National Cordova Corp. v. City of Memphis

380 S.W.2d 793, 214 Tenn. 371, 18 McCanless 371, 1964 Tenn. LEXIS 486
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 380 S.W.2d 793 (National Cordova Corp. v. City of Memphis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Cordova Corp. v. City of Memphis, 380 S.W.2d 793, 214 Tenn. 371, 18 McCanless 371, 1964 Tenn. LEXIS 486 (Tenn. 1964).

Opinion

Me. Justice White

delivered the opinion of the Court.

*374 Upon the filing of the summons and the service of process in dne course, the plaintiff in error filed a declaration. The defendants filed a plea in abatement and the plaintiff filed a demurrer thereto. The plea in abatement was sustained and the suit dismissed. Prom this final dismissal an appeal in error has been prosecuted to this Court.

The facts as disclosed by the pleadings are that on October 29, 1957 a fire and explosion occurred at a munitions warehouse in Shelby County belonging to National Cordova Corporation. Certain equipment inside the building was destroyed and it was owned by National Fireworks Ordnance Corporation. National Fireworks Ordnance Corporation, as nominal plaintiff, for the use and benefit of several fire insurance companies who were subrogated to that corporation’s right of action by virtue of paying the fire loss on the equipment, brought suit sounding in tort in the United States District Court for the Western District of Tennessee against the City of Memphis and the Commissioners of the Memphis Light, Gras & Water Division, alleging that the negligence of those, defendants caused the fire and resulting property damage.

These same insurance companies are the real parties in interest in the instant case although they sue in the name of National Cordova Corporation as the nominal plaintiff.

On October 19, 1961 the jury trying the cause brought in the Federal District Court found in favor of all of said defendants. The defendants here are the same as those in the Federal Court. The fire causing the damages sued for there and here was the same fire described in the declaration in this case.

*375 The declaration in the case now under consideration sets out that said fire and explosion did occur on October 29, 1957, resulting in the loss aforesaid, all through the negligence of the defendants. An amendment to said declaration was permitted, hut it is not necessary to consider it further except to say that the addendum clause was raised from the sum of $26,550.00 to the sum of $44,550.00.

The plea in abatement says that the defendants should not be required to answer further or respond in damages because suit was filed against these defendants by the same parties, by the true plaintiffs as a matter of law, in the Federal District Court as aforesaid, for the same cause of action now stated in the declaration filed in this case. Certified copies of the pleadings were made a part of the record.

The defendants averred that

< í * * * the same real parties iri interest in the case of action tried in the United States District Court, that is, the insurance companies named in plaintiff’s Declaration, are the very same real plaintiffs that are bringing suit in the cause above styled.
“ * * * your defendants aver that the nominal plaintiff in this cause of action, that is, the National Cordova Corporation, is a wholly owned subsidiary of the National Fireworks Ordnance Corporation, which was the nominal plaintiff in the suit brought in the United States District Court. Your defendants aver that the two corporations named have the same directorship and the same officers, and that the National Fireworks Ordnance Corporation, the complainant in the suit in the United States District Court, is in control of the *376 litigation filed in the Circuit Court in this cause. Your defendants aver that the nominal plaintiff in this cause is in privity with the nominal plaintiff in the cause of action in the United States District Court, and are, for all practical purposes, the very same entities. Your defendants further aver that the real parties in interest herein are in this suit attempting to recover a portion of the loss incurred by them under the identical insurance policies for which these plaintiffs have already sought recovery of another portion of the very same loss in the above mentioned action in the United States District Court. Your defendants aver that because of such action on the part of the plaintiffs, the plaintiffs have split their cause of action, and by proceeding in the United States District Court first, the plaintiffs have waived this portion of the loss not sued for therein and are judicially estopped by the verdict and final judgment for the defendants in said cause in the United States District Court.”

Finally, the defendants averred that:

“ * * * the plaintiffs in the United States District Court action are the same plaintiffs or are in privity with the very same plaintiffs who are engaged in this cause of action, and that as a result of the judgment in favor of your defendants in the United States District Court, the plaintiffs in this cause of action are judicially and collaterally estopped from bringing their suit in this Court. ’ ’

The plaintiffs joined issue by filing a demurrer to the plea in abatement in which they state:

1. That taking into consideration the facts set forth by the defendants in their plea in abatement that such *377 constitutes no defense to the action herein complained of.
2. That the defendants through their pleas seek to establish that the plaintiff is attempting to split a cause of action, but it is manifest in the pleadings that such is not the case.
3. The defendants by their pleadings state that the cause of action has already been decided and plead res adjudicata, but such is not applicable to facts of the matter involved as manifest by the pleadings.

Counsel for all parties entered into a stipulation in which they agreed that all of the claims sued on herein by any and all of the plaintiffs herein, including especially the claim for lost rent, are in fact owned, by subrogation, by the various insurance companies named as party plaintiffs herein; and that said insurance companies who were likewise party plaintiffs in the action in the District Court styled National Fireworks Ordnance Corporation, et al v. City of Memphis, et al., No. 4054 Civil Docket, copies of the -pertinent pleadings and records of said suit being attached to and made a part of the plea in abatement of the defendants herein, were and are the owners of all claims sued for in that court.

The defendants plead res judicata as a bar to the present suit. Res judicata may be successfully pleaded when a judgment on the merits exhausts or extinguishes the cause of action on which it was based, and is an absolute bar to a subsequent suit between the same parties upon the same cause of action, and concludes such parties and their privies not only as to all matters that were actually put in issue and determined, but also as to all matters which might have been put in issue and deter *378 mined. Jordan v. Johns, 168 Tenn. 525, 79 S.W.2d 798 (1935); Webb v. Schultz, 31 Tenn.App.

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Bluebook (online)
380 S.W.2d 793, 214 Tenn. 371, 18 McCanless 371, 1964 Tenn. LEXIS 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-cordova-corp-v-city-of-memphis-tenn-1964.