11 Haw. 416 | Haw. | 1898
OPINION OP THE COURT BY
The essential facts of this case are as follows: In December, 1896, the Oahu Lumber and Building Company, a domestic corporation, brought an action of ejectment in the Circuit Court,
The court heard the plea and sustained it, to which exception was taken to this Court. The trial court rendered the following decision:
*418 “On the plea in bar interposed in this case, it seems to me that the main point now before the court is that at the time the present suit was filed there was pending in the Circuit Court an action of ejectment filed December, 1896, to recover the same premises for which this action is brought. Its object was the same and the premises in controversy the same. I think that if that original action had been a mistake on the part of counsel or if in the language of the counsel it had been a false proceeding, the proper course for counsel to have taken would have been to have discontinued that prior action. He elected his remedy and until he discontinues it he must abide by it; he certainly must file no other action for the same object at the same time. I therefore sustain the plea in bar.
It seems to me that as this point is decisive of the case, it is unnecessary to decide the question as to whether the affidavit is sufficient on the plea in bar setting up the question of title.
Plea sustained.”
The defendant contends that the suit is abated by reason of the pendency of another suit.
The ground upon which courts proceed in abating a subsequent suit on the ground of the pendency of a former action between the same parties and for the same cause is, that the subsequent one is unnecessary and therefore oppressive and vexatious. But in order to sustain the plea of another action pending it must appear that the two suits are for the same cause or causes of action. "We have here first, ejectment, which may try the title to land and (or) the right of possession to it; and, second, the summary method of obtaining possession of land where there is the relation between the parties of landlord and tenant.
In the ejectment case the plaintiff claims title.' In the second case the plaintiff alleges that defendant is its tenant at will and is holding over after notice to quit. The causes of action are different. The plea alleges merely that the object in each of the suits is to recover the same identical property and premises. That this is not sufficient; see Larco v. Clements, 36 Cal. 132;
“A pending replevin suit to recover goods taken in distress for rent does not bar an action against the surety for the rent.” King v. Blackmore, 72 Pa. St. 347.
The plea should show distinctly that the causes of action are the same. It does not.
The exceptions are sustained and the case remanded to the Circuit Court, First Circuit, for such further proceedings as may be necessary.
The question raised by the other plea — that of “title involved” in the second suit and therefore that the case is not within the jurisdiction of the District Court — is not before this Court. The bill of exceptions which sends up the decision of the trial court shows that this plea was not passed upon and no exception was taken to the ruling or refused to rule. "We cannot consider it.