Plаintiff, Francesco Pillo, an employee of defendant, Reading Company, was injured by a vеhicle at a grade crossing where he was engaged in cleaning the tracks of defendаnt-railroad. After instituting a trespass suit against the driver and his employer in the state court system, 1 2plaintiff received a judgment of $25,951.56 which was satisfied. Plaintiff now brings an action against the railroad under thе Federal Employers’ Liability Act (FELA) 2 claiming damages for the same injuries for which he received compensation in the state court.
Defendant has moved for summary judgment on the ground that sаtisfaction of the prior judgment bars recovery in the present suit.
Both counsel concеde that the federal law on the conclusiveness of judgments governs this question. 3 There also аppears to be no special reason inherent in the basic policy of the FELA which requires a deviation from the general law on the subject.
It is hornbook law that a satisfied judgmеnt against one co-obligor or joint tortfeasor bars suit against others jointly responsible for the same injury. Sessions v. Johnson,
Against this fundamental rule of damages, plaintiff attempts to draw a distinction between joint tortfeasors and conсurrent tortfeasors whose successive acts combine to produce one indivisible injury. Thе Restatement of Torts does not make such a distinction and it would be illogical to do so in this case. Section 886 of the Restatement of Torts states that “ * * * satisfaction of a judgment against one of several persons each of whom is liable for a single harm discharges each of the others from liability therefor.” Accord, Restatement, Judgments § 95 (1942). Absent satisfaction there is no question that the allegations of plaintiff’s complaint, if proven, would as a matter of tort law make defendant, the concurrent tortfeasor, liable for the same harm which wаs sued upon in the state court. Kendrick v. Piper Aircraft Corp.,
Plaintiff relies solely on Husky Refining Co. v. Barnes,
At oral argument, counsel for plaintiff suggested that suit be permitted on the condition that the amount of the prior satisfaction be deducted from any verdict obtained. No cases were cited for this proposition. Such a procedure, if permitted, would encourage litigation to be never-ending with dissatisfied claimants always seeking another verdict in the *763 kope that subsequent verdicts will, like inflation, alwаys spiral upward the second or third time around.
Since there is no genuine issue of material fact upon which defendant’s motion hinges, 7 summary judgment is granted.
Notes
. The verdict against the employer of the driver was аffirmed by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Pillo v. Mohan, et al.,
. 45 U.S.C. § 51.
. Language in Panichella v. Pennsylvania R. R. Co.,
. The Husky case may fall within the general rule “that there can be but one satisfaction” on the theory that some releasеs do not constitute full satisfactions. See Harper & James, Torts, § 10.1 at 710-11 (1956).
. Cert. denied,
.
. Plaintiff lias not contended — nor does it appear from the record that he could contend — that the damages sought in the second action are substantially different ■ than those recovered in the first suit.
