192 P. 417 | Okla. | 1920
1. Under the Negotiable Instruments Law, section 4088, Rev. Laws 1910, the indorsement of the note by E.E. Cressler to C.W. Cressler, without recourse, is a qualified indorsement, and made C.W. Cressler a mere assignee of the title. Such qualified indorsement, under section 4115, Rev. Laws 1910, *174
made E.E. Crossler a warrantor that (1) said note is genuine and in all respects what it purports to be; (2) that he had a good title to it; (3) that the makers had capacity to contract; and (4) that he, E.E. Cressler, had no knowledge of any fact which would impair the validity of the instrument or render it valueless. Section 4115, Rev. Laws 1910, is a statutory declaration of the general rule. Some of the implied warranties which arise at common law on the sale of goods and chattels apply to the sale of commercial paper. Meyer v. Richards,
2. The alleged plea of res judicata cannot be sustained as a plea in bar, but it is a sufficient plea of estoppel by judgment. The judgment relied upon in the plea was not rendered in a case involving the same cause of action presented in this case. A former judgment cannot be relied upon in support of a plea in bar, unless the former suit was based on the same cause of action upon which the latter suit is based. A judgment rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction on the merits is a bar to any future suit between the same parties or their privies upon the same cause of action, so long as the judgment remains unreversed. The cause of action and all defenses made, or which might have been made, are merged in the judgment, and the plea of res judicata in that kind of a case is a plea in bar. Black on judgments (2nd Ed.) vol 2, secs. 504, 506, and 673. Where the former judgment in a suit between the same parties or their privies, involving the same cause of action set up in the second suit, is pleaded in bar, the former judgment is conclusive not only as to all matters actually litigated and determined in the former action, but conclusive on the parties and their privies as to all matters germane to the issues which could or might have been litigated and availed of by the parties. The cause of action is merged in the former judgment, and that being true, the parties and their privies are precluded in a subsequent suit involving the same cause of action from availing themselves of any point of law or fact, irrespective *175
of whether or not it was relied upon or passed on in the former case, and it makes no difference whether the law or facts of which the parties may have availed themselves were actually discussed, considered, or adjudicated by the court. All is merged into the judgment. The cause of action is destroyed in its entirety. The cause of action is ended and terminated, irrespective of the facts or legal propositions pleaded and considered by the court rendering the judgment. Black on Judgments (2nd Ed.) vol. 2, secs. 673 and 506. Cromwell v. County of Sac,
"If a person is bound by a judgment as a privy to one of the parties, it is because he has succeeded to some right, title, or interest of that party in the subject-matter of the action, and not because there is privity of blood, law, or representation between them, although privity of the latter sort may also exist."
Privies in estate or title are only bound in relation to the property involved in the Hart v. Moulton (Wis.) 76 Am. St. Rep. 881. It is clear that no such privity existed between E.E. Cressler and C.W. Cressler so as to make C.W. Cressler a privy to the judgment. This is true because C.W. Cressler succeeded to the rights of E.E. Cressler prior to the commencement of the suit resulting in the federal court judgment now relied upon as an estoppel. The general rule that one cannot rely upon a judgment as an estoppel unless he is estopped by the judgment himself is not without its exception. We realize some authorities lay the rule down in broad language that the estoppel by judgment must be mutual. It is well settled that one not a party to a suit is bound and estopped by a judgment rendered in a suit of which he had notice, involving the title to property he has warranted, or claim he has contracted to defend. Thus, a warrantor, not a party, is bound by a judgment against his grantee, where the warrantor was notified by the warrantee to defend the case. Where one is responsible over to another in the event the other's title is defeated, it is the warrantor's duty to defend the case, and if he is notified and requested to defend the suit and fails to defend, he is still bound by the judgment and estopped to litigate the issues adjudicated thereby. It is pretty well settled that when a person is responsible over to another, either by express contract or by operation of law, and notice has been given him of the pendency of the suit, and he has been requested to take upon himself the defense, he is no longer regarded as a stranger to the judgment that may be recovered. When notice is thus given, the judgment, if free from fraud and collusion, will be conclusive against him whether or not he appeared. If Fred Brown had sued C.W. Cressler to cancel the note for want of consideration, and C.W. Cressler had notified E.E. Cressler to defend the case, and the judgment had been rendered in favor of Fred Brown and against C.W. Cressler, E.E. Cressler would have been concluded by the Judgment and responsible to C.W. Cressler for the amount of the consideration paid by the latter for the note and mortgage. Undoubtedly there is privity existing between C.W. Cressler and E.E. Cressler in the sense that E.E. Cressler would have been bound by such a judgment whether or not he actually became a party to the suit, and *177
he would have been responsible over to C.W. Cressler for the amount of the consideration received. Black on Judgments (2nd Ed.) vol. 2, secs. 567 to 574, inclusive; City of St. Joseph v. Union R. Co. (Mo.) 38 Am. St. Rep. 626; Littleton v. Richard,
Now, suppose the demurrer to the plea is sustained and Fred Brown obtains a final judgment finding and adjudging the note and mortgage to have been executed without consideration; then C.W. Cressler sues E.E. Cressler for breach of warranty, and seeks to recover as damages therefor the amount of consideration paid by him for the assignment of the note and mortgage; E.E. Cressler could not plead the judgment in the federal court as an estoppel against C.W. Cressler because C.W. Cressler was not a party thereto, and then we would have E.E. Cressler deprived of the benefit of the judgment in the federal court case between him and Fred Brown, although he had litigated the very question with Fred Brown. E.E. Cressler ought not to be called upon to defend the validity and integrity of the note in a second suit with Fred Brown. In Scott v. American National Bank (Tex. Civ. App.)
3. Evidently anticipating a plea of estoppel by judgment based on the federal court judgment, Fred Brown and wife in their amended answer and cross-petition against C.W. Cressler allege that the note and mortgage were assigned and transferred to C.W. Cressler by E.E. Cressler, without any consideration; that in the very transaction complained of by Fred Brown in the federal court case, C.W. Cressler was the principal and E.E. Cressler his agent; that "C.W. Cressler acted at all times in the various transactions out of which said promissory note and real estate mortgage were signed, and in the signing of said promissory note and real estate mortgage, by and through his duly authorized agent, and representative. E.E. Cressler." In brief, Brown and wife allege that C.W. Cressler was the undisclosed principal of E.E. Cressler, with whom they dealt. Whether or not C.W. Cressler paid any consideration to E. *178
E. Cressler for the note and mortgage is wholly immaterial, it being well settled that the maker of a note and mortgage cannot, in an action brought against him by the indorsee or assignee thereof, litigate questions that can properly arise only between the holder and his immediate indorser. Gamel v. Hynds,
4. Mary Brown was not a party to the suit in the federal court, and the judgment cannot be pleaded as an estoppel against her. But no judgment is asked against her on the note, and whether she had any interest in the land sufficient to make her a necessary party to the mortgage does not clearly appear. Unless she had some interest the land mortgaged to secure the note, homestead interest, or some legal or equitable title other than the remote interest every wife has in her husband's property, which is not a legal or equitable estate or interest in law, she is not a necessary or indispensable party to a foreclosure decree. Of course, if she had a homestead interest, she is an indispensable party and is not bound by the judgment in the federal court case. Pettis v. Johnston,
The judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause remanded.
HARRISON, V. C.J., and KANE, PITCHFORD, JOHNSON, HIGGINS, and BAILEY, JJ., concur.