Martin v. Evans
Martin v. Evans
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action of trover. The suit was brought by the appellant against the appellees, who are the administrators of James Reed, deceased. The plaintiff seeks to recover the value of certain United States coupon bonds claimed by her as her property, and alleged in the declaration to have been converted by James Reed to his own use in his lifetime. To the declaration three pleas were filed. With the first and third we are not concerned on this appeal; but the second presents the question brought up on the record now before us. The second plea is a plea of res adjudicata. It sets forth with particularity and technical precision the proceedings in an equity case at one time pending in the Circuit Court for Allegany County, between the same parties who are the parties to this suit, and avers that the relief sought in that case was the recovery of the value of the identical bonds for the alleged conversion of which this action was subsequently instituted. It further avers that to the bill in equity the defendants, who are also the defendants here, filed their answer flatly denying that the plaintiff owned, as alleged in her bill of compiaint, the bonds therein referred to, and it recites that after a general replication had been filed, testimony was taken and the equity case was heard and was thereafter decided and determined adversely to the plaintiff on the merits. With the plea, and as a part of it, there were filed a copy of the bill in equity and of the Court’s opinion and the final order dismissing -the bill. To this plea thus setting up the defence that the exact and precise issue raised and controverted in this case had been antecedently passed upon and decided on its merits adversely to the plaintiff by a Court of competent jurisdiction in another proceeding between the same parties, the plaintiff demurred. The Circuit Court for Allegany County entered judgment on the demurrer for the defendants and from that judgment this appeal has been taken.
Now, it is not denied and it could not well be disputed at this day, that if a question has once been tried and deter
These few sentences are now seized by the plaintiff and are relied on by her to show that the Equity Court dismissed the bill for the want of jurisdiction to entertain it; and the inquiry comes to this : Do these extracts from the opinion demonstrate, or can they be resorted to for the purpose of showing, that the bill in equity was dismissed, not because there was no decision on the merits, but because the Court was without authority to pass upon the merits at all ? The merits certainly were considered, discussed and decided. The opinion, if it can be consulted to measure the scope of the final order, leaves no room to doubt this. If the merits
Even if the opinion may be looked to for the purpose of ascertaining whether the Equity Court considered that there was an adequate remedy at law, still there are no qualifying words in the decretal order warranting the inference that the merits were not finally adjudicated, or indicating that the dismissal was founded on purely technical grounds. Whenever a deci'ee dismissing a bill in equity fails to restrict its own scope, the presumption, according to the great preponderance of decided cases, is, that the issues raised by the proceedings have been disposed of on their merits and they therefore become res adjudicata. When “ the decree of dismissal is unqualified, it is presumed to be an adjudication on the merits adversely to the complainant, and constitutes a bar to further litigation of the same matters between the parties.” Tankersley v. Pettis, 71 Ala. 179; Story’s Eq. Pl. 793; Adams v. Cameron, 40 Mich. 506; Thompsons. Clay, 3 T. B. Monr. 359; Pelton v. Mott, 11
The broad terms of the decretal order dismissing the bill cannot be limited, qualified or restricted by the opinion filed in the eqúity case. “ The opinion of the Judge is the expression of the reasons by which he reaches his conclusions ; these may be consistent or contradictory, clear or confused.
Agreeing, as we do, with the Circuit Court that the controversy involved in this case was fully and finally determined by the decree in the equity case between the same parties, we affirm-its judgment with costs.
Judgment affirmed with costs above and belotv.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MARTHA M. MARTIN v. WILLIAM H. EVANS and JOHN PRICE, Administrators of JAMES REED
- Cited By
- 28 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Bes Adjudicata — When Dismissal of a Bill in Equity is a Bar to Subsequent Litigation on the Same Subject — Absolute or Qiialified Dismissal of Bill — Effective Decree. Whenever a decree dismissing a bill in equity fails to restrict its own scope, the presumption is that the issues raised by the proceedings had been disposed of on their merits, and they therefore become res adjudicata. The broad terms of a decree dismissing a bill in equity cannot be limited by the opinion of the Court filed in the cause. The decree, and not the opinion, is the instrument with which the Court acts. Plaintiff sued in trover to recover the value of certain coupon bonds alleged to have been converted by defendant’s intestate. Defendants pleaded res adjudicata, and set forth the proceedings in an equity case previously instituted by the plaintiff to recover the same bonds. That bill was dismissed in absolute terms after a hearing. Plaintiff alleged that the bill was dismissed upon the ground that the Court had no jurisdiction because the remedy at law was ample. The opinion of the Equity Court was against the plaintiff on the merits, but also stated that a bill in equity could not have been maintained, even if the plaintiff’s title had been made out. Held, that since there are no qualifying words in the decretal order dismissing the bill, to warrant the inference that the merits of the case were not finally adjudicated, or indicating that the dismissal was founded on purely technical grounds, the order of dismissal must be taken to be a final determination of the controversy and a bar to this action.