33 Mo. App. 205 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant Greene contracted with the plaintiff to erect for him a two-story factory building according t o certain specifications, and'gave bond for the faithful performance of the contract with his co-defendants as
This action is brought on the bond given by Greene. The plaintiff claims that he was compelled to pay $1,080.52 on a mechanic’s lien judgment and one hundred dollars for attorney’s fees in defending against the lien. Also that he was compel led to pay $228.02 for completing the roof, and one hundred and thirty-five dollars- for painting the outside of the roof, items of expense caused by non-completion of the contract in conformity with the specifications. That the whole amount thus paid by him was $422.54 in excess of money due Greene under the contract, and that by the failure on part of Greene to complete said contract he incurred said additional expenses, wherefore he sues on the bond.
The answer denies that there was any failure on part of Greene to perform the contract so far as protecting the plaintiff ’ s property against liens is concerned; admits the bringing of the lien suit, but claims that the same was defended by Greene at plaintiff’s request, and avers that in said suit the question as to whether Greene did complete the contract in conformity with the specifications was fully adjudicated, whereby that question became res judicata. The answer further denies that the one hundred dollars counsel fees paid by plaintiff were necessarily paid by plaintiff in defending against any lien claim, and states there is still a balance of sixty dollars due the defendant Greene by the terms of the
The cause was tried by the court without the intervention of a jury, and the parties adduced evidence tending to show the following facts: The plaintiff let the contract to Greene for the entire building under certain specifications, and Greene sub-let the contract for the corrugated iron roofing which was to be of a certain make under the identical specifications to Mesker. When the building was completed, the plaintiff claimed that the ironroofing was not done according to specifications. He wrote to the defendant Greene suggesting to him not to settle with Mesker until the roof was inspected by an expert, and he, plaintiff, was satisfied that it had been put up in accordance with the specifications. The defendant Greene and Mesker thereupon called on plaintiff who refused to pay the balance of about $1,121, still in his hands, and Mesker brought suit for $1,664, which he claimed was due him under his contract with Greene, against Greene as contractor and Hoyt as owner. This claim, however, he reduced to $1,097 before the trial, and recovered judgment thereon for$1,082.50, which judgment the plaintiff subsequently paid.
Upon the trial of the present action the plaintiff gave evidence tending to show that the roof was not constructed in conformity with the specifications and that he paid the amounts as claimed in his petition to have it thus completed ; also that he paid to his counsel in the Mesker lien suit one hundred dollars, which was a reasonable fee. The defendant gave evidence tending to show that the roof was completed according to specifications, that he, Greene, defended the lien suit of Mesker at plaintiff’s request, and employed and paid his own counsel; that the plaintiff himself caused the witnesses to be subpoenaed in the Mesker suit, who were to prove that the roof had not been properly constructed. That
This being the evidence the plaintiff requested the court to declare that under the pleadings and evidence the plea of res adjudícala, in defendant’s answer cannot be sustained.' This instruction the court refused.
The defendant requested the court to declare, in substance, that if it found that the refusal to pay the sub-contractor on account of which the lien proceeding was instituted was at the instance or by advice of plaintiff the owner, and that the owner had in his hand at beginning of such suit moneys belonging or coming to the the contractor enough or more than sufficient to pay the judgment recovered therein, and that Greene employed and paid his own counsel in' said suit, then within the meaning of the bond there was no breach thereof or damage sustained thereby, notwithstanding that plaintiff employed and paid counsel in defense of said suit. This instruction was also refused.
The court thereupon rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff for $109.65 on the theory that plaintiff was not entitled to recover amounts paid by him as claimed above the contract price for completion of the roof, but was entitled to recover counsel fees paid by him in the said lien suit with interest. Both parties appeal.
It is stated as a general rule in Freeman on Judgments, section 158, that “parties to a judgment are not bound by it in a subsequent controversy between each other, unless they are adversary parties in the original action.” As a general rule this is correct, and as such has been repeatedly approved by our own supreme court. Miller v. Gillespie, 59 Mo. 220 ; McMahan v. Geiger, 73 Mo. 145. The sole reason of the rule, however, is that unless they were adversary parties, the identical question which arises on the second action was not likely to have' been litigated in the former action, as was the
Where, however, it conclusively appears that the identical question was litigated, and that the party against whom the former adjudication is invoked did litigate it, and had a right to control the proceedings, or where the litigation was carried on in his interest by one primarily liable, and he had notice and a right to control the proceedings, the reason of the rule falls away, and the rule itself has no application. Cessante ralione cessat lex. In Strong v. Phoenix Ins. Co., 62 Mo. 299 ; Wood v. Unset, 63 Mo. 193; Missouri Pacific Ry. Co. v. Levy, 17 Mo. App. 508, and Landis v. Hamilton, 77 Mo. 565, the parties against whom the former adjudication was invoked were not even parties in the former proceeding, nor privies in a strict semse of the term, yet they were held to be conclusively bound by it on the ground that they participated in a litigation with a right to control the proceedings, and this litigation was carried on in their interest, or for their ultimate benefit.
One of the main reasons for giving effect to former judgments in subsequent litigations touching the same subject-matter, is that the state is concerned in the proposition that the identical question should not be litigated more than once. Here the question in the Mesker suit was identical with the one arising in the present action. There can be no controversy on the evidence but that the roof and the specifications are the same. There is no pretense that Mesker’s contract with Greene was different, so far as the construction of the roof is concerned, from Greene’s contract with plaintiff. Mesker merely stepped into the shoes of Greene. The contest was carried on by Hoyt’s “acquiescence and for his benefit and protection, and if good faith was
The statute (section 3191) makes it the duty of the contractor to defend an action brought by the sub-contractor, and authorizes the owner, in case the sub-contractor’s lien claim passes into judgment, to deduct the amount of the judgment from the amount due the contractor. It establishes a privity by representation between the contractor and owner, and makes the judgment obtained by the sub-contractor conclusive against the contractor, not only in favor of the sub-contractor, who was an adversary party, but also as against the owner, who was his co-defendant. As estoppels are-in their nature mutual, it necessarily follows that the owner is likewise precluded from questioning the validity of the sub-contractor’s judgment, when he had full opportunity to defend, and did in fact defend against the claim, in hnj subsequent action between the contractor and himself.
It results from these views of the law that the-instruction asked by the plaintiff, to the effect that the record in the Mesker suit was not • evidence of res judicata, was properly refused, and that there is no-merit in plaintiff’s appeal.
The bond binds the defendant to hold the plaintiff' harmless and indemnified from and against all and every claim, demand, judgments, liens and mechanic’s, liens, costs and fees of every description incurred in a suit or otherwise that may be had against him or against, the buildings to be erected.” The defendant requested the court to declare the law. that under the evidence there was no breach of that part of the bond. This the court refused, and by its judgment declared the-defendant liable to pay the one hundred dollars counsel fees paid by plaintiff in the Mesker suit. Under the-terms of the bond the defendants were undoubtedly
“If the jury find from the evidence that when the house in controversy was delivered up to plaintiff, the plaintiff was owing defendant Craig any sum for the building thereof, and that Craig directed the plaintiff or her agent to apply said moneys so due, in the payment of any specific liens on said house, and that plaintiff failed to so apply said moneys, but contested said liens, then the court declares that with respect to said liens so contested by plaintiff, the plaintiff is not' entitled to recover anything by way of costs and attorney’ s fees incurred in defending such liens which he was so directed by defendants to pay.”
This instruction the court gave, and this court held there was no error in the instruction given. It is true that that holding was upon the defendant’s appeal, and hence the case is not an authority in defendants’ favor
The judgment is reversed and judgment entered in this court in favor of defendants.