7 F. 851 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana | 1881
Tin's suit is brought by, Claflin & Co. against Stoughton A. Fletcher and Francis Churchman, for the value of a lot of dry goods which one George Hazard, by fraudulently representing that he was solvent, when in fact he was insolvent, induced the plaintiffs to soil to him on time.
It is averred that Fletcher & Churchman bought the goods at sale on execution against Hazard, after being notified of the latter’s fraud, and that the plaintiffs had cancelled the sale and demanded possession of the property.
The defendants answer that for some time before their purchase of the goods they had been in the custody of John W. Gottorn, Robert S. Foster, and Ellis G. Shantlin, as the agents of the defendants; that prior to the marshal’s sale the plaintiffs demanded possession of the goods of such agents, who, under instructions from the defendants, refused
After admitting in their reply that they prosecuted their action in replevin to judgment, the plaintiffs aver that the defendants in this suit were not parties to the suit in the state court; that the suit in the latter court was not tried on its merits; that the right oi, the plaintiffs to the goods was not determined by that action; and that the plaintiffs failed in the state court because they had not, prior to the beginning of their suit, surrendered or offered to surrender to George Hazard the note that he had given for the goods; for which reason the court instructed the jury to return a verdict for the defendants.
The judgment of the state court is conclusive between the same parties and their privies. The defendants in the first suit were the agents of the defendants in this suit. Through these agents the present defendants resisted Claflin & Co.’s claim of ownership in the state court. Extrinsic evidence is admissible to prove that a real party in a suit was not a party to the record, but that he prosecuted or defended the suit in the name of a nominal party; and whenever this is made to appear, the real party is concluded by the judgment as effectually as if he had been a pcrty to the record. It makes no difference that the first suit was for possession of the goods while the present one is for their value. The ownership of the goods was the eontrover sy in the state court, and we have the same controversy in this court. The same proof that would entitle the plaintiffs to recover here, ought to have entitled them to a verdict and judgment in the state court. It may be that the judgment of the state court was erroneous,
Demurrer sustained.