41 Mich. 316 | Mich. | 1879
Counsel for defendant in error claimed on the argument in this case, and the evidence showed, that the demand which Eussell had against West, and upon which he afterwards recovered the judgment against West offered and allowed as a set-off in this case, was made up of payments made to West, and which should have been allowed by the latter on the trial of the action which he brought against Eussell to recover for services performed, and upon which such payments were made. This being so, then, it is clear that such payments could not be considered as an off-set so as to be separated from or survive as a demand the action brought against Eussell and in which judgment was recovered. They were payments made upon the contract in suit in that case, and did not arise from or grow out of any other transaction. As such proof thereof would have been admissible under the general issue, and had the defendant appeared in that case, and for any reason declined to introduce proof of such payments, but permitted plaintiff to recover the full value of his services without deducting such payments, we think he could not after-wards have maintained any action against West for the amount thereof. The payments made under the agreement must necessarily have been in issue in that case had the defendant appeared and pleaded thereto, and his default in not appearing cannot in this case benefit him. If the claim made had not consisted of payments, but had arisen in some other way, so as to have constituted a proper matter of set-off, then the only effect of defendant’s not appearing, pleading and proving the same, would be that in an action thereafter brought to recover the same he could not recover costs under the statute.
Waiving this, however, and conceding that a judgment was afterwards recovered by Eussell against West for the amount of such payments, could such judgment
Huntoon not being a party to that suit brought by Bussell against West, would not be bound or concluded thereby. As against him it settled nothing; he could controvert the claim or demand upon which it was rendered. The judgment was not, therefore, admissible as an off-set' against him, and the demand upon which it was rendered, was merged therein, and was no longer a subsisting one for any purpose. Bussell’s remedy was upon the judgment against West, and it would seem that he had no other remedy.
The judgment must be reversed with costs and a new trial ordered.