69 Vt. 417 | Vt. | 1897
The plaintiff obtained judgment in the court below for damages that had accrued to him by reason of the defendants’ breach of contract to repair, keep in repair and return in as good condition as when they took it, a certain mill and machinery therein. While the defendants were in the occupancy of the mill under this contract, it was destroyed by fire. Thereupon the plaintiff brought a suit against the defendants, declaring in case, and thereby charged, that, while the defendants were in the occupancy of the mill, it became their duty to manage and use the mill and premises in a careful and prudent manner, so that the same might not be injured and destroyed; that the defendants, not regarding their duty, were careless and negligent in the management of the property, by putting upon the premises a boiler and smoke-stack and running and operating the same and neglecting to keep the property insured for the benefit of the plaintiff, and by wholly neglecting to care for the property so that it might not be destroyed; and that, by reason of the carelessness and negligence aforesaid, the property was wholly destroyed. To this declaration the defendants pleaded not guilty; and the cause was heard by a referee, who failed to find that the fire was caused by the negligence of the defendants, or that
The defendants claim that the judgment in the first suit is conclusive as to the terms of the contract under which they took possession of the property, and that its terms were not open to dispute in the present suit. The terms of the original contract were not put in issue by the pleadings in the former suit; and the court refused to allow an amendment that would put the defendants’ liability under the contract in issue, because the same was for a different cause of action from that declared upon in the original declaration, and thereby held that the defendants’ liability, under their contract to return the property, could not be litigated in that action. This holding is conclusive upon the question of whether the defendants’ liability under the contract was in issue, or determined; and the plaintiff is not concluded by the finding of the referee upon an issue not made by the pleadings, which was not, and could not, be litigated in that action. In order to estop a party from proving a fact, because the'fact has been found against him in a former suit, it must clearly appear that the precise question was adjudicated in such suit; and, if the record relied upon leave this in doubt, there is no estoppel. Aiken v. Peck, 22 Vt. 255; Tarbell v. Tarbell, 57 Vt. 492; Gray v.
The more important inquiry is, whether the plaintiff, by attempting to charge the defendants with the loss of the property, in an action of tort, on the ground that the damage was caused by the defendants’ negligence, and failing in such action, is precluded from resorting to the present action to recover the damage he has sustained by reason of a breach of the defendants’ contract to repair, keep in repair and return the property in as good condition as when they took it. To constitute the defense of a waiver by election of remedies, the remedies must be inconsistent, as where one action is founded on an affirmance, and the other upon a disaffirmance of a contract. Where two remedies are consistent, so that resort to one is not a disaffirmance of the other, either or both may be prosecuted until satisfaction is obtained. There are numerous authorities in support of this holding. Thus, in Merchants National Bank v. Taylor, 66 Vt. 574, the defendant, by false and fraudulent representations in respect to his farm being free from incumbrance, induced the plaintiff to surrender to him certain trade paper and take in lieu thereof his note, secured by mortgage upon his farm. It was held, that the plaintiff had two causes of action, one in contract upon the note, and the other in tort for the false representations; that the plaintiff might prosecute either or both of these causes of action to a recovery; that both proceeded on the theory of affirming the contract; and that one did not allege what the other denied.
In Johnson v. Worden, 47 Vt. 457, it is held, that a conditional vendor of personal property does not lose his lien upon the property by proving the sum due upon the contract of sale against the vendee’s estate in insolvency; and that, after such proof, he may maintain an action against the vendee for its conversion. In the opinion it is said: “When he proved the debt for the oxen, he was
Where the remedies are consistent and concurrent, the party may prosecute as many remedies as he has. Bowen v. Mandeville, 95 N. Y. 237. The rule requiring a choice of remedies is applicable only when the remedies available are inconsistent. Black v. Miller, 75 Mich. 323. Election exists when a party has two alternative and inconsistent rights, and is determined by a manifestation of choice; but the fact that a party wrongly supposed he had two such rights, and attempted to choose the one to which he was not entitled, is not enough to prevent his exercising the other, if entitled to it. Snow v. Alley, 156 Mass. 193. In the case last cited the plaintiff had brought an action to recover the value of certain bonds, on the ground that he could repudiate the contract because of the defendant’s bad faith, but recovered for only a part of them; and it was held
The issues made by the pleadings in the two cases are dissimilar, and are supported by entirely different evidence. In the former case, the issue was whether the loss complained
The jury having found, from evidence that was legally ■ admissible, that the defendants agreed to repair and keep in repair the property and return it in as good condition as it was when they took it, the plaintiff was entitled to recover the damage sustained by him by reason of the defendants’ failuretodoso, notwithstanding the property was destroyed by fire. A few authorities may be cited in support of this holding. In Hoy v. Holt, 91 Penn. St. 88: 36 Am. Rep. 659, it is held, that, where, in a lease, there is an express and unconditional agreement to repair and keep in repair, the
Judgment affirmed.