Moore v. Felkel

7 Fla. 44
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 7 Fla. 44 (Moore v. Felkel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Felkel, 7 Fla. 44 (Fla. 1857).

Opinion

DuPont, J.,

delivered the following opinion:

This is a hill in equity, filed in the Circuit Court of Leon County, hy the appellees, as complainants in that Court, against the appellants, and has for its object the opening and re-settlement of their accounts as the executors of the last will and testament of William Turner, deceased. There is also presented for our consideration an original and independent bill, filed in the same Court, by Daniel Hambleton, against the same executors and with the same object, in the character of administrator upon the estate of his deceased wife, who was a distributee under the will of the testator, and whose interest as such was identical or similar to that claimed by the complainants in the principal bill. As the object of the two bills is the same, and the position and interests of the complainants identical, they might well have joined as complainants, and there was no impropriety on the part of the Chancellor in consenting to consider them as one, and rendering one decree as applicable to both.

The appeal comes before us (by virtue of a provision of the statute,) upon an interlocutory decree, pronouncing upon a. plea of former recovery, and ordering a reference to the Master for an account, with certain instructions.

The appellants, in their petition of appeal, claim a reversal oí the decree upon, the ground that Eelkel and wife’s recovery on the guardian bond concluded them to have an account against them in their character of executors.

They also appeal from that portion of the decree ordering a reference to the Master, and set forth the following grounds, viz:

1st. “ There is error in directing the executors to be charged with the amount of Craig’s note.”

[56]*562d. “ The refusal of commissions ought not to be sustained.”

The appellees, by way of cross-appeal, except to some of the instructions contained in the order of reference, and ask that they may be so modified as to direct — 1st. That the interest to be charged upon balances against the executors be estimated at the rate of eight per cent, throughout the entire range of the accounts, and not to be affected by the reduction of the rate of interest provided for by the act of 1844. 2d. That the burthen of proof be devolved upon the executors in reference to all matters of surcharge and falsification contained and specified in the bill.

The portion of the decree which is applicable to the first exception taken by the appellants, is as follows : This cause having been submitted to the Court, and the Court having considered the same, doth order, adjudge and decree, that the recovery by the complainants, Felkel and wife, in a suit against K. M. Moore, one of the executors, who was also guardian, upon his bond as guardian, is no bar to a suit in equity against defendants', Moore and Mont-ford, as executors,”

For a due appreciation of the objection to this portion of the decree, and in order that the conclusion of the majority on the point may be comprehended and fully understood, it is proper to state the facts and circumstances out of which the objection grows. The bill and exhibits show that the testator, William Turner, executed his will on the 13th day of December, A. D. 1840; that it was admitted to probate on the 12th day of January, A. D. 1841, and on the same day Moore and Montford. qualified as executors thereof; that they entered upon and continued in the administration of the estate as executors until the 8th day of January, A. D. 1847, about which time a settlement was made with the adult distributees, and the said Moore was appointed the guardian of the two complain ants, who were [57]*57then infants, Elizabeth, the wife of Eelkel, and Tabitha, the wife of McCoy. That subsequently Eelkel and wife caused a suit to be instituted, in the Circuit Court of Leon County, against Moore, on his guardian bond, and recovered against him as guardian a judgment for $928 05. It is that judgment that is set up in the plea of former recovery, as a bar to a decree in this suit in favor of Felkeland wife.

The conclusion of the majority of the Court on this point (the reason for which will be given in a separate opinion) is, that the decree will be reversed, and that the investigation into the accounts must be so conducted that the matters put in issue and adjusted by the judgment shall not be again enquired into.

The position of the majority, as I understand it, is, that ■the judgment at law is a bar to the extent of the matters which were put in issue in the suit in which it was obtained, and that what those matters were is to be a subject of enquiry upon the taking of the account as of matters in pais. This view of the case, in my opinion, effectually destroys the conclusiveness of the judgment by depriving it of the benefit arising from the legal presumption that attaches to every judgment at law, viz: that all matters which were'put in issue ly the pleadings must be taken to have been passed upon by the judgment. To illustrate my meaning, I will observe that Eelkel and wife, in their bill, complain of Moore, the defendant, in his two-fold character of executor and guardian. Moore pleads in bar a judgment recovered by them on the guardian bond, and the question is, how and to what extent shall it avail him in this suit? Evidently it is no bar to the investigation of his accounts as- executor, but with respect to his accounts as guardian, it is, upon well settled principles, perfectly conclusive. Suppose this were a second suit in a Court of law upon the guardian bond, could there be any question as [58]*58to the extent and conclusiveness of the former recovery ? And yet I understand the rule to be that “ a judgment on the merits which will bar any other suit at law will also bar a suit in chancery on the same cause of action.” (7 J. J. Marsh., 68 and 70.) I know that there are cases in which Courts of Equity have not only disregarded the plea of a former recovery, but have interfered to set the judgment aside; but, to induce a Court thus to act, there must be some new equity set up in the bill by distinct allegation, such as fraud, mistake or surprise, which would make it against conscience that the defendant should avail himself of the bar. Dan’l Ch. Prac., 706; 1 Eq. Dig., 676; 1 Wash. C. C. R., 320. In this bill there is no such allegation with respect to the judgment pleaded.

To adopt the views of the majority, it seems to me, would be attended with peculiar hardship to defendants, and subject them to continual harrassment. The general rule to be deduced from the numerous cases involving a discussion of this subject is, that the judgment of a Court of competent jurisdiction, obtained in a suit between the same parties or their privies, and for the same subject matter, being still in force or fully satisfied, concludes the rights of the parties thereto. (5 Bac. Abr., tit. Pleas and Pleading; 2 Dan’l Ch. Prac., 758; Irwin vs. Knox, 10 John. R., 374.)

The very point now under consideration arose and was authoritatively ruled in Thornton vs. Campbell, (6 Fla. R., 546,) a case decided by this Court at its last term. The rule there laid down is, w that a second suit shall not be allowed when the judgment in the first, whether upon confession, demurrer or verdict, and still in force, was given by a Court of competent jurisdiction and was for the same subject matter, for the same object and the case was tried upon the merits.”

Applying the rule to the case under consideration, and [59]

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Bluebook (online)
7 Fla. 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-felkel-fla-1857.