A decree in a suit in equity set forth a hearing on pleadings
and proofs and awarded relief, but it ordered that a bill of
exceptions signed by the court be filed as a part of the record.
The bill of exceptions showed that the judge who held the court
refused to permit the counsel for plaintiff to argue the cause, and
allowed the counsel for the defendant to determine whether the case
fell within a prior decision of another judge, and refused to
determine that question himself, and then directed that the decree
be entered, which was in favor of the defendant. On a bill of
review, filed by the plaintiff.
Held that the decree must
be held for naught.
A decree was made by a circuit court in December, 1873, against
two plaintiffs. In January, 1874, they appealed to this Court. In
December, 1875, the appeal was dismissed for the failure of the
appellants to file and docket the cause in this Court. In
September, 1876, a bill of review was filed for errors in law.
Held that the bill was filed in time, though not within
two years From the making of the decree, because the control of the
circuit court over the decree was suspended during the pendency of
the appeal.
A lot of land, part of the navy yard at Memphis, Tennessee, not
under lease to a private party, being exempt from state and county
taxation by § 9 of the Act of the Legislature of Tennessee, which
took effect February 20, 1860, c. 70, Private Acts of 1859-60, 284,
was, by section 13 of the Act of Congress of August 5, 1801, c. 45,
12 Stat. 297, exempt from taxation under the direct tax on land
authorized by that act.
Bill in equity. The facts and the issues in controversy are
fully stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
In May, 1867, a bill in equity was filed by the Board of Mayor
and Aldermen of the City of Memphis and Bridget Powers against
Marmaduke L. Ensminger and J. J. Sears in the Circuit Court of the
United States for the Western District of Tennessee. The bill was
sworn to by John C. Powers as
Page 108 U. S. 293
agent for Bridget Powers. The substantial allegations of the
bill were that the city then owned in fee 75 acres of land in
Memphis, known as the navy yard, which land, after having been
dedicated by its owners in 1844 to the government of the United
States, in fee, for naval purposes, was ceded to said city by the
government in fee; that the city, in February, 1866, leased lot 10,
part of said land, to said Bridget Powers, for twenty years, and
she took possession of it; that Ensminger and Sears as his agent
were setting up a claim to said lot as having been purchased by
Ensminger at a sale of it by the United States Direct Tax
Commissioners in June, 1864, and had procured said commissioners to
issue a writ of possession on April 30, 1867, to put Ensminger in
possession of said lot; that the tax sale was void because (1) the
act of Congress under which the sale was made was unconstitutional;
(2) the assessment was excessive and unauthorized; (3) the
enforcement of the act was premature in time; (4) the act was not
followed as to advertising the sale in a newspaper, or as to the
length of time of the advertisement; (5) the sale was made on a day
subsequent to that for which it was advertised. The bill prayed for
a decree declaring the sale void, and for an injunction restraining
the issuing or execution of any writ dispossessing the plaintiffs.
A temporary injunction was issued.
Ensminger answered, setting up his tax title, as evidenced by a
certificate of sale, alleging the validity of the sale and denying
the allegations of the bill. The cause was heard on pleadings and
proofs, and on the 27th of December, 1873, the court entered a
decree that the injunction be dissolved; that lot 10 was duly sold
to Ensminger, and the acquired thereby a title to it in fee simple;
that he should have a writ to the marshal to put him in possession;
that there be a reference to a master to take an account of the
damages to Ensminger from the injunction, for which purpose only
the bill should be retained, and that the plaintiffs pay the costs
of the suit. The city and Bridget Powers appealed to this Court.
John C. Powers signed the appeal bond for costs as surety. There
was no supersedeas bond. On the 13th of December, 1875, the cause
came on for hearing in this Court, and, it appearing that the
appellants had
Page 108 U. S. 294
failed to file and docket the cause in this Court in conformity
with its rules, the appeal was docketed and dismissed by this Court
with costs, execution was awarded against the plaintiffs for the
costs of the defendants in this Court, and the cause was remanded
to the circuit court for execution and further proceedings. The
mandate of this Court was filed in the circuit court, and on the
19th of June, 1876, that court made a decree that the reference as
to the damages from the injunction proceed, and that the referee
also report the damages to Ensminger from the loss of rents and
profits of the land, and under its order an alias writ of
possession was issued by it, on July 8, 1876, to the marshal to put
Ensminger in possession of lot 10.
On the 9th of September, 1876, the said John C. Powers,
describing himself as the husband of the said Bridget Powers, and
the said Bridget Powers filed a bill in equity against the said
Ensminger and the said Sears and the said city in the said circuit
court. The bill prays for a decree that the plaintiffs, or the
plaintiff Bridget, have a right to the leased premises for the term
of the lease; that the sale to Ensminger be declared void; that the
said decrees of December, 1873, and June, 1876, be reviewed and set
aside, and that Ensminger and Sears be enjoined from collecting
rent from the plaintiffs, or either of them, for said lot, and from
interfering with their possession of it. Ensminger and Sears having
demurred to the bill, the court gave leave to the plaintiffs to
file said bill as a bill of review, and then the demurrer was heard
and overruled, with leave to the defendants to embody in their
answer the matters of the demurrer, and a temporary injunction was
granted according to the prayer of the bill, and the bill was
dismissed as to the city, and the other defendants were allowed to
answer the bill. They answered, there was a replication, the case
was heard on pleadings and proofs, and in December, 1878, the court
rendered a decree adjudging that the said decrees of December,
1873, and June, 1876, in the first suit be reversed, vacated, set
aside, and cancelled, and the plaintiffs, as against the
defendants, be restored to all they had lost under and by virtue of
said decrees and the process which had been issued thereunder;
Page 108 U. S. 295
that the plaintiff Bridget has a good title as against the
defendants for the term of her lease from the city to said lot 10,
subject only to said lease; that Ensminger be perpetually enjoined
from setting up any title to said lot under said tax sale
certificate; that the said temporary injunction be made perpetual;
that a writ issue to put the plaintiffs in possession of said lot,
and that the plaintiffs recover from the defendants the costs of
both of the suits, and have execution therefor. Sears having died
after the cause was submitted, the suit was ordered to be abated as
to him, and Ensminger took an appeal to this Court from said
decree.
The bill in this suit sets forth that the land for the navy
yard, after having been dedicated by its original proprietors, in
1828, for a landing for public purposes of navigation or trade
forever, was conveyed to the government by the City of Memphis, in
1844, for a navy yard, without lawful authority, because it had
been dedicated to public purposes by the original proprietors, and
the city had accepted the dedication; that in 1854, by an act of
Congress, the government ceded the land to the city, for the use
and benefit of the city, and after that the rights of the public
remained the same as before the conveyance to the government; that
the city leased lot 10 to the plaintiff Bridget for the term from
February 28, 1866, to December 31, 1886, for a yearly rent of
$127.19, payable half-yearly; that the lot was vacant and she
agreed with the city to put buildings on it, with the right to her
to remove them as her own property at the end of the lease; that
Ensminger and Sears had compelled John C. Powers to take a lease of
the lot from Ensminger in order to enable the plaintiffs to avoid
being turned out of possession, and also, as a condition of
remaining, to give his five notes for $25 each as rent for five
months from July 19, 1876, one of which notes he had paid; that the
plaintiff Bridget had put buildings on the lot, which were now on
it at a cost to her of $9,000 or $10,000; that after the plaintiffs
had constructed much the larger part of the buildings they learned
of the claim of Ensminger, and the plaintiff John C. applied to the
city attorney to protect the plaintiffs, and he filed the bill in
the first suit, not making
Page 108 U. S. 296
John C. a party; that Ensminger answered, setting up his tax
title; that no cross-bill was filed, nor was the answer made a
cross-bill, nor was any affirmative relief prayed in the answer;
that some proof was taken and the cause was treated as at issue,
though no replication was filed; that the decree entered was not
entered on a hearing of the case by the judge who held the court,
although the plaintiffs in the suit asked for a hearing, but the
judge allowed the counsel for the defendants to enter the decree at
his peril, subject to the right of the plaintiffs to bring a bill
of review; that the plaintiffs excepted to such ruling and the
judge signed a bill of exceptions; that the appeal to this Court
was dismissed because the city refused to pay the necessary money
for filing the transcript of the record which had been made, and
docketing the appeal; that the marshal was proceeding to execute
the alias writ of possession when the plaintiff John C. accepted
said lease and gave said notes, and the plaintiffs remain in
possession, and that the said decree and proceedings did not bind
either of the plaintiffs, because Bridget was a married woman and
her husband was not a party. The bill alleges that the former
decrees, so far as they undertook to decree the validity of the
title of Ensminger to the premises, or to award a writ of
possession to him, or to do anything more than dismiss the bill of
the plaintiffs, departed from the established practice of the
court, and were void or erroneous, and that the decree was
erroneous, if not void, because it was not the deliberate judgment
of the court upon the facts in the record, and because the cause
was not at issue or ready for hearing. The bill then sets forth
various reasons why the purchase and title of Ensminger were
invalid. Among other things, the bill says:
"These plaintiffs further state and show that in the year 1861,
and from thence up to the date of the lease aforesaid, the said
premises were not and had not been leased by the City of Memphis to
anyone, or, if any such lease had been made, the same had been
abandoned and forfeited, and was not for any part or period of the
same time in force or subsisting as a valid and effectual contract.
The plaintiffs further state and show that,
Page 108 U. S. 297
by a special act of the General Assembly of the State of
Tennessee, in force in the year 1861, the said premises were not
taxable by the State of Tennessee, or the United States of America,
the same not being under a lease from the city, and, for that
reason, that the said sale was void. And the plaintiffs further
state and show that the title to the said premises in 1861, and
before and since that time, was in the City of Memphis, which held
the same as public property, for municipal or public purposes, as
provided by law, and therefore by the law of the State of
Tennessee, the said premises were not, in the year 1861, or before
or since, liable to a direct tax by the government of the United
States, and for that reason the said sale was void."
The bill also prays that the lease taken and the notes given by
John C. be cancelled. The decree granted this relief also.
The answer of Ensminger and Sears asserts the validity of the
title of Ensminger under the tax sale; that the decree in the first
suit was an adjudication in his favor as to all the allegations in
this bill; that none of the alleged objections to the tax sale
proceedings are tenable; that although the lease to Bridget was not
made until 1866, the property had been divided into lots and
offered for lease by the city before the assessment of said tax in
1864, and at one time before that date a lease of lot 10 had been
made by the city, which was not carried into operation because of
the failure of the lessee to comply with it; that the property was
not exempt from taxation under any act of the Legislature of
Tennessee, and was not in 1861, or before or since, held for
municipal purposes; that the said Bridget has no right to the
improvements she put on the land; that the former suit was
commenced at the instance and request of John C., and he swore to
the bill and prosecuted it in conjunction with Bridget; that said
suit, under which all of the plaintiffs' rights were fully
considered and passed upon by the court, was a final adjudication
of all of the questions and rights therein set up, and the
decision, being upon the same facts and rights as are claimed by
the plaintiffs in this suit, and between the same parties, is
res adjudicata as to this suit, and that the defendants
plead the
Page 108 U. S. 298
same as a complete bar to this suit. The answer then sets up as
a defense most of the matters which had been so set up in the
demurrer.
After the decree of June, 1876, in the former suit, the
reference as to the damages from the injunction in that suit
proceeded, and in November, 1876, a report was made awarding to
Ensminger, as damages, $12,962.10. The City of Memphis excepted to
the report, and on the 11th of January, 1878, the court made a
decree that it had no jurisdiction to assess the damages from the
injunction, and that the bill be dismissed without prejudice to a
suit at law on the injunction bond.
The first question to be considered is as to whether the decree
of December, 1873, can be considered as a decree of the court for
any purpose. The bill in the present suit sets forth certain facts
as having occurred in court when the case came up for hearing, and
refers to a bill of exceptions embodying such matters as having
been signed by the judge who was holding the court, and ordered to
be filed and to form a part of the record of the cause, and alleges
that the decree was erroneous because it was not the deliberate
judgment of the court upon the facts in the record. The decree
states that the case was heard on the bill, answer, exhibits,
agreement of counsel, and proof, and had been fully argued, and the
court had duly deliberated thereon, but it also says:
"It is further ordered that the bill of exceptions tendered and
signed by the court be filed as part of the record, which is done
accordingly."
There is in the record a bill of exceptions filed the same day
the decree was made. This bill of exceptions states that the cause
came on to be heard before the judge holding the court
"under the following circumstances, to which counsel for the
City of Memphis excepted, and prayed a bill of exceptions to, upon
the record of the facts below, stated as they occurred:"
"First. Duncan K. McRae, Esq., of counsel for the claimants of
the tax titles, stated that he had been instructed by his honor H.
H. Emmons, lately presiding at this term of said court,
Page 108 U. S. 299
but who had then left the City of Memphis, where said court is
held, to enter decrees in the series of causes in said court known
as the 'United States tax title cases,' in all such of these cases
as fell within the purview of the decision of his honor, rendered
in certain of those cases tried before the said Judge Emmons before
that time, and that said decrees were to be entered in those cases
which the said counsel thought came within his decision aforesaid,
but to be so entered at the peril of said parties, because said
judge would, upon a bill of review, set aside said decrees if it
appeared to him by such bill of review that the case did not
properly fall within his said decision; that he had at the further
suggestion of said judge, published a notice in the city papers
that on Saturday, the 20th of December aforesaid, he would proceed
to take such decrees, when the counsel interested in the several
cases could appear; which said newspaper notice is hereto
attached."
"Secondly. The said counsel then proceeded to read from a list
the cases, and to designate such as he desired to enter decrees in
and such as he would pass or continue. When the above-entitled
cause was called, the counsel for the city objected, and stated
that the city attorney would insist that this cause did not come
within the class of causes to which Judge Emmons referred, and
stated that the city would contend that the property of its
municipality was not liable to taxation; that it was exempt under
an act of the legislature; that the proof showed the city was
entitled to a decree. The counsel for the claimants of the tax
titles, the said McRae, insisted that he was to be the judge of the
cases in which he was entitled to take decrees, and was to take
them at his peril, subject to a bill of review, and that if the
city attorney would convince him, before the decree was entered,
that the case was not one proper for a decree, he would not enter
it. The counsel for the city insisted that the presiding judge here
present was to determine that question. Whereupon the presiding
judge remarked"
"that he did not know what Judge Emmons decision was, nor the
scope of it; that he had promised said justice to have entered
decrees in such cases as fell within the decision, and that he
understood that it was left to counsel for the claimants of the tax
titles to determine which
Page 108 U. S. 300
were such cases, and that he would enter decrees in such cases
as the said counsel should designate, with the understanding that
such proceedings were at his peril."
"Thereupon counsel for the city inquired if Judge Emmons' decree
or decision, or the order under which these proceedings were had,
were of record, and the counsel for the tax title claimants
informed the court that such order was not of record, but that it
would be entered of record before the decrees were entered. And
thereupon B. M. Estes, Esq., who was of counsel and argued the
cases in opposition to the tax titles, stated to the court that
Judge Emmons' written opinion had been lost or mislaid, having been
rendered some time ago and then withdrawn for revision, since which
time it could not be found; that in it he had only decided that the
acts of Congress under which the sales were made were
constitutional, and the proceedings of the commissioners thereupon
regular; that prior to the final determination of the case by the
judge, and while he had it under advisement, the case had been
compromised, and hence no decree had ever been entered. Counsel for
the city then objected to a decree in this case, because it
involved other questions than the constitutionality of the acts of
Congress and the regularity of the proceedings of the commissioners
appointed under them, and asked to have those other questions
argued. Whereupon counsel for the tax title claimants insisted that
if the case contained other questions the city could show it on
bill of review and the decree would be set aside under Judge
Emmons' order; to which counsel for the city objected that a bill
of review would not lie, and insisted on a determination of the
question by the court, whether this case came within Judge Emmons'
order for the entry of decrees. And thereupon the court decided
that the counsel for the claimants should enter decrees in such
cases, as he designated, as, under the undertaking with his brother
Emmons, he had only to direct such decrees to be entered as the
counsel should determine. To all of which counsel for the city
excepted, and prayed that by bill of exceptions the city should be
allowed to show the proceedings in court as they occurred and its
exceptions thereto. And now, accordingly, the said city here
tenders this bill of exceptions,
Page 108 U. S. 301
and objects to the said decree and all said proceedings as
heretofore on the hearing they were objected to, and prays that
said bill of exceptions may be signed and sealed by the judge
presiding and made a part of the record, which is done
accordingly."
Under this state of facts, the bill of exceptions must have the
same effect as if the narration it contains of what occurred were
incorporated in the body of the decree. Thus considered, it appears
that, against the objection and exception of the counsel for the
city, who represented both of the plaintiffs in the suit, the
plaintiffs were denied by the court a hearing of the case on the
merits, and the judge holding the court refused to decide whether
the case fell within the prior decision or order of Judge Emmons,
and allowed the counsel for the defendant to determine that
question. Notwithstanding the statements in the decree that the
case was heard on the pleadings and proofs and fully argued, and
that the decree was the decree of the court, these statements are
contradicted by the bill of exceptions, forming virtually part of
the same decree. It is quite apparent that the judge intended that
what occurred should be spread before this Court on an appeal, so
that its effect on the validity of the decree might be considered.
There can be no doubt that it could be so considered; and if on
appeal, it must have a like effect on a bill of review, as it is to
looked at as forming a part of the decree. What then does it show
except that the proper forms of the administration of justice were
disregarded, the functions of the judge were abnegated, there was
no hearing or decision by the court, and the counsel for the
defendant was allowed to prepare and enter such a degree as he
chose? Words need not be multiplied to argue that a decree rendered
under such circumstances must, on a bill of review, by held for
naught and as if it did not exist. Though not the case of actual
fraud practiced on the court or on the opposite party, what was
done operated as a legal fraud in respect of the rights of such
party, through the illegal cooperation of the judge with one of the
parties. In
McVeigh v. United
States, 11 Wall. 259, an information had been filed
by the United States against certain property belonging to McVeigh
to forfeit it. He appeared and
Page 108 U. S. 302
put in a claim and answer. The district court struck it out
because McVeigh resided within the Confederate lines and was a
rebel, and condemned the property by default. This Court, on a writ
of error, reversed the judgment on the ground that McVeigh was
denied a hearing and the first principles of the due administration
of justice were violated. Equally in the present case, the
plaintiffs in the suit were denied a hearing, and their answer
might as well have been stricken out. In addition to this, there
was no judicial action by the court, and the defendant was allowed
virtually to decide the cause in his own favor. For these reasons,
it must be held that the decree in question cannot, in this suit,
be regarded as a decree adjudicating any rights between the parties
to the former suit, and that it forms no obstacle to the
consideration of the issues raised in the present suit, provided
the bill was filed in time, as a bill of review.
It was not filed within two years after the decree of December,
1873, was rendered. But the plaintiffs in that decree appealed from
it to this Court, it being a final decree. A bill of review must
ordinarily be brought within the time limited by statute for taking
an appeal from the decree sought to be reviewed where, as here, the
review sought is not founded on matters discovered since the
decree.
Thomas v. Harvie's
Heirs, 10 Wheat. 146;
Whiting v.
Bank of the United States, 13 Pet. 6;
Kennedy v. Georgia State
Bank, 8 How. 586;
Clark v. Killian,
103 U. S. 766. But
the appeal to this Court was perfected by the giving of a bond for
costs in January, 1874, and although this Court, in December, 1875,
dismissed the appeal for the failure of the appellants to file and
docket the cause in this Court, yet the cause was out of the court
below, and in this Court until within two years before the bill in
this suit was filed. The pendency of the appeal by Bridget Powers
would have been a valid objection to the filing of a bill of review
by her for the errors in law now alleged, and inasmuch as the
appeal was not heard here on its merits, but the prosecution of it
was abandoned, we are of opinion that the bill of review was filed
in time. While the appeal was pending here, although there was no
supersedeas,
Page 108 U. S. 303
the circuit court had no jurisdiction to vacate the decree, in
pursuance of the prayer of a bill of review, because such relief
was beyond its control. The time during which that control was
suspended to await the orderly conduct of business in this Court in
regard to hearing the appeal, is not to be reckoned against Bridget
Powers in this case, although she joined in the appeal. She was
exercising a right in doing so; and, as the City of Memphis was the
principal plaintiff and appellant, and was endeavoring to protect
its title in fee, and thus her right as a lessee, it may very well
have been, as is alleged in the bill, that the appeal fell because
the city refused to pay the necessary money for filing the
transcript of the record. Being thus left to the protection of her
own rights, she may well have concluded that a bill of review was
preferable to the further prosecution of the appeal, when she had
such good cause for that course, as now appears, although the same
error might have been corrected if the appeal had been heard on the
merits.
This bill of review is properly brought therefore because of the
error on the face of the decree which has been considered, and, the
decree being set aside, as it must be we are free to examine the
question as to the validity of the tax title set up by
Ensminger.
Although the sale of the lot for taxes preceded the lease to
Bridget Powers, the sale was invalid as to her if the lot was not
subject to be sold for taxes. By § 13 of the act of Congress of
August 5, 1861, 12 Stat. c. 45, 12 Stat. 297, providing for a
direct tax and for its assessment on land, there was exempted from
tax all land permanently or specially exempted from taxation by the
laws of the state wherein it was situated at the time of the
passage of that act. The same section provided that in making such
assessment, due regard should be had to the latest valuation under
the authority of the state. The exemption of land exempted from
taxation by the laws of the state is repeated in section 1 of the
Act of June 7, 1862, c. 98, 12 Stat. 422, and it is there provided
that the direct taxes shall be charged on lands and lots of ground
as the same were enumerated and valued under the last assessment
and valuation thereof made under the authority of the state
before
Page 108 U. S. 304
January 1, 1861. Section 7 of that act, which makes the
certificate of the sale of the land for the tax
prima
facie evidence of the regularity and validity of the sale, and
of the title of the purchaser, provides that the certificate may be
affected, as evidence of the regularity and validity of the sale,
by establishing the fact that the property was not subject to
taxes. These acts of 1861 and 1862 governed the sale in question.
By section 9 of the Act of the Legislature of Tennessee which took
effect February 20, 1860, Private Acts of 1859-1860, c. 70, 284, it
was enacted
"That all buildings and grounds owned by said City of Memphis
and used exclusively for public purposes, such as for fire
companies and fire engines, city waterworks, markets, and market
houses, and their grounds, and such parts of the navy yard as are
not leased to private parties, be and the same are hereby declared
free and exempt from all state and county taxes so long as owned by
the city, and so used for public purposes."
The lot in question is shown by the testimony in the present
suit to have been part of the navy yard, and to have been the
property of the City of Memphis from before the passage of the act
of 1861 until after the sale of it for taxes. It is not shown to
have been leased to any private party between those dates. The
decree in the first suit and the tax sale certificate refer to the
lot as "assessed to G. McLean in 1860," and the evidence shows that
it was assessed to G. W. McLean in 1860, 1865, 1866, and 1867. The
lease to Bridget Powers provides that she shall save the city
harmless from any damages "to be claimed by the original lessees of
said lot." But there is no legal evidence whatever of any
subsisting lease during the period named. The bill alleges that
there was none, and the answer substantially admits this averment,
by saying that at one time before the assessment of the tax in
1864, a lease of the lot by the city had been made, "which was not
carried into operation by failure of the lessee to comply." This is
equivalent to saying that there was no subsisting lease when the
tax was assessed for which the lot was sold. There is the evidence
of a witness for the plaintiff familiar with the premises, and
residing near them, that he never knew of any
Page 108 U. S. 305
assertion of any claim to the lot by any lessee, and the case is
one where, on all the facts, and in the absence of affirmative
proof by the defendant of the existence of such lease, the evidence
that there was none must be held sufficient.
We do not perceive that any of the objections set up by demurrer
and repeated in the answer are tenable. The decree of the circuit
court is affirmed in all respects, except insofar as it erroneously
gives the date of July 19, 1876, to the decree of June 19, 1876,
and recites erroneously the contents of said decree, and except
insofar as it may be construed as enjoining the defendant Ensminger
from setting up any title to said lot 10 as against the City of
Memphis, or as quieting or confirming the possession of the
plaintiffs as against the City of Memphis under the said lease from
said city, and except insofar as it adjudges that the lease made by
the defendants to the plaintiff John C. Powers, and the five notes
executed by him, be delivered up and cancelled. As to this
last-named lease, the plaintiff John C. Powers, having voluntarily
entered into it, no ground is shown for setting it aside. It was
correct to charge Ensminger with the costs of both suits. The
decree of this Court in the first suit imposed on the plaintiffs
herein only the costs of the appeal to this Court. The costs of the
present appeal must be paid by the appellant.
So ordered.