96 S.E. 644 | N.C. | 1918
This case was here before, and was reported in
1. Is plaintiff the owner of the land described in the complaint? Answer: Yes.
2. Has the defendant wrongfully diverted and discharged the water on the lands of the plaintiff, as alleged, by deepening or widening ditch referred to? Answer: No.
The other four issues related to the damages, and were not answered, as the second issue had been decided against the plaintiff. Judgment was entered on the verdict, and plaintiff appealed. After stating the case: The verdict of the jury shows that there has been no change in the facts since the former judgment was rendered — that is, no additional cause of damage. Assuming that this is not a case in which permanent damages could be assessed without the consent of the plaintiff, it appears that in the first case he deliberately amended his complaint for the purpose of having such damages assessed, and he having thus made his election, which was entirely voluntary, and the case having been tried on that theory, and a judgment for permanent damages — that is, all damages, past, present, and prospective — having been recovered, he will not now be heard to say that it was all wrong, and that, while he has received the full amount of damages assessed by the jury upon the basis chosen by himself, he should not be bound by his act. This would not do, as it would be manifestly unjust, and contrary to all principles by which we judge the conduct of men. He cannot accept the benefit of his selection and at the same time repudiate the consequences. *41
This Court held in Barcliff v. R. R.,
"A judicial determination of the issues in one action is a bar to a subsequent one between the same parties having substantially the same object in view, although the form of the latter and the precise relief sought is different from the former." Lumber Co. v. Lumber Co.,
These are but statements, in one or the other form, of the general proposition that a plaintiff cannot recover twice for the same thing, or, in other words, he cannot have two compensations for the same complete tort, but must abide the first recovery as a full satisfaction for the wrong, and especially is this true when he has solemnly agreed, upon his own initiative, as here, to accept such a payment in final settlement.
Nor can plaintiff now be permitted to allege that the former recovery was upon a wrong basis; for if there was any error to his prejudice in the trial of that case, he should then have excepted and had it corrected by an appeal, and it is now too late to raise the question, as the judgment forecloses all these questions and estops him. The cases of Duval v. R. R.,
We have confined the discussions to the question stated and considered in the plaintiff's brief, but upon a full review of the entire record we find no error therein. The charge was fair, full, and correct, and there is nothing of which the plaintiff can justly complain.
No error.