89 So. 660 | Ala. | 1921
Lead Opinion
It is a familiar principle of law that where there has been a judgment against one of two joint tort-feasors, followed by an acceptance of satisfaction of such judgment by the plaintiff, the judgment and satisfaction may be successfully pleaded by the other joint tort-feasor to the further maintenance of the suit by the same plaintiff involving the same cause of action. This rule also obtains notwithstanding there was no ligament of a common purpose binding the acts of the two if their acts of negligence united in causing the single injury to the plaintiff.
"A rational rule deduced from the authorities * * * would seem to be that, 'Where one has received an injury at the hands of two or more persons acting in concert, or acting independently of each other, if their acts unite in causing a single injury, all of the wrong-doers are liable for damages occasioned by the injury.' It is also manifest that this single injury, in itself or of itself, indivisibly constitutes an indivisible cause of action. This is true, notwithstanding the fact that the party injured could maintain separate suits on this cause of action against the tort-feasors at the same time, and could have sued them jointly, and the mere pendency of suit or judgment without satisfaction could not be set up in defense by either tort-feasor. * * * But when she successfully prosecuted her single cause of action against one of the tort-feasors, and received satisfaction in full of the judgment, that was satisfaction for the entire injury, for the single cause of action, and after satisfaction, although it moved from only one of the tort-feasors no foundation remained for a suit against any one. Her cause of action was extinguished." McCoy v. L. N. R. R.,
See, also, Cooley on Torts p. 247, Matthews v. Delaware Co.,
"The conclusive presumption is that the full damages were awarded the plaintiff in the judgment that was satisfied. The cause of action being extinguished by the acceptance of satisfaction by the plaintiff, there is nothing to support the action against the defendant, even for the recovery of nominal damages." McCoy's Case, supra.
We think that the special pleas of the defendant bring this case under the influence of the rule above declared, for whether the conduct of the Cannons as set out in the first suit and that of the defendants in the present one was or was not joint or in concert, each was charged with causing or producing the same result, to wit, the death of the plaintiff's minor son. The pleas sufficiently describe and identify the suit and judgment against the Cannons and aver that the judgment had been paid and satisfied as well as the cost. Perkins v. Moore,
While the defendants' special pleas A and B contained unnecessary repetitions and could have been shorter, they substantially and sufficiently set up facts which, if proved, would be a legal bar to the plaintiff's recovery in the present action, and said pleas were not therefore subject to any of the grounds of demurrer interposed to same, and which were erroneously sustained by the trial court. True, the pleader, while sufficiently describing and designating the former suit and judgment, made a futile attempt to make the same a part of the special pleas in the present case, but such abortive attempt merely made the same surplusage, and which did not therefore effect the pleas which were otherwise good and sufficient. Of course, had the pleas been insufficient without incorporating therein the pleading and judgment in the former suit, the omission *219
of same should be raised by demurrer, but, as said pleas did not have to set out the judgment or pleading in the former suit in hæc verba, and sufficiently informed the plaintiff of the nature and character of the former suit and the result of same, the improper method of adopting the same as a part of the pleas was of no importance, was immaterial, and was therefore mere surplusage, and which should have been eliminated, if at all, by a motion to strike instead of demurrer. Davis v. L.
N. R. R.,
Moreover, apart from the improper elimination of the defendants' special pleas, the plaintiff proved when a witness without objection or a limitation at the time, the judgment against the Cannons for the same cause of action, the satisfaction of same, and the payment of cost, and this should operate as a waiver of the defendants' failure to plead the same specially. Flandreau v. Downey,
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
McCLELLAN, SOMERVILLE, and THOMAS, JJ., concur.
Addendum
Counsel for appellee seem to base their complaint against the foregoing opinion upon the grounds that it adheres to and quotes rather copiously from the McCoy Case, supra, and because of the fact that it does not allude to or discuss the case of Home Telephone Co. v. Fields,
As to the failure to notice or comment upon the Fields and other cases cited, we meant no disrespect to the able counsel for the appellee, whose briefs are usually helpful and accurate, but felt that in this instance these cases were so inapt and foreign to the present case that an attempted differentiation was needless. The McCoy Case was not only in existence when the Fields Case and other cited by counsel for the appellee were decided, but the question there decided was in line with other cases there cited, and neither the court in the Fields Case nor the eminent counsel in same deemed said McCoy Case as of such similarity as to be noticed either in the opinion or briefs. They deal with entirely different questions, one with ordinary releases or receipts and the effect to be given same under the statute, and the other with judgments and the legal effect of the satisfaction of same upon other actions against joint tort-feasors, a question to which the statute as to releases and receipts does not apply.