after stating the case as' above reported, delivered the opinion of the court.
There appears to be an ambiguity, if not an inconsistency, 'in the terms of the order or judgment of the general term. It affirms that there is no error in the record and proceedings of the special term, but .does.not affirm its order, which was appеaled from, but in fact dismisses the appeal, as though it had no jurisdiction either to affirm or reverse the order .brought up by the appeal. Interpreting the judgment of the .general terih. by the opinion of the learned judge, who spoke for the court,
Phillips
v.
Negley,
The legal proposition in volved, in the judgment complained of, and necessary to maintain it, is, that the Supreme Court of this District at special term has the same disсretionary power ' over its judgments, rendered at a previous term Of the court, without any motion or other proceeding to that end máde or taken at that term, to set them aside and grant new trials of the actions in.which they were rendered, which it has-over ■ judgments, when such proceedings are taken during the term 'af which they were rendered; and thаt this being true, the' ' proceeding and order of the court, in the exercise of this jurisdiction and discretion, cannot be reviewed on appeal or writ of-error.
This proposition, it is argued, may be deduced from the inherent and implied powers of all courts of record, according to the course of the common law; and, if that fails,' is supplied by the law of Maryland, as to the Supreme Court in the District of Columbia, adopted by the act of Congress of 27th February, 180,1. ’ 2 Stat. Í03.,
The first branch of this proposition'is conclusively negatived ■ for this court, in regard to the powers of the courts of the United States, by the decision in
Bronson
v.
Schulten,
.“In this country all courts have terms and vacations. The time of the commencement of every term, if there be half a dozen a year, is-fixed by statute, and the end of it by the final adjournment of the court for that term. This is .the case with , regard to all the courts of the Uiuted States, and if there be.' *673 exceptions in the' State cоurts they are unimportant. It is a general rule of the law -that all the judgments, decrees, or other orders of the courts, however conclusive in their character, are under the control of the court which pronounces them, during the term at which they are rendered or entered of record, and they may then be set aside, vacated, modified or annulled by that court. But it is a rule equally well established that, after the term has ended, all final judgments and decrees of the court pass beyond its control, unless steps be taken during that term, by motion or otherwise, to set aside, modify or correct them; and if- errors exist, they can only be corrected by such proceeding, by a writ of error or appeal, as may be allowed in a court which, by law,' can review the decision. So strongly has this principle been upheld by this court. that,- while realizing that there is no court which can review its decisions, it has invariably refused all applications for rehearing made after the adjournment of the court for the term ■ at which the judgment wаs rendered. And this is placed upon the ground that the case has passed beyond the, control of the court.”
The opinion then notices an exception- to this rule founded upon the common law writ of error
coram vobis,
by which errors of fact might be corrected, limited generally to the facts that one of the parties to the judgment had died bеfore it was rendered, or w;as an infant and no guardian had appeared or been appointed, or was a
feme
covert, and the like, or error in the process through the fault of the clerk; for which writ, as was said in
Pickett's Heirs
v.
Legerwood,
,ít is equally well established by the decisions of this court
*675
that the appropriate remedy for relief against, judgments at law, wrongfully obtained, is by a bill in equity, and the cases in which that remedy is applicable have been clearly defined. rThat rule was formulated by Chief Justice Marshall in a case arising in this District, of
Marine Insurance Company of Alexandria v.
Hodgson,
But it is argued that the power exercised in the present instance is vested in the Supreme Court of this District by virtue of the laws оf Maryland in force February 27, 1801,. adopted by the act of Congress of that date.
The statute of Maryland supposed to confer this power is an *676 act of 1787, cb. 9, 2 Kilty Laws, Thomp. Dig. 173, relating to continuances, the sixth section of which is as follows:
“ In any case.where a judgment shall be set aside for fraud, deceit, surprise, or irregularity in obtaining the same, ‘the said courts respectively may direct the continuances tó bе entered from the court when such judgment was. obtained, until the court such judgment shall be set aside, and may also continue such cause for so long a time as they shall judge necessary for the trial of the merits between the parties, not exceeding two courts after such cause has been -reinstated, unless, &c.”
This statutory provision, it will be observed, is entirely silent as to the -mode according to Avhich a judgment may be set aside at a subsequent' term, whether by a writ of error- corain vobis or coram nobis, bill in equity, or other procedure, and does not, either'in express terms or. by any necessary implication, provide that it may be done by a motion and summary proceedings thereon; and also, that it seems to procеed upon the idea that continuances should regularly be entered to show that the proceeding, if at law, to set a judgment aside, in theory at least, ought to Originate at the same term at which the judgment was rendered.
The remedy by writ of error
corara^ nobis
continued in force and in use'in Maryland.
Hawkins
v.
Bowie,
9 G.
&
J. 428, 437;
Bridendolph
v.
Zeller’s Executors,
It appears also from the case of
Kearney
v.
Sascer et al.,
It thus appears, that in Maryland, prior to 1801, the only statute in existence referring to the subject, while it assumes the existence' of a power in the courts to set aside their judgments, after the term in which they were rendered, for certain causes, does not specify the modes in which that relief may be administered, and does not enumerate a summary proceeding by motion as one of them; that the cases in which that relief has been administered in that way have all arisen and been decided since the date of thе cession to the United States of the territory constituting the District of Columbia ; that these decisions are.based, not upon the statute as creating or conferring such power, but upon an interpretation of the common law by which all courts of record are assumed to be possessed of it, as adherent in and incident.to their constitution as courts of justice; that, in whatever form, the proceedings are regarded, ' not as interlocutory steps in the original cause, but as independent applications to a legal discretion governed by fixed rules, and, therefore, terminating in final judgments, subject as in other cases to review or error in a court of appeal; and that the jurisdiction of chancery by a plenary suit in equity is not excluded, but is maintained and exercised in conformity with the general principles of' equity jurisprudence.
It follows from this statement that these decisions of' the Maryland courts, being founded upon general principles, and made since the organization of the District of Columbia, are not binding upon the courts of the District as authorities, though entitled to all the 'respect due to the opinions of the highest court of the State; a rule acted upon in this court in
Ould
v.
Washington
Hospital,
Meversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to dismiss the motion of the defendant, but without frejudice, to his right to file a bill in equity.
