28 N.J. Eq. 71 | New York Court of Chancery | 1877
The bill is filed to compel the defendants, Gilbert T. Raisbeck, Charles IT. Bertrand and Edwin M. Cook, to account to the complainant for five bonds, with the mortgages securing the payment thereof, assigned and delivered by. him through Bertrand to Raisbeck, on or about the 7th of June, 1871, in trust, to sell them and pay over to the complainant the proceeds, after deducting ten per cent, on the amount of the principal and interest due at the time of sale. The bill states that there were then due thereon $25,500, and that the complainant was induced to make the assignments and deliver over the bonds and mortgages by the advice, representations and recommendations of Bertrand, who was, or pretended to be, a Yew York lawyer, and acted as the complainant’s legal adviser in the matter; and that Bertrand represented to him that Raisbeck (who pretended to be a real estate broker) was an honest man and pecuniarily responsible, and that the latter had already a
The bill further states that the defendants conspired'to defraud the complainant in the matter, and that, accordingly, Raisbeck assigned one of the bonds, with the mortgage securing its payment, to Arthur Childs, on or about the 26th of April, 1872,’ and purchased the title to the mortgaged premises mentioned in the other mortgages, and then, on or about the 5th of the last mentioned month, canceled those mortgages, and that he afterwards sold the property. It further states that he admits that he has converted the proceeds of the bonds and mortgages to his own use, except $7,000 which he claims to have paid to Bertrand, and $2,000 to Cook. The complainant further states that when he sought to compel payment of the proceeds to him, Bertrand and Raisbeck conspired to cause him to be imprisoned in the state penitentiary, and for tha£ purpose falsely accused him, on oath, of subornation of perjury; that for their conspiracy in the matter they were indicted and convicted, and imprisoned in the state penitentiary. Raisbeck pleads that, as to four of the bonds and mortgages, there was an adjudication on the merits, on the 18th of January, 1872, in the supreme court of New York, in a
To make the judgment pleaded a technical bar to this suit, it must appear to have been for the same subject matter, and between the same, or substantially the same, parties. It was, as stated by the plea, in an action by Charles Gardner, to set aside the assignments to Raisbeek, on the ground that they were without valuable consideration. The result of that litigation was merely the defeat of Charles Gardner, and the consequent dismissal of his bill. It is alleged, indeed, that the ground of dismissal was, that the court found that the assignments were made for valuable consideration and bona fide. The bill in this cause alleges that they were made bona fide.
The question between the parties to this suit, whether the complainant is entitled to an account from the defendants, in respect of the bonds and mortgages assigned to
“ To make a former judgment conclusive between the parties in another suit, in relation to the same matter, it is necessary,” says Chancellor Walworth, “ that the former suit should have been between the same parties. But the fact that there were other defendants in the. former suit, who are also bound by the decision, and estopped from controverting the same fact, does not render the former decision any the less conclusive against any one of the defendants therein.” Dows v. McMichael, 6 Paige 139. In Behrens v. Sieveking, 2 M. & C. 581, the lord chancellor said, that in order to support the plea, it was necessary to show that the proceedings in which the plaintiffs were alleged to have failed were taken for the same purpose as the suit in which the plea was filed; for, he adds, the issue might have been the same, while the object was different; and the circumstance that the matter had been tried as a matter of evidence could not be conclusive; that the defendant had to show that the subject matter was the same, that the right came in question before a court of competent jurisdiction, and that the result was conclusive, so as to bind the judgment of every other court. This is in' accordance with
The pleas will be overruled, with costs.