The payment of the judgment in the Cabarrus County action in favor of Bowen and Knitting Co. against Trucking Co. was authorized by G.S. 1-239, and discharges the judgment. 3 Strong’s N. C. Index, Judgments, § 47, p. 68. “The effect of the statute (C.S. 617, now G.S. 1-239) is to make the clerk the statutory agent of the owner of the judgment, and not of the party making the payment.”
Dalton v. Strickland,
Bowen in the present action seeks to reach and apply to the payment of the judgment in the Forsyth County action in which Shipp, the agent of Trucking Co., ivas the defendant, the obligation of Iowa under its policy of automobile liability insurance, when Iowa has paid and discharged, by virtue of its obligation under this insurance policy, the judgment in the Cabarrus County action, in which Bowen recovered damages on his counterclaim for personal injuries against Shipp’s principal, Trucking Co., a cause of action arising out of the same collision in which he recovered damages, which are unpaid, against the principal’s agent Shipp.
The question here presented is whether the payment or satisfaction of plaintiff’s Cabarrus County judgment against Trucking Co., the principal, on his counterclaim in the sum of $2,464 for personal injuries received by Bowen in the collision on 21 June 1961, entered at the February 1963 Civil Session of Cabarrus County, and paid by Iowa on 29 April 1963 operates as a satisfaction and a bar to Bowen’s present action against Iowa to enforce payment of his judgment entered in his case in Forsyth County on 12 December 1961 for $15,000 for personal injuries against Shipp, the agent of Trucking Co., received in the same collision.
In the Cabarrus County action and in the Forsyth County action, there was a single tort: the negligence of Shipp as agent in operating the Ford truck of Trucking Co., his principal. The liability of Trucking Co. was based not on any personal fault, for there was none on the present record, but on the agency relationship which existed between Trucking Co. and its negligent agent Shipp. Trucking Co.’s liability was derivative and dependent entirely on the doctrine of
respondeat superior.
Because of this liability of the principal, it has been sometimes broadly assumed that the master was guilty of a tort in a personal sense. This is contrary to fact. In the case of joint tort-feasors, although there is a single damage done, there are several wrongdoers. The act inflicting injury may be single, but back of that, and essential to liability, lies some wrong done by
*492
each tort-feasor contributing in some way to the wrong complained of. It is said in
White v. Keller,
It is the general rule that, although judgments may be recovered against all persons participating in a single wrong, there can be only one full satisfaction or indemnity.
McNair v. Goodwin,
Pinnix v. Griffin,
It is said in
Thompson v. Lassiter,
“However, where the doctrine of respondeat superior is or may be invoked, the injured party may sue the agent or servant alone, and if a judgment is obtained against the agent or servant, and such judgment is not satisfied, the injured party may bring an action against the principal or master. In such case, however, the recovery against the principal or master may not exceed the amount of the recovery against the agent or servant. [Citing authority.] On the other hand, if the agent or servant satisfies the judgment against him or obtains a verdict in his favor, no action will lie against the principal or master.”
In Brown v. Louisburg, supra, the facts were these: A property owner in the town of Louisburg caused an excavation in the sidewalk in front of his building into which the plaintiff fell and was injured. Plaintiff brought an action against the property owner and the town of Louisburg to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him in falling into this excavation. While the action was pending, plaintiff agreed in writing through his attorneys, for the consideration of $75, to enter a nonsuit and to release the property owner from any and all claims of plaintiff against him, by reason of the facts set forth in the complaint, and from any and all claims of every description which the plaintiff may have against the property owner. It was verbally agreed at the time of the execution of the agreement that the payment of the $75 was not made or accepted in full satisfaction of the injuries received, but simply to discharge the property owner. When the action came on for trial, the town claimed that it also was entitled to the benefit of the release. His Honor held otherwise. The town excepted. The jury rendered a verdict for $400 less $75 against the town. Judgment was entered upon the verdict, and the town appealed. The Court in its opinion said in part:
*494 “The defendants were not, however, joint tort feasors. To make persons joint tort feasors they must actively participate in the act which causes the injury. ...
“The real question in the case is this: Upon which of the defendants is the ultimate • liability resting as between themselves. The plaintiff can, of course, sue either one, but which one of the defendants is liable to the other for the damages which the plaintiff would be entitled to recover for the injury which he has sustained on account of their negligence? We think that Ponton would be liable to the town, and that any recovery which might be made against the town could be ultimately recovered back from Ponton. [Citing authority.]
“. . . His Honor should have instructed the jury that upon the evidence the plaintiff could not recover.”
This case has been repeatedly cited and approved in our Reports. See Shepard’s Citations.
Leonard v. Blake, supra, held, as succinctly and correctly summarized in headnote six in the North Eastern Reporter:
“A plaintiff, suing a mother and her daughter in separate actions for death caused by negligent operation of mother’s automobile by daughter, could prosecute both actions to final judgment, but there could be satisfaction for damages in one action only.”
In McNamara v. Chapman, supra, the Court held that a judgment against a solvent master for tort on the servant is a bar to a suit by the same plaintiff against the same servant for the same cause of action, although it has not been satisfied.
The case of
Marange v. Marshall,
Court of Civil Appeals of Texas, Corpus Christi, rendered 31 March 1966, and reported in
“In a well and carefully prepared opinion with facts almost identical to the case at bar, the New Hampshire Supreme Court in the case of McNamara v. Chapman, supra, firmly and in thoughtful and well-reasoned language, rejects a similar position taken by the appellants here. The court in McNamara held, that the second action filed against the employee alone could not be maintained, by reason of the prior judgment. This decision as a leading case is reported in123 A. 229 ,31 A.L.R. 188 , and has been cited with approval at least in ten states.”
In
Stone v. Coach Co.,
The Court held in
Ingram v. Insurance Co.,
This is stated in the agreed statement of facts:
“By a letter dated June 7, 1962, prior to the trial of the Cabarrus County action and prior to the institution of the *496 present action, Iowa National Mutual Insurance Company, through its attorney, Ralph M. Stockton, Jr., tendered for a ten-day period to Fred S. Hutchins, Sr., as attorney for Fred J. Bowen, the amount of $5,000.00 in settlement of the Forsyth County judgment in favor of Fred J. Bowen against Johnny C. Shipp. A true copy of said letter is attached hereto and incorporated herein and fully set out in this paragraph. Said tender was not accepted by Fred J. Bowen.”
By rejecting this offer Bowen elected to pursue his counterclaim for personal injuries in the Cabarrus County action and to obtain satisfaction for his injuries in that action. The judgment in the Cabarrus County action, in which Bowen received $2,464 as damages for his personal injuries received in the same collision which was the basis for his Forsyth County action resulting in a judgment in his favor against Shipp, has been paid in full by Iowa into the office of the clerk of the Superior Court of Cabarrus County. The clerk of the Superior Court of Cabarrus County disbursed to the attorneys of record for Bowen the amount of said judgment and costs in payment and satisfaction of the judgment entered in this action in favor of Bowen and Knitting Co. Bowen did not appeal. Although separate judgments may be rendered against the agent and his principal arising out of the same cause of action, there can be but one satisfaction of the judgments arising on the same cause of action, and this rule has been applied even where the judgments differed in amount when the two judgments are for compensatory damages. This is true because Bowen’s cause of action is indivisible, and the satisfaction of the judgment by the principal operates to extinguish his judgment in the Forsyth County action against the agent, particularly when Bowen rejected the offer of the payment of $5,000 as aforesaid and elected to pursue his cause of action against the principal and enforce the judgment obtained against him.
Burkhardt v. Armour & Co.,
Although it is not necessary for us in reaching a decision in this case to approve all the trial court’s conclusions of law, we approve this conclusion, that the acceptance of satisfaction of the Cabarrus County judgment by Bowen constitutes a bar to recovery by him in *497 the present action against Iowa, and that conclusion supports the judgment that plaintiff recover nothing from the defendant Iowa.
The judgment of the lower court is
Affirmed.
