76 Minn. 441 | Minn. | 1899
Lead Opinion
The nature of the agreement (hereinafter called the “lease”) referred to in this opinion will be seen by an examination of Dickinson Co. v. Fitterling, 69 Minn. 162, 71 N. W. 1030. In that case it was held that all of the fixed charges specified in the lease to be paid by the lessees were in fact a part of the rent for the use of the premises, and that the assignee of the lessees — the Dickinson Company, a corporation, which had made an assignment for the
After the decision in that case, Fitterling brought this action to recover from Welch, as assignee, and out of the assets in his hands as such, the sum of $445.32, as a balance due as rent while the premises were in the assignee’s possession after the assignment, — 21 days in all. The claim was made up of several items, — mainly, the proportionate share of the notes given when the building was erected, secured by a mortgage on the premises, the proportionate share of the interest thereon, and a like share of the taxes, which plaintiff had been compelled to pay. The payment by Welch of $125 on account of rent was acknowledged. A copy of the lease, with copies of the modifications thereof, was made a part of the complaint. As one of his defenses, the assignee alleged in his answer, and as a bar to any recovery, certain proceedings had in the district court in which the assignment proceedings were pending, and that in said proceedings, upon a petition or application made by Fitterling, through which he attempted to obtain an order of the court directing the assignee to pay to him out of the assets of the insolvent a certain sum of money, claimed to be a balance due on account of rent accruing for the same period herein, to which petition ,the assignee filed an answer, a hearing was had by the court, and its order denying the prayer of the- petitioner filed March 10, 1896. It was further alleged that no appeal was taken from the order, and that it stood unaffected and unreversed. It was also alleged that certain subsequent proceedings were taken by Fitterling in respect to his petition and the order, to which' further reference will be made.
There is really no dispute as to these proceedings, the controversy being as to their legal effect. It . appears that instead of bringing an action against the assignee to recover the balance claimed, after the payment of the $125, Fitterling appeared in the assignment proceedings, with a verified petition or application, in which he set out his ownership of the premises; the amount of rent paid per month by the insolvent prior to the assignment; that the use and occupation were reasonably worth that sum; that the assignee occupied the store for one month after the assignment, and had paid ho part of the rental, except the sum of $125. His demand was that the
This answer put in issue the construction to be put on the lease, and was drawn, evidently, upon the theory that the fixed charges were no part of the rent, — an erroneous view, as we have seen. But, whatever the theory might have been, it is obvious that the answer put in issue the claim of Fitterling that under the lease he was entitled to collect from the assignee, as rent, a proportionate part of the fixed charges. At the hearing the lease and the modifications thereof were received in evidence as part of the. case. Subsequently the court made its order, in which, after reciting that the petition was for an order directing the assignee to pay over “certain moneys by way of rent/’ the court denied the petition. Soon after-wards, upon an affidavit in which it was asserted that the sum of $125 paid as before stated was only a small part of the rental to be paid by the assignee, and that the court was mistaken as to the amount which should have been paid for the month of October, an order to show cause why a rehearing of the claim should not be had, and a new order made, finding the facts in controversy between the parties, was obtained by Fitterling’s counsel. The assignee opposed such action, and the court then denied the application for a rehearing.
It appears then that, soon after the assignee ceased to occupy the building, Fitterling, as the owner, voluntarily appeared in the assignment proceedings, and submitted his claim against such assignee for rent during the month of October. He admitted a pay
Fitterling was privileged to select his own mode of presenting his claim and having it adjudicated. He could bring an action either against the assignee in his official capacity, or as an individual alleging a personal liability, or he could proceed, as he did, by petition or complaint, or by motion, as his counsel styles the first step taken, in the pending equitable proceeding. See Nelson v. Kalkhoff, 60 Minn. 305, 62 N. W. 335. But, if defeated in his chosen method of enforcing payment, he was bound by the result. If the method adopted is by a simple motion, and it has been determined, as such, after a full hearing upon a controverted question of fact, the-order disposing of it being appealable, as was the one in question, the determination of the litigated point is an adjudication binding upon the parties, and conclusive upon the
It is true that the court below did not make findings of fact when •disposing of the petition. It was not to be expected that it would. Such a course would not be irregular or unwarranted, but it would be unusual, if we understand the common practice in the district •court. But the fact that no findings were made cannot stand in the way of a holding that the issues presented in this action were actually litigated and disposed of on the hearing of the petition, if from the record it appears that they were. As before stated, we think it so appears. It is urged by counsel for Fitterling that it conclusively appears from the record referred to that the petition or application was simply an attempt to secure an order that a certain stated sum of money be paid over by the assignee, and that it was not considered by the court that it was called upon to determine what was due under the lease. We cannot take this view, for the petition and the answer clearly raised the issue as to whether there ■was due, under the terms of the lease, any sum in excess of the $125. This was precisely what the court was asked to determine, and, when it disposed of the petition by denying it, there was the decision of the court that nothing more was due. This determination was primarily involved in a ruling that the petitioner was not entitled to an order.
It has been urged that as the petition omitted an allegation that the assignee had money in his hands, belonging to the estate, with which to pay the claim, it failed to state a right to have the prayer of the petition granted, and for that reason was demurrable, and, further, that it might have been denied because the assignee was without funds with which to pay: If the petition failed to state facts sufficient to show a right to the order, it was the fault of the petitioner. If the assignee chose to an-swer on the merits, waiving the insufficiency of the petition on this mere formal matter, the former ought not to be heard upon a contention founded on his own failure. The omission of an allegation in the petition that the assignee then had funds to satisfy the claim was not an omission to allege an essential element of petitioner’s cause of action. The petition, without it, stated a cause of action, but it failed to show that
That the suggestion of counsel seems to be an afterthought and without merit appears from an allegation in the answer of the assignee in the first proceeding to the effect that he had taken possession of a portion of the assigned estate, — a stock of merchandise situated in the building on the leased premises, — and that, pursuant to the order of the court, he had sold the same. The fair inference is that he had funds with which to pay the expenses incurred in administering upon the trust estate. Again, we think this appears from the affidavit on which was obtained the order to show cause, in which it is averred, as one of the grounds for a rehearing, that the court had made a mistake as to the amount of rent to be paid for the month of October. And, further than this, it is alleged by Fitterling in the complaint in the present action that the assignee has at all times had in his hands assets-sufficient to pay the rent demanded of him. With all these facts and circumstances appearing-in this case, we think it would be a rank injustice to hold that possibly the decision of the court upon the petition was predicated upon the fact that the assignee was without funds with which to pay.
Order reversed, and a new trial ordered.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
Conceding that an adjudication upon the merits (as to defendant’s.
Plaintiff’s application was made on a petition that was defective in substance, in not alleging that the defendant, as receiver, had any funds in his hands, summarily heard on affidavits, and summarily disposed of by an order merely denying the petition. The record nowhere discloses on what grounds it was denied, or what the court passed upon in denying it, except as we may guess or conjecture. The motion or application might, for anything that appears, have been denied because of the insufficiency of the petition, or because the defendant had no funds in his hands, or — what would have been a very natural and good reason — because, the indebtedness being disputed, the court concluded to leave the plaintiff to his action, in which the matter could be tried in the usual way upon full oral evidence. The answer set up an affirmative defense, and the burden was upon the defendant to establish every fact necessary to constitute a complete bar to this action. If the record leaves any doubt as to what was actually litigated and determined in the motion or summary application, this defense has entirely failed. The defendant was bound .to show, beyond- conjecture or uncertainty, that upon that motion the court tried, considered, and determined every fact and issue, and the precise facts and issues involved in the determination of this action. If the record is-uncertain as to what issues were determined, all are open to a new contention. I think it is a new departure in the law of res adjudicata to hold that a former adjudication may be established by mere inference and conjecture. I therefore dissent.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I am of the opinion that the petition was defective in failing to state that the receiver had funds in his hands which should be applied to the payment of the petitioner’s claim. The answer did not supply this defect in the petition, and for this reason I concur with Justice MITCHELL.