7 Gill 333 | Md. | 1848
delivered the opinion of this court.
This court at the hearing of the former appeal between these parties, having directed an audit to be made in this court, thereupon remanded the,cause to the chancery court, with directions to sell the mortgaged premises according to the usual course in such cases, unless McClellan should pay into that court, the sum ascertained by said audit in this court, to be due to the appellee.
The appellee, (Crookj) had been for a series of years, tenant of the mortgaged estate; and in the audit here referred to, the rents for which he had become chargable, were credited in fav.or of McClellan against the mortgage demand of Crook, up to the period on which the chancellor decreed, November 19th 1844. It is now averred, that Crook continued to occupy the premises as tenant, subsequent to the period thus assumed by the audit in this court, and that Me Clellan is consequently entitled to credits, in reduction of the sum decreed under said audit, to be brought into the court of chancery. He accordingly files his petition in that .court, shewing the amount of rents, which he claims to have accrued in his favor by Crook's occupancy since the allowance in said audit.
But the chancellor considering the decree of the Court of Appeals conclusive, and that his authority was limited to the execution of the decree, .dismissed the petition. And the question presented upon the present appeal is, whether there is error in the opinion thus expressed by the chancellor.
This petition, can in no yiew, be considered as part of th.e original proceedings, but as substantially new matter of relief, predicated upon the principles of the decree passed by the Court of Appeals. That decree disposed of the entire subject in controversy upon the pleadings and proofs exhibited; and the cause was remanded to the chancery court, with instructions to the chancellor to enforce the decree; to direct the mortgage property to be sold, according to the usual practice of the court of chancery, unless McClellan within the time specified, paid into court, the sum adjudged by this court to be due. It was a final
But all this necessarily requires the chancellor to open the .decree of this court, which as before said, was intended to be conclusive on the chancellor* He must consider that decree .as rightly and definitively settling every question, properly presented to the .court, and his action upon it is strictly confined •within the limits presented to him.
The matter now suggested by the petition of the appellant, was not in issue at the time of the chancellor’s decree, but has arisen subsequently; even if within the principles declared by the Court of Appeals. Upon the record before the chancellor, and on the questions within that record, this tribunal has acted, and passed a definite decree, in relation to the entire subject presented to the chancellor, and to this court. Thus, the whole subject then in litigation, has been finally disposed of by the decree of this court. That decree has become the law of the case, and the chancellor cannot otherwise deal with the matters thus adjudicated, than in the form prescribed.
In presenting this case, upon argument by the counsel for the appellant, it is conceded, that “the difficulty arises from an
As a final decree of this court, conclusive on the chancellor, he was right in rejecting the petition; and his decision is affirmed.
decision affirmed.