Opinion
06-17-1874
ADAMS v. HUBBARD.
John E. Penn, for the appellant. There was no counsel for the appellee.
I. An injunction to a judgment is obtained; and whilst it is pending the matter in dispute is referred to arbitrators, who, after reading the pleadings and depositions, and hearing oral evidence, including that of the parties, make an award that the injunction be dissolved. On a motion to set aside the award, on the ground of after discovered evidence--HELD:
1. The rules governing courts of equity in awarding new trials in actions at law, on the ground of after discovered evidence, apply equally to motions to set aside an award on that ground.
2. Where all the evidence that was before the arbitrators is not before the court on the motion to set aside the award, the motion must fail.
3. Though the evidence in the cause before the reference was made, might have warranted the court to direct a new trial, yet the award is in fact a new trial, and the party is not entitled to another trial on that evidence.
II. An affidavit taken without notice, if read without objection in the court below, will be considered as evidence in the appellate court; but it will not have the weight it might have had if regularly taken on notice.
In September 1870 John Hubbard filed his bill in the County court of Patrick county, to enjoin a judgment for $1,000 and interest, which had been recovered in that court by Isaac Adams against himself and William G. Price and Jonathan W. Hubbard, as partners. The bill alleged that the plaintiff was not a partner with Price and Jonathan W. Hubbard, and was no party to the contract upon which the action at law was brought. And the plaintiff's excuse for not defending the action is, that in February 1868, when the case was tried, he, who is a very old and feeble man, seventy-six years of age, was confined to his bed more or less, and totally unable to attend court and make a defense; and in fact did not know whet defense he was or could be required to make. The injunction was granted.
Adams answered, insisting that the plaintiff was a partner of the firm of Hubbard, Price & Hubbard, and that defendant made the contract referred to, personally with the plaintiff. He said that the plaintiff, though an old man, was in his usual health when said action was brought and judgment obtained, and was physically as fully able to make his defense at law as he now is in equity.
Whilst the case was pending in the County court a number of depositions were taken and filed in the cause; and there was some evidence of connivance between Adams and Price and Jonathan Hubbard in obtaining the judgment. In March 1871 the parties entered into an agreement under seal, by which they agreed to submit all matters involved in said suit to C. H. Harbour and William Critz, and if they failed to agree they were to choose an umpire to decide any question upon which they might differ. They were to settle the whole merits of the case, to examine the testimony already filed in the cause, and such other evidence as either party might produce, and decide the case upon the equity and rights of both parties. And their decision was to be made the judgment of the court: and an order referring the cause was made.
The arbitrators chose an umpire, and in April 1871 proceeded to hear the case. Both parties were present with their counsel, and announced themselves ready. The bill and answers and all the written evidence in the case was read; the plaintiff and defendant and several other witnesses were examined orally. And after full hearing of the case, the arbitrators and umpire united in the award, that the injunction granted the plaintiff should be dissolved: And that the same be certified to the County court of Patrick.
In July 1871 the cause came on to be finally heard upon the award, and upon the motion of the plaintiff to set it aside, upon the grounds of mistake of both law and fact by the arbitrators, and also upon the ground of newly discovered evidence by the plaintiff since the award was made. And in support of the motion to set aside the award, the plaintiff read the affidavit of Lester McAlexander, taken before a notary public in the county of Floyd, on the 27th of June 1871. The affidavit details conversations between the affiant and Adams, and between Adams and one Ross, in relation to the subject of the action and the manner of obtaining the judgment at law, which indicated that the claim on which the judgment was obtained was fraudulent, and that the judgment was obtained by the connivance of one or both of the other defendants in the action; neither of whom was worth anything.
The court made a decree setting aside the award; and proceeding to decide the cause set aside the judgment, and directed the action at law to be reinstated on the docket, and that a new trial be awarded, with costs. From this decree Adams obtained an appeal to the Circuit court of Patrick county, where the decree was affirmed. And thereupon Adams applied to a judge of this court for an appeal, which was allowed.
John E. Penn, for the appellant.
There was no counsel for the appellee.
OPINION
STAPLES, J.
The rules governing courts of equity in awarding new trials in actions at law are well settled. The party applying for relief must show that he has a good defense, of which either he had no knowledge until after judgment, or that he was prevented from making it by fraud or accident or some act of the adverse party, unmixed with negligence or fault on his part. 2 Rob. Prac. 213; Green & Suttle v. Massie, 21 Gratt. 356.
The question to be considered by us is, whether John Hubbard, the appellee, consistently with these principles, is entitled to relief against the judgment recovered against him by the appellant Adams. It is very apparent that the appellee, though regularly served with process in the action at law, made no preparation for the trial. He did not employ counsel; he summoned no witnesses. It does not appear that he exercised the least diligence from the inception to the termination of the case. His excuse is, that he was not able to attend the court on account of sickness. But it is certain that he was neither mentally nor physically incapable of employing an agent to look after his interests. He was as competent to make his defense at law as to bring this suit in equity. The same counsel might have been employed; the same witnesses examined as well in the one case as in the other. So far as the appellee is concerned, it is a case of the grossest negligence. The appellant, however, is not free from suspicion of unfair conduct. The evidence of Mr. Shelton, the counsel first spoken to by Price, one of the defendants, tends strongly to show that the judgment was obtained by some management and contrivance on the part of Adams. Notwithstanding the gross and culpable neglect of the appellee, the judge of the County court, under all the circumstances, would, perhaps, have been justified in setting aside the judgment and awarding a new trial. But before the case was ready for a hearing, the parties submitted the matter in controversy to arbitration. It was agreed between them that the arbitrators should determine all the questions in dispute between them; that they should examine the testimony already taken and filed in the cause, and such other evidence as either party might produce, and decide the case upon the equity and rights of both parties. It is very apparent it was the intention of the parties that the merits of the whole controversy should be fully investigated by the arbitrators, and settled upon equitable principles, unaffected by the judgment.
Accordingly the bill, the answer of the defendants, and all the depositions then taken, were read before the arbitrators, the appellant and appellee respectively were examined orally along with other witnesses introduced by them. It seems that the fullest investigation was had, and upon the whole case an award was rendered declaring that the injunction shall and ought to be dissolved.
Now it is very clear that the appellee has obtained all that he sought by his bill, a new trial before judges of his own selection, and that he was afforded ample opportunity of making his defense upon the merits, untrammelled by technical rules of law. The award is regular on its face, and no complaint is made of any partiality, or improper or illegal conduct on the part of the arbitrators. Surely, an award thus made, cannot and ought not to be set aside, except upon very clear and convincing grounds. What are the grounds suggested here? I have looked carefully through the record, and can find nothing that affords even a plausible pretext for interfering with the decision of the arbitrators, unless it be the affidavit of Lester McAlexander. It is very probable the decree of the court below was based upon the facts there stated. This affidavit was taken about two months after the award was made. It does not appear that any notice was ever given to the appellant of the examination of this witness. As no objection seems to have been made on this ground in the court below, I suppose we must consider the affidavit as regular, though the form in which it appears, and is certified in the record, deprives it of much of the weight due to a deposition regularly taken.
The witness undertakes to repeat conversations held in his presence more than three years before. He does not pretend that his attention was particularly called to what was said. During all this time he keeps his knowledge carefully concealed from the parties until the controversy is about to be terminated, and then for some reason, and in some manner not explained, he contrives to communicate the facts to the appellee. And although much of his testimony, if true, was capable of confirmation by other witnesses, no attempt is made to introduce them. His unsupported declarations thus made, constitute the sole ground for setting aside the judgment and the award.
The most that can be said of this evidence is that it creates a strong suspicion of improper conduct on the part of Adams in the action at law. But if it be conceded that it establishes fraud in procuring the judgment, the result would be a new trial of the action. That result was substantially attained by the submission. The arbitration as effectually removed the verdict and judgment out of the way, as though a new trial had been directed by a court of equity. If the award was fairly obtained we are not authorized to set it aside because a judgment preceding it may have been the result of a fraudulent combination.
The rules in regard to the setting aside verdicts of juries upon the ground of after-discovered evidence equally apply to awards. These rules are too familiar to require any extended discussion. They were the subject of consideration by this court in the case of the Commonwealth v. Read, 22 Gratt. 924. The principle there stated, and it is sustained by all the authorities, is that after-discovered evidence in order to afford a proper ground for granting a new trial, must be material in its object, and not merely cumulative and corroborative or collateral; and must be such as ought to produce, on another trial, an opposite result on the merits.
As has been already seen, a part of the matter stated in the affidavit relates to the manner in which the judgment was obtained. This has already been considered and requires no further notice. The other matters contained in the affidavit have some bearing upon the merits of the controversy. But they are merely corroborative of the evidence in the record, and relied upon before the arbitrators. If these additional facts had been before them the arbitrators might have arrived at a different conclusion. It is impossible to say whether they would or not. We cannot affirm that a different result would or ought to have been produced. Unless this can be done, the court is not, upon any rule applicable to after-discovered evidence, authorized to interfere with the award.
But there is a still more decided objection in the way. We are not in the possession of all the testimony before the arbitrators. It is true that we have all the depositions taken before the award was made; but a number of witnesses, including the parties, were orally examined. What testimony they gave, or what it proved or tended to prove, we have no means of ascertaining. It may be that the facts stated in the affidavit were the subject of investigation. The appellee may have offered evidence bearing on the same points, and the appellant, on the other hand, may have met such evidence by testimony of the most satisfactory character. In Callaghan v. Kippers, 7 Leigh 608, Judge Cabell in discussing a nearly similar proposition, said, " It (the record) gives us only the newly-discovered evidence, which, if it was the only evidence in the case, would show the verdict to be wrong. But other evidence was given to the jury, and that evidence may have justified the verdict, even if the newly-discovered evidence had also been before the jury." This case plainly establishes the rule, that the appellate court will not undertake to interfere with the decision of the trying court upon the ground of after-discovered evidence, unless it has before it all the evidence heard in the latter court. The observance of this rule is necessary to prevent the granting of new trials in consequence of the discovery of mere cumulative facts and circumstances relating to matters which may have been controverted on the former trial.
This doctrine received the unanimons approval of this court in Markam v. Boyd, 22 Gratt. 548. It equally applies to awards as to verdicts, and is decisive of this case. For these reasons the decree of the Circuit and County courts must be reversed, and the bill of complainants be dismissed with costs.
DECREE REVERSED.