Freidenbloom v. McAfee
Freidenbloom v. McAfee
Opinion of the Court
Appellant, J. A. Freiden-bloom, sued appellee, J. L. McAfee, for partition of certain real estate and an accounting of an alleged partnership between them which was formed for the purpose of buying and selling real estate, and building houses and renting the same in El Paso, Tex., said partnership being formed during the year 1899, and was to continue 10 or 12 years, and was to be carried on in the name of appellee, and all property purchased or acquired by virtue of the said partnership was to be taken and held in appellee’s name, and that under said partnership a large amount of real estate had been accumulated and taken in appellee’s name. Appellant sued for a half interest in all the real estate and for an accounting of all the moneys received by ap-pellee on account of said partnership.
“In the District Court, Forty-First Judicial District of Texas, in and for El Paso County, Texas.
“J. A. Freidenbloom v. J. L. McAfee.
No. 8775.
“Be it remembered that on the 9th day of December, 1911, came on to be heard the plea in abatement of the defendant, to plaintiff’s cause of action herein, said plea in abatement having been filed herein December 7,1911, and the court, having heard the said plea, and the evidence adduced on said hearing thereof, in support of said plea, and the argument of counsel for both parties thereon, and having taken the same under advisement until this the 11th day of December, 1911, and being fully advised in the premises, is of the opinion that said plea of abatement should be in all things sustained; it is therefore the order, judgment, and decree of the court that defendant’s said plea of abatement be and the same is hereby in all things sustained, and this suit is hereby this 11th day of December, 1911, dismissed at the cost of the plaintiff, without prejudice to the rights of the plaintiff to file a new suit; and it is further ordered that the defendant have and recover of and from the plaintiff all costs by him incurred herein, for which let him have his execution. To which ruling and judgment of the court plaintiff then and there excepted and gave notice of appeal to the Eighth Court of Civil Appeals at El Paso, Tex.”
The first assignment of error complains of the action of the trial court in overruling the demurrer to the plea of res adjudicata. The judgment in the former suit was entered, sustaining the plea in abatement, and, by an examination of same, it will be noted that the former suit was dismissed at the cost of the plaintiff, without prejudice to the rights of the plaintiff to file a new suit. We are of opinion that the provision in the judgment that the suit be dismissed without prejudice to the rights of the plaintiff to file a new suit would permit him to file such other suit, and that such judgment would not be a bar to a new action.
In Black on Judgments, § 721, it is said:
“Where a bill is dismissed ‘without prejudice,’ the effect of the reservation is to prevent the decree from constituting a bar to another suit brought upon the same subject-matter. The purport of a decree so framed is that such dismissal shall not operate as a bar to a new suit which the party may institute; it does not debar the defendant of any defense which he might be entitled to make in the new suit, and confers no privilege on the complainant; and it will not have the effect of excepting from the time prescribed by the statute of limitations the time of the pendency of that suit. In fact, the effect of the reservation is merely to prevent the decree from constituting a bar to another suit brought upon the same title, but it by no means compromits the court as a judicial determination in favor of that title. Nor does it alter the case that the court erred, by dismissing the bill ‘without prejudice,’ when it ought to have been dismissed finally upon the merits. If the decree is absolutely void for want of authority to make such a reservation, there is no valid adjudication to stand in the way of a new suit And, if it is merely irregular or erroneous, it must be corrected on appeal, and, until that is done, it must stand as rendered and cannot be impeached collaterally. Conversely, if the reservation is omitted where it ought to have been inserted, the error will be corrected in the court above.”
To the same effect is Yan Fleet’s Former Adjudication, p. 67, § 45, which holds that a dismissal of a bill without prejudice or without prejudice to another action, even though' erroneous, will not bar a new suit.
In 23 Cyc. p. 1144, it is said: “If a bill or complaint is. dismissed ‘without prejudice’ (that is, without prejudice to the right to bring another suit or take further proceedings), it has not the force of an adjudication on the merits and cannot be pleaded in bar of another suit upon the same cause of action, even though plaintiff presents no better or stronger case; and, according to the better opinion, it is immaterial that the words ‘without prejudice’ were erroneously or improperly added. But it has been held that these or equivalent words clearly expressing a saving of rights must be expressed in the judgment or decree; and, if the dismissal is specified to be without prejudice to certain specific rights or claims, it may operate as an es-toppel as to all rights or claims not embraced within the reservation.”
We have examined numerous authorities, and they are practically uniform in holding that the judgment in question would not bar a new suit. We are therefore of the opinion that the court erred in overruling the demurrer, and the assignment should be sustained.
In Bates on Partnership, yol. 1, p. 127, § 122, it is said: “Where the business is legal, but the motives for forming the partnership are in fraud of the rights of others, and hence voidable as to them, the partners can be compelled to account to each other. As, where two persons form a firm for the purpose of hindering the creditors of one of them, this fact is no defense to a bill for settlement of the concern.”
The principle as announced is applicable to the case at bar. The partnership, from the allegations of the petition, was entered into for the purpose of buying real estate in El Paso, improving, selling, and renting same, which was a legal business, and the fact that the money invested by the appellant in said concern, under the authorities, would not be such a fraudulent purpose as to prevent a partition and an accounting. Harvey v. Varney, 98 Mass. 118.
Eor the reasons indicated, this cause is reversed and remanded.
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