A decree of the court below that certain deeds should be set
aside as fraudulent and void; that certain lands and slaves should
be delivered up to the complainant; that one of the defendants
should pay a certain sum of money to the complainant; that the
complainant should have execution for these several matters; that
the master should take an account of the profits of the lands and
slaves, and also an account of certain money and notes, and then
said decree concluding as follows,
viz.,
"And so much of the said bill as contains or relates to matters
hereby referred to the master for a report is retained for further
decree in the premises, and so much of the said bill as is not now,
nor has been heretofore, adjudged and decreed upon, and which is
not above retained for the purposes aforesaid, be dismissed without
prejudice, and that the said defendants do pay the costs"
was a final decree within the meaning of the acts of Congress,
and an appeal from it will lie to this Court.
But a decree that money shall be paid into court, or that
property shall be delivered to a receiver, or that property held in
trust shall be delivered to a new trustee appointed by the court is
interlocutory only, and intended to reserve the subject matter in
dispute from waste or dilapidation, and to keep it within the
control of the court until the rights of the parties concerned can
be finally adjudicated. From such a decree, no appeal lies.
The attention of the circuit courts is called to the propriety
of merely announcing their opinion in an interlocutory order, and
withholding a decree setting aside titles and conveyances until the
case is ready for a final decree.
The difference between the English and American practice upon
this subject explained.
Where the defendants claimed separate pieces of property,
conveyed at different times by separate conveyances, and the decree
against them was several, it was not necessary for all to join in
an appeal.
The facts in the case are set forth in the opinion of the
Court.
Mr. Sergeant moved to dismiss the appeal because the decree of
the court below was not final, and because the appeal was not
regularly brought up. On the second point, he said that there were
several defendants, one only of whom had appealed. But all the
parties must join.
32 U. S. 7 Pet.
399. He referred the court, however, upon this point, to
Todd v.
Daniel, 16 Pet. 521. A case must not come up in
fragments.
28 U. S. 3 Pet.
307;
3 U. S. 3 Dall.
188.
To show that the decree was not final, he referred to
The Palmyra,
10 Wheat. 502;
Chace v.
Vasquez, 11 Wheat. 429;
Brown v.
Swann, 9 Pet. 1;
Young v.
Grundy, 6 Cranch 51;
Rutherford
v. Fisher, 4 Dall. 22;
Lea v.
Kelly, 1 Pet. 213;
Young
v. Smith, 12 Pet. 287.
Page 47 U. S. 202
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TANEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
A motion has been made to dismiss this appeal upon the ground,
that the decree in the circuit court is not a final decree within
the meaning of the acts of Congress of 1789 and 1803.
The bill was filed by the appellee, as the assignee in
bankruptcy of a certain Thomas Banks in the Circuit Court of the
United States for the District of Louisiana against the appellants
and Banks the bankrupt and three other defendants. The object of
the bill was to set aside sundry deeds made by Banks for lands and
slaves which the complainant charged to be fraudulent, and for an
account of the rents and profits of the property so conveyed, and
also for an account of sundry sums of money which he alleged had
been received by one or more of the defendants, as specifically
charged in the bill, which belonged to the bankrupt's estate at the
time of his bankruptcy.
The case was proceeded in until it came on for hearing, when the
court passed a decree declaring sundry deeds therein mentioned to
be fraudulent and void, and directing the lands and slaves therein
mentioned to be delivered up to the complainant, and also directing
one of the defendants named in the decree to pay him eleven
thousand dollars received from the bankrupt in fraud of his
creditors, and
"that the complainant do have execution for the several matters
aforesaid, in conformity with law and the practice prescribed by
the rules of the Supreme Court of the United States."
The decree then directs that the master take an account of the
profits of the lands and slaves ordered to be delivered up, from
the time of the filing
Page 47 U. S. 203
of the bill until the property was delivered, or to the date of
the master's report, and also an account of the money and notes
received by one of the defendants (who has not appealed) in fraud
of the creditors of the bankrupt, and concludes in the following
words:
"And so much of the said bill as contains or relates to matters
hereby referred to the master for a report is retained for further
decree in the premises, and so much of the said bill as is not now,
nor has been heretofore, adjudged and decreed upon, and which is
not above retained for the purposes aforesaid, be dismissed without
prejudice, and that the said defendants do pay the costs."
Among the deeds set aside as fraudulent is one from the bankrupt
to Ann Fogarty, otherwise called Ann Wells, for two lots in the
City of New Orleans and sundry slaves which she afterwards conveyed
to Forgay, the other appellant. Both of these deeds are declared
null and void and the lots, with the improvements thereon, and the
negroes directed to be delivered to the complainant for the benefit
of the bankrupt's creditors. This part of the decree is one of the
matters of which the complainant was to have execution. But the
account of the rents and profits of this property is, like other
similar accounts, referred to the master, and reserved for further
decree.
The appeal is taken by Samuel L. Forgay and Ann Fogarty,
otherwise called Ann Wells, and they alone are interested in that
portion of the decree last above mentioned. The bankrupt and the
three other defendants have not appealed. These three defendants
claimed other property, which had been conveyed to them at
different times and by separate conveyances, as mentioned in the
proceedings. And it was not therefore necessary that they should
join in this appeal.
Todd v.
Daniel, 16 Pet. 523.
The question upon the motion to dismiss is whether this is a
final decree within the meaning of the acts of Congress.
Undoubtedly, it is not final in the strict, technical sense of that
term. But this Court has not heretofore understood the words "final
decrees" in this strict and technical sense, but has given to them
a more liberal, and, as we think, a more reasonable construction,
and one more consonant to the intention of the legislature.
In the case of
Whiting v. Bank of the United
States, 13 Pet. 15, it was held that a decree of
foreclosure and sale of mortgaged premises was a final decree, and
the defendant entitled to his appeal without waiting for the return
and confirmation of the sale by a decretal order. And this decision
is placed by the court upon the ground, that the decree of
foreclosure and sale was final upon the merits, and the
ulterior
Page 47 U. S. 204
proceedings but a mode of executing the original decree. The
same rule of construction was acted on in the case of
Michaud v.
Girod, 4 How. 503.
The case before us is a stronger one for an appeal than the case
last mentioned. For here the decree not only decides the title to
the property in dispute, and annuls the deeds under which the
defendants claim, but also directs the property in dispute to be
delivered to the complainant, and awards execution. And according
to the last paragraph in the decree, the bill is retained merely
for the purpose of adjusting the accounts referred to the master.
In all other respects, the whole of the matters brought into
controversy by the bill are finally disposed of as to all of the
defendants, and the bill as to them is no longer pending before the
court, and the decree which it passed could not have been
afterwards reconsidered or modified in relation to the matters
decided, except upon a petition for a rehearing, within the time
prescribed by the rules of this Court regulating proceedings in
equity in the circuit courts. If these appellants, therefore, must
wait until the accounts are reported by the master and confirmed by
the court, they will be subjected to irreparable injury. For the
lands and slaves which they claim will be taken out of their
possession and sold, and the proceeds distributed among the
creditors of the bankrupt, before they can have an opportunity of
being heard in this Court in defense of their rights. We think,
upon sound principles of construction, as well as upon the
authority of the cases referred to, that such is not the meaning of
the acts of Congress. And when the decree decides the right to the
property in contest, and directs it to be delivered up by the
defendant to the complainant, or directs it to be sold, or directs
the defendant to pay a certain sum of money to the complainant, and
the complainant is entitled to have such decree carried immediately
into execution, the decree must be regarded as a final one to that
extent, and authorizes an appeal to this Court, although so much of
the bill is retained in the circuit court as is necessary for the
purpose of adjusting by a further decree the accounts between the
parties pursuant to the decree passed.
This rule, of course, does not extend to cases where money is
directed to be paid into court, or property to be delivered to a
receiver, or property held in trust to be delivered to a new
trustee appointed by the court, or to cases of a like description.
Orders of that kind are frequently and necessarily made in the
progress of a cause. But they are interlocutory only, and intended
to preserve the subject matter in dispute from waste or
dilapidation, and to keep it within the control of the court
Page 47 U. S. 205
until the rights of the parties concerned can be adjudicated by
a final decree. The case before us, however, comes within the rule
above stated and the motion to dismiss is therefore overruled. We
however feel it our duty to say that we cannot approve of the
manner in which this case has been disposed of by the decree. In
limiting the right of appeal to final decrees, it was obviously the
object of the law to save the unnecessary expense and delay of
repeated appeals in the same suit and to have the whole case and
every matter in controversy in it decided in a single appeal.
In this respect, the practice of the United States chancery
courts differs from the English practice. For appeals to the House
of Lords may be taken from an interlocutory order of the
chancellor, which decides a right of property in dispute, and
therefore there is no irreparable injury to the party by ordering
his deed to be cancelled or the property he holds to be delivered
up, because he may immediately appeal, and the execution of the
order is suspended until the decision of the appellate court. But
the case is otherwise in the courts of the United States, where the
right to appeal is by law limited to final decrees. And if by an
interlocutory order or decree he is required to deliver up property
which he claims or to pay money which he denies to be due, and the
order immediately carried into execution by the circuit court, his
right of appeal is of very little value to him, and he may be
ruined before he is permitted to avail himself of the right. It is
exceedingly important, therefore, that the circuit courts of the
United States, in framing their interlocutory orders and in
carrying them into execution, should keep in view the difference
between the right of appeal as practiced in the English chancery
jurisdiction and as restricted by the act of Congress, and abstain
from changing unnecessarily the possession of property or
compelling the payment of money by an interlocutory order.
Cases no doubt sometimes arise where the purposes of justice
require that the property in controversy should be placed in the
hands of a receiver, or a trustee be changed, or money be paid into
court. But orders of this description stand upon very different
principles from the interlocutory orders of which we are
speaking.
In the case before us, for example, it would certainly have been
proper and entirely consistent with chancery practice for the
circuit court to have announced in an interlocutory order or decree
the opinion it had formed as to the rights of the parties and the
decree it would finally pronounce upon the titles and conveyances
in contest. But there could be no necessity
Page 47 U. S. 206
for passing immediately a final decree annulling the
conveyances, and ordering the property to be delivered to the
assignee of the bankrupt. The decree upon these matters might and
ought to have awaited the master's report; and when the accounts
were before the court, then every matter in dispute might have been
adjudicated in one final decree, and if either party thought
himself aggrieved, the whole matter would be brought here and
decided in one appeal and the object and policy of the acts of
Congress upon this subject carried into effect.
These remarks are not made for the purpose of censuring the
learned judge by whom this decree was pronounced, but in order to
call the attention of the circuit courts to an inconvenient
practice into which some of them have sometimes fallen and which is
regarded by this Court as altogether inconsistent with the object
and policy of the acts of Congress in relation to appeals, and at
the same time needlessly burdensome and expensive to the parties
concerned, and calculated by successive appeals to produce great
and unreasonable delays in suits in chancery. For it may well
happen that when the accounts are taken and reported by the master,
this case may again come here upon exceptions to his report,
allowed or disallowed by the circuit court, and thus two appeals
made necessary when the matters in dispute could more conveniently
and speedily and with less expense have been decided in one.
Order
On consideration of the motion filed by Mr. Sergeant, of counsel
for the appellee, to dismiss this appeal, and of the arguments of
counsel thereupon had as well against as in support of the said
motion, it is now here ordered by this Court that the said motion
be and the same is hereby overruled.