15 Wash. 352 | Wash. | 1896
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action brought to subrogate the respondents to the rights of the mortgagees of a certain mortgage. The defendants, appellants here, and others of the Austin family, the parties of the second part and who were owners of the timber in question, entered into a contract with John K. Rae and P. M. Isensee, whereby the parties of the first part granted to the parties of the second part the right, privilege and authority to at all times, for a period of
The mortgage to the trust company was paid by Rae and Isensee as per contract agreement. Rae after-wards conveyed his interest in the contract to Lena Isensee. Isensee afterwards became involved, and on September 7, 1893, Isensee and wife conveyed to John H. Stenger t-heir interest in the contract and in all the
Many errors are assigned by the appellants, viz.: 1st, defect of parties defendant; 2d, insufficient proofs to establish the fact of over-payment; 3d, the termination by a former decree of any rights respondents may. have had under the contract; 4th, that Isensee could not be subrogated to the benefits of the mortgage by him paid, for the reason that by the contract he assumed the payment of the mortgage in question and made it his own obligation, and made the payment by reason of his contractual obligation so to do from considerations moving to himself.
From the view we take' of the last two propositions-it will not be necessary to discuss the first two. We think the authorities universally sustain the proposition that a person cannot be subrogated when he pays-an incumbrance which he has agreed to pay. In fact this proposition of law is not very stoutly disputed, if disputed at all, by the respondents; but they claim that the court found that the mortgage was paid at the-request of Thomas C. Austin. This, indeed, is the finding of the court, but this finding was excepted to--, and we are satisfied that the finding is unfounded. The parties of the second part had agreed to pay this mortgage. It was one of the affirmative conditions of their contract, and we are satisfied from the proof that that they made the payment by reason of their contractual liability and for no other reason.
But, however this may be, we think the third, objection raised by the appellants is absolutely conclusive of this case, viz., that the former decree terminated the rights of the parties to this contract. The
“ It is a general rule that a valid judgment for the plaintiff definitely and finally negatives every defense that might and should have been raised against the action; and this is true, not only with respect to further or supplementary proceedings in the same cause, but for the purposes of every subsequent suit between the same parties, whether founded upon the same or a different cause of action. A party cannot re-litigate matters which he might have interposed, but failed to do in á prior action between the same parties or their privies in reference to the same subject matter.”
This rule has become firmly established in the United States, and applying it to this case, if the parties of the second part to this contract had a right to plead over-payment by reason of their subrogation to the rights of the trust company, that right existed in the action between the appellants and Stenger and should have been there adjudicated. In that suit the contract was canceled. If there was any reason why the contract should not be canceled and if the defense urged here could be substantiated, it should not have been canceled, and that defense should have been urged in the former trial, and, not having been urged, it is lost.
But it is argued by the respondents that, while the rule above announced may be correct, it has no application to this case for the reason that the rule is coupled with a provision that the parties to the former action must be the same parties to this action. They are substantially the same parties. The meaning of the law is that they shall be the same parties in interest, not necessarily the same parties in name. In this case the parties in interest were the parties of the first part to the contract and the parties of the second
The case of Wilkes v. Davies, 8 Wash. 112 (35 Pac. 611), lays down a rule on the subject of res adjudicata, which would be decisive of this case against respondents’ contention. In fact it is not necessary to go nearly so far in this case to hold the former action an estoppel or bar to the present one as the court went in that case.
The judgment will therefore be reversed and the cause dismissed.
Hoyt, C. J., and Scott and Anders, JJ., concur.