49 W. Va. 520 | W. Va. | 1901
Isaac Pethtel brought a chancery suit in the circuit court of
A question might be made as to Mrs. Williamson’s right to appeal ; but we shall decide the case on the merits.
What is the effect of an order of “Dismissed agreed ?” It is a bar to another suit upon the same cause on the principle of a compromise decree on the merits in equity, or a retraxit at common law, either of which is a bar to another suit. Hoover v. Mitchell, 25 Grat. 387, holds it prima fade final at least; but Wohlford v. Compton, 79 Va. 333, holds it final as to all matters
While such a dismissal bars the demand set up in the bill of Pethtel, does it also bar relief to Smith upon the judgment set up in his petition ? That petition sets up the pendency of Peth-tel’s suit and its purposes, and asks that Smith be made a party thereto, and that relief be given him in it, and by order of the court in the' cause the petition was allowed to be filed in it, and Smith was made a party defendant to the cause, and his petition was sent to rules to issue process on it and mature it for hearing, which was done. Afterwards this dismissal was entered under the name and title of “Isaac Pethtel v. J. W. Williamson and others.” It is contended that this dismissal carried the Smith petition out of court as well as PethteFs bill, and further that it bars, not only PethteFs cause of suit, but also that of Smith. It neither carried the petition out of court, nor does it bar Smith’s cause of suit. As to whether it extinguished Smith’s petition, we
The question whether that dismissal is a bar to Smith as res judicata, has been virtually answered. If it did not dismiss Smith/’s petition because it was an original bill stating a separate cause of action, it is difficult to say that it is a bar to that distinct, different cause of suit stated by Smith. The order says that the matters in difference in “the above styled suit having been settled, on motion of the plaintiff this cause is dismissed.” The fact that it was dismissed on Pethtel’s motion indicates that it was only matters in controversy between him and William-sons that had been settled. And it says matters “in the above styled suit;” that is, the Pethtel suit. Smith’s matter was not in Pethtel’s suit. If no other consideration would forbid denial of relief to Smith because of this dismissal, the general rule that it is of the essence of res judicata as a bar that it shall be on the very matter, and that this must be certain, and when doubtful upon which of several issues the decree went, it is no bar, would justify relief to Smith. Bigelow, Estop. 61; 1 Bart. Ch. Pr. 401. “If upon the face of the record anything is left to conjecture as to what was decided, there is no estoppel in it when pleaded, and nothing conclusive in it when offered in evidence.” Russell v. Place, 94 U. S. 606. That matter must have been necessarily decided. McCoy v. McCoy, 29 W. Va. 794. By way of application of these authorities 1 will say, that we must hold that the adjustment applied to Pethtel’s causé and his suit, and we cannot declare that it applied to Smith. Was that necessarily included in the or-der? Was it necessarily passed on? Could not that order apply alone to Pethtel’s suit, in the name of which alone it was entered?
As to the demurrer to the petition. All it lacks is a caption naming formal parties, or a prayer for process against named parties, one or the other of which it should have under good pleading. Martin v. Kester, 46 W. Va. 438. But the petition names the persons interested, and states their interest in the matter of the petition, sets up the case fully, prays for relief. All parties interested in it were served with process to answer it.
As to laches in prosecuting the suit for seven years and three months. All the parties still living and able to show their defense, under the eases bearing on the question when a suit will
Affirmed.