46 Mo. 26 | Mo. | 1870
delivered the opinion of the court.
In 1858 the plaintiff gave West and» Holton his promissory note for $2,000, and, by sundry indorsements, it came through Jane West, wife of one of the payees, into the hands of the defendant, who recovered judgment upon it against the maker. The present action is brought to COMPEL and set oee a claim against West,, the husband, and to enjoin the collection of so much of the judgment, claiming that the note was prosecuted for his use; that it was fraudulently placed in the hands of said defendant to be collected in his own name, for the purpose of preventing the application of the set-off of some $1,100, paid by the plaintiff upon an order of West, and by its terms agreed to be supplied upon said note, and also claiming other equities. The defense in part is res adjudicata, and upon that ground the Circuit Court dissolved the injunction and dismissed the petition.
It appears that when the original suit was brought upon the note, the facts embraced in this petition were set forth in the answer in order to constitute an equitable set-off to a portion of the claim ; but, wrhen the case was called for trial the defendant (present plaintiff) did not appear, his defense was not considered, and judgment was rendered upon the note. In giving the reason for his non-appearance, the present petition states that he relied entirely upon his attorney to look after the case, but that the attorney had, without his knowledge, left the State. Under these circumstances, has the plaintiff a right again to come into court and ask its protection ? There is no res adjudicata. This equitable set-off has never been passed upon. But having had the opportunity of prosecuting it, and having actually set it out on paper, shall he now be permitted to prosecute it by petition ?
This court has frequently held that equity will not interfere to grant a new trial, and let in a defense, where the failure to make it was the result of neglect by the party or his attorney. (Cadwallader v. Atchison, 1 Mo. 659; Risher v. Roush, 2 Mo. 95;
The plaintiff not having set forth in his petition any excuse, as fraud or mistake, for not having prosecuted his set-off in the former suit, that would of itself entitle him to relief, we must treat his case as if no such defense had been attempted. In that case could the matter be prosecuted as an independent claim? If not, he has lost his day in court, and must suffer tho penalty of his negligence, and it makes no difference whether the defense were a legal or equitable one. (Dederick v. Hoystradt, 4 How. Pr. 350; Hunt v. Farmers’ L. & T. Co., 8 How. Pr. 416.)
I have said’that this equitable set-off is not res adjudícala. Certainly the matter set forth had not been adjudicated in fact, but it is claimed that the general character of the judgment necessarily implies that-it was passed upon; that the finding the issues for the plaintiff must have included all that were made by the pleadings. It certainly would include all that were prosecuted or involved in the prosecution. The record shows that this defendant (the present plaintiff) did not appear. His set-off was not then prosecuted, whatever the entry, for it could not be prosecuted. A set-off is an independent claim; a defendant may bring it in to extinguish, in part or the whole, the one upon which he is sued, or he may sue upon it independently. But however brought into court, it is an affirmative demand, that can not be investigated upon the merits unless prosecuted by him who makes it. The court does not sit to represent parties, but to hear their allegations and proofs ; and if they fail to appear and present their demands, it can only dismiss them without adjudication. This is necessarily so, and I can not find that the contrary has ever been held.
The subject of former adjudication in relation to prosecutions
The court, in Risher v. Roush, 2 Mo. 97, though it was not The main point involved in The case, said: “If The party have any demand good by way of set-off, be must be driven to bis separate action for remedy if be submitted no evidence on That point in a court of law.”
Burrell v. Knight, 51 Barb. 267, was an action upon a warranty of a horse. It appeared that before the action was brought the plaintiff bad been sued by the defendant for the price of the horse, and that be set up the breach of the warranty as á defense. He did not, however, appear at the trial, and judgment was rendered against him for the price upon the testimony of the plaintiff. After the trial, but before the justice bad entered judgment, the defendant bad withdrawn bis defense. The Supreme Court, at general term, held that be was not precluded by the defense from bringing bis action from the fact that be did not appear at the trial. “The defendant,” says -the court, “did not appear at the trial. -The action was undefended. The only witness examined was the plaintiff, and it is not ■ to be presumed be gave any testimony touching the defense. The defense, therefore, was never submitted to the justice. A withdrawal of the answer by the defendant’s counsel was quite unnecessary.”
Tbe court cited numerous authorities in cases where adjudica
The court, in the judgment now under consideration, found the issues for the plaintiff, and it affirmatively appears that the defendant was not present, and hence did not prosecute his claim. The inference must be that the court found only such issues for the plaintiff as it could lawfully consider, and that it found nothing upon the matters that were not submitted for its consideration; and if there were any doubt upon this point, it would be competent to prove by parol that the matters set up in the present petition were not in fact submitted and passed upon.
The petition alleges that West, to whom the plaintiff advanced the $1,100, is the owner of the judgment, or most of it; that the note was transferred to Salisbury to enable West to cheat and defraud the plaintiff, and prevent him from setting off this advance; that West is insolvent, and is about to recover of the plaintiff the judgment he had obtained in the name of Salisbury while protected by his insolvency from -his own indebtedness. It is .a proper case for equitable interference. (Field v. Oliver, 43 Mo. 200.) The matter has not been adjudicated, nor was the plaintiff bound to set it up as a defense to the former suit.
The other judges concurring, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.