The plaintiffs claim, as heirs of John N. S. Cox, the undivided half of the W. % of N. W. y2 of section 9, township 11 north, range 6, and the N. W. % of section 2, township 11 north, range 7 west, parish of Natchitoches. The defendants claim title to the whole of the property by purchase from Johnson and Weaver, and call their said vendors in warranty. The latter purchased from Robert and John Cox and Julia Smith, the brothers and the mother of the plaintiffs, by an act reciting as follows:
“Know all • men by these presents that we, Julia Smith, widow of John N. S. Cox, Robert Cox, and John Cox, the only legal heirs of John N. S. Cox, deceased, have this day sold,” etc.
In setting forth their title the plaintiffs merely alleged in general that they had acquired by inheritance from their father, John N. S. Cox, who had acquired by patent from the government.
Defendants filed an exception calling upon them to give the name of their mother, with the date and registry of the marriage of their father and mother, and the dates of their own births.
They answered that their mother was Julia Smith, and that she was married to their father during the War, and that they themselves were born on March 27, 1870, and December 4, 1875, respectively.
On application of defendants, the plaintiffs were ordered to give more specific information than' this; and they answered that they were unable to do so.
The question in the case is as to the legitimacy of the plaintiffs.
About the time of the breaking out of the Civil War, Julia Smith, a young mulattress and slave, who had had one or two children and worked as servant in the house of her father, a white man, left for Mexico, or Texas, with John N. S. Cox, a white man, who lived in the neighborhood; some said with the connivance of her father; some say not. The pair remained away some two years, during which time a letter was received written at Corpus Christi, Tex., saying that they had married. When they returned, their first born, John Cox, was a baby in arms. They gave themselves out to be man and wife. Cox went to the War. On his return he resumed his marital relations with Julia Smith living with her and holding her out to the world as his wife. These marital relations continued until August, 1884. During this time three other children were born to them, Robert Cox, who joined with John in making the sale to the warrantors of defendants, and the two plaintiffs, Liddy and Clara Cox. In 1884 John N. S. Cox married Mildred Barnes. This marriage was not preceded by a divorce from Julia Smith. Of this marriage two children were born. Johnson and Weaver, the warrantors, made the purchase from John and Robert Cox and Julia Smith in 1906. Shortly afterwards they transferred the property to the Black Lake Lumber Company, who
“Respondent admits that he and A. R.' Johnson bought the land claimed by the plaintiffs from the heirs of J. N. S. Cox, and sold it to the Black Lake Lumber Company, who sold it to the Frost-Johnson Lumber Company. Respondent acted in good faith in the purchase of said land from said heirs, who represented themselves and were the legal heirs of J. N. S. Cox. Your respondent shows that the plaintiffs herein are not the legal heirs of J. N. S. Cox.”
The suit was never tried. The parties made, a compromise by which Weaver and Johnson paid $75 to the plaintiffs in it, and a judgment, based on this compromise, was entered decreeing the defendants in it, to be owners of the property.
The allegation made by Weaver in that suit to the effect that John and Robert Cox were the legal heirs of John N. S. Cox, and that Julia Smith was his widow, is now relied on by the plaintiffs in the present suit as an estoppel on the question of their legitimacy. The case is before this court on writ of review to the Court of Appeal, and therefore has not been argued orally. The brief of the plaintiffs hardly amounts to a claim that their father and mother were legally married. Their mother was a slave at the time of the alleged marriage, and therefore incapable of marriage with a free man. She was still living at the time of the trial, and, although old, was not so old but that her testimony might have been secured by commission, or even taken in open court. If a marriage really took place, she might have given the plaintiffs,, her children, all the information necessary for procuring the official record evidence of it, or, at least for accounting for the absence of this certificate.
The bulk of the brief of the plaintiffs is devoted to the contention that the defendants are estopped from contesting their legitimacy.
“Estoppel by deed is operative only between the parties to the deed and their privies; strangers to the deed are not bound by it, nor can they invoke it.” 16 Oyc. 710.
The Court of Appeal was of the opinion that the plaintiffs were privies to the said act of sale, for the reason that they “were coheirs and co-owners with defendant’s vendors, and bore the same relationship to and had the same interest in the estate of John N. S'. Oox.” But this was an error. Coheirs or co-owners are not privies to each other’s contracts, even if the subject of the contract be the common property. By a privy to a deed is meant a party to the deed or a legal representative of, or successor in title to, a party, the heirs, executors, administrators, or assigns of a party, what the French call the ayant causes. If the plaintiffs had been privies to the said act of sale, they would have been bound by it and would be estopped from prosecuting the present suit. To be privy to an act means to be bound by it.
In Bore v. Quierry,
“We do not indeed believe that the doctrine of estoppel, as known to our laws, extends to the length which the defendant contends for. In order that a demand may operate as a bar against another, it must appear that by the first all rights to the second have been waived. But, although it must be confessed that it is not easy to reconcile a demand of wages as a servant with a claim as a partner, the one does ■not of necessity exclude the other. Actions, contrary to one another, although they cannot be united in a libel, may be separately instituted ‘quando sunt talia jura, quae non tolluntur electione,’ says Lopez, n. 1, Part. 3, 10, 7.”
In Delacroix v. Prevost,
In Vavasseur v. Bayon,
“The court below certainly did not possess the right of depriving one party of the confession of another, which was on record, any more than it could have refused him the benefit of it in case it had been extrajudicial. If made through mistake, the proper time to have corrected the error would have been on the trial.”
In Boatner v. Scott,
“An admission made in the course of judicial proceedings cannot be retracted to the prejudice of the adverse party. In this case there was no pretense of the allegation having been made in error; and it was in the same suit.”
In Estill v. Holmes,
In Wells v. Compton,
“Where the meaning of an instrument is uncertain, the record of another suit, by a different plaintiff, but to which the defendant was a party, will be admissible in evidence to show, by the acts and declarations of the latter, what his understanding of the instrument was. The present plaintiffs, not having been parties to the suit, cannot avail themselves of the statements in the pleadings as judicial admissions, absolutely conclusive of the rights of the defendant. They must be considered simply as other declarations.”
In Hill v. Barlow,
In Farrar et al. v. Stacy,
In Freeman v. Savage,
“What he has thus said and done, the policy of the law will not allow him to gainsay or deny.”
The indorsers had not been parties to the suit in which the allegations in question had been made; hence no equity had arisen in their favor from these allegations. The case is authority, therefore, for the proposition that judicial allegations, apart from all equitable consideration, are conclusive in another suit with another party. The case as
In Putnam, Administrator, v. Davidson,
“We think that, as to the present plaintiff, he is bound by his plea, and must be held to it, on principles x elementary in the administration of justice. * * * He ought to have disclaimed ownership, and thus enabled the proper parties in interest to be made parties to the suit.”
It will be noted that it is “as against the present plaintiff” that the former allegation is held conclusive. Indeed, the second suit was but a continuation, or fruition, of the first, so that the case is not authority on the point we are concerned with. There was ground, besides, for equitable estoppel.
In Gridley v. Conner,
“We understand it is to. be a rule in the administration of justice that a man shall not be permitted to deny what he has solemnly acknowledged in a judicial proceeding, nor to shift his position at will to a contradictory one, in relation to the subject-matter of litigation, in order to prostra'te and defeat the action of the law upon it.”
In support of this, the court cited the following authorities: Sprigg v. Bank of Mount Pleasant,
“A party who i-n one suit set up a title of ownership to certain property is not thereby estopped from afterwards claiming mortgage rights on the property, as against one who in the former suit denied and contested his title as owner, and who was in no way injured or induced to change his position by the claim of ownership set up in the former suit.”
In an earlier case (Millaudon v. Allard,
“The purchase of the land cannot have the effect of destroying the claim of the creditor unless the title passes to him.”
This (Gridley v. Conner) suit was, however, between the same parties as that in which the allegation invoked as estoppel was made, and involved the same property, so that the case cannot be said to be authority for the proposition of allegations being conclusive in another suit with other parties.
In Denton v. Erwin,
“A party may, by his own voluntary act, have placed himself in a situation as to some matter of fact that he is precluded from denying it; and the rule by which he is so held to be bound is founded on the obligation which every man is under, to speak and act according to the truth of the case and in the policy of the law to prevent the unavoidable mischief resulting from uncertainty, confusion, falsehood, and the want of confidence in the intercourse of men, if they were permitted to deny that which they have deliberately and solemnly asserted and received as true. Greenleaf on Evidence, § 22. We accordingly held that a man should not be permitted to deny what he had solemnly acknowledged in a judicial proceeding, nor to shift his position at wiE, to a contradictory one, in relation to the subject-matter of Etigation, in order to frustrate and defeat the action of the law upon it. Gridley v. Conner,4 La. Ann. 416 . The judges in that case were divided in opinion, but they were united in opinion in the principle of law therein laid down, and their dissent only related to its application to the facts of the case. See the cases there cited, and 4 Kent’s Com. 261 (last edition) note by the author; Pelletreau v. Jackson, 11 Wend. (N. Y.) 117; Jackson v. Waldon, 13 Wend. (N. Y.) 208. * * * These authorities concur in showing that the matters aEeged for relief against those judgments in the first suit, under the oath of Denton, whose coplaintiff and surety Erwin was, cannot be unheeded by this court, but, left to their legal*513 effect, they deprive him of the faculty of now treating them as false by again attempting to make the amount of his judgments out of the property of the plaintiff; indeed, any other conclusion would encourage and sustain a scandal in the administration of justice; The only means under our legislation, within the power of courts to protect the integrity of their judicial proceedings, are the sanctity which is thrown around them, and the presumptions which the law has established in their favor. If all the restraints of justice and truth are lost sight of by litigants, and judicial proceedings are converted into mere machinations for fraud and oppression, the law itself meets the emergency by holding the offending parties to their allegations of record, and not permitting them to falsify what they have solemnly declared to be the truth.”
It will be noted that the court here rests its decision, not upon any equities as between parties, nor upon any proof resulting from the evidence, but, as expressed in the syllabus, upon the announced principle that:
“Courts of justice are bound to vindicate and maintain the sanctity of their judicial proceedings before they consider the merits of cases.”
The authorities cited by the court in support of that proposition do not support it, excepting always Freeman v. Savage, and Gridley v. Conner, supra. They are Green-leaf on Ev. 22; Gridley v. Conner,
“I shall not deny, nor do I doubt, that this doctrine, in its virgin purity and simplicity, before it was bedizened and obscured with the meretricious and many colored drapery in which lawyers and judges have dressed it, was consistent with truth and justice and good sense; but legal ingenuity has spun and wove for it so many and various garments that it is npw difficult, if not impracticable, to ascertain ' its primitive form and features.”
The doctrine of this Denton v. Erwin Case is broad enough, as announced in the syllabus, to apply to suits with other parties, and even where such suits, are in connection with different property; but the case itself, in its facts, is not a precedent for this latitudinous operation of the doctrine; the litigation having been between the same parties and in connection with the same property.
In Webster v. Smith,
“The probate proceedings carried on by the defendant amount to judicial confession on his part that the property belonged to the minor. Code, 2264, 2266, 2270 (Revised Code, 2285, 2286, 2291). Even if we supposed, which we do not, that he was in. error of law, as to the effect of his deed of gift he could not revoke his judicial confession, and it affords the legal presumption that the slaves belonged to the minor. Article 2264 (2285).”
The court there abandoned the common-law formulation of the law of estoppel and brought into play these articles of the Code on the same subject. The case is authority for not confining the conclusiveness of the “judicial confession” to the case in which it has been made, but for extending it to all cases where the fact it bears upon may be at issue between the same parties. We may add that the case presented an element of equitable estoppel, for, after having obtained possession of the slaves in his capacity of curator (i. e., as agent, of the minor’s estate), Smith could not, by any act of his own, change the nature of his tenure, and hence he was holding them as property belonging to the plaintiffs in the case who were the legal heirs of the minor. The court, however, predicated its judgment, not upon equitable estoppel, but upon the conclusiveness of judicial allegations, it said:
“He could not revoke his judicial confession.”
The general statement that the minor had property was not a specific allegation that these particular slaves belonged to the minor, and, by approving and signing the inventory, Smith had “led no one astray and occasioned damages to nobody” (Stockmeyer v. Oertling,
In Jones v. Morgan,
In Mallard v. Carpenter,
“Where .an error of fact as to the domicile of a party has been alleged in the pleadings, it may be revoked, even in a suit between the same parties, and can have but little weight in*517 a controversy in which a third person is a party. C. O. 2270.”
In Lejeune v. Barrow,
In Edson v. Freret Bros.,
“He is not to be heard who alleges things contradictory to each other.”
It will be noted that the decision is not predicated upon the fact that Freret Bros, had disposed of the property without authorization from the other attaching creditors and of Donshea, but squarely upon the conclusive character of the allegation made in the attachment suit. In other words, that Freret Bros, could not be heard to prove that this allegation had been made in error of fact. The case would seem to be contrary to article 2291, C. C., which expressly allows a party to retract, even in the suit itself, his allegations of fact erroneously made.
Reed v. Crocker, Extr.,
In Pochelu v. Kemper,
In Smith v. Harrell,
In Devall v. Succession of Watterston,
“It was held in Gridley v. Conner,4 La. Ann. 416 , that a party will not be permitted to deny what he has solemnly acknowledged in a, judicial proceeding; and in Denton v. Erwin,5 La. Ann. 18 , the court said in addition to this: That a party cannot shift his position at will to a contradictory one in relation to the subject-matter of litigation in order to frustrate and defeat the action of the law upon it. The alleged cause of action in the two suits is not an identical one; but the judicial admission made by the plaintiff in the first suit, that the contract sued on was one of hire, estops the plaintiff from proving that that contract was one of an entirely different nature. It is the presumptio juris et de jure, against which the law admits no proof whatsoever.”
In behalf of plaintiff it was strongly argued, but in vain, that a party is not estopped by a mistaken interpretation of his contract; or, in other words, as subsequently held by this court, that a party is not es-topped by a plea unsuccessfully made in a
In City v. Hall,
In Abbot v. Wilbur,
“Estoppels are not favored in law, for the object of the administration of justice is to discover and apply the truth; but there may be cases in which courts are bound to say to a litigant that he has, to his own advantage or the injury of his adversary, asserted judicially what is false, and that, having done so, he must be forever forbidden to unfold for his own benefit the truth of the matter. * * * These views of the plaintiff were sustained by the Supreme Court of the United States, which decided that the company was estopped, by its own conduct in the county court, from proving the reverse of what it had there maintained; and the principle was enunciated that where a party asserts what he knows to be false, or does not know to be true, to another’s loss, or to his own gain, he is guilty of a fraud — a fraud, in fact if he knew it to be false; a fraud in law if he does not know it to be true. That it would not mitigate the fraud if the false assertion were made in a court of justice and a suit defeated thereby; and that the defendant could not be heard to say that what was asserted on the former trial was false, even if the assertion was made by mistake. ‘If it was a mistake, of which there is no evidence, it was one made by the defendants, of which they took the benefit, and the plaintiff the loss, and it is too late to correct it now.’ ”
This case presents simply an ordinary estoppel where a party has made an allegation “to- his own advantage and the injury of his adversary,” where he “has taken the benefit and his adversary the loss.” The case is not in point, since what is there said arguendo must be read in the connection in which it is said, and, when so read, is not in point, but has reference only to cases involving elements of equitable estoppel, as in the cited case of Philadelphia v. Howard,
In Morgan, Administrator, v. Kinnard,
“It is contended that Norrell is estopped from setting up title to this land, because when sued on one of the notes given for the price thereof he alleged that the consideration of the note had failed, inasmuch as he had not received a perfect title; that the land had been previous.ly transferred to J. W. Kelly. The same wit*521 nesses who prove the above facts state that Norrell, during the pendency of the suit, proposed to compromise the note in suit by paying $2,000. It is a general rule that parties are bound by their judicial admissions, and it is also true that admissions made in one suit may sometimes be used in another suit, even though the parties to the suit be not the same. But we are not prepared to say that all admissions made in pleading may be used as an estoppel in every suit in which the party making them may be a party. This suit is itself an example of the .harshness and injustice of the rule contended for. Suppose that judgment had been rendered against Norrell on the note, in spite of his defense, he would have the price to pay, and yet any stranger who might get possession of his land could hold it without a legal title, because Norrell had admitted in the contest for the price that he had no title. Doctrines which lead to such unjust conclusions cannot be correct.”
In Bender v. Belknap,
“It is a well-settled rule in the administration of justice that a party will not be permitted to deny what he has solemnly acknowledged in a judicial proceeding. The defendant will not be heard to contradict his sworn statement that he received the property in controversy as owner. The only means of courts to protect the integrity of judicial proceedings are the sanctity which the law throws around them, and, if all the restraints of justice and truth are lost sight of by litigants, ‘the law itself meets the emergency by holding the parties to their allegations of record, and not permitting them to falsify what they have solemnly declared to be the truth.’ Denton v. Erwin,5 La. Ann. 18 ; Gridley v. Conner,4 La. Ann. 416 ; Freeman v. Savage,2 La. Ann. 269 .”
Here the doctrine of estoppel based, not upon the equities or rights of the parties, but upon the necessity for the courts to maintain their own dignity, is again sanctioned. The suit, however, was between the same parties; and hence the case, in its facts, is not a precedent for allowing judicial allegations to be invoked as estoppels in other suits with other parties.
In Bush v. Dewing,
In Ware v. Morris,
In Mrs. Elbert v. Wallace and Liddell, Sheriff, and others,
In. Soulie v. Ranson,
“It is not permissible to deny what one has solemnly acknowledged in a judicial proceeding. The admissions are made stronger by being transmitted into averments which he cannot be permitted to gainsay.”
It is noted that the two answers merely put different interpretations upon the written 'contract; and that the second was practically a withdrawal of the first. The case is authority for the conclusiveness of judicial allegations, even in the absence of all element of equitable estoppel. The allegations, however, had been made in the suit itself, and not in another suit with some other party.
In Judson Fowler & Stillman v. Stevens,
“These judicial admissions unalterably determine his liability in the capacity in which he is sued by the plaintiffs. His evidence to the contrary cannot now be heard. He cannot be permitted to impugn what he had thus solemnly and repeatedly asseverated in judicial proceedings to be true.”
The case in its doctrine is a precedent for holding judicial allegations to be conclusive in other suits with other parties; but in its
In Succession of Anselm,
In Chaffe & Bro. v. Morgan,
“A party who in one suit sets up a title of ownership to certain property is not thereby estopped from afterward claiming mortgage rights on the property, as against one who in the former suit denied, and contested his title ■as owner, and who was in no way injured or induced to change his position by the claim of ownership set up in the former suit.”
The court said:
“In Abbot v. Wilbur,22 La. Ann. 368 , it was correctly announced that estoppels are not barred [favored] in the law¡ for the object of the administration of justice is to discover and apply the truth, and it is only where one has asserted in some judicial or other proceeding what is false, to his own advantage or the injury of another, that he will be estopped from showing the truth. The same principle is recognized by all the elementary writers. See Phillips on Evidence, vol. 1, § 378; .Green-leaf’s Evidence, vol. 1, § 204, and note; Biglow on Estoppel, p. 293, Nos. 4 and 5. It is manifest that Shultz was in no way injured or induced to change his position for the sum by Chaffe’s assertion of title. It is, however, well settled that estoppels cannot be set up against law.”
This was said in a case between the same parties and with reference to the same property.
In Factors’ & Traders’ Ins. Co. v. De Blanc,
“One cannot claim, judicially, the proceeds of a judicial sale, and afterwards attack that sale for nullity. ’ The demand for the proceeds is the judicial admission of the legality of the sale (Boubede v. Aymes,29 La. Ann. 275 ); and the declaration which one makes in a judicial proceeding is full proof against him; and it cannot be revoked unless it be proved to have been made through an, error of fact. R. C. C. 2291. Nor can one wio has judicially asserted a fact, as the basis of a right touching the subject-matter in controversy, be permitted to change his position and to assert the contrary. Gridley v. Conner,4 La. Ann. 416 ; Denton v. Erwin,5 La. Ann. 18 ; Bender v. Belknap,23 La. Ann. 765 : Gervin v. Beaird,26 La. Ann. 630 .”
It will be noted that the doctrine of this case is not that one cannot at the same time claim the proceeds of a sale and its nullity, but that it is that one who has filed and withdrawn before trial a third opposition claiming proceeds of a sale is forever estopped from contesting its validity. Here was no element of equitable estoppel. In that respect the case is distinguishable from Campbell v. Woolfolk,
Byrne v. Hibernia Bank,
In Board of School Directors v. Hernandez,
“Where the plaintiff in suit formally avers that the defendant has collected certain warrants, the property of plaintiff, and prays the defendant’s condemnation for the amount of the warrants, he thereby estops himself from subsequently suing another person as the collector of the warrants.”
This case is authority for the conclusiveness of allegations in another suit with another party. To the same effect is Walker v. Walker,
In City v. Southern Bank,
“It is a judicial declaration which binds her.”
The opinion does not show whether the plea of payment in the police board suit had been made successfully or unsuccessfully. If the former, there would seem to have been the clearest ground for equitable estoppel. If the latter, there was none at all, and the decision would then be counter to the line of decisions holding that pleas founded upon law do not estop when unsuccessful.
In Durham v. Williams,
In Gilmer v. O’Neal,
“Gilmer was estopped from contradicting the judicial allegations in his answer in order to reap a new advantage therefrom.”
Here there was no equitable estoppel, and therefore the case may be said to be in line with Freeman v. Savage, and Gridley v. Conner, supra.
In Dickson v. Dickson,
“The judicial averments of a married woman, in her suit against her husband, of the sums received by him from her father for her account, estop her from afterwards disputing such sums in a partition suit between her coheirs.”
There was here no element of equitable estoppel; and hence the case is authority for the proposition that judicial allegations, are conclusive in another suit with other parties.
In State ex rel. Railroad Co. v. Judge,
In Stockmeyer v. Oertling,
“They merely, from the condition of things, deduced (they thought legally) their discharge and nonliability. The court corrected their misconception of the Jaw on such a subject,. and condemned them to pay, under the obligation which they had contracted. The doctrine of estoppel, however apparently emphatic, is full of exceptions, which vary according to circumstances, and was never designed to apply to a case like the instant one, in which the declaration made, which is an illegal deduction from facts, has led no one astray and occasioned damage to nobody. [Turner v. Edwards, Fed. Cas. No. 14,254]2 Woods, 435 ; [Thayer v. Arnold]32 Mich. 336 .”
Folger v. Palmer,
“Our jurisprudence has uniformly recognized and enforced the wise and salutary doctrine, which firmly binds a party to his judicial declarations, and forbids him from subsequently contradicting his statements thus made. Farrar v. Stacy,2 La. Ann. 221 ; Gridley v. Conner,4 La. Ann. 416 ; Durham v. Williams,32 La. Ann. 962 ; Gilmer v. O’Neal,32 La. Ann. 979 ; Dickson v. Dickson,33 La. Ann. 1370 .”
Pomez v. Camors,
In Succession of Harris,
“They claim that Levi J. Harris is estopped, by his judicial declarations and conduct, from disputing that this fund was received for, and belongs to, the succession of Alexander Harris. We think the estoppel pleaded has no foundation in law or justice. The general doctrine that a party is bound by his judicial declarations and is estopped from subsequently denying them is well established and supported by the numerous authorities cited by the learned counsel for opponents. But as we very recently said in reference to a like plea of judicial estoppel: ‘The doctrine of estoppel, however apparently emphatic, is full of exceptions, which vary according to circumstances, and was never designed to apply to a case like the instant one, in which the declaration made has led no one astray and occasioned damage to nobody.’ Stockmeyer v. Oertling,38 La. Ann. 102 . The Supreme Court of the United States has said: ‘The primary ground . * * * of the previous conduct had denied, when, in the faith of that denial, others have acted. The element of fraud is essential either in the intention of the party estopped, or in the effect of the evidence which he attempts to set up.’ Brant v. Virginia,93 U. S. 335 [23 L. Ed. 927 ].”
In Gaudet v. Gauthreaux,
“The doctrine of estoppel, to which appellant refers, applies .exclusively to cases of estoppel en pais, and not to cases of estoppels by recitals, or written admissions, the strongest of which is that of acknowledgments or declarations in judicial proceedings. The law holds parties to their allegations of record. It does not allow them to play fast and loose, to falsify what they have solemnly declared to be a fact —the truth. Such averments are the highest evidence against the party making them. They are not subject to explanation or contradiction ab extra, as a rule; so that what appears to be of record is to be proved thereby only, and nothing conflicting therewith can be admitted. Delacroix v. Provost,6 Mart. (O. S.) 280 ; Freeman v. Savage,2 La. Ann. 269 ; also Farrar v. Stacy,2 La. Ann. 211 ; Denton v. Erwin,5 La. Ann. 18 ; Gridley v. Conner,4 La. Ann. 416 ; Webster v. Smith,6 La. Ann. 719 ; Edson v. Freret,11 La. Ann. 710 ; Bigelow on Estoppel, 4 (note) 266 et seq., — 293, Nos. 3 and 4. A previous court has well said: 'It is a well-settled rule in the administration of justice that a party will not be permitted to deny what he has solemnly acknowledged in a judicial proceeding. The only means of courts to protect the integrity of judicial proceedings are the sanctity which the law throws around them.’ Bender v. Belknap,23 La. Ann. 765 . See, also, Devall v. Watterston,18 La. Ann. 141 ; New Orleans v. Southern Bank,31 La. Ann. 564 ; [Chaffe v. Morgan]30 La. Ann. 1309 ; [Durham v. Williams]32 La. Ann. 962 , 979; [Dickson v. Dickson]33 La. Ann. 1370 .”
The case is authority for the proposition that allegations made in another suit between different parties, even in the absence of any element of equitable estoppel, are conclusive against the party who has made them.
In Succession of Dejan,
In Johnson v. Flanner,
“Besides, the judicial declarations which Planner has made in the two suits and the exercise of the rights which he asserted therein, and which affirm and reaffirm the sale from him to Johnson as a reality, effectually estop him from denying its seriousness. He cannot be permitted to play fast and loose.”
The case would seem to have been one of equitable estoppel.
In Imhof v. Imhof,
“There is no doubt that the mortuaria proceedings taken in the matter of the succession of the first wife of the plaintiff are evidence tending to discredit and strongly discredit his present assertion that at the date of his second marriage he had property to the amount of*533 $10,000, but there is a great difference^ between ‘estoppels’ which preclude the advancing of a claim at all, and admission by conduct or presumptions arising from conduct which only render difficult of proof pretensions which are set up -inconsistent therewith. The defendant in this - suit was not a party to the proceedings which she invokes, and her rights and her course here in no manner controlled, injured, or affected them so far as the record shows. The mortuaria were admissible in evidence, but when so received they worked4 no ‘estoppel.’ Estoppel was not pleaded, and evidence covering the whole ground was introduced without objection. Estoppel resulting from the most solemn adjudications of courts may as such be waived or renounced, unless insisted upon when evidence adverse to them is sought to be introduced.”
In Williams v. Gilkeson-Sloss Co.,
“These undeniable propositions are without force or application in the case at bar, for the reason that the defendants have declared in another suit that the draft was paid and the amount placed to plaintiff’s credit. He is not to be heard who alleges things contrary to each other. Edson v. Freret,11 La. Ann. 710 .”
In Lachman & Jacobi v. Block & Bro. et al.,
“I hereby agree to become surety for Henry Block & Bro., for the sum of $10,000 jointly and severally with Henry Block & Bro. This-agreement to bind me in the sum of $10,000 until October 15, 1891.”
Block & Bro. becoming embarrassed, Lazard & Go. brought an attachment suit against them upon an open account, one of the items of which was the $10,000 mentioned in said letter. In the course of the trial of this attachment suit, this part of the demand was discontinued, on the plea of having been incorporated in the demand through error. But this was not done until after Lachman and Jacobi had, in turn, levied an attachment against Block & Bro., and had made amicable demand upon Lazard for the payment of the $10,000. To this demand Lazard had answered asking for time. Afterwards he refused to pay the $10,000 on the plea that this offer contained in his above transcribed letter had never been accepted; and he made the same defense when suit was brought against him. He pleaded in addition that Lachman and Jacobi had induced him by fraud to give said letter of guaranty. Estoppel was pleaded against him, based, first, on the inconsistency between his two pleas of want of acceptance and fraud; and, secondly, on the attachment suit, which was said to have been brought with his full knowledge, since he himself had made the affidavit for the attachment. The majority opinion does not deal with the.first of these grounds of estoppel, but says of the second:
“Finally on this branch of the case, it is pressed on us, the allegations in the attachment suit are judicial confessions within the purview*535 of article 2291 of the Civil Code. This, in our view, misconceives the judicial confession the subject of that article. It can be invoked as conclusive by the party to the suit in which the allegation is made, and even as to him may be revoked for error of fact. As to those not parties. to that suit, the allegations are evidence in their favor, but open to explanation and correction by proof. 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, §§ 206, 212; Mallard v. Carpenter,6 La. Ann. 397 . Of course when any admission or declaration of a party has been acted on by another, Tit] can [not] be withdrawn to his prejudice. Then the admission becomes an estoppel. 1 Greenleaf, § 207.”
In Godwin v. Neustadtl,
“The plaintiff in this suit is not estopped, because in the former suit she pleaded that the act of sale was simulated. She tendered that issue to the defendant, who met it by alleging and, through his own answers, proving its reality. The decision of the court closed the question of simulation favorably to defendant, but in doing so it carried with it the disadvantage to him of being subsequently forced to meet the obligation which he assumed in the act then declared to be real. If there be estoppel in this case it is he, not Mrs. Godwin, who is estopped on the issue as now presented. Parties are. not bound by allegations unsuccessfully pleaded. Eng. & Am. ICncy. of Law, vol. 7, p. 3, note 2; McQueen’s Appeal,104 Pa. 595 [49 Am. Rep. 592 ]; Appeal of Susquehanna Ins. Co.,105 Pa. 615 .”
In Vredenburg v. Baton Rouge Sugar Co.,
ager it had been unable to operate its mill during the most active part of the season. Plaintiff argued that the defendant company was estopped from contradicting the allegation thus made in this former suit. The court said:
“It must be borne in mind that plaintiff was not'a party to the suit in question, and, while his answer was admissible, it did not have the effect of concluding the defendant. ‘Allegations in a petition and an affidavit for an attachment are admissible only in evidence, but not conclusive in favor of one not a party to the suit; hence such allegations are open to examination and correction by proof of error.’ 1 Greenleaf, Ev. § 204 et seq.; Mallard v. Carpenter,6 La. Ann. 397 ; Lachman v. Block,47 La. Ann. 505 ,17 South. 153 , 28 L. R. A. 255.”
In Johnson v. Marx Levy & Bro., 109 La, 1036,
“The law holds parties to their allegations of record. Such averments are the highest evidence against those who made them. Nor will they be permitted to deny or contradict that which they thus solemnly declare in. a judicial proceeding. Gaudet v. Gauthreaux,40 La. Ann. 139 ,3 South. 645 ; Williams v. Gilkeson-Sloss Co.,45 La. Ann. 1017 ,13 South. 394 .”
The case is authority for the proposition that judicial allegations are conclusive in suits with other parties.
In Brown, Chipley & Co. v. Haigh,
“Though certain allegations made in a suit brought by A. against B., to which suit C. is no party, may be utilized by C. in a suit between him and A., as containing admissions in his favor, they cannot be urged by him as working an estoppel against A. Between them they are open to explanation and correction.”
In Re Immanuel Presbyterian Church,
In State ex rel. Curtis v. Thompson,
In Doullut v. Smith,
“That mere inconsistency in pleading^ does not estop is included in the rule that one is not estopped by allegations unsuccessfully pleaded. Thus it has been held that one who is defeated in an attempt to recover property alleged to have been conveyed or covered by a simulated title is not estopped thereafter to sue for the price upon the basis of a bóna fide conveyance (Godwin v. Neustadtl,47 La. Ann. 851 ,17 South. 471 ); that defendant who sets up that his title is not valid, when sued for the price, is not estopped to defend his title, when sued for the land (Morgan v. Kinnard,23 La. Ann. 645 ); that a bankrupt is not estopped to plead the nullity of a judgment because he has placed it on his schedule in the description list of claims against him (King v. Pickett,32 La. Ann. 1006 ). It is true that those were cases In which the inconsistent pleas were set up in different suits, but the principle involved is that where a litigant is entitled to recover in ■one of two positions, which conflict, he does not, by losing in the one position, estop himself from recovering' in the other, merely because it conflicts with the position originally taken; and, where it is the plaintiff who brings inconsistent ■demands, the only penalty is the dismissal of one of them; though it has been held that: ‘Where all the promises and contracts are set out in the pleading, if any one will authorize judgment, the court should render it. Irrelevant or useless matter does not vitiate the good.’ Rawle v. Skipwith,19 La. 207 . If the allegations of the defendants which are thought to estop them were susceptible of no other construction than that which has been accepted by our learned Brothers of the Court of Appeal, they are, at worst, merely inconsistent, and, at best, useless and irrelevant.”
In Caldwell v. Nelson Morris Co.,
Finally, in the recent ease of Nora Coleman et al. v. Jones & Pickett,
Recapitulating the foregoing, we find that the following cases sometimes cited in support of the conclusiveness of judicial allegations are not in point, to wit: Delacroix v. Prevost,
And we find that the following cases are authority for the proposition that judicial allegations made in one suit will operate as an estoppel in another suit, even where that other suit is with another party and in connection with a different subject-matter, and even though the party invoking the estoppel has not been led astray thereby or in any way injured (that is to say, even in the absence of all ground for equitable estoppel), but solely on the ground that the court in
And we find that the following cases are authority for the very opposite of this last-mentioned proposition, or, in other words, are authority for the proposition that while allegations made in the pleadings of another suit are always receivable in evidence, they are not conclusive, or operate as estoppel, unless the party who invokes them has been prejudiced in some way by them, to wit: Bore v. Quierry,
And that we also have a line of cases to the effect that allegations of law unsuccessfully made in a former suit do not estop. Hornor v. McDonald,
In the foregoing review of our jurisprudence we have not sought to include cases involving mere inconsistency in pleading, except those which we found were cited in the other cases as instances of estoppel by judicial allegation. By inconsistency in pleading we here mean inconsistency between two pleas in the same case. The expression made use of in a number of decisions not included in the foregoing review that a party cannot be allowed to occupy in court at the same time two inconsistent positions are really not pertinent to the question which we have under consideration in the present suit, which is whether allegations of fact made in another suit may be invoked as estoppels by a stranger who has not been prejudiced by them. Nor, it is needless to say, are those other cases in point where a party’s express admissions made in the suit itself for the purpose of dispensing the opposite party from offering evidence on the point admitted or from presenting argument upon it have been held to be conclusive, or, in other words, to operate as estoppels.
“Admissions, which have been acted upon by others, are conclusive against the party making them, in all cases between him and the person, whose conduct he had thus influenced.”
Some decisions, supra, went so far as not to allow judicial allegations to be retracted, even where made in error, and although the party invoking them as estoppels has not been prejudiced by them; thus overlooking, or not heeding, article 2291 of the Code, which expressly allows judicial allegations to be retracted when made in error of fact, even in the suit itself in which they are made.
This article, by the way, has reference only to the judicial confession made in the suit itself, either in the pleadings, or in the note of evidence, for the purpose of dispensing from taking evidence upon the fact admitted ; it has no reference to confessions, or admissions, made in other suits. The latter can be classed only as extrajudicial confessions, or admissions which are evidence but not conclusive presumptions, or estoppels. That point divided at one time the courts and jurists of France, but may now be said to be practically settled in the sense just stated. The discussion of this point on the French books is interesting reading, but this opinion is already so long that we will content ourselves with giving here the following taken from Carpentier and Du Saint, Juris. Gen. Vo. Aveu, Nos. 139 and 140, which fairly sums up the result:
“Does the confession of a party in one suit make complete proof against him in another suit? On this question both the courts and the text-writers are to-day divided. A majority of the latter hold that a confession being merely evidence can only have a relative effect, as is the case with all evidence of a judiciary character ; it has, therefore, the force of a legal presumption only in the suits in the course of which it has been made. And so the court of Cassation now holds, unanimously, that the judicial confession can have the force of a legal presumption only in the suit in which it has been made.”
Said article 2291 is an exact translation of article 1356, O. N.
At common law the point has never been doubtful; the rule has always been that while admissions made in other suits are of course evidence, as being declarations against interest, and therefore presumably true, they are no more conclusive, or estoppels, than admissions made out of courts. In fact, the only doubt has been as to whether they were admissible in evidence at all, when contained in pleadings at law, owing to the necessity
In the same connection we may profitably quote the following from the recent work of Chamberlayne on Evidence:
“See. 1233. Judicial and Esotra judicial.— The judicial admission is one made on the record or in connection with the judicial proceedings in which it is offered in evidence. An extrajudicial admission is one in pais, not made in court for the purpose of the case on trial in which it is offered. An admission made in the course of judicial proceedings in a case other than that in which it is offered, though of record or in connection with judicial proceedings in another case, is properly classed as extrajudicial.
“Sec. 1241. Formal Judicial Admissions— Limitations upon Effect. — The effect of a formal judicial admission is limited to the purposes of the pending trial, and, if so worded, to those of additional trials, or proceedings, if any, growing out of or otherwise connected with the principal case. Unless an extended vitality in other cases is thus created by the terms of a formal admission, the operative force which procedure conferred on it for the purposes of the trial falls away upon its transfer to another cause.
“It then becomes, in its new environment, simply a statement which the party has made and which is to be weighed solely upon the basis of logic, by determining how justifiable or necessary is the inference that the party made the declaration because it was true. When thus considered the circumstances under which the judicial admission was made may be such as to deprive it of all force whatever. The general rule is that, unless such admissions are closely identified with the party or expressly ratified by him, their operation will not be extended to other cases, by implication. * * * Nor will such an admission continue to operate in the case itself after having been withdrawn.
“Sec. 1263. Informal Judicial Admissions-.— The informal judicial admission is less absolutely the creature of procedure than is one of the more solemn class ranked as formal. Under the general denomination of informal judicial admissions may be grouped statements of probative or res gestae facts made by a party in proceedings in court, as a witness, as a deponent,' an affiant, or in any similar connection. * * * The informal judicial admission is classed as judicial simply because made in the course of judicial proceedings 'by one who was then a party to the latter. When the declarant is not a party to the pending proceedings, as where a witness gives his testimony in the case, they may be received as admissions, so far as they relate to a probative or res gestae fact, in any case where the declarant is himself a party but not as judicial admissions, informal or otherwise.
“Sec. 1264. Informal Judicial Admissions— Probative Force. — Little difficulty, as a rule, exists in determining the probative force of an informal judicial admission, so far as it involves the direct statements by the party himself. As between formal and informal judicial admissions the effect, for the purposes of the trial in which they are made, is determined by procedure. When the attempt is made to use them, in another cause, as extrajudicial admissions the difference in probative force is entirely one of logic. Indeed, the informal admission, as being more closely identified with the party and more probably made because deemed to be true, may have a greater probative weight than the formal. In the case in which it was given, the informal judicial admission is accorded by procedure the force of a levamen probationis, the quality of prima facie proof shifting the burden of evidence. In subsequent cases, the statements of a party made as informal judicial admissions are divested of any evidentiary valuation affixed by procedure on the occasion when originally given. They are received against the declarant as his admissions, and, so far as competent at all, are given probative force solely according to their logical value.”
In connection with Ms treatment of the maxim “Omnia contra spoliatorem,” the same learned author has the following to say in regard to the court’s refusing to hear evidence because of the supposed necessity of vindicating its dignity:
“Sec. 1070. e. Omnia Contra Spoliatorem— Spoliation an Insult to the Court. — It is quite possible to regard spoliation not only as a deliberative fact but as constituting a serious contempt of court. Suppression and fabrication are offenses against the administration of justice and an insult to the dignity of the tribunal which the act or omission in question is designed improperly to effect. Obviously, it is merely with the first of these points of view that the law of evidence is concerned. The*545 justice or propriety of penalizing the offender, beyond the logical effect of his conduct in the case itself, and his punishment, so far as the acts are criminal, upon direct proceedings, appears to be open to grave doubt. That, a court of justice should ‘strike back’ at one attempting fraud upon the purity of its proceedings by depriving him of a fair consideration of the real merits of his case does not seem consistent with its dignity. The sounder rule of judicial administration seems to be to the effect that the situation as developed should not be extended beyond its logical hearings and that a litigant ought not to be deprived of his legal rights by refusing to receive other and relevant evidence in his favor, unless, indeed, the jury would not, as a matter of reason, be justified, after the disclosures, in acting favorably upon it.”
Our conclusion is that Weaver and Johnson, the warrantors, are not concluded by the allegations made in this former suit, which have in no way been acted on by plaintiffs, or in' any way prejudiced them, and therefore do not give rise to any estoppel. These allegations carry some weight, of course, as evidence; but their weight as evidence is overborne by that of the other facts proved in the case, especially by the fact that Julia Smith was a slave, and, therefore, could not contract marriage with a free man.
The judgment of the Court of Appeal and of the district court are set aside, and the suit of plaintiffs is dismissed, plaintiffs to pay all costs.
