BLAKELY et al. v. COUCH
48195
Court of Appeals of Georgia
September 13, 1973
129 Ga. App. 625
CLARK, Judge
3. Objection is made to the earlier report on the grounds that it contains charges for which no disposition is indicated, as well as recommendations of victims of appellant‘s burglaries as to his punishment. However, assuming that this information should not have been included in that report, the remainder of that report, as well as the second report which does not contain such information, show three dispositions for truancy and burglary, and one for two counts of burglary. This is certainly sufficient to support the trial court‘s finding of “the apparent pattern of violating the law,” and no reversible error appears. Robinson v. State, 229 Ga. 14, 15 (189 SE2d 53).
Judgment affirmed. Pannell and Stolz, JJ., concur.
SUBMITTED SEPTEMBER 6, 1973 — DECIDED SEPTEMBER 12, 1973.
Smith & Millikan, Troy R. Millikan, for appellant.
Jeff C. Wayne, District Attorney, for appellee.
ARGUED MAY 8, 1973 — DECIDED SEPTEMBER 13, 1973.
McCamy, Minor, Phillips & Tuggle, Joseph T. Tuggle, Jr., J. T. Fordham, Jones, Kemp & Osteen, Charles M. Jones, Miller, Beckmann & Simpson, A. Martin Kent, for appellants.
Mitchell, Mitchell, Coppedge & Boyett, William T. Boyett, for appellee.
CLARK, Judge. Appellants’ able attorneys ardently argue that a previous judgment rendered in the U. S. District Court for appellant Blakely against the employers of appellee Couch preclude Couch as plaintiff from proceeding against Blakely and
Because of the frequency of cases of this nature resulting from a race by litigants for their preferred forum, be it state or federal, we relate the facts in detail.
A collision occurred between tractor-trailer-combines operated by Blakely, employee of Neely Produce, Inc., and by Couch, employee of National Truck Service, Inc. and Refrigerated Transport Company, Inc. Personal injuries were sustained by the respective employees. The first suit was filed by Couch against Blakely and Blakely‘s employer, Neely Produce, Inc., as co-defendants in the Superior Court of Whitfield County on July 26, 1971. Six weeks later, on September 13, 1971, Blakely filed his complaint in the U. S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, Rome Division, against Couch and Couch‘s employers, National Truck Service, Inc. and Refrigerated Transport Company, Inc., as co-defendants seeking damages of $500,000. Couch was voluntarily dismissed as a party defendant in the federal suit for lack of service upon him.
The federal court case came on for trial before the state court assignment and was concluded by a judgment for Blakely dated October 11, 1972. This judgment reads: “This action came on for trial before the Court and a jury, Honorable William C. O‘Kelley, United States District Judge, presiding, and the issues having been duly tried and the jury having duly rendered its verdict, It is Ordered and Adjudged that the plaintiff, Harold E. Blakely, recover of the defendants, National Truck Service, Inc., and Refrigerated Transport Company, Inc., the sum of twenty-nine thousand and no/100 dollars ($29,000.00), together with interest thereon as provided by law, and his costs of action.” (R. 64).
The following week a motion for summary judgment was filed in the state court action by Blakely and Neely Produce, Inc. asserting “that all issues raised in the above styled action have been duly adjudicated by a prior Federal court judgment; that plaintiff is estopped from further prosecution of the present action by said prior Federal court judgment based on the doctrine of res judicata and/or estoppel by judgment and that defendants are entitled to the judgment as a matter of law.” (R. 28). In support thereof the federal court record is attached.
This attachment at pages 65 and 66 included the entries from
This summary judgment motion based on the federal district court record was denied. Upon the trial judge granting the requisite immediate review certificate, this appeal followed.
1. The doctrine of res judicata is stated in
The difference between the two pleas is explained in Sumner v. Sumner, 186 Ga. 390 (197 SE 833). Headnote 2 of that decision quotes our codal definition of res judicata and then points out that there is “an estoppel by judgment only as to such matters within the scope of the previous pleadings as necessarily had to be adjudicated in order for the previous judgment to be rendered, or as to such matters within the scope of the pleadings as might or might not have been adjudicated, but which are shown by aliunde proof to have been actually litigated and determined. [Cits.] Under both rules, in order for the former decision to be conclusive, it must have been based, not merely on purely technical grounds, but at least in part on the merits where under the pleadings they were
Since privity does exist in a master-servant situation appellants rely upon the authority of Roadway Express v. McBroom, 61 Ga. App. 223 (1) (6 SE2d 460), quoting “Where the liability, if any, of the master to a third person is purely derivative and dependent entirely upon the principle of respondeat superior, a judgment on the merits in favor of the agent or servant is res judicata in favor of the principal or master though he was not a party to the action. This rule is an exemplification of the broader rule by which one whose liability is wholly derivative may claim the benefit of a judgment in favor of the person from whom his liability is derived . . .” Since state court plaintiff Couch was the employee of the defendants against whom judgment was rendered in the federal court, appellants contend that judgment bars Couch here.
The fallacy in this argument lies in their failure to recognize the importance in Roadway Express v. McBroom of the phrase, “a judgment on the merits.” In the case at bar the civil docket entries show that the judgment which on its face appears complete and the result of a contest was in truth rendered by consent and in conformity with an agreement for settlement. As is stated in
Cognoscenti among trial lawyers recognize that a judgment rendered in conformance with an agreement to settle is not synonymous with a contested trial. Obviously, there has not been an adjudication upon the merits, despite the wording of the judgment. A party such as the plaintiff here should not be deprived of his day in court because other counsel and other parties with whom neither he nor his counsel have any say-so make a settlement which includes a consent judgment. They did this for their own purposes and for reasons having no relevancy to this plaintiff. It is true that he was originally named as a co-defendant with his employers but service was never made upon him in the federal forum. In fact, the docket entry recites a “verbal stipulation of counsel to dismiss Couch as defendant.”
In our court we are reluctant to issue a mandate1 saying “This is the law” without citing precedents. Our research has not
A similar situation exists in the area of tax law. There, we find that the Commissioner of Internal Revenue is not bound by the ruling of a state trial court in litigation to which he was not a party. Commr. of Int. Rev. v. Bosch‘s Estate, 387 U. S. 456 (87 SC 1776, 18 LE2d 886). The basis of refusal to place a judicial stamp upon a contractual settlement is the absence of the indicia of a genuinely adversary proceeding.
Our ruling here of course in no way limits the binding effect between the participating litigants of consent verdicts and judgment based thereon. Webster v. Dundee Mtg. &c. Co., 93 Ga. 278 (1) (20 SE 310); Grayson v. Grayson, 217 Ga. 133 (121 SE2d 34); Alford v. Smith, 224 Ga. 802 (164 SE2d 781).
2. We recognize the validity of the doctrine of “binding precedent” as stated in Bray v. Westinghouse Electric Corp., 103 Ga. App. 783 (120 SE2d 628) and Standard Oil Co. v. Harris, 120 Ga. App. 768 (172 SE2d 344). Nevertheless, for the reasons presented in the foregoing division such doctrine should be applicable only where there has been a genuine determination by contest of the issues. A consent judgment rendered to conform with a settlement agreement without a party‘s participation would not come within this doctrine, there having been no judicial decision upon the merits in the absence of a true adversary proceeding.
Judgment affirmed. Hall, P. J., concurs. Evans, J., concurs specially.
It has been held, however, that where a husband or wife is injured as the result of a tort, neither is the privy of the other. The husband may file the first suit, and lose it; and the wife then may file suit and win it, the first judgment being no bar because husband and wife are not privies in such cases. See Hare v. Southern R. Co., 61 Ga. App. 159 (6 SE2d 65); Commercial Credit Corp. v. C. & S. Nat. Bank, 68 Ga. App. 393, 394 (23 SE2d 198); Morris v. Ga. Power Co., 65 Ga. App. 180 (1a) (15 SE2d 730); and Harris Equip. Co. v. McGuigan, 104 Ga. App. 612 (122 SE2d 286).
Of course, there is privity between employer and employee, master and servant, and principal and agent, because tortious conduct by the servant while in prosecution of the master‘s business renders the master liable; and if the wife should be agent of the husband in commission of tortious acts whereby another is injured, the husband would be liable.
But in the case sub judice there is another principle of law which enables the plaintiff to withstand the defense of former judgment. Here, the plaintiff, Howard Edward Couch, filed the first suit in Whitfield Superior Court, against Harold Blakely and Neely Produce Company, as defendants.
With a great show of speed, the defendant, Harold Blakely, filed an action in United States District Court against Howard Couch, National Truck Service, Inc., and Refrigerated Transport Company. Service was not perfected on Howard Edward Couch, and this resulted in his being dismissed from the Federal court action. But judgment was rendered before the state court action was tried, in favor of Harold Blakely, plaintiff, and against National
Ordinarily, Harold Blakely, defendant in the case sub judice, would have the right to plead his judgment against the employer of Howard Edward Couch, National Truck Service, Inc., and Refrigerated Transport Company, Inc., in bar, as res judicata, because such judgment presumes that the negligence of the truck driver was adjudicated against Couch and in favor of Blakely. The privity between the employer, Refrigerated Transport Company, Inc., and its employee and driver of its truck, Couch, would ordinarily afford Blakely the privilege of pleading same in bar, even though Couch himself was never served and was dismissed from the federal suit.
But here Couch sued Blakely first and his state court suit was pending when Blakely rushed into federal court, and with more than “deliberate speed,” obtained judgment before a trial was held as to the action pending in state court.
It would have simplified this case if Couch could have gone into federal court and filed a plea of pending suit, which would have effectively prevented the obtaining of any judgment against him in the federal court action.
It may be thought that Couch should have gone into federal court with a plea of pending suit. But it must be remembered that Blakely did not afford him that right, in that Blakely failed to perfect service on Couch and dismissed him from the suit. Thus, Couch was not required or allowed to plead the pending suit as a bar to the federal court action.
I do not find any precedent on this question, that is, where suit is pending in a court of competent jurisdiction, and the defendant rushes into a federal court and files another suit and obtains judgment, and then pleads it in estoppel or bar of the earlier suit which was pending against him when he filed the federal action.
Counsel for defendant Blakely must be given credit for ingenuity in this attempt, including the failure to serve Couch, so it would be made certain that Couch could not come forth and plead the
