This is a suit in nature of bill of review filed in a district court of Dallas County, Texas, to set aside a judgment of this court, Ward v. Strickland,
We are at liberty, as was the trial court (as held in Griffith v. Tipps, Tex.Civ.App.
The record in the original suit shows that no special defensive issues were submitted to the jury and none requested; hence, all controverted issues of fact raised by pleadings and supported by evidence, or which may have been reasonably deduced from the evidence, were waived by defendants. The jury found that the contract was entered into by Ward and Strickland, and the uncontroverted evidence showed the breach, to which findings defendant raised no objection in the court below and no adverse criticism was presented to this court on appeal; hence the judgment was entered in favor of Ward.
In this case, the same defensive issues as in the original suit are pleaded, and the testimony alleged to be newly discovered is that Am, Prestwood would or could give testimony bearing on the alleged conspiracy. In limine, on motion of the defendant to dismiss the suit, the court heard testimony.
Amy Prestwood testified by deposition, to the effect that sometime about May 1942, in conversation with her husband, A. Prestwood, he hold her that the original suit instituted by Ward against Strickland was a three-cornered affair; that, in the event Ward won the suit, the ninety-three shares would be equally divided among the three — Ward, Jones and Prestwood; and that they did not want Mrs. Strickland, who held the majority stock in the corporation, to be President of the Excelsior Life Insurance Company. A. Prestwood also testified by deposition that he did not have any such conversation with his estranged wife, who was suing him for divorce, and that no such conspiracy as alleged by plaintiff and testified to by her was ever entered into by him and the other two alleged conspirators to get control of the ninety-three shares of stock. E. E. Ward testified that he had no such agreement with Prestwood and Jones; that he offered no false testimony in the trial of his case against Strickland by and under which he was able to win the suit against Mrs. B. J. Strickland, et al, and that he made no agreement that if he recovered the ninety-three shares of stock in the corporation, the three would be equally interested therein and have a majority, thus the control and management of the corporation. C. E. Jones testified to the same effect, as did Ward and Prestwood.
In the record of the original suit, E. E. Ward is credited with relating that he told Mrs. B. J. Strickland in March 1942, and her attorney before suit, of the facts and circumstances surrounding the making of the oral contract with H. Strickland. And in briefs on the former appeal, appellees, (appellants here), in discussing the facts of the case, confessed "there is no controversy revealed by the record as to the existence and contents of the alleged oral contract not in writing. All testimony offered on this subject was offered by plaintiff (E. E. Ward) and the testimony as to the existence and contents of such oral contract is full and complete, even though the witnesses testify that they were advised by Strickland and Ward of such contract and its existence one time only and this was more than five years before the suit was filed." At the conclusion of the testimony the trial court sustained defendants' motion to dismiss the bill of review, accordingly entered judgment from which this appeal is prosecuted.
The only point raised by appellants is that a "Bill of review will lie in the district court after judgment of an appellate court and after mandate has been issued for observance without leave granted by appellate court, where new matter or newly discovered evidence constitutes the ground of the bill, and the Honorable District Court erred in not so holding."
We are in accord with the view that a trial court, in the exercise of its equity powers, where a judgment has been obtained by fraud, has authority in a suit brought expressly for that purpose, where the same parties and the same subject-matter are involved, to grant relief against its former judgment as equity and justice demand; and that this power extends to judgments of the appellate courts, where the petition is based on sufficient grounds of fraud, accident or mistake; Houston E. W. T. R. Co. v. Cavanaugh, Tex.Civ.App.
It will be further observed in the bill that appellants make no charge of "extrinsic fraud" against appellees in whose favor the judgment was rendered. At most, the alleged newly discovered testimony of Amy Prestwood is impeachment of her husband, Arthur Prestwood, who testified, among other things, to the existence of the oral contract. If judgments are to be reopened and attacked on the grounds of false testimony introduced in their procurement, or by newly discovered testimony to impeach some witness who gave favorable or unfavorable testimony in the case, it is obvious that there would be no end to suits by the losing parties. Reed v. Bryant, Tex.Civ.App.
Assuming all the allegations in appellants' petition to be true, such would only go to the trial of relitigating the issue fully and completely determined in the original suit on which the judgment was entered. We find nothing in this appeal to vacate the judgment assailed. The impeachment testimony of Amy Prestwood, claimed to have been newly discovered, is insufficient to set aside the judgment, and relitigate the suit.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed. *Page 739
