285 Mass. 594 | Mass. | 1934
This is an action of contract. The two counts in the plaintiff’s declaration are alleged to be for the same cause of action. Allegations (common to both, counts) are that the “plaintiff says that the said defendants owe him” a specified sum of money with interest “for a balance due of money” (in count 1) “received by the defendants to the plaintiff’s use” and (in count 2) “lent by the said plaintiff to the said defendants.” The defendant Chambers pleaded general denial. The defendant Turner pleaded general denial and res judicata. It is stated in the exceptions that the plaintiff, an attorney at law, appeared pro se, that the defendants were not represented by counsel, and that only the defendant Turner appeared at the trial and testified. Turner (called as a witness by the plaintiff) testified that his aid was asked by the defendant Chambers in procuring a loan, that on November 23, 1921, the plaintiff handed $305 in cash to Chambers, and that the two defendants signed and delivered to the plaintiff a promissory note for that amount on that date. The plaintiff on demand produced the note, which was received in evidence subject to his exception on the stated ground that it “was a different cause of action.” It appeared that immediately after the payment of $305 to Chambers and the signing and delivery of the note by both defendants to the plaintiff, the latter demanded and received from Chambers $155 in cash, which was then and there credited as a payment on the note, and that subsequently $5 was paid on the principal and $1.88 on the interest. The plaintiff testified that he took the note of the defendants as evidence of the loan and that the present action is to recover the balance of the $305 lent. The plaintiff admitted and it appeared of record that by writ dated July 1, 1922, he brought an action
The ruling was right that judgment in the earlier action was rendered on the same cause of action as that declared upon in the present action. The only transaction between the parties was a loan of money by the plaintiff to the defendants. The note and the cause of action set out in the present declaration both were founded upon and grew out of that single transaction.
The statement of a different form of liability is not a different cause of action, provided it grows out of the same transaction, act, or agreement, and seeks redress for the same wrong. Smith v. Palmer, 6 Cush. 513, 519. Newhall v. Enterprise Mining Co. 205 Mass. 585. Diebold Safe &
The alleged debt due to the plaintiff from the defendants constituted one right, whether disclosed by a note or by money lent. The violation of that right was the failure of the defendants to pay that obligation. That was the single legal wrong of which the plaintiff complained. The forms of pleading cannot obscure this underlying single right violated by a single wrong.
The point is concluded by authority in this Commonwealth. It was held in Moore v. Moore, 9 Met. 417, through Chief Justice Shaw, that in an action upon money counts a promissory note may be given in evidence to support the action because “the offer of the notes is not the introduction of a new cause of action.” Wild v. Fisher, 4 Pick. 421. Story v. Atkins, 2 Stra. 719, 725. See, also, Townsend v. Derby, 3 Met. 363. It is also covered in principle by nu
Cases like Leonard v. Trustees of First Congregational Society, 2 Cush. 462, Reggio v. Warren, 207 Mass. 525, 537, and others cited by the plaintiff, have no relevancy to the grounds of this decision.
Cases like Commercial National Bank v. Sloman, 194 N. Y. 506, Bruner v. Bearden, 80 Okla. 154, and Funk v. Young, 254 Penn. St. 548, are to be distinguished on the ground, either that there had not in the earlier action been a full trial on the merits, or that the causes of action were in truth substantially different. In any event, we do not regard them as controlling and cannot follow them.
It follows from what has been said that the note and testimony concerning it were rightly admitted in evidence.
The ruling also was right to the effect that the plaintiff could not recover against the defendant Chambers although he had not pleaded res judicata, a plea entered by Turner alone.
It is plain that the cause of action set out in the plaintiff’s declaration (as already stated) is a joint obligation on the part of both the defendants. It was stated by Chief Justice Shaw, spealdng for the court after an exhaustive discussion and review of authorities in Tuttle v. Cooper, 10 Pick. 281, 291-292, that “in an action upon contract, against two or more, the contract must be proved as laid, and that in a trial upon the general merit, the plaintiff cannot have a judgment against one or more, where all are not hable: That, however, there is an exception to this rule, established by the English precedents, and somewhat modified and extended by the American cases, that where a defence can be made by one or more of the defendants, either by plea or by proof on the trial, which admits the making of the original joint contract, but shows matter of personal exemption or discharge, whether such exemption arises from an incapacity to contract, as in
Clearly the case at bar does not fall within the exception thus carefully explained. It comes within the general rule. The plaintiff must in any event fail against the defendant Turner for reasons already stated. Mulrey v. Carberry, 204 Mass. 378. No discussion is necessary to demonstrate that the defence of res judicata was as applicable to Chambers as to Turner. He simply failed to plead it. If he had appeared in this court, he would have been allowed to amend his answer. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 125. But amendment is not necessary. It is the general rule that, where one defendant or several joint defendants in an action of contract maintain a defence which negatives the plaintiff’s right to recover against any defendant, and shows that he has no cause of action, the plaintiff cannot be entitled to judgment against any of the defendants although not appearing or not pleading that defence. Bowman v. Noyes, 12 N. H. 302, 311. See cases collected in 78 Am. L. R. 939, 940. The trial judge rightly took notice of, and gave effect to, that defence in favor of Chambers. Compare Quintin v. Magnant, ante, 450, for illustration of the converse principle that in certain instances one jointly liable on an original obligation, although having a perfect personal defence, ought to make contribution to a payment made by his coobligor not having such defence.
Exceptions overruled.