296 Mass. 544 | Mass. | 1937
This is a suit in equity, seeking an order for the removal of certain obstructions on a right of way.
It is alleged in the bill that the right of way was established by a final decree dated March 25, 1931, entered in the Superior Court for Norfolk County, in case number 15753, entitled Angelo Bonifazi vs. Guido Breschi et al.; that by that decree the plaintiff was given free and unobstructed use of that way; that there now exist obstructions therein, namely, a bank wall, a curbing, a lawn filled in several feet above the natural grade of the right of way, and a concrete sidewalk.
The defendant in his answer says that in January, 1933, the plaintiff filed a petition against the defendant in which were set out the same obstructions as are now relied on, and sought to have the defendant adjudged guilty of contempt for failure to remove them. This petition was referred to a master, who heard the parties and filed his report. On January 13, 1934, the petition, upon hearing by the judge, was dismissed, because the defendant was found to have complied with the decree. The defendant therefore alleges that the entire subject matter of the bill of complaint in the present suit became res judicata, and that the right of the plaintiff to have the relief sought therein is barred.
The master in the pending suit found the following material facts: By deed dated February 8, 1927, the plaintiff and his wife conveyed to the Franklin Petroleum Products Company a portion of their premises, but retained a twenty foot strip between the land which they conveyed and land of the defendant and others. The grantors also agreed to convey, on demand, the twenty foot driveway which was retained. In 1927, the Franklin Petroleum Products Company demanded that the plaintiff secure to it a right of way “twenty feet wide over land of Breschi to Alpine Place.” At that time the plaintiff’s original bill was pending. By the final decree entered March 25, 1931, the plaintiff was given a twelve foot right of way over the defendant’s land between Alpine Place (an accepted street) and the twenty foot strip
It should be noted that this suit is here on the master’s report and that this court is in the same position as the trial judge. Frechette v. Thibodeau, 294 Mass. 51, 54. The contention, that the dismissal of the petition for contempt constituted the matters here in issue res judicata merely because the petition for contempt contained allegations that obstructions here in question were being maintained, cannot prevail. The sole issue on that petition was whether the defendant had literally complied with the terms of the decree which specifically ordered the defendant to remove one set of obstructions. Stanley v. Old Colony Railroad, 176 Mass. 145, 149, 150. Compare New York Central Railroad v. Ayer, 253 Mass. 122, 128. If the defendant had done so he could not have been adjudged guilty of contempt in that he had not complied with an order which the plaintiff then sought. Nor could the plaintiff obtain a modification of the original decree by such a proceeding. Prenguber v. Agostini, 294 Mass. 491, 495. It follows that, as the obstructions now
The contention of the defendant that the original suit and decree rendered the issue now in litigation res judicata remains for consideration. Generally speaking, the doctrine of res judicata operates when a bill is based upon the same cause of action that was the subject of a prior bill, in which case the issues raised and decided in the earlier suit, as well as those which could have been raised and decided, are conclusively settled by the earlier decree. Karas v. Karas, 294 Mass. 230, 231, and cases cited. Where the later proceeding is for a different cause of action, those facts necessarily involved in the prior adjudication, or which under proper pleading were actually passed on, are conclusively determined. Sandler v. Silk, 292 Mass. 493, 498.
In the case at bar the burden of proof on these issues was on the defendant. Rosenberg v. Peter, 269 Mass. 32, 37. Sandler v. Silk, 292 Mass. 493. It does not appear from the record in the case at bar that the questions here raised were actually considered in the earlier suit in which the plaintiff obtained an adjudication of his right to a way twelve feet in width, and consequently the defendant fails on this branch of the case for lack of proof.
The question remains, therefore, whether the plaintiff is barred on the grounds that he should have asked for relief in the former suit against the obstructions which form the basis of the present suit. Generally speaking, where a single tortious act results in several items of damage, any relief which may be obtained because of such an act must be obtained in a single action. Bennett v. Hood, 1 Allen, 47, 48. Trask v. Hartford & New Haven Railroad, 2 Allen, 331, 332. Folsom v. Clemence, 119 Mass. 473, 474. McCaffrey v. Carter, 125 Mass. 330, 332. Loughlin v. Wright Machine Co., ante, 11, 12. Where, however, different torts are committed by separate acts, although the acts may be more or less connected and the wrongdoer and the wronged may in each case be the same persons, the plaintiff is not forced to seek relief for all the wrongs in the same action,
In the case at bar the master found that some of the obstructions here sought to be removed were in existence at the time of the decree in the earlier suit. But the defendant has not shown that the obstructions were put on by a single act or that the situation was such that the plaintiff had only a single cause of action as to them. Thus, while it might have been desirable for the plaintiff to settle the whole matter in the earlier suit, it cannot be said that he was obligated to do so, nor has the defendant shown such inequitable conduct on the part of the plaintiff as to induce a court of equity to refuse relief. It would seem, therefore, that the plaintiff is entitled to the removal of the obstructions, including the concrete sidewalk which was not in existence at the time of the final decree in the earlier suit.
Decree affirmed with costs.