Source: https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/235/407/
Timestamp: 2019-04-22 10:37:18+00:00

Document:
Bills of review are on two grounds: first, error of law apparent on the face of the record without further examination of matter of fact; second, new facts discovered since the decree, which should materially affect the decree and probably induce a different result.
An aspect of the claim involved cannot be held back when the case is presented to the court and later made the subject of a bill of review. Although the decision of the district court which determined the case sought to be reviewed is alleged to have been decided upon principles inconsistent with a subsequent decision by this Court, the subsequent decision will not lay the foundation for a bill of review for errors of law apparent, or for new matter in pais discovered since the decree and requiring a different result.
The facts, which involve the principles of law upon which bills of review are granted and their application to this case, are stated in the opinion.
This case presents another phase of the bankruptcy of A. O. Brown & Company, stockbrokers in New York.
See First National Bank of Princeton v. Littlefield, 226 U. S. 110; Gorman v. Littlefield, 229 U. S. 19; Schuyler v. Littlefield, 232 U. S. 707. This case is submitted on the motion of appellee to dismiss, affirm, or place on the summary docket. The appellants filed a petition for reclamation in the bankruptcy court, which concerned, among other stocks, three hundred shares of United States Steel stock, which are now the subject matter of this controversy. On April 20, 1911, the district court confirmed the report of the master, and entered an order dismissing the petitions of appellants and of some other claimants. Appellants appealed to the circuit court of appeals, and that court affirmed the district court (193 F. 24). The case then came to this Court, and the judgment of the court of appeals was affirmed ( 226 U. S. 226 U.S. 110). On August 4, 1913, the bill of review with which the present proceeding is concerned was filed in the district court. This was more than two years after the original order in the district court, dismissing the reclamation proceeding, was made. The district court dismissed the bill of review (213 F. 701). That decree was affirmed in the circuit court of appeals (213 F. 705). Then the case was appealed here.
the circuit court of appeals in the same case (175 F. 769), would, had they been applied in this case, have required a different result in the district court in dealing with the original petition in reclamation, so far as the three hundred shares of the United States Steel stock, pledged with the Hanover National Bank, are concerned.
Bills of review are on two grounds: first, error of law apparent on the face of the record without further examination of matters of fact; second, new facts discovered since the decree, which should materially affect the decree and probably induce a different result. 2 Bates' Federal Equity Procedure 762; Street's Federal Equity Practice, Vol. 2, § 2151.
If the decision in the Gorman case would have required a different result if the principles upon which it was decided had been applied in the original proceeding, which we do not find it necessary to decide, such subsequent decision will not lay the foundation for a bill of review for errors of law apparent, or for new matter in pais discovered since the decree, and probably requiring a different result. Tilghman v. Werk, 39 F. 680 (opinion by Judge Jackson, afterwards Mr. Justice Jackson of this Court); Hoffman v. Knox, Circuit Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit, 50 F. 484, 491 (opinion by Chief Justice Fuller).

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