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Dyche v. Patton

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Aug 1, 1852
43 N.C. 294 (N.C. 1852)

Opinion

(August Term, 1852.)

1. Whether a Court of Equity will interfere in a case at law, where the verdict was obtained by the testimony of a witness, which was known to be false by the party using it, and which the opposite party had no means of contradicting at the trial, or in time to support a rule for a new a new trial, and with the further ground offered, that the false witness has been prosecuted for perjury, or has absconded so as not to be answerable to the process of the law: Query?

2. When the answer to a bill of injunction is responsive to its allegations and not evasive, and positively denies the truth of the facts set forth in the bill, the injunction must be dissolved.

CASE transmitted from the Court of Equity of CHEROKEE, at Fall Term, 1851.

J. W. Woodfin for the plaintiff.

Gaither and J. Baxter for the defendant.


It is attempted by the bill to raise this question: (296) Will a court of equity interfere and require the parties to set aside a judgment and verdict at law, and try the matter de novo upon the allegation that the verdict was obtained by the testimony of a witness which was known to be false by the party using it, and which the opposite party had no means of contradicting at the trial or in time to support a rule for a new trial, without an allegation that the false witness has been presented for perjury or has absconded so as not to be answerable to the process of the law.

The question is an interesting one, but we do not feel at liberty to decide it, because it is not presented by the case in the stage in which we are now considering it. The answer, without evasion, responds to the allegation by a positive and flat denial; consequently, the plaintiff has nothing to stand on, and cannot support the injunction which he obtained at the filing of his bill, for, on the motion to dissolve upon the bill and answer, the answer, so far as it is responsive to the bill, is taken to be true.

The allegation of the discovery of new matter after the trial and after the term, when it was too late to move for a new trial, is also positively denied in the answer.

In this case the denial of the answer is accompanied with an exhibit and also a narration of facts, all tending to disprove the allegations of the bill.

PER CURIAM. Affirmed.

Cited: Burgess v. Lovengood, 55 N.C. 460; Dyche v. Patton, 56 N.C. 333; Carson v. Dellinger, 90 N.C. 231; Simmons v. Mann, 92 N.C. 17; Blackwell v. McElwee, 94 N.C. 429.

(297)


Summaries of

Dyche v. Patton

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Aug 1, 1852
43 N.C. 294 (N.C. 1852)
Case details for

Dyche v. Patton

Case Details

Full title:JOHN R. DYCHE v. A. J. PATTON

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Aug 1, 1852

Citations

43 N.C. 294 (N.C. 1852)

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