57 Ala. 308 | Ala. | 1876
Appellees, heirs of mature age of Eli Townsend, deceased, and distributees of his estate, complainants in the Chancery Court, filed their bill against defendant, Boswell, as administrator of the same estate, and against the other heirs and distributees, to correct alleged errors of fact and law, which they aver had been committed without any fault or neglect on their part, by the judge of probate of Pike county upon the final settlement by Boswell •of his administration. The bill shows that notice of such final settlement was duly given to complainants, and that they were present personally and with counsel, contesting the accounts and adducing evidence in respect to the items thereof and to the advancements made to each — not excepting the particulars specified in the bill as those in which it is charged the errors occurred. No exceptions were reserved at that time to the rulings of the court • no bill of exceptions was prepared and taken; it is not alleged that complainants and their counsel were prevented by any fraud, or false representations practised by others, or any excusable ignorance of facts which they had since learned, from obtaining justice; and no facts or circumstances are assigned in support of the averment that the complainants are not chargeable with any fault or neglect in respect to the errors complained of — unless we regard as such the allegation that they produced to the court evidence upon which it should have decided otherwise. What this evidence was, is not set forth.
The bill of complaint was supposed to be authorized in its present form, by section 2274 (1915) of the Bevised Code ; which is as follows: “ Where any error of law or fact has occurred in the settlement of any estate of a decedent to the injury of any party, without any fault, or neglect on his part, such party may correct such error by bill in chancery within two years after the final settlement thereof; and the evidence filed in the court in relation to such settlement, must be
Without commenting on other clauses of this section, it expressly declares that the errors it mentions that may be corrected, through the aid of a court of chancery, are such as have occurred “ without any fault or neglect” on the part of the person complaining. Care is thus taken, to maintain a principle which has always been held by this court to be the corner stone of the jurisdiction of chancerv in all similar cases.
When the State is invoked through its judicial tribunals to settle matters in controversy between persons subject to its jurisdiction, it is that the settlement may be definitive. The expensiveness of litigation to the parties concerned is always considerable and often very heavy. The time also of themselves and their witnesses devoted to it, is taken from their other important affairs and daily business; and the anxiety rand distraction of mind which' are the pretty certain concomitants, must be not only painfully disquieting, but a hinderance to the proper performance of exacting duties. These and other considerations make it a matter not only of private, but of public concern, that such controversies when once -determined shall not be reopened; a conviction which was long ago expressed in the maxim, interest reipublieae ut sit finis litium. Hence, although appellate tribunals are established to revise the proceedings and correct the errors of courts in which causes are first decided, in order that the law may be correctly expounded and uniform throughout the State, yet unless these causes be remanded to them by the appellate tribunals, the same matters of controversy can not, save in exceptional cases, be tried in those courts again, or in any other of merely co-ordinate or concurrent authority. When, therefore, in any of those exceptional eases of which, under either statute law, or general equity principles, an ■•unsuccessful party is allowed to obtain a retrial — because prevented from getting justice in the first instance, by some fraud, accident or mistake, to which any one may fall a victim — it is necessary to his success, that he aver and prove that the judgment complained of was rendered without fault ■ on his part. The rule is based on a fundamental principle; for, it is foreign to the idea of law and judgment, that they .should be unstable, or exorable and capricious.
In every form in which such cases have been presented in our courts, this rule has been insisted on.—In French v. Garner (7 Port. 549), as in many others, the endeavor was
In Duckworth v. Duckworth (35 Ala. 73), Watts v. Gayle (20 Ala. 817), and other cases, it was held that the same rule would prevent the reopening on account of errors, of the settlements made of estates in probate courts. In Weaver v. State (39 Ala. 535-540), it operated to prevent the setting' aside of a decision of a court of county commissioners, on-the amount of an assessment for taxes. And in White v. Ryan (31 Ala. 400), Stewart v. Williams (33 Ala. 492), and some other instances — of petition to circuit judges, for supersedeas and retrial, under section 2814 (2408) of the Revised-Code — the petitioners were held to proof of strict diligence unmixed with fault or negligence, to entitle them to relief.In this section 2814, the clause is — “ without fault on his part.” In the section under which the bill in the present cause , was filed, the provision is — “ without any fault or neglect on his part.”
Not only must the plaintiff in such a case have been without fault, but the circumstances showing that he was so must be stated, in order that the court may judge for itself whether he was blameless or not.—French v. Garner, supra; Stewart v. Williams, 33 Ala. 493; Weaver v. State, 39 Ala. 545. In the present bill this is not done, unless the allegation that - proof was submitted to the Probate Court which should have induced it to decide otherwise, can be regarded as a compliance with the rule. But obviously this is the statement of a mere conclusion of those who aver it, or of their pleader, and not a statement of facts from which the conclusion results. Besides, if this averment is true, it discloses affirmatively, that complainants and their counsel were guilty of neglect in not, by bill of exceptions, having the evidence put on the record, and the errors corrected by appeal to this court. The court of chancery is not an appellate or revising court for correction of errors committed by other courts, upon the same evidence which they had jurisdiction to consider, and which was or might have been submitted to them..
The able counsel of appellees argue that causes arising under section 2274 are an exception, in this particular, to the general rule; and that it was intended to confer a revisory jurisdiction on chancery courts over settlements in probate courts, and a right to parties to call it into exercise, whenever the evidence that was before the Probate Court, “ and such other evidence as may be adduced,” if incorporated in a bill of exceptions, would show “error of law or fact” in the judgment of that court on an appeal to this. But, if the “ other evidence” adduced, be required to show such error,, it would not appear that the Probate Court had committed any, upon the evidence that was submitted to its consideration; and by this construction the words “without any fault or neglect on his part,” and the effect which must be given to them, according to numerous decisions of this court, would be wholly ignored. Or, if it is intended they shall not be ignored, then as the issue to be first decided, is, whether such error was committed without fault on the part-of complainant, witnesses must be examined to give testimony on one side, and on the other side to controvert the-testimony given, concerning the evidence that was in fact submitted to the pi’obate judge; an inquiry and practice that could not but be productive of great expense, embarrassment and dissatisfaction. It is to be observed, that the right given by the section in question is given to “ any party” to the settlement, the administrator, as well as distributees; so that, upon the construction contended for, any one of them might drag all the rest into the Chancery Court, almost at will; and the decrees of the Probate Court, which are intended to be of so conclusive a character that executions-upon them may be issued, and appeals taken for the revision of them in the Supreme Court, would thus be made almost-nugatory.
This court stands in the same relation — that of an appellate •tribunal — to the Probate Court as to a court of chancery. It is the complement in our judicial system of either, and the proper forum for the correction of their errors. And where a party complaining of error in such a. settlement in the Probate Court, shows that he was present at it personally and by counsel, and that he produced there evidence upon which he was entitled to a decree in his favor, but omitted, without any good legal reason, to except to the rulings against him of the Probate Court, and’to set forth that evidence and his •exceptions in a bill of exceptions, so that the proceedings might be reviewed on appeal by this court, he discloses on the face of his complaint a want of due diligence. The error, if there be any, does not exist without fault on his part. A •settlement thus made in a court having cognizance of the cause, can not be treated as a nullity, and proceedings be instituted for a re-examination of the same matters, de novo, in a court of concurrent jurisdiction (e. g. a court of chancery), to be thence brought, as it might have been from the Probate Court, to this tribunal, by appeal.—Reynolds v. Dothard, 7 Ala. 664.
Let the judgment of the Chancery Court be here reversed, -and an order made dismissing the bill of complaint at the • costs of appellees in this court and the court below.