151 N.W. 282 | S.D. | 1915
In the year 1910, the Lamro Townsite Com
Upon the trial of this cause, plaintiff offered in evidence the umrrons, proof óf service thereof, pleadings, stipulation of facts, findings of fact, and judgment of the trial court in the equity case. Defendant sought to be relieved from the stipulation of ::cts entered into in the equity .case, but this relief was denied. Plaintiff then offeree! in evidence the notice of appeal and other
Just what was determined by this court as a basis for such affirmance? Under the pleadings there was presented, both in the trial court and in this court, two questions of law: (i)
“This disposes of all the equitable features of the case, and dispenses with the necessity of deciding whether the checks are negotiable or nonnegotiable. The appellant has shown no right to have the transfer of the checks enjoined, even though they were negotiable.”
It is therefore clear that this court disposed of the appeal by sustaining the action of the circuit court in dismissing the cause “upon the merits.” Having thus disposed of the appeal, the further statement made by this court — to the effect that no reason appeared why any party to such proceeding had not a complete and adequate remedy at law- — was entirely superfluous', because, in the -light of what this court had already held therein, it became absolutely immaterial, for the purposes of such decision, whether or not either party had any remedy at -law.
Quite a different situation would now present itself if, in the equity case, the trial co-urt, after making its findings, had held that the plaintiff therein had an adequate remedy at law and l:a-d dismissed the complaint for that reason alone, and then this court had sustained the action of the trial court basing our decision solely upon -the same ground. Then it might, with good show of reason, be urged, as was held in Barnett v. Smart, 158 Mo. 167, 59 S. W. 235:
“To hold that a court is competent to try the issues of fact and bind the parties by its findings, but m-ust then send them to another tribunal for an appropriate judgment would be to -put the court in a strange position, and leave the party against whom the finding was in an unfortunate condition, deprived of his right of*169 trial by jury and deprived of his right of appeal, because, with the facts found against him if the decree should be in his favor, he cannot appeal from, those findings, and he must therefore go to the law court, not for trial, hut to submit to the judgment already forecast. The more reasonable and just rule is that if the court had not jurisdiction to .pronounce judgment on the facts found, its findings are not adjudications of the facts. We do not say that the court in such a case may not have had jurisdiction to try the issues of fact, because it may be that its jurisdiction to render final judgment would depend on its finding of the facts, but we do say that when the result is that the equity court is1 without authority to give effect in its judgment to the facts found, and for that reason must send the parties to a law court 'for the adjustment of their rights, the equity court cannot forestall the jurisdiction of that law court in the matter of its trial of the facts.”
See, also, Keokuk & N. W. Ry. Co. v. Donnell et al., 77 Iowa, 221, 42 N. W. 176. But, when this court affirmed the trial court in the equity, case, basing its affirmance upon the ground that the facts found established no' equitable ground for relief, it was far different from remanding the parties to an action at law upon the ground that the trial court had no jurisdiction to grant equitable relief — even though equities were .proven — because plaintiff had an adequate remedy at law. The suggestion by this court, in its opinion in the equity case, that it did not appear that the parties did not have adequate remedies at law, was not only unnecessary, but was unfortunate in that it has been taken by appellant as the basis for a claim of error in this case. In this respect this case is quite similar to that of Martin v. Evans, 85_ Md. 9, 36 Atl. 258, 36 L. R. A. 218, 60 Am. St. Rep. 292, wherein the court considered the effect as res judicata of a judgment of dismissal in an equity case upon the issues in a law case thereafter brought, when, -in the equity case, the court, after reaching a conclusion upon the merits, incidentally observed later on in its opinion:
“I have thus * * * * gone into the merits and would dismiss the bill without regard to technical objections. But it seems to me to be perfectly clear that this proceeding could not be sustained at any rate, as at best it would be simply a conver*170 sion of the .plaintiff’s property * * * for which she had an ample remedy at law.”
In discussing the effect of such inadvertent statement, the court said':
“These few sentences are now seized, by the plaintiff and are relied on by her to show that the equity court dismissed the bill for the want of jurisdiction to entertain it; and the inquiry comes to this: Do these extracts from the opinion demonstrate, or can they be resorted to for the purpose of showing, that the bill in equity was dismissed, not because there was no. decision on the merits, but because the court was without authority to pass upon the merits at all? The merits certainly were considered, discussed, and decided. The opinion, if it can be consulted to measure the scope of the final order, leaves no room to doubt this. If .the merits -had in reality nothing to do with the ultimate conclusion reached in- the equity case, it is difficult to understand why they were considered or decided at all. And if, in fact, the bill was dismissed solely for the want of jurisdiction in the court to grant the relief asked, and not because the evidence did not justify the granting of the relief, there would have been no occasion to advert to the merits.”
Appellant cites the case of Cramer v. Moore, 36 Ohio St. 347, which case is cited in Black on Judgments as supporting the proposition stated in section 518 of that work. After a careful analysis of the opinion in that case, we are convinced that the court rendering same failed to properly distinguish 'between the effect of a decree in equity as a bar to- an action at law, and the conclusive force as evidence, in a suit at law, of a finding made by a court in an action in equity. An examination of the opinion in Cramer v. Moore reveals that the authorities cited, as quoted from in such opinion, merely hold that a dhsmissai of a .bill in equity is no bar to an action at law based upon the same cmtse of action. With this proposition we have on quarrel; but this is far different from a holding that a finding of a court in any action, whether at law or equity, which said finding stands as one of the supports upon which rests the judgment of the court, is not conclusive as between the same parties when offered, not as a bar to the bringing of a later action, but, upon the trial of such later action, as evidence to prove the fact found in such
We think the correct rule is that announced in 23 Cyc. 1227:
“Findings of fact made by the court, * * * when made the basis of a judgment or decree, are conclusive on the parties in subsequent litigation.”
The reasons for this are thus stated in Burlen v. Shannon, 99 Mass. 200, 96 Am. Dec. 733:
“When a fact has been once determined in the course of a judicial proceeding, and a final judgment, has been rendered in accordance therewith, it cannot be again litigated between the same parties without virtually impeaching the correctness of the former decision, which from motives of- public policy the law does not permit to be done. The estoppel is not confined to the judgment, but extends to all facts involved in it as necessary steps or the ground-work upon which it must have been founded. It is allowable to reason back from a judgment to the basis on which it stands, ‘upon the obvious principle that, where a conclusion is indisputable and could ha-ve been drawn only from certain premises, the premises are equally indisputable with the conclusion.’ But such an inference must be inevitable, or it cannot be drawn. These we understand to be the limitations of the rule, according to all the well-considered authorities, ancient and modern.”
It follows, from what we have said above, that the trial court was not in error in excluding evidence tending to prove facts inconsistent with' those findings which bore upon the ques-
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.