113 A. 98 | Md. | 1921
In the case of McComas v. Wiley,
The present suit is in ejectment, and it was brought by the heirs of Mrs. Wiley against the heirs of her husband, to recover the real estate of which he was seised at the time of his death. In the trial of the case below, the issue joined was held to be controlled and determined by the adjudication in the case presented on the previous appeal. Upon this theory the record of that case was admitted in evidence over objection by the defendants, and their proffers to prove that Mrs. Wiley did not survive her husband were refused. The prayers offered by the defendants in opposition to the theory of res adjudicata were likewise rejected. These are the rulings to which the exceptions in the record refer, and they are all concerned with the single question as to whether the decision in the former case is conclusive of the issue involved in this action. *639
There are some very important differences between the pending case and the one previously decided. This is an action of ejectment to try the title to real estate. That was a proceeding to assert a claim to personal property. In this case the parties are acting in their individual character as heirs at law. The petitioners and respondents in the other case were claiming and defending in their representative capacities as administrators. The order of the orphans' court entered in pursuance of our decision on the former appeal was passed in reference to a subject within its jurisdiction. The present issue is one which it had no authority to determine.
As originally filed the petition in the other case claimed the right of possession of both the real and personal property of the decedent. One of the grounds of a demurrer to the petition was that the determination of the ownership of the real estate was beyond the jurisdiction of the orphans' court. The demurrer having been sustained and the petition dismissed, the case was appealed to this court, and is reported in
In order that a prior judicial decision may be conclusive of a question raised in a separate suit, it must have been a final judgment on the merits, rendered in the exercise, and within the scope, of a competent jurisdiction, and the subject and parties in both causes must be identical. These are all essential elements of the principle of res adjudicata. A statement of the principle in the recent case of Christopher v. Sisk,
The issues raised in the orphans' court proceeding and in the pending ejectment suit both depend upon the question of survivorship as between Mr. Wiley and his wife. But the decisions in the two cases could not be similar in their purpose and effect. The object and result of the former case was to determine who were entitled to the personal estate in process of administration. In the present suit a decision is sought between opposing claimants of the title to real estate with which the administration was in no way concerned. The jurisdiction of the orphans' court in the case tried before it acquired, of course, no greater scope or potency because the case was brought to this court for review. If there had been no appeal, the decision of the orphans' court would have precisely the same effect in reference to the question now presented. *641 There is nothing in the order of that court which gives it the character of a judgment in rem with respect to the subject-matter of this ejectment suit, and makes it binding as such on those not parties to the petition upon which the order was passed. It was not equivalent to an adjudication as to the validity or construction of the will, as suggested in the argument, and the decisions cited upon that theory are therefore not available as precedents. The probate of the will was not the subject of contest, and its simple provisions required and received no judicial interpretation. It was in reference to conditions independent of the will that the decision of the orphans' court was rendered. The proceeding was certainly not inrem so far as the real estate was concerned, and the conflicting claims determined by the order were asserted by administrators who sustained no relation of privity with the heirs at law by whom this suit is prosecuted and defended.
It is clear that the issue in this action of ejectment was not decided in the case tried in the orphans' court, and that if it had undertaken to pass upon the title to the real estate involved in this litigation, its order, to that extent, would have been nugatory. There was no jurisdiction which it possessed or attempted to exercise over the subject of the present suit or the parties between whom it was instituted. It necessarily follows that the order of the orphans' court relied upon as a conclusive adjudication of the issue in the pending case is not entitled to be given that effect under the conditions shown by the record.
Judgment reversed with costs and new trial awarded. *642