Opinion by
This case presents the issue of whether a trial court’s finding of fact which is not relied upon by an appellate court in affirming a judgment is conclusive against one of the parties who brings a subsequent suit against a nonparty, in which the fact is in issue.
The Court of Common Pleas of Erie County, Mc-Clelland, J., having by implication determined the question in the affirmative, issued summary judgment in favor of the defendant. We reverse.
On appeal from a summary judgment, the record should be examined in the light most favorable to the appellant, and his well-pleaded facts should be accepted as true. Toth v. Philadelphia,
As to strict liability under §402A of the Restatement (Second) of Torts, the court exonerated the manufacturer/seller of the pump on the ground of an abnormal use of the product;
On plaintiff’s appeal, the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit affirmed.® But in so af
In the present Pennsylvaniа state action, plaintiffs sued the manufacturer and seller of the defective hose, Goodyear, for negligence, strict product liability, and breach of warranty. Contributory negligence is a defense, of course, in a negligence action. See Dougherty v. Philadelphia Nat’l Bank,
As to what law of res judicata and collateral еstoppel should govern the case, it is clear that reference must be made to Pennsylvania rules. Although “federal court judgments are entitled to faith and credit in state courts” [47 Am. Jur. 2d Judgments § 1291 (1969)], and although it has been held that а federal court’s rule of res judicata must therefore be respected by a state court [Horne v. Woolever, 170 Ohio S. 178,
As to the issue of estoppel on these facts, no Pennsylvania case directly on point has been found. But the weight of authority, the better rationale, and the case of Irwin Borough School District v. North Huntingdon Township Sсhool District,
According to the Restatement of Judgments, “Where the trial court bases [a] judgment upon two alterna
The view that аn appeal creates a clean slate, so to speak, for purposes of res judicata, upon which the appellate court’s grounds of decision are inscribed, has been said to be supported by “the great weight of judicial and scholarly opinion.” Hannahville Indian Community v. United States,
The bases for this rule are easy to discern. First, it is felt that, properly speaking, there is оnly one judgment in a case — the ultimate judgment, which is that of the appellate court. See Scott, Collateral Estoppel by Judgment, supra at 15. Second, it is clear that an appellate court’s refusal to rest its affirmance on a certain finding is often indicative of an infirmity in the finding. Third, it has been held that to consid
In the case of Irwin Borough School District v. North Huntingdon Township School District, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court was confronted with the question of whether an appellate court’s affirmance of the first part of a decree (invalidating an annexation), while passing over the second part (imposing liability on the annexed party for certain school benefits received), had the effect of making the second part res judicata in a collateral suit between the parties. The Court held it did not.
Another interpretation is that because the particular ruling in question was invalid for lack of subject matter jurisdiction in the lower court,
The minority rule, which hоlds that a finding passed over in an appellate court’s affirmance remains res judicata as to the parties, was adopted in the federal case of Russell v. Russell,
Although Pennsylvania was once said by the Third Circuit to be an adherent of the minority rule, Blum v. William Goldman Theatres, Inc.,
Judgment reversed with a procedendo.
Notes
Speyer, Inc. v. Humble Oil & Ref. Co.,
It was only upon defendants’ presentation of their case аt trial that plaintiffs discovered that the cause of the accident was a defect in the hose rather than the pump. Id. at 866-67.
Id. at 870.
Id. at 868-69.
Id. at 865-68, 869-71.
Speyer, Inc. v. Humble Oil & Ref. Co.,
Id. at 771.
Id. at 772.
Id. at 770-71. It is true that the court made reference to the trial court’s finding of negligence оn the part of a Yellow Cab employee in handling the gasoline hose, but it appears that the discussion was intended to affirm the defendants’ theory of causation, which centered upon the hose, not thе pump, and to serve as a basis for the appellate court’s consideration of defendants' negligence on that premise. See id. at 769 n.6. Having affirmed the lower court’s finding of an absence of negligence, the court found it “unnecessary” to discuss contributory negligence as it related to the unitary enterprise doctrine of imputation among corporations. Id. at 772-73.
The lower court was held to have lacked jurisdiction to order the township school district to reimburse the borough district for school expenditures made in reliance on the validity of the annexation.
