104 So. 230 | Ala. | 1925
It is provided by statute that, if a contract be entire, but one suit can be maintained for the breach thereof; if severable, or if the breaches occur at successive periods in an entire contract (as installment payments), an action will lie for each breach; "but all the breaches occurring up to the commencement of the action must be included therein." Code 1907, § 2505; Code 1923, § 5721; Callan v. Anderson,
In Callan v. Anderson, supra, an action on a promissory note, the judgment and pleadings in a former suit were in evidence as the legal method of showing such former suit, and the issues of law and of fact embraced therein. A judgment or decree of a court of competent jurisdiction is res adjudicata and a bar to the maintenance of a subsequent suit, when it is pleaded and ascertained that the subject-matter of said suit is the same embraced or presented under issues in the former suit broad enough to have comprehended all that is involved in the issues of the second suit — not what was actually litigated, but what might and ought to have been litigated in the former suit, is the test. Redd Bros. v. Todd,
Appellee relies upon Herrin v. Buckelew,
"Now, at the time this suit was filed and this judgment was rendered against you, Doctor, were these three notes that you are being sued on now due?"
The bill of exceptions then proceeds:
"Thereupon the plaintiff objected to said question on the ground that it called for irrelevant, incompetent, illegal, and immaterial testimony. The court sustained said objection, and to this action of the court the defendant then and there, in open court, duly reserved an exception, stating that he offered to show by the witness that at the time this suit was filed that he is now being sued on that the notes were past due and were due at the time he was sued in the inferior court of Bessemer on the first three notes."
In Herrin v. Buckelew (1861)
"The contract being to pay in annual installments, each default of payment was a separable and distinct demand, and the foundation of a distinct cause of action. It is only an indivisible and entire cause of action which cannot be split up or divided into several causes of action, so as to authorize a recovery for divided parts of it."
So, also, of Davis v. Preston,
The decision in Moore v. Johnston,
In Jasper Mercantile Co. v. O'Rear,
We may observe that the foregoing decisions, and Liddell v. Chidester,
"If the former [to be paid in gross] then the recovery and enforcement of the judgment for a part of the demand in June, 1886, is a complete defense and bar to this action, and nothing should be recovered. This, under the well-known principle, that a plaintiff cannot split up a single cause of action into two or more suits; and if he does so, and recovers a part of his demand, this is a waiver of and a bar to the residue of his claim, be it much or little. Oliver v. Holt,
This case has since been approved in McTighe Co. v. McLane (1890)
No doubt the uncertainty of the application of the rule against splitting causes of action induced the insertion in the Code of 1907 of section 2505.
After authentication or identification of same by the witness Ball, the excluding from the evidence of the book or civil docket of the indicated case (Book No. 13, case No. 29751, p. 1092) in the inferior court of Bessemer, was error. The dates of the former trial and judgment were shown by that book or docket, and the due dates of the respective notes are evidenced therein, in the absence of evidence of a change of due date by the parties. Had said last-named issues of fact been presented, the question sought to be propounded to Dr. McNeil would have been relevant. As it was, the records were the better evidence of the due days of the respective notes (Formby v. Williams,
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and BOULDIN, JJ., concur.