19 Nev. 379 | Nev. | 1887
By the Court,
In May, 1884, defendant owed plaintiff nearly six thousand dollars, upon promissory notes secured by mortgages, and for money paid out. On the second day of October, 1884, plaintiff brought an action in the district court of Eureka County to recover two thousand six hundred and forty-seven dollars, and interest, upon two promissory notes, and for money paid out. That case was transferred to White Pine County for trial. In bis answer defendant denied any and all indebtedness, and alleged that he had paid plaintiff in full all sums of money claimed in the complaint to be due. After trial upon the merits, plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment for two thousand three hundred and seventy-two dollars.
At the trial in this case it was admitted and agreed that, in the White Pine Case, defendant had filed and served notice of intention to move for a new trial; that no statement had been settled; that said motion was still pending; and that defendant had not executed any bond or undertaking on appeal. Plain
The verdict in that case must have turned on those issues, for there were no others, and it was in favor of plaintiff. Yet in this action, between the same parties, those are the precise questions which defendant endeavored to agitate again; and to that end he introduced evidence substantially the same-as that produced at the trial in White Pine.
After defendant had rested, for the purpose of proving-what questions were submitted and determined in the former case, plaintiff introduced in evidence copy of complaint, summons, answer, order of removal to White Pine County for trial, verdict, and judgment in that case, and also oral testimony showing what evidence was introduced by the respective parties in support of the issues there made. The court charged the jury, among other things, that if they found the verdict of the jury- and the judgment of the court in the case tried in White Pina were in favor of plaintiff upon the issues of delivery or non-delivery, acceptance or non-acceptance, of the said deed, and if they further found that defendant in this action relied upon the
The district court in White Pine County had jurisdiction of the parties and the subj.ect-matter of that action. The court and the district court of Eureka County had concurrent jurisdiction. In the two cases mentioned, the parties and the issues made by the pleadings were the sajne. The facts put in issue and found by the jury in the White Pine Case in favor of plaintiff, upon which recovery was based, were identical with those that defendant attempted to establish in his favor in this action, and upon which he relied to defeat plaintiff’s recovery. The verdict and judgment in the former case established the fact, conclusively, that the deed referred to was not delivered or accepted in payment or satisfaction of plaintiff’s demands, and consequently that the notes and claims in question in that action had not been paid thereby. If there was not such delivery or acceptance of the deed as to constitute payment of the demands in question in that action, the same was true of the notes involved in this, because the transaction was entire, and the conveyance covered and satisfied the whole indebtedness, if any part of it. Upon these facts the judgment in the former case, as evidence, was conclusive against defendant upon the only material issues raised in this case. (McLeod v. Lee, 17 Nev. 103; 1 Greenl. Ev., sec. 534; Caperton v. Schmidt, 26 Cal. 496;
Defendant did not claim that he had paid the notes in question, unless the execution and alleged delivery of the deed of May 31,1884, constituted such payment. Upon that point the former judgment was conclusive against him, and the court did not err in granting a new trial.
Order appealed from affirmed.
85 Am. Dee. 187.
15 Am. Dec. 256.
15 Am. Dec. 102.
53 Am. Dec. 850.
79 Am. Dec. 411.