Sharp v. Gray

44 Ky. 4 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1844

Judge Marshall

delivered the opinion of the' Court.

To an action of detinue,*for a negro slave, George, brought in the common form, in the name of Sharp as Trustee vs Gray, the latter pleaded, in substance, that after he had bought the slave from one Stanly Singleton, who had purchased him at Sheriff’s sale,, under an execution against-Douglas, under whom the plaintiff claimed, and while he, the defendant, had possession under his said purchase, the plaintiff and one Bridwell had brought a joint action of detinue against Singleton and recovered a judgment for the slave, or his value, and damages for detention, and exhibits the record and proceedings in that suit. A demurrer to this plea was overruled, and a judgment in bar rendered against the plaintiff, who prosecutes this writ of error for its reversal.

A judgment in detinue against a vendor which is unsatisfied, is no bar to an action of detinue against the vendee of the defendant in the first judgment.

As to the title, the matter of the plea affords at most only a ground of inference. There is no averment that any other person was, at the commencement of this suit, jointly interested with the plaintiff in the title which he asserts. And even if the judgment in the former action should be deemed, as between the present parties, admissible and conclusive evidence to prove that the title was once held jointly by the two plaintiffs in that action, its continuance in the same state at the commencement of the present action, would be but mátter of inference or presumption, which, not being averred, could not be assumed upon the demurrer as baring the action. Conceding then without deciding that such a state of the title might be pleaded in bar in the action of detinue, (as may perhaps be inferred from the case of Luke vs Marshall, (5 J. J. Mar. 356,) we think the plea before us does not present such a bar. The plea does not even state that, in the former action, the plaintiffs sued as Trustees, and therefore lays but slight ground even for inferring that the former co-plaintiff was or is interested in the title now asserted. The former judgment is no estoppel as between these parties, and is not relied on as such in the plea.

The fact that the plea does not show explicitly that the former recovery was upon the same title, or rather in the same character, as the present action might also be urged as an objection to its sufficiency as a plea of former recovery, or as showing a bar by election of remedies.

But waiving this point, and giving to the plea the most liberal construction, we are disposed to regard it, as it has been regarded in argument,, as presenting the question, whether if a plaintiff having a distinct cause of action in detinue for the same property against two persons standing to each other in the relation of vendor and vendee, sues the vendor and obtains a judgment against him, he is thereby, and without satisfaction of the judgment or any part of it, barred from afterwards pursuing his remedy against the other parly. In support of the negative of this question, we have been referred to the case of Foster vs Smoot, (1 A. K. Mar. 394.) But there the second action was brought upon the first judgment, and between the same parties. The Court decided that the action of *6detinue could not be maintained upon a judgment in detinue. And that between the same parties a second action of detinue for the same detention was barred by the former recovery. We think the present plea derives no support from the points decided, or from the reasoning of the Court in that case. But in the case of Elliott vs Porter, (5 Dana, 299,) and the principles there decided, we find direct authority against the sufficiency of the plea.

A judgment in detinue without satisfaction does not, ipso facto, change the right' of property from, the plaintiff to' the defendant. One having cause of action against two in detinue, does not by recovering judgment againstone, lose liis right of action. against the other, until the first judgment is satisfied.

The judgment in detinue without satisfaction, does not, ipso facto, change the property in the thing sued for. On the contrary it establishes the title of the plaintiff as against the defendant; and the alternative judgment for the value of the thing, is intended first as a means of en'forcing its delivery, and secondly, as an indemnity to the plaintiff for its loss, should the remedy prove inefficacious in accomplishing its peculiar object — the restoration of the thiug itself; and the sole reason given in the case of Foster vs Smoot against allowing a second action of detinue between the same parties for the same detention, is the all sufficient one which operates in other cases, that no one should be twice harrassed with suit for the same cause.

No such ground of policy or justice applies in the present case; and in the case of Elliott vs Porter, it is established, not only that a plaintiff in detinue does not lose his title by a judgment, but aiso that when having several causes of action in detinue against several for the same property, he sues one and obtains a judgment, his cause of action against another is not thereby merged so long as there is no satisfaction. On this general ground then, the plea in this case must be deemed insufficient. But further. While it shows that the plaintiffs in the first action could not have obtained the slave by means of the judgment rendered therein, and does not show that they could have obtained the alternate value .or the damages, it fails to aver that they knew that they had any cause of action against the present defendant, or that they knew where the slave was, or that he had been sold by Singleton when they commenced their action. It does not, therefore, make out a case in which, on any *7principle of justice or policy, the action against the pres, ent defendant should be precluded on the ground of an election to sue the former defendant.

Pirtle for plaintiff. Guthrie for defendant.

Wherefore, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to sustain the demurrer to the plea, and for further proceedings.