Watson v. Thomas
Watson v. Thomas
Opinion of the Court
Opinion of the Court, by
THIS is a bill in chancery, brought by the administrator with the will annexed, and legatees of Timothy Cox, against the appellant, to compel him to convey, or rather to re-convey a tract of land, which had been conveyed by the testator to him by a previous deed, relying on a bond given by the appellant, which is alleged to be lost. At the January term of the court below, in the year 1818, that court made a decree, that the ap
It is evident, from this record, that the decree of January 1818 was final, and that it left no controversy open to be thereafter settled by a decree of the court. The parties were, to all intents and purposes, out of court, except as to the execution of the decree; and the decree itself was out of the power of that court, except so far as it could be thereafter reached by a bill of review. Even if the order directing a commissioner to convey, had remained, still the decree was final, and such an order only directed the execution of the decree, which could be done by the commissioner without the cause remaining in court, even as execution for money could be had by the sheriff, after a final decree for money.
So many records of this court have been presented, showing chancery causes retained after the whole controversy was settled, that it induces a belief that the clerks, or solicitors, or parties in chancery, have commenced a practice, which is expensive to the parties and calculated to delude them. Such a practice ought, in due time, to be corrected. In this case, the appeal not having been prayed at the term when the final decree was rendered, no error in the original decree can be noticed; nor does the appeal taken author
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.