114 Tenn. 328 | Tenn. | 1904
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The bill in this case was dismissed upon the ground that the issues presented by it had been determined against the complainants by a court having jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the parties. The facts upon which this decree of dismissal rests are as follows: In 1903 N. H. Harris, R. Harris, and Cole Bros., styling, themselves as the firm of Harris & Cole Bros., brought a suit in the circuit court of Maury county, for the use of themselves and certain fire insurance companies named therein, against the Columbia Water & Light Company. In their declaration the plaintiffs alleged that Cole Bros., a member of the firm, was a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Iowa, and that the firm so constituted was engaged in the lumber business in the city of Columbia, in this State, and that on their yards in that city they had stored large quantities Of lumber, and had erected for the use of their business costly buildings, in which they were operating much valuable machinery. The declaration further alleged, that the firm of Harris & Cole Bros.- had entered into a contract with the defendant company whereby, for a consideration, that company agreed and obligated itself to furnish, at the fire plugs located on the premises of the firm, an ample supply of water at all times adequate in force, volume, and quantity to produce a stream of water flowing through hose and fire nozzles to throw upon the buildings, lumber, material, .and machinery
To these pleas the plaintiffs filed a replication in which it was admitted that Cole Bros, was a foreign corporation, and that it had failed to comply with the statutory requirements with regard to such corporations entering the State to do business, but denied that the firm of Harris & Cole Bros, were unlawfully doing business in Tennessee. On these special pleas and this replication the circuit court dismissed the suit, and on appeal to this court the judgment of the lower court was affirmed upon the ground that an action by a firm could not be maintained unless all the partners in the firm were competent to sue, and that a firm composed of individuals and a foreign corporation could not maintain an action upon a contract made in this State, where it appeared that the corporation had not complied with the statutes requiring it to register its charter. Harris v. Water & Light Co., 108 Tenn., 245, 67 S. W., 811.
The bill in the present case is brought by N. H. Harris, Rutledge Harris, J. W. Cole, W. R. Cole, and John J. Cole, trading under the firm name and style of Harris & Cole Bros., against the Columbia Water & Light Company, for the same breach of the same contract, and under the same conditions alleged in the former suit, and a recovery is sought for this breach for the use of the firm of Harris & Cole Bros, and the same insurance
. The chancellor held, on a demurrer raising the question, that the adjudication in the former suit was com elusive upon the complainants in the present case, and dismissed their bill.
Was the chancellor correct in this ruling, and is the matter now sought to be litigated res adjudicata? Two of the essentials to the successful defense of former adjudication are that there must be identity of parties in the two actions, and the judgment in- the prior action must have been upon the merits. As to the first of these
In section 536, volume 2, of his work on Judgments, the author, Mr. Black, says: “It is not only necessary that the person sought to be bound by the former judgment should have been a party to both actions, but he must have appeared in both in the same capacity or character.” The author embodies in his text a paragraph from the opinion in Rathbone v. Hooney, 58 N. Y., 463, which is as follows: “A judgment against a party sued as an individual is not an estoppel in a subsequent action in which he sues or is sued in another capacity or character. In the latter case he is, in contemplation of law, a distinct person, and a stranger to the prior proceedings and judgment."
A corollary of this rule is thus stated by Mr. Freeman in his work on Judgments, in volume 1, section 266: “A judgment given because of misjoinder or nonjoinder of plaintiffs or defendants, or because of the want of capacity of the party plaintiff- or defendant to sue or to be sued, establishes nothing but such defect or incapacity, and cannot defeat a subsequent suit in which the vice causing the former suit does not' exist.” The author cites the following cases, which upon examination are found to support his text: McCall v. Jones, 72 Ala., 368; Tierney v. Abbott, 46 Wis., 329, 1 N. W., 94; Tiffany v. Stewart, 60 Iowa, 207, 14 N. W., 241; Smith v.
Our own reports furnish illustrations of this rule, and all it implies. In the case of L. & N. R. R. v. Atkins, 2 Lea, 248, Atkins sued the railroad for killing a horse; and the defendant pleaded a former suit by Atkins and wife against it for killing the same animal, and a judgment in his favor. It was ruled, however, by this court, that the defense was not maintainable. On this point it was said that the “authorities are uniform that, to make a judgment a bar, the former must be between the same parties. . . . Ordinarily a judgment in the suit would not be a bar to a suit brought by either of those two, for the obvious reason that a joint cause of action in favor of two cannot possibly be a cause of action in favor of one of those two.” In Melton v. Pace, 103 Tenn., 484, 53 S. W., 939, the rule was recognized that, in order to make a judgment effective as res adju-dicata, it is essential that the party sought to be concluded thereby should have sued or been sued in both cases in the same capacity or character, and to enforce the same right. And so it was there held that children inheriting from both father and mother were not es-topped to set up title to the whole of a tract of land inherited from their mother by reason of the fact that a part of it had been by inadvertence embraced in the description of a tract which they, as heirs of their father, had brought to sale by decree of foreclosure of a
Another one of the essentials to this plea, as we have already seen, is that the former judgment must have been upon the merits of the case. In Hughes v. U. S., 4 Wall., 232,18 L. Ed., 303, it is said: “If the first suit was dismissed for defect of pleading or parties or a misconception of the form of the pleading, or the want of jurisdiction, or was disposed of on any ground which did not go to the merits of the action, the judgment rendered will prove no bar to another suit.” The rule is thus stated by Mr. Black in section 693 of volume 2 of his work on “Judgments”: “A former judgment will not operate as a bar to a subsequent suit upon the same cause of action unless the proceeding and judgment in the first case involved an investigation or offered full legal opportunity for an investigation and determination of the merits of the suit. Or as otherwise expressed, the judgment must be upon the merits in a competent action; the plaintiff having sued in his proper character, and the pleading having been correct.” Among the cases in which this rule has been recognized and applied by this court we will refer to two: In Hoggatt v. White, 2 Swan, 265, the facts were that one B. executed a mortgage of a slave to W. to secure a note which upon its face called for ten per cent interest per annum. After maturity W. filed a bill to foreclose the mortgage, which was dimissed by the chancellor upon the ground that the contract sought to be enforced was,
In Hurst v. Means, 2 Sneed, 546, it was held that where the plaintiff had brought his action to recover the amount of purchase money paid by him for land, the title to which had failed, but from which he had not yet been evicted, and there was verdict and judgment against him on that ground, this was no bar to subsequent suit for the same cause of action after he had lost possession of the land.
So we hold that the doctrine of res adjudioata cannot be relied upon in this case, because, first, there is a lack óf identity between the parties plaintiff in the first action and the complainants in this cause; and, second, for the reason that the merits of the suit were not determined in the first action. In ruling otherwise the chancellor was in error.
The defendants, however, insist that the complainants are estopped by the admission made in this former judicial proceeding that Cole Bros, was a corporation.This defense is equally unavailing to preclude the complain
The defendant’s insistence, however, over and beyond the defenses to the bill of complainant just disposed of, is that the bill is fatally defective in failing to show that the damages claimed by complainants proximately resulted from the breach of the contract on the part of the defendant to furnish water. This is a mistaken assumption. The bill distinctly avers that the defendant contracted to supply at all times an amount of water ample to extinguish fires, and failed to do> so, and that this failure was the occasion of the loss sustained by complainants. The failure to furnish water did not occasion the fire, but it is averred that it did bring about the loss resulting from the fire. To prevent this loss by supplying a quantity of water sufficient to extinguish any fire which might occur was within the letter of the contract.
Nor do we think that another position assumed by the
Again, it is insisted by the defendant that, at the utmost, complainants can only recover the value of the water which should have been furnished them under the contract, and not the value of the property destroyed. It is true that, where an action is brought to recover for a breach of a contract, “the contract itself must give the measure of damages,” yet, in the light of the aver-ments of the bill in this case, it was clearly within the contemplation of the parties to this contract that, if it was breached by defendant, then it should furnish full indemnity of the damages resulting from the breach. This question has been fully considered in Chisholm, v. U'. S. Canopy Co., Ill Tenn., 202, Tt N. W., 1062, and we can add nothing to the argument or conclusion of that case. The cases of State v. Ward, 9 Heisk., 132, and Foster v. Water Co., 3 Lea, 46, relied upon by the counsel of defendants to bring complainants’ recovery within the narrowest limits, are referred to and construed in the Chisholm case, and are brought in accord with it. It is true that there are expressions in the Foster case which seem in conflict with the rule an
The result is, the chancellor’s decree dismissing the bill is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings.