National Fire Insurance v. Hughes

81 N.E. 562, 189 N.Y. 84, 27 Bedell 84, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 917
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 4, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 81 N.E. 562 (National Fire Insurance v. Hughes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Fire Insurance v. Hughes, 81 N.E. 562, 189 N.Y. 84, 27 Bedell 84, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 917 (N.Y. 1907).

Opinion

Chase, J.

In 1902 the defendant and one Seaman were partners engaged in business in Jersey City. They occupied for the purpose of their business two buildings, one a three-story frame building used as a bagging factory, and the other an iron-covered warehouse used for storage purposes.

On June 4,1902, the plaintiff issued to said firm a policy of insurance in the standard form of this state which purported to insure them against loss or damage by fire, to the extent of $1,500 for one year oil merchandise as in the policy described, “ Contained in frame and iron building and additions and extensions thereto and on or under sidewalks adjoining situate on the south side of Gilchrist street about fifty feet west of Monmouth street, Jersey City, W. J.”

The intention of the parties ivas to insure such merchandise while contained in the “ iron-covered warehouse situated on south side of Gilchrist street, about 150 feet west of Monmouth street, used for storage purposes.” The policy of insurance, by reason of a mutual mistake, did not correctly describe the building in which the merchandise insured was contained, and it did not conform to the contract of insurance. The contract of insurance did not cover and was not intended by the parties to cover or insure the stock of merchandise-contained in the frame building used as a bagging factory.

On December 9th, 1902, the bagging factory, building and contents were destroyed by fire. The said Seaman duly assigned all his right, title and interest in the said policy to the defendant. The record discloses that thereafter and before the commencement of this action the defendant brought an action against the plaintiff upon said policy of insurance to recover the amount of the loss and damage to the contents of *87 the said bagging factory. To such action the plaintiff herein interposed as an equitable defense the mutual mistake of the parties in describing the real property in which the merchandise intended to be insured was contained, and- asked that the policy be reformed, and that the complaint of the plaintiff in that action be dismissed.

The appellant concedes that the defendant in that action endeavored to obtain a trial of the issues therein at a Special Term, and that he objected thereto because the facts alleged in the answer were interposed only as an equitable defense and not as a counterclaim. The court granted the motion of the appellant herein to strike the case from the Special Term calendar “ without prejudice to the defendant to apply to the court to amend its answer by setting up a counterclaim.”

The plaintiff herein then brought this action to reform said policy, and the defendant, as an answer thereto, alleges the pendency of the action brought by him against the plaintiff to recover on the policy, and he asks that the plaintiff’s complaint be dismissed. This action was tried at a Special Term and judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant reforming the policy without awarding any costs. An appeal was taken therefrom to the Appellate Division, where the judgment was unanimously affirmed, and from such judgment of affirmance the appeal is taken to this court. The only question discussed before this court is whether the pendency of the said action brought by the defendant against the plaintiff is a bar to this action.

The defense of another action pending between the same parties for the same cause was formerly called a plea in abatement. It is a plea that is allowed to prevent a person from being harassed and annoyed by unnecessary actions. It is primarily applicable to a case" where more than one action is brought by the same plaintiff against the same defendant for the same, or substantially the same, relief and growing out of the same subject-matter. It is a dilatory plea, technical in its nature, and a person interposing it must clearly show himself within the reason for its enforcement, Such a plea is not sus. *88 tamed where full relief cannot be obtained in. the first action. The actions now under consideration are not by the same plaintiff, but although between the same parties their relations are reversed. The actions are not for the same thing. One is a legal action to recover on a contract, and the other is an equitable action to reform the contract itself. The purpose of the actions is entirely different and the relief demanded antagonistic and inconsistent. A judgmeut in favor of the plaintiff in the first action would be a bar to the plaintiff in this action. A judgment in favor of the plaintiff in this action would not only be a bar to the plaintiff in the first action, but it would give to the plaintiff additional and further affirmative relief. If the plaintiff in the first action failed to prosecute the same or if his complaint was dismissed for reasons other than those stated in the equitable defense, the- policy of insurance would remain uurefonned. Unless the answer is amended, therefore, full relief to the defendant herein cannot he obtained in the first action. The defendant in this action assumes that the plea of another action pending is sustained if it is possible for the plaintiff to obtain full relief in the action first commenced, and that the plaintiff in this action should be compelled to so form his pleading in the first action as to obtain full relief therein.

The binding force of a judgment and the difference in the meaning of the terms “ cause of action ” and “subject-matter ” are well stated by Sutherland, J., in Tyler v. Standard Wine Co. (52 Misc. Rep. 374) as follows: “The reason why the second suit for the same cause is not allowed to proceed is not found in the finality of res adjudieata, for the plea is interposed before any judgment has been rendered. But £ cause of action ’ in this sense is not synonymous with £ subject-matter ; ’ for an action between the same parties involving the same question is not necessarily an action for the same cause within the rules governing pleas in abatement.

“ Of course, where two actions are brought concerning the same subject-matter, and in both suits the same question is necessarily involved, either singly or in connection with other *89 matters not involved in both, and a judgment is duly rendered in one of the actions upon the question common to both suits, that judgment becomes at once and forever decisive as to that question in the other litigation between the same parties; and the date of the commencement of the actions respectively is of no consequence as to the effect of the judgment as res adjudícala. If the judgment is first rendered in the later suit, it will control necessarily the determination of the same question iu the prior action when that is brought to trial; but, until one action proceeds to judgment, the jiendency of the other cannot be set up as a defense, unless the second suit is for the same cause of action as the first.”

When a judgment is once obtained it is conclusive, not only of the issues actually litigated in the action, but also of any matter necessarily comprehended and involved therein although the same was not litigated. (Honsinger v. Union Carriage & Gear Co., 175 N. Y. 229 ; Earle v. Earle, 173 N. Y. 480 ; Pakas v. Hollingshead, 184 N. Y. 211.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 N.E. 562, 189 N.Y. 84, 27 Bedell 84, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 917, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-fire-insurance-v-hughes-ny-1907.