Follansbee v. Walker

1 Foster 380
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Erie County
DecidedOctober 27, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Foster 380 (Follansbee v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Erie County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Follansbee v. Walker, 1 Foster 380 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1873).

Opinion

Opinion delivered October 27th, 1873, by

Sharswood J.

There was no error in the admission of the record of the former judgment. The parties in that suit and in the action tried below were substantially the same. In the former, Joshua Foliansbee was the legal, in the latter, he is the equitable plaintiff. The subject matter of the two suits appeared by the record to be identical. The presumption would be upon the issues, that the merits had been passed upon in the former proceeding. Such being the case, if no technical objection appeared to have been raised upon the record to the right of Joshua Foliansbee to maintain the action as legal plaintiff, the judgment in that action would be a bar to a. subsequent action by him as equitable plaintiff. If it appeared that only the equitable, not the legal right, was in Joshua Foliansbee, it would be-presumed that the defendant had waived that purely technical objection. It would be very unreasonable and contrary to the settled rules upon the-subject, to permit the plaintiff having once been defeated on the merits, to try the same question over again in a different form. Calhoun’s Lessee v. Dunning, 4 Dall. 120; Marsh v. Pier, 4 Rawle, 273; Chambers v. Lapsley, 7 Barr, 24.

But we are of the opinion that the learned judge below fell into an error in excluding the evidence offered by the plaintiffs, the rejection of 'which forms the subject of the second assignment. That offer was to. prove by members of the jury empanelled on the trial of the first suit “that the jury only decided on the preliminary question submitted by the court, whether or not the transaction was with the firm of Walker & Fol-iansbee, or with Foliansbee alone, and that they did not pass upon the accounts between the parties submitted to them in a subsequent part of the charge.” This was objected to for the reason that the evidence was incompetent and irrevelant. In strictness this was not an objection to the-competency of the witnesses, but only to the competency of the evidence.. Waiving that point, however, we will consider-both questions.

The charge of the judge as filed of record in the first case, showed' conclusively that both the questions referred to in the offer were submitted to the jury. In Carmoney v. Hoober, 5 Barr, 305, the charge of the judge so filed was considered as sufficient to establish on what point a former recovery had-passed. Nothing seems better settled than that the evidence thus offered was competent. It did not contradict the record, but was entirely consis[381]*381tent with it. On the general issue under the pleas of non assumfserunt, the defendants could have defeated the plaintiff by showing that the con- . tract was not made with him, but with a firm of Follansbee & Walker. Non-joinder of plaintiffs in an action ex contractu may be taken advantage of under the general issue. 1 Chitt’s Pleadings, 13. Whenever it does not contradict the record, parol evidence may be given to show that a former recovery was had, not upon the merits, but upon some technical objection to the form of action or otherwise. The cases upon this subject-are too numerous to cite ; it will be sufficient to refer to some of our own decisions. Zeigler v. Zeigler, 2 S. & R. 286; Haak v. Breidenbach, 3 Ibid. 204; Wilson v. Wilson, 9 Ibid. 424; Cist v. Zeigler, 16 Ibid. 282; Leonard v. Leonard, 1 W. & S. 342; Fleming v. The Insurance Co., 2 Jones. 391; Carmoney v. Hoober, 5 Barr, 305; Coleman’s Appeal, 12 P. F. Smith, 252.

It is equally clear that the jurors were competent witnesses. In Haak v. Breidenbach, and Leonard v. Leonard, supra, the parol evidence was given by jurors, and in the latter case under a special objection and exception ; yet the judgment was reversed for the rejection of the evidence. There is no principle of law or rule of policy which in such a case ought to exclude them. It is entirely different from where they are called to impeach a verdict on the ground of their own misbehavior or that of their fellows. Claggey v. Sween, 4 Binn. 150, though even that has been since questioned; Ritchie v. Halbrooke, 7 S. & R. 458.

Judgment reversed and venire facias de novo awarded.

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Related

Lessee v. Dunning
4 U.S. 120 (Supreme Court, 1792)
Leonard v. Leonard
1 Watts & Serg. 342 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1841)
Lessee of Cluggage v. Swain
4 Binn. 150 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1811)
Marsh v. Pier
4 Rawle 273 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1833)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Foster 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/follansbee-v-walker-pactcomplerie-1873.