348 Mass. 640 | Mass. | 1965
This is a bill in equity to enjoin the defendants from maintaining an excavation in adjoining land which deprives the plaintiff’s land of lateral support. The bill alleged that because of such excavation the land of the plaintiff has caved in and fallen on the defendants’ land and such subsidence is continuing. The relief sought includes restoration of support and damages.
The defendant McDonald filed no pleading. The defendant McGrath (hereinafter, the defendant) filed a plea in abatement and a plea in bar both of which were sustained in the Superior Court on allegations to the effect that the issues had been fully heard in an action of tort between the same parties in the Superior Court in which the finding had been for the defendant. The plea in bar alleged that “ [ejvidence introduced at the trial on the question of damages was [as] to the amount of fill required to restore the . . . [plaintiff’s] land to its original state, the angle of repose necessary to support such land . . . and the value of the amount of land necessary . . . [for restoration]. Plans and charts were introduced . . . showing the property lines . . . and the angle of repose necessary . . .. The same factual claim as introduced in evidence in the prior case . . . [is] alleged in the . . . present bill. The . . . [plaintiff] at no time . . . sought to amend its declaration nor to amend for hearing . . . [in] Equity.”
The town’s appeals challenge the interlocutory decrees and the final decree that dismissed the bill as against McGrath.
The record before us does not include any evidence taken at the hearing on the pleas. The indorsement on each plea, “Sustained,” imports that the substance of the matter set out in the pleas was established. The basis for the disposition of the prior action is conclusively shown by the record therein, but the record may be explained by extrinsic evidence. Gallo v. Foley, 299 Mass. 1, 5.
Judged by the respective pleadings the plaintiff’s present suit is not barred by the principle of res judicata. Plainly the new allegations call for the application of a different rule of substantive law from that invoked in the first action. Diebold Safe & Loch Co. v. Morse, 234 Mass. 17. Burhe v. Willard, 249 Mass. 313. Sandler v. Silk, 292 Mass. 493, 499. See Magaletta v. Millard, 346 Mass. 591, 596.
But, beyond this, the allegations of the respective pleadings are of different facts. The allegations of the declaration in the prior action speak of actual entry on the plaintiff’s land and acts thereon. The present allegations describe acts taking place on the defendants’ land only, but having an effect on the plaintiff’s land. The present allegations are therefore not essentially the same, restyled and characterized to be appropriate to a different legal theory. Hence, looking only at the pleadings in the two suits, those cases that hold that a second suit is barred if it merely invokes a new theory for relief based on the same facts are inapplicable. Cotter v. Boston & No. St. Ry. 190 Mass. 302. Franklin v. North Weymouth Coop. Bank, 283 Mass. 275, 279-280. Mackintosh v. Chambers, 285 Mass. 594, 596-597. Siegel v. Knott, 318 Mass. 257. Forman v. Wolfson, 327 Mass. 341. Ratner v. Rockwood Sprinkler Co. 340 Mass. 773, 776. We need not pause to consider possible inconsistencies in the two lines of cases. See Schopflocher, What is a Single Cause of Action for the Purpose of the Doctrine of Bes Judicata, 21 Ore. L. Bev. 319; Note, Bes Judicata and the Scope of a Cause of Action in Massachusetts, 34 B. IT. L. Bev. 64.
Notwithstanding differences in the pleadings suggesting a different cause of action, the defendant may show through the evidence at the former trial the identity of the facts of the case tried with the case pending. Thus in the Siegel case, supra, a comparison of the earlier evidence with the plaintiffs ’ opening in the second case showed that, in essence, the plaintiffs were seeking for a second time to recover for the defendant’s acts in foreclosing a mortgage. The first action was, in terms, for wrongful foreclosure. The second was for breach of an oral agreement modifying certain of the mortgage terms, the breach consisting of taking possession to foreclose the mortgage, although, if the
The declaration in the law action brought by the town appears to have been based on a misconstruction of what the defendants in fact did. The plaintiff appears also to have so presented its evidence as to show an intent to make out a case for actual trespass and conversion. The judge’s findings, as noted, state that in the evidence, as well as in the pleadings and specifications, the plaintiff did not intimate that it sought to protect its right to lateral support. The Siegel case does not establish that the adducing of evidence in the first action that would make out a case of the kind later brought must be construed as establishing the identity of the first and second causes of action. Conceivably, if there had been a motion to amend in the town’s first action, it would have been allowed. But the implications of the judge’s findings are otherwise. See Marcus v. Richardson, 299 Mass. 11. His comments emphasize the difference in the causes of action and the inappropriateness of the first case for the relief belatedly sought.' True, the same conduct of the defendant causing the plaintiff’s injury underlies both actions. But the first case was not for that conduct, but for other supposed acts which, according to the judge’s findings, had not been proved. The action did not lose that essential aspect at any time up to judgment. We think that the town has not had its day in court for the loss of lateral support. This is the opinion of a majority of the court.
Interlocutory and final decrees reversed.
These applied to a like action against a partnership also alleged to have trespassed and converted.