15 S.W.2d 239 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1929
Reversing.
George Hogg and Stephen Caudill were partners in the business of cutting, sawing and marketing certain timber, which they owned jointly, on land in Letcher county. The firm name was Hogg Caudill. At the same time Stephen Caudill was operating a steam sawmill near the timber on Little Cowan creek, and Hiram Johnson was one of his employees. During the course of his employment Johnson was injured, and, in settlement of his claim for damages, Caudill entered into a written contract with him by which he undertook to bind the partnership of Hogg Caudill to pay his doctor's bills and his wages during the time he was unable to work, provided he would stay on the job and render such services as he could during that time. The contract further provided that Hogg and Caudill should furnish Johnson work so long as the job lasted and he continued faithful on the job. Thereafter Johnson brought suit in the Letcher circuit court against Hogg Caudill as partners to recover on the contract. Besides interposing defenses not here material, each of the defendants pleaded that Hogg had nothing whatever to do with the job of work in which Johnson was injured, and that, if there was any responsibility at all, it rested on Caudill. A trial before a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment against both Hogg and Caudill for the sum of $450, with interest and costs. No appeal was prosecuted from the judgment. Before any execution issued, Caudill paid one-half of the principal of the judgment. An execution then issued for the balance, including interest and costs, and was levied on the property of Hogg. To prevent a sale of the property *398 Hogg paid off the execution. The amount paid was $276.15.
Charging, in substance, that Johnson was not an employee of the partnership, but worked for Caudill alone, and that Caudill was without authority to bind the partnership by the settlement contract which he made with Johnson, Hogg brought this suit against Caudill to recover the amount paid by him on the ground that he had paid Caudill's debt. Caudill defended on the ground that the judgment in the suit of Johnson v. Hogg Caudill was a bar to Hogg's recovery, and also asserted a counterclaim for teamwork performed for the partnership business. On final hearing, the chancellor sustained the plea of res judicata, and dismissed the petition. He also dismissed the counterclaim on the ground that the matters involved therein had been settled by the parties. From that portion of the judgment dismissing the petition Hogg has prayed an appeal.
The rule that a prior judgment operates as an estoppel does not apply where the parties in the second action were not adversary parties in the first action. Hargis v. Hargis,
Wherefore the appeal is granted, and the judgment is reversed and cause remanded for a new trial consistent with this opinion.