30 Minn. 64 | Minn. | 1882
The question presented by this case for consideration is this: Does the fact that a vendor of goods, in ignorance of fraud on the part of his vendee sufficient to authorize a rescission of a sale, has obtained judgment against his vendee for the purchase price of the goods, amount to an affirmance or ratification of the contract of sale, so as to preclude him from subsequently rescinding, upon discovery of the frauds It is proper to remark that the court below, in deciding this question in the affirmative, fortifies his decision by the suggestion that, although the evidence tended to show that the attorneys, on whose motion the judgments referred to in this case were entered, had no notice of the fraud, yet it did not appear that their clients, the vendors, were at the time in ignorance of the facts. We do not think that the language of the bill of exceptions, when considered in connection with the pleadings, will sustain this suggestion. The complaint alleges that the vendors did not discover the fraud until on or about July 10th, (the judgments by confession w'ere obtained by the attorneys July 2d,) and that, úpon discovery of the fraud, they rescinded the contracts of sale, and that after such discovery they have done nothing to affirm the sales. The bill of exceptions shows that the plaintiffs introduced evidence tending to prove all the issues in the action, and particularly evidence tending to show a rescission of each and every of the sales of goods
But the point made in this suggestion was clearly not the ground upon which the learned court rested his decision. The real ground was the supposed conclusiveness of the judgment j)er se as res adjudi-caba, or, to put it in the words of the court himself, “a judgment, regularly entered, settles the ultimate rights of the parties, and, being a security of a higher nature than other contracts, merges all claims of the parties respecting the matters on which it rests,” and "if the vendors’ rights to rescind were ended by their entries of judgment, they could not be revived by the opening or setting aside of the judgments on their applications.”
With all due deference to thesé views of the very able judge who decided this case, we think that his conclusions rest upon a misapplication of the doctrine of the conclusive effects of judgments as res adjudicaba. Of course, it is elementary that an issue once determined in a court of competent jurisdiction is an effectual bar to any further litigation of the same matter by parties and privies, and that a judgment is conclusive upon the parties thereto in respect to the grounds covered by it, and the law and facts necessary to uphold it. But we fail to see how the right of a vendor to rescind a sale is in issue or determined in an action brought to recover the purchase price of the goods sold, or how an attempted rescission after judgment in such a case is any collateral attack upon the eonclusiveness of such judgment as to any matters determined by it. There never ■has been a judgment as to whether the goods were obtained by the vendee by fraud, such as would give the vendor the right to rescind. The judgment for the purchase price determines that there was a sale in fact, and as to that it is, of course, conclusive. But a rescission of the sale controverts none of the facts in issue in an action for the purchase-money, but, in fact, admits them. A rescission proceeds upon the theory that there has been a sale, but voidable at the
Any act of ratification of the contract, after knowledge of the facts authorizing a rescission, amounts to an affirmance and terminates the right to rescind; but, if done before such knowledge, it will have no such effect. . And, in our opinion, the act of obtaining judgment against the vendee for the purchase price stands in that respect on the same footing as any other act recognizing the existence of the contract of sale, and must be governed by the same rules. The fact that the original claim against the vendee for the price of the goods is extinguished by the judgment, is not material. The case is not different in that regard from what it would have been if the vendor had taken from the vendee his own note, or the note of a third party, in payment of the original claim.
The point made by respondent, that a notice of rescission and a demand for the goods could not be made until after these judgments were vacated and annulled, is founded upon the same mistaken theory as to the eonclusiveness of the judgments to which we have already referred. See Lloyd v. Brewster, 4 Paige, 537.
In our judgment, therefore, the court below erred in excluding the evidence tending to show that these judgments were, on motion of the vendors, after discovery of the fraud, vacated and set aside, and in •instructing the jury that as to the plaintiffs’ first, fourth, eighth, and twelfth causes of action they could not recover. This should have
Order denying a new trial reversed, and a new trial granted as to the first, fourth, eighth, and twelfth causes of action set up in the complaint.
Gilfillan, C. J., because of illness, took no part in this case.