Ambler v. Whipple, 90 U.S. 278 (1874)
U.S. Supreme Court
Ambler v. Whipple, 90 U.S. 23 Wall. 278 278 (1874)Ambler v. Whipple
90 U.S. (23 Wall.) 278
Syllabus
A rehearing will not be granted on the ground that the record on which the case was heard was imperfect, it appearing by an examination of the parts which on the original hearing were left out, but which were now brought up, that they presented nothing but matter which did not affect the merits of the case, or matter which only further established that which the court in giving its decree considered to be already otherwise abundantly proved.
This was a petition for rehearing, made in behalf of Whipple, the appellee, in an appeal from a chancery decree, in which a judgment of reversal and remand had been given in this Court against him, at an earlier part of this term. [Footnote 1]
The original case was thus:
Whipple, of the City of Washington, D.C., had formed a partnership in the year 1869, with a man of the name of Ambler, the purpose of the partnership being to generate gas from petroleum by a new process which Ambler professed to have discovered. Whipple was the man of business of the firm, and the person who furnished the requisite money to carry on the scheme. Ambler was a man of inventive genius, but of genius disfigured by so many irregularities and vices as to make it somewhat doubtful whether he was entirely sane. He would get, for example, into drunken debauches from time to time, and when in them, lie, cheat, commit forgery (of which, indeed, he was at the time actually convicted), and go away from Washington as
if he had no business there at all to attend to. About the 21st of August, 1869, Ambler being sober enough before and at the time, the parties made an experiment which resulted in a valuable and profitable discovery. Soon after this -- that is to say about the 1st of September following -- Ambler having got into one of his drunken fits, went away from Washington, and was gone for eight or ten days while Whipple was bringing more nearly to perfection the experiment just mentioned, the success of which, in the main, had been already established -- a success which was largely due to Ambler.
Having got through his debauch, Ambler returned to Washington, where he found that Whipple had taken another person into partnership with him, and that the two had combined to shut him out of the partnership workshops, and to treat him as no longer interested in the business of the firm.
Ambler hereupon filed a bill praying that the new firm might be enjoined from using the recent discovery, and that Whipple might account.
Whipple answered setting forth Ambler's habits of debauchery, of lying &c., and that he had abandoned the workshops at Washington -- in which point of light the bill represented Ambler's recent departure.
Neither, however, in this answer nor in a cross-bill which he filed did Whipple allege that Ambler's character and habits were not known to him as to very many other persons in Washington before the formation of the partnership. And in point of fact it seemed that they were perfectly well known to him as to others. No dissolution of the partnership was prayed for by either party.
This Court. on appeal from a decree made in the local court at Washington where the proceedings in the case were originally begun, decreed that though Ambler's bad character -- his drunkenness, dishonesty &c. -- would have been good ground for dissolving the partnership had the partnership been entered into in ignorance of them by Whipple, yet that Whipple having been fully acquainted with them before the
partnership was made, he could not now make them the excuse to treat the partnership as ended, and to take to himself all the benefits of the joint labor of the two partners and their joint property. And it appearing on the proofs that notwithstanding all his foibles and vices, Ambler had greatly contributed by his inventive genius to the discovery which had been made on the 21st of August, 1869 -- contributed indeed quite as much as Whipple ever had by his money and his more steady habits -- this Court charged Whipple with half the profits made since his exclusion of Ambler from the workshops.
In narrating the facts of the case, before giving the opinion of the court upon them, the court spoke of Ambler's departure from Washington as having occurred on the 20th of August. [Footnote 2] In point of fact, as already said, he actually went from the city on the 1st of September, he having been lying about somewhere more or less intoxicated, as was said, for a day or two before he actually went out of town.
Such was the original case. The petition for rehearing now set forth that a large part of the matter which was before the court below had been omitted on the hearing before this Court, and that such hearing was therefore upon a defective record. Affidavits accompanied the petition by which it was attempted to be shown that owing to the death of one of the gentlemen employed as counsel, and the substitution of others, there was no laches or neglect in examining and perfecting the record before the hearing for which the petitioner, Whipple, the appellee, should be held responsible. A transcript of the parts of the record which were omitted in the first transcript now accompanied the petition for rehearing. They consisted of commissions to take depositions, of orders fixing the time, by extension or otherwise,
for taking testimony, of rules upon the parties to do various things preparatory to a final hearing, which did not affect the merits of the case, and of matters showing Ambler to have been drunk, vicious, negligent, and in contempt of court in the progress of the case.
The petition for rehearing stated the petitioner's case very fully, fortifying it, so far as it could be fortified, by references and extracts from both the original record and the supplemental one now brought up, and containing the parts which had been omitted.
As respected one of the points sought to be established by the affidavits -- to-wit, that Whipple, or his counsel, were without fault in not having sought before the hearing of the original case to perfect the transcript of the record -- it appeared by an examination of the records of this Court that the appeal was docketed and dismissed February 19th, 1872, because the record had not been filed within the time limited by the rule of the Court; that on the 1st of March, a motion to set aside that order was made, when the late Mr. Hughes, counsel for Whipple, the appellee, obtained time for one week to examine the transcript proposed to be filed, and it was within the recollection of the Court that this was on the ground that it was an incomplete record.
It further appeared by the same sort of evidence, that on the 8th of March, Mr. Hughes had an extension of time for this examination to the 22d, which made three weeks allowed for that purpose, and on that day the order of dismissal was set aside and the case docketed, on the transcript on which it was finally heard. The case was reached for argument at the October Term of 1873, and continued without objection, and on the 15th of October, 1874, was passed until the 13th of November by consent, and heard on the 16th and 17th of that month.