delivered the opinion of the court.
This case involves the question as to whether the state courts gave due force and effect to a judgment of the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of South Carolina in an action brought by plaintiff in error against the defendant in error.
The action in the case at bar was brought by defendant in error, whom we shall call Kirven, against plaintiff in error, whom we shall call the Chemical Company, for damages resulting from the defective manufacture of certain fertilizers bought’ by Kirven of the Chemical Company, through one McCall, to whom he .gave his note for twenty-two hundred and twenty-eight dollars. The allegation of complainant is:
“That the said fertilizers, to wit, acid phosphate and dissolved bone, had been manufactured with such gross negligence and want of skill that, instead of being of advantage to the crops to which they were applied, they destroyed the same in large part, and were not only worthless to the plaintiff, but, by destroying his crops, damaged him very heavily, and by the injury'‘which was inflicted on his crop of cotton and corn by fertilizers which were manufactured and sold for use upon them, he was damaged in the sum of $1,995.”
The Chemical Company, in its answer, set up, among other defenses, the judgment of the Circuit Court of the United States. The plea, was not sustained and judgment was entered for Kirven for the amount sued for, which was affirmed by,the Supreme Court of the State. Kirven v. Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co., 77 S. Car. 493.
The facts, so far as necessary to be stated, are as follows: The Chemical Company, being a New Jersey corporation, brought action against Kirven in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of South Carolina on the note before mentioned. Kirven, among other defenses, set up *256 that the note was given for fertilizers, “for, which he agreed to pay a sound price, which is set forth in the note sued upon, and were purchased for the use of the defendant himself and his tenants and customers in making a crop for the year in which the said note was given, but the said fertilizers were so unskillfully manipulated and manufactured and prepared, and were of such inferior quality, that instead of being a benefit to the crops of defendant and his tenants and customers, to whom,he furnished the same, they were deleterious and destructive to the crops, and destroyed the same in large part, and there was an entire failure of consideration to the defendant for said note.”
Kirven- subsequently filed a supplementary answer, in which he omitted, the Chemical Company not objecting, the defense above set out, but pleaded as a counterclaim certain proceedings instituted by the Chemical Company in North Carolina, in which it attached certain cotton belonging to Kirven, sold .the same and “ applied and appropriated the proceeds to its own use and benefit.” The value of the cotton and the amount “so seized and appropriated” were alleged to be twenty-four hundred and fifty dollars ($2,450.00).
Kirven, when testifying as to the purchase of the fertilizers, said: “I did not. know anything, until later on, there was &■ complete destruction of my crop.” Counsel for the company objected “to thb latter clause, on the ground that that whole question is taken out of the complaint.” The objection was sustained and the answer stricken out. The Chemical Company recovered judgment for nine hundred eleven dollars and seven cents ($911.07).
A motion is made to dismiss the writ of error, on the grounds (1) that the assignment of errors in the Supreme Court of the State lacked certainty of specification, as it only stated that the refusal by the trial court to give proper and full credit to the judgment of the Circuit Court, “thereby denied to the defendant [the Chemical Company] a right arising under the authority of the United States.” This, it
*257
is contended, is not sufficient to raise a Federal right, and the following cases are cited:
Chicago & N. W. Ry. Co.
v.
Chicago,
The cases are not applicable. In neither of them was the contention under the Constitution of the United States identified or passed upon. . In the case at bar there is a definite right arising under the authority of the United States and the decision of the court was in effect against it. The case falls within
Crescent City &c. Co.
v.
Butchers’ Union &c. Co.,
The question on the merits is a narrow one. Its solution depends upon the application of well-known principles—too well known to need much more than statement. It is established that the bar of a judgment in another action for the same claim or demand between the same parties extends to not only what was pleaded or litigated in the first action, but what might have been pleaded or litigated- If the second action is upon a different claim or demand, the bar of the judgment is limited to that which was actually litigated and determined.
Cromwell
v.
Sac County,
It is, however, contended by the Chemical Company that whether new matter constitutes a defense or counterclaim under §§ 170, 171 of the Code of . Procedure of South Carolina (inserted in the margin *), it must be set up by a defendant in his answer and cannot be, if not set up, used as an independent cause of action. It is also contended that this being the practice in the state courts, by virtue of the *260 provisions of '§ 914 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, it becomes the practice in causes in the courts of the United States held in South Carolina. That section requires “the practice, pleadings, forms and modes of proceedings” in the Federal courts to “conform as near as may be” to the practice in the state courts. An answer to this contention is that the Supreme Court of the State did not so construe the Code of Procedure. On the effect of the judgment of. the Circuit Court of the United States as res judicata the court divided, but three members of the court must have entertained opinions adverse to the contention of the Chemical Company. Mr. Justice Gary discussed the effect of the judgment, and was of opinion that it was not res judicata, a conclusion at which he could not have arrived if the code of the State required Kirven to set up his demand for damages in the answer. Mr. Justice Woods, in his concurring opinion, expressed the view that under the code the demand could have been, but was not required to be, pleaded in defense. Mr. Justice Pope dissented from that construction, and also' from the effect of the judgment as res judicata. Mr. Justice Jones concurred with the Chief Justice only as to the effect of the judgment.
Finally, it is urged that in the case of Greenwood Drug Company v. Bromonia Company, 81 S. Car. 516, decided since the case at' bar, the Supreme Court of the State of South Carolina is in accord with the contention of the Chemical Company as to the effect of judgments as res judicata, and has. modified tlie views expressed by that court in the case at bar. It may well be contended that we are not concerned to consider to what extent that learned court has modified its views, as we have' taken jurisdiction of this case because of our right to decide the weight and effect to be given to the judgment of the Circuit Court. It is enough, however, to say that the Supreme Court of South Carolina did riot question the correctness of its decision in the case at bar.
Judgment affirmed.-
