J.E. GROOVER and Lucy Lee Groover, his wife, Appellants,
v.
Calvin WALKER, Appellee.
Supreme Court of Florida, Special Division A.
*313 James G. Pace and A.F. Barone, Miami, for appellants.
Sweet & Wolf and Joseph Pardo, Miami, for appellee.
PATTERSON, Associate Justice.
Plaintiff below filed his bill in the nature of a bill of review to have an earlier decree of foreclosure and sale vacated and to allow plaintiff to redeem the property sold under the previous foreclosure sale. After answer, both plaintiff and defendants moved for summary final decree and upon hearing the Chancellor, Honorable Vernon Hawthorne, granted defendants' motion and on December 13, 1954, entered summary final decree for defendants dismissing plaintiff's suit. On December 22, 1954, plaintiff filed a Petition for Rehearing of said summary final decree and on January 19, 1955 filed an amended Petition for Rehearing directed to the same summary final decree. In the meanwhile, on December 31, 1954, the term of Judge Hawthorne expired and he was succeeded as Chancellor by Honorable Fritz Gordon. On February 8, 1955, Judge Gordon granted the Petition for Rehearing, set aside the summary final decree entered by Judge Hawthorne on December 13, 1954 and entered final decree vacating the certificate of title in the prior foreclosure and ordering that the property involved in the foreclosure be resold by the Clerk unless redeemed within ten days.
This appeal is taken from such final decree of February 8th.
Appellants, defendants below, are content to rest their appeal in this Court on two questions of procedure: (1) does our chancery practice permit a rehearing of a summary final decree and (2) may a successor Chancellor reverse the final order or decree of his predecessor, no new facts being made to appear.
Assuming, but not deciding, that Petitions for Rehearing may properly be addressed to summary final decrees in chancery, the decisive question to be decided in this case is whether Judge Gordon, sitting in the case as successor to Judge Hawthorne who had entered summary final decree for the defendants, had authority to set aside such final decree on the basis of the matter presented to him in the petition for rehearing on which he acted to vacate and reverse his predecessor's final decree.
The Court is committed to the general proposition that a successor judge may not correct errors of law committed by his predecessor and hence he cannot review and reverse on the merits and on the same facts the final orders and decrees of his predecessor. In Smith v. Mobley,
"A successor judge generally cannot review, modify or reverse, upon the merits, on the same facts, the final orders of his predecessor unless there exists some special circumstances such as mistake or fraud perpetrated on the court. 33 C.J. Judges, § 104, (p. 973); Annotation,132 A.L.R. 14 .
"It is also generally held that where an application is made to a court seeking the exercise of a discretionary authority and such application has already been made to and passed on by a predecessor judge, the successor may not reverse or modify the previous ruling. Annotation supra. The motion for new trial and petition for rehearing thereof were addressed to the discretion of the Court. Florida Dairies Co. v. Ward,131 Fla. 76 ,178 So. 906 . The motion to vacate the final judgment was addressed to the discretion of the court. Alabama Hotel Co. v. J.L. Mott Iron Works,86 Fla. 608 ,98 So. 825 . Both were founded on and supported by the same facts and legal arguments.
"The rule stated does not derogate that line of decisions in this State holding, as in Alabama Hotel Co. v. J.L. Mott Iron Works,86 Fla. 608 ,98 So. 825 , supra, a courts' order, however conclusive, to be under the control of that court during the term at which the order was rendered. It does not follow from this recognition of the court's inherent power over its own actions that a successor judge may reverse or modify his predecessor's final orders or discretionary rulings where the facts remain unchanged."
Appellee cites and relies heavily on United American Ins. Co. v. Oak,
The relief sought in this case in the Court below, and denied by the summary final decree entered by Judge Hawthorne, was the vacating of an earlier foreclosure sale of appellee's property wherein it is claimed, for reasons set out, that appellee had not had proper notice and opportunity of redemption, with harsh and inequitable result. We have carefully examined the record below and the petition for rehearing on which the successor Chancellor reversed his predecessor's summary final decree denying the relief sought and find that such petition for rehearing, contrary to the recognized scope of petitions for rehearing, did not bring to the Court's attention any point the Court overlooked or failed to consider in entering its final decree, but on the other hand merely charges that the Court erred in its view of the facts and equities of the cause resulting in an erroneous final decree, and seeks to reargue the case on the same facts and arguments presented theretofore to the predecessor Chancellor in the hearing on motion for summary final decree. Under such circumstances, and under the rule of Smith v. Mobley, supra, such are not proper matters to be presented to another circuit judge and under the general rule approved in Lawyers Co-op. Pub. Co. v. Williams, supra, were not such matters that would authorize a successor Chancellor to reverse the final decree of his predecessor.
We are impelled to the conclusion that every consequential fact and argument in support of the decree of February 8th was before the Court for consideration when the decree of December 13th was entered; and that the later decree constitutes an outright reversal by a successor Chancellor of the final decree of his predecessor on the same facts and arguments. It was therefore entered without authority and must be reversed.
It is so ordered.
DREW, C.J., and HOBSON and THORNAL, JJ., concur.
