22 App. D.C. 356 | D.C. Cir. | 1903
delivered tbe opinion of tbe Court:
This appeal is from a decree of tbe supreme court of tbe District of Columbia. Tbe bill was filed by tbe appellee, Elias Wineland, to establish bis ownership of certain moneys or funds on deposit in tbe Treasury of the United States, as against tbe appellants, Ellwood 0. Wagenhurst, John E. Eeyburn, and John K. Little, adverse claimants of said funds. Decree is also sought against Eobert M. Moore and Ellis H. Eoberts, tbe latter being tbe Treasurer of tbe United States, and ex officio commissioner of tbe sinking fund of tbe District of Columbia, and
The bill is a very elaborate statement of facts and circumstances supposed to be material to the plaintiff’s case. The objects and prayer of the bill are the establishment of the claim of the plaintiff to the funds in controversy; the obtaining of an injunction both pendente lite and perpetual; the appointment of receivers of the fund; the discovery as to the origin and evidence of the adverse claims of the defendants, Reyburn and Little, to the funds in question, and for general relief. But, while the bill calls for answer, it is called for without oath, the oath being expressly waived.
The appellants appeared to the case and interposed a plea to the bill, of former adjudication in their favor, and against the right and title now set up by the present bill; — said adjudication being in respect to the identical subject-matter now claimed. It appears from the pleadings of the defendants that the present is simply a new suit, instituted by the complainant, asserting his claim anew to the funds in question, after the final disposition of the case of Wagenhurst v. Wineland, 20 App. D. C. 85, though there is no mention of or reference to that case whatever in the present bill. Of course, the bill being a new suit, asserting title to the funds, and making no reference whatever to that case, the charges of fraud and collusion made in the present bill, in regard to the purchase and assignment of the claims to the funds by the appellants, are not to be construed as intended, or made for the purpose, of impeaching the decree that was made in the former case, and which is the subject of the plea in this case. If, therefore, there has been a definite final decree passed in that case, adjudicating the rights of the parties in respect to the funds in controversy, then the question of fraud or collusion is not open to inquiry in the present case.
The three defendants thus ordered to answer, on January 23, 1903, put in their joint and separate answer to the bill. And after admitting to be true the allegations of paragraphs 1 and 2
The answer was excepted to on various grounds: 1st. That it was insufficient, in that tire defendants had not answered fully, nor at all, the material allegations and charges of the bill made in paragraphs 3 to 40, inclusive. 2. That, saving paragraphs 1 and 2, of the bill, the matters in bar alleged were insufficient, in that the defense therein set up as a bar, and claimed as such, was insufficient and not supported by proper averments and exhibits, nor by a proper answer. 3. That the matters and things set forth in the answer were not responsive but irrelevant to said bill, and form no sufficient defense to the case' for relief made thereby; and especially so, as the defense is predicated exclusively of the records and proceedings and exhibits referred to in said answer, yet the said exhibit is no part of the answer, and can not be considered, because it was not filed with' the answer, but thereafter and without any leave of the court, as will more fully appear by reference to the record and proceedings herein; and the said record and proceedings have neither been filed nor exhibited with the answer.
There were many other motions and counter motions and affidavits filed, all of which rather tended to produce confusion and involve the ease in a net of technicalities, than to advance the case to a fair hearing.
Upon the hearing of the exceptions to the answer, the court sustained the exceptions, with costs, and ruled the answer insufficient; and thereupon-ordered that a sufficient answer to the bill
The proceedings would strongly indicate a purpose on the part of the plaintiff to evade and keep out of view the record and decree in the former suit; and hence the persistence in the effort to have the bill in this casé taken pro confesso, and thus conclude and cut off the defendants from their defense of former adjudication.
A few days after the exceptions to the answer had been sustained, an order taking the bill pro confesso was obtained as against Roberts, the treasurer, and a few days thereafter an order was entered taking the bill pro confesso as against the three defendants who had been required to put in a new answer, but who had declined to do so, and notified their purpose to stand upon the defense that they had made of record.
Whereupon, on the 7th day of April, 1903, a decree was entered in favor of the plaintiff, sustaining the claim set up in the bill to the full extent as therein made; that decree being founded entirely upon the orders to which we have referred, taking the bill as confessed, — the plea and answer having been ruled out of the case, upon technical objections thereto.
In the preamble to the decree, it is recited that, it appearing to the court that an order was passed, March 23, 1903, taking the bill pro confesso against the defendant Roberts; also, that another order was passed April 3, 1903, taking the bill pro confesso as against the respondents, Wagenhurst, Reyburn, and Little, and that said orders still remain in force; and that respondent Moore duly waived process and appeared to the cause, and consented to any decree vhich the court might think proper to
If the matters of record alleged in the plea and answer be established, and the subject-matter of the former suit and that of the present be identical as alleged, and as between the same parties, and therefore constitute a bar to the relief claimed by the plaintiff in this case, it follows from what has occurred, and the final decree passed in this case, that the merits and justice of the case have not been reached, and have not been passed upon in the making of the decree appealed from. The question then is, Has there been any such error in the proceedings upon which the decree is based, as will justify a court of review in reversing the decree, and opening the case, to let in a valid defense that may be shown % Upon examination, we think there was error in the proceedings which we have recited.
It is a well settled principle, that a decree or order dismissing a former bill for the same matter, may be pleaded in bar to a new bill, if the dismissal was upon the hetn. .g, and was not in terms directed to be without prejudice. An order of dismissal, however, will constitute a bar only, where the court has determined that the plaintiff had no title to the relief sought by his former bill; and, therefore, an order dismissing a bill for want of prosecution, or the want of proper parties, will not be a bar to another bill for the same subject-matter. To constitute a bar to the relief sought by the new bill, the decree of dismissal of the former bill must be conclusive upon the rights of the plaintiff in that former bill, or of those under whom he claims. Mitford, Ch. PI. & Pr. 288-240; Story, Eq. PI. § 193; Young v. Black, 7 Cranch, 567, 3 L. ed. 441; Cromwell v. Sac County, 94 U. S.
In this case, if the matters set forth in either the plea or answer be established, they would seem to constitute a complete bar to the relief sought in the present case, and the defendants ought to have the benefit of the defense, unless they have, in some way, forfeited the right to make and insist upon it. They ought not, by any mere technical objection that could be removed by amendment, to be deprived of the benefit of the defense thus brought within the view of the court. While both plea and answer were adjudged to be insufficient, neither of them was removed from the files of the court, but both were allowed to remain in the cause; and for any defect therein they ought to have been amended so as to be available to the parties pleading them. The plea may have been superseded by the subsequent filing of the answer; but while the answer remained in the cause, the court was not justified in taking the bill pro confesso, and in proceeding to final decree, regardless of the efforts of the defendants to get their defense before the court. Hovey v. Elliott, 167 U. S. 409, 413, 414, 42 L. ed. 215, 220, 17 Sup. Ct. Rep. 841.
The attempt to obtain the benefit of the defense by plea was certainly a very proper and, perhaps, the most appropriate way of making the defense in this case available. For whatever shows that there is no right which can be made the foundation of a suit or decree therein for the plaintiff may constitute the subject of a plea. And, unlike a demurrer, one of its main objects is to bring upon the record such new matter as has not been shown or relied on by the plaintiff, as will preclude him from the discovery as well as the relief that may be sought by the bill. The plea demands the judgment of the court in the first instance, whether the special matter urged by it does or not debar the plaintiff from the title to the answer that the bill requires to be made. If the plaintiff conceives the plea to be defective in point of form or substance, he may take the judgment of the court upon its sufficiency; and so may the defendant interposing the plea, and thus have its sufficiency determined before proceed
In this case the plea was set down by the plaintiff for argument, as to its sufficiency in form or substance, and it was, after argument, adjudged to be insufficient, and the defendants were required to answer; though the ground of the decision is not stated. The effect of this ruling -of the court was that the defendants should forego the right to plead, and the order imposed upon them the duty and necessity of making their defense by answer. The order, however, could not dispense with the settled rules of chancery pleading and practice, and therefore it was the right of the defendants to either interpose a new defense, or the same defense in another form. This they could do either by plea, or by answer, which they were required to make within ten days. And having submitted to answer, the latter superseded the plea, as the same defense could not be made by both plea and answer at the same time. But the plea having been overruled as insufficient, the same matter set up by it could be advanced and relied upon in the answer, and be available to the defendants at the hearing. Salmon v. Clagett, 3 Bland Ch. 149; Suffolk v. Green, 1 Atk. 450; Brownsword v. Edwards, 2 Ves. Sr. 246; Baker v. Mellish, 11 Ves. Jr. 68; Goodrich v. Pendleton, 4 John Ch. 549. And so by rule 34 of the court below, it is provided that “the defendant may, in all cases, insist by answer upon all matters of defense in bar of or to the merits of the bill, of which he may avail himself by a plea in bar; and in such answer he shall not be compellable'to answer any other matters than such as he would he compellable to answer and discover upon fxl
Rut, as we have seen, there were exceptions to the answer, and those exceptions were sustained, and the answer held to be insufficient. Why it was so held is not disclosed by anything apparent in the record as the reason upon which.the court acted,
But the exceptions to the answer having been sustained, we must determine whether there was anything in them that was sustainable. There is but one ground among the exceptions taken to the answer, so far as we can perceive, that has any validity in it, and that is, that the answer is not supported by a verified copy of die record and final decree of the former case, exhibited as part of the answer. This would seem to be necessary, in order to make the record complete in this case. In the case of Bank of United States v. Beverly, 1 How. 134, 11 L. ed. 75 (a case from this District), it was held that the omission to exhibit the record as a part of the answer was more than a mere formal objection; that it affected the validity and sufficiency of the answer. In that case “the answer set up the dismission of a bill filed by the complainants in 1827, against the defendants, for the same relief as is prayed for in the present bill [then un
In the case of Wiggins Ferry Co. v. Ohio & M. R. Co. 142 U. S. 396, 413, 35 L. ed. 1055, 1061, 12 Sup. Ct. Rep. 188, it was held by the Supreme Court, that where the facts showed that the plaintiff had an equitable title to relief, but that court, on the state of pleadings before it, was unable to afford relief, it could and would remand the case to the court below for amendment of pleadings and further proceedings, in order that the right might be availed of. And this principle equally applies in the case where it is shown by the facts in the record that the defendants have a good ground of defense to the bill of the plaintiff, but because of some supposed defect in the pleadings or proceedings the benefit of that defense has been denied to the defendants; and therefore this court, in order to effect the purpose of justice, will reverse the decree appealed from, and remand the cause that proper amendments may be made, and further proceedings had, in a manner not inconsistent with the foregoing opinion.
Decree reversed and cause remanded.