Tasin v. Bastress

130 A. 417, 284 Pa. 47, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 464
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 11, 1925
DocketAppeals, 173, 174, 280, 281 and 282
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 130 A. 417 (Tasin v. Bastress) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tasin v. Bastress, 130 A. 417, 284 Pa. 47, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 464 (Pa. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Simpson,

The court below tried these five cases together, without a jury; judgments for plaintiffs were entered in two of them, and for defendant in the other three. Each of the losing parties prosecutes a separate appeal. But one opinion was delivered below, and one will suffice here.

In compromise of a suit, brought in the City of New York, by L. S. Walter and W. B. Faust against the defendant in these cases, he agreed with them that, if they would discontinue the suit, he would, inter alia, pay an outstanding indebtedness of $36,000,i — which plaintiffs owed to certain financial institutions, and which was secured by a second mortgage, of doubtful value, on certain property of the Kriner Realty Company, — in one of three ways, (a) “he would endeavor to place a mortgage upon the lands of the Kriner Realty Company of sufficient amount to pay and discharge said notes; or, if *50 that could not be done, (b) he would endeavor to sell the lands of the Kriner Realty Company......for a price satisfactory to the company, and out of the money realized from the sale would pay the notes; or (c) he would himself purchase the said lands of the Kriner Realty Company at a price satisfactory to the company and pay the notes.” In accordance with this agreement Walter and Faust discontinued their New York suit (which was for a much larger amount than the liability assumed by defendant), but he only partially complied with his promise. For some time after the settlement was made, he tried ineffectually to mortgage or sell the property referred to; on his ultimate failure to do so, the parties, liable on each note, brought a separate suit in their own names, claiming that the agreement of compromise had been made for their benefit.

There were six such suits. One was by Emanuel Tasin, W. W. Robertson, L. S. Walter, J. H. Reed, K. I. Hopwood, B. W. Kriner, and J. H. Bird against defendant, was tried before a jury, verdict and judgment were entered in favor of plaintiffs, and the judgment was affirmed by this court: Tasin v. Bastress, 268 Pa. 85. As between the parties to it, the judgment therein conclusively determined that the agreement above referred to was made for the benefit of those liable on the $36,000 of notes, that the suit was on one of these notes, and that defendant breached his agreement. These conclusions of fact thus became res adjudicata in all other actions between the same parties, growing out of the same subject-matter. The present suits are upon the rest of the obligations which defendant promised to pay in consideration of the compromise of the New York suit.

In three of them, all the plaintiffs therein were, with others, also plaintiffs in the suit which was affirmed by this court. Under such circumstances, no reason exists why res adjudicata should not conclusively determine the rights of the litigants in these three suits, if, as is admittedly the case, the obligations sued on were also *51 part of the $36,000. It is not necessary that exactly the same parties shall appear in both cases; it is sufficient if all those in the later case were parties in the former one. In 15 E. C. L. 1012, where the applicable rule of law is tersely stated, it is said: “While in order that a judgment may operate as res judicata there must be identity of parties in the two proceedings, yet it is not generally deemed essential that all the parties to. both proceedings be identical, and a judgment is conclusive of the issue involved in a controversy as between the parties and those standing in privity with them, although in the action in which it is pleaded some only of the parties are litigants.” Among the cases, cited as supporting this conclusion, are Thompson v. Eoberts, 24 Howard 233, 241, and Green v. Bogue, 158 U. S. 478, in the first of which it is well said that “A contrary doctrine would sacrifice a wholesome principle of law to a mere technical rule having no foundation in reason: making a distinction where there is no difference.” To the same effect is Follansbee v. Walker, 74 Pa. 306.

In another of the present suits, some of the plaintiffs were also plaintiffs in the case affirmed in 268 Pa. 85, and some were not. A great diversity of opinion exists, as to what extent, if at all, res adjudicata applies in that class of cases. In 34 C. J. 996, the conclusion reached, as the result of a consideration of the numerous cases cited in the foot notes, is stated as follows: “Where both the party offering a judgment as an estoppel and the party against whom it is so offered were parties to the action in which the judgment was rendered, it is no objection that the action included some additional parties who are not joined in the present suit, or that there are additional parties in the present action. But this does not make the judgment admissible as evidence either for or against parties to the pending action, who were not parties to the action in which it was rendered. And the estoppel arising from a judgment does not apply in a subsequent suit where a new plaintiff comes in, *52 seeking to litigate matters not determined in the former suit, although otherwise the parties are the same.”

If the qualifying clause, — “seeking to litigate matters not determined in the former suit,” — were omitted, as, on principle we think it should have been, we would have the exact situation appearing here. If the new plaintiff is a mere nominal party, not personally interested in the litigation, res adjudicata applies, for the benefit of the real parties, whether the matters adjudicated were or were not contested in the former suit, if they could have been there litigated and would, in that event, have controlled the result. In the particular appeal now under consideration, plaintiffs’ action is a joint one; all must recover on it, or it must wholly fail. The statement of claim alleges a liability of defendant to all the plaintiffs. Under these circumstances, no evidence is admissible which does not tend to prove the joint liability, and the record in the prior suit does not do this. It follows that as to this fourth case, now under consideration, and as to the fifth, where the sole plaintiff was not a party to the original suit, res adjudicata does not apply, and the question of liability is at large.

On the three appeals where res adjudicata does apply, that question was not raised in or determined by the court below, yet, in view of the order we intend to enter, what we said, by the present Chief Justice, in State Hospital for the Criminal Insane v. Consolidated Water Supply Co., 267 Pa. 29, 37, is most appropriate: “The purpose underlying res adjudicata is more than to serve simply the interest of one who may see fit to invoke the rule; it is a measure of public policy, based on the principle that the general welfare requires litigation not to be interminable: Mayor et al. of City of Paterson v. Baker, 51 N. J. Eq. 49, 59; Walsh’s Est., 80 N. J. Eq. 565, 570. The courts, for the economy of time belonging in common to all litigants, will not consider a point which has already been adjudicated between the same parties (Wheeling, etc., Co.’s App., 1 Penny. 360, 363; *53 15 R. C. L. 954; McMichael v. Horay, 90 N. J. L. 142, 145; Ludwick v. Penny, 158 N. C. 104,110; Womack v. City of St. Joseph, 201 Mo. 467, 476 et seq.)......

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 A. 417, 284 Pa. 47, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tasin-v-bastress-pa-1925.