90 N.J. Eq. 433 | New York Court of Chancery | 1919
The complainant seeks to restrain the defendant from prosecuting her action in the supreme court to recover damages for an alleged deceit, on the ground that the cause of action has been determined by this court on its merits, adversely to the defendant, and is res adjucHcata.
The defendant sold to the complainant her property in Newark, and took in pajnnent $1,100 in cash, a promissory note of one Park for $800, and a certain mortgage of $1,500. The mortgage was a second mortgage and was barred and wiped out by a foreclosure sale under the first mortgage shortly after the deal was consummated. The defendant in her suit at law alleges
In a former suit in this court for a rescission of the contract . and restoration of her property, the defendant by her bill alleged, after stating events leading up to it, that the complainant represented to her that the second mortgage was second only to a first mortgage of $5,000 held by a building and loan association, and the installments and interest thereon were paid up to elate; that the promissory note was good ancf the maker was the owner of several pieces of real estate in Essex and Union counties and was financially able to pay it; that in truth the installments and interest on the first mortgage were then greatly in arrears, and the mortgage was under foreclosure; that the maker of the note was an absconder and heavily indebted; that the note and second mortgage were worthless; and that the complainant, well knowing that the representations made by him were false and fraudulent, 'did, by his deceit, connivance and fraud, induce the defendant to- part with her property without his paying her a fair, bona fide and valid consideration. Issue was taken on the charges of fraudulent representations, and the cause came before Vice-Chancellor Stevens for trial. He dismissed the bill after a hearing, reciting in the decree of dismissal that no misrepresentations had been made, nor fraud practiced upon the defendant by the complainant. While the bill did not specifically set up the cause of action now alleged in the sxrit at. law, viz., that tire complainant, with intent to cheat and defraud the defendant, falsely represented the second mortgage to be a gilt-edged security for $1,500, it is clear that it was one of the issues tried, and was treated by the vice-chancellor as raised by the pleadings, and that the decree of dismissal turned upon its, decision. Counsel has furnished a transcript of only a portion of the testimony, and the vice-chancellor’s oral conclusions; but from the little before me, and the opinion, it is plainly to be seen that the transaction, in all its details, was laid before the court; that the question of fraudulent representation was upper
The record of the case exhibits beyond question all the essential elements of a plea of res adjudícala — the identity of the parties, the cause of action, and the subject-matter. The onty difference between the suit in equity, decided, and the action at law, pending, is the forum, the form of the remedy and the nature of the relief. In the former, had the defendant been successful, the recovery would have been in specie; in the-latter the award would be damages pro lanío of the property lost. This difference does not prevent the decree from operating in estoppel. 23 Cyc. 1116, 1169. Nor, in order to raise the estoppel, is it necessary that the pleadings in the first suit should have counted upon the precise false representations set up as the cause for action in the second. It is enough if the matter was triable in the first suit, and that it was actually litigated and adjudicated. Here the same misrepresentation forms the basis of each suit, and the primary inquiry, vital to a recovery in either, is, Was the mortgage misrepresented? A test of the identification of the cause of action is, Would the evidence, adequate to a recovery in the second suit, have been sufficient to support the first? 23 Cyc. 1158. In the equity suit the thing controverted was whether the complainant misrepresented the nature and character of the security of the second mortgage, hoAvever the misrepresentation may have been phrased; and the deterniination of that question by the court must be regarded as a finality. The defendant threw her lot with the court of-chancery, and after an exhaustiA'c, investigation, and upon principles more favorable to her than the law courts could afford, the cause, which she again desires to litigate, Avas determined against her; and by that, determination she is hound. Marsh v. Masterton, 101 N. Y. 401, contains many examples of the rule of ' former recoveries, but we need not go beyond our own books for illustrations of the application of the doctrine. In City of Paterson v. Baker, 51 N. J. Eq. 49, this court decreed the surrender of two city bonds, to be canceled, based upon the conclusiveness of a judgment in an action at law, brought by Baker, to recover
Counsel for the defendant questions the jurisdiction of this court to restrain the suit for deceit, contending that the com
Another point was suggested — just that — which'ought not to be passed without comment. The proposition advanced is, that the decree is not a bar to the action at law because the court of chancery was without jurisdiction to grant the relief prayed for, even had- it found that fraud had been perpetrated, because of the equities of an innocent purchaser. At the time the defendant filed her bill to -rescind the contract the complainant had parted with the' land to Benker, a bona fide purchaser. This fact was set up in the bill and the good faith of the purchaser was challenged. The vice-chancellor, after deciding that there was no fraud, and denying relief on that score, held further that Benker was an innocent purchaser, and for that reason, also, relief must be denied. The fallacy of the point lies in the failure to distinguish between jurisdiction and the exercise of jurisdiction. The court, unquestionably, had jurisdiction, for it could and would have granted the -relief prayed for liad the charge of fraud, and notice thereof in Benker, been-made out. If the fraud had-been-established and notice had not, the court would have refrained, not for lack of jurisdiction, but because it would not exercise its jurisdiction as against the higher equities of an innocent purchaser. Here the two issues, indispensable to a recovery, were tried and determined; and both or either is res adjiodicata, and pleadable as the exigency may demand. --
The complainant is entitled to a perpetual injunction.