73 N.Y.S. 498 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
Lead Opinion
This is the usual action in equity, brought by the owners of property abutting upon the street, to enjoin the further alleged unlawful use by the defendants of easements of light, air and access, and for the recovery of past damages caused by such use.
A. former action brought in respect to these premises by Mary MoGlynn, as trustee, in behalf of these plaintiffs, resulted in a jndg
The judgment in that action was entered on March 11,1893; this action was commenced on November 13, 1893, and the court has awarded damages for the period between November 13j 1893, and May 10, 1900. The defendants pleaded the former action as a bar to this. • , .
An examination of the complaint in the present action and that in the first action shows that the averments upon which the plaintiffs base the right to recover are nearly identical in form, terms and language; indeed, the causes of action stated in the two pleadings are precisely alike, except as to the dates of the invasion and continued trespass -upon the plaintiffs’ rights. It - is evident, therefore, that as the complaint in the first action was dismissed upon the merits, after ¿11 the evidence had been received and judgment entered based thereon, that such judgment must be regarded as a bar to the extent of the matters there in issue, viz., the conditions existing prior to the entry of such judgment. It is undoubtedly the fact, and also the law, that the construction of the elevated structure in the street opposite the plaintiffs’ premises was an invasion of- their legal rights therein, and that the continued maintenance of the structure Constitutes the same a continuing trespass upon such rights so long as- the same remains and the defendants do not acquire the rights of the plaintiffs therein. But the mere invasion of the legal rights of the plaintiffs is not, of itself, sufficient-to authorize the intervention •of a court of equity to restrain the maintenance and operation of the
It is evident, therefore, that when an action has once been brought and the parties have presented their evidence bearing upon their respective claims, and the court in determination of the same renders a judgment dismissing the complaint, based upon the ground that no substantial damage has been sustained by the plaintiff, such determination must be regarded as conclusive upon that state of facts. Otherwise, if no effect be given to such judgment, it would necessarily follow that one court might conclude that the plaintiff sustained no damage and another award a substantial recovery upon the same facts. Such a result is so repugnant to all legal rules and would render litigation so interminable unless the plaintiff recover judgment, that it ought not to be upheld, unless in the peculiar nature of this litigation no other result is permissible. It is the settled equitable rule that the judgments and decrees of a court of equity are binding upon parties and privies as to all matters which the parties might have legitimately litigated and had determined in the action, and a bill in equity regularly dismissed upon the merits may be plead in bar of a new bill for the same matter. (Neafie v. Neafie, 7 Johns. Ch. 1; Perine v. Dunn, 4 id. 140; Burhans v. Van Zandt, 7 N. Y. 523; Herm. Estop. §§ 400, 401; Story Eq. Juris. § 1523.) This rule is equally as applicable to the parties and privies in elevated railroad litigation as it is in any other. The peculiar relation, however, which has been created by the invasion of the plaintiffs’ legal rights may make such rule inapplicable when applied to results which may flow from the continued trespass upon their rights. As the trespass is a continuing one it is quite evident that at any time subsequent to judgment in a given case the relative conditions of the property owner and the railroad may be essentially changed, and while, at one time, the act of maintenance and operation may inflict no damage, at another time very serious damage may accrue, and under such circumstances the right to maintain a subsequent action would
We conclude, however, that what was really meant by the court was that the dismissal was without prejudice to the plaintiff’s right to maintain a second action if he could establish that the subsequent, act inflicted substantial damage; and the language of the court in that case indicates that no recovery would be authorized unless such fact was established, and if not established, the former judgment given in evidence would be conclusive upon the right of the plaintiff
The result of this reasoning would seem to lead to the conclusion that the former adjudication is to be regarded as conclusive upon' the plaintiffs’ right to recover in this action at the time when it was commenced. The first action was dismissed and judgment entered on March 11,1893; this action was begun on the thirteenth day of November of the same year. The proof given upon the trial does not show the slightest change or act upon the part of the defendants, either in construction or operation, which did not exist when the former action was tried and when the complaint was dismissed,, except such as occurred after this action was commenced. What-did appear was, that in December, 1894, some fourteen months after the plaintiffs began this action, the defendants placed a third track upon the structure and ran additional trains over the same, and this is the substantive part of- the testimony appearing in this record upon which the case is changed from that which appeared upon the former trial.
It is quite possible that this change of structure authorized the court to find that it inflicted damage upon the plaintiffs’ property, but such conditions were not in existence when this action was begun. While, undoubtedly, the jflaintiff is entitled to recover in one action all the damages sustained down to the time of the trial, yet this necessarily presupposes, indeed, rests upon-the fact' of the>
It follows that the judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Van Brunt, P. J., and Laughlin, J., concurred; Ingraham and Patterson, JJ., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
This action was commenced on November 13, 1893, and the complaint alleged that the plaintiffs were the owners of two pieces of property situated on the westerly side of Ninth avenue, in the city of New York, between Thirty-seventh and Thirty-eighth streets; that during the year 1878 the defendant, the New York Elevated Railroad Company, took possession of Ninth avenue in front of the plaintiffs’ premises and erected thereon an elevated railroad, and is now maintaining and operating a double-track steam elevated railway thereon, and ran and still runs thereon railroad cars drawn by locomotive steam engines ; that said railway is now and since May 20, 1879, has been in the possession of and operated by the defendant, the Manhattan Railway Company ; that such an appropriation of the avenue was against the plaintiffs’ will or consent, the defendants claiming the right to maintain and operate the said railroad without compensation for the property thus taken ; that the erection of the said structure and the running of said trains thereon have created an additional burden on the premises described in the complaint, not included in the easements granted to the city, and have
The cause of action here sought to be enfored was thus based upon a trespass by the defendants upon the plaintiffs’ property, it being claimed that at the date of the commencement of the action the defendants were then committing such a trespass; that such trespass was a continuing one, the defendants claiming that they were entitled to maintain their road and trespass upon the plaintiffs’' property without compensation, and the relief they sought was an injunction restraining such continuing trespass. As a defense to this cause of action the defendants alleged that on the 6th of May, 1890, Mary IT. McGHynn, as trustee of Hugh A. McGrane, ^¡arrie O. McGrane, and Hugh A. McGrane and Mary A. McGrane, infants, by Mary IT. McGlynn, their guardian ad litem, the then alleged owners of the premises described in the complaint, began an action against these defendants in the Superior Court of the city of Hew York; that said action was brought to enjoin the maintenance and Operation through said street in front of said premises of the elevated railroad described in the complaint herein, and for incidental damages, and that the cause of action set’forth in the complaint herein is the same cause of action as that sued upon in said former action, and that on the lltli of March, 1893, judgment dismissing the complaint upon the merits was entered therein.
Upon the trial of this case the defendants introduced in evidence the judgment roll in the former action, wherein it appeared that the action was brought for an injunction and for damages, the cause of action being similar to that set out in the complaint in this action. As a part of that judgment roll there is the report of a referee before whom the action was tried. The referee found as a fact that the maintenance of the railway structure in front of the plaintiffs’ premises has, from the year 1887 to the present time, constituted, and will hereafter constitute, a use inconsistent with, and in
The effect of that judgment is, by the prevailing opinion, held to be fatal to the plaintiffs’ right to a recovery in this action, upon the ground that, the conditions remaining the same, the prior adjudication is evidence conclusive that there is no ground for the interference of a court of equity; that under such circumstances the judgment of dismissal in the first action may be proved, and when proved has all the force and effect of a former adjudication of the question involved and is conclusive as evidence against the plaintiffs’ right to maintain the action; that before the second action can be maintained, it must be made to appear by proof upon the trial that the relative conditions of the parties have changed, and that
The former action was brought to restrain a trespass, and was based upon the fact that in 1890 the defendants were trespassing upon the plaintiffs’ property under a claim of right; that such trespass was a-continuous trespass for which the plaintiffs could obtain no adequate relief in an action at law. When that action came on to be tried in the year 1893, the court found as a fact, that the defendants were trespassing upon the plaintiffs’ property, but that the plaintiffs had failed to prove that such trespass had caused substantial damage, and that for that reason the plaintiffs were not entitled to equitable relief. That this adjudication was binding upon both parties to, the action is not disputed. The .question is as to what was adjudicated. That the right to maintain the action depended upon the Condition as it existed at the time the action was brought seems to be conceded. The effect of that adjudication, therefore, is that on the 6th of May, 1890, the defendants were trespassers upon the plaintiffs’ property; but to entitle the plaintiffs to recover, they were bound to prove that such a trespass caused a material in j ury; and that, having failed to prove such injury, the defendants were entitled to a dismissal of the equitable cause of action.
■ Now, what relation had this adjudication to an action commenced in November, 1893, based upon an allegation that the defendants were then committing a trespass upon the plaintiffs’ property; that- such trespass as the defendants were then committing was an injury, and that the plaintiffs should be enjoined from continuing such trespass ? By the prevailing opinion it does not seem to be claimed that this prior adjudication was a bar to the commencement of this action, but that it was evidence conclusive upon the trial that the defendants’ trespass caused no damage. But as I understand the rule, théfe is no distinction between the effect of an adjudication as evidence and a bar except that to be effectual as a bar it must be pleaded. The second action was not brought for the same cause of action that the first was brought to enforce. If the first action had been at law, to recover the-damages for.the trespass, and' resulted in a judgment for nominal damages only—which,
Fo authority is cited to sustain this proposition, either in the pre
It is conceded by the prevailing opinion, as I understand it, that this judgment would not be a bar if it appeared that the conditions had changed since the former action was commenced; but that as no change appears, the j ndgment is conclusive. But this seems to me to violate the rule that the burden to show that the conditions are the same rests upon the party who undertakes to make use of the judgment as conclusive evidence. (See Bell v. Merrifield, 109 N. Y. 211; Lewis v. O. N. & P. Co., 125 id. 348; Reynolds v. Ætna Life Ins. Co., 160 id. 651.) In the last named case it is said; “ The conclusive character of a judgment as a bar extends only to the identical issues which were tried in the former action. They must be the same in each action, not merely in name but in fact and in substance, and the party seeking to avail himself of a former judgment, as conclusive evidence or as a bar in a subsequent action, must show affirmatively that the question involved in the second was material and determined in the former, as a former judgment would not operate as an estoppel in a subsequent action as to immaterial and unessential facts, even though put in issue and directly decided.” Upon this record I think that the former judgment that
. As. this is the only question discussed in the prevailing opinion, it, is unnecessary to discuss the other questions presented. ,
. I, therefore, dissent.,
Patterson,. J., concurred.
Judgment reversed,, new trial granted, costs .to appellants to abide-, event.