16 S.E. 412 | N.C. | 1892
Soon after the Superior Courts were clothed with the blended jurisdiction both of law and equity, the practice was marked out. Instead *191
of a proceeding in equity for an injunction against the enforcement of a judgment, a motion in the cause was indicated as the proper procedure for any sufficient cause which could have been, and by accident or fraud was not, pleaded in bar of the judgment, where the same was not provided for in section 133 of Code of Civil Procedure, now section 274 of The Code, on the ground of mistake, surprise or excusable neglect. Jarman v. Saunders,
In Bledsoe v. Nixon,
Laws 1887, ch. 192, entitled "An Act concerning appeals," instituted a new feature in our law. It provides:
"SECTION 1. The stay of execution provided for in title 13, chapter 10, of The Code, shall not be construed to vacate the judgment appealed from, but in all cases said judgment shall remain in full force and effect, and the lien of said judgment shall remain unimpaired, notwithstanding the giving of the undertaking or making the deposit required in said title until the judgment appealed from is reversed or modified by the Supreme Court.
"SEC. 3. In civil cases, at the first term of the Superior Court after such certificate is received, if the judgment is affirmed, the court below shall direct the execution thereof to proceed, and if said judgment is modified, shall direct its modification and performance," etc.
We are called upon in this case to construe the effect of the Act of 1887 upon motions for new trials for newly discovered evidence in actions which have been tried in the Superior Court, judgment rendered therein, taken by appeal to the Supreme Court, and the judgment affirmed and certified down, as in the present case, and by force of the statute the Superior Court is required to direct the execution thereof to proceed. Shall the practice settled in Bledsoe v. Nixon, supra, *192 continue, or shall the motion now be made in the court where the judgment stands? We are again, as was said by the Chief Justice (304) in Bledsoe v. Nixon, "Sailing without a compass, and can only look to the statutes and the reason of the thing in navigating this unknown water." Since the Act of 1887 "the cause" is no longer by the appeal taken out of the Superior Court and carried up to the Supreme Court; the judgment remains in the Superior Court, and when docketed, the lien continues, notwithstanding the appeal.
By virtue of Art. IV, sec. 8, of the Constitution, this Court has jurisdiction to review, upon appeal, any decision of the courts below upon any matter of law or legal inference, and has the "power" to issue any remedial writs necessary to give it a general supervision and control over the proceedings of the inferior courts. We do not mean to intimate that any of its powers or jurisdiction have been impaired by the act in question, but the effect thereof is to render it unnecessary in many cases to render any final judgment further than to indicate that the judgment below is affirmed.
It was held In re Griffin,
But the right to equitable relief, upon proper proofs, rests somewhere, and is not affected by the action upon the appeal. There is no case pending, nor judgment rendered in this Court, except the order affirming the judgment below and imposing the costs of appeal. To the Superior Court alone can the application be made, for it alone retains jurisdiction of the action. Motions for new trials for newly discovered evidence have been entertained in this Court pending the appeal since the passage of the Act of 1887, Brown v. Mitchell,
1. We conclude that the proper practice is, that pending appeals, such motions should be made in this Court, and when the final judgment has been rendered in this Court a petition to rehear should be filed for the purpose of making the motion here.
2. But when the judgment of the Superior Court has been affirmed and the opinion certified down and the matter finally disposed of in this Court, the motion (or action in the nature of a bill of review, as was resorted to in Matthews v. Joyce,
The learned judge before whom this motion was made denied it upon the ground of want of power of jurisdiction to grant it, in order that the question might be passed upon and settled. And this we have endeavored to do.
We have expressed no opinion upon the merits of this motion.
The affidavits and motion should be passed upon by the judge in the Superior Court, to whose discretion it is committed (S. v. Morris,
REVERSED.
Cited: Banking Co. v. Morehead,