Joseph v. Darrar

472 P.2d 328, 93 Idaho 762, 1970 Ida. LEXIS 250
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 20, 1970
Docket10572
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 472 P.2d 328 (Joseph v. Darrar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joseph v. Darrar, 472 P.2d 328, 93 Idaho 762, 1970 Ida. LEXIS 250 (Idaho 1970).

Opinion

McFADDEN, Chief Justice.

This action was instituted by M. L. Joseph, the plaintiff (respondent), against Eugene Darrar, the defendant (appellant), to recover on three accounts assigned to the plaintiff. Defendant denied the allegations of plaintiff’s complaint and also interposed the affirmative defenses of res 'judicata and the statute of limitations. The trial court found against the plaintiff ■on two of the assigned accounts, but entered judgment in favor of plaintiff on an .account assigned to him by Siler Equipment Sales, Inc. The trial court also found against the defendant on both of his affirmative defenses and this appeal was taken from that judgment. On appeal the issues before this court deal with the defendant’s two affirmative defenses. The facts relevant to the controversy are as follows.

In April 1963 Siler Equipment Sales, Inc., sold certain mill equipment and machinery to the defendant-appellant, Eugene Darrar, on open account, for an agreed sale price of $2,500.00, retaining no security interest in the property. Before making any payments on the purchase price of this machinery, the defendant sold some of it to a Mr. V. L. Johnson. The facts regarding the transaction are in dispute. Earl Siler, who does business as Siler Equipment Sales, Inc., testified that Darrar sold the equipment to Johnson and took Johnson’s $900 promissory note, which Darrar then delivered to Siler with instructions to collect payments on the note and apply them to Darrar’s open account for the equipment. Siler also stated that this arrangement was made at Darrar’s suggestion with the understanding that Siler would accept payments from Johnson on behalf of Darrar for credit to his account.

Darrar, however, gave a different interpretation of the transaction. He testified that he had no account with Siler Equipment Sales, Inc., but rather that Siler had agreed to allow him to sell the equipment for ten per cent commission. He then sold the equipment to Johnson, and Siler agreed to cancel his account and look solely to Johnson for payment. Darrar testified that there was no agreement to credit any payments to his account. He denied ever admitting the existence of the account or instructing anyone to make any payments on his behalf. Siler, however, testified that he never agreed to cancel Darrar’s account, but only agreed to accept payment from Johnson on the account. 1

*764 On February 1, 1964 Johnson paid $150.-00 on the nóte to Siler, who credited it' to Darrar’s account. Another payment of $100.00 was made by Johnson on February 1, 1965 and this payment was credited to the account.

On June 21, 1965 Siler Equipment Sales, Inc., assigned the Darrar account to the plaintiff, M. L. Joseph, for valuable consideration. The amount of the account at the time of assignment, as found by the district court in its findings of fact, was $2,250.00. Although other accounts were also assigned to Joseph by others, only the account obtained from Siler Equipment Sales, Inc. is involved here.

There has been other litigation involving these same parties which is of importance in the present case. Darrar held a note and mortgage on real property owned by the plaintiff Joseph. Darrar assigned this mortgage to a Jean Felton who, in 1967, subsequent to the assignment of Darrar’s account with Siler Equipment to Joseph, instituted an action in the district court seeking to obtain judgment on the note and to foreclose the mortgage against Joseph’s property. Joseph answered the complaint in the mortgage foreclosure case and raised his claim against Darrar on the assigned account as a set-off against Jean Felton. Darrar was later joined as an involuntary plaintiff in the mortgage foreclosure action, but Joseph did not assert the account assigned by Siler Equipment as a counterclaim against Darrar, but merely pleaded it as a set-off against Jean Felton’s claim on the mortgage.

Following trial in the mortgage foreclosure case, the district court held that the claim asserted by Joseph could not be used as a set-off against Jean Felton on the mortgage because she was a holder in due course, having taken the mortgage without notice of Joseph’s claim against Darrar. The court also held that no judgment could be rendered in favor of Joseph against Darrar on the account because it was not pleaded as a counterclaim • against Darrar. Accordingly, the court- did not adjudicate the validity of the account; but merely foreclosed the mortgage on the Joseph property.

On January 18, 1969 Joseph then instituted the present action in the district court upon the assigned account which had been raised as .a set-off in the earlier action.

Following trial in this action, the district court entered findings of fact and judgment for Joseph, holding that the claim was not barred by res judicata, since it was not adjudicated in the prior action,, and that it was not barred by failure to raise it as a counterclaim in the prior action since it was not a compulsory counterclaim under I.R.C.P. 13(a). The court also held that although the original debt with Siler Equipment Sales, Inc., was contracted in 1963 and the complaint was not filed in the present action until 1969, the payments made on the account by Johnson in 1964 and 1965 tolled the running of the-statute, and since the complaint was filed within four years of the final payment, the action was not barred by the statute of limitations. The validity of Darrar’s two defenses that the claim is barred by res judicata and the statute of limitations is the only issue raised by this appeal.

It is clear from the record in the present case that the validity of respondent’s claim against appellant was not adjudicated in the prior case between Felton and Joseph. No judgment was rendered on this claim because the district court held in Felton v. Joseph, and correctly so, that the claim was not pleaded as a counterclaim against *765 Darrar. It was pleaded only as a set-off against Felton, and the district court did no more than hold that it could not be asserted against Felton, a holder in due course of the note and mortgage. The court did not make any determination on the validity of the claim as against Darrar, and consequently the judgment in that case is not res judicata on the issue here.

Darrar argues, however, that the prior judgment is res judicata not only as to matters actually litigated and determined, but also as to every matter which might and should have been litigated in the first suit. Joyce v. Murphy Land and Irrig. Co., Ltd., 35 Idaho 549, 208 P. 241 (1922); Gibbs v. Claar, 59 Idaho 763, 87 P.2d 471 (1939). He argues that since the court had before it both parties involved in the present action, the claim asserted here might and should have been raised and litigated in that case and that since it was not, it is now barred by res judicata. It is our opinion, however, that Darrar has misapplied the doctrine of res judicata. Although he has correctly stated the rule as it applies in certain instances, it is not applicable to the litigation of counterclaims. Counterclaims are governed by I.R.C.P. 13(a) and 13(b), which distinguish between compulsory and permissive counterclaims. I.R.C.P. 13(a) deals with compulsory counterclaims and provides that

“A pleading shall

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Bluebook (online)
472 P.2d 328, 93 Idaho 762, 1970 Ida. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-v-darrar-idaho-1970.