BARNES v. WALKER.
Knoxville, September Term, 1950.
October 9, 1950
Rehearing Denied December 9, 1950.
191 Tenn. 364
BURCH, PORTER & JOHNSON, of Memphis, for defendant in error, O. G. Walker.
Barnes bought a house trailer from Walker in May of 1948 under a Conditional Sales Contract regulated by
Predicated upon the alleged illegal retaking and sale of the trailer Barnes sued Walker for its conversion, but subsequently was allowed a voluntary nonsuit.
The doctrine of election of remedies applies where there are “two existing alternative remedial rights, inconsistent and not reconcilable with each other,” and an election is made by “the adoption, by an unequivocal act, of one of” the two existing remedies. Phillips v. Rooker, 134 Tenn. 457, 462, 184 S. W. 12, 13: An unequivocal election of one of two repugnant remedies conclusively estops a subsequent resort to the other remedy. Grizzard v. Fite, 137 Tenn. 103, 108, 191 S. W. 969, L. R. A. 1917D, 652.
Assuming, but not deciding, that the two remedies afforded Barnes, the conditional vendee here, are repugnant and, therefore, put him to his election between the two repugnant remedies, the question is whether the mere commencement of the action for conversion by Barnes, followed by a voluntary nonsuit, amounted to
When the trial court in the case at bar concluded that the two remedies were repugnant and then held that the commencement of the action for conversion upon the part of Barnes amounted, notwithstanding the subsequent voluntary nonsuit, to an irrevocable election which precluded this subsequent suit to recover purchase money already paid, that court was only following, as it should have done, the decision of this court in Grizzard v. Fite, supra.
However, it is the opinion of the present personnel of this court that this decision of Grizzard v. Fite, supra, is inconsistent with one of the purposes for which courts are created, to wit, a redress of wrongs found to have been committed. The ultimate question, therefore, is whether this court should follow Grizzard v. Fite because of the rule of stare decisis.
For obvious reasons the rule of stare decisis is one of paramount importance. Therefore, the power of this court to overrule a former decision should be sparingly exercised and only when the reason is compelling. J. T. Fargason Co. v. Ball, 128 Tenn. 137, 141-142, 159 S. W. 221, 50 L. R. A., N. S., 51; Hall v. Skidmore, 180 Tenn. 23, 29, 171 S. W. (2d) 274. The rule is even more rigidly followed with reference to decisions construing constitutional provisions and legislative enactments, Humphries v. Manhattan Savings Bank & Trust Co., 174 Tenn. 17, 25, 122 S. W. (2d) 446; and when that decision has established a rule of property, Wilkins v. Chicago, St. L. & N. O. R. Co., 110 Tenn. 422, 458, 75 S. W. 1026.
Where a former decision neither involves the construction of statutes and constitutional provisions, nor announces that which has become a rule of property, but does involve the private rights of litigants whose conduct has not been prejudiced by the former decision, and when a litigant has not acted upon such former decision to his prejudice with relation to the establishing or fixing of a private property right, courts of last resort “should feel at liberty to settle principles of law according to the opinion of then existing members, neither regardless of, nor implicitly bound by, prior decisions“. Wilkins v. Chicago, St. L. & N. O. R. Co., supra, 110 Tenn. at page 460, 75 S. W. at page 1035, quoting dictum. When such is the situation, it seems to be “the manifest policy of our courts to hold the doctrine of stare decisis subordinate to” what is subsequently considered “legal reason and justice, and to depart” from such former decisions when such departure is necessary to the achievement of what it subsequently considers manifest justice. State v. Matthews, 143 Tenn. 463, 475, 226 S. W. 203, 207, 13 A. L. R. 314, provided the court can see that more good than evil would result from the overruling of the previous decision which is now considered erroneous. Steedman, Steere & Co. v. Dobbins & Dazey, 93 Tenn. 397, 406, 24 S. W. 1133.
When Walker, the conditional vendor, allegedly converted the trailer and when he allegedly thereafter sold it without the precedent advertisement required by the statute, his action in each instance could not possibly have been influenced by the decision in Grizzard v. Fite, supra. That decision could in no manner have informed him as to whether Barnes, the conditional vendee, would elect to seek redress for the alleged wrongs committed by an action for conversion or by an action for recovery of the paid in purchase money. So, Walker‘s conduct could not have been induced by the decision in Grizzard v. Fite. Moreover, the institution by Barnes of an action for conversion, followed by a voluntary nonsuit in that action did in no way prejudice any possible defense of Walker in this second suit for recovery of the paid in purchase money. It follows, of course, that no property right of Walker was prejudiced in any manner either by the institution of the suit for conversion, or by the voluntary nonsuit in that case before a decision on the merits.
All concur.
ON PETITION TO REHEAR.
Walkers‘s petition to rehear states that in Barnes’ suit for conversion (the case in which he took a voluntary nonsuit) there was entered “a final adjudication, unappealed from, of the very question sought to be relitigated in the subsequent suit from which the appeal in this case was prayed, granted and perfected“. Upon the premises so asserted, it is insisted that Barnes is thereby barred from the maintenance of the present suit subsequently commenced for the recovery of so much of the
As stated, Barnes’ first suit was for the conversion of the trailer, and his declaration was to that effect. Thereafter, he moved to amend his declaration so as to sue for so much of the purchase price as he had paid on the trailer because of the alleged illegal sale by Walker. The Trial Court refused to permit the amendment, and entered a judgment to that effect reading as follows:
“It appears to the Court that the proposed amendment is inconsistent with and repugnant to the declaration filed and that plaintiff has made an election to sue for a conversion of the property described in the declaration and that said motion should, therefore, be disallowed.
“It is, therefore, Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed by the Court that the motion of the plaintiff to amend his declaration be and the same is hereby overruled.”
This is the order which the petition to rehear says is “a final adjudication, un-appealed from, of the very question sought to be re-litigated” in the present case.
The question in the present case, as stated in the opinion, is:
“Assuming, but not deciding, that the two remedies afforded Barnes, the conditional vendee here are repugnant and, therefore, put him to his election between the two repugnant remedies, the question is whether the mere commencement of the action for conversion by Barnes, followed by a voluntary non-suit, amounted to the un-
equivocal act necessary to an irrevocable election between the two remedies.”
The question just above stated in the present (second) suit was not before the Court when it entered the above quoted order refusing to permit the amendment sought, and in the very plight of the record, could not possibly have been before the Court, nor within its contemplation at that time, because the voluntary nonsuit had not, of course, been allowed or applied for at that time. So, that order did not and could not have proposed to adjudge, with reference to the question of an irrevocable election of remedies, the effect of a voluntary nonsuit, in the event one should in the future be taken, upon the rights of Barnes in another suit based upon the remedy assumed in the first case to be repugnant to the remedy for which the first suit was brought. The “law of the case” rule, invoked by this petition to rehear, is applicable only ” ‘so long as the facts on which such decision was predicated continue to be the facts in the case.’ 15 R. C. L., p. 959. But ‘when a judgment establishes the law of the case, its effect as such extends only to the particular subject matter then before the court.’ ” Brewer v. Griggs, 10 Tenn. App. 378, 399-400.
Since this construction of the order in question is conclusive of the insistence made, it is not necessary to respond further to the argument made or authorities cited by petitioner. They are advanced under a construction which we are not able to place upon the order entered in the first case.
When the Trial Court dismissed the present (second) suit of Barnes on the theory that the commencement of the first suit, notwithstanding the voluntary nonsuit, amounted to an irrevocable election and precluded the maintaining of this second suit, the order of dismissal
It is probable that when the Court in the order dismissing this second suit recited that the dismissal was to be “without prejudice to the rights of the plaintiff” it had in mind the right of Barnes to bring another suit for conversion within one year after the taking of the voluntary nonsuit in the first case. However that may be, it was the holding in the second case that Barnes could not maintain a suit to recover the purchase money already paid on the trailer because, in the opinion of that Court, he had made an irrevocable election in previously suing for conversion, the voluntary nonsuit notwithstanding. Had Barnes not appealed from the order dismissing that (the present) suit he would have been forever barred from maintaining a suit to recover such purchase money. That seems to be just about as final as a judgment can possibly be insofar as it determines the right of Barnes to maintain this second suit for recovery of the purchase money previously paid by him on the trailer. Therefore, this insistence must also be rejected.
The petition to rehear will be denied.
All concur.
