109 F. 97 | 8th Cir. | 1901
At the May term, 1897, of this court, the present case, entitled “E. P. Reynolds and Company, Appellants, v. The Manhattan Trust Company et al., Appellees,” was decided on the merits. Vide 55. U. S. App. 9(5, 27 C. C. A. 620, 83 Fed. 593. The opinion was handed down on November 15, 1897, and the court was adjourned for the term on the 29th of the same month. The mandate of this court ivas transmitted to the circuit court, in accordance with our rules, at the succeeding December term, to wit, January 8, 1893, and was duly filed in the circuit court. On February 26, 1898, a motion was lodged in this court, which presents the question now to he determined, praying that the original mandate be revoked, and that a new mandate issue, directing the entry of a different decree than the one required to be entered by the original mandate.
As will appear from our original decision (27 C. C. A. 621, 622, 83 Fed. 593, where the facts are stated in detail), E. P. Reynolds & Co. filed a cross bill in a railroad foreclosure suit which was then pending in the circuit court of the United States for the district of Nebraska, to establish a mechanic’s lien against the mortgaged property in the sum of $37,400 for work and labor done in the construction of the railroad. At a certain stage of the proceedings in the foreclosure case, as the lien was contested by the trustee in the mortgage, a bond was given to secure the payment of the amount of the appellants’ claim, if their lien should be eventually established and declared to be paramount to the mortgage indebtedness. After the giving of this bond the foreclosure suit proceeded to its legitimate termination, and the road was sold under a decree of foreclosure, and passed into the possession of the purchasers at such sale. The claim for a lien was referred to a master for hearing and determination, who eventually filed a report to the effect thai the cross complainants, Reynolds & Co., were entitled to a lien upon the proceeds of
We feel disposed to concede that if a timely application had been made to this court, by a petition for a rehearing, to modify its judgment, and to enter an order adjudging that the appellants have a lien upon the railroad, and that the road be sold if the amount of the lien was not paid by a given date, such relief might have been granted, notwithstanding the provisions of the decree of foreclosure that the mortgaged property should be sold “free and clear of all liens,” etc. Keynolds & Oo. had not become parties to the foreclosure suit when the decree containing this provision was entered. The order directing that a bond might be given for the payment of the lien if the same should be established and adjudged superior to the mortgage indebtedness did not in terms provide that the giving of the bond should operate as a release of the lien and transfer the liability to the bondsmen, as it should have done if such was intended to be its effect; and the bond which was actually given did not conform strictly to the terms of the order permitting it to be given, because it was not signed by both of the purchasers at the foreclosure sale, as the order required. For these reasons, we shall concede for present purposes that it was within the power of this court to have modified its original judgment, if relief of that nature had been sought during the period when the judgment was subject to its control. No such relief was sought, however, during the term at which the judgment
“No principle is better settled or of more universal application than that no court can reverse or annul its own final decrees or judgments for errors of fact or law after the term in which they have been rendered, unless for clerical mistakes; * * * from whieb it follows that no change or modiíication can be made which may substantially vary or affect it in any material thing.”
The same doctrine was reiterated in Bank v. Moss, 6 How. 31, 38, 12 L. Ed. 331; and in Bronson, v. Schulten, 104 U. S. 410, 415, 26 L. Ed. 797, 799, it was declared to be “a general rule of 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,” the court said, “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 decision, it has invariably refused all applications for rehearing made after the adjournment of the court for the term at which the judgment was rendered. And this is placed upon the ground that the case has passed beyond the control of the court.” In Bushnell v. Smelting Co., 150 U. S. 82, 14 Sup. Ct. 22, 37 L. Ed. 1007, the supreme court, with some impatience, again reiterated the rule that an application for a rehearing cannot be entertained when presented after the expiration of the term at which the judgment was rendered, citing various cases in which the point had been previously adjudicated. It must be regarded, therefore, as a well-settled rule that neither a federal appellate court nor a federal nisi prius court can materially modify its judgment or decree after the lapse of the term at which the same was rendered, unless the power to do so is reserved by a petition for a rehearing or a motion for a new trial filed during the term, and regularly continued to a succeeding term, so as to preserve the court’s power of control over the particular judgment or decree. Woods v. Lindvall, 4 U. S. App, 45, 1 C. C. A. 34, 48 Fed. 73. And this is the view which obtains in other circuits. Klever v. Seawell, 22 U. S. App. 458, 467, 12 C. C. A. 653, 65 Fed. 373.
In the present instance we are not asked to correct a mere clerical mistake made in the entry of a judgment, or to enter a judgment orally announced, which the clerk failed to enter, or to expunge a judgment which, when entered, was absolutely void for want of jurisdiction over the parties, all of which mistakes may doubtless be cor