delivered the opinion of the court.
After this cause was remanded the last time, the defend-ant, William A. Harris, by leave of the court filed a supplemental answer to the bill. Though not sworn to, the filing does not appear to have been objected to; nor did the complainants reply. During the same term at which it was filed, the cause was heard upon it and the papers formerly read, and the bill was dismissed.
The sole ground upon which the dismissal is placed by *190the decree is, that “a suit to set aside the fraudulent deed made by John A. Harris, bankrupt, before his bankruptcy, can only be maintained by the assignee of said bankrupt.”
It is not necessary in this case to determine whether this proposition of law be sound or not, for even if it were correct, the facts in the record do not warrant its application. Though John A. Harris may have been adjudicated a bankrupt before the bill was filed, yet there is not a scintilla of proof that there was any assignee of his estate duly appointed and qualified. The new or additional answer, taken as true in the absence of a replication, does not aver it. Such averment was necessary if the question was intended to be raised. Dewey and others v. Moyer and others, 72 N. Y. 70. To be sure, it refers to a former suit as brought by P. A. Forbes, assignee of J. A. Harris, bankrupt, to set aside the deed made by Harris, but this is rather by way of recital, and the very record of that suit, exhibited with the answer, shows that the suit was brought, not by Forbes as assignee of Harris, but by said Forbes as assignee of the estate and effects of Robert Posh, bankrupt. This certainly cannot be fairly considered as an averment that Forbes was the assignee of Harris. The truth is, the judge seems to have wholly misconceived the design and effect of the answer. It does-not appear to have been its object to raise the question whether any other person than the assignee could bring a bill to set aside the deed, but to plead the decree in the former suit referred to in bar of the pending suit. Such seems to be the proper construction of the answer. It avers that the former suit was instituted by Forbes, assignee, in behalf of himself and others; that “the said suit had the same object as this cause”; that the respondent was one of the defendants in that suit; and that it was “dismissed agreed” touching the record, a transcript of which is filed. After stating that the respondent is advised that by a recent decision of the su*191preme court of the United. States no one but the assignee of the bankrupt can maintain a suit having for its object the setting aside of a fraudulent deed, it concludes thus: “And the assignee in this case having instituted his suit and failed, your respondent is entitled to have this suit-dismissed. And he now claims that the object of this suit is res judicata, and he prays the benefit thereof, as if the same had been fully and formally decided. And having fully answered, he prays to be hence dismissed,” &c.
This is substantially a plea of adjudication in the former suit of the same matter involved in the pending suit, and nothing more. And as such it was of no force, because, if for no other reason, the complainants in this cause were not parties to the suit in which the decree or final order relied on was made. It is true, the bill in that suit was brought by Forbes, assignee of Bosh, in behalf of himself and other creditors of Harris, but, so far as appears, no order for a general account of debts was ever made; and therefore the complainants in the present suit, though creditors of Harris, not being named in the former suit, nor having appeared therein, never became parties thereto in any sense or to any extent. The suit was the suit of Forbes, as assignee of Bosh, and so continued to the end. The executors of Elder and the devisees of William S. Andrews, not being parties, are, of course, not bound by any decree or order made in that cause. See Piedmont and Arlington Ins. Co. v. Maury and others, 1 Matthews, 508, and cases there cited.
But if the answer had been such as the learned counsel of the appellees claim it to be, we do not hesitate to declare it as our opinion that it should not have been received, had objection been made to its being filed.
It is by no means matter of course to grant liberty to file an amended or supplemental answer. On the contrary, the cases are exceptional in which this indulgence is given.
*192“ In the case of answers and of pleas put in upon oath,” says Judge Story, “the court will not, for obvious reasons, easily suffer an amendment to be made. In a small matter, however, the defendant may amend; but not in a material one, unless upon evidence to the court of surprise. The most common case of amending an answer is, where, through inadvertency, the defendant has mistaken a fact, or a date; there the court will give leave to amend to prevent the defendant from being prosecuted for perjury. In general, however, this indulgence is confined to cases of mere mistake or surprise in the answer.” Story’s Eq. Plead. § 896.
“There is,” says Chancellor Kent, “no precise and absolute rule on the subject; the question, as Lord Eldon said, is always applied to the discretion of the court, in the particular instance.” Bowen v. Cross, 4 Johns. Ch. Rep. 377. The like opinion is expressed by Chief-Justice Marshall in Calloway v. Dobson. &c., 1 Brok. Rep. 119; see also Howe v. Russell, 36 Maine, 115, 124, where amendment was refused, because, as stated, to allow it would be admitting a new ground of defence, existing and known to the defendants when their answers were filed and proof taken, and which they did not omit to present and rely upon through accident or surprise. Champion v. Kille, 1 McCoster (N. J.), 229, 232; Smith v. Babcock and others, 3 Sumner, 583, 585, et seq.; 1 Danl. Ch. Prac. (4 Amer. Ed., ch. 17, § 6, p. (top) 777; 2 Rob. (old) Prac. 316, et seq.; Jackson’s Assignees v. Cutright & Clark, 5 Munf. 308.
The provision of the statute, allowing a defendant to file his answer at any time before final decree, has no ref- - erence to an amended or supplemental answer. Code of 1873, ch. 167, § 35.
It would, in our judgment, be a great abuse of discretion to allow the supposed answer in this case. This litigation . commenced in 1874, and this is the third time the cause *193lias come before us on appeal. And yet to this day tbe debtor, John A. Harris, has never answered tbe bill. It stands confessed as to him. William A. Harris, tbe alienee, answered at an early stage of tbe proceedings. He knew, before tbe first bearing, of bis brother’s bankruptcy, for it was proved in tbe cause; and if there was an assignee duly appointed and qualified, be must have known that fact also. And yet be set up no such defence as that tbe suit could only be maintained by the assignee. There was no. room for mistake or surprise. When, after protracted litigation, tbe fraud charged against him bas been irreversibly established, and bis liability and tbe rights of tbe complainants have been fixed by tbe decrees of this court— after tbe land (one of tbe subjects of controversy) bas been actually sold by tbe court and tbe sale confirmed, and tbe value of tbe personal property (tbe other subject), which be fraudulently converted to bis use, bas been ascertained by a commissioner under an order of reference, and tbe cause awaits tbe action of tbe court on exceptions to tbe commissioner’s report—after all this, to allow this fraudulent alienee to make an entirely new defence, tbe effect of which, if valid and sustained, would be to turn tbe complainant out of court and leave him, if not protected by lapse of time, to be held in a new proceeding to account to a third- person, who himself would be compellable, as trustee, to account to tbe complainant for what be received, would be not only most inequitable, but, we believe, without precedent in tbe chancery practice.
Tbe decree of tbe circuit court will be reversed, and tbe cause remanded for tbe third time. We cannot, as we are asked to do, in order to put an end to this litigation, pass upon tbe exceptions to tbe commissioner’s report, because they have not been acted upon by tbe court below. That court should have done this instead of dismissing tbe bill. As to tbe pending order directing an issue, we could not *194pass directly and finally upon it on tfie last appeal, because as we tfien field, tfie appeal was improvidently allowed. ¥e did, fio we ver, intimate very plainly, in tfie opinion delivered by Judge Anderson (1 Matthews, p. 74), tfiat we regarded tfie order as erroneous. Wfiat we tfien intimated we now decide, as tfie order is open to review on tfiis appeal ; and it will be set aside, and tfie circuit court directed to proceed to pass on tfie exceptions to tfie commissioner’s report, witfiout tfie intervention of a jury, in order to final decree.
Decree reversed.