155 N.E. 475 | Ill. | 1927
On May 3, 1920, Mary L. Pillsbury (hereinafter called plaintiff) filed her bill of complaint in the superior court of Cook county for specific performance, wherein she alleged that John Early, now deceased, in 1907 agreed by parol that if she would go and live on his farm, located in Franklin Park, and take care of his elderly parents and himself, the farm would be given to her at his death, and that in addition to the farm she was to receive one-half of the stock and the produce of the farm. She further alleged in her bill that she went to Franklin Park and took care of the parents and of Early until the latter died, in January, 1920; that he died testate and devised the farm to one of his nieces and bequeathed to plaintiff the sum of $2000 and other property. The prayer of the bill was that the parol agreement be specifically performed and the farm conveyed to her. The defendants answered the bill, and admitted that Early in his lifetime owned certain real estate located at Franklin Park; that he died testate, the will having been probated in the probate court of Cook county; that he devised the real estate in Franklin Park to one of his nieces and that he bequeathed $2000 to plaintiff. The answer denied that Early had entered into the parol agreement as plaintiff alleged in her bill. There was a trial of the chancery suit on the merits and a decree entered dismissing the bill for want of equity. From this decree plaintiff prosecuted an appeal to this court, where the decree of the superior court was affirmed. (Pillsbury v. Reidy,
Plaintiff's claim as filed in the probate court was a blanket claim in the form of the common counts and it was alleged therein, inter alia, that John Early, the deceased, at the time of his death was indebted to plaintiff for work done and services performed, and the damages were laid at $15,000. In the Appellate Court a number of points were urged for the reversal of the judgment, but it appears from the opinion of that court that only one of them was considered, which was, that the decree rendered by the superior court of Cook county dismissing the bill for specific performance for want of equity, and the affirmance of that decree by the Supreme Court, were conclusive and a bar to the further prosecution of this claim by plaintiff. This contention was sustained by the Appellate Court, and the judgment of the circuit court was reversed and an order entered remanding the cause to that court for further proceedings in accordance with the views expressed in the opinion of the Appellate Court. Thereafter counsel for plaintiff filed a motion in the Appellate Court to strike out the remanding part of the order of the Appellate Court, for the reason, as he stated, that plaintiff would be unable to produce any other or different evidence upon re-trial of the case and that he desired to present a petition for writ of certiorari to this court, and thereupon the Appellate Court entered an order "that the judgment of the circuit court of Cook county must be reversed because the decree in the chancery suit is resjudicata of the matters involved in the instant case." *565
The decree in the chancery suit was not res judicata as to all of the matters involved in the instant case and did not constitute a bar to the prosecution of plaintiff's claim for labor and services. While the rule is that when some specific fact or question has been adjudicated and determined in a former suit and the same fact or question is again put in issue in a subsequent suit by the same parties, the determination in the former suit, if properly presented and relied upon, will be conclusive upon the parties in the subsequent suit without regard to whether the cause of action in each case is the same, (Dempster v. Lansingh,
The judgment of the Appellate Court is reversed and the cause remanded to that court, with directions to reconsider the cause on its merits.
Reversed and remanded, with directions.