38 Cal. 643 | Cal. | 1869
The former judgment, relied upon by the defendants, was, in our opinion, a bar to this action. The pleadings in the first action, directly put in issue the title of the plaintiff to the potatoes now in controversy; and the present plaintiff offered evidence of his title on the trial of that action. The Court excluded the evidence on the ground that the present plaintiff (then defendant) could not go behind the Sheriff’s return on the writ, which was to the effect, that after seizing the potatoes, he had returned them to the master of the vessel from whom he took them. The Court held the return to be conclusive of the fact, that the present plaintiff had not
In the case at bar, the very evidence now relied on was offered, and an adjudication had upon it. A re-hearing of the same action may be proper, but to maintain a new action would be to throw all judgments into uncertainty and confusion.” In that case, the defendant set up a former judgment in bar. The plaintiff’s replication admitted that the pleadings in the former action embraced the demand in contest, and that he had offered proof in support of it, but averred that the Court excluded the proof, and that “no evidence on that particular was given to the jury,” and that the judgment was exclusively on account of other promises than the promise now sued upon. This replication was demurred to, and-the demurrer was sustained, for the reasons stated by the* Chief Justice, in the extract above quoted. This is a decision, by a Court of very high authority, directly on the question at issue in this case; and we are not aware that it has been impugned in any subsequent case. On the contrary, the same principle, in substance, has been decided in Canfield v. Monger (12 John. 347); Wheeler v. Van Houten (Id.311); Battey v. Button (13 Id.187); Grant v. Button, (14 Id. 377); Gray v. Dougherty (25 Cal. 266.)
In La Guen v. Gouverneur (1 Johns. Cases, 436), it is held that the judgment or decree of a Court of competent juris-diction is not only final as to the matter actually determined, but as to every other matter which the parties might have litigated and had decided, under the pleadings. This ruling is approved in Bruen v. Hone (2 Barb. 596); Southgate v. Montgomery (1 Paige, Ch. R. 47); Simson v. Hart (14 John 77, and the same case in 1 John. Ch. R. 97.) This is, perhaps, stating the proposition a little too broadly. It is more correctly stated by Chancellor Walworth, in Miller v. Manice (6 Hill, 121), in which he says that where a general declara-* tion embraces several causes of action, the plaintiff, in' a second suit, may show that he “offered” no evidence as to-one or more of those causes of action, and that the cause went to the jury upon a different part of his claim from that for which the second suit is brought, in which case the judg
These authorities .appear to us to establish, conclusively, that by offering testimony in support of his title to the potatoes in controversy, on the trial of the first action, and allowing the cause to go to the jury without amending his pleadings, the plaintiff is concluded by the judgment in that action. If the Court erred in its ruling, the remedy was by exception and appeal; and if the plaintiff had not sufficient confidence in his position to hazard his case on an appeal, his proper course was to amend his pleading, and withdraw that portion of his claim from the jury.. But having submitted to the puling of the Court, and, nevertheless, permitted his plead-, ing to stand, he is bound by the judgment.
It is claimed, however, on behalf of the plaintiff, that the taking and conversion of the property for which this, action is brought, occurred after the potatoes were returned by the Sheriff; and that therefore it is a new and different cause of action from that which was involved in the former suit. The answer to this proposition is, that the point in issue in the former action' was,. whether the potatoes belonged to the, plaintiff or defendants. The main issue between them -was one of title; and it is not pretended that the plaintiff has now any other or better title than he had when the first action was tried. If there was anything adjudicated in that action in respect to these potatoes, it was on the question, of title between the parties, and as the title now set up by the plaintiff is the same which he then had, he is estopped from again litigating that question in a new action, for the reasons already stated.
In our opinion, the judgment ought to be reversed and a new trial granted, and it is so ordered.
Mr. Justice Sprague delivered no opinion.