In 1862 a decree was rendered in the probate court of Warren county against the plaintiff in error, as exec
On the 29th day of April, 1868, the constitutional convention of that year passed an ordinance, of which the following is a copy of section one:
“ Be it ordained by the people of the state of Mississippi, in convention assembled, that in all cases where judgments in the circuit courts and decrees in the chancery or probate courts of this state have been rendered since the 9th day of January, 1861, and prior to this date, the., party against whom such judgment or decree has been rendered, whether in a representative capacity or otherwise, shall be entitled to a new trial upon filing an affidavit that he or she had no attorney or counsel present at the time of the rendition of said judgment or decree, and that he or she believes that said judgment or decree is unjust.” This ordinance was not submitted to the people.
On the 16th day of March, 1870, a motion was entered in the chancery court of Madison county, under the ordinance above quoted, to set aside the decree of April 7, 1865, and for a re-hearing, which motion was overruled by the chancellor at a regular term of the court in July, 1870. . Prom the decree overruling the said motion, an appeal was taken to this court.
The question for our determination is as to the force and effect of the ordinance upon which the motion overruled was based. The question, whether the judgments
As before stated, the decree sought to be opened in virtue of the ordinance of the convention of 1868, was rendered April 7, 1865. The suspension of the statute of limitations, by the act of December, 1862, expired April 2, 1867.
Conceding this statute to apply to bills of review and appeals, which it does not in terms, the time to file a bill of review expired April 7, 1869 (if not April 7, 1867), and the limitation of appeal terminated April 7, 1870 (if not April 7, 1867), the period within which a new trial or a re-hearing could be had by application to the court rendering the judgment or decree, had long before passed. In 1870, when the motion, the decree overruling which is under review, was made and decided, the constitution framed by the convention of 1868 had been ratified, and the state government organized thereby was in full operation. As to the decree sought to be annulled by ordinance, the court had full jurisdiction of the cause and the parties. At the date of the passage of the ordinance, it was too late to obtain a new trial or re-hearing by application to the court rendering the judgment or decree. The time within which to file a bill of review had also expired. But there was, perhaps, then open to the party the right of appeal. 40 Miss. 611. In all other respects, the rights of the parties had become fixed by .the then existing laws of the staté.
The constitutional convention of 1868 assembled under the authority of the laws of congress, popularly
With these preliminary statements, we are prepared to advert to our theory of the true .solution of the question before us, our conclusion being based upon a most extended and patient examination of all the authorities within our reach. Upon such research, we are of the opinion that the ordinance above quoted is a judicial, and not a legislative act, and, therefore, unauthorized.
Adding the authorities consulted, we might here conclude this opinion; but the importance of the question involved, and its novelty in the jurisprudence of our state, lead us to a brief elucidation of the subject as it
The question presented being essentially peculiar to a country of constitutions and laws, the authorities referred to are exclusively American, and are found in three different periods of our history, viz.: 1. Pre-revolutionary; 2. Prom the adoption of the federal constitution to the late rebellion; 3. Adjudications to which reconstruction has given rise. (1.) Prior to the adoption of the federal constitution, certain of the state legislatures combined the character of a legislature and a court, exercising the powers of both. (2.) With the supremacy of the federal compact then obtained, the American policy or law of distributing the functions of government into executive, legislative and judicial departments, and prohibiting the exercise of the duties of one by the other, or by either of them. (3.) Reconstruction, as a necessity of the late war, was altogether novel, and the problems thence arising anomalous. The ’first period furnishes, for the ordinance in question, but one precedent, fully referred to hereafter. During the second period we are not aware that judicial acts were
The cases cited'in support of the action of the convention of this state may be here briefly referred to. A single case is presented where the legislature of Connecticut, in 1795, granted a new trial in a cause wherein the time for apjieal had passed; a few cases indicate the power of a legislature, by retroactive laws, to allow the right of appeal, where the time has expired, or never existed; and others are precedents for laws conferring upon courts a discretion to entertain bills of review, where the time to file them has passed, or where the right was not before provided for;/ but these authorities are believed to be exceptional and special, or inapplicable to the case at bar, and in no way establish the doctrine contended for by the plaintiff in error, The earliest adjudication cited, is that of Colder v. Bull, 2 Root, 350, decided in 1796. The legislature of Connecticut having granted a new trial in a cause in the court of probate, on appeal, the court of last resort said : “ The power of granting new trials was ever exercised by the general assembly of this state; ” show
Two considerations are invoked in support of the claim of the plaintiff in error, which demand attention. 1. The supposed enlarged, if not unrestricted, powers of a constitutional convention. 2. The character of the government at the time of the rendition of the judgment in which a new trial is sought.
As to the first. /A constitutional convention is convened to build up, not to tear down; to protect, not to destroy; Our American system is peculiarly one of established, regulated law. (if, in our system, there is any one feature pre-eminently prominent, it is a sacred regard for law and private rights} A part of the American system, impressed alike upon the people and the
In regard to the second. Dealing with the delicate questions growing out of the war, we have deemed it the course of wisdom and justice to follow, as far as we could understand it, the spirit of the solution of these matters furnished by the supreme court of the United States, rather than precedents of some of the states. These appear to have pursued the policy of political passion, or followed theories, correct perhaps in the abstract, to impolitic, if not unwise conclusions. At any rate, whether right or wrong, we have not been disposed to act upon extreme views in adjudicating the rights of parties, but have treated, as valid and binding, without constitutional or legislative approval, the con
In view of the subject under review, we remark:
1. If a legislative body may grant a new trial, it may order a continuance, annul a judgment, suspend a trial, direct the judgment to be entered, and otherwise interfere with the discretion and independence of the judiciary. The evils that would flow from such an assertion of legislative power are too apparent to be enumerated, and need not be here undertaken.
2. Placing the solution of the case at bar upon the sole ground of a usurpation of judicial attributes by the convention, we waive, as unnecessary, a discussion of the vexed questions of vested rights, the obligation of contracts, retrospective legislation, due process of law, property in judgments, remedial laws, with incidental and kindred matters propounded and discussed in nearly every case involving any one of this family of questions, and by which cases we are sustained in‘the result herein arrived at.
3. The right of the restored governments to annul, re-open or evade the judgments of the Confederate courts — whether, if those judgments were void, they could be made valid by the approval of the restored governments — and the wisdom of interfering with those judgments, if the right to do so were conceded, are questions which are discussed and variously acted upon
Without further discussion, we append the authorities coming under our observation in the examination of this case. Adjudications bearing more directly upon the power of a legislative body to perform judicial acts: 15 Penn. St. 18 ; 10 N. Y. 396 ; 1 N. H. 199 ; 2 Chip. (Vt.) 77; 7 Humph. 152; 9 Gill. & J. 365; 39 Penn. St. 146; 43 ib. 512; 3 R. I. 299; 4 ib. 324; 2 Allen, 361; 11 Penn. St. 490; 37 Ga. 158; 40 ib. 493; 3 N. Y. 511; 3 Me. 335; 4 Ind. 301; 3 Scam. 238; ib. 469; 5 Gilm. 417 ; 26 Cal. 135; 36 Me. 9; 50 ib. Ill; 5 Pick. 65; 6 Selden, —; 3 Mich. 436 ; 21 ib. 390; 10 Md. 478 ; 18 ib. 193; 8 Blackf. 10; 24 Ark. 91; 33 Cal. 279; 16 ib. 11; 17 ib. 547; 10 Yerger, 59 ; 5 Humph. 165; 41 Ala. 153; 1 Daniel Ch. (Yt.) 237; 10 How. 395; 7 Peters, 222; 11 How. 185; 2 Peters, 380; 8 ib. 110; 35 Ga. 26; 38 ib. 285; Phillip (N. C.), 149, 209; 15 S. C. (Richardson), 84; 21 La. Ann. 325; 44 Mo. 570; 7 Caldwell, 15; 32 Texas, 1; 43 Ala. 173, 224. Whether a judgment is property and a vested right: 2 Wendell’s Blackstone, 396, 436, 464; 2 Kent (11th ed.), 432, 487; 50 Me. Ill; 12 N. Y. 209; 4 Dev. 15; 16 Penn. St. 266; 17 B. Monroe, 176; 1 Mich. 56; 10 Cal.
It is believed that the ordinance under review is without a precedent, and without the support of an accredited authority in the United States. No day is given the opposite party in court to contest the motion for a new trial. In fact, no motion is required. Upon filing an affidavit of merits, and the absence of counsel at the rendition of the judgment or decree, a new trial is awarded, not by the court, but by force of the ordinance. Hence, we say it was a judicial act, and, therefore, unauthorized. Texas v. White, 7 Wall. —; Act of Cong., approved March 2, 1867, and the several acts supplementary thereto; Cooley’s Const. Lim. 95, 369, 569, 413, 355, 569; Potter’s Dwarris, 430 ; 12 N. Y. 209; 4 Hill, 147 ; 13 N. Y. 395 ; Hob. 85 ; 8 Coke, 118 ; 12 Mod. 669 ; 2 Chip. 77 ; 39 Penn. St. 146 ; 1 N.H. 204; 16 Penn. St. 266; 7 Humph. 152 ; 3 Johns. 299; Regents v. Williams, 9 G. & J. ; 43 Penn. St. 512 ; 10 N. Y. 396 ; 2 Allen, 361 ; 37 Ga. 158; 11 Penn. St. 490; 39 ib. 137 ; 3 N. Y. 511; 12 ib. 209; 4 R. I. 324 ; 7 G. & J. 206; 3 Me. 326; 39 Ga. 493; 15 Penn. St. 18; 7 Johns. 477; 4 Ind. 301.
The decree appealed from, denying a new trial or rehearing in the case at bar, is affirmed.
A re-argument was applied for, but refused by the court.