228 Mo. 154 | Mo. | 1910
This cause is here for a second time. There was at least an attempted adjudication of it in Strottman v. Railway Co., 211 Mo. 227. We have purposely used the word “cause” instead of the word “case.” The cause when first here came by appeal from Jefferson county. Plaintiff, the widow of an engineer in the employ of defendant, sues for the alleged negligent killing of her husband. The negligence charged was the failure of a telegraph operator to deliver a train dispatcher’s message, through which
“Now at this day come again the parties aforesaid, by their respective attorneys, and the court here being now sufficiently advised of and concerning the premises, doth consider and adjudge that the judgment aforesaid, in the form aforesaid, by the said Jefferson County Circuit Court rendered, be reversed, annulled and for naught held and esteemed, and that the said appellant be restored to all things which it has lost by reason of the said judgment. It is further considered and adjudged by the court that the said' appellant recover against the said respondent its costs and charges herein expended, and have execution therefor. (Opinion filed.)”
The present case was instituted in' the circuit court of the city of St. Louis by a petition containing two counts. The two counts are the same, save, except on the second»there is an allegation of wanton and willful negligence and a prayer for punitive as well as other damages. La this count actual damages for $5000 and additional punitive damages are claimed. Both counts of said petition contain the following allegations :
“Within six months next after said accident, injury and death of the plaintiff’s husband, she brought her action against the defendant in the circuit court of Jefferson county to recover damages therefor, and to recover upon the cause of action sued for herein, and subsequently, on May 14, 1903, recovered a judgment against the defendant therein, and said cause was
Other allegations in the two respective counts of the petition were such in substance as are found in the petition when the cause was formerly here.
To this petition, the defendant filed a demurrer in this language:
“Now comes the defendant in the above entitled cause and demurs to the first count of the amended petition filed therein for the reasons following:
“First. Because said first count of said amended petition fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against this defendant.
“Second1. Because it appears on the face of said first count that plaintiff has no cause of action against this defendant.
“And, defendant demurs to the second count of said amended petition for the reasons following:
“First. Because said second count of said amended petition fails to state facts sufficient to_constitute a cause of action against this defendant.
“Second. Because it appears on the face of said second count that plaintiff has no cause of action against this defendant.”
This demurrer the trial court sustained, and entered its judgment for the defendant and from such judgment the plaintiff has appealed. The cause was briefed and argued here both upon the merits, and upon the question of res adjudicada. Such sufficiently states the case.
I. In our judgment the present case is determined without a rediscussion of the merits of the cause. The present case, whilst here upon petition
The question must turn somewhat upon our statutory provisions. The various statutes are:
Section 639, Revised Statutes 1899, which reads: “The plaintiff shall be allowed to dismiss his suit or take a nonsuit at any time before the same is finally submitted to the jury, or to the court sitting as a jury, or to the court, and not afterward.”
Section 866, Revised Statutes 1899: “The Supreme Court, St. Louis Court of Appeals and Kansas City Court of Appeals, in appeals or writs of error shall examine the record and award a new trial, reverse or affirm the judgment or decision of the circuit court, or give such judgment as such court ought to have given, as to them shall seem agreeable to law; but it shall not be necessary, for the review of the action of any lower court on appeal or writ of error,
Section 2868, Revised Statutes 1899: “Every action instituted by virtue of the preceding sections of this chapter shall be commenced within one year after the cause of such action shall accrue.”
Laws of 1905, p. 138, enacted in lieu of section 2868, Revised Statutes 1899, read thus: “Every action instituted by virtue of the preceding sections of this chapter shall be commenced within one year after the cause of such actions shall accrue: Provided, that if any action shall have been commenced within the time prescribed in this section, and the plaintiff therein suffer a nonsuit, or, after a verdict for him, the judgment be arrested, or after a judgment for him, the same be reversed on appeal or error, such plantiff may commence a new action, from time to time, within one year after such nonsuit suffered or such judgment arrested or reversed.” Section 4285, Revised Statutes 1899: “If any action shall have been commenced within the times respectively prescribed in this chapter, and the plaintiff therein suffer a nonsuit, or, after a verdict for him, the judgment be arrested, or, after a judgment for him, the same be reversed on appeal or error, such plaintiff may commence a new action from time to time, within one year after such nonsuit suffered or such judgment arrested or reversed; and if the cause of action survive or descend to his heirs, or survive to his executors or administrators, they may, in like manner, commence a new action within the time herein
Section 4285, supra, appears under article 2 of chapter 48, which pertains to limitations of personal actions. The chapter contains two articles, one pertaining to limitations of real actions and the other to limitations of personal actions.
Section 2868, supra, appears in chapter 17, which is entitled, “Damages and Contributions in Actions of Tort,” and the Amendment of 1905 would leave the amended section in the same chapter.
Sections 639 and 866 appear in chapter 8, entitled “Code of Civil Procedure.” The first section mentioned is in article 5 of chapter 8, which article is entitled, “Pleadings, and the Rules of Pleadings,” and the second section, supra, is in article 12 of chapter 8, and such article is entitled, “Practice in the Supreme. Court and Courts of Appeals. ’ ’
Such are the several statutory provisions involved in a discussion of the question.
It is immaterial in our judgment how we classify the case at bar. Plaintiff proceeded upon the theory that the case falls within the limitations as to time of bringing suit fixed by the Damage Act. She proceeded in the first case, as also in this case, upon the theory that her right of action would lapse unless suit was brought within a year from the death of her husband. We say that it is immaterial, because by an examination of section 4285 under the chapter pertaining to limitations of actions generally, and the Act of 1905 eliminating the old section 2868 of the Damage Act, and enacting a new section 2868 in lieu thereof, it will be observed that the saving clause of the general statute of limitations found in said section 4285, has been substantially transplanted to the Dam
Discussing this saving clause added to the Damage Act by the Act of 1905, in the Clark case, supra, we said:
“There has long existed in our statutes (Chapter 48 on Limitations of Actions, art. 2, Personal Actions), a section containing a saving clause in case of a non: suit, and providing that a plaintiff ‘may commence a new action from time to time, within one year after such nonsuit suffered.’ [Sec. 4285.] This saving clause was substantially borrowed and used in the new section, 2868, supra, now part of chapter 17 on Damages and Contributions in Actions of Tort. But in said article 2, chapter 48, it is further provided as follows (sec. 4292): ‘The provisions of this chapter shall not extend to any action which is or shall be otherwise limited by any statute; but such action shall be brought within the time limited by such statute.’
“Proper construction of the last section precludes the idea that section 4285 applies to actions instituted for damages for torts under the Damage Act. This, because the Damage Act carries its own special Statute of Limitations, which must control. [Gerren v. Railroad, 60 Mo. 405; Wilson v. Knox Co., 132 Mo. 387; Davenport v. Hannibal, 120 Mo. 150; Revelle v. Railroad, 74 Mo. 438; Packard v. Railroad, 181 Mo. 421.] In the latter case it was held that a widow, nonsuited within the year, might sue again provided she instituted her suit within a year after the cause of action accrued, not within a year after nonsuit suffered. [McQuade v. Railroad, 200 Mo. l. c. 157.]
“It is practically conceded by counsel for appellant that unless section 2868, passed in 1905, applies to the case at bar, then the demurrer is well taken; for up to that time, as the law stood, there was no saving clause tolling the Statute of Limitations relating to damage suits grounded on torts, and permitting a
In the Clark case, suit had been brought within the year but before the Act of 1905 was enacted. Pending the suit, the Act of 1905 was eu acted and went into effect on June 16, 1905. On August 19, 1905, a nonsuit was taken, and thereafter, within a year after the nonsuit a new suit was filed. This second suit was more than one year after the cause of action accrued, but we reached the conclusion that section 2868 as enacted in 1905 applied, and the new suit was within time.
Upon this question, the present case is not more difficult. Here the original action was brought rwithin the year, and the reversal was had long after the Act of 1905 became effective.
Section 866 simply provides for the character of judgments the appellate courts may render. Such courts, “shall examine the record and” (1) “award a new trial” (2) “reverse” the judgment, or (3) “affirm” the judgment, or (4) “give such judgment as such court [meaning trial court] ought to have given.” The awarding of a new trial of necessity requires the reversal of the judment, nisi. This section is of but little importance save as a side light.
The real question is the proper construction of the new section 2868 as enacted in 1905, when taken with section 639. Under such sections, in a case where this court has passed upon both the law and facts of a case and reversed the judgment, nisi, can the plaintiff bring and maintain a new suit, if brought within the year specified in section 2868? We think not, and for reasons which follow.
II. Inasmuch as our new section 2868 is in substance the same as section 4285, the history of the latter section becomes important. Section 4285 had
Thus throughout our existence as a State, and for years before, we have had this statutory provision, and yet this is the first time that this court has been called upon to meet the question here presented. It would seem singular that in all these years a ease fully heard upon law and fact and reversed, was considered as ended, and yet when we transplant the same statute into the Damage Act a life of a different character would be thereby infused into it.
Plaintiff is not without some authority in this State, however. We are cited to the case of Donnell v. Wright, 199 Mo. l. c. 312, but this case does not help the plaintiff. There are some remarks made by the writer of that opinion which might lend color to plain tiff’s claim, but this color is taken away by the following subsequent statement of Judge Lamm in that case: “In leaving this view of the matter, it should be said (to guard against misunderstanding) that the question is not here, and, therefore, we do not decide, that an opinion of this court holding plaintiff has no ease at all on the facts and the law, which opinion is followed by a judgment of reversal only, leaves the identical issue on the identical facts open to reagitation in a new suit — it being meet to dispose of that question only when reached as a live matter in a live case, and not obiter, or by the by,”
The question came up in the case of Musser v. Harwood, 23 Mo. App. 495. Musser was the defendant in the case of Robinson v. Musser, 78 Mo. 153, which case simply reversed a judgment obtained by Robinson against Musser. Robinson had given a bond for costs, and the case of Musser v. Harwood was an action on that bond. Hall, J., of the Kansas City Court of Appeals, in discussing the question as to the force and effect of our judgment of simple reversal, said:
“The Supreme Court had the power to reverse the judgment of the circuit court, and to render final judgment in favor of the defendant in the case of Robinson v. Musser; it had the power, to reverse such judgment and dismiss the petition in such case. [Gatewood v. Hart, 58 Mo. 261; Jenkins v. McCoy, 50 Mo. 348; McGee v. Larramore, 50 Mo. 425.]
“A reversal of the judgment and dismissal of the petition by the Supreme Court would have been a final determination of the ease. Did the simple reversal of the judgment, without remanding the case, have the same effect? Both modes have been indiscriminately used by all the appellate courts of this State in finally determining cases. In the cases last cited the judgments were reversed and the petitions dismissed.
“But in other cases to accomplish the same end the judgments have been simply reversed and the cases not remanded. In Bell v. Railroad, 86 Mo. 612, the court held that the plaintiff had made no case and that the defendant ought to have had judgment iii the cir
“The judgment actually entered was a final judgment upon the merits, and was a complete bar to another suit on the same cause of action by the plaintiff, Robinson. The judgment of a simple reversal was entered in accordance with the opinion of the court, and, as has been said, it was intended to and did have the effect stated.” In this opinion, Philips, P. J., and Ellison, J., concurred.
Later the Kansas City Court of Appeals dealt with the subject and overruled the Musser case, supra. [Lumber Co. v. Lumber Co., 72 Mo. App. l. c. 260.] In the Lumber Company case, Smith, P. J., said: “The rule to be extracted from the foregoing- authorities is that the simple reversal of a judgment without remanding will destroy its effect as an estoppel and
A review of these cases will be of value. The Briant case was this: Hays, as sheriff of Cass county, had sold lands in partition and taken notes for the purchase money, dated April, 1860. Briant, the plaintiff in the case cited above, was a subsequent sheriff and was directed by the court to close up the said partition proceeding. The notes to Hays became due in 1862, but Hays went out of office about that time. By order of court, Dale, a sheriff between Hays and Briant, was directed to close up the partition proceedings. Dale brought suit and obtained judgment against Fudge and others in 1870, which judgment upon the motion of Fudge, filed in 1871, was set aside by the circuit court in July, 1872, because there had been no sufficient service on Fudge. This motion of Fudge had been served upon Briant, and before the motion was actually sustained, i. e., on March 11, 1872, Briant
The case of Shaw v. Pershing, supra, is not at all in point and does not even squint at the proposition. In that case it would appear that Shaw had first instituted his action in ejectment in the United States
Houts v. Shepherd, 79 Mo. 141, is also relied upon by Judge Smith. That case is as far from the mark as is the Shaw case. The second syllabus properly states the case and our holding, and reads thus: “Within five years after the plaintiffs attained their majority they brought suit to set aside defendant’s final settlement as administrator for fraud. In that action there was a nonsuit. Within one year thereafter this suit was brought. More than ten years had elapsed since the final settlement. Held, that this suit was not barred by the Statute of Limitations.”
The facts and our holding in State ex rel. v. O’Gorman, 75 Mo. 370, are well stated in the third syllabus, which reads: “The statute which provides that a party who suffers a nonsuit in an action commenced within the time prescribed by the Statute of Limitations, shall have the right to commence a new action within one year, applies as well to voluntary as to involuntary nonsuits. [R. S. 1879, sec. 3239.]”
The foregoing are all the eases from this court cited by the learned judge in the Lumber Company case as the foundation for the holding therein made. The question at issue in the Lumber Company case was not at issue in either of these cases, and our opinions furnish absolutely no basis for the conclusion reached. There are also cited the cases of Atkison v. Dixon, 96 Mo. 582, and Crispen v. Hannovan, 86 Mo. 160, which simply hold that a judgment of a circuit
Judge Smith, in the Lumber Company case, further relies upon two cases from the St. Louis Court of Appeals. The first is Zurfluh v. Ry. Co., 46 Mo. App. l. c. 642, whereat Judge Biggs, who wrote the opinion, says:' ££We are, therefore, of the opinion that the plaintiff’s instructions were not authorized by the evidence, and that the verdict and judgment were against the law and the evidence. The other questions presented by the briefs, we need not discuss. My associates concur in this opinion, but we differ as to the proper disposition of the case. They are of the opinion that the cause ought not to he remanded, but a simple order of reversal be entered. I understand their position to be that a simple reversal is not an adjudica
The second is Berning v. Medart, 56 Mo. App. l. c. 449, where Rombauer, P. J., said: “The Supreme Court and this court have recently adopted the rule not to remand a cause for new trial where the plaintiff’s evidence furnishes no substantial ground of recovery, unless it clearly appears that some hiatus in plaintiff’s evidence may likely be supplied on a retrial of the cause in conformity with the true state of the facts. As the reversal of a judgment for plaintiff is equivalent to a nonsuit only, and the plaintiff is still at liberty to substantiate his recovery in a new action, if so advised, the rule works no hardship.”
Such are the cases relied upon by Judge Smith in the Lumber Company case. In so far as the opinions from this court are concerned, none of these are in point.
In the later case of Ordelheide v. Wabash R. R. Co., 80 Mo. App. l. c. 368, the St. Louis Court of Appeals reversed the case without remanding it. Judge Biggs filed a separate opinion and certified the case to this court. In so doing, he said: “Upon this ground I concur in reversing the judgment, but I am of the opinion the case ought to be remanded. The rule of practice is that where an appellate court in an action at law reverses a judgment in favor of plaintiff, the cause will be remanded, unless it appears that all the facts have been proven, and that upon such facts the plaintiff could not possibly recover. [Gatewood v. Hart, 58 Mo. 261; Brown v. Bank, 5 Mo. App. 1; Berning v. Medart, 56 Mo. App. 443; Rutledge v.
In Stone v. United Workmen, 117 Mo. App. 297, the Kansas City Court of Appeals follows the ruling in the Lumber Company case.
Upon these cases, the plaintiff contends that a judgment of reversal is equivalent to a nonsuit. That it amounts to nothing more than a nonsuit, and that a new suit can be reinstituted within a year after such judgment. In the Berning case, supra, Judge Rombauer does say that this court has said that a judgment of reversal was equivalent to a nonsuit, but he cites, us to no case, and if it has been so held where the question was an issue, we have been unable to find the case.
Nor is it equivalent to a nonsuit. It is true that at common law the plaintiff could take a nonsuit at any time before verdict. [14 Cyc. 401.] But this rule
In nonsuits .there is no adjudication of the issues involved in the case, whereas in most of the cases wherein the appellate courts simply reverse the case, there has been an adjudication of the issues on the law and facts of the case. There might be cases wherein we could reverse the case without remanding, and yet leave the issues upon the merits untouched. Thus in McQuitty v. Wilhite, 218 Mo. 586, we reversed the case without remanding, and yet never passed upon the merits of the case at all. By the first count of her petition the plaintiff McQuitty sued the administrators of W. R. Wilhite, deceased, for the value of her services. In the second count, she sued for the specific performance of a contract to convey real estate. The trial court found against plaintiff on the first count, but she failed to appeal. But the trial court found for plaintiff on the second count and the administrators appealed. This judgment we reversed on the ground that plaintiff had sued the wrong parties. In other words, such action should have been against the heirs and not the administrators. We have no doubt in a case like this the plaintiff could sue again, but where upon appeal we examine the facts and apply the law, and reverse the case for the reason that plaintiff upon the merits is not entitled to re
III. What we have said in the closing sentences, of the preceding paragraph is certainly the reasonable thing. We should never give a statute an unreasonable construction. The word “reversed” as used in section 4285 and in the new section 2868 should be construed to mean a reversal wherein the merits of the cause have not been adjudicated, as in the McQuitty case, supra. If the statute is to receive the construction contended for by the plaintiff there would be no end to litigation. The statute says, “Such-plaintiff may commence a new action, from time to time, within one year after . . . such judgment . . . reversed.” This would mean, according to plaintiff’s contention, that if the plaintiff was successful below and we reversed the judgment, she could bring the action over within one year, and if again successful before the jury, and1 we reversed that judgment, she could again bring it over and so on until such time as she might be defeated, nisi, or until we entered or directed a verdict for defendant. It must be observed that the statute uses the words “from time to time” and if she can reinstitute her suit after one reversal, she can continue to so reinstitute it after each subsequent reversal.
By statute, we are authorized to enter judgments of simple reversal, and these judgments may or may not be finalities. If the merits of the cases are adjudicated and passed upon' they are final, but if not, they are not necessarily so.
So that considering the whole statute we are of opinion that a reasonable construction thereof precludes the plaintiff from again suing after a judgment of reversal in a ease wherein the merits of the controversy have been investigated and adjudicated by the court, and this fact is one of easy determination.
Bnt if she had new facts, she has lost her opportunity. She might have asked for a modification of the judgment, as such has been permitted in some instances. Thus in Rutledge v. Railroad, 123 Mo. l. c. 140, this court thus spoke in an opinion on a motion to modify a judgment of reversal: “On motion to modify the judgment, it has been suggested that plaintiff may have a cause of action upon further proof that the signal on which the engineer acted, originated with the yardmaster. Plaintiff hence prays that the judgment be modified so as to remand the cause; and thus give him an opportunity to amend, and present that phase of the case to the trial court, the Statute of Limitations having intervened as against any new action he might bring. On consideration of this motion we are of opinion that it should be granted. [Bowen v. Railroad, 118 Mo. 541; Lilly v. Tobbein, 103 Mo. 477.] Accordingly the final judgment of this court will be that the judgment of the circuit court be reversed and the cause remanded.”
It would appear that both plaintiff and the court in that case understood that the judgment of reversal was a finality, and unless modified no further action could be taken by plaintiff. Other cases of like tenor might be cited.
IV. But going a step further we are of opinion that this court has in effect refused to entertain the views urged by plaintiff. Thus in the case of Carroll v. Interstate Rapid Transit Co., 107 Mo. l. c. 664, Barclay, J., said: “My associates entertain a positive opinion that where (as here) it appears that, in every view of the facts, plaintiff has no right of action whatever, the cause should not be remanded for a new trial upon the reversal of an erroneous judgment. Many cogent reasons, no doubt, can be given for that opinion,
Later, the personnel of the court changed, and in the case of Keown v. Railroad, 141 Mo. l. c. 95, the question must have again come up, for Judge Barclay, who wrote the opinion in this case, as well as in the Carroll case, supra, concludes his opinion thus: “Conceding the full force of plaintiff’s evidence, it does not tend to prove the essential fact of a breach of duty toward Keown. Whether submitted testimony tends to establish negligence is a question of law. Where the testimony does not have such tendency it is the duty of the court to so declare upon a proper request, The learned trial court should have given the instruc
It must be concluded that the court again discussed the character of the judgment to be entered, because Judge Barclay refers especially to his individual views in the Carroll case. In both of these cases, Judge Barclay was insisting upon remanding the cause so as to allow the plaintiff to take a nonsuit, but the other members of the court were evidently of the opinion that there were no merits in either case, and finally determined them by a simple judgment of reversal. Had it ever occurred to them that a judgment of reversal was tantamount to a nonsuit, they evidently would have answered Judge Barclay’s insistence by so suggesting.
But beyond this, the vast number of cases which this court has disposed of by a simple judgment of reversal bespeaks the interpretation placed upon section 4285 at least. This section has been with us since the organization of the court. Section 2868, supra, is in word's the same, so that the interpretation given to the one must be applied to the other. Counsel for defendant has industriously collated a great. number of our eases wherein we have fully adjudicated the merits and entered a simple judgment of reversal. He has selected some opinions from every judge upon this bench in three or more decades. We shall not burden this opinion with a list of the cases, but they are causes wherein we have said that under the facts no recovery could be had and then entered a simple judgment of reversal. The curious can examine the
If the conduct of this court means anything, in view of the fact that section 4285 has been upon the Missouri Statutes since the Territorial days of 1807, it means that we have always understood that a simple reversal was the end of a case -wherein we undertook to determine the merits of the controversy. And we now say that the statute under consideration in the case at bar should be so construed.
It follows from this, that Judge Hall, in the original case in this State, i. e., Musser v. Harwood, 23 Mo. App. 495, was right when he said: “It would be an endless and fruitless task to discover and cite all the cases in our Reports, in which cases have been finally determined by our appellate courts by simply reversing the judgment. "We are clearly of the opinion that the Supreme Court, by ordering simply the reversal of the judgment in the case under discussion, intended to, and did, finally determine it, as said court had the full power so to do.” The doctrine of the Musser case we approve, and those differing therefrom, which we have elsewhere mentioned, should be and are overruled.
Y. A thought or two more and we dismiss the subject, save and except to note some cases outside of Missouri cited by the plaintiff. An examination of our cases shows that we have indiscriminately used judgments of reversal, and judgments of reversal and dismissal of the petition.
For instance, in Gatewood v. Hart, 58 Mo. l. c. 265, we disposed of the case, thus: “The judgment is reversed, and as it is evident that a new trial could be of no avail to the plaintiffs, their petition will be dismissed; all the judges concur.”
In Rutledge v. Railway Company, 123 Mo. l. c. 137, at the conclusion of the opinions written in Divis
Thus it will be observed that we have reached the same object, i. e., a disposition of the merits of the controversy through different wordings of our opinions and judgments. Other similar instances could be cited but these serve to illustrate.
There can be no doubt that a reversal of the judgment and a dismissal of the plaintiff’s petition finally determines the cause. So too may the simple judgment of reversal, if it appear that the merits of the cause were submitted and adjudicated. What was held in judgment does not always appear from the judgment itself, but may be gathered from the pleadings and whole record of the case. In the case at bar it appears from the plaintiff’s petition that we held in judgment at the prior hearing both law and facts and therefore the merits of the controversy.
VI. Plaintiff in addition to the cases in this State has cited us the following: Smith v. Adams, 130 U. S. 167; Gardner v. Railroad, 150 U. S. 349; Bucher v. Railroad, 125 U. S. 555; Spring Valley Coal Co. v. Patting, 210 Ill. 342; Railroad v. Bentz, 108 Tenn. 670.
The Smith case, supra, does not reach the question. Mr. Justice Field in discussing an incidental question in the case, used this language: “But there is a ground, not taken by the respondent, which forces itself upon our consideration, and that is, that the judgment of the Supreme Court of the Territory is not in form a final judgment. It not merely reversed the judgment of the district court, but remanded the
In the Gardner case, supra, plaintiff had first sued in the State courts of Michigan. In the lower court of the State he recovered. This judgment was reversed by the Supreme Court, but the cause was remanded. Plaintiff then went to the lower court and took a non-suit, but thereafter brought his suit in the United States court In the Federal court the defendant contended that plaintiff was estopped by the judgment of the Michigan court. This contention was- disallowed because there had been no final judgment. This was clearly right, because the remanding of the case left it open for further proceedings, including a nonsuit, if plaintiff desired such.
The Bucher case, supra, is well stated in the first syllabus, which reads: “The plaintiff sued the defendants in a State court and recovered judgment. The highest appellate court of the State, reviewing the case, decided the points of law involved in it against the plaintiff, set aside the judgment for error in the ruling of the court below, and sent the case back for a new trial. The plaintiff then became nonsuit, and brought the present suit in the circuit court of the United States on the same cause of action. Held, that he was not estopped.” The point is the same
The Illinois case, supra, covers the same question as in the Bucher and Gardner cases. The first syllabus' states the case, and reads: “A judgment by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals reversing a judgment of the United States Circuit Court in a personal injury case and remanding the cause for a new trial is not a final judgment, and, if followed by a nonsuit, cannot be pleaded as an estoppel in a subsequent suit in a State court on the same cause of action.”
The Tennessee case, supra, is fully covered by the first syllabus, which reads: “Where the United States Circuit Court of Appeals reverses a judgment in favor of plaintiff, declaring that he has no right of recovery, even upon his own theory, under the law as administered by the Federal courts, and remands the cause for a new trial, and the plaintiff, thereupon, takes voluntary nonsuit and brings a new action in the State court, the decision of the Federal court is not conclusive, either as res adjtidicata or as a declaration of the law of the case, upon plaintiff in the prosecution of his action in the State court, where a different view of the law applicable to the case prevails, under which he is entitled to recover.”
It will be observed that in each of the five eases the judgment under discussion was one wherein the judgment nisi had not only been reversed, but the cause had been remanded. The cases are therefore absolutely foreign to the question at issue in this case. No one would contend that a judgment of this court which reversed the judgment nisi and remanded the cause would be a final judgment.
Later the plaintiff added to her brief the following cases: Spees v. Boggs, 204 Pa. St. 506; McOmber v. Chapman, 42 Mich. 117; Coffin v. Cottle, 16 Pick. 383;
After all, the question here, as in all States, is oné which must be determined upon the statutory provisions, and the construction thereof, either tacit or explicit, given by the court.
We shall not consume further time and space. It follows from what has been said that the judgment of the lower court is right and should be affirmed. It is therefore ordered that the judgment be affirmed.