de Kohly v. Fernandez

58 Misc. 24, 110 N.Y.S. 398
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1908
StatusPublished

This text of 58 Misc. 24 (de Kohly v. Fernandez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
de Kohly v. Fernandez, 58 Misc. 24, 110 N.Y.S. 398 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1908).

Opinion

Goff, J.

On July 13, 1894, at the city of Havana, island of Cuba, José Miguel Fernandez and Andres Fernandez, brothers, executed and delivered to Carolina Fernandez de Kohly, their sister, a contract ” in writing which acknowledged an indebtedness by José and Andres to Carolina of sixty-nine thousand dollars ($69,000), and as security for payment mortgaged certain plantations. It was provided that the money should be paid by installments at stated times, and on failure of any such payment Carolina might elect to demand payment of the whole sum, and on failure to pay foreclose all the mortgages given as security. The town of Colon was designated as the place in which were to be made all notifications, citations and other proceedings in and out of court which would spring out of the contract.” In August, 1895, because of the failure to pay installments, Carolina commenced an executory action ” in the Court of First Instance in the city of Colon for the recovery of the portion of the indebtedness due by José and Andres under the contract,” and for execution [26]*26against a certain plantation and against their remaining property. In this action judgment was awarded Carolina and execution issued under which were sold the remaining plantations. The proceeds of the different sales in the aggregate were applied to the payment of the original indebtedness, leaving a deficiency of many thousands of dollars. An appeal was taken from this judgment, and it was affirmed in the intermediate court of appeal, and on further appeal it was affirmed by the Supreme Court. In October, 1902, Carolina commenced an action in this court, as plaintiff, against José and Andres, as defendants,-on the “ contract ” of July 13, 1894, for the recovery of the amount of indebtedness acknowledged therein, less the sums that had been received by the plaintiff from the proceeds of the sales of the plantations. The defendant José appeared and answered,- the defendant Andres was not served with summons and is not before the court. Subsequently, and in Hay, 1903, Andres commenced a “ declaratory action ” in the Court of First Instance in the city of Colon, Cuba, naming as defendants Carolina and José, “ to declare that a certain credit secured by mortgage cannot be claimed ” and to annul and declare void the aforementioned executions and sales of the plantations. This “ declaratory action ” was instituted and maintained after conferences between Andres and José, who appeared but did not defend. Carolina appeared and defended. Judgment was rendered declaring “that payment cannot be enforced of the credit of sixty-nine thousand dollars, in which amount Andres and José Miguel Fernandez declared they were indebted towards Carolina Fernandez de Kohly, as appears from deed 426, executed on the 13th day of July, 1894, * * * which was the basis of the executory suit prosecuted by that lady in this court against her brothers, Andres and José Miguel Fernandez, likewise declaring void the public sales effected in said suit.” Then the defendant José made a supplemental answer that the said judgment of the Court of First Instance was a bar to the maintenance of the action herein and was res adjudicate between the parties thereto. Thereupon Carolina appealed [27]*27from the judgment of the Court of First Instance to the intermediate court of appeal sitting at Matanzas, and that court reversed the judgment. Carolina then interposed reply in this action that the judgment of the Court of First Instance had been reversed on the merits, that such judgment was reversed by a competent court after the commencement of the action herein, that it determines the matters in controversy,” and that the matters at issue therein have become and are res adjudicata as between the parties to this action.” From the judgment of reversal Andres appealed to the Supreme Court, the final court of appeal of the Republic of Cuba, and that court reversed the judgment of the intermediate court of appeal and affirmed the judgment of the Court of First Instance. José then made a second supplemental answer by pleading that the judgment set up in the reply as a bar to the action herein had been reversed and the judgment of the Court of First Instance confirmed by the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction, the court of final appeal, was a bar to and was res adjudicata upon the matters set forth in the complaint as between the parties to this action. FTo reply was made to this plea and the parties entered upon trial. Because of the prolonged and intricate litigation in the courts of Cuba between the parties to this action relative to the estate of their father the pleadings and documentary evidence are very voluminous and complex. To give even a condensed narrative or brief reference to all the questions arising would require a statement of inordinate length, and hut an outline of the principal links in succession is here sketched in order to form the basis of the question which lies at the threshold. Is the judgment of the Court of First Instance in the “ declaratory action ” as affirmed by the judgment of the final court of appeal a bar to the maintenance of this action, and are the matters therein determined res adjudicata? In considering this question it is not necessary to refer to or pass upon the many questions raised relating to the changes of government in Cuba, the effect of military decrees or of' international treaties. The action is on a written instrument, and whatever obligations rest upon the [28]*28defendants must be determined by the terms of that instrument. The prayer of the plaintiff Andres in the declaratory action ” was to establish the nonenforcibility of a mortgage credit and the nullity of various public sales,” and one of the issues in the action was “ whether the credit is true and whether its payment can be exacted.” It was declared by the judgment that the contract ” was “ not a real and effective contract * * * but a feigned contract;” that “ its nullity or inefficacy ” depended “ on its real and effective nonexistence;” that the “ credit ” was nonenforeible; that payment of the sum claimed to be an indebtedness could not be enforced, and that the forbeclosnre sales had under the “ contract ” were null and void. Thus, in words and in effect, the Court of First Instance declares that the “ contract ” upon which plaintiff sues never had a legal existence. Is the plaintiff bound by that judgment ? There is' no dispute but that the Court of First Instance at Colon had jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the parties. They were residents of Cuba. The contract was made there. It stipulated that all proceedings in court springing out of it ” should be had at Colon, and the plaintiff litigated in and submitted to the jurisdiction of that court. She appealed from its adverse decision, and on securing a reversal set up the judgment in her favor as determining the matters in controversy herein, and that the matters so determined “ have become and are res adjudicaba as between the parties to this action.” Had the trial then proceeded she would, under her plea, have occupied substantially a similar position to that now occupied hy the defendant as to invoking the doctrine of res adjudicata. ' But since the rendition of that judgment the defendant succeeded in obtaining its reversal and a confirmation of the judgment of the Court of First Instance in his favor, and he now invokes the same doctrine against her that she invokes against him.

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Bluebook (online)
58 Misc. 24, 110 N.Y.S. 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-kohly-v-fernandez-nysupct-1908.