Moses v. Brodie
Moses v. Brodie
Opinion of the Court
On the 14th of March, 1867, the Cincinnati creditors of Simon Brodie mentioned in his deed of trust after Lockhard & Ireland, who are complainants in the preceding case, filed this bill, which is in form an original bill, and so entered on the Rule Docket of this court, against the parties to said bill of Lockhard & Ireland, except the complainants themselves. They set out their claims against Simon Brodie, and mention the filing of the bill of Lockhard v. Brodie, and say: “All the allegations of fraud contained in said bill are especially referred to and adopted in this bill as if here set out and charged. Complainants also refer to the exhibits of said bill and make them a part of this bill.” They then charge that the conveyance of the master to Sophia
Separate demurrers have been filed by Simon Brodie, Sophia Brodie and the two Bissingers, to this bill, the grounds assigned being the same in each, namely, that the bill is multifarious in joining in one bill the matter of the deed to Mrs. Brodie, and the matter of the deed of trust, and for the same reason that there has been a misjoinder of parties. A third ground of demurrer is that the bill fails to set out the individual names of the persons composing the firms of the complainants. The latter ground of demurrer is one of form, not substance, at any rate it is a ground of special demurrer to its particular defect, not of general demurrer to the whole bill. The other grounds of demurrer are, of course, not well taken. Johnson v. Brown, 2 Hum. 327; Fogg v. Rogers, 2 Cold. 290, 296; Bartee v. Tompkins, 4 Sneed, 623, 636. The two transactions sought to be impeached have a common origin, and are so connected in the manner in which they took place, that it was impossible to tell in advance what bearing one might have upon the other.
The defendants have made no point that the validity of the demurrers has been admitted by failing to set them for argument at the first term under the Code, § 4394, and, of course, the court does not feel called upon to do it.
If this bill is to be treated as an original bill it is not only
Our supreme court has often had occasion to say, and in the conclusion I fully concur with them, and it would be my duty to follow the ruling whether I concurred or not, that the court of chancery looks to substance not form. Accordingly, I have at this term, in the case of Newman v. Smith, treated a petition as an original bill, and, in the case of Randall v. Payne, treated as a bill of review for errors apparent a bill filed nominally as an original bill in the nature of a bill of review. This bill is in form, and has been so treated, an original bill, but it is in substance a petition to be allowed to become parties complainant to the bill of Lock-hard & Ireland, or, at any rate, as a cross-bill in that cause. In either of these views, the two proceedings are in effect one. These complainants had a right to file a cross-bill in order to set up adverse rights against their co-defendants with whom they were joined, as having acquiesced in the deed of trust. They might also make themselves parties complainant with the assent of the original complainants. I will permit them now to treat their bill as a petition to become co-complainants, in the original bill, and, unless the defendants show cause to the contrary, to take an order, with the assent of Lockhard & Ireland, making them complainants upon their giving bond and security for costs ; or they may consider their bill as a cross-bill and proceed with it accord
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.