5 Kan. App. 253 | Kan. Ct. App. | 1897
The principal question involved in this case is as to the validity and effect of the judgment rendered by the Iowa justice of the peace. There is less than one hundred dollars involved, but a question arises under section 1, article 4, of the Constitution of the United States, which provides that full faith and credit shall be given in each state to the public acts, records and judicial proceedings of every other state.
It is further contended by counsel for the defendant in error that, as the Iowa judgment was not rendered until after the commencement of this action, it cannot be pleaded as a bar to the prosecution of this case. With this contention we cannot agree. If the proceedings in Iowa were valid, and an order, or judgment, was there made on the garnishee before the trial of this case in the District Court of Geary . County, we think it would be a bar to further prosecution of the case. Of course, the mere pendency in another state of an action for the same cause of action, is not a bar to an action in this State. But, as we understand the rule, if a judgment is rendered, the judgment first rendered may be interposed as a bar to the further prosecution of another action. By the appeal taken by the Railway Company from the judgment rendered by the justice of the peace of Geary County, the case was transferred to the District Court for trial de novo, and stood there the same as if originally commenced in that court; nor was it tried there on the defense to the judgment of the justice, but on defenses to the cause of action. If valid, the Iowa judgment merged the cause of action and must be a bar to a further prosecution in this State of a case based on the original cause of action.
*257 “Although a suit is not abated by reason of the pendency of another suit between the same parties and for the same cause of action in another of the United States ; still a judgment rendered in one state by a court having jurisdiction of the suit, will operate as a merger of the cause of action and be a bar to the further prosecution of a suit in another state between the same parties upon the same claim.
“The defendant, a citizen of New Plampshire, was sued simultaneously by the plaintiffs, both in New Hampshire and in Vermont, upon the same cause of action. In each suit the property of the defendant in the state in which the action was brought was attached, but the attachment in New Plampshire was subject to several prior attachments of other creditors. The plaintiffs obtained a judgment in the New Hampshire suit, which, however, had not been paid : Held, that the recovery of the judgment in New Hampshire was a bar to the further prosecution of the suit in this state.” McGilvray v. Avery, 30 Vt. 538.
“Parties having a judgment in another state, legally rendered by a court of common law jurisdiction, cannot maintain an action in this state on the original debt or cause of action.
“The effect of a common law judgment is practically to destroy, so long as it exists, the grounds upon which it rests.
“The plaintiffs brought suit in the Supreme Court of the State of New York to recover a debt claimed to be due from the defendants, and afterwards brought suit in the Circuit Court of Essex County, in this State, against the defendants for the same cause of action, pending which last suit the plaintiffs obtained a judgment in the State of New York ; this judgment operates as a merger of the original debt, and may be pleaded in bar of the suit brought in this State.” Barnes & Drake v. Gibbs et al., 31 N. J. L. 317.
£ ‘ The pendency of another suit for the same cause of action may be pleaded in abatement of a suit subsequently commenced; but the converse of the proposition does not hold true. The original, or first suit,*258 cannot be abated and a plea that another action for the same cause was afterwards commenced. Renner v. Marshall, 1 Wheat. 215. But this doctrine does not overturn the plea. The defendant does not set up matter in abatement, but in bar of the action. He does not plead the pendency of another suit, but a judgment rendered. The plea-does not go to the form of the remedy, but to the right of the plaintiff. It shows that the cause of action which the plaintiff once had is gone forever. I can see no good reason why the defendant should not be at liberty to set up this, as well any other bar to the further maintenance of the action, which may have arisen since suit brought. It is true that he might have pleaded in abatement before the justice ; but the omission to do so, cannot be construed into a waiver of the right to set up matter in bar which had not then arisen. He has omitted no opportunity of pleading the trial and the judgment before the justice; and that judgment is none the less conclusive because the defendant might have got rid of the action in another way. If the plaintiff had recovered on the former trial, he would hardly think of maintaining this action. It would be giving him two judgments against the same party for one debt. But the question now is the same, in principle, as it would be if the plaintiff had recovered before the justice. The original cause of action is merged and gone — not because the one party or the other prevailed on the former trial, but because the right has been tried, and adjudged one way or the other.” Nicholl v. Mason, 21 Wend. 839.
To the same effect are Rogers v. Odell, 39 N. H. 457 ; Baxley v. Linah, 16 Pa. St. 241, 55 Am. Dec. 494; U. S. v. Dewey, 6 Bliss, 503.
The judgment will be reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings in accordance with the views expressed herein.