Blaisdell v. Inhabitants of York

Supreme Judicial Court of Maine
Blaisdell v. Inhabitants of York, 115 Me. 351 (Me. 1916)
99 A. 33; 1916 Me. LEXIS 92
Cornish, Hanson, King, Philbrook, Savage

Blaisdell v. Inhabitants of York

Opinion of the Court

Hanson, J.

This action of assumpsit is brought to recover of the defendant for certain services alleged to have been performed for it by the plaintiff. The defendant pleads a former judgment in bar. The former judgment is the one directed by this court in Blaisdell v. York, 110 Maine, 500. The case comes before us on report.

The parties have stipulated and agreed “that the subject matter claim and entire cause of action as set forth in the said pending writ and declaration ... is that part of the subject matter claim and cause of action that was set forth and included in the writ and declaration of said Edward B. Blaisdell against the inhabitants of said town of York in his said former action reported to said court . . . upon which opinion was written in said no Maine, pages 500 to 522 inclusive, though in different form and phraseology, and consists of the same subject matters, items, charges and amounts which said Blaisdell in said former action sought to recover and which the law court in said former action disallowed as being embraced and falling within the alleged supplemental contract as reported in said Blaisdell v. York, 110 Maine, 500."

The foregoing stipulation is verified by a comparison of the declarations in the two cases, and an examination of the reported case.

This stipulation squarely brings the case within the doctrine declared in Corey v. Independent Ice Co., 106 Maine at p. 494, and Wilson v. Lacroix, 111 Maine, 324. In the latter case the court used this. language: “It is a fundamental rule of law, that con*353ceding- jurisdiction, regularity in proceedings and the absence of fraud, a judgment between the same parties is a final bar to any other suit for the same cause of action, and is conclusive not only as to all matters which were tried, but also as to all which might have been tried in the first action.”

In fact, as appears both by the stipulation and the record, the claim now sued was not only embraced in the former declaration, but it was considered, and was decided, adversely to the plaintiff, in the former suit. The claim is res judicata. The suit is barred.

Judgment for the defendant.

Reference

Full Case Name
Edward B. Blaisdell v. Inhabitants of Town of York
Status
Published