75 Ind. App. 218 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1921
Complaint by appellant to recover damages on account of alleged fraud on the part of the appellee in inducing appellant to enter into a contract by the terms of which the appellant exchanged certain real estate owned by her for a farm in Pulaski county, owned by appellee.
Appellee filed an answer in two paragraphs, (1) general denial, (2) admitting the execution of the contract mentioned in the complaint and alleging that, as part of the consideration for such exchange, appellant on the consummation of such exchange executed and gave to appellee her promissory notes aggregating $4,835, and in order to secure the payment thereof gave appellee a mortgage upon the farm which appellee had conveyed to appellant; that appellant failed to pay said notes and in October, 1912, appellee commenced an action in the Pulaski Circuit Court to recover the amount due on the notes and to foreclose the mortgage; that appellant appeared in the action and filed an answer in five paragraphs, the first of which was a general denial; the second and fourth paragraphs, of said answer were in fact counterclaims and set out and alleged the same fraudulent representations, acts and conduct as .are alleged in the complaint herein; that all of said paragraphs of counterclaims and answers, except the general denial, were withdrawn by appellant before trial, and the cause was on change of venue taken to the Carroll Circuit Court, where the action was tried in June, 1914, and resulted in a judgment against appellant and in favor of appellee for $6,622.57, and for the foreclosure of the mortgage; that said judgment was never appealed from, vacated, set aside or modified; that appellee, in her complaint on said notes and for the foreclosure of said mortgage, challenged the appellant to set up and establish therein all her defenses founded upon the fraud and misrepresentation alleged in her complaint
Appellant filed a demurrer to said second paragraph of answer, which was overruled and exception saved. The first paragraph of answer was withdrawn and appellant refusing to plead further, judgment was rendered against her, and she now appeals and assigns as error that the court erred in overruling her demurrer to the second paragraph of answer. The only question presented for our consideration by this assignment is: Must a vendee of property, when sued by the vendor on a note given for the purchase price, set up by way of counterclaim a cause of action held by the vendee against the vendor for fraud in inducing the vendee to enter into a contract of sale, or may he at his option prosecute a separate action against the vendor for such alleged fraud?
This question might well be answered by a mere reference to §856 Burns 1914, §351 R. S. 1881, which reads as follows: “If any defendant personally served with notice omit to set up a counterclaim arising out of the contract, or transaction set forth in the complaint as the ground for the plaintiff’s claim, or any of them, he can not afterward maintain an action against the plaintiff therefor, except at his own cost.”
In view of the fact that both the Supreme and this court in some of their opinions have made statements
And in §449 at page 972 of the same volume, it is said: “A fact which is impliedly or expressly involved in a judgment is considered merged therein so that it can not again be litigated, but a separate cause of action will not necessarily be merged, and therefore need not be pleaded as a defense.” In 24 R. C. L. §92, p. 883 the author says: “A judgment or a decree of a court having jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and of the parties, is, as a general rule, final and conclusive as to the matters actually litigated and decided, and also as to matters necessarily involved in the litigation, and which might have been litigated. It is, however, sometimes difficult to draw the line between a judgment which will operate as a bar to an action for a specified claim, and one which leaves the claim outstanding to
Judge Van Fleet, in speaking of a counterclaim, says: “This pleading is not a defense. It neither denies nor confesses and avoids the plaintiff’s cause of action. It is simply a cause of action in favor of the defendant, and the court deducts the less from the greater and renders a judgment for the remainder. But as the plaintiff has an option in respect to the time and place of suing upon his cause of action, and as the defendant possesses the same option, he is not obliged thus to use his cause. Hence, all the cases agree, that, if he exercises his option, and does not use it as a counterclaim, cross demand or set off, he can maintain an independent action upon it.” 1 Van Fleets, Former Adjudication §171. To the same effect, see Wells, Res Adjudicata §268; Bigelow, Estoppel 174; Herman, Law of Estoppel §266.
In our discussion of this question we are not unmindful of the rule laid down in Fischli v. Fischli (1825), 1 Blackf. 360, 12 Am. Dec. 251, where the court in
As said by the court in Griffin v. Wallace (1879), 66 Ind. 410:
“The rule that every question which might have been decided or litigated in a cause, will be presumed to •have been decided, means that everything which was within the issues in the cause, and might have been proved under them, will be presumed to have been proved and adjudicated upon. But what was not embraced by the issues made, though issues broad enough to embrace such matter might have been made, will not at least, be conclusively presumed to have been determined.” So in Finley v. Cathcart (1897), 149 Ind. 470, 48 N. E. 586, 49 N. E. 381, 63 Am. St. 292; it is said: “In fact, it is an essential element or principle underlying the doctrine of former adjudication that the judgment of the former action settles all material issues involved between the parties to that' action, and all matters which might have been properly litigated and determined within the issues made or tendered by the*225 pleadings in the case, and to this extent the judgment is not subject to collateral attack. * ' * * The court or jury trying the cause, however, cannot, in any case, legitimately go outside of the issues under the pleadings, and determine matters not embraced within such issues; and what was not within the latter, although they might have been extended to include it, will not, at least, be presumed to have been conclusively adjudicated.”
Before the rule of former adjudication can be invoked it must appear that the thing demanded was the same. Kitts v. Willson (1895), 140 Ind. 604, 39 N. E. 313. As said by the court in McFadden v. Ross (1886), 108 Ind. 512, 8 N. E. 161, and quoted in Whitney v. Marshall (1894), 138 Ind. 472, 37 N. E. 964: “The proposition, that the judgment of the court having jurisdiction of the parties and the subject-matter, is conclusive, has become a settled maxim of law. This, however, means nothing more than that such judgment is conclusive upon all questions which were, or might have been, litigated and determined within the issues before the court. Neither reason nor authority lends any support to the view, that because suitors have submitted certain designated matters to the consideration of a court, 'the tribunal is thereby authorized to determine any other matter in which the parties may be interested, whether it be involved in the pending litigation or not.”
Green v. Glynn (1880), 71 Ind. 336, was an action by appellant, Green, to have a lien declared on certain real estate by reason of a tax sale. Appellee filed an answer to the effect that their grantors for the purpose of adjudicating appellant’s claim filed a complaint in the Jasper Circuit Court. That upon trial judgment was rendered in favor of their grantors quieting their title and enjoining appellant from setting up any claim
In Columbus, etc., R. Co. v. Watson (1866), 26 Ind. 50, it is said: “In order to be a good answer of former adjudication, it must appear that the matters in controversy in the case at bar either actually were determined in the former action, or that they might have been litigated under the issues.” In Duncan v. Holcomb (1866), 26 Ind. 378, it was held that: “It is only those matters involved in the issues made by the pleadings, that are considered res adjudicatae.”
And in Howe v. Lewis (1889), 121 Ind. 110, 22 N. E. 978, the court, after holding that everything which might have been adjudicated under the issues will be presumed to have been adjudicated, expressly held that: “A party is not bound, when sued, to plead a set-off or counter-claim, but if the issues are so formed as that a counter-claim is, in fact, litigated, the defendant will not be permitted afterward to sue and recover on the same. Such questions as are within the issues, or such as are necessary to a complete determination of the point presented by the complaint, or such as are necessary to a full adjustment of conflicting interests in the property which is the subject of controversy, are settled by the judgment.”
In Stanton v. Kenrick (1893), 135 Ind. 382, 35 N. E. 19, cited by appellee, Kenrick had mortgaged certain lands to secure the payment of certain notes. The holder of the notes, Edward W. Bowen, commenced suit, to recover the amount due on the notes and foreclose the mortgage, making Kenrick and wife and appellant Stanton, with others, defendants. It was alleged in the
After evidence had been introduced Kenrick dismissed his cross-complaint, and judgment was rendered against him, that he alone was indebted for the amount due on the notes and foreclosing the mortgage against all the defendants. Later Kenrick commenced an action against Stanton alleging the execution of the notes and mortgage, that Stanton had purchased the land and assumed the mortgage indebtedness and that Bowen had recovered judgment against him (Kenrick) for the amount of the notes and asking equitable relief against Stanton because of alleged assumption of the debt. To this complaint Stanton filed an answer of former adjudication, in which he set up all the facts relative to the Bowen foreclosure. The trial court sustained a demurrer to this answer. This answer on appeal was held good, the court saying:
"The plea of former adjudication is good, not only as to what was decided, but also as to what might have been decided. The answer shows that the matters in controversy in this case were presented by appellee Kenrick, by cross-complaint, and that issue was joined, in a suit brought by appellee Bowen, against all other parties to this, suit, to foreclose the mortgage given him by appellee Kenrick, the payment of which had been assumed by appellant. The same issues as in this case,*228 and the same parties, were before the court in that case; and the court had jurisdiction of both subject-matter and the parties.”
That case is easily distinguished from the instant case. In that case Bowen in his complaint alleged that Stanton had purchased the land and had assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage debt. This Stanton by his answer denied. The question as to whether Stanton had assumed the mortgage debt was thus put in issue by Bowen’s complaint and was not, and could not be, withdrawn by the dismissal of Kenrick’s cross-complaint. In the absence of Kenrick’s cross-complaint it was the duty of the trial court on the issues presented by the complaint to determine the question as to whether Stanton had assumed the mortgage debt, and to render a personal judgment against him in case the court found against him on the issue thus presented. The assumption of the debt by Stanton being presented by the complaint filed by Bowen, the court was quite right in holding that Kenrick in withdrawing his pleadings could gain no new right as against Stanton. The statement in the case that “The plea of former adjudication is good, not only as to what was decided, but also as to what might have been decided,” in order to be in harmony with the prior and subsequent decisions of the Supreme Court, must be construed as meaning that the plea is good as to what was, or as to what might have been, decided under the issues. Walb v. Eshelman (1911), 176 Ind. 258, 94 N. E. 566; Ryan v. Rhodes (1905), 167 Ind. 121, 76 N. E. 249, 78 N. E. 380; Maynard v. Waidlich (1901), 156 Ind. 562, 570, 60 N. E. 348; Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. State (1898), 153 Ind. 134, 51 N. E. 924; Finley v. Cathcart, supra; Kitts v. Willson, supra; Whitney v. Marshall, supra; Howe v. Lewis, supra; Lieb v. Lichtenstein (1890), 121 Ind. 483, 23 N. E. 284; McFadden v. Ross, supra; Griffin v. Wallace,
In Reichert v. Krass (1895), 13 Ind. App. 348, 40 N. E. 706, 41 N. E. 835, the court after referring to §351 R. S. 1881 (§356, supra) said: “If two stipulations in a contract are entirely independent of each other, an adjudication of the breach of one does not necessarily adjudicate the breach of the other. But if the issues are so formed as that the counterclaim is in fact litigated, the defendant will not be permitted afterwards to sue and recover upon the same. Such questions as are within the issues, or such as are essential to a complete determination of the points presented by the complaint are of necessity adjudicated.” The action there was not a suit on common count to recover money due under a special contract, but was a suit on a contract itself, alleging full performance on the plaintiff’s part. The breach set up in the counterclaim was necessarily involved in the complaint. “The former decree is conclusive only as to the facts directly and distinctly put in issue and the finding of which is necessary to uphold the decree.” Deke v. Huenkemeier (1919), 289 Ill. 148, 124 N. E. 381.
In McDonald v. Christie (1863), 42 Barb. (N. Y.) 36, suit had been instituted on a note given in payment of the purchase price of a horse. The defendant filed a counterclaim setting up fraud on the part of the plaintiff in inducing the defendant to purchase the horse. After the evidence had been introduced the defendant withdrew the counterclaim and judgment was rendered against him for the amount due on the note. Later the defendant filed a complaint against the plaintiff in the former action to recover damages on account of the fraud set up in the counterclaim which he had withdrawn. It was there held that the party had the right
Bacon v. Reichelt (1916), 272 Ill. 90, 11 N. E. 565, Ann. Cas. 1918B 1, cited by appellee is not in point. In that case Bacon, Eeichelt and others had been made defendants in an action to foreclose a mechanic’s lien. After a decree against all the defendants ordering the property sold and after the sale upon the decree, Bacon commenced an action against the holder of the certificate of sale, Eeichelt and others, to enjoin the issuance of a deed to the holder of the certificate of sale, on the theory that the property, although the record title thereto stood in the name of Eeichelt, was not subject to the mechanic’s lien for the improvements which Eeichelt had placed thereon, because of certain equitable claims of Bacon. It was correctly held that the complaint to foreclose the lien required Bacon to set up and litigate his claim to the property and that he could not thereafter in a separate action litigate that question. This case in principle is the same as Green v. Glynn, supra.
In Rothman v. Engel (1917), 97 Ohio St. 77, 119 N. E. 250, Mrs. Engel had been sued by Eothman for the specific performance of a contract for the exchange of lands. Later the form of action was by amendment changed to an action at law to recover $1,000 as liqui
Appellee’s proceeding to foreclose her mortgage was an action in equity, triable by the court; while appellant’s right of action for fraud is an action at law, where either party has the right to trial by jury. This may have been the reason why appellant saw fit to exercise the right given her by said section.
The court clearly erred in overruling appellant’s demurrer to the second paragraph of answer. Judgment reversed, with direction to sustain said demurrer and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.