37 N.J. Eq. 266 | N.J. | 1883
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The object of this appeal seems to have been to obtain the de
The distinction between the suspension of proceedings in an equity suit, with leave to a party to bring a suit at law, or directing an action and an issue out of chancery, is well settled. If the cause is allowed to stand over with leave to bring an action, or directing an action at law, the action is prosecuted in compliance with the practice and proceedings in ordinary actions at law. Bills of exceptions may be taken at the trial, and the proceedings are reviewable by rule to show cause and writ of error in the usual manner, and judgment at law will be entered, which will be accepted in the equity court as a finality. Bootle v. Blurdell, 19 Ves. 494, 509; Ex parte Kensington, Geo. Coop. 96; Hope v. Hope, 10 Beav. 581, 583, 586; Smith v. Earl of Effingham, Id. 589, 595; Apthorp v. Comstock, 2 Paige 482. But where an issue is sent out of chancery, the whole proceeding is under the control of the chancellor. No bill of exceptions can be taken, and no judgment entered; the circuit record and postea are sent to the court of chancery, and the conduct and result of the trial are subject to review in that court only. Trenton Banking Co. v. Rossell, 1 Gr. Ch. 511; S. C, Id. 492; Holcombe v. Managers, 1 Stock. 457; Freeman v. Staats, Id. 816; Black v. Lamb, 1 Beas. 108, 2 Id. 455; Johnson v. Harmon, 94 U. S. 371; Clayton v. Lord Nugent, 1 Coll. 363; 13 L. J. (N. S.) Exch. 363.
Whether an order is for an action at law or an issue out of chancery, does not depend upon the form in which the issue is> framed. An issue, or, as it is commonly called, a feigned issue, is a mode of procedure adopted from' the civil law by courts of law as well as courts of equity as a means of having some question of fact arising incidentally, and to be made the foundation of some order or decree, determined by the verdict of a jury. It is called a feigned issue for the reason that its object is not the establishment of a legal right on which a judgment shall regularly follow, but the ascertainment by a formal trial of some issue of fact arising in another cause, and material to the decision of the latter. For convenience of trial the issue must be given the form of a common law action, with appropriate pleadings,
We must look, therefore, at the order of the chancellor directing the issue, to decide whether the issue is an issue out of chancery or an ordinary action at law. An appeal will lie from an order directing an issue. N. & N. Y. R. R. Co. v. Newark, 8 C. E. Gr. 575. But the court of appeal will not interfere with the discretion of the chancellor as to the form of the issue, unless the issue is not adapted to the case made in the pleadings in equity, or was framed so as to put the burden of proof on the wrong party. Smyth v. Nangle, 7 Cl. & Fin. 405; Browne v. McClintock, L. R. (6 H. of L.) 456, 467.
The substance of the complainants’ bill aud the defendants’ answers is stated in the report of this case in 8 Stew. Eq. 181. The bill, among other things, sets out a claim of title to the premises in controversy by the New Jersey West Line Railroad Company, under a grant executed by the governor, attorney-general and riparian commissioners, on March 19th, 1872. It denies the
• The bill charges that the complainants had for years been in possession of the premises. It avers that the bill is filed to have the grant to the West Line company declared invalid, and to restrain any one claiming under it from setting up title thereunder, and from disturbing the complainants in their possession, and to remove the cloud the said grant casts upon their title. The prayer of the bill is, among other things, to the effect that the title of the West Line company to the premises be declared to be invalid, and that peaceable possession thereof by the complainants may be protected by a decree of the court. With some imperfection in form, the bill in substance is an appeal to the jurisdiction which a court of equity exercises to quiet the title to lands.
It is apparent, from the inspection of the several orders of the chancellor, that the issue in question is an issue out of chancery. The form of the issue adopted is in accordance with the substance of the pleadings under the ejectment act, and must so be considered; otherwise the plea would not be appropriate to raise an issue of title. Rev. pp. 327, 334 § 13. But the chancellor’s order in directing the issue and the recital in the issue directed, show that his purpose was to retain the trial of the title under his control; and the form of the issue approved is appropriate to secure a fair presentation of the issue of title at the trial.
The power of the court of chancery to order an issue, instead of allowing an action at law to be brought, is indisputable, where an issue is applied for or assented to by the parties. The general rule is that a court of equity has no jurisdiction to establish by its decree the title to lands, its jurisdiction
In one particular the act entitled “An act to compel the determination of claims to real estate in certain cases, and to quiet the title to the same,” enlarged the jurisdiction of the court of chancery in this respect. It gives a party, who is in peaceable possession of lands where his title is disputed, a right to come into chancery to settle the title in advance of a determination of the title at law, where no suit to enforce' or test the validity of
The several orders obtained and consented to by the parties respectively, as steps toward the trial of the contested issue of title, constitute a waiver with respect to the mode of trial proposed.
The order appealed from should be affirmed.
Decree unanimously affirmed.