266 N.W. 256 | S.D. | 1936
This action was commenced by plaintiff as special administrator and sole beneficiary seeking to recover damages for the alleged wrongful death of his wife. The defendant Willers Truck Service, Inc., answered by denying any negligence and further pleaded a former adjudication of the issue of negligence. The substance of this defense is that plaintiff commenced an action in the circuit court of Lincoln county, involving the identical accident, to recover for personal injuries sustained by him; that in said action the Willers Truck Service, Inc., alleged that the driver of its truck was not negligent and that the collision resulted solely from the negligence of William Keith who was then and there driving the car in which plaintiff and decedent were riding; that the court submitted to the jury in the trial of that action the question of whether or not the defendant Willers Truck Service, Inc., was negligent and the jury thereafter returned a general verdict in favor of said defendant determining thereby that defendant company was not negligent and did not cause or contribute to the injuries received by plaintiff; and that the judgment entered in said action is a full and complete adjudication of the issue of negligence presented in the instant case. Demurrer to this defense was overruled, and plaintiff appeals to this court.
In Cromwell v. County of Sac,
[1, 3] It thus appears that while a second and different cause of action may be defeated by a former judgment because it conclusively adjudicates some essential fact or issue involved in the latter, a judgment can never operate as a bar to a different cause of action. The general principles, applied in numerous decisions, may be stated as follows: First, a final judgment or decree of a court of competent jurisdiction upon the merits is a bar to any future action between the same parties or their privies upon the same cause of action so long as it remains unreversed; and, second, a point which was actually and directly in issue in a former action and was there judicially passed upon and determined by a domestic court of competent jurisdiction cannot be drawn in question in any future action between the same parties or their privies whether the cause of action in the two actions be identical or different. Black on Judgments (2d Ed.) vol. 2, § 504. Under the first rule the res which is judicata is the cause of action. Under the second, the res which may be judicata is the particular issue or fact common to both actions.
In the former action plaintiff was a party in his own right. The death of Esther Keith as the result of the alleged negligence of the defendants gave rise to a cause of action to be enforced in the name of her personal representative. Sections 2929-2931, Rev. Code 1919; Rowe v. Richards,
[4] It is settled law that a former judgment does not have the effect of res judicata and is not conclusive of a material fact therein adjudicated unless the second action is not only between the same parties, but also between them in the same capacity or character. 15 R.C.L. 1012, and cases cited; Sonnenberg v. Steinbach,
[5] This court in Carlock v. Loyd,
"The courts look beyond the nominal parties, and treat all those whose interests are involved in the litigation and who conduct and control the action or defense as real parties, and hold them concluded by any judgment which may be rendered, as, for example, those who employ counsel in the case, assume the active management of the proceeding or defense, or who pay the costs and do such other things as are generally done by parties. In other words, by participating in the proceedings one is estopped by the judgment as to any questions actually litigated and decided therein."
Appellant urges that there is a want of identity of parties and in support of this contention cites and relies upon the cases of McCarthy v. Wm. H. Wood Lumber Co.,
"In the Iowa proceeding, the widow of the deceased was a party in her own right and clearly was bound by the judgment. The action in Minnesota, however, was brought by the administrator, and the state Supreme Court, on the authority of Dennison v. Payne, supra [(C.C.A.) 293 F. 333], pages 342, 343, held that there was a want of identity of parties. The decision in the Dennison Case rests entirely on Troxell v. Delaware, L. W.R. Co.,
The Supreme Court of the United States in the earlier case of Troxell v. Delaware, L. W.R. Co.,
"It remains only to consider the bearing of the Troxell Case, supra, upon this point. * * * It was held, following the general rule, that, the cause of action in the two cases being different and the issue determined in the first not being involved in the second, there was no estoppel. This was decisive of the case, but the court proceeded to say that, furthermore, there was not an identity of parties in the two actions. Two former decisions of this court are cited. Brown v. Fletcher's Estate,
See, also, In re Parks' Estate,
If the statements made in the answer are true as the demurrer admits, we conclude that the former adjudication upon the issue of negligence is conclusive.
The order appealed from is affirmed.
All the Judges concur.