Plaintiff-appellant Homer F. Ramseyer (hereinafter “Homer”) appeals from an order granting defendants-respondents’ motions for summary judgment. Homer brought this action to quiet title to, partition and recover mesne profits from certain real property in the possession of his sons, defendants-respondents H. Duane Ramsey-er and Donald D. Ramseyer (defendant-respondent Antelope Springs Land and Cattle Company is a corporation owning Donald’s interest in the real property), and their wives. The land in question was conveyed by Homer to respondents by warranty deed in 1969. We affirm, though not for the reasons announced by the district court.
The same parties were recently before us in the case of
Ramseyer v. Ramseyer,
In Ramseyer I, Homer brought an action for a judicial dissolution and accounting of the partnership which had existed between him and his two sons. The sons contended that the partnership had been dissolved by mutual agreement of the parties, that all accounts between the partners had been settled in 1969 and that Homer’s cause of action was barred by the statute of limitations. This Court agreed with the trial court’s evaluation of the evidence:
“The evidence is clear appellant and respondents understood that the exchange of property was final. The details of the exchange and the documentation were arrived at by appellant [Homer] and an attorney of his choosing. Respondents [the sons] testified the exchange was not their idea and they just went along with their father and his attorney.”98 Idaho at 51 ,558 P.2d at 80 .
We thus affirmed the conclusion of the trial court that “the transactions of June 12, 1969, constituted both a dissolution of the partnership and a winding-up of partnership affairs”, and that the relevant statutes of limitations provided “an adequate period of time for an aggrieved partner, acting as a reasonably prudent business person, to discover any cause of action he may have against his partners or the partnership”.
The dispute in the present case centers around the following language from the warranty deed by which Homer conveyed Antelope Springs Ranch to his sons on June 12, 1969:
“For Good and Valuable Consideration, and in an Exchange of Lands Among Tenants in Common HOMER F. RAMSEYER, also known as H. F. RAMSEY-ER, a married man dealing with his sole and separate property, Grantor, does hereby grant, bargain, sell and convey.
“TO HAVE AND TO HOLD the said premises, with their appurtenances unto the said GRANTEES and to their heirs and assigns forever.” (Emphasis added.)
Homer relies upon this language in claiming an interest in Antelope Springs Ranch. The warranty deed explicitly noted that he was a married man and that he was conveying his separate property. He argues, therefore, that whatever community interest he and Ebony had in Antelope Springs Ranch was excluded from the 1969 conveyance to his sons and that this interest became his separate property by the terms of the property settlement entered in the divorce action. Homer dates the accrual of his cause of action not from the date of the conveyance in 1969 but from February, 1971, when the sons allegedly clouded his interest in Antelope Springs Ranch by mortgaging the property to secure a loan from Equitable Life.
The sons and their wives moved for summary judgment of dismissal on the grounds that Homer’s causes of action were barred by the applicable statutes of limitation and by the res judicata effect of the partnership action. Equitable Life moved for summary judgment on the grounds that it relied on record title in the sons in loaning the money secured by the mortgage, contending that Homer was estopped from claiming any interest in the mortgaged property.
*556 In a memorandum decision favorable to the sons and to Equitable, the district court ruled that even if Homer’s 1969 deed had not conveyed whatever community property interest he and Ebony had in the real property, said interest became his separate property by virtue of the final divorce decree and passed to the sons at that time because of the doctrine of after-acquired title.
We affirm the result reached by the district court. We do so, however, on the grounds that the present cause of action is barred by the res judicata effect of our decision in Ramseyer I.
In the course of our discussion of the law of voluntary partnership dissolution in
Ramseyer I,
we stated that a dissolution agreement of this nature “is presumed to include
all
disputed matters among the partners, and will be final and conclusive upon them in the absence of fraud, mistake or duress.” (Emphasis added.)
The final judgment in Ramseyer I quieted title to Antelope Springs Ranch in the sons. Homer now attempts to avoid that judgment by a cause of action to quiet title to Antelope Springs Ranch in him to the extent of his alleged community interest in that property — an interest which, for reasons of their own, he and his attorney preferred not to make explicit in the 1969 dissolution agreement or in the partnership action. 1 The attempt so to avoid the res judicata effect of the earlier judgment is without merit.
The drafters of the Restatement (Second) of Judgments summed up the law on this matter in their Comment a to section 61:
“The law of res judicata now reflects the expectation that parties who are given the capacity to present their ‘entire controversies’ shall in fact do so.”
This expectation that entire controversies will be presented and that all relevant material will be produced has long been the rule in Idaho:
“We think the correct rule to be that in an action between the same parties upon the same claim or demand, the former adjudication concludes parties and privies not only as to every matter offered and received to sustain or defeat the claim but also as to every matter which might and should have been litigated in the first suit.” (Emphasis added.) Joyce v. Murphy Land etc. Co.,35 Idaho 549 , 553,208 P. 241 , 242 (1922).
The rationale behind this long established rule has grown ever stronger with the evolution of modern systems of pleading and their free permissive joinder of claims, liberal amendment provisions and compulsory counterclaims.
As applied to the present case, the result is clear: when the partnership action
(Ramseyer I)
was filed in 1973, the 1969 exchange of property was completed; the decree of divorce between appellant and his wife had been entered; the sons had executed the mortgage on Antelope Springs Ranch with respondent Equitable Life; and appellant had received the community real property interests in the final property divi
*557
sion entered in the divorce action. The trial court in
Ramseyer I
held that Homer had no interest in or title to Antelope Springs Ranch and quieted title to the property in the sons. When Homer brought the present action to quiet title, partition and recover mesne profits in 1975, the state of facts giving rise to his claim had not changed. When he changed the label applied to his theory of recovery, the essential relief sought was no different from that sought in the partnership action. Accordingly, Homer’s quiet title action was barred by the judgment in the partnership action, and the respondents’ motions for summary judgment should have been granted for that reason. As was stated in
Treinies
v.
Sunshine Mining Co.,
The order of the trial court granting summary judgment in favor of respondents and against appellant Homer F. Ramseyer is affirmed. Costs to respondents.
Notes
. As stated in
Ramseyer I,
the avowed “purpose of the [partnership dissolution] was to minimize his community estate in view of a pending divorce action.” As we commented there, “We know of no principle of community property law by which either spouse could achieve such a result,” in view of the fiduciary duty the manager of the property owes to his spouse to account for all community property.
