11 Ga. 265 | Ga. | 1852
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
The decree of the Court was entered up in pursuance of the verdict.
The decision of the Court is founded on the admission of Evans in these pleadings, and judgments of the Court rendered on Mr. Gresham's demurrer, and the final.decree rendered in the cause. From all these, he says it is manifest, that title to the lands is showm out of Evans, and therefore he is estopped. It is a judgment, that in Law he is estopped from asserting a claim to them, against the defendant, Birge. As to any admissions which the recitals in the bill contain, without referring to them in the way of specification, I remark that they are not an estoppel. As evidence against his title, they might go to the Jury for what they are worth. I do not think that there is any admission against his claim upon the lands, which, per se, constitutes an estoppel. In Lampen vs. Corke, Holroyd, J. says that estoppels are odious in the Law, (7 Eng. S. L. R. 209.) It is often so said, and truly said of estoppels, by recitals in deeds, admissions in pleadings, and all of that class. They are not to be readily allowed. Estoppels hjjudgme?it are, however, not odious. They are to be received with as much favor as any other defence, because it is the interest of the Commonwealth that litigation should cease. The Court clearly erred, if he is to be understood as holding that the admissions of Evans were in-Law^ an estoppel. I am inclined to believe that he did not so hold, but that he referred to
It is very well settled, that a fact which has been directly tried and decided by a Court of competent jurisdiction, cannot be contested again between the same parties or their privies, in the same or any other Court. A judgment therefore of a Court of Law or a decree in Chancery, is an estoppel to the parties” thereto, and to those who are in privity with them. This is the rule. It is, however, carefully and strongly fenced. The judgment must relate to the same question, and must clearly decide it. If it came collaterally under consideration, or w7as only incidentally-considered, there is no estoppel. And if the decision of the question is ascertained inferentially, by arguing from the judgment or decree and the pleadings in the case, there is equally no estoppel. Laying dowm the rule, with the modifications stated, I subject this case to its test. (6 Wheat. R. 109. 1 Story’s Rep. 474. 4 Howard, U. S. R. 497, 498.)
There were two judgments in the cause, to wit: the final decree and the 'decision upon Mr. Gresham’s demurrer. The bill, among other things, assailed the sale of the lands, under Mr. Fay’s mortgage, upon the ground (which I did not before state) that the Sheriff had agreed with the defendant in execution, Evans, that he would sell them in parcels, but did in fact sell the whole together. The consequence was, as the bill charges, that it did not bring more than half its value. Gresham, as stated before,bought the land, and was made a party to the bill and demurred to it. The Court ruled that the demurrer be sustained upon two
Let the judgment be reversed.