124 Wash. 360 | Wash. | 1923
— Respondent, as plaintiff, brought this action to recover the value of certain personal property sold under a chattel mortgage foreclosure, which, it is alleged, was not included in, or covered by, the mortgage. From a judgment against them in the sum of
Appellants raised, by affirmative answer, by objection to the introduction of any testimony, and in various other ways, the "defense of res judicata, and chiefly rely on that issue here.
It appears that, after the appellant First National Bank of Lind had directed the appellant sheriff to proceed by notice and sale to foreclose the chattel mortgage in question, respondent brought an action against the bank and the sheriff, alleging that she was the owner in her separate right of,
“All the furniture and fixtures contained in the Hotel Lind Building, Lind, Washington, located on Lots 4 and 5, Block 2, original Town of Lind, Wash., consisting of office chairs, tables, dining room furnishing, tables, chairs, etc., and bed room furnishings for about thirty rooms, which consists of bed, mattresses, dressers, comodes and pillars, rugs, safe, in fact everything connected with the said hotel, linens and cooking utensils, etc., and so much thereof as has ever been contained in the premises therein described. ’ ’
Therein further alleging that the sheriff had seized that property and would proceed to sell it unless restrained ; that she desired to contest the right to foreclose upon said property, and the prayer was that she be adjudged to be the owner of the property free from the lien of the chattel mortgage and that the sheriff be restrained from further proceeding. The judgment in that case was to the effect that the personal property described was subject to the lien of the chattel mortgage and the action was dismissed, which judgment was affirmed on appeal to this court in Woodland v. First National Bank of Lind, 115 Wash. 448, 197 Pac. 621.
The chattel mortgage foreclosure having been consummated by sale, respondent brought this action,
Law suits should not be tried piecemeal, and in a long line of cases from Sayward v. Thayer, 9 Wash. 22, 36 Pac. 966, 38 Pac. 137, to Brandon v. Leavenworth, 99 Wash. 339, 169 Pac. 867, we have announced and adhered to the rule:
“The general doctrine is that the plea of res judicata applies, except in special cases, not only to points upon which the court was actually required by the parties to form an opinion and pronounce a judgment, but to every point which properly belonged to the subject of litigation, and which the parties, exercising reasonable diligence, might have brought forward at the time.”
As already stated^ this point was raised in various timely ways, and should have been sustained.
The judgment is reversed with directions to dismiss the action.
Main, G. J., Holcomb, Fullerton, and Pemberton, JJ., concur.