Relying on the diverse citizenship of the parties, plaintiff, a citizen of California, has sued defendant, located in New York City, for damages of $40,000 alleged to have been caused her by acts of defendant as testamentary trustee under the will of Anna R. Morison, of whom plaintiff was one of the two residuary legatees after the expiration of a life estate. The complaint and its accompanying exhibits are most full and complete, obviously designed, among other things, to anticipate defenses of res judicata. These defenses arise by virtue of two judgments — one a consent judgment of the Supreme Court of New York County settling defendant’s account as trustee upоn the termination of-the life estate, and the other the order of the Surrogate’s Court for New York County dismissing a petition for resettlement of this account because of claimed duress in the procurement of the stipulation for-the first judgment. What effect these judgments shall be accorded in a federal action attempting once more to reopen the issues is the very interesting question presented on this appeal from the judgment of the District Court,
From the allegations of the complaint it appears that after the termination of the life estate the beneficiaries under the will entered into a stipulation with defendant for the entry of a judgment in the New York Supreme Court providing for - the payment of certain securities and monies to the former and settling the account of the latter and releasing it from further liability. Though the settlement thus envisaged has been fully consummated, plaintiff now allegеs that her consent was obtained by duress, and that she has been damaged by the duress practiced upon her. Acts constituting the duress are alleged to be defendant’s willful withholding of principal and income of the estate, initiation of unnecessary and expensive litigation ex
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hausting this plaintiff and her co-beneficiary financially (referring to the action for construction of the will which resulted in a decree sustaining the validity of the trust, Bank of New York v. Kaufman, Sup,
Further allegations show that after defendant had delivered the trust property to plaintiff, as ordered by the judgment, plaintiff and her co-beneficiary filed a petition in the Surrogate’s Court to compel the bank to account in that cotirt as trustee under the Morison will. This petition, attached to the complaint herein as an exhibit, was most detailed in its recitals of alleged defaults by the trustee in making investments and otherwise administering the trust, and of the claimed duress of the trustee in procuring the settlement of its account in the Supreme Court. Nevertheless, the Surrogate dismissed the petition in a short opinion, Estate of Anna R. Morison, •— Misc. -,
We agree with the District Court’s view that this action was a collateral attack on the New York Supreme Court judgment. Notwithstanding that it took the form of a tort claim for damages, either for defendant’s breaches of trust or for defendant’s duress in procuring the stipulation for the judgment, its essential and necessary nature is an equitable proceeding collaterally attacking the judgment and seeking appropriate relief if that attack is sustained. For, as the cases discussed hereinafter show, legal relief is held barred by the formal judgment and the available relief is necessarily equitable in nature. But we cannot agree with the District Court’s further conclusion that a judgment cannot be attacked collaterally, and that parties seeking relief from it must do so in the original action. For it is well settled that the federal courts may exercise their equity powers so as to set aside, enjoin enforcement of, or ignore a state court judgment obtained by fraud. Marshall v. Holmes,
But putting aside the unsettled question whether cases such as those of Holmes and Publicker definitely mark the elimination of the Throckmorton restriction, cf. Graver v. Faurot,
Though the сourt in the Ingram case, supra, did not in so many words classify the case as one of “extrinsic” fraud, both the situation there presented and the one before us seem clearly to be so characterized if we are bound to hold the powers of a court of equity thus restricted. For the very duress by which the release or consent is obtained also prevents the coerced party from challenging before or at trial the statements or conduct of its adversary. Thus in the original action the issue of duress never is before the court. Indeed, the case differs little, if at all, from those where a witness is forcibly prevented from testifying, or an attorney is bribed to fight a losing battle оr give his client false advice. Unless, therefore, the later judgment of the Surrogate’s Court changes the situation, the District Court was in error in dismissing plaintiff’s complaint.
The Surrogate’s decision does pose an important and, so far as we can discover, an unusual problem of federal judicial power and discretion. This is because of thе ground which the Surrogate took for his dismissal of plaintiff’s petition to compel the trustee to account. Plaintiff argues that this is but the decision of a court of limited jurisdiction, that it has no power to act in the premises, and hence that it cannot be a bar to an action by plaintiff in a court having broader powers. But we cannot аgree, for that was neither the expressed nor, as we view it, a permissible legal ground for the decision. Whatever doubt may have existed earlier, the jurisdiction of the Surrogate’s Court was broadened by a series of statutory changes completed in 1921 which amended § 40 of the Surrogate’s Court Act and which now give to that court well recоgnized and extensive equitable powers. Raymond v. Davis’ Estate,
The Surrogate appears, therefore, not to have lacked ample equitable powers in the premises; and his opinion shows that he was acting not on the basis of lack of jurisdiction, but of a prohibition stated by Crouse v. McVickar, supra, as New York practice against the collateral attack of judgments obtained by the type of fraud here involved. In the Crouse case, supra, the New York Court of Appeals held not open to collateral attack a judgment which, although obtained by a stipulation of settlement or compromise when the action was brought on for trial, was nevertheless based upon the expected testimony of certain witnesses who had been suborned to perjure themselves. The court obviously intended to state no new rule, but, citing text writers and other authorities, including United States v. Throckmorton, supra, proceeded to state the usual principle that “the fraud for which a judgment can be impeached must be in some matter other than the issue in controversy in the action” [
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The Crouse case, therefore, actually reiterates and re-еnforces the general rule, well settled in New York, that judgments obtained by extrinsic fraud can be attacked collaterally. Lapiedra v. American Surety Co.,
In the light of this background of New York practice, we find it difficult to appraise the scope of the Surrogate’s decision. His actual order, entered after notice to the parties, is only that the petition “is hereby dismissed”; it does refer to the Court’s having filed its decision in writing. The opinion does show clearly that decision is not on the merits, but is only because relief was sought in the wrong court. It does not speak of “intrinsic fraud” in terms, though it is possible that the Surrogate had the New York cases above cited in mind when he reached his conclusion. Nevertheless, when he says that attack upon a judgment for “fraud or newly discovered evidеnce or other grounds for [its] vacatur” must be “by a direct application to the Supreme Court,” he seems to be going beyond the ancient distinction between forms of fraud. Elsewhere he seems to regard the rule he is following as one of comity on the part of a Surrogate where jurisdiction, otherwise concurrent, has been taken by the Supreme Court. A judgment other than on the merits is conclusive only as to the point expressly decided; it is not res judicata on points which might have been included, but were not adjudicated. Restatement, Judgments, 1942, § 49; 2 Freeman, Judgments, 5th Ed. 1925, § 745; Thorburn v. Gates,
There being no estoppel by judgment which would bar action in a court of competent jurisdiction, is there something in the federal system to prevent action in a federal court? It is true that in Cohen v. Randall, supra, where we recognized such a federal right, we did not have аn
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intermediate state court decision pointing to a different procedure. But since the matters here involved are procedural, the doctrine of Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins,
equitable, 6 and can be sought in either state or federal courts. Consequently there appears to be no proper ground for holding a federal court compelled to deny relief to a litigant situated as is the plaintiff.
Assuming power to act, nevertheless should the district cоurt refuse to take jurisdiction in the exercise of discretion? Although we have found no direct authority, it would seem that there should be some discretion in a federal court to refuse equitable relief where state procedure is intended to be exclusive — at least in the absence of a showing that that procedure is inadequatе to protect a plaintiff. 'Cf. Massachusetts Ben. Life Ass’n v. Lohmillefi, 7 Cir.,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
See also Simon v. Southern Ry. Co,
Recent lower court eases in accord include In re Schmidt’s Estate, Sup., 33 N. Y.S.2d 341; Finan v. Finan, Sup., 47 N. Y.S.2d 429; Scopano v. United States Gypsum Co.,
Of course, a state judgment on the merits of fraud is res judicata in the federal courts as elsewhere. American Bakeries Co. v. Vining, 5 Cir.,
The fact that Marshall v. Holmes,
Osterling
v. Commonwealth Trust Co. of Pittsburgh, D.C.W.D.Pa.,
There is language in Chase Nat. Bank v. City of Norwalk,
