In all cases of concurrent jurisdiction, the court which first
has possession of the subject must determine it conclusively.
Although courts of equity have concurrent jurisdiction with
courts of law in all matters of fraud, yet where the cause has
already been tried and determined by a court of law, a court of
equity cannot take cognizance of it unless there be the addition of
some equitable circumstance to give jurisdiction.
In such a case, some defect of testimony or other disability
which a court of law cannot remove must be shown as a ground for
resorting to a court of equity.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL, delivered the opinion of the
Court.
This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of the
United States for the District of West Tennessee dismissing the
plaintiff's bill.
The bill states that the plaintiff had made several
Page 22 U. S. 533
entries for small tracts of land within the district for which
he had obtained patents. That the defendant, John McIver, claiming
title to the same land, under an older grant, obtained by Donaldson
and Tyrrel, had brought ejectments against him for the several
tracts of land he claims, and has obtained judgment in some of
them. That he has attempted to bring the causes before this Court
by writ of error, but has been unable to do so because no one of
his tracts is worth two thousand dollars, though all of them, taken
together, are worth a larger sum.
The bill alleges that the grant to Donaldson and Tyrrel is a
pretended grant, purporting to be issued by the State of North
Carolina in the year 1795; that if genuine, it does not cover his
land, because it calls for 40,000 acres only, but includes 70,000
within its boundaries; that the grant is not founded on any
warrants, or, if upon any, on those previously granted, and the
numbers of the warrants have been inserted in the plat and
certificate by the grantees, since the grant issued; that it is
probable the grant never did issue, but was stolen out of the
office in blank and was filled up by the grantees, of all which the
said McIver had notice, before he received his conveyance. That
McIver contends sometimes that the grant issued on one set of
warrants and sometimes on another, and has caused it to be
registered in Knox County in one way and in Overton, where the land
lies, in another, and to avoid detection has torn the plat and
certificate of survey from the grant. And finally,
Page 22 U. S. 534
that the State of North Carolina had no power to issue the
grant.
The defendant demurred to this bill, and on argument the
demurrer was sustained and the bill dismissed.
The first question made in the cause is the jurisdiction of the
court, sitting as a court of chancery. It is contended on the part
of the respondent that a court of equity can exercise no
jurisdiction in the case, because the plaintiff has full and
adequate remedy at law.
The several allegations of the bill have been reviewed, and it
is contended that each of them is examinable at law, and ought to
be decided in precisely the same manner in both courts. If the
surplus quantity of land contained in the patent avoids the grant
in whole or in part in a court of equity, its effect would be the
same in a court of law. If the grant be void because issued without
warrants or on warrants previously satisfied, it is void at law. So
with respect to the allegations that it was stolen out of the land
office; that the plat and certificate of survey have been torn off;
that North Carolina had no power to issue it, and so with respect
to every allegation in the bill. The facts alleged are all
examinable at law, and a court of law is as capable of deciding on
them as a court of equity. In such a case, the existence of some
fact which disables the party having the law in his favor from
bringing his case fairly and fully before a court of law has been
generally supposed to be indispensable to the jurisdiction of a
court of equity. Some defect of testimony, some disability
Page 22 U. S. 535
which a court of law cannot remove, is usually alleged as a
motive for coming into a court of equity. But in the case at bar,
the bill alleges nothing which can prevent a court of law from
exercising its full judgment. No defect of testimony is alleged; no
discovery is required; no appeal is made to the conscience of the
defendant. Facts are alleged which have precisely the same
operation in a court of law as in a court of equity, and the bill
does not even insinuate that they cannot be proved at law.
The argument on the other side is that the bill charges gross
fraud on those under whom the defendant claims, and charges him
with knowledge of that fraud, and that courts of equity have
concurrent jurisdiction with courts of law in all matters of
fraud.
Admitting this proposition to be true to the full extent in
which it is stated, it will not, we think, aid the case. In all
cases of concurrent jurisdiction, the court which first has
possession of the subject must decide it. The questions in these
cases have all been decided at law, and the party can have no right
to bring them on again before a court of chancery. Were a court of
equity, in a case of concurrent jurisdiction, to try a cause
already tried at law without the addition of any equitable
circumstance to give jurisdiction, it would act as an appellate
court to affirm or reverse a judgment already rendered, on the same
circumstances, by a competent tribunal. This is not the province of
a court of chancery.
The appellant has relied on the case of
Page 22 U. S. 536
Winchester v. Evans, Cook's Tenn. 420. That was a bill
in the Court of Chancery of Tennessee to be relieved against a
judgment rendered in the state court of Pennsylvania, on the
suggestion that it was a trial by surprise, in the absence of the
party and of his witnesses. The defendant filed a plea in bar,
denying the surprise alleged in the bill, and averring that the
trial was a full and a fair one, and that the judgment was rendered
on all the testimony belonging to the cause. The plaintiff
demurred, and on the argument of the demurrer the court said,
"taking the matter of the plea to be true, it would bar an
investigation in this Court. If the complainant chooses to deny the
truth of this plea, he can still reply to it, as well as to the
answer, and he may then have an opportunity of showing that there
was not a full and fair trial and that therefore the judgment ought
in equity to have no effect. But while ever I am constrained to
believe that there was a full and fair trial in a court of law, it
will be an objection with me to a reinvestigation in a court of
equity."
This case appears to the Court to decide the very principle laid
down in the preceding part of this opinion.
Admitting, then, the concurrent jurisdiction of the courts of
equity and law in matters of fraud, we think the cause must be
decided by the tribunal which first obtains possession of it, and
that each court must respect the judgment or decree of the other. A
question decided at law cannot
Page 22 U. S. 537
be reviewed in a court of equity without the suggestion of some
equitable circumstance of which the party could not avail himself
at law.
Decree affirmed, with costs.