53 S.E. 134 | N.C. | 1906
This cause was before us, on appeal by both parties, at February Term, 1904 (
The test as to the bar of a previous action, is not whether the damages sought to be recovered are different, but whether the cause of action, or the decisive question involved is the same. Gibbs v. Cruikshanks, L. R., 8, C. P., 460. A judicial determination of the issues in one action is a bar to a subsequent one between the same parties having substantially the same object in view, although the form of the latter and the precise relief sought is different from the former. Edwards v. Baker,
We do not construe the defendant's or the inspector's reports of timber cut as do the plaintiff's counsel, but even if the defendant had reported the timber as having been cut on the land described in the complaint, the law will not permit that fact, nor the terms of the orders made in the cause, to outweigh the deliberate verdict of a jury upon that question, followed, as it was, by a judgment of the court thereon. Fanshaw v.Fanshaw,
The motion of the plaintiff is for the assessment of damages accrued since the action was commenced, that is, of course, for damages which have accrued in like manner as those which were alleged to have been sustained prior to the date of the summons. To allow this, would be to give the plaintiff two chances to establish its case and to recover, not as much, it is true, as it would have done if it had succeeded instead of failed in showing the justice of its claim, but still something of the same kind and depending upon the same asserted right or title which the jury had found did not in fact exist. We hold that the effect of the former decision is to bar the plaintiff's recovery of damages.
No Error.
Cited: McArthur v. Griffith,
(444)