Upon the trial of this action decision was reserved on defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint.
Concededly the plaintiff, in 1937, obtained a judgment by default against the defendant J. & B. Friedman, Inc., in the sum of $26,310.50. With the exception of a few hundred dollars the judgment remains unpaid. The action was one to recover dam
The present action is to recover damages for alleged conspiracy to defraud the plaintiff by falsifying the books of, and disposing of assets belonging to, J. & B. Friedman, Inc. This action is brought not only against J. & B. Friedman, Inc., the defendant in the prior action, but also against the Friedman Contracting Co., Inc., and the agents, officers and directors of those corporations. It is claimed that these defendants conspired to deprive the plaintiff of its earned insurance premiums and were equally responsible in effecting a fraudulent and unlawful transfer of the property and assets of the J. & B. Friedman, Inc., to the Friedman Contracting Co., Inc.
The question is whether the plaintiff, having elected to prosecute to judgment the previous action for breach of contract, is precluded from maintaining the present action for conspiracy to defraud.
It is a well-settled rule of practice that, where two or more remedies for the same wrong are consistent with each other, the choice of one will not operate as a bar until there has been a satisfaction of the judgment, since there can be but one adequate compensation for the wrong done. Where, however, the remedies are inconsistent with each other, in the sense that they proceed upon irreconcilable demands or claims of right or liability, the deliberate choice of one, with knowledge of the facts which would enable a resort to the other, will preclude the pursuing of the other remedy, since, in such a case, the choice or election of one remedy implies a waiver or abandonment of the other. (Merry Realty Co. v. Shamokin & Hollis R. E. Co.,
The test is whether the facts necessary to support one remedy are consistent with the facts necessary to support the other (Palmer v. Goldberg,
Thus, as has been pointed out, “ One may not both affirm and disaffirm a contract (Conrow v. Little,
Whether a true choice of remedies exists in situations other than those just enumerated has been doubted. (Cf. 6 Minn, L. R. 360-362, 495, 496; Clark Code Pleading, 336.)
The doctrine of election of remedies is founded on public policy. Its primary purpose is to prevent vexatious litigation. (Clark v. Kirby, supra, p. 303.) It has long been the subject of severe and undoubtedly well-deserved criticism. (26 Harv. L. R. 707; 34 Yale L. J. 665; 14 Corn. L. Q. 141.) The rule is a harsh one and is not to be extended (Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Childs Co., supra, p. 291; Friederichsen v. Renard,
Moreover, the doctrine, to be available, must be pleaded as an affirmative defense. (Roberge v. Winne,
The remaining question as to whether the present action lies against the other defendants has already been passed upon. In Travelers Ins. Co. v. Thompson (
Accordingly judgment is directed against the defendants J & B. Friedman, Inc., Friedman Contracting Co., Inc., and Jacob Friedman, in the sum of $17,784.33, the amount of premiums to which the plaintiff would have been entitled on August 24, 1936 (at the time the fraud was discovered), if correct books had been kept, less the premiums actually paid. (See Travelers Ins. Co. v. Thompson, supra; Record on Appeal, p. 604.) As to the defendant Wolfson, the complaint is dismissed.
