314 Mass. 120 | Mass. | 1943
This is a bill of review by the executors of the will of Benjamin P. Cheney, the younger of that name, against the trustees under the will of Benjamin P. Cheney the elder, the surviving executor of the will of Elizabeth S. Cheney, widow of Benjamin P. Cheney the elder, and the trustees under the will of Mary Cheney Davis to have “corrected and vacated,” in part, the decree entered by the single justice of this court after the rescript of the full court which followed the decision in Forbes v. Snow, 245 Mass. 85. See also Forbes v. Snow, 239 Mass. 138. In the present proceeding the single justice sustained demurrers and dismissed the bill.
The case of Forbes v. Snow, review of which is now sought, was ended by final decree after rescript on October 23, 1923, nearly nineteen years before this bill of review was filed. The parties to this proceeding are all in direct privity with the parties in Forbes v. Snow, as indeed it would seem they must be in order to be proper parties to a bill of review.
No court is infallible, but litigation must end somewhere, and when a court of last resort, in the course of appellate procedure, has rendered its decision, the soundness of its conclusions of law resting upon the record before it cannot be challenged by bill of review. Nashua & Lowell Railroad v. Boston & Lowell Railroad, 169 Mass. 157, 162-165. Manning v. Woodlawn Cemetery Corp. 249 Mass. 281, 285. Handy v. Miner, 265 Mass. 226, 228. Boston v. Santosuosso, 308 Mass. 189, 194-196. Compare Mulrey v. Carberry, 204 Mass. 378.
An argument has been based upon the fact, alleged in the bill of review, that Cheney the younger in his lifetime and after the former decision attempted to exercise the power of appointment given to him in his father’s will, and that the appointees named by him were not parties to the original suit and never had their day in court. These facts are immaterial. They do not create a new condition arising after the former decree and altering the equities of the parties. This situation was anticipated and covered by the former decision. It was there held that the power of Cheney the younger to appoint for the benefit of any but his creditors had become extinguished (245 Mass. at page
It becomes unnecessary to discuss laches as a further ground of demurrer.
In nothing here said or left unsaid is there the slightest implication that there was error in any respect in the opinion or the decision in Forbes v. Snow, 245 Mass. 85. That is a leading case on the effect upon a so called power appendant of the bankruptcy of the donee of the power. See Am. Law Inst. Restatement: Property, § 325 and comment.
Decree affirmed.