5 S.E.2d 336 | Ga. | 1939
Where the merits of plaintiff's case have been passed upon by a judgment sustaining a general demurrer and dismissing the complaint, a subsequent suit between the same parties, seeking the same relief upon substantially the same grounds, is barred under the doctrine of res judicata.
If the merits of the case had previously been passed upon the plaintiff was barred under the well-established doctrine of res judicata. If, on the other hand, the previous litigation between the same parties reached its termination, not upon the merits, but upon some purely technical aspect of the case, such as dismissal upon procedural grounds, or upon other technical defects challenged by special demurrer, then the plaintiff would not be so barred, as will presently be shown. "If the judgment is general and not based on any technical defect or objection, and the parties had a full legal opportunity to be heard on their respective claims and contentions, it is upon the merits. . . A judgment is not on the merits if the case went off on any preliminary or subsidiary or technical plea or objection." 34 C. J. 776, § 1193. It is provided by the Code: "If upon demurrer the court shall decide upon the merits of the cause, the judgment may be pleaded in bar of another *107
suit for the same cause." § 110-504. See Phillips v. State,
Comparing the two petitions brought by the plaintiff, under the test as to whether the general demurrer to the first petition invoked a ruling upon the merits of the plaintiff's case as stated in the last one, we can reach but one conclusion — that the plaintiff stated substantially the same case in both instances. The gist, the gravamen of her case, however stated, was fraud on the part of the defendants which she alleged resulted in a judgment in the court of ordinary adverse to her interests. The relief sought in both cases was the same — cancellation and setting aside of the judgment. The reasons relied upon in each instance were substantially the same. Counsel for the plaintiff in error states in his brief: "It was also agreed that the allegations contained in the first and second suits were substantially the same; . . yet there is a difference so marked and so clear that this difference should be noted and considered in passing upon a plea of res adjudicata."
We have carefully examined the pleadings in both cases, and can *108
find no difference except a difference of language. It is true there are some additional reasons stated in the latter petition, and some stated in the former petition are omitted from the second, but each has the effect of stating the plaintiff's complaint as is indicated above. In Wilson v. Missouri StateLife Ins. Co.,
We find in the present case that the plaintiff not only could have put in issue in the previous litigation all of the questions depended on by her in the second suit, but that she actually did so. Such a case was that of Hamlin v. Johns,
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur. *109