16 Johns. 136 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1819
There are some principles which have been urged on the argument, admitting of no doubt; where, for instance, a demand of a party is submitted to a jury, and they see fit to disallow it, either for want of sufficient proof, or for any other cause, a verdict and judgment thereon is conclusive, and the same demand is barred for ever. This principle was recognized in Brockway v. Kinney, (2 Johns. Rep. 210.) So, also, if the plaintiff’s demand consist of a claim indivisible in its, nature, as in the case of Farrington & Smith v. Payne, (15 Johns. Rep. 432.) where several actions of trover were brought, for the tortious taking of several articles of goods at the same time, and by one act, we held, that the party could not be vexed by having the claim split up into separate suits for each article; and as in the case of Smith v. Jones, (15 Johns. Rep. 229.) where the plaintiff brought several suits for three barrels of pot-ashes, sold at the same time, we held the contract to be entire, and that several suits could not be maintained.
If we test the rale we have laid down, by the rales of pleading, the same result will be found. The defendant, had he pleaded specially, must Jiave stated a former recovery
There is no case or dictum which requires the party to join in one suit, several and distinct causes of action. It is true, the Court may, to prevent vexation and cost, consolidate, under some circumstances, several suits, brought and pending at the same time. It is in the election of the plaintiff, if he has distinct causes of action, to sue upon all or any of them, when he pleases; and he has the further election to unite in one suit, under certain restrictions not now necessary to be stated, several causes of action ; but the defendant cannot compel him to do this. If, then, the plaintiff is not bound to unite in one suit two distinct causes of action ; and if the plaintiff has a right to elect to proceed by separate suits, and obtain judgment on one of his causes of action, upon what principle is it, that he shall lose his .deferred cause of action, merely because it resembles the one on which he has obtained judgment ? The law is not so inconsistent in its provisions, nor, indeed, so unjust, as to deny to the party the means, and the right of showing, that although there is a resemblance between the causes of action, and they belong to the same family, yet that there is not an identity, but that, in truth, they are distinct and different. The defendant’s counsel placed great reliance on the case of Markham v. Middleton. (2 Sir. 12.59.) There the plaintiff sued for an apothecary’s bill, and on executing the writ of inquiry, by accident, was unprepared to prove
Judgment of reversal-.