214 N.W. 669 | Minn. | 1927
Both actions are for the recovery of damages (one covering an earlier and the other a later period) on the oral contract between plaintiffs and defendant, The Pure Oil Company, which was the subject matter of Reichert v. Pure Oil Company,
It is unnecessary to repeat here the findings in the former case. So far as material, they are quoted in the opinion (
1. The former action being for specific performance and these for damages arising from breach, we must hold that the plea of former action pending is not good. "The pendency of one action is not a bar to another where the relief sought in the two is entirely different, although the same questions may be to some extent involved in both." Coles v. Yorks,
2. There is merit in defendant's proposition, the premise of its argument, that the findings in an action for the specific performance of an oral contract, nothing appearing to the contrary, ordinarily must be taken to embody the whole contract. Specific performance *11 of such agreements cannot very well be decreed "unless the whole terms of the contract are clear and definitely ascertained." 2 Story, Eq. (14 ed.) § 1053. It must appear "what is the contract which is to be performed." Fry, Specific Performance (6 ed.) § 380. And we are not now denying that if judgment is entered in the former case on the findings as they stand, the question of what the contract is, the issue as to its terms, will be closed. That question is not yet presented and is not determined.
It is correct also to say that if the judgment warranted by the findings and order in the first case would be a bar to the causes of action for damages now asserted, the plea of former action pending would be good. But the only effect of such judgment would be to deny a decree of continued performance by defendant. That of course might have little to say to defendant's liability for refusal to perform while plaintiffs were guilty of no breach and tendering performance on their part. Plainly, therefore, a judgment denying specific performance could not, in and of itself, bar the cause of action for damages arising from breach, if any.
So it is a mistake to invoke the operation of the possible judgment in the former case as a bar. As just stated, it cannot determine the question of damages for breach. But whether it will operate as an estoppel concerning the terms of the contract is another and different question. "There is a wide difference between the effect of a judgment as a bar or estoppel against the prosecution of a second action upon the same claim or demand and its effect as an estoppel in another action between the same parties upon a different claim or cause of action." In the latter case, which is the present situation, the judgment in the first suit does operate as an estoppel, but only as to any "point or question actually litigated and determined." 15 R.C.L. 962, 973. O'Brien v. Manwaring,
But as yet there is no judgment in the former action; so argument supposing estoppel is premature. Meantime, it may be that the findings in the former case will be amended so as to be complete and consistent with the evidence therein with respect to the contract, or so as to show that it was not the intention to find the entire contract but only so much of it as was deemed necessary to support the injunctional relief ordered.
Orders affirmed. *13