This mаtter comes before the court on exceptions of the respondent, the Texas Company, to а libel of review filed by the libelant, the United States of America.
Facts.
On November 17, 1921, Congress pass'ed a special act authorizing the owners of the steamship Texas to bring suit against the United States of America in the District Court of the Sоuthern District of New York under and in compliance with the rules of said court, sitting as a court of admiralty, to determinе the controversy arising out of a collision between the steamship Texas and the United States steamer Frederick Der Grosse, which occurred in New York Harbor on September 3, 1917, “and to enter judgment or deeree fоr the amount of the legal damages sustained by reason of said collision if any shall be found to be due either fоr or against the United States upon the same principle and measure of liability, with costs as in like eases in аdmiralty between private parties with the said rights of ap- . peal.” On January 17,1922, the Texas Company, the owner of the Texas, filed its libel in this court, and on March 5, 1925, that case was tried and resulted in a deeree in favor of the Texas Company, libelant in that suit. On January 29, 1926, after the damage sustained by the Texas had been stipulated between the parties, a final decree was entered in favor of the Texas Company for the amount of such stipulаted damages, namely, $12,918.74, and also interest at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum from September 3,1917, the date on which the collision occurred. (D. C.)
Libels of review are rare, and they seem to have been adopted from and are somewhat akin to a bill of review in equity. The Co
From an examination of the cases, it appears that few libels of review have been entertained from the early history of the federal eourts down to the present time, but that a libel of review will lie when there exist: (1) Errors of law apparent on the face of the records; or (2) new facts discovered since the deeree which should materially effect the deeree and probably induce a different result; or (3) fraud in the entering of thе deeree affecting the rights of the petitioner. Scotten v. Littlefield,
A subsequent decision establishing a rule of law contrary to that applied in a casе sought to he reviewed is not a newly discovered matter of fact or such error of law apparent оn the face of the record as will sustain a libel of review. “If the decision in the Gorman Case [
It would be a remarkаble situation and lead to a very great uncertainty and confusion, where a final deeree or judgment has been docketed and tbe term of the court in which such judgment or deeree was entered had expired and an appeal disposed of, if that judgment or decree could be reopened because in a lаter case the law applied by that court, or by an appellate court in another case, differed from that applied to the one where the judgment had been entered.
Accordingly, the exceptions to the libel of review are sustained and the libel dismissed.
