165 N.E. 456 | NY | 1929
Plaintiff made a contract with five corporations, defendants in these actions, to supply whatever coal was required for their business in accordance with their written orders, the contract to continue for a stated term.
Four of the defendants, the appellants in this court, *306 insist that liability under the contract is several, not joint, and that none of them may be held for coal delivered to the others. The fifth defendant, being bankrupt, has suffered a default.
If the question were still open, much might be said in support of the defendants' position that the contract, fairly read in the setting of the circumstances, is at least so ambiguous that an inference of a several promise with a several liability might be drawn upon a trial as an inference of fact (Restatement of the Law of Contracts, American Law Institute, §§ 112, 128). The difficulty is that the meaning and effect of the contract have already been adjudicated. In an action between the same parties in the City Court of the City of New York, judgment was recovered against all the defendants jointly for coal delivered at other times. The same contract was pleaded, and the nature of the promise, i.e., its quality as joint or several, was the subject of the controversy, the gist of the debate. The court held it to be joint. The defendants may not now be heard to claim that it is several (Lorillard v. Clyde,
What has been written applies to two of the actions before us, those designated in their titles as actions numbers 1 and 2, and also to action number 4 in so far as it contains the same denials and defenses. There is, however, in action number 4 a counterclaim for the reformation of the contract on allegations of mistake and fraud. A judgment in one action is conclusive in a later one not only as to any matters actually litigated therein, but also as to any that might have been so litigated, when *307
the two causes of action have such a measure of identity that a different judgment in the second would destroy or impair rights or interests established by the first (Cromwell v. County ofSac,
Illustrations are many, but a few, specially apposite, may be selected from the mass. Cromwell v. County of Sac (supra) and Nesbit v. Riverside Independent District (supra) were cases where judgments were recovered on coupons attached to municipal bonds. The former judgments were disregarded in actions on other coupons wherein new defenses were set up. Jacobson v.Miller (supra) was an action on a lease to recover an installment of rent. The Supreme Court of Michigan held, in an opinion by COOLEY, J., that a judgment in an action for an earlier installment did not exclude a new defense, though it was available before. Howlett v. Tarte (supra; approved in *308 Cromwell v. County of Sac, supra, p. 357) was an action for rent under a building loan agreement. The ruling was that a former judgment for rent under the same agreement did not exclude a new defense that the agreement had been abrogated, though if abrogated at all, it was out of existence at the date of the earlier installment for which judgment had been rendered (cf.Humphries v. Humphries, 1910, 2 K.B. 531, and the note thereon by Spencer Bower, Res Judicata, p. 112). IndependentHarvester Co. v. Tinsman (supra) was an action to set aside a contract on the ground of fraud. A note given under the same contract had previously been reduced to judgment. There was a holding that the judgment did not constitute a bar.
Cases in this court may seem upon a hasty reading to uphold a stricter rule. Analysis will show that the conflict is unreal. The decisive test is this, whether the substance of the rights or interests established in the first action will be destroyed or impaired by the prosecution of the second. An estoppel is not avoided in such circumstances by mere differences of form between the one action and the other (Baltimore S.S. Co. v. Phillips,supra; Southern Pacific Ry. Co. v. U.S.,
We pass from this statement of the precedents to the case before the court. As often as an attempt is made to enforce the written contract according to its terms, the former judgment will be conclusive as to the meaning of those terms and their effect. It will not be conclusive upon the question whether the terms should be reformed, for no such issue has been litigated. Till now there has been neither counterclaim for reformation nor equitable defense (Susquehanna Coal Co. v. Andersen Co.,
Other assignments of error argued in the briefs have been considered by the court, but are thought to be untenable.
The contract was not a guaranty, but a joint purchase, and on the plaintiff's side, at least, has now been fully executed. The plea of ultra vires is unavailing to defeat *310
it (American Surety Co. v. Philippine Nat. Bank,
In actions numbers 1 and 2, the judgments should be affirmed with costs.
In action number 4, the judgment of the Appellate Division and that of the trial court should be reversed, and the motion denied, with costs in all courts.
POUND, CRANE, LEHMAN, KELLOGG, O'BRIEN and HUBBS, JJ., concur.
Judgment accordingly.