In the case of Blum v. Truelsen,
It is obvious that the verdict of the jury, releasing Henry T. Truelsen, the father, and the entry of such judgment by the trial court were not disturbed in the opinion. The
The plaintiff filed a motion for rehearing and brief in support thereof, attacking that part of the holding permitting the jury to release Henry T. Truelsen on the note. The motion for rehearing was denied. The mandate of this court was issued to the district court. The district court on a hearing thereon adjudged that the plaintiff recover from Clarence W. Truelsen the sum of $2,138.40, interest and costs, thus computing the amount of the judgment, as required by the opinion.
While the plaintiff contends that the entire case was reversed, he does not assail the recovery as against the defendant Clarence W. Truelsen. Henry T. Truelsen departed this life, and the plaintiff made application to have the district court revive the action in the name of his executor and heirs. This application was denied; hence this appeal, brought for the purpose to again attack that part of the holding in the opinion of Blum v. Truelsen, supra, dismissing defendant Henry T. Truelsen from liability on the note.
The plaintiff in this appeal raises the same propositions that were considered in the motion for rehearing, in attacking that'part of the judgment releasing Henry T. Truelsen from liability on the note. This court determined the issue so raised when the motion for rehearing was denied.
“It is a fundamental principle of jurisprudence that material facts or. questions which were in issue in a former action, and were there admitted or judicially determined, are conclusively settled by a judgment rendered therein, and that such facts or questions become res judicata and may not again be litigated in a subsequent action.”
Affirmed.
