131 Ala. 228 | Ala. | 1901
As we understand the testimony of Gallan in regard to the payment of the two hundred dollars balance of the purchase price of the land, it contains two separable statements of facts; first, that the sum was to be paid in gross at one time and not in instalments of one hundred dollars or other amounts, and, second, that this lump sum was to be paid at his election either in December, 1898, or in December, 1899. The judgment in the former suit, begun after December, 1898, and before December, 1899, for one hundred dollars is confessedly conclusive that Callan was mistaken in his statement that no part of the sum was due before December, 1899, and that one hundred dollars of it was due in December, 1898: To this extent that judgment is res adjudicata. But is that judgment conclusive against the other statement of Callan that the balance Avas due and payable in a lump sum and a thing ad-' judged that such balance was payable in instalments? To have that effect it must appear that the fact that the
The case of Liddell v. Chidester, 84 Ala. 508, chiefly relied on by appellee, does not support the rulings below, but, to the contrary, the principles there declared fully sustain the views we have .expressed. In that case the question was whether the salary of a clerk was due and payable, in gross for the year or in instalments for each month. In a former action the clerk had sued for the wage of a month and had recovered, he having been discharged and the suit being brought at the end of the first month afterwards. In the case reported the suit was for the balance of salary for the remainder of the year, and the defense was that the plaintiff’s only claim was for the salary in gross for the year, and that having sued for and recovered a part of it commensurate with his services for one month, he thereby split his cause of action and could not bring another suit for the balance. Manifestly he had no right óf action for one month’s salary- unless his compensation Avas due and payable by the month — in monthly instalments so to «ay. Hence the establishment of the fact that it Avas so due and payable “aauis essential to the finding of the former verdict” and rendition of judgment thereon; and that judgment Avas, therefore, conclusive that the salary was payable in monthly instalments, so that a separate ■cause of action arose at the end of each month, the prosecution of wdiich to judgment Avas the recovery of the Avliole of the sum then due and not the splitting-up of a then existing cause of action, leaving a balance for attempted recovery in a subsequent suit. The court in concluding the discussion of this question in that case said: “If the contract Avas for the payment of one thousand dollars in gross at the end of the year, * * * that suit Avas prematurely brought, and there could have been no recovery. It Avas indispensable to plaintiff’s right of recoA'ery to show that by the terms of the contract his Avages Avere due in monthly instalments, one instalment of which had matured. This was ‘essential to the finding of the former verdict.’ ” As we have seen it Avas not essential to the former judgment pleaded in the case at bar for the plaintiff to show that the two
Reversed and remanded.