[1] After this court reached the conclusion and rendered an opinion that under the amended bill and pleadings and the evidence Mrs. Mathieson was entitled to one-half of the sum of $16,000 charged upon the Capelle farm, the Jamison Corner farm and the Homestead farm, on due application to the court the bill was dismissed as to nine of the defendants named therein, including Oliver V. Jamison, Raura Jamison, Clarence Jamison, Florence Jamison and Helen Grebb, citizens of Pennsylvania, whose presence as parties in the suit defeated the jurisdiction of the court so far as granting relief under the original bill to Mrs. Bastían was concerned, she and her husband being citizens of Pennsylvania. After the bill had been dismissed as to the parties defendant above referred to, on due application leave was granted to Mrs. Bastían and her husband to intervene as co-complainants with the Mathiesons. There were cogent reasons for the intervention. If it had not been allowed and the defendants should have failed voluntarily to pay the several amounts due to Mrs. Mathieson, and the three farms had been exposed to public sale under the decree of this court, bidders at the sale would have occupied a position so difficult and embarrassing as to render an advantageous sale of the property practically impossible. For in the case supposed, this suit not being a proceeding strictly in rem, it would have been gravely questionable whether the sale of the farms would not have been subject to whatever right, title or interest therein Mrs. Bastían possessed prior to such sale. A cloud on the title of the purchaser would have been created. The sale of the farms would necessarily have been either subject to the lien claim of Mrs. Bastían or free and discharged from it. In the former case, if the proceeds of sale of any one of the farms would not have sufficed to pay and satisfy the lien claim of Mrs. Mathieson against it, discrimination, contrary to the fundamental equitable principle of equality, would have resulted against her and in favor of Mrs. Bastían, as the farm so sold would have remained subject to the lien claim of the latter. And in order that Mrs. Mathieson and Mrs. Bastían should be placed on the plane of equality it would have been necessary that the latter should in some -mode have been brought into the suit as a party and made subject to the order and decree of the court. If, on the other hand, the
“That lie [the petitioner] is a necessary party is not apparent but that he is a proper party is sufficiently clear. With the petitioner on the record all the interested parties are before (he court and a decree can be entered determinative of the entire controversy. It is for the interest of all concerned that the questions still in dispute between the parties shall be decided in the pending suit: to commence a new suit will only protract litigation and increase expense.”
A fortiori it was proper to allow an intervention in the cause before this court. In disposing of the demurrer to the amended bill in this case the court used language (164 Fed. 471, 479, 481) not without application in this connection:
“It appears from the amended bill that Mrs. Bastian, as one of the children of Edgar Jamison, is entitled, if entitled at all, to precisely the same measure and kind of relief as Mrs. Mathieson. * * * It is true that the ascertainment of what is due to Mrs. Mathieson involves primarily an ascertainment of what is due to both Mrs. Bastian and Mrs. Mathieson; and it is also true, that, other things being equal, Mrs. Bastian should be a party in order that the defendants should not be compelled to account to her separately from Mrs. Bastian. ~ * * It is proper, also, to add that certain .questions may or may not arise in this suit or certain proceedings hereafter be resorted to therein, the solution or effect of which may or may not tend to obviate the trouble to which it has been suggested the executor, trustee or purchaser may be put, if the bill in its present shape be maintained. It appears that Mrs. Bastian ‘consents to the relief sought in this bill and to all proceedings had and to all orders or decrees made or that may be made by the court in this causo,’ and further, that Mrs. Bastian originally joined as a co-complainant in this case to recover the separable claim made by her. Under these circumstances it is possible, if not probable, that she may applyPage 226so to intervene .in tbe suit as to result in a sale of tbe real estate disc-barged from any lien in ber favor and free from cloud or incumbrance on tbe title.”
[2] It has been strenuously contended on the part of the defendants that notwithstanding the intervention of Mrs. Bastian and her husband as parties complainant in this cause, no decree properly can be made in her favor by reason of alleged laches on her part. This position is untenable. On the subject of laches, this court has said in this cause on a former occasion (228 Fed. 345, 378):
“Laches with respect to tbe bringing of suit is unreasonable and inequitable delay in proceeding for the .enforcement of a demand or right viewed in tbe light of the circumstances of tbe particular case. No rigid rule as to lapse of time is applicable. It is essentially an equitable defense, and does not depend, like tbe operation of a statute of limitations, upon tbe mere passage of time, but upon tbe equity or inequity of permitting tbe asserted' claim or demand to be enforced.”
Tested by the above definition of laches in connection with the bringing of suit I am unable to perceive that it attaches to Mrs. Bastian in the slightest degree. She and her husband were co-complainants in the bill as originally filed, and this court has held that there was no ladies on the part of the complainants prior to the institution of the suit. By amendment the Bastians were omitted from the bill, they being citizens of Pennsylvania, of which state some of the defendants were also citizens, in order that this court might retain jurisdiction of the cause by reason of diversity of citizenship. The amended bill stated that:
“Tbe said Yesta L. Bastian consents to tbe relief sought in tbis bill and to all proceedings bad and to all orders or decrees made or that may be made by tbe court in tbis cause.”
And on this point she testified:
“Q. Mrs. Bastian, do you consent to tbe proceedings taken in tbis cause by your sister and ber husband and without yourself being a party? A. Yes, sir. Q. Do you consent to tbe further proceedings that may be taken in tbis cause, including such action, or decree, as tbe court may make thereon? A. Yes, sir.”
It is unquestionably true, as stated by the court in disposing of the demurrer:
“Mrs. Mathieson certainly bad a right to sue in tbis court for tbe relief sought by ber. It is equally certain that Mrs. Bastian did not have a right to sue as co-complainant for the relief sought by ber, as jurisdiction would thereby be ousted. Mrs. Bastian, therefore, was dropped as a party,” etc.
Mrs. Bastian could not compel Mrs. Mathieson to consent to a dismissal of theabill as against those defendants between whom and Mrs. Bastian there was no diversity of citizenship, and indeed, until after the opinion of this court had been rendered on final hearing, when for the first time it became plain that those defendants were not necessary parties to the cause, it did not appear to Mrs. Mathieson or her counsel that the bill could with safety be dismissed as to such defendants. Mrs. Bastian having been dropped as a party in order that jurisdiction of the cause might not be defeated, did not display any negligent disregard of her rights and interest in the subject-matter of the controversy. She did not become indifferent to
[3] Mr. and Mrs. Bastían having been allowed to intervene in this cause as co-complainants, the court subsequently, on the application of their counsel, made an order providing as follows:
‘■That all the evidence adduced in said cause prior to the intervention of the said intervenors shall stand and he read as evidence hearing upon the existence and enforceability of the alleged rights and claim of the intervenors, so fur as pertinent thereto, and shall he considered by the court in the determination of said rights and claim, subject to such objections to said evidence as were made during the presentation thereof.”
One effect of this order was that all evidence adduced in this cause prior to the intervention in proof or disproof of points common to the
[4] And it is sound doctrine that the evidence, oral and documentary, touching points common to the claims of the complainants and subsequent intervenors cannot be added to or affected by the introduction of further evidence after the intervention, for the reason that the introduction of such further evidence would practically amount to a rehearing of the case on such points, already determined on full consideration, and the further reason that its introduction would tend to create confusion, lead to contradictory findings on the same points, encourage perjury and defeat the due administration of justice. To permit the defendants after intervention to go into evidence touching points common to the claims of Mrs. Bastían and Mrs. Mathieson respectively and covered by the evidence in this case adduced before the intervention would be as objectionable, and for the same reasons, as to permit the plaintiff in a cross-bill, filed after publication in the original cause, to go into evidence touching points covered by the evidence so published. According to the settled chancery practice, subject to certain exceptions not pertinent here, this can not be done. In Field v. Schieffelin, 7 Johns. Ch. (N. Y.) *251, 11 Am. Dec. 441, Chancellor Kent said:
“It is a well established rule, that a cross bill must be brought before publication has passed in the first cause, unless the plaintiff in the cross bill go to a hearing on the depositions already published. Rep. temp. Finch, 103; Wyat’s P. R. 85; Cooper’s Pl. 87; 1 Johns. Ch. Rep. *64. The object of the rule is to prevent the danger of perjury. It is founded in sound policy, and in a just sense and deep knowledge of the seductions of interest, and the force and influence of the passions. * * * The court will sometimes at the hearing, and in its discretion, direct a cross bill; but this is when it appears that the suit is insufficient to bring before the court thePage 229rights of all the parties, and the matters necessary to a full and just determination of the cause. Mitf. Pl. 77. And these instances which I have mentioned, are the utmost length to which the court has gone in the admission of cross bills; they must be brought before publication, and testimony taken in them afterwards cannot be used, unless where some new matter of defense, as a release, arises after the cause is at issue, or the case appears, at the hearing, too imperfect to reach and settle the rights of all the parties. It is too late, after publication, to introduce new and further testimony to the matter in issue, by the contrivance of a cross bill. It would be doing, in an indirect way, per obliqiram, what is forbidden to be done directly. * * * It is infinitely important to the due administration of justice, that the rules of evidence should he stable, and not made to yield to the convenience, or even hardship, of a particular case. If a cross bill could be filed in such a stage of the cause as is presented in this case, and to enable the party to make a fuller defence, ‘by putting in issue and establishing the matters aforesaid, (and' which were the matters in issue in the original cause,) and such other matters as he might he advised to establish,’ the practice of the court would be broken up; litigation would become oppressive, vexatious, and interminable; the door would he opened for fabricated testimony to supply defects, and remove the pressure upon the case; and arbitrary discretion would be substituted for established rules.”
In the above case there was an application for a rehearing, as there was in the case now pending, and also for leave to file a cross bill, and both were denied. Touching the rehearing sought the court said:
“If the Chancellor is satisfied that the cause lias been exhausted by argument, and if he has given to the ease the best examination in his power, and has arrived to a conclusion which satisfies his judgment, I see no propriety, nor use, nor justice, in granting a rehearing, fiord Thurlow once refused to grant it; and I think that this case, under all its circumstances, is one in which the discussion should be closed in this court, and the defendant put to his regular constitutional remedy, by appeal.”
To allow the defendants to go into further evidence as to matters in issue common to both claims, and testified to before the intervention, would essentially involve a rehearing of this cause, which, under the circumstances, would be both improper and unjustifiable.
The order above quoted, however, does not have the effect of precluding either the intervenors or the defendants from adducing evidence not touching points common to the claims of the intervenors and their co-complainants but. relating to points personal to the intervenors and not affecting their co-complainants.
[5] After the intervention the issue raised by the intervening petition and pleadings were referred to an examiner for the taking of evidence germane thereto, who' took and returned certain evidence adduced by the intervenors and defendants respectively. Some of the evidence so returned was on objection suppressed by this court as having been taken under improper insistence of the counsel for the defendants. See Scott v. Paschall, 12 Sim. *550; Paschall v. Scott, 1 Phillips, *110. The evidence so suppressed related to points strictly common to the claims of Mrs. Mathieson and Mrs. Bastían respectively, touching which the defendants had prior to the intervention made an exhaustive examination of witnesses and documentary evidence. This cause came to a final hearing on the evidence taken therein prior to the intervention and on the evidence taken and returned by the examii2er other than that suppressed by the court as above men
A decree will be entered in accordance with this opinion.