208 Mich. 50 | Mich. | 1919
This litigation had its beginning in a suit brought by plaintiffs in 1904 against John W. Garrison, the father of defendant Earl D. Garrison, and one Bivard, to recover on certain promissory notes made by Bivard and indorsed by Garrison. The litigation lasted for some time,' it finally being concluded in April, 1909, in favor of plaintiffs. In October, 1905, and while the foregoing suit was pending, Fran
In June, 1911, the plaintiffs filed a bill against Frances Nolan and made the other defendants herein parties defendant, alleging in substance:
(1) That the title to lots 4 and 5 at the corner of Baltimore and Woodward avenues was in John W. Garrison, that he was the real owner thereof, and that the decree which the mother obtained ordering a re-conveyance of these lots was fraudulently obtained.
(2) That even if said lots 4 and 5 did not actually belong to John W. Garrison, the mother permitted^ the title thereof to stand in his name, and he obtained
(3) That the execution sale to satisfy the money decree of Mrs. Nolan on the Cass and Jefferson avenue property was invalid for the reason that John W. Garrison was, at the time, mentally incompetent to manage and care for his property, and was under guardianship.
(4) That defendant trust company had funds which it held in trust belonging to the estate of John W. Garrison, which should be applied to plaintiffs’ judgment.
The defendants in this suit answered and the foregoing claims were made contested issues in the case. The case was heard by Honorable George S. Hosmer of the Wayne circuit court, and he made a holding upon each one of these propositions. His conclusions will be found in the opinion of Mr. Justice Kuhn, which is reported as Spitzley v. Garrison, 201 Mich, at page 363. The conclusion of the chancellor was that plaintiffs were not entitled to recover, and he, therefore, dismissed their bill. .The matter was then presented to this court and was affirmed, the affirmance being placed upon one ground only. In this connection the opinion says:
“After an exhaustive examination of this very voluminous record, we are well satisfied that a decision of the case may very well rest upon the second point, to wit: That there is no evidence upon which the court might properly conclude that the decree in the case of Nolan v. Garrison, 151 Mich. 138, which was affirmed by this court, was obtained by fraud and collusion.”
Following the affirmance of the decision by this court an application for a rehearing was made by plaintiffs in which the attention of this court was called to the fact that while it had disposed of propositions (one) and (two), involving the fraud as to
Plaintiffs then filed the bill in this case in which they set up substantially the same matters that were set up in the first bill, omitting the charges of fraud with reference to the Woodward and Baltimore avenue property, and insisting and asking for a determination of the questions as to whether the execution sale was a valid one and whether the defendant trust company held trust funds belonging to John W. Garrison estate. Defendants answered this bill claiming, among other things, that those questions had been determined by the former litigation, and when the case came on for hearing, upon motion of defendants’ counsel, a preliminary hearing was held under Circuit Court Buie No. 25, resulting in a holding by the chancellor that the former case was res judicata of the issues in the present one, and the bill was dismissed. Plaintiffs are in this court again insisting that the undetermined questions raised by the former case, and which are again raised in this case, should be determined by this court.
It is argued by defendants that these questions were all in issue in the former case, that they were contested and adjudicated in the trial court, and that while this court, on appeal, placed its decision upon only one ground, there was subsequently filed an application for a rehearing, and the court’s attention was challenged to the undetermined questions. That notwithstanding this the court denied the application and, therefore, the whole case was disposed of adversely to plaintiffs’ contentions.
The following rule has been laid down for testing
“A matter or question, either of law or fact, is res judicata, or set at rest, as to adverse parties and their respective privies, if it was a material issue in the proceeding, directly involved, and not merely incidentally cognizable nor collaterally in question, and was adjudicated after a contest, by final judgment on the merits.” 1 Van Fleet’s Former Adjudication, p. 2, approved in LeRoy v. Collins, 165 Mich. 380.
It appears to be conceded that the questions of the validity of the execution sale and the question affecting the trust company were in issue and were material issues in the trial court, and that they were adjudicated after a contest by a final judgment on the merits. Therefore, we must conclude that the adjudication in the trial court was full and final upon all of the material questions raised. But can it be said that there was an adjudication of these undetermined questions in this court? The decision in this court was expressly confined to the one question, and that was the question of fraud. The questions of fraud were distinct, having no such relation to the other questions as that a decision thereon would affect the remaining questions. The questions were squarely raised and plaintiffs were entitled to the judgment of this court on each one of them. Thus far we think plaintiffs’ contention is right. But following this an application for a rehearing was made and this court’s attention was expressly challenged to those undetermined questions, and after a consideration thereof the application for rehearing was denied. This can be construed in no other reasonable way than that this court refused to give plaintiffs any relief upon those undetermined questions. It is quite possible that it would have been better had we written something upon the denial of the application for rehearing, but in the hurry of the work it was not done. We think
The view taken by the chancellor must be sustained and the decree affirmed. No question of practice is involved.