This wаs an action by the Portland Gold Mining Company, a Wyoming corporation, against Stratton’s Independence, Limited, an English corporation, J. W. Price, T. B'. Burbridge, and others, whose presence in the litigation has become immaterial, to recover damages for. a trespass to real property. Stratton’s Independence and Burbridge answered separately, the answer of each being substantially a general denial, and Price, without answering, appeared at the trial, attended by counsel, and secured a verdict in his favor, as here stated. At the conclusion of all the evidence Stratton’s Independence moved for a directed verdict, and the motion was sustained. The plaintiff then indicated that it would not ask a separate verdict against Price or Burbridge, and a motion for a directed verdict interposed by them was sustained. The trial thus resulted in a verdict and a judgment against the plaintiff, and it sued out this writ of error. The ruling on the motion of Stratton’s Independence was excepted to at the time and error is assigned thereon now, but no exception was taken to the ruling on the motion of Price and Burbridge, and it is not questioned now.
The case made by the evidence was this: The plaintiff and Strat-ton’s Independence were, respectively, the owners of adjoining mining properties. Stratton’s Independence leased to Burbridge, for mining purposes, a portion of its mine far beneath the surface and adjacent to the line dividing the two properties. The lease in terms prohibited the lessee from extending his mining operations outside of the leased premises, required him to actively mine them, and reserved to the lessor the right to market the ore and to retain a substantial share of the proceeds as .rental. Before any work was done, an arrangement was effected between Burbridge and Price whereby the latter had charge of the mining operations under the lease, and, if a trespass was committed, it was bеcause these operations were extended outside of the leased premises and into the property of the plaintiff. But Stratton’s Independence was not a participant in these operations, and was not responsible for such a trespass, unless it be that it marketed the
It is plain that the plaintiff’s right, if any it had, to hold Stratton’s Independence for a trespаss was dependent, first, upon the commission of the trespass by those operating under the lease; and, second, upon its adoption or ratification of their act. They were the immediate actors, and, if guilty of a trespass, were personally responsible therefor, whether or not responsibility was also cast uрon it. But, as it was not a participant in the mining operations, and, if responsible at all, became so only by adopting or ratifying tbeir act, it follows that no responsibility was cast upon it unless personal responsibility also attached to them. As quite apposite, we quote from New Orleans & Northeastern R. R. Co. v. Jopes,
“It would seem on general principles that, it' the party who actually causes the injury is free from all civil and criminal liability therefor, his employer must also be entitled to like immunity. * * * If the immediate actor is free from responsibility, because his act was lawful, can his employer, one taking no direct part in the transaction, be held responsible? * * * The question carries its own answer, and it may be generally affirmed that if an. act of an employe be lawful, and one which he is justified in doing, and which casts no personal responsibility upon him, no responsibility attaches to the emplоyer therefor.”
Here the immediate actors were exonerated by the judgment in their favor, which is none the less effective as a final adjudication because resting upon a verdict directed with the plaintiff’s virtual consent. Nashville, etc., Co. v. United States,
One of the earliest cases in which the question arose is Ferrers v. Arden, 2 Cro. Eliz. 668, which was trespass on the case for the conversion of an ox. The defеndant pleaded that in a prior action for the same trespass, prosecuted by the same plaintiffs against other defendants, the latter had justified in his right and were acquitted, and it was held that, if the second action was for the same cause, the defendant’s plea was good; for “although he be a stranger to the reсord, whereby the plaintiffs were barred, yet he is privy to the trespass, wherefore he well may plead it, and take advantage of it.” In another relation, the same question arose in Biggs v. Benger, 2 Ld. Raymond, 1372, an action of trespass against two defendants. ■ One made default, and the other pleaded that the act charged was done by him in the right of his codefendant and under the license of the plaintiff. The latter took issue on the plea, which was found against him, and it was held that the defendant who made default was entitled, on motion in arrest, to the benefit of the plea because it showed that the plaintiff could have no cause of action against him. Of like import are 2 Tidd’s Pr. 895, 2 Black on Judgments, § 781, and Williams v. McGrade,
“To permit a person to commence an action against the principal and to prove the acts alleged to be trespasses, to have been committed by his servant acting by his order, and to fail upon the merits to recover, and subsequently to commence an action against that servant and to prove and rely upon the same acts as a trespass, is to allow him to have two trials for the same cause of action, to be proved by the same testimony. In such cases the technical rule that a judgment can only be admitted bеtween the parties to the record or their privies expands so far as to admit it, when the same question has been decided and judgment rendered between parties responsible for the acts of others.”
The doctrine of that case was reaffirmed in Atkinson v. White,
“That the question Involved in each suit is precisely the same, and to be proved by the same testimony is beyond a doubt. It is equally clear that the plaintiff is the same, and that he has had his day in court. He has had a full*67 hearing upon the law and fact involved in the very question he now proposes to try again in another suit. He has had every privilege the law allows him, unless he is entitled to another hearing, simply because he is now attempting to enforce his claim against another defendant in name, but the same in interest.
“Ordinarily judgments have been held conclusive only between parties and their privies, and only whеn both parties are bound. But this rule is subject to exceptions; as in the case of an alleged trespass by two persons, when one acts as servant of the other, and by his command. Such persons are not privies, and yet, if the plaintiff fails in his action against one, he is precluded by that judgment from maintaining an action for the sаme trespass against the other.”
Then, after it was observed that one reason for the rule, that es-toppels, to be binding, must be mutual, ceased with the enactment of statutes enabling parties to be witnesses, it was held that the former judgment was conclusive against the plaintiff. Well in point is Emma Silver Mining Co., Limited, v. Emma Silver Mining Co. of New York (C. C.)
“The weight of authority, however, is that where an agent in a transaction is sued after the termination of his agency, and upon a trial of the merits the issue is determined against the plaintiff, the principal, though not a party to the suit, can avail himself of the judgment as a bar, when he is sued by the same plaintiff on the same cause of action. While the principal, if he had no notice of the former suit, and no opportunity to defend it, may not be concluded by a judgment against his former agent, or made responsible by the agent’s bad pleading or blunders in the trial of the cause, because so to conclude him would be to deprive him of his property without due process of law, yet, as regards the plaintiff who has before sued the agent and been defeated, there is no reason why he should not be concluded upon that principle of public policy which gives every man one opportunity to prove his case, and limits every man to one such opportunity. He has had his day in court, and it is immaterial whether he has chosen to test his right as against the principal or the agent in the transaction, provided the issue to be tried was identical as against both.”
In King v.
“The sheriff is responsible for the acts of his deputy in attaching property. The plaintiff might have sued the defendant for the aсt of Stebbins in taking the oats. But he had the right also to sue Stebbins himself, and this he elected to do. Having litigated the title to the oats with him, and failed, he ought to be precluded from trying the same matter in another suit against the defendant, on the ground that the defendant is responsible, and that he had a right of action against him also.”
Other cases which establish that the rule that estoppels, to be binding, must be mutual, is not absolute, or without rational exceptions, are Hill v. Bain, 15 R. I. 75,
Thus it is settled by repeated decisions, that the general rule that one may not have the benefit of a judgment as an estoppel unless he would have been bound by it had it been the other way is subject to recognized exceptions, one of which is that in actions of tort, such as trespass, if the defendant’s responsibility is nеcessarily dependent upon the culpability of another, who was the immediate actor, and who, in an action against him by the same plaintiff for the same act, has been adjudged not culpable, the defendant may have the benefit of
We conclude that the verdict and judgment exonerating Price and Burbridge, which upon this record neither are nor can be called in question, are available to Stratton’s Independence, and therefore that, if there was error in any ruling in its favor at the trial, the error has now become harmless.
The judgment is accordingly affirmed.
