26 Cal. 479 | Cal. | 1864
The complaint in this action alleges, that, on thfi first day of January, 1860, the plaintiff “ was the owner in fee, and seized of and- in the possession of” Block 142, in the City of Oakland, Alameda County; that afterwards, on the 20th of January, 1860, “ whilst said plaintiff was so seized in fee and possessed of said tract of laud, the said defendant wrongfully and unlawfully entered into and upon said premises and unlawfully ousted and ejected said plaintiff therefrom, and still continues to withhold wrongfully from said plaintiff the possession of said premises,” and prays judgment for restitution of the premises, and for damages.
The answer specifically denies the allegations of ownership and seizin, and the ouster, thereby putting the title and ouster in issue. It then affirmatively alleges, that, on the 20th of
The plaintiff on the trial relied upon a title derived from Luis Peralta, the original grantee of the Mexican Government, through his sons Vicente and Domingo Peralta, to whom the grant was confirmed by the Land Commissioners, and the Courts of the United" States on appeal. Plaintiff also proved that defendant had been in possession since 1857.
The defendants, to maintain the issues on their part, offered in evidence the record of the former suit set up in the answer; to the introduction^ of which, the plaintiff objected. The Court sustained the objection, and defendant excepted. This ruling is assigned as error.
The complaint in the record offered in evidence, and excluded by the Court, avers that, “ on the 27th day of September, 1858, the said plaintiffs (Caperton and Hays) were the owners in fee simple and seized of, and as such entitled to the possession of” * * * Block 142, in the City of Oakland, Alameda County; that while so seized and possessed and entitled to the possession the said defendant, (Schmidt,) on said day, “unlawfully and without title or right trespassed and entered upon said premises and took unlawful possession of the same, and he withholds and detains the same without right or title,” etc., and prays judgment “for the restitution and recovery of said premisesalso for damages, etc.
The answer “ denies that the said plaintiffs were or are owners in fee simple, or seized of, or were or are entitled to the possession of the tract of land and premises mentioned in the complaint,” etc.; denies that “ he ever unlawfully, or without right or title, trespassed or entered upon said premises, or any part thereof, or took uiilawful possession of the same, or dispossessed said plaintiffs,” etc.
The defendant then sets up a claim to an undivided one half of the premises, averring that he is lawfully in possession of said undivided one half, and lawfully entitled to the possession thereof, in common with others, his co-tenants, to the extent of his interest and possession in common, as aforesaid,
Thus the title and right of possession were distinctly put in issue. The cause was tried by the Court, without a jury, and the Court found and adjudged, that the plaintiffs were entitled to forty-one eighty-first parts of the premises, “ and that they be let into possession of the said premises according to their said undivided interests as tenants in common with the said defendants, and that said defendants do have and recover judgment against the said plaintiffs for the undivided forty eighty-first parts of said land and premises, and for the possession thereof as co-tenants with said plaintiffs, and that plaintiffs pay the costs of suit.”
The record also contains an agreed statement on motion for new trial, embracing the evidence, which shows that the parties, on the former trial, relied upon the same title, and same evidence to support it, as on the trial in this case. But on the former trial the will of Peralta, offered in evidence by plaintiffs, was excluded, while on the trial in this case, it was admitted. The plaintiffs in the first action appealed to the Supreme Court, the judgment was affirmed, and it is still in full force.
The former proceeding and judgment having been set up by way of estoppel, the question is, whether the record and judgment in the first action, were admissible in evidence on the trial of the second.
It is perfectly well settled, that the judgment of a Court of concurrent jurisdiction directly upon the point is, as a plea, a bar; and where there has been no opportunity to plead it, and it is offered in evidence, it is admissible and conclusive between the same parties and their privies upon the same matter directly in issue in another Court; and also when coming incidentally in question in another Court for another purpose. The entire current of authorities in England and America establish the rule as here limited, and many extend it further.
And the rule is applicable to real, as well as personal actions. “ Each species of judgment, from one in an action of trespass to one upon a writ of right, is equally conclusive upon its subject matter by way of bar to future litigation for the thing thereby decided.” * * * 1 What, therefore,’ Lord Coke says, ‘ that in personal actions concerning debts, goods and effects (by way of distinction from other actions), a recovery in one action is a bar to another, is not true of personal actions alone, but is equally and universally true as to all actions whatsoever quoad their subject matter.’” (Outram v. Morewood, 3 East. 357.)
But neither the judgment of a concurrent or exclusive jurisdiction is evidence of any matter which only comes collaterally in question, though within the jurisdiction; nor of any matter incidentally cognizable; nor of any matter to be inferred by argument from the judgment. The matter to become as a plea, a bar, or as evidence conclusive, must have been directly in issue. (1 Green. Ev. 528; Fulton v. Hanlow, 20 Cal. 451; 15 Cal. 147; Hopkins v. Lee, 6 Wheat. 109; and cases before cited.)
It will be seen from the rule as here stated, that, the matter adjudicated to become, as a plea, a bar, or as evidence conclusive, must have been directly in issue, and not merely collaterally litigated. It must he a fact “ immediately found accorcling to the pleadings, not that on toliich the verdict ivas merely based— a fact in issue, as distinct from a fact in controversy.” (Porter v. Baker, 19 N. H. 166; McDonald v. B. R. W. and M. Co., 15 Cal. 148.) And what constitutes a fact in issue, as distinct from a fact in controversy, is well illustrated in the case of King v. Chase, 15 N. H. 15-17; Betts v. Starr, 5 Conn. 552.
The respondent’s counsel does not controvert the correct
This proposition is partly, but not entirely true. The recovery of possession was, doubtless, in part at least, the object of a suit in the old action of ejectment—the fruit sought by the litigation—but the right of possession was not, strictly speaking, the fact litigated and determined. The subject matter in one sense may be the right of possession, but the right of possession is a conclusion of law to be drawn from the facts put in issue and determined, and not the facts themselves from which it is deduced. A complaint alleging in terms a right of possession merely, and a wrongful withholding, would present no issue of fact which a Court could try. The subject matter litigated and determined depends upon the facts alleged in the pleadings.
This ¡imposition of the respondent’s counsel proceeds upon the theory, that, the recovery alone, and not the matter in issue and determined, and upon wdiich the recovery is had, constitutes the bar. Lord Ellenborough, in commenting upon a prior case, in Outram v. Morewood, 3 East. 354-5, said :
“ The Court very properly distinguished then between what operates by way of bar to a future recovery of the same thing, and what by way of estoppel. That was the case of a mere recovery in cjectio firmce, Without title alleged; and the plain*496 tiff might in respect of possession, or other varying circumstances of title, be well entitled to' recover at one time, and not he so at another. And it is not the recovery, but the matter alleged by the party, and upon which the recovery proceeds, which creates the estoppel. The recovery itself in an action of trespass is only a bar to the future recovery of damages for the same injury ; but the estoppel prechides parties and privies from contending to the contrary of that point or matter of fact, which having been once distinctly put in issue by them, or by those to whom they are privy in estate or law, has been on such issue joined and solemnly found against them”
This shows that it is not the object of the suit, the recovery, or fruits of the litigation alone that constitutés the estoppel,' but the facts put in issue, and found, upon which the recovery is based. The controversy, then, is, as to what is directly in issue in an action to recover the possession of real estate under our system of pleading and practice.
From habit, and as a matter of convenience, we ordinarily speak of the action, in a general sense, as an action of ejectment. This is well enough, so long as we do not suffer ourselves to be misled by confounding the action to recover real estate in use in this State, with the action of ejectment at common law, and as a consequence embarrass ourselves by attempting to apply the rules of law peculiar to the latter action to the former. Technically, and substantially, we have no action of ejectment. The forms constitute the substance of that action at common law. True, practically, the possession of the land was recovered. But this was equally true of the writ of entry, and an assize. All these were possessory actions merely. And there would be just as much propriety in calling our action to recover the possession of land a writ of entry, or" an assize, as an ejectment. The pleadings are more nearly assimilated to the pleadings in a writ of entry, or an assize, than to the pleadings in an action of ejectment. In theory, the writ of entry, and the assize, were actions to recover the freehold ; while ejectment was an action to recover the term of the tenant—a mere chattel interest. But, in our
In regard to the two former actions Mr. Blackstone says: “ These remedies are either by writ of entry, or an ¡assize, which are actions merely possessory, serving only to regain that possession, whereof the demandant (that is, he who sues for the land) or his ancestors have been unjustly deprived by the tenant or possessor of the freehold, or those under whom he claims; they decide nothing with respect to the right of property; only restoring the demandant to that situation in which he was (or by law ought to have been) before the dispossession committed.” * * *
“ The first of these remedies is by writ of entry, which is that which disproves the title of the tenant or possessor, by showing the unlawful means by which he entered or continues in possession.” * * #
The writ requires the tenant to deliver seizin, or show cause why he wdl^not. “ This cause may be either a denial of the fact of having entered by or under such means as are suggested, or a justification of his entry by reason of title in himself or in those under whom he may claim; whereupon the possession of the land is awarded to him who produces the clearest right to possess it.” (Sharswood’s Black. Com. 180-1.)
After stating the exceptions, Blackstone says, “ But in general the writ of entry is the universal remedy to recover j>ossession, when wrongfully withheld from the owner.” (Ib. 183.) Notwithstanding these actions are merely possessory and “decide nothing with respect to the right of property” (a question which could only be determined in a writ of right), a judgment in one writ of entry was conclusive in another, or in an assise for the same land.
Says Mr. Blackstone : “As a writ of entry is a real action which disproves the title of the tenant by showing the unlawful commencement of his possession, so an assize is a real action which proves the title of the demandant merely by
“Actions of ejectment have succeeded to those real actions called possessory actions; but an inconvenience was found to result from them which did not follow from real actions, to which it has been found necessary to apply a remedy. Real actions could not be brought twice for the same thing; but a person might bring as many ejectments as he pleased, which rendered the rights of parties subject to endless litigation.” (Archbold’s note to Sharswood’s Bl. Com. 206.)
The inconclusiveness of the judgment resulting from the form of proceeding was admitted to be an inconvenience, and the necessary remedy for it; referred to by Mr. Arclibold, was, an injunction, which was at length granted, after two or more trials. (Ib.) In these real actions, then, we may say, with at least as much propriety as the respondent’s counsel says of the action of ejectment, “ the object is the recovery of possession; the subject matter to be tried is the right of possession as between plaintiff and defendant; that is the extent of the issue.”
It is manifest, therefore, that the reason that one recovery in ejectment at common law was not a bar to a second ejectment between the same parties for the same land, rvas not because the subject matter to be tried was the right of present possession; for this reason would apply with equal force to the actions we have just considered, in which a former recovery was a bar. But the reason is found in the very framework and essential qualities of the action, which rendered the rules of law laid down at the commencement of this opinion inapplicable. The character of the proceeding is well known. Originally, the party who desired to recover the possession of land in this action entered upon the land, and there executed
“In ejectment the unsuccessful party may retry the same question, (that is the title,) as often as he pleases without leave of the Court, for by making a fresh demise to another nominal character it becomes the action of a n.ew plaintiff upon another right.” (Christian’s note to Bl. Com., Ib. 205.)
This is the reason given in the books. By a new demise a different term is created, a new possession and ouster alleged, and the matters directly alleged are different from those directly alleged in the former suit. The recovery alone, therefore, could not be a bar, as a different term was recovered. And the determination of the title was not available as matter of estoppel, because it was not directly in issue. And thus the title—the 11 fact in controversy,” but not “ directly in issue ”—
In this case (page 354) Lord Ellenborough says “ That a recovery in any one suit upon issue joined on matter of title is equally conclusive upon the subject matter of such title; and that a finding upon title in trespass not only operates as a bar to a future recovery of damages for a trespass founded on the same injury, but also operates by way of estoppel to any action for an injury to the same supposed right of possession.” (Tb.)
In many States of our own cojmtry the common law action of ejectment has either been abolished, or the proceedings materially modified; and we shall now examine some of the decisions under such modified proceedings for the recovery of real property bearing upon the question under consideration.
In Connecticut, if the common law action of ejectment was ever in use, it was abandoned at a very early period, and a proceeding substituted, generally called an action of disseizin, ■ sometimes ejectment; but whether the change was originally made by virtue of statutory provisions, or by the Courts we have not been able to discover with certainty—probably by rules of practice adopted by the Courts under statutory authority.
Smith v. Sherwood, which arose in 1822, (4 Conn. 280) was an action of disseizin or ejectment. The plaintiff alleged title and a disseizin. The defendant by way of estoppel plead a former judgment in a similar action, and averred that the title of the plaintiff in that action was the only subject of determination.' Plaintiff demurred to the plea. The plaintiff in the first action alleged title and a disseizin. The defendants plead “ no wrong and disseizin,” and the jury found for defendants. The question was as to the sufficiency of the plea of estoppel. The Court were equally divided on the question, Hosmer, C. J., and Brainard, J., holding it to be insufficient, and Bristol and Peters, Justices, holding it sufficient. Hosmer, C. J., says: “ Neither can the record be an estoppel to the plaintiff’s demand, as the ground of determination does not appear. The defendants, it was found, did not disseize Salmon,
He says, (p. 284): “ The action of disseizin (called indiscriminately disseizin or ejectment) is the only real action known to our laws. Whether the plaintiff declares upon a seizin in fee, or any lesser estate, it is the only remedy for settling the title to real property. This is probably the first time that a doubt has been intimated as to the nature of the action, and of its being adapted to the great business of terminating disputes concerning the title to land.”
After discussing the question at length, and citing and commenting on the case of Outram v. Morewood, he proceeds (p. 280) : “ Let it be tested by the undoubted principles of that
Again, upon the question whether the entire matter of estoppel must appear by the record, he said (p. 287):
“ The defendant has averred, that on trial of the case of Salmon the ouster was proved and admitted by the defendant, and consequently the judgment and verdict proceeded on the ground that Salmon had no title. The only question, therefore, is, whether such averments are admissible. These averments are consistent with the record. They do not contradict it. The title was undoubtedly in issue by the declaration and plea, and the only effect of the averment is to show, what is consistent with the record, that the verdict was found in favor*505 of the defendants because Salmon had no title. To permit such averments seems indispensable to attain the purpose of justice; and they have frequently been admitted in similar cases. (Hutchins v. Camp, 2 Black. 827; Sedden v. Tutop, 6 Term Rep. 607; Rover v. Foune, 4 T. R. 146.) Numerous cases in our sister States recognize the necessity and propriety of showing by averments anything not contradictory to the record when the question is whether a former judgment bars a subsequent suit.”
And such seems to be the current of authorities on this point. (Gardner v. Buckbee, 3 Cow. 127; Young v. Black, 7 Cranch. 565; Burt v. Steinburgh, 4 Cow. 559; Lawrence v. Hunt, 10 Wend. 85; Young v. Rummell, 2 Hill, 478; 4 Barb. 36, 457; Doty v. Brown, 4 Coms. 71; 2 Smith’s Lead. Cases, 575.) But they are not entirely uniform, and subsequent decisions seem to settle the point the other way in Connecticut.
It will be seen that the question in this case was, as to whether the title was shown by the record to be in issue and determined ón the plea of “ no wrong and disseizin j” and if not, whether the record could be aided by averment, and not as to the effect of the judgment, if in issue. If the title teas shoivn by the record, to be determined, or the record could be aided by averment, it seems to be taken for granted by all the Judges that the judgment would have been conclusive.
Mr. Chief Justice Swift, in his Digest of the Laws of Connecticut, says, in relation to this subject: “ In several States in the Union, they have copied in substance the English forms of real actions, with such variations as local circumstances required. In Connecticut, we have introduced one action which comprehends and answers the purposes of the whole. This is indiscriminately called an action of ejectment or an action of disseizin. Like the writ of right, it definitely settles the title and is a bar to another action.” Here the sentence ended in the former edition. But Professor Dutton, in the revision of 1851, made since the case of Smith v. Sherwood arose, adds this qualification: “ [Provided issue is taken on
So also in Connecticut, the party in whose favor the title to land is determined, by an award of arbitrators, may avail himself of it, in a subsequent action by way of estoppel. (Shelton v. Alcox, 11 Conn. 248.)
Thus, in Connecticut, if issue be taken distinctly on the title, the verdict and judgment are conclusive upon the same principles that judgments in other actions conclude the parties.
In South Carolina, the action of ejectment, with some statutory modifications, was formerly in use. In 1791, the action of ejectment was abolished, and the action of trespass to try title substituted. The effect of the judgment upon the rights of the defendant in this action was left to be determined by the principles of the common law. And it was held in Thomas v. Geiger, 2 Nott and McCord, 528, that, “ the defendant, in an action of trespass to try title, cannot, after a recovery against him, in turn become plaintiff and sustain a second action to try title.” The Court say, (p. 530) : “ It has been contended that a change of action does not alter the rights of the parties, and, therefore, in an action of trespass to. try title, the parties retain the power of renewing the action as often as was permitted in an action of ejectment. The rights of the parties must not be confounded with the incidents peculiar to forms of action. The fictitious action of ejectment was substituted for the real action. As trespass to try title is now substituted for ejectment, were the rule contended for to prevail, trespass to try title as well as ejectment, must be governed by the incidents peculiar to a real action. This doc
Prior to 1847, the action of ejectment was in use in Georgia. In that year an Act was passed which provides : “ That from and after the passage of this Act, the form of a declaration for the recovery of real estate and mesne profits may be as follows, etc., etc., to wit:
“ (Title of cause.) The petition of A. B. showeth that C. D. is in possession of a certain tract of land in said county, (here describe the laud), to which your petitioner claims title ; that C. D. has received the profits of said land since, etc., and refuses to deliver said land to your petitioner, or to pay him the profits thereof. Wherefore, your petitioner prays process, etc. (Cobb’s New Dig. Laws of Geo. 1851, p. 490.)”
There is no provision as to the effect of the judgment. In 7 Geo. 172, it was held that a plaintiff, if he chose, might, notwithstanding this provision, still proceed under the old forms of the action of ejectment. But in Sims v. Smith, 19 Geo. 124, a verdict and judgment in an action brought under the Act of 1847, just cited, was held to be conclusive, even when set up in a subsequent action of ejectment brought in the common law form for the same land. In this case the second action was brought under the old form. The former recovery, under the form prescribed in the Act of 1847, was pleaded in bar. Ho new title or right of possession since the verdict in the former action was shown. Mr. Justice Starnes, who delivered the opinion of the Court, says, (p. 125):
“ The rule of practice, as derived from the English Courts, was, that a recovery in ejectment did not bar a subsequent action. The rule was founded, I suppose, upon the nature and character of the action.” After stating the character of*508 the action he proceeds : “ All this ingenuity and contrivance had their origin, no doubt, in the high estimate which was placed upon real estate in England, and its immense importance as an element in the feudal policy. But whatever may have been the reason of the rule, such it was—and we have made it a part of our law.
“ We are all ready to admit, however, I suppose, that there is no necessity for the rule with us; that there is no reason in our State, why a suitor claiming real estate in a Court of justice should have this advantage over one who was suing for personal property ; that substantial and practical reasons cannot be assigned for it. Still, if called upon to enforce it in such a case, and under such circumstances as would demand its enforcement at the common law, we should feel constrained to adopt it. But when a different case is presented, arising in part out of our own legislation, we are at liberty to adopt a more reasonable and practicable rule. The case is presented here. The first action, brought according to the provisions of our statute of 1847, was a real substantial claim of title, and it was determined against the plaintiff.
“ Bow, we regard the Act of 1847 as intended to try title, not possession. The plaintiff confessedly cannot directly bring another action against the defendant under and by virtue of the provisions of the statute, for the purpose of trying the title to the same premises. Shall he be allowed to do so circuitously, by adopting the common law fiction ? This unreasonable result is avoided by holding that the common law rule, which we have been considering, can properly be held applicable to a case of ejectment only when the common law forms have been adopted and followed by the plaintiff—that the Act of 1847 repeals the common law fiction as to all cases where it is followed; and when a verdict is rendered under it, the common law fiction must give way and can no longer apply, if another case be brought by the plaintiff against the defendant, in the form of common law ejectment, if it can be shown that the latter case is in truth and in fact an action for the trial of the same title.”
In several of the States, as in Hew York and Illinois, there are special statutes regulating actions for the recovery of real estate. In such cases, the forms of the common law action of ejectment are generally abolished, and another form substituted, and—what wmuld naturally be expected, as a consequence of the change of the form in the action—the effect of the j udginent is also modified, regulated and prescribed. Sometimes one new trial in the same action is granted, as a matter of right, and another upon a proper showing, in the discretion of the Judge. But when finally determined in that action, it is made conclusive. The statutory form of a declaration in Hew York does not even allege title. It only alleges a possession by plaintiff and an ouster by defendant. Yet the judgment is made conclusive. A second trial, if any be had, must he in the same action.
But these provisions granting new trials, as a matter of absolute right, were adopted many years ago, when the old ideas as to the peculiar importance and sacreduess of real estate, in comparison with personalty, still lingered in the minds of the people. At this day, and especially in the new States, little more importance is attached to real estate, than to personal property of equal value. It is almost as much an article of traffic, commerce and speculation as merchandise. Ho restraints are thrown around its alienation, except so far as are necessary for the protection of parties dealing in it, by enabling them to trace and preserve the evidence of titles, and judge of their validity. Since the change in the form of actions, no technical reason exists—and we can perceive no substantial reason inherent in the nature of the property—why the title to a piece of land should not be finally determined by one trial fairly conducted, in which no error occurs, that does not apply with at least equal force to an action for the recovery of a
One party may have the absolute right of property; a second, the right of. enjoyment for a specified time ; a third, a right of immediate possession; and a fourth, the actual, rightful or wrongful possession of personalty, as well as of realty; and there may be injuries to the rights of each of these parties, for which they have a remedy. A party may recover possession who has no right of property, as well as in the case of realty; and we can see no reason why a judgment upon a matter in regard to realty, once put in issue, litigated and determined—whether it be title, a right of present possession, or something else—should not be conclusive, as well as when it relates to personalty. No principle of the common law would be violated by such a result. On the contrary, its rules require it. Nor would it be contrary to any principle of public policy.
Mr. Gfreenleaf says: “The rules of law'upon this subject are founded upon these evident principles, or axioms, that it
If there is any litigation that the “ interest of the community," and “the public tranquillity demand,” “should be forever closed,” after one full and fair trial—or even without trial unless it be speedily had—it is, in our judgment, litigation in respect to titles to lands. And such was manifestly the opinion of the Legislature of this State; for in adopting a Statute of Limitations that should bar all actions in relation to realty, they fixed upon the unprecedentedly short period of five years. And in prescribing the mode of proceedings in civil cases, that body left the action for the recovery of real estate untrammelled by any of the forms and fictions that pertained to actions of ejectment, and to the almost innumerable variety of other proceedings relating to real and mixed actions at common law. They made no distinction between personal and real actions, but left them all to be governed by the same principles, and attended by the same incidents and consequences. Whether the action be real or personal, the plaintiff alleges the facts that constitute his cause of action. There is no general issue. The defendant must take issue directly upon each material allegation by denying it, or it will be taken against him as admitted. Whatever is put in issue and passed upon, is, upon the principles of the common law, finally determined. In the language of Mr. Chief Justice Swift, in speaking of the action of disseizin in Connecticut, as distinguished from the numerous real actions at common law, before quoted, we have but “one action which comprehends and answers the purpose of the whole. Like the writ of right it definitely settles the title, and is a bar to another action, provided issue is taken on such title. Like the writs of entry and assize it will lie for possessory rights. Without the formalities and delays of real actions,
It does not follow, that a party suing to recover the possession of land must use the same stereotyped form of complaint, or that he must allege title in fee, because he may do it. He need not of necessity adopt the precise form of complaint, which was in controversy and approved in Payne and Dewey v. Treadwell, 16 Cal. 243. The form may be adapted to the estate sought to be recovered, and the facts desired to be put in issue. The cause of action should be stated according to the facts. In the language of Mr. Chief Justice Field, in that case (p. 245,) the plaintiff may aver, “ that he is seized of the premises, or of some estate therein in fee, for life, or for years, according to the fact;” or “ When the plaintiff has been in possession of the premises for which he sues, it will be sufficient for him to allege in his complaint such possession and entry, ouster and continued withholding by the defendant. Such allegations are proper when they correspond with the facts, but they are not essential.” (Ib. p. 244.) Did whatever is put in issue, and determined, is conclusive and final.
If a party declares upon a seizin in fee, and thus puts his. title in issue, and chooses to rely upon a prior possession merely, or does not choose to put in all his evidence of title, or is unable from any accident to get it in, he is in no worse position than many other parties, who for any reason fail in personal actions to get in sufficient, or all their evidence. Prudent counsel, where, from any unforeseen accident they fail to make as strong a case as the facts and evidence attainable should enable them to do, and they are not satisfied of the sufficiency of their proofs, will submit to a nonsuit, or in a proper case, with the permission of the Court, withdraw a juror and begin again. If they do not, they cannot complain that the judgment against them in the action should be followed by its legitimate consequences.
In order that we may not be misapprehended, we will add,
In this case the record offered in evidence, and excluded by the Court, shows, that in the former suit, the title was distinctly put in issue and determined, (the possession of an undivided half was admitted by the answer); that the undivided forty-one eiglity-first parts was found and adjudged to be in the plaintiffs—and forty eiglity-first parts in the defendant ; that the same title, and the same ouster, were relied on in this action—for the plaintiffs proved that the defendant’s possession extended as far back as 1857 before the commencement of the former .action, and no evidence of title acquired since the former suit was offered. The Court therefore erred in refusing to admit the record in evidence, and the j udgment must be reversed.
' Another question of great importance has been presented in this case and elaborately argued, which the counsel urge us to decide. But under the views we have taken, it becomes unnecessary to determine the question in this case, and the importance of the questions already discussed have required so wide a range of investigation, that we have already devoted as much time to the consideration of the case as the accumulated business, and other pressing duties of the Court will admit of at this time.
This cause was decided by the late Supreme Court, Mr. Justice Crocker delivering the opinion, in which all the Justices concurred. At the time of the transfer of the cause to the new Court there was a petition for rehearing pending. As the questions involved were new in this State, and supposed to be of great practical importance, a rehearing was granted in order that they might be further considered. Upon a thorough examination of the case we have arrived
Let the. judgment be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Rhodes, J.: I concur in the judgment.
Cubbet, J.: I dissent.
[Note.—Since the foregoing decision was announced, we 'have been favored by Mr. Justice Field with a copy of the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case óf Miles v. Caldwell, recently decided. The Court had occasion to discuss, to some extent, the questions involved in Caperton v. Schmidt, and we are gratified to find that the views so ably expressed in the opinion of Mr. Justice Miller coincide with those announced by us in this casé.]