1 2 The defendant firm, Ferrall & Hawkins Brothers, was a judgment creditor of W. O. and L. P. Garretson and by virtue of an execution levied upon a stock of merchandise upon which W. O. and L. P. Garretson had made to plaintiff in this suit, O. S. Garretson, a chattel mortgage. After the levy, Ferrall & Hawkins Brothers made to O. S. Garretson an indemnifying bond, and the merchandise was sold, and the proceeds paid to Ferrall & Hawkins Brothers, and this suit is by O. S. Garretson on the bond. A defense to the action is that plaintiff is estopped to maintain this suit because of an action in his interest on said bond by one C. L. Garretson, the defense being pleaded as follows: “That said O. S. Garretson transferred the said cause of action to the said O. L. Garretson for the purpose of bringing suit upon it in this state, because of the fact that C. L. Garretson was a resident of Iowa, and O. S. Garretson was a resident of New York; that the said cause of action on the part of C. L. Garretson was brought for the benefit of O. S. Garretson, and in his behalf and for him, and not for the benefit of C. L. Garretson.” It is true that C. L. Garretson did institute an action on the bond in this state; that an issue was formed, and a trial-had, resulting in a verdict for the defendant by direction of the court, on which judgment was entered. O. S. Garretson was a witness in the suit on the bond brought by C. L. Garretson, and he is also a witness in this suit. No other conclusion could be drawn from his testimony than that he never intended to convey, by his assignment to C. L. Garretson, any property interest in the bond, but simply a right to maintain an action thereon for his (C. L. Garretson’s) benefit. He was asked why he sold the chattel mortgage claim to C. L. Garretson, and he answered: “Because he resided in Iowa, and could, attend to the matter better than. I *730could.” He stated that the consideration for the assignment was nominal, and “no money was received or credited.” He stated, in answer to a question: “I am now the owner of said note and account, and always have been, except that I once assigned the right of action upon said note and account by direction of my attorney in Iowa, and the same was afterward returned to me, retransferred to me.” He was then ashed to explain more fully what it was that he assigned, and he answered: “I only assigned a right of action under the bonds and papers in this ease. I assigned such right by and in a written instrument sept me by my attorney in Iowa. I did not assign the note or the mortgage referred to in said deposition to the said O. L. Garretson.” He was then asked to state what he did assign, which he called “a right of action upon said note and mortgage,” and he answered: “What I did assign to O. L. Garretson was a right to prosecute the bond given by Ferrall & Hawkins Brothers to the sheriff, being the same claim for which action is brought. ”
3 The record shows that, after the jury was impaneled, the court, on suggestion of defendant’s counsel, “directs the hearing of and determination of the plea of abatement, and estoppel on the question of res adjudicaba to be first tried to the court as a law issue.” It is urged that the question of a prior adjudication was one for the jury, and that the court erred in directing it to be first tried to the court. The error, if conceded, is without prejudice. We may assume that, if the issue had been tried to the jury, plaintiff’s testimony would have been the same, and in such a case we think the court would have been warranted in entering judgment as it did. The averment in the answer is that the suit on the bond by O. L. Garretson “was brought for the benefit of O. S. Garretson, and on his behalf and for him, and not for the *731benefit of C. L. Garretson.” This averment seems to be clearly established by the plaintiff’s testimony without a contradictory statement. There was, then, no question of fact' for the jury to determine. If the former suit was for and in the interest of O. S. Garret-son, the plea of a former adjudication must be sustained. It is true that O. S. Garretson does not, in terms, say that the former suit was for him, or in his interest, but no other conclusion is deducible from his statements. The assignment of the bond was without consideration, and for the reason, only, that C. L. Garretson lived in Iowa, and could attend to the prosecution better than he could in New York. It was assigned by direction of his own attorney in Iowa, and upon a failure of the suit it was retransferred to him. After considerable persistence on the part of defendant’s counsel to learn from him* what he assigned to C. L. Garretson, he finally said that it was the right to prosecute the bond, “being the same claim for which this action is brought.” It thus appears that the former suit was between the same parties in interest, ■and the cause of action precisely the same as in this suit.
4 It is claimed that the former suit, having been determined upon a plea of abatement, is not a bar to this suit. But the record does not disclose that the former suit was determined upon such a plea. The record in that case, as put in evidence in this case, shows that a general verdict was returned for defendants by direction of the court. The answer in that case presented four distinct defenses, only one of which was in abatement, and the record in this case in no way indicates on which defense the verdict was based. By Code, section 2851, it is provided: “Where matter in abatement is plead in connection with other matter not such, the finding of the jury or court must distinguish between matter in abatement *732and matter in bar, and the judgment must, if it is rendered on the matter in abatement, and not on the merits, so declare.” In view of this law, where the record fails to distinguish between matters pleaded in bar and abatement, we must assume that the judgment was not rendered on matter in abatement, or it would so declare.
5 A reference is made in argument to the opinion of this court in the former case; but the questions of what were the issues and judgment in that case are those of fact, for which we are to look to the record in this case. We may take notice of facts in the former case in so far as they are established by the record in this case, but no further. Enix v. Miller, 54 Iowa, 551, 6 N. W. Rep. 722. The authorities cited by appellant on the question of a former adjudication are not in point. The-judgment of the district court is AEEIRMED.
AI-generated responses must be verified and are not legal advice.