The plaintiff having received an injury while alighting from a car of the defendant, on which she was a passenger, brought suit claiming that the car was started suddenly and carelessly, thereby throwing her to the ground. That action was tried and resulted in a verdict in favor of the defendant. This suit was then brought to recover for the same injury, the writ alleging that the defendant had dug a trench near the rail and left the same open, unguarded, and unlighted, so that the plaintiff in stepping from the car to the street fell into the trench. The presiding Justice, having ruled that the prior judgment was not a bar to the present suit, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. The case comes up on an exception to the ruling and on a general motion.
The general principles of “res judicata” have been repeatedly stated, the difficulty being in their application to the varying facts; all agreeing that a judgment on the merits is a bar to an action between the same parties for the same cause of action. Our own court in Corey v. Independent Ice Co., 106 Maine, 485, says “Conceding jurisdiction, absence of fraud, and regularity in proceedings, we think it will not be challenged as a general rule, that a judgment between the same parties, or their privies, is a final bar to any other suit for the same cause of action, and is conclusive not only as to all matters which were tried in the first action, but as to all matters which might have been tried.” Anderson v. Wetter, 103 Maine, 257, defines cause of action as “neither the circumstances that occasioned the suit nor the remedy employed, but a legal right of action. The primary right belonging to the plaintiff, and the corresponding duty belonging to the defendant, and the delict or wrong done by the defendant, consisting in a breach of such primary right or duty, constitute a cause of action. “All damages acruing from a single wrong though at different times, make but one cause of action.” Bendernagle v. Cocks,
“Where a given matter becomes the subject of litigation in, and of adjudication by, a court of competent jurisdiction, the court requires the parties to bring forward the whole case, and will not, except under special circumstances, permit the same parties to open the same subject of litigation in respect of a certain matter, which might have been brought forward, as a part of the subject in contest but which
A case analogous to the one under consideration is M’Knight v. Minneapolis Street Railway Co.,
“In suits based upon negligence, the cause of action is the violation of the ultimate duty to exercise due care that another may not suffer injury. In the instant case the plaintiff was a passenger upon defendant’s street car, and it was the duty of defendant to afford her safe egress therefrom. Her claim for damages is grounded upon the charge that the defendant violated such duty. The violation of duty constitutes her cause of action. In the first suit she charges that the defendant violated this duty, by suddenly starting the car, while she was in the act of alighting. In the present suit she charges that defendant violated this duty by providing a defective step, for her use in descending from the car. Both suits are based upon the violation of the ultimate duty to afford safe egress from the car. The second suit ‘presents no new cause of action, but only new grounds for relief upon the same cause of action,’ and under the authorities cited is barred by the judgment in the former suit. It follows that the decision of the trial court was correct, and must be affirmed.”
In Columb v. Webster Manufacturing Co., 84 Fed. Rep., 592, 43 L. R. A., 195, the rule is thus stated. “Judgment upon the merits in an action for negligence is a bar to another action for the same injury grounded on the defendant’s fault, or negligence, in respect to
In Armstrong v. Chicago,
In McCain v. Louisville & R. Co.,
Limatainen v. St. Louis River Dam & Improvement Co.,
In Wildman v. Wildman,
In Cotter v. Boston & Northern Street Railway Co.,
A single tort gives rise to a single cause of action, and a plaintiff cannot be permitted to split up a cause of action, and bring more than one suit thereon, the penalty imposed for the violation of this rule being the application of the doctrine of “res judicata.” This doctrine is based on the legal maxims that, “A man should not be twice vexed for the same cause” and that “It is for the. public good that there should be an end of litigation.” Limatainen v. St. Louis River, etc., supra.
“The rule of res judicata does not rest wholly on the narrow ground of a technical estoppel. Nor on the presumption that the former judgment was right and just; but on the broad ground of public policy, that requires a limit to litigation, a curb to the litigoüsness of the obstinate litigant. Like the statute of limitations, it is a rule of rest. Sargent & Co. v. New Hampshire Steamboat Co.,
Exception sustained, new trial granted.
