18 N.Y.S. 728 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1892
This action is brought upon a contract made between the plaintiff and one Hugh J. Jewett, as receiver of the Erie Railroad Company, whereby the said Jewett, as such receiver, agreed to pay one fifth of the net profits arising from the business to be carried on upon certain premises, which plaintiff had agreed to assign to a corporation known as the “National Stock • Yard Company,” and in which corporation, by the recitals of the agreement, the Erie Railroad Company had become largely interested. The defendant, for a separate defense to the action, alleged in its answer that, prior to the commencement of this action, plaintiff had commenced another action in this court against said Jewett, as receiver, upon the same alleged contract, to recover under the contracts for the net profits alleged to have accrued from September 1, 1877, to October 1, 1878; that judgment had been entered in that action in favor of the defendant, and that, on appeal to the general term, such judgment was affirmed, (47 Hun, 635,) and that such judgment of the general term was affirmed by the court of appeals, (116 N. Y. 40, 22 N. E, Rep. 224,) and that, by such judgments so rendered and entered, there was a final judicial settlement and determination, conclusive upon both parties, of the issues in controversy; that one of such issues embraced in such final settlement and determination was as to the validity of said contract;
If this allegation in the answer, and this finding of fact of the referee, are sustained by the evidence, the legal conclusion is right, and must be affirmed. The sole question for us to determine, therefore, is whether there is any evidence in this action that the issue as to the validity of the contract sued on was presented to the court in the former action, and was there determined by the judgment either of this court or the court of appeals. The judgment roll entered in the former action was offered in evidence before the referee. From it, it appears that two defenses were interposed in that action: First, that there were no net profits, and nothing, therefore, due under the contract; and, second, that the contract was invalid for want of legal consideration. The issues in that action were referred to a referee, who filed his report, whereby he found as a fact that no profits were made from the business carried on at such premises, or from their use and occupancy, and as matter of law that the defendant was not indebted to the plaintiff in the sums mentioned in the complaint, or any part thereof, and that the defendant is entitled to judgment that the complaint be dismissed on the merits, with costs; and, upon such report, judgment was entered that the complaint be dismissed upon the merits. There was also introduced in evidence a notice of appeal to this court by the plaintiff from such judgment, and the judgment of this court adjudging that the said judgment appealed from was in all things affirmed, and also a notice of appeal from such judgment of this court to the court of appeals, and the remittitur from the court of appeals, in all things affirming the said judgment of this court, and the order of this court making the judgment of the court of appeals the judgment of this court. This record, standing by itself, would show that the judgment entered upon the report of the referee, and its affirmance by this court and by the court of appeals, was an adjudication that there were no profits made from the business carried on on the premises described in the contract, and that there had been no determination of the issue raised as to the validity of the contract.
There appears, however, in the case, as introduced in evidence by the defendant under the objection and exception of the plaintiff, an opinion of the general term of this court, and also an opinion of the court of appeals; and the only evidence to sustain the finding of the referee that the judgment of the general term and of the court of appeals was an adjudication that the said contract was void is what is claimed to be found in these opinions. We have now to determine whether such opinions of the appellate court, affirming a judgment of a court below, which disposes of but one issue in the case, is competent evidence to prove that such judgments of affirmance were adjudications of other issues in the case, not passed upon by the trial court, and where the judgment record on the appeal contained no adjudication except that the judgment be affirmed. In considering this question the distinction between the effect of the judgment as a bar or estoppel against the prosecution of a second action against the same claim or demand, and its effect as an es
Is it competent to introduce evidence of the declarations of the judges who affirmed that judgment, either verbal or written,’or by their written opinions, or by their oral testimony, to show that the question determined was different from that in the record? I think not. The rule that allows oral testimony to be given as to what questions were actually determined upon the trial of the action has always been restricted, so far as I have been able to discover,—with one or two exceptions, which will be hereafter mentioned,— to what actually happened upon the trial of the action, and to the questions submitted for determination; and such evidence has always been limited to facts that are not inconsistent with the record, and do not impugn its verity. Thus, in Gardner v. Buckbee, 3 Cow. 127, the court, in stating the ground upon which such evidence is admitted, says: “It is true that the record merely proves the pleadings, and that judgment was rendered for the defendant. Without proof, it would not make out the defense. The record shows that it was competent on the trial to establish the fraud of the plaintiff. Whether fraud was made out, and whether that was the point upon which the decision was founded, must necessarily be proven by evidence extrinsic of the record. To do so is not inconsistent with the record, nor does it impugn its verity.” So in the case of Wood v. Jackson, 8 Wend. 17, the evidence admitted was, what question was submitted to the jury on the trial? But such evidence has never been received to contradict the record, or which is inconsistent with it; and I think it clear that the effect of these opinions as evidence, if they were admissible at all, was to contradict, the record,—that is, that the judgment affirming the judgment dismissing the complaint because of the failure to prove anything due under the contract was an adjudication
We think, therefore, that there was no evidence before the referee to sustain his finding that the former judgment was an adjudication that the con-' tract sued on was invalid, and that the judgment must be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Van Brunt, P. J., concurs in result. O'Brien, J., concurs.