19 S.W.2d 1030 | Ark. | 1929
H. G. Pugh Company, a corporation, brought this suit in equity against J. D. Ahrens to enjoin him from enforcing a judgment in the circuit court, on the ground that it was procured by fraud. The facts on which the relief is based may be briefly stated as follows:
J. D. Aherns sued H. G. Pugh Company, a corporation, of which H. G. Pugh is president, to recover an amount alleged to be due for premiums on two policies of insurance upon the life of its president. Ahrens recovered judgment in the circuit court, which was affirmed on appeal. H. G. Pugh Co. v. Ahrens,
The chancery court overruled a motion of the plaintiff to transfer the case to the circuit court, and sustained a plea treated by the court as a demurrer to the complaint. It was therefore decreed that the complaint *830 should be dismissed for want of equity, and the plaintiff has appealed. HART, C.J.
(after stating the facts). The opinion of the chancery court was correct. The complaint in the case at bar asks that a judgment between the parties in the circuit court be enjoined as having been procured by fraud. Ahrens sued Pugh Company to recover judgment for an amount alleged to be due for premiums on two insurance policies, and recovered judgment. He was a witness for himself, and his testimony sustained his right to recover. In the present case it is alleged that his testimony was false, and the falsity of his testimony in the circuit court is made the basis of plaintiff's cause of action in the case at bar.
It is the settled law of this State that the fraud which will justify the setting aside of a judgment or decree of a court must be such as prevented the unsuccessful party from fully presenting his case, or which operated as a fraud or imposition upon the jurisdiction of the court. Mere false testimony is not enough, if the disputed matter was all issue in the case in which it is claimed that it was given. The truth or falsity of the testimony of Ahrens was a material issue in the circuit court case.
It has been well said that the mischief of retrying every case in which the judgment or decree rendered on false testimony, given by perjured witnesses, would be greater, by reason of the endless nature of the strife, than any compensation from doing justice in individual cases. United States v. Throckmorton,
It follows that the decree must be affirmed. *831