This is an appeal from an order of the circuit court of Cook county striking a petition for leave to file a bill in the nature of a bill of review and the appeal is brought directly to this court because the revenue is involved.
The decree sought to be reviewed was one entered by the circuit court of Cook county and affirmed by this court on appeal. (Inderrieden Co. v. Lindheimer,
In the petition for leave to file the present bill in the nature of a bill of review it is alleged that since the denial of their petition for rehearing in this court the petitioners discovered the names and addresses of the deputy assessors who made the previous assessments and procured affidavits from them (which are attached to the petition) to show that the deputy assessor who had testified in the previous case was mistaken as to the manner and method by which the assessment had been made; that that assessment had actually been made arbitrarily in accordance with a certain *Page 182 formula and that at the time of the previous trial the deputy assessor who was directed to make the original calculation of the assessment was not in the employ of the assessor and that his name and whereabouts could not be ascertained upon diligent inquiry. It is their contention that this so-called newly discovered evidence amounts to a sufficient ground for a review of the previous decree.
It is a general policy of the law that litigation once determined shall be considered ended, and bills of review are not permitted to be filed for trivial reasons nor otherwise than upon a clear and substantial showing. If leave is sought to file such a bill for newly discovered evidence, that evidence must be of an important and decisive character and be such as would apparently have produced a different result had it been known and brought before the court. (Elzas v. Elzas,
The case before us is in some respects similar to the old case of McDaniel v. James,
The order of the circuit court is affirmed.
Order affirmed. *Page 184
