, a bill of review could not originate in the Supreme Court. If such a bill can be allowed, there is no limitation short of twenty years. We are, therefore, brought to the conclusion, from a consideration of the statute, that a bill of review cannot be filed in this Court; but if the words of the statute were less plain and unequivocal, our conclusion would derive support from other considerations.
1. Bills of review owe their origin to the famous ordinance of LordBacon, which treats the power to entertain such bills as an incident to the jurisdiction of the Chancellor. Such bills are of two (14) kinds, one for error of law, like the bill before us; and the other upon new proofs that have come to light after the decision was made. Suppose a bill of the latter kind was filed in this Court; answer is put in, replications taken, and commissions. So, in effect, a case originates in this Court. This is certainly not proper. It must be brought here by appeal or removal. Both kinds of bills of review stand on the same footing, and if we entertain one, as a matter of course we must entertain the other.
2. No bill of review, of either kind, has ever been filed in this Court, but there are many petitions to rehear. We are certain that, but for a settled conviction on the part both of the Judges and of the profession that this Court will not entertain such a bill, it would have been attempted in the course of thirty-six years. Indeed in Ward v. Stowe,
3. There are several cases in which bills filed in the Courts of Equity to reverse their decree have been brought to this Court by appeal.Gilchrist v. Buie,
4. No reason can be assigned why cases in Equity should be tried a second time in this Court that does not apply, with equal force, to cases *20 on the law side, and there can be no writ of error, for error in law, in a judgment of this Court.
Bill dismissed with costs.
Cited: Smith v. Cheek,
(15)