1. The general rule is that a final judgment cannot be set aside
by the court which rendered it, on application made after the close
of the term at which it was entered, and as this case comes within
that rule the judgment is affirmed.
2. The court of appeals dismissed the appeal, but inasmuch as if
it had entertained it, that court would have been compelled to
affirm the order appealed from, this Court is not obliged, in the
circumstances disclosed by the record, to modify or reverse even if
that court might have maintained jurisdiction of the appeal.
The case is stated in the opinion of the court.
Page 190 U. S. 39
THE CHIEF JUSTICE: The declaration in this action was filed
March 26, 1895, and several demurrers were interposed thereto the
following June. August 6, 1901, the case was dismissed for want of
prosecution. After the term at which that judgment was entered had
expired, and on May 19, 1902, plaintiff made a motion to set it
aside, and the motion was denied. From the order denying the
motion, plaintiff took an appeal to the Court of Appeals of the
District of Columbia, which was dismissed, and this writ of error
then allowed. The case comes before us on a motion to dismiss or
affirm. The appeal to the Court of Appeals was dismissed on the
ground that the order overruling the motion to vacate the judgment
of dismissal was not the subject of appeal, and we think there was
color for the motion here to dismiss the writ of error. But, in the
view we take, we must decline to sustain that motion, and will
dispose of the case on the motion to affirm.
In its opinion, the Court of Appeals said, among other things,
that the
"motion to vacate was not made until after the lapse of more
than two terms of the court in which the original judgment was
entered. It is not shown that there was any fraud or surprise in
procuring the judgment of dismissal of the action by the
court."
The Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court of the District
obviously agreed in this finding, and a careful examination of the
record affords no basis for questioning the conclusion, if it were
permissible for us to do so. The general rule is that a final
judgment cannot be set aside on application made after the close of
the term at which it was entered, by the court which rendered it,
because the case has passed beyond the control of the court.
Bronson v. Schulten, 104 U. S. 410,
104 U. S. 415;
Phillips v. Negley, 117 U. S. 665.
In the latter case, jurisdiction was taken on error to review a
final order setting aside a judgment on motion made at a subsequent
term. And in
Hume v. Bowie, 148 U.
S. 245,
Phillips v. Negley was considered, and
the distinction between a judgment ordering a new trial when the
court has jurisdiction to make such an order, and a judgment where
such jurisdiction does not exist, was pointed out.
See
Macfarland v. Brown, 187 U. S. 239,
187 U. S.
243.
Page 190 U. S. 40
In the present case, the motion to set aside was denied, not
granted, and, as it was made after the lapse of the term, and came
within no exception, the general rule was applicable. If, then, the
Court of Appeals had entertained jurisdiction, the result would
have been an affirmance, and even if the court erred in declining
jurisdiction, the difference between dismissing the appeal and
affirming the order does not, in the circumstances, require
reversal or modification.
Judgment affirmed.