71 W. Va. 402 | W. Va. | 1912
Lead Opinion
A former adjudication set up Rere brings into this record that of Iguano Land & Mining Co. v. Jones et al., heretofore decided by this Court, and reported in 65 W. Va. 59. The opinion in the report of that decision recites at length and minutely .-all of its material facts and the proceedings therein. Reference
Mrs. Mary Patton Hudson, who was a party to that cause, having procured the rights of all persons associated with her in interest, after the decision thereof, dissolving the injunction and dismissing the bill of the Iguano Land & Mining Company, brought this suit for an accounting for timber cut from the land and coal mined therefrom by the Plymouth Coal & Mining Company, lessee of the Iguano Company, during the pendency of the former litigation, making the Iguano Company and the Plymouth Company parties defendant. Demurrers of both defendants were overruled and the cause went to a final hearing on answers, replications and 'proof, resulting in a .decree declaring Mrs. Hudson to be the owner of that portion of the Lockhait 200 acre survey which lies within the boundaries of the 2500 acres claimed by the Iguano Company, and entitled to the rents, issues and profits thereof, enjoining the defendants from the further mining of coal therein, declaring her right to compensation for the coal already mined and timber cut therefrom, referring the cause to a commissioner to take, state and report an account, and consolidating with this cause the old suit of the State of West Virginia v. R. A. Jones et al., in which Mrs. Hudson and her associates attempted to redeem the land from forfeiture, and in which such redemption was temporarily-enjoined in the cause lately decided by this Court, as above stated.
In addition to the former adjudication, the plaintiff in this, bill relies upon a claim of possession of the tract of 85.5 acres, part of the Lockhart 200 acre survey, lying within the 2500-gcre claim of the Iguano Company, at the beginning of the former litigation, and prior to the commencement thereof, as. a basis for two separate and distinct contentions, (1) adjudication in the former suit of possession on her part, and (2) forfeiture of the claim of the Iguano Company to title to the forfeited Lockhart survey by transfer under the constitution.
Her bill alleges her possession on or about the 23rd day of' August, 1899, the date of the award of the injunction against
The answer denied possession in the plaintiff of any kind at any time. Its averments as to possession on the part of the defendant are as follows: “Respondents allege that the said four tracts of land claimed and owned by them as aforesaid consists mainly of wild lands — virgin forests, which are not susceptible of being held in occupancy of any one or in ‘actual, exclusive and continual possession of complainants, as they allege, but respondents allege that they have been in exclusive continuous possession of said tracts ever since the accruing of their title thereto, to which they have never known of any denial or contrary claim until the bringing of this suit. * * * Respond
If the former adjudication against the Iguano Land & Mining Company is conclusive in Mrs. Hudson’s favor, as matter of actual decision or estoppel, what right, title or possession any of the parties previously had is now immaterial. Hence disposition of the claims.and contentions, based on that decision, is logically first in order, and decisive, if the theory of complainant’s bill shall prove to be sound.
The former suit had a twofold object, (1) to have the Middleton patent declared invalid as against the title of the plaintiff and removed as a cloud thereon, and (3) to quiet the plaintiff im its possession by injunction against molestation thereof. All else was subsidiary. The injunction against redemption from forfeiture proceeded upon the invalidity of the Middleton patent and was an attempt to prevent the acquisition of further ground for the claim of title under it.
Regarding the former suit as analogous to our statutory action of ejectment and the decree of dismissal as the equivalent of a judgment for the defendant in such an action, agreeably to observations found in Mills v. Oil Co., 57 W. Va. 255, and Logan v. Ward, 58 W. Va. 366, an inquiry as to the effect of such a judgment upon future litigation between the same parties arises. At common law, a judgment in ejectment was not conclusive, because the parties were fictitious and could be changed at the .will of the real parties, resulting in successive actions. Moreover, it did not reach the question of title but was limited to the right of possession only. In all the states in which the character of the action has been changed by statute so as to permit the real parties in interest to become litigants, judgments in ejectment' are conclusive under the principles of former adjudication, unless the statute, by allowing a new trial as a matter
The doctrine of estoppel by former adjudication has its limitations and certain rules and principles govern the application thereof. The same cause of action between the same parties can be the subject of only one adjudication. It becomes merged in the judgment and no longer has a separate existence. It is extinguished by the judgment and ceases to be. Herman on Est. & Res. Ad. pp. 560, 561. If the plaintiff recovers a judgment, his rights thereafter arise upon it, not the original cause of action. He has remedies for the enforcement of the judgment or decree, but no right to maintain a second suit for the same demand. If he fails and there is a judgment or decree for the defendant, he cannot put the latter to a subsequent trial for that cau&e of action. A judgment for the defendant operates as effectually by way of estoppel as one for the plaintiff, and decrees in courts of equity stand upon the same footing in this respect as judgments of courts of law. Herman on Est. etc., pp. 477, 478.
The principle may be invqked in either of two ways. If the judgment or decree is pleaded in bar of the second action and
When the cause of action in thé second suit is the same as that in the first and the parties are identical, they are concluded, not only as to what was actually decided, but also as to all matters which the plaintiff could have adduced to sustain his claim •and which the defendant could have pleaded or proven in defense of the action. In such cases, there is no inquiry as to what was actually decided, as contradistinguished from things which could have been decided or may have been.
But the principle applies in cases in which the parties to the second suit are the same as those of the first and the cause of action is not the same, so as to prevent a trial in the second suit of a question settled and determined in the first; but the rules in such cases are different. In them, it becomes necessary to ascertain whether the particular question sought to be raised in the second suit was actually decided and determined in the first. This necessitates resort to the particular issues made and findings thereon. Russell v. Place, 94 U. S. 606; Cromwell v. County of Sac., 94 U. S. 351; DeSollar v. Hanscome, 158 U. S. 216; Burn v. Ray, 49 W. Va. 129.
The requisite of certainty in all estoppels necessitates this variation in the application of the principle. Estoppels must be certain to every intent. When the cause of action is the same, such a degree of certainty is shown by the record. It identifies the subject matter, the rights claimed and denied and the parties, placing beyond doubt or question what was claimed on the one side and resisted on the other. It is unnecessary to descend into the particulars of the respective claims and contentions or the minutiae of the proceedings. When the cause of
Drom these conclusions, the inquiry as to whether the cause of action in the second suit is the same as that of the first is obviously important and productive of decisive results. More than one cause of action may grow out of the same contract. So, also, may more than one arise respecting the same piece of property. Hence the identity of the contract or the property is not conclusive. Take, for illustration, an executory contract for the sale of land. Circumstances entirely aside from the validity of the contract may constrain a court of equity to refuse specific performance of it, without declaring it invalid. Thereafter a court of law may entertain an action on it for damages. Here we have the same contract and the same parties, but the former suit would not conclude the latter. The causes of action are not the same. One is the assertion of a claim for damages for a breach of the contract, and the other a claim of right to specific performance. Money may be due on a contract in installments. An action for the first installment may be defeated by proof of payment or sets-off. A second action upon the same contract for another installment would be founded upon a new' cause of action growing out of the same contract. The owner of real estate, being out of possession, may bring a posses-sory action at law to recover it, or, being in possession and having good title, he may sue for a ’trespass thereto, or to remove a cloud. Jn all these cases, the property and parties are the same, but the rights and wrongs giving rise to the action and constituting the cause of action in the several cases are different. To constitute a cause or right of action, two elements must concur,— a duty and a breach of it. There can be no actionable wrong unless there is a dhty resting upon a person, and he breaks it. If there is no duty, though the act of the defendant may work harm or damage, there is no right of action. Clark v. Railroad Co., 39 W. Va. 732. To constitute a cause of action- there must be a right possessed by the plaintiff and an infringement of that right by the defendant. Railroad Co. v. Rice, 36 Kan.
In Cromwell v. County of Sac, 94 U. S. 351, a judgment for the defendant in an action upon certain interest coupons, on failure' of proof of payment of a valuable consideration therefor, was pleaded in bar of a subsequent action, on bonds of the same series and coupons attached thereto. Notwithstanding this close relationship of the subject matter of the two actions, the plaintiff in the second suit was not estopped to show that he had purchased the bonds there involved for value before maturity. The court distinctly held the cause of action in the second suit not to be the same as that of the first. The offered evidence introduced an additional element. It then became a question as to whether there had been a former decision against the1 payment of a valuable consideration for the bonds subsequently sued on. In Rusell v. Place, 94 U. S. 606, a former judgment in an action for infringement of a certain patent was held not to estop the defendant in a suit in equity by the same plaintiff from contesting the validity of the patent, it not appearing by the record of the action nor by extrinsic evidence, upon what claim the former recovery had been had. Here the same patent was involved and the same persons were parties, but one action was for the recovery of damages and the other for an injunction and an accounting for issues and profits. Hence the causes of action were different.' In De Sollar v. Hanscome, 158 U. S. 216, a judgment for the defendant in an action at law was'relied upon as an estoppel in a suit for specific performance on a contract of 'sale of land. In an action at law, damages had been sought for injuries to the market value of the land by the recordation of the alleged contract of sale. The court held that, as the causes of action were different, notwithstanding they had arisen out of the same transaction, the judgment would not estop the plaintiff in the second suit, unless it appeared there had been a decision against the validity of the contract, which was not in any way disclosed. It was not enough merely to show there had been a former adjudication between the parties,
Tested by these principles the cause of action stated in the bill in this suit differs from that on which the former suit was based. This bill claims a right to an accounting for timber and coal taken from the land under a claim of title thereto. The former bill sought the removal of a cloud on the alleged title of the plaintiff therein to the same land, and an injunction against molestation of its tenants in possession thereof. Had the plaintiff in the former suit instituted a new one for the same purposes, it would have sufficed to have pleaded the decree of dissolution and dismissal. An inquiry as to what was actually decided beyond that would have been unnecessary. If, instead of filing another bill of the same kind, it had brought an action of ejectment, the decree of dissolution and dismissal might not have been sufficient, the second cause of action being different, and it may have been necessary, in order to defeat the action, to show an adjudication in the former decree against the claim of title. The cause of action set up in this bill is more clearly and
The final decree in the former suit was pronounced by this Court. Finding the court 'below had rendered an improper decree, it rendered such a decree as should have been originally pronounced. It took up the record and made its own findings, of fact from the pleadings and evidence and applied the law. Hence, to' ascertain what was actually decided, resort must be had to the record of that case and the opinion of this Court, as in other instances in which its decisions are relied upon as matter of adjudication. Western &c. Co. v. Virginia Coal Co., 10 W. Va. 250; Dent v. Pickens, 59 W. Va. 274. The title papers of both parties are fully and accurately described in the opinion in the former decision, and the allegations of the bill and averments of the answer as to possession are set forth in this opinion. The opinion in the former case finds and declares a forfeiture of the Middleton title and the answer of the parties claiming under it admits it. There was a redemption from
What is said in this opinion and in the former one suffices to>
Jurisdiction in equity for the purposes of this bill, injunction against a trespass and an accounting for coal and timber, must rest upon good title in the plaintiff, and it was filed upon the assumption of such title, conclusively shown by the record of the former adjudication. Principles declared in Freer v. Davis, 52 W. Va. 1, deny jurisdiction in equity to prevent trespass by injunction, in the absence of disclosure of good title in the plaintiff, unless it is a necessary auxiliary to a pending action at law, or one about to be instituted, to settle the title. This hill discloses neither of the essential elements of jurisdiction. Read with the record exhibited therewith and as a part thereof, it shows no adjudication of either title or possession in the plaintiff, and there is no allegation of the pendency of an action at law nor of intent to institute such an action. All this arose on the demurrers to the bill, which should have been sustained.
This ground of jurisdiction having failed, nothing remains except a simple charge of trespass and a demand for an accounting in equity for the damages. The right to such an accounting can neither precede nor assume the establishment of the trespass itself. It is a sequence, dependent upon the existence .of the trespass, and an issue of that kind belongs exclusively to courts of law in the absence of an independent equity such as
The alleged right of redemption from the forfeiture to the state is not such a title. It is no title at all. The forfeiture is complete and total, extinguishing equitable as well as legal title. The privilege of redemption, accorded by the statute, is a mere matter of grace on the part of the state, vesting no interest in the land until effected in the manner prescribed by law. State v. King, 64 W. Va. 575, 596; McClure v. Maitland, 24 W. Va. 561; Coal Co. v. Howell, 36 W. Va. 489; Wiant v. Hayes, 38 W. Va. 681; Curran v. Owens, 15 W. Va. 208.
These conclusions render it wholly unnecessary to consider any of the evidence bearing on the question of possession. That alone would not sustain an injunction, nor afford ground for an accounting. Ho complication of accounts is shown, and whether it would afford ground of equity jurisdiction, under such circumstances, if it were, we need not inquire. If there is a right of recovery, the ascertainment of the damages involves no more than the computation of the value of the tonnage of coal mined from a certain number of acres of land and timber cut therefrom.
Dor the reasons stated, so much of the decree complained of as relates to this cause will be reversed, thb injunction dissolved and the bill dismissed, without prejudice, however, to any right the plaintiff may have to prosecute any other suit or proceeding in equity or at law for the vindication of any right she may have.
Reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting) :
I am unable to see why the former decree is not res judicata to prove the superiority of the Hudson title over that of the Iguano Company. The company presented its title as paramount over that of Mrs. Hudson. Mrs. Hudson pleaded her title as defense. The suit was a comparison of titles. The Iguano Company failed because it did not show title. As between these two parties the decree held the company title bad as compared with that of Mrs. Hudson. The company sought to remove the cloud of the Hudson title and failed. It was an ejectment in equity, a test of two adversary titles. Like ejectment the plain
There was a chancery suit brought to annul the Hudson title, and decree of failure .on merits. Does not this fix that the company had no title against the Hudson title ? The titles were both in the record, and necessarily decided upon. Beckwith v. Thompson. 18 W. Va. 103. The decree is conclusive upon all issues. Watson v. Watson, 45 W. Va. 290. See 99 Am. St. R., 233, Hersbach v. Cohen.