THE complainant's intestate filed his bill against the defendant's testator, the object of which was to set aside an award which had been made between the parties, and to open accounts on which the award was founded; and the court, many years ago, passed an interlocutory decree to that effect. The defendant preferred a petition praying a rehearing, which was had, and his petition overruled. The accounts were referred to a master, who reported a large sum against the defendant. He filed exceptions to the report, which had stood some years for *Page 11 argument, when he preferred a second petition praying a rehearing of the interlocutory decree. This petition was objected to on the ground that a second petition praying a rehearing of the same question would not lie.
This case was several times argued in the District Court and also in this Court. The act of Assembly establishing the courts of equity in this State is silent with respect to the mode of proceeding on rehearing; but in order to ascertain the authority they are to exercise, and the course of procedure in cases not especially provided for, a general reference is made to the former court of chancery, and to the power rightfully incident to such a court.
It would be extremely difficult to discover the rules of practice which formerly obtained here, as well from the total want of any memorials of the decisions of this Court as from the loss or dispersion of the records.
The practice in England will be found unsuited and inapplicable, in a variety of instances, to the existing constitution of our courts of equity, which have therefore been obliged to make, occasionally, such rules as were necessary to (12) expedite the decision of causes, the details of which the Legislature did not enter into, but left to be arranged by the courts, under the above general reference.
But the shortness of time allotted to the equity business, and the consequent accumulation of suits in many of the districts, have concurred with other causes in rendering this branch of our jurisprudence little indebted to precedents of our own, and in compelling a frequent resort to the books to ascertain the practice in correspondent cases.
Upon the question now under consideration, no aid can be derived from any former decision in our courts, and it is probable that one of the kind has not before occurred. It must therefore be decided by an inquiry into the usual course of courts of chancery and the powers and authorities rightfully incident to them.
When we consider, however, that equity is administered in England in tribunals exclusively established for that purpose, possessing a ready access to all the means of information by which the science is illustrated, by men who make it the principal business of their lives, assisted, too, in difficult cases, by the common-law judges, and from whose decision there is nevertheless an appeal, it seems obvious that whatever liberality there is in rehearing causes there, ought more strongly to prevail *Page 12 in our courts, destitute as they are of all these advantages.
It appears that this cause, so far as it respects the interlocutory decree complained of, has been once reheard; but that circumstance does not appear, in itself, of such decisive weight as to prevent a rehearing, more especially as it must have been at the time reheard before the same judges that made the decree. For it is laid down by a great judge of equity in England to be the practice there, that when a petition of rehearing is signed by two counsel, such credit is given by the Court to their opinion that the cause ought to be reheard, so as to order it to be (13) set down. Ambler, 91. It is therefore entirely a matter of course to grant a rehearing, if counsel will certify in its favor. Yet the defendant might have appealed to the chancellor, if the decree had been made by the master of the rolls, or to the House of Lords, if made by the chancellor. Do not the principles of justice, then, plainly dictate when substantial reasons are shown against a decree, which when enrolled is final and unappealable, a second rehearing ought to be granted? It is not a matter of course to grant a second, as it is to grant a first; but whenever the court is satisfied with the reasons offered, it is apprehended that a second ought to be granted. And independently of the additional reasons in support of this mode of proceeding arising from the constitution of our courts of equity, there are several cases in the books which, when attentively considered, will go a great way towards authorizing it. In the case of Falkland and others against Cheney and others, in 1 Bro. Par. Cases, there was hearing and rehearing at the rolls, and upon both occasions the decree was in favor of the defendants, and the petition for the rehearing was by the plaintiffs. There was afterwards a rehearing before the chancellor, who confirmed the decree at the rolls, and after this there was a further rehearing before the Lord Keeper.
In Porter v. Hubert, in 2 Chan., 85, and 3 Chan., 78, the decree was made by a judge sitting for the Lord Keeper, who afterwards on the petition of the defendant, heard the case himself, assisted by judges. There was afterwards a second rehearing before the chancellor, assisted by judges.
In Parker v. Dee, 2 Chan. Cases, 210, there was a hearing and decree at the rolls, and upon the defendant's appeal, the cause was again heard before the Lord Keeper. On this, another hearing was granted on the plaintiff's petition, upon which the cause was heard by the chancellor, assisted by a judge; (14) and the chancellor making a decree different from both the former decrees, the plaintiffs prayed a still further rehearing, and obtained it. These cases, even if there were no *Page 13 others, strongly demonstrate how cautious the equity courts in that country are in revising and reconsidering decrees, and that before enrollment they are considered within the discretion of the court to order a rehearing.
Noel v. Robinson, 1 Vernon, 90, 453, 560, 466, also in 2 Chan. Cases and 2 Ventris, is a precedent of a second rehearing. There were three hearings and two decrees by Lord Nottingham. Lord North reheard the cause, and reversed Lord Nottingham's decree. But the cause was again reheard by Lord Jeffries, who reversed Lord North's decree, and affirmed Lord Nottingham's.
So it appears in Nutt v. Hill, 1 Vern., 16, and 2 Chancery Cases, 120, that there were two rehearings, one before Lord North, the other before Lord Jeffries.
The Court is, therefore, of the opinion that a petition for rehearing will lie, notwithstanding a former petition preferred and denied, if the justice of a case demands a rehearing. They are led to believe that the justice of the case requires it here, and therefore direct a rehearing before the Superior Court of Hillsborough District.