71 S.E. 1009 | S.C. | 1911
December 19, 1911. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This appeal presents the following question: Does a judgment, dismissing a complaint on a demurrer, based on the ground, among others, that the complaint alleges facts which affirmatively show that plaintiff is not entitled to recover, bar a second action, between the same parties for the same cause?
In Duke v. Tel. Co.,
But the authorities cited by the Court in that case recognize this distinction: That where the complaint is dismissed, not because of the omission of a material allegation, but because of the affirmation therein of facts which show that plaintiff is not entitled to recover, a second action is barred, because the first was necessarily a decision upon the merits. In Gould v. Evansville etc. R. Co.,
Under these authorities, and especially Duke v. Tel. Co., in so far as the demurrer in the first action was based on grounds of insufficiency of allegation in the complaint, the judgment would not be a bar to this action, in which the deficiency is fully supplied. But if it was based also upon the ground that the complaint showed affirmatively that plaintiff was not entitled to recover, then the judgment is a bar to this action. It is not necessary for us to consider the allegations of the complaint in the former case to ascertain what is and what is not therein alleged. The order of the Court, in that case, sustaining the demurrer on the grounds upon which it was based, precludes any such inquiry. All parties, including this Court, are bound by the construction put upon the complaint by the Court in that case. We are also bound by the conclusion of the Circuit Court, in this case, that the order in the former case sustained all the grounds of demurrer; because there is no appeal from that conclusion. Therefore, it is only necessary to look to the grounds of demurrer in the former case to see if any one of them is based upon the ground that the complaint alleges facts which show that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover; for if there is one such ground, it is enough to show that the merits of the former case were considered and decided.
The third ground of demurrer was as follows: "The entire complaint shows that the plaintiff's intestate, while a licensee or a trespasser, was injured by a mere accident as a result of the breaking of the machinery of the defendant, while used in the ordinary course of its business, and which could not have been guarded against." Now, clearly, if the complaint *233 shows what is stated in this ground of demurrer, and that it does cannot now be questioned, it shows affirmatively that plaintiff was not entitled to recover, for the law does not impose liability for a mere accident, which could not have been guarded against. That plaintiff's intestate lost his life as the result of such an accident has been conclusively adjudicated. Therefore, the Court erred in not holding such adjudication to be a bar to this action. Every litigant is entitled to have the merits of his case tried once, but he is entitled to only one such trial.
It must not be inferred that such an allegation is not subject to amendment. Hall v. Woodward,
The same question is involved and the same judgment will be entered in the case of A.O. Hodge, as administrator of the estate of Howard M. Hodge, against the same defendant.
Reversed.
Petition for rehearing refused by formal order filed December 19, 1911.