announced the opinion of the Court:
The following bill was filed in the circuit court of Jefferson county: “Andrew Hunter special ■commissioner of the circuit court of Jefferson county filed his bill of complaint against John "W\ Kennedy, Andrew E. Kennedy, John Sel-den and Sarah B. Selden his'wife, Mary Cooke, Edward P. Kennedy, S. B. Kennedy and Mary S. his wife, Lizzie G. *345Selden, Andrew. K. Selden and H. 0. Selden, defendants. Complainant respectfully represents that lie was duly appointed a special receiver of the circuit court of Jefferson county, in the chancery suit of Jno. I. Heñido, John W. Kennedy, :&c., and as such he obtained a decree in said court on the chancery side, against the defendant Jno. W. Kennedy; that execution duty issued and was returned, in effect by the sheriff that said Kennedy is an heir of Andrew Kennedy deceased who died in this county, leaving to valuable farms, which are both situated in this county, known as ‘Cassilis’ and the ‘Cave’ farm, and that said Jno. Mb Kennedy has an undivided interest amounting to one-sixth of said two farms. The complainant therefore prays, that this undivided interest may be subjected to the payment of his said decree, which as will appear by an authentic copy of the same herewith filed, as exhibit ‘A’ amounts to the sum of four hundred and fifty-seven dollars and eighty-nine cents ($457.89) with six per cent, interest thereon from May 3, 1872, till paid and two dollars and twenty cents costs of issuing execution;.that to this end sale may be made of such undivided interest, or if the court should think such course necessary that partition in kind may he made, and the portion-allotted, to said Jno. W. Kennedy may he subjected in the manner prescribed bylaw to the payment of complainant’s debt. Complainant prays further that Jno. Mb Kennedy, and the co-heirs named as defendants in the caption, may be made such by proper process, and required to answer, and that all such other, and further relief may be granted, as may be equitable.”
Exhibit “A” referred to in the bill is not a part of the record.
At Kovember term, 1876, a decree was entered reciting, that “this cause came on to be heard on the proper process executed or acknowledged by all the defendants, and the bill and exhibits, and the bill taken for confessed as to all the defendants” and referring the cause, to a commissioner to take proof of the claim set up in the bill and of the interest of the defendant, Jno. Mb MbKennedy,in the realty inherited from his father, together with the valué oi such interest, and whether the same could be sold to better advantage by partition before sale, &c. On the 24th of April, 1877, the court entered *346another decree reciting the incoming of the report of the commissioner, and that it appeared by said report, that there had been by mutual agreement a partition of the “Cave farm,” in which the defendant, Jño. "W. Kennedy, had a sufficient interest to satisfy the plaintiff’s demand, and referred to a plat of said land so partitioned, and further stated, that a certain portion thereof was to be assigned to said Jno. W. Kennedy. The decree further confirmed the commissioner’s rej>orf,ancI appointed two commissioners to sell the said portion to be assigned to said Kennedy to pay the claim of plaintiff; said sale to take place, “after the expiration of ninety days from the adjournment of this term,” &c. The decree concludes as follows : “So much of this decree as directs a sale of John W. Kennedy’s land, before his portion has been separately allotted to him, is consented to,” signed by counsel for plaintiff, and by counsel for defendant, Kennedy. On the 24th day of October, 1878, the following order was entered: “This ease coming on to be heard this 24th day of October, 1878, on the papers formerly read and filed, and on the petition of defendant, Jno. W. Kennedy, for leave to file a bill of review, was argued by counsel. And on consideration whereof the court doth refuse to permit said bill of review to be filed, and the special commissioners A. E. Kennedy and J). B. Lucas heretofore appointed arc directed to proceed to execute the order of sale heretofore entered.”
The said petition for a rehearing, or bill of review, whichever it may be called, represents, that at the February rales, 1870, a bill was exhibited against petitioner by John T. ITenkle, asking a decree against him for the sum of three hundred and twenty-five dollars, which he alleged was due to him by petitioner, as trustee of Gfeo. W. Sappington, and which petitioner received by virtue of a sale made by him on the 16th day of August, 1858, of certain property belonging to said Sappington. This bill petitioner answered on November'23, 1870, asking that certain other parties be made defendants thereto.
On the 13th of December, 1871, an amended bill wasfiled, the chief object of which was to make Andrew Hunter as special commissioner a party defendant. At March rules, 1872, an amendment to this bill was filed correcting certain *347misstatements in the former bills. At tlie same rules Andrew Hunter answered said bills, and afterwards, as petitioner is informed, a decree was had against him. Hotliing further was done in the cause up to the time petitioner left Jeffer-sou county in 1873. In August, 1876, another bill was exhibited by said Hunter as special receiver of the circuit court of 1 etferson county against petitioner and others of the heirs of Andrew Kennedy, probably predicated on the decree in the other cause, which petitioner has not seen, but which was filed to subject the interest of petitioner, in the -‘Gave farm” to the payment of the debt mentioned. At the April term, 1877, a decree was rendered in this cause appointing commissioners to sell petitioner’s share of said farm. Petitioner further represents that he is aggrieved by said decree because he is advised it is erroneous upon its face, and for other reasons about, to be stated.
Petitioner further represents, that at the time he filed his answer to the bill of John T. IlenlGe, he was utterly at a loss to account for the non-payment by him to said Heukle or Hunter, special commissioner, of the money so claimed to he due, and after many careful searches among his papers and receipts could only find a receipt for the cash payment of sixty-three dollars, and Richard B. Washington’s receipt for his share of the purchase-money; petitioner then thought he might have paid the three deferred payments to Hunter, special commissioner. He enquired of Mr. Hunter, if he had done so, and asked him to inspect his books for that purpose, and was informed by him, that they had been destroyed at the burning of his house during the war, and that he had no recollection whatever' of his having received any of the money except the cash payment. In this state of the ease petitioner could make no'further answer to the Ilenkle hill, and none to the bill of Hunter, special receiver, hilt was obliged to let the decree be pronounced against him without answer. A few days before petitioner’s land was to be sold, as advertised, under the decree, intending to go to Jefferson county and be present at the sale, he made another search among the great mass of papers and receipts, which had accumulated since he came to the bar in 1847. He found two papers, which at once recalled matters, which *348he Had long since iorgotton, and which, if he had known or rather remembered, when ho filed his answer in 1872, would have prevented any such decree against him, and which, if he could plead now, would satisfy the court, that either decree was improper and ought to be reheard. One of these papers is a receipt of "Wells J. Hawks for money paid by this petitioner to him at Iienlcle’s request on the 10th day of January, 1859, and the other a brief of argument made by petitioner on behalf of said Ilenkle in the chancery case of Hagerstown Bank v. Samuel Strider, &c. The papers in the ease of Henkle v. Kennedy show, that petitioner sold the Sappington property in August, 1858; that the cash payment was then received and that the deferred payments were to be made in six, twelve and eighteen mouths thereafter. About the last of December, 1858, or the first part of January, 1859, John T. Ilenkle, who was the administrator of Jacob Swagler, and whose daughter said Ilenkle married, came to Charlestown and stated to petitioner, that he was interested in Swagler’s estate; that he had judgment-lions of Swagler’s upon certain slaves in possession of Samuel Strider; that Meredith Helm as trustee had a deed of trust also upon said slaves in favor of Isaac Strider, and that Samuel Strider had taken said slaves out of the State for the purpose of disposing of them, and then employed petitioner to go with Wells J. Hawks and himself to Baltimore or Washington in search of said Strider and the slaves, and force him to return with them to Jefferson county. Petitioner did go and as the result of the joint action of IJenkle, Hawks and himself the slaves were traced to the possession of one McDowell in Baltimore,- who had purchased them of said Strider, and was about to ship them South. McDowell was informed that he had no title to the slaves, and that he must not ship them. Subsequently by way of compromise Strider returned to Jefferson county, and deposited nine thousand five hundred and six dollars of the money with Edward E. Cooke and Andrew Hunter as commissioners, subject to the decision in tire ease of the Hagerstown Bank v. Strider. After the close of the war Ilenkle again employed petitioner in the said chancery cause, and he labored for him assiduously to get the Swagler lien satisfied out of the said ninethousandfive hundred dollars.
*349Petiticmer lias never received any compensation whatever for the money advanced to Hawks from Iienkle, nor for the trip to Baltimore, nor for his services in the Hagerstown hank case. Petitioner states, that from 1859 to a short time before the filing of Henkíe’s bill against him in 1870 Hcnkle made no demand on him for the money sued for. When the demand was made, the aforesaid matter had entirely escaped the memory of petitioner, and he stated to Henkel, that he had no doubt, that lie would be able to produce Andrew Hunter’s receipts for the money. Even after the filing of the answer by the petitioner, and up to the date of finding of said papers he had no other belief. The great lapse of time and the events ot the war had entirely obliterated these matters from the memory of petitioner.
Petitioner avers, that it is not from carelessness that these matters have not been pleaded, nor from negligence in endeavoring to ascertain some satisfactory solution of his failure to account for this trust-fund, nor from any desire to shun responsibility therefor. Petitioner prays, that said cause may be re-heard, and that he may be allowed to plead the said services as matters of proper defense to said bill;. and for general relief.”
While the petitioner did not make the chancery papers, orders and decrees in the chancery cause of Henkle v. Kennedy nor any part of said papers exhibits with his petition, and though it does not appear, that any part of the record of said cause accompanied his petition, when presented, yet he has copied a great part of that record into the record of this cause. It is clearly no part of the record, and cannot be considered in the decision of this cause.
This petition must be regarded, as an application for re-hearing this cause on the specific grounds therein set forth and not a notice on which to base a motion to correct errors as provided for in chap. 134 of the Code.
There are several reasons which justified the court in refusing to permit the petition to be filed.
If it was intended to show, that the decree entered in this cause on the 24th of April, 1877, was based on the decree entered in the cause of Henkle v. Kennedy, and that this suit was an outgrowth of that and so clearly connected therewith, *350that they could now be re-heard together, it fails in its purpose, because neither the bill, exhibits nor any decree in that cause is made a part of the petition nor exhibited therewith and no decree in that cause is described in the petition, so that this Court could see the character of the decree, whether final or interlocutory, or the particulars thereof. Again, even if that had been done, and this Court was satisfied, that if a proper case was made by the petition, it ought to have been filed, yet upon an inspection of the petition it appears, that the defence now set up to the decree in this cause was not payments on the claim of said llenkle against said petitioner but only offsets to said claim, which petitioner was not bound to file in said .suit to obtain the benefit thereof, but might have sued the said llenkle according to his own showing and collected the amount thereof in a suit at law; besides it clearly appears, from said petition that at the time he filed the same, said claims being offsets were barred by the statute of limitations. Hurst’s adm’r v. Hite, supra.
The court therefore did not err, in refusing to allow the petition to be filed.
The petition being out of the way, the decree as to all matters not consented to is a decree on bill taken for confessed, and there was no appearance except to make the qualified consent to the decree, that we have shown in the statement. As to all other matters not consented to the appellant may upon notice and motion, pursue his remedy in the court below as to the decrees entered in this cause, if not barred by the statute. So much of said decree of April 24, 1877, as is consented to, is of course not appealable.
Tor the foregoing reasons the decree entered in this cause on the 24th day of October, 1878, refusing to permit the filing of said petition, &e., is affirmed with costs and thirty dollars damages; and the appeal from and supersedas to the decrees entered at the November term, 1876, and on the 24th day of April, 1877, arc dismissed as being improvidently awarded; and this cause is remanded to the circuit court- of Jefferson county for further proceedings therein to be had.
Judges IIaymond and Green CONCURRED.One Degree Aeeirmed. Appeal as to the Other Dismissed. Cause Remanded.