M'Kellar Ex Rel. Smith v. Bowell

11 N.C. 34
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1825
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 11 N.C. 34 (M'Kellar Ex Rel. Smith v. Bowell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M'Kellar Ex Rel. Smith v. Bowell, 11 N.C. 34 (N.C. 1825).

Opinion

Tayxoe, Chief Justice. —

This is an action against the securities to a guardian bond, in which the ques-tion arises, whether the record of a judgment recovered against the guardian, in a suit brought against him alone, in behalf of the present plaintiff, is competent evidence against the defendants.

The general rule laid down by all the writers on the law of evidence is, that it would be unjust to bind a third person by a judicial proceeding between two, in which he could not be admitted to make a defence, or to examine witnesses, or to appeal from a judgment which he might think erroneous. A verdict or judgment, however, in a former action, upon the same matter directly in question, is also evidence for and against privies in blood, privies in estate, or privies in law, because their rights are derived under the person against whom the judgment is recovered, and must consequently be bound as his were.

Every reason assigned for the exclusion of such evidence, applies with full force to this case; for there defendants had no opportunity of making a defence in the former action, of examining witnesses, or of appealing from the judgment; nor is there such a privity subsisting between them and the guardian, as to form an exception to the rule. (1 State Trials 219. Runn. Eject. 364.)

The defendants entered into a joint and several bond, ■conditional for the faithful performance of the guardian’s. *38 duty; blit they have made no agreement, by the nature of their contracts, to be concluded by a judgment against their principal; they ought, of course, to be bound only upml the assignment and proof of a breach of the condition, m a suit against themselves.

If A binds himself to pay for goods sold and delivered to B, the admission of B as to the amount of the goods sold and delivered to him, is not admissible evidence in a suit against A. (5 Espm. 26.)

Nor, upon the same principle, could a judgment against 33, founded upon his admission of the debt, be evidence against A. So if A and B be bound in a recognizance thatB shall keep the peace, in another scire Jadas against A, he shall not be estopped by the first trial. (10 Vin. 464.)

Another rule of evidence intimately connected with the foregoing is, that no record can be given in evidence, but such whereof the benefit may be mutual, that is, such as might he given in evidence either by the plaintiff or defendant; or according to Baron Gilbert, that nobody can take benefit by a verdii t, w;bo had not been prejudiced by it, had it gone contrary. The reason why it would not be evidence against the party has been already shown. And it could not be relied on by a stranger to the former suit, even against the party to it, because if the person offering it had been a party instead of the person gaining the verdict, different evidence might have led to a different result; or it might have been gained by such evidence as would have been inadmissible if offered against himself. So that to admit a verdict as evidence under such circumstances, would be giving the party the benefit of evidence, which he could not avail himself of in his own suit. But this reason seems to apply only where the verdict is offered in evidence by a third person against the party who failed in the former action, and not where it is produced against the party who succeeded. (1 Phil. 233.)

*39 It goes, however, to show, that if the guardian hád succeeded in the suit brought against him by the plaintiff, the judgment could not be offered by these defendants to repel the action; and, therefore, as the judgment was rendered against the guardian, it shall not be evidence against this defendant.

The cases relied upon to show that a judgment against one person is admissible evidence against another, not a party to the suit, are all, either within the literal terms of the exception or within its sperit, relative to privies.

The cases wherein the warrantee or covenantee of lands or chattels, have been allowed to give in evidence, against the warrantor, or covenantor, the judgment of eviction, or recovery against themselves, have proceeded on the ground of privity of contract; and most of them have been accompanied with notice of the suit,, and either the war-rantor did defend it, or might have done so, and employed the name of the defendant. Some of them have been decided on the principle that there was a covenant against eviction, which, therefore, as a fact, the party was at, liberty to prove by the judgment, but he must still allege that the eviction was by a lawful title. In these cases, the covenantor was in fact, if not nominally, a party to the first suit, and might properly have been affected by the judgment.

In tiie case of Rennerly v. Onpie, cited from 2 Douglas 517. there was a verdict for the plaintiff, in an action of trespass, committed in the plaintiff’s fishery, against one who justified as servant, and this was received at nisi prius as conclusive evidence against another defendant, in a subsequent action, for a penalty incurred by destroying fish in the same fishery. On a motion for a new trial, it was held only to be admissible evidence; but in a recent case, it is justly doubted, whether the record of the first suit was at all admissible in evidence, upon the subsequent action against the. defendant, who was not a party to the former action. (2 East 866.) It is true that by our *40 act of 1784, a judgment recovered against an executor by a cre(iitor who seeks satisfaction out of the real es- J tate, is made evidence against the heir, who is allowed tIie same t'i!!e to prove, if lie can, that the executor has not fully administered. But this very provision shows that, in the opinion of the legislature, it was not admissible evidence upon common law principles.

The case of Rip v. Brigham and others, was cited from 6 Johns. 158. That was a contract for indemnity, and all these contracts stand upon peculiar grounds; « for if a demand be made, which the person indemnifying is bound to pay, and notice be given to him, and he refuse to defend the action, in consequence of which the person to be indemnified is obliged to pay the demand, that is equivalent to a judgment, and estops the other party from saying that the defendant in the first action was not bound to pay the money.” Per Butter J. in 3 Term Rep. 374.

And the case in 6 Johns,

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.C. 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mkellar-ex-rel-smith-v-bowell-nc-1825.