60 So. 820 | Ala. | 1912
Lead Opinion
Appellee,' a mercantile corporation, contracted to sell to appellants, a partnership engaged in buying and selling cotton, 300 bales of cotton, to be delivered in the future. There is no contention that the contracts were gambling contracts, or those, dealing in futures only, in which delivery Avas not contemplated; in other Avords, it is not contended that these engagements were void as gambling contracts, nor that they were void under section 3349 of the Code of 1907. Appellee failed to perform, and appellants brought this suit to recover damages for the breach of the three, contracts in question, each to sell and deliver 100 bales of cotton.
One. defense insisted upon, and one upon which the defendant seems to have preimiled in the lorver court, is that the contract Avas ultra vires the powers of the corporation. The defendant set up this defense by tAvo special pleas, numbered 6 and 7. The trial court over
It is unnecessary to decide whether these pleas were good or bad. The replication of res judicata filed thereto was a complete and conclusive answer to these pleas, and shows by matter of record that the question attempted to be raised by the pleas had been finally determined and adjudicated between these parties or their privies in right. This replication, in effect, alleged that, after suit brought, the defendant had been adjudicated a bankrupt, and that the claim sued on was filed in the bankrupt court as a claim against the bankrupt estate; that the trustee in bankruptcy, at the suggestion and request of this defendant, filed objections against the allowance of plaintiff’s demand; that the case was set down for hearing in the bankrupt court, on a contest of the claim, at which hearing all the parties interested, including the defendant, appeared and contested, and, after a full hearing, the claim was allowed by the bankrupt court, and that the judgment or decree of allowance stands unreversed. A copy of the proceedings in the bankrupt court, properly certified, is made an exhibit to the replication. This replication presented a complete answer to any defense attempted to be set up-in the pleas; and the court erred in sustaining a demurrer thereto.
The case of McDougald's Adm'r v. Rutherford, 30 Ala. 253, is in point. In that case, after suit brought, the estate of the defendant’s intestate was declared insolvent by the probate court, and the plaintiff filed his claim sued upon in that court, and objection to its allowance was filed. An issue was there made up and a trial was had, and the claim disallowed. This was set up as a defense to the pending suit in the circuit court, and this court held that the judgment of disallowance
The doctrine of and rules of pleading as tó res judicata and estoppel by judgment are probably nowhere better stated than in the case of Cromwell v. County of Sac, 94 U. S. 351-271 (24 L. Ed. 195). The members of the court differed as to the effect of the doctrine and rules upon that particular appeal, and hence the subjects are thoroughly and ably treated, and the authorities reviewed and quoted at length. Justice Field, for
This difference in the operation of a judgment in the two classes of cases mentioned is seen through all the leading adjudications upon the doctrine of estoppel. Thus in the case of Outram v. Morewood, 3 East, 346, the defendants were held estopped from averring title to a mine, in an action of trespass for digging out coal from it, because, in a previous action for a similar trespass, they had set up the same title, and it had been determined against them. In commenting upon a decision cited in that case, Lord Ellenborough, in his elaborate opinion, said: “It is not the recovery, but the matter alleged by the party, and upon which the recovery proceeds, Avhich creates the estoppel. The recovery of itself in an action of trespass is only a bar to the future recovery of damages for the same injury; but the estoppel precludes parties and privies from contending to the contrary of that point or matter of fact, Avhich, having been once distinctly put in issue by them, or by those to Avhom they are privy in estate or Iuav, has been on such issue joined solemnly found against them.” Justice Clifford stated the rule as follows (94 U. S. at page 364 L. Ed. 195) : “Where the parties and the cause of actions are the same, the prima facie presumption is that the questions presented for decision Avere
It will be seen that tbe only difference between the justices in that case was touching tbe application of tbe principles to tbe case under consideration. All tbe authorities seem to bold that a judgment or decree is a bar to other actions or suits in all cases where tbe matters put in issue in tbe first suit were thé same as tbe
For the reasons indicated, the judgment of the trial-court must be reversed and the cause remanded.
Rehearing
We think the following authorities conclusively show the correctness of our holding that the allowance of plaintiffs’ claim in the bankrupt court, and from Avhich no appeal was taken, is an answer to the defendant’s plea of ultra vires. Mr. Collier, in his Avork on Bankruptcy, p. 616, under the head of “Effect of proof and alloAvance,” says: “Under the former law, a creditor who proved his claim could not proceed thereon in another court. This is not the laAV noAV. He can proceed, though he Avill usually be halted by a stay. He becomes, however, a party to the bankruptcy proceeding, with all that that condition implies. If his claim, voluntarily filed, is disallowed it is a bar to a suit against the bankrupt on the same cause of action in another jurisdiction.” We have examined the authorities cited by Collier, and find that they support the conclusion.
In the case of Sanford v. Sanford, 58 N. Y. 68, 17 Am. Rep. 206, it is said: “When the bankrupt is seeking to prevent the establishment- of a claim against himself, the assignee in the interest of the creditors may Avell be allowed to intervene in order to exclude claims which, if established, might be entitled to dividends; but in the latter case the bankrupt also certainly has an interest sufficient to entitle him to maintain an appeal. He may never obtain a discharge, and in that event erroneous judgment Avill be a charge upon him.” Justice CaldAvell, in Hudson’s Case, 122 Fed. 233, 58 C. C. A. 597, says: “The plaintiff having voluntarily gone into the bankrupt court, and submitted itself to the jurisdiction of that court, and filed its claim against the bank-' rupt estate founded on the judgment here in suit, and that court having disallowed- the claim' and entered
Of course, if the bankrupt is ultimately discharged, neither the allowance in the bankrupt court, nor the judgment in the state court'would be binding on him personally; but, if he should not be discharged, it would be binding upon him personally and upon his estate.