Judges: Henderson
Filed Date: 6/5/1829
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The bill charged that since the trial at law, between the same parties,
On the last circuit, NORWOOD, J., on the motion of the defendant, dismissed the bill for want of jurisdiction, it being a bill to review a decree of the Supreme Court. From this decree the plaintiff appealed. This is a bill of review for error in fact in a former decree, made in this Court. Waiving every other objection, i think the bill cannot be sustained because it appears in the bill itself that the error, or rather the cause of complaint, was known to the plaintiff at the return term of the original bill, time enough for him to have availed himself of it in that suit; for if the bill did not embrace it, it might have been amended; or if that could not have been done, it might have been brought before the Court by supplemental bill. The necessity, under which the plaintiff says he was placed, of abandoning his injunction if he amended his bill (if in fact it did exist), would have been obviated by a supplemental bill, leaving the injunction to be sustained, if it could, by the original. i fear that the common idea, that (328) an injunction is given up by an amendment, is carried too far; it is going sufficiently far to say that an injunction cannot be sustained or propped by an amendment.
PER CURIAM. Affirmed.
Cited: Am. Bible Soc. v. Hollister,