93 Va. 595 | Va. | 1896
delivered the opinion of the court.
The single assignment of error in the petition for an appeal in this case is to the action of the Circuit Court of Rock-bridge county in sustaining the demurrer to the petitioners’ bill.
The bill fiied March 19,1896, by the Diamond State Iron Company and others on behalf of themselves and all other creditors of The Alex. K. Rarig Company, a corporation chartered by the Circuit Court of Rockbridge county, Va., August 30, 1890, against The Alex. K. Rarig Company, Alex. K. Rarig & Company, and numerous other parties, stockholders or subscribers to the stock of The Alex. K. Rarig Company, avers that the complainants are creditors of The Alex. K. Rarig Company, and after setting out their respective demands, the amounts thereof, &c., it says that on the 9th day of February, 1892, The Alex. K. Rarig Company conveyed all of its assets to J. E. Mullen, trustee, for the benefit ratably of all its creditors; that on the third Monday in March, 1892, the Southern Railway Supply Company, a supply lienor of The Alex. K. Rarig Company, filed a bill in the Circuit Court of Rockbridge county, on behalf of itself and all other creditors, against The Alex. K. Rarig Company, and Mullen, trustee, for the specific object of enforcing its lien, and, incidentally, for having an account stated of all liens and their priorities; that the Pocahontas Coal Company also filed a bill in the same court against the same defendants for the enforcement of its supply lien; that on the 20th of April, 1892, The Morgan Engineering Company and others filed their bill of complaint in the Corporation Court of the city of Buena Vista against the same defendants, the objects of which were to have the deed of trust of February 9,1892, to Mullen, trustee, administered under the supervision and
It is further averred that the agreement to purchase of Rarig & Company $25,000 of the capital stock of The Alex. Kb Rarig Company was by the express terms of the contract of August 16, 1890, an individual liability of the subscribers, with which The Alex. Kb Rarig Company had no concern; that the action of the stockholders’ meeting of September 5, 1890, in authorizing, and of the officers of the company in making payment of this sum of $25,000 to Alex. K. Rarig was ultra vires, and, as to complainants, creditors of the company, it was a grossly fraudulent misappropriation of the funds of the company, which then undertook to act as a corporate body; that, at the time, Alex. Kb Rarig was president of The Alex. E. Rarig Company, and a member of the firm of Alex. E. Rarig & Company, which firm held $150,000 of the stock of The Alex. E. Rarig Company, out of a total issue of $275,000, and was present and participated in the stockholders’ meeting which authorized said payment, and that without his vote the illegal action could not have been taken and carried out. Therefore complainants charge that this $25,000 was a trust fund for creditors of The Alex. E. Rarig Company, and that Alex. E. Rarig & Company who received, as well as the parties of the second part to the contract of August 16, 1890, whose debts the funds of The Alex. E. Rarig Company were used to pay, are personally liable to complainants for the damage they have sustained by reason of the premises.
The bill prays that it may, in so far as applicable, be treated as a petition in the consolidated cause of the Southern Railway Supply Co. et als. v. Alex. K. Rarig Co. et als.; that the decree in that cause entered at the September term, 1894, in so far as it attempts to strike the cause from the docket, be set aside; that said cause be reinstated on the docket; that an order be entered therein revoking the order of September 19, 1893, empowering the receiver to sue for the recovery of the $25,000, mentioned in his report of September
The question first presented is: Can the complainants' bill be considered as a petition to rehear the decree of September 15, 1894, and if not, can it be considered as a bill of review?
It .is the disposition of courts of equity to regard substance rather than form, and so to mould the pleadings as to attain the real justice of the case, and to this end a petition for a rehearing is sometimes treated as a bill of review and vice versa. 1 Bar. Ohy. Prac., 127, 331-2, and cases cited. Here, however, the bill cannot be treated as a petition to rehear, or as a bill of review. The decree asked to be reheard is a final decree, and the bill falls far short of containing the requisites of a bill of review. When the application for leave to file a bill of review is based upon the allegation of after discovered evidence, it is never a matter of right, but rests in the sound discretion of the court. It must be supported by affidavits, which must set forth, and satisfactorily prove, that the evidence is not only new, but such as the party by the use of reasonable diligence could not have known of; for, if there be any laches
The evidence must have been discovered since the decree, and must appear to be material to the case, and such as would probably effect a different result; for immaterial or merely cumulative testimony will not suffice to sustain a bill of review, and if a party should be allowed to go on to a decree without looking for evidence which might be obtained by a proper search, and afterwards, upon finding the evidence, file a bill of review, there would be no end to such bills. 1 Bar. Chy. Pr. 336-7 and cases cited. Campbell’s Exor. v. Campbell’s Exor., 22 Gratt. 674.
There is no suggestion in the bill here of any after discovered evidence, nor was the bill sworn to, nor was the leave of court obtained for filing it, both of which are requisite in reference to a bill of review based upon this ground. Nor are there shown anywhere in the bill errors upon the face of the record in the first suit, nor does the bill aver the necessary parties to make it a bill of review, as the plaintiffs in the creditors’ bill in the former consolidated causes are ■omitted, while, in addition to making the defendants in the former suit defendants here, the subscribers to the stock of The Alex. K. Rarig Company are also made defendants.
The complainants here were parties to the former suit, and participated in the distribution of the assets of The Alex. K. Rarig Company among its creditors in that cause, as ■shown by the final decree therein of September 15, 1894, wherein appears this clause: “ And it appearing * * * that a final settlement has been made with all the creditors •entitled to the payment out of said funds,” (the fund arising from the sale of company’s property in that suit) “it is therefore adjudged, &c.” “ And, it appearing that the object •of this suit has been accomplished, it is ordered that this ■cause be stricken from the docket.”
The deed of assignment to Mullen, trustee, which was
Treating the bill then as an original bill, the question remains whether or not the matters sought to be litigated are-res adjudicata.
The doctrine so well and comprehensively stated by Vice Chancellor Wigram is founded upon the familiar maxim in our jurisprudence that no person shall be twice vexed for one and the same cause. The rule has found its way into every system of jurisprudence, not only from its obvious fitness and propriety, but because, without it, an end could never be put to litigation. It has been sanctioned and approved in numerous cases decided by this court, among which are S. V. R. R. Co. v. Griffith, &c., 76 Va. 913; Withers Adm’r v. Sims, 80 Va. 660, 661; McCullough v. Dashiell, 85 Va. 41; Fishburn v. Ferguson, 85 Va. 321; Osburn v. Throckmorton, 90 Va. 316; Beale v. Gordon, 21 S. E. R. 667. See also Wells Res. Adj., section 282; Freeman on Judgments, sections 246, 249 and 256.
It clearly appears from the bill and exhibits that all the\ matters set up here were, or might and should have been litigated in the original suit. According to the bill, both arose
For the foregoing reasons, we are of opinion that there is no error in the decree of the Circuit Court of Rockbridge county sustaining the demurrer to the complainants’ bill, and it is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.