76 W. Va. 111 | W. Va. | 1915
This is a lien creditors’ suit. It is made up by the consolidation of two causes, separately instituted. The decrees
We need only set forth those matters which tend to proper decision. There are many ins and outs to be eliminated. They are in no wise material to a true view of the disposition which we find must be made of the case.
None of the defendants who are now appealing appeared to the original bill in either of the causes, nor to the amended and supplemental bill filed in one of them, which latter bill attacked the conveyances to the sons as being in fraud of the plaintiff and other creditors. The bills were taken for confessed as to all these parties. They did not answer, take exceptions to the report of the commissioner, or appear in any manner. So in the natural course of events, decrees appropriate to the ease so confessed were entered against, them. One decree set aside the alleged fraudulent conveyances. A subsequent decree adjudged certain Hens to exist on the real estate thereby conveyed, as well as on remaining lands of the grantors, and ordered a sale of all the property for the payment and satisfaction of the liens.
When the property was advertised for sale pursuant to' the decree, these' appellants filed a bill of review and obtained a stay of the proceedings. They asked a review for errors. The errors alleged by them were such as would be apparent from the face of the record. They were those for which a bill of review would lie. The proper parties were named as defendants to this bill of review, but not all of them were summoned to answer it. When it was heard, only some of the parties to be affected by the proceedings therein were before the court by process or appearance. The cause, had not been completely matured for a hearing. Why the appellees allowed it to be proceeded with in this shape, we do not know.
Nevertheless, the court, upon the bill of review, entered a decree totally vacating, annulling, and setting aside the former decrees. At the term at which it did this, it did no more. At a later term, a lien creditor, the City of Charleston, which had failed to present its case theretofore, was permitted to
Now, let us see what a jumble has been made of this case. How stands it? Upon the bill filed by the appellants for a review of the original decrees, those decrees have been reviewed and changed so that the new decree binds some of the parties, while as to others the former decrees have not been affected. The plaintiffs in the original causes which were consolidated, together with some of the lien holding defendants therein who were served with process or appeared, are affected by the proceedings on the bill of review. Those proceedings, however, can not bind the several judgment lien holders whose claims were reported by the commissioner and were decreed in the cause, but who were hot brought before the court in the bill of review proceedings. The original decrees, even if erroneous, are as to them still standing. The proceedings by way of review are abortive as to such parties. Proceedings in a cause can not hind parties who have been merely named as defendants therein, but as to whom the bill has not been matured for a hearing by the service of process to answer
The answer tendered by the appellants was erroneously received. On the bill of review the original cause could not be re-opened to give them an opportunity to deny the fraud which they had confessed by their default, and to rehear the question of fact as to the fraud alleged. A bill seeking to review a cause for errors apparent on the record, can not re-open the case for general rehearing. The procedure brings about an appeal for error, not a re-opening for a continuation of the cause. 1 Hogg’s Equity Procedure, sec. 211. Only errors apparent on the face of the record could be corrected and eliminated by the bill of review which appellants filed.-
Even if all proper parties had been before the court, it would have been'erroneous to set aside totally the decrees in the original cause, and then to allow the cause to stand for further decree, as the court did herein. When a bill of review for errors apparent, on the record has been p'roperly matured for a hearing, the court should review the cause for error, and in one order of decree, like procedure on appeal, adjudicate t[ie whole matter. Goolsby v. St. John, 25 Grat. 146. In this case the court was not only unmindful when it so proceeded without proper parties before it that confusion of rights instead of certainty would result, but it seems-also to have been unmindful of the proper office of a bill of review and the scope of the practice and procedure thereunder.
Manifestly, in the interest of justice we must straighten out the affair. We can not rightly take up the assignments of the appellants while the case is in such shape. Underlying the assigned errors, is the gross error of orders and decrees having been entered on the bill of review in the absence of parties who should have been brought before the court. Without them, the decrees which were attacked for errors could not properly be reviewed. Though this error is not complained of, we must notice it. Surely we can not, for the
The orders and decrees entered on the bill of review will be reversed. The cause must go back to the circuit court with direction that the bill of review be remanded to rules for a maturing by process served on all the defendants. When it is regularly matured and set for hearing, it should be proceeded with according to the established practice in relation to the hearing of bills of review.
Reversed and remanded.