Eastman v. Cooper

32 Mass. 276
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1834
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Mass. 276 (Eastman v. Cooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eastman v. Cooper, 32 Mass. 276 (Mass. 1834).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Shaw C. J.

The Court are of opinion, that neither of the two pleas can be sustained, as a good bar to the present action. It cannot be sustained as a plea in bar of a former acqu'ttal, because it sufficiently appears from the record, that the cause of action was not the same. Had the plaintiff relied upon these notes, as his ground and cause of action, upon the money counts, or in any form of declaring, he must have failed, because at the time of the action brought, these notes were not due. Still the notes were offered in evidence and to a certain extent their validity was tried. It having been heretofore decided as a rule of law, that the existence of a note, not yet due, is a good consideration for a new note payable on demand, upon which the holder may presently commence a suit and attach property, the plaintiff gave these notes in evidence, not as notes due, upon which he could bring suit, but to show a good subsisting debt, due but not payable, from the same firm, as a consideration for the note on demand, on which his suit was in fact commenced. Although therefore the validity of these notes, as an existing consideration for the note sued, was drawn in question and in effect tried, yet it was a question collateral to the one in issue. A plea in bar, of former acquittal or former conviction, must not only show that the same question was tried, but that the same cause of action was adjudicated between the parties. Here it is very clear that the cause of action is not the same ; that action being upon a promissory note payable on demand, and this on several notes payable on time, and not due when that action was brought.

Nor can the plea of the same matter by way of estoppel be sustained. In order to constitute an estoppel, the same point must be put in issue, upon the record, and directly found by the jury. Wherever a point of fact has been so put in issue and found by a jury, there the record is regarded as conclusive of that fact, whenever it is again drawn in question by the parties, or their privies. But it results from the es[280]*280tablished rules of pleading, that this rule must be strictly confined to facts put directly in issue, and cannot be extended to collateral facts, or facts to be deduced by inference from the verdict. Outram v. Morewood, 3 East, 346 ; Spooner v. Davis, 7 Pick. 147.

This opinion is confined solely to the question upon the demurrer, whether the matter pleaded is a good bar, and has no bearing upon the question, whether the verdict and judgment may be given in evidence, which depends upon different considerations. Parker v. Standish, 3 Pick. 288.

Pleas adjudged bad

The cause was afterwards tried upon the general issue, before Slum C. J.

The signature to the notes, and the partnership of the defendants, as brewers, being proved, the defence was, that the notes were given by Robbins for purposes not connected with the partnership and in fraud of the other partners, of which the plaintiff had actual or constructive notice, and therefore that Cooper and Gould were not liable.

1. The defendants proposed to show that the same question had been tried in the former suit upon the note for 4700 dollars, and offered in evidence the verdict and judgment in that suit. The case proposed to be proved was, that the same defence was relied on as in the present action, namely, that the note for 4700 dollars was given by Robbins in fraud of bis partners, with express or implied notice to the plaintiff; that a receipt was then given in evidence, showing that the same note was given as collateral security for the seven notes then held by the plaintiff and now sued, none of which were then due ; and it should seem that this was done to enable the plaintiff to commence an action against the firm and attach property, they being then in failing circumstances ; that on the trial of the former action, the consideration of the note for 4700 dollars, and the fact that it was given for partnership purposes, being questioned, the plaintiff then gave in evidence the seven notes now sued, and then held by him, and went into proof tracing them to their origin, with a view to show [281]*281that they were respectively given on good consideration and for partnership purposes.

And it was contended, that the jury, in finding against the validity of the note for 4700 dollars and its binding effect upon the partners, did in effect decide against the validity of the seven notes then relied on, as a consideration, in these respects.

Whereupon it was ruled, though objected to, that the former verdict and judgment, though not a bar, were competent evidence, if in fact the same questions now raised were submitted and passed upon ; and that the weight of the evidence would be a question for the jury, depending upon circumstances, and to be taken in connexion with any other evidence now given. And the jury were subsequently instructed, that if they were satisfied from the evidence, that the question submitted to the jury upon the former trial, between the same parties, was the same now raised, namely, whether the seven notes were made by Robbins in the name of the firm and were given for purposes of his own, and not to raise money or purchase stock for the firm, and this known to the plaintiff, and that the jury did pass upon that question, then the verdict and judgment in the former case, in favor of the defendants, was competent evidence of the same facts now in issue on this trial.

2. The defendants offered in evidence the report made by Parker, the late chief justice of this Court, before whom the former cause was tried, and though objected to, as not competent evidence, it was admitted, not as evidence of the facts recited in it, or detailed in the evidence reported, but as evidence bearing upon the question, whether the questions of fact which were then presented to the court and jury, were the same questions now in issue between these parties.

3. It appeared that Robbins was carrying on a tobacco nusiness wholly distinct from his brewing business, and the defendants offered to give in evidence several purchases of tobacco made by Robbins previous to the time of the origin of the notes now in suit, upon which he had given notes in the name of Cooper, Gould & Robbins. It was also testified □y one Loring, (without any objection on the part of the [282]*282plaintiff,) that in a conversation with the witness, whether before or after the failure of the defendants he could not say, the plaintiff said that he had advised Robbins to give up his tobacco business, and take his notes out of the market, and not have his mind so much embarrassed.

It was ruled, principally upon the authority of the late chief justice in the former case, that evidence of notes o1 the firm given by Robbins for purposes not connected with those of the partnership, especially for the purchase of tobacco, was competent evidence.

4. It having been a question, whether the notes last mentioned were or were not given with the consent of the other partners, there being no direct evidence either way, the court was called on for an opinion as to the presumption ; whereupon the jury were instructed, that the partnership being limited to the purpose of carrying on the brewing business, the use of the name of the firm by one of the partners for another and distinct purpose, was prima facie

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 Mass. 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastman-v-cooper-mass-1834.