42 N.J. Eq. 573 | New York Court of Chancery | 1887
The defendant demurs to the complainant’s bill for want of equity, and the question which this condition of the pleading presents is whether, taking every fact set forth in the bill to be true, a case is made which entitles the complainant to the relief he asks. The object of the bill is to obtain relief against a decree entered in this court on the mandate of the court of errors
The court of errors and appeals, iu its opinion, declared that the frauds charged were established by six different and distinct classes of - proof. As the frauds on which the present bill rests consist in a charge that a certain book was fraudulently altered after it was received in evidence, thus making it furnish forged evidence of fraud, and that the effect of certain other evidence was so artfully and ingeniously misrepresented, on the argument before the court of errors and appeals, as to constitute a fraud on
These are the facts on which the decree assailed rests. Whether or not the evidence in support of them is sufficient to demonstrate their truth, or whether it has been rightly or wrongly understood or interpreted; in short, whether these facts are true or
As already stated, the decree in question is assailed on two grounds. First, it is alleged that a certain piece of documentary proof, put in evidence by the receiver, in his suit against Dringer, was altered by Dringer’s clerk, by the procurement of the receiver,after it had been received in evidence, so as to make it furnish forged evidence of fraud. The pith of the bill on this point is contained in the following averment:
“And your orator charges that the last three items, on the first page of Exhibit 112 for the complainant, were entered long after the other items were entered thereupon, and after the book had been offered in evidence, and were made for the purpose, as your orator believes, of defrauding your orator, and misrepresenting him in the court of errors and appeals, and in pursuance of a conspiracy entered into between Mills Green and the receiver to ruin and destroy your orator and his business.”
It is more difficult to describe, with brevity and precision, the other fraud charged. The charge runs through many pages of the bill, and is made in a variety of forms, and with- much verbiage and argumentation. The substance of it, however, is, as I understand it, that the counsel of the receiver, in the production of the proofs, and by their subsequent collocation and classification for argument, so ingeniously and artfully arranged them as to conceal the real truth, and to impress upon facts, which were innocent in themselves, and would have so appeared if the whole of them, with their connections and surroundings, had been put in evidence, an appearance of fraud, thus misleading and deceiving the court of errors and appeals. The last ground will be considered first.
Stated plainly, it will be observed that the last charge amounts to this: that the receiver, in trying his case, put in evidence such facts or such parts of the facts of the case as he thought furnished proof of fraud, and left out such as. he thought had an opposite tendency, and that his counsel, in the preparation of the proofs for argument, so arranged them as to.make the evidence upon which he relied to demonstrate the fact of fraud as
There can be no doubt that the first ground stated in the bill imputes to the-defendant in this action a fraud of the most iniquitous character. He is charged with both corruption and.forgery.
The court of errors and appeals simply found the fact of fraud; they adjudged that Dringer had, by fraudulent means,, obtained a large quantity of waste material, for which he should be required to pay; but they did not attempt to fix the extent of his frauds or the value of the material thus obtained, but referred that matter to a master. The master was at liberty to hear proofs. A large mass of testimony was taken respecting the alleged alteration of Exhibit 112. If that book was altered, as the complainant charges it was, the alteration could do him no harm, except as it augmented or strengthened the force of the-proof of fraud. On the accounting he had a right to prove, if he could, that the entries, which he says are forgeries, were so, and if he demonstrated that fact to the satisfaction of the master, he would relieve himself from all liability for the value of the material, which he says the entries falsely show that he had obtained.
The bill does not allege that the master charged him with the value of the material which he says was fraudulently entered against him. In the absence of such an allegation, it must be taken as true that he was not charged with this material. Hence, it is obvious that the only injury he sustained by the fraud was-in the added force which the forged entries gave to the other proof of fraud. If, therefore, it appears that there was other-proof in the ease sufficient to establish the fact of fraud, so that without the forged entries the same result would have been reached and the same judgment would have been pronounced, then it will necessarily follow that the decree in question is not the sole product of the -fraud here charged, but that it stands on an independent foundation, entirely aside from the fraud here-charged. If this is so, it is plain that the decree cannot be dis- - turbed, and that this court has no power to touch it. In suits of this kind the court cannot give relief in a doubtful case. In the language of Chief-Justice Marshall^ “ the equity of a complainant,” to entitle him to relief in such a case, “ must be free from doubt.” Marine Insurance Co. v. Hodgson, 7 Cranch 332 The
The litigation between these parties has already extended over a period of more than ten years. More than five years prior to the filing of the bill now under consideration the present complainant applied for leave to file a bill asking this court to review the decree assailed in this suit. Jewett v. Dringer, 4 Stew. Eq. 586. His application was based on the same matters set up in his present bill. He subsequently attempted to litigate the same matters on the accounting, and his bill in this case alleges that the decree made by this court, on the accounting, is now pending, on his appeal, in the court of errors and appeals. The litigation has certainly assumed forms sufficient and occupied time enough to enable the complainant to obtain all the justice he is entitled to. Private interests, as well as the public good, would seem to require that the litigation should come to an end. The language used by Mr. Justice Miller, in United States v. Throckmorton, supra, should, I think, be repeated, with emphasis, in this case. He said: “ There are no maxims of the law * * * of more value in the administration of justice than the two which are designed to prevent repeated litigation between the same parties
For these reasons, I think, the demurrer must be sustained, with costs.