Driscoll v. Damp

17 Wis. 419 | Wis. | 1863

By the Court,

Dixosr, C. J.

However unjust and wrong it may be for the defendant to keep the money, a part of which is admitted to have been first paid and then collected upon the judgment, yet this action cannot be maintained. The judgment is a bar to all agitation of that question, and conclusive in law that the merits were then determined. It is conclusive that the sum for which it was rendered was then actually due and unpaid. This is the effect ordinarily ascribed to judgments in all collateral proceedings, and the facts do not bring this case within any exception which has ever been established. On the other hand, it is almost word for word and line for line like many cases in which it has been held that the general principle must govern. It is not to be distinguished from *422Marriot vs. Hampton, 7 D. & E., 269, and Loring vs. Mansfield, 17 Mass., 394, and is never to be confounded with Woodward vs. Hill, in this court, 6 Wis., 143. It is as clearly distinguishable from the latter as the latter from the two former, the decisions of which were not only not questioned, but their propriety was expressly assented to and sanctioned. Woodward vs. Hill is not an extreme case of the class to which it belongs.

It was clearly within a well settled exception, and the decision is supported by numerous adjudged cases. The distinguishing feature upon which it turned, was, to use the language of the court, that there was a special trust reposed in the defendant. The money was placed in his hands and received by him to be credited and applied on the bond. He violated that trust. The court was furthermore very careful to note that there was no answer to the action in which the judgment .was recovered. The defense was not set up or attempted to be. In this case the facts are reversed. There was no trust, and there was an answer. The payment was a present one — effectual from the moment the money was delivered. The demand was open ; not evidenced by note, bond, or writing of any kind —at most a mere matter of account. There was no relation of trust or confidence beyond that which arises between every debtor and creditor upon the payment of money. There was no special application to be made of the money, as by indorsement upon a note or bond, and from the nature of the case there could be none. It was not even arranged that there should be a credit or entry in the defendant’s books, if he had any. It was not money delivered to become a payment upon some future application, but a payment absolute and unqualified. And as to the answer, though not a formal plea of payment, it was substantially such. It was so intended, and amply sufficient, had Mrs. Driscoll appeared to insist upon the defense. Upon the subject of payment in Woodward vs. Hill, this observation occurs: “ This is not like the case of a payment the applica ion of which *423is made at tbe time and a receipt taken as evidence of tbe fact; but tbe money was delivered to tbe defendant and received by bim to be used for a specific purpose.” And as to tbe answer, after observing that tbe plaintiff might have appeared and set up tbe same facts by way of answer, but did not, it is said ; “ And there is no doubt that bad tbe plaintiff made tbe attempt and failed for want of proof or other cause, tbe matter would have become res adjudicóla, and a bar to this action.'1' We need not go farther far the sake of discriminating between that case and this, or showing that it does not sustain tbe decision below. There is no case by which it can be sustained, unless it be tbe overruled one of Moses vs. Macferlan, 2 Burr., 1006.

Marriot vs. Hampton was a much stronger case in favor of tbe right to recover. There the plaintiff bad been active and diligent. The proof of tbe payment was not voluntarily witheld at tbe former trial, but was prevented by an unavoidable accident. Tbe receipt bad been lost, and there was no other proof of payment; so that tbe plaintiff could not defend himself in tbe first action. Yet Lord Kenyon said be was afraid of such a precedent. If tbe action could be maintained, be knew not what cause of action could ever be at rest. And Geosb, J, said it would tend to encourage the greatest negligence if they were to open a door to parties to try their causes again because they were not properly prepared the first time with their evidence. If Harriot was shut out by tbe stern rule, that the judgment of a court possessing competent jurisdiction “ is not only final as to tbe matter actually determined, but as to every other matter which the parties might litigate in the cause, and which they might have decided ” (1 Johns. Oas., 402), then how is Mrs. Driscoll to be let in ? Certainly she cannot, unless we are prepared to establish a precedent which shall “unsettle foundations.” She staid away voluntarily, and has not the excuse of having lost her evidence. It even seems that a part of the payment for which she now claims to recov*424er was admitted by tbe defendant at the first trial, though not deducted. To allow her now to prove and recover it back, is to say that she may go to and impeach the very point of the former judgment, which was that there was so much due and unpaid on account of the threshing. This cannot be doneThe same judgment cannot create a duty for the recovery upon which the plaintiff may have debt, and a duty against him, upon which an action for money had and received will lie. Philips vs. Hunter, 2 Blackstone R., 416.

Judgment reversed, and cause remanded with directions that it be dismissed.