69 So. 948 | Ala. | 1915
In the exercise of its undoubted jurisdiction to set aside judgments at law for fraud, chancery has always deemed it inexpedient, if not impracticable, to circumscribe the area of justiceable fraud with a boundary that is fixed and inflexible. Hence, it is that, though general rules of limitation have been formulated and everywhere sanctioned, yet occasional aberrations from these settled rules are to be met with in the exercise of this power by most of the courts of this country. Mr. Pomeroy justly declares that: “The ground for the exercise of this jurisdiction is that there has been no fair adversary trial at law. Consequently a distinction is made between fraud, accident, mistake, and the like, relating to the subject-matter of the action, and similar elements relating to the conduct of the suit. Fraud relating to the subject-matter is not of itself sufficient ground for relief.” — 6 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 648.
So it is said by Mr. Freeman, a profound student of this subject, that: “It is only fraud in the management of the action or proceeding, and by which the complainant was prevented from properly presenting and establishing his cause of action or defense, which may be a ground for relief in equity.” — Note to Little Rock, etc., Ry. Co. v. Wells, 61 Ark. 354, 33 S. W. 208, 30 L. R. A. 560, 54 Am. St. Rep. 218, 232.
In the instant case, the complaint itself warned the defendant (complainant here) that a vital and decisive issue in the case was whether or not the plaintiff was under or over 14 years of age at the time of his injury, and inevitably suggested the defense, viz., a simple negation of the affirmative allegation of the complaint. This was the sole issue upon which the case was tried before the jury on the defendant’s general denial, and on this issue the verdict was rendered. The defendant knew that his defense must lie solely in a denial of this allegation,, which, if established by the plaintiff, would of necessity result in a judgment in his favor. In such a state of the pleadings, and upon such a trial, it is some
The proposition is manifestly inconsistent with the record.
The case of Adler v. Van Kirk, L. & C. Co., 114 Ala. 551, 21 South. 490, 62 Am. St. Rep. 133, is, we think, conclusive to the effect that the complainant was guilty of laches in the tardy discovery of the witnesses with whose testimony he would now overthrow the claim of-the plaintiff in judgment by proving the falsity of H. J. Hill’s testimony, and of the Bible entry, as to the under age of the plaintiff. We quote from the opinion of Chief Justice Brickell in that case: “The bill is essentially a bill of review, based upon alleged newly discovered evidence which, it is the theory of the bill, shows that, by false and fraudulent representations made, several months prior to the rendition of the consent decree, upon an accounting * * * then had between the parties touching the demands secured by the mortgage, the Land & Construction Company, relying upon such representations and believing them to be true, had been induced to admit and to bind itself to pay an amount largely in excess of what was in fact owing by it upon those demands. * * * It is a clear inference from the averments of the bill that the complainant was as fully possessed of the facilities for prosecuting its inquiries before as it was after the consent decree was entered. * * * The only pretence of an excuse offered in the bill for this remarkable supineness is that the complainant, its officers and agents, relied implicitly on the representations, which are alleged to have' been made by a member of the other firm of Worthington, Elliott & De Bardeleben [the plaintiff’s assignor], believing them to be time, and not having any reason to suspect that, they were-untrue. The only re
See, also, to the same effect, McDonald v. Pearson, 114 Ala. 630, 644, 21 South. 534, and Otis v. Dargan, 53 Ala. 178.
It appears in the instant case that the complainant (defendant in judgment) made no effort to investigate the age of the plaintiff at the place of his birth, as confessedly it could have successfully done before the trial; and the fact that he was born in a remote rural community, instead of being an obstacle to success, would undoubtedly give the greater hope of success, since in such communities, as common knowledge informs us, births, deaths, and marriages are noted and remembered by neighbors with amazing accuracy. It may be urged that the complainant did not discover the plaintiff’s birthplace until the trial of the case. But it was cer-. tain that he had a birthplace somewhere, and strongly probable that his parents had neighbors, or even relations, who might have more or less accurate knowledge
It is impossible, as it seems to us, to make any logical distinction between knowingly false statements, made to a litigant by an adversary party respecting the merits of his case, by parol out of court, and by written pleadings and answers to interrogatories filed in court. If he may trustingly accept the one as true, he may, with equal assurance, accept the other. And since a fraudulent purpose to forestall further inquiry and lull into inaction may as well be imputed to the one as to the other, the result would be the insufferable evil of reviewing in chancery courts almost every judgment that has been rendered in adversary suits, than which it is infinitely better that occasional unjust judgments should stand unrebuked, and their wrongful results go unredressed.
We are referred to the case of Hall v. Pegram, 85 Ala. 522, 5 South. 209, 6 South. 612, as an authority which justifies the complainant’s conduct in the present case. But that case is manifestly not in point, for the trust there reposed was by a foreign domiciliary executor in a resident administrator, both representing the same estate, “with relations both actually and officially confidential; and the administrator filed a large claim in his own favor against the estate, at the last moment, and procured its allowance on a final settlement at which the estate was not represented, and of which the foreign executor had no personal notice. So, in the case of Humphreys v. Burleson, 72 Ala. 1, cited in appellant’s brief, relief against a fraudulent judgment was granted because in the language of the opinion: “The relation existing between these parties, the legal relation — that of trustee and cestui que trust — independent of the natural relation of brother and sister, rendered it the duty of the appellee to communicate to the appellant a fair, full, truthful statement, of her interest in the estate he was administering.”
Mr. Pomeroy says that: “In order that [fraudulent] concealment shall be ground for any equitable relief, there must be a duty to. disclose. Ordinarily when there are two parties on an equal footing before the court, there is no such duty. * * * That the adversary has not communicated facts which tend to defeat his claim or to impeach his witnesses is not ground for relief.” —6 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 654.
This principle is also clearly stated by Mr. Freeman in his note to Little Rock, etc., Co., v. Wells, 54 Am. St. Rep. 218, 233.
The case of Taylor v. N. & C. R. R. Co., 86 Tenn. 228, 6 S. W. 393, is strongly relied upon by appellant. That case is somewhat anomalous, as pointed' out by Mr. Freeman in the note above referred to (pages 234, 235). We are not prepared to approve the general principle upon which the court seems to have based its conclusions, but the case is not an authority in point here, for the fraud practiced was of an entirely different character.
In support of the contention that the complainant was entitled to rely upon the genuineness and truthfulness of the Bible entry, we are referred to the case of Boynton v. Chicago, M. & L. Co., 84 Ark. 203, 105, S. W. 77. It appears that the plaintiff’s attorney placed in evidence a certified copy of a recorded- judgment, to-establish a res judicata in the case in suit, which copy, unknown to the defendant and his attorneys, omitted something on the record which would have shown the total invalidity of the judgment. The question presented on a bill filed to set aside the judgment was “whether opposing counsel were negligent in accepting this copy and not examining the court record itself in order to ascertain the truth in regard to this turning point in the titles.”
Without approving that decision, it is sufficient to say that reliance upon the certificate of a public officer as to the contents of a public record at a distant place is a very different thing from reliance upon a private document, exhibited and vouched for only by a partisan adversary. Hence that case is without value here.
Most of the departures from the general rules above stated have been in ex parte proceedings (6 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 654), or where the defendant was absent or not
The case of Wilson v. Wilson, 113 Ala. 670, 21 South. 67, as pointed out on the former appeal in this case, is without value as a precedent on this subject, since the sufficiency of the fraud charged and the diligence shown were in no wise questioned, and the ruling was merely that the evidence established the allegations of the bill.
_ The learned trial judge sustained the demurrer on the ground that the infant plaintiff Hill was not responsible in any way for the fraudulent conduct of his uncle, H. J. Hill, though named as his “next friend” for the prosecution of the suit. We deem it unnecessary to pass upon this question, since we prefer to base our conclusion upon the considerations above stated.
Let the decree of the city court, sustaining the demurrer to the amended bill of complaint, be affirmed.
Affirmed.