Willoughby v. Chicago Junction Railways & Union Stock Co.

50 N.J. Eq. 656
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 50 N.J. Eq. 656 (Willoughby v. Chicago Junction Railways & Union Stock Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willoughby v. Chicago Junction Railways & Union Stock Co., 50 N.J. Eq. 656 (N.J. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Green, V. C.

For convenience, the designations of the respective parties used by counsel are herein adopted, as follows:

The Chicago Junction Railways and Union Stockyards Company, as “ The New Jersey Company.”

The Union Stockyard and Transit Company of Chicago, as The Chicago Company.”

Armour & Company, Nelson Morris & Company and Swift & Company, as “-The Associate Packers; ” other parties located and operating their plants in the vicinity of the stockyards of the Chicago Company, as The Non-Associate Packers.”

[658]*658The original bill was filed December 17th, 1891, by Charles L. Willoughby, on behalf of himself, as a. stockholder in the New Jersey Company, and all other stockholders therein, who should come in and contribute to the expense of the suit;' and Royal E. Robbins, Edwin G. Foreman and Oscar G. Foreman were, by an order of the court, afterwards admitted as parties complainant. The New Jersey Company, the Chicago Company, the individual directors of the New Jersey Company, the Associate Packers, and John Reeves Ellerman, are the defendants. The object of the original bill was to restrain the defendants from carrying into execution an agreement, between the New Jersey Company and the Associate Packers, bearing date July 27th, 1891.

An order to show cause why an injunction should not issue, with a'restraining order in the meanwhile, was granted on the filing of the bill.

Before the hearing of the order to show cause, another agreement was entered into between the New Jersey Company and the Associate Packers. This contract is dated January 15th, 1892, and although characterized by the answer of the New Jersey Company as a modification of the agreement of July 27th, 1891, yet by its fourteenth paragraph it annulled the previous agreement, and Messrs. Willoughby, Robbins, Edwin G. and Oscar G. Foreman, the complainants, thereupon, by leave of the court, filed a supplemental bill against the same defendants, setting out the fact of the original suit, and as far as proper incorporating the original bill, and seeking to restrain the carrying into effect both the agreement of January 15th, 1892, and that of July 27th, 1891.

Answers were filed by the New Jersey Company and its directors, and by the Associate Packers, and affidavits were presented, under leave, by the complainants and defendants.

John Reeves Ellerman, another stockholder of the New Jersey Company, on the 19th of August, 1891, filed a bill in this court, in behalf of himself, and all other stockholders therein, who should come in and contribute to the expense of the suit, for the purpose of preventing the consummation of the same agreement, [659]*659between the New Jersey Company and the Associate Packers, dated July 27th, 1891. The defendants in that suit were the New Jersey Company and the Associate Packers. Answers' were filed in the cause and it was regularly upon the calendar for October Term, 1891; it was heard before a vice-chancellor on November 5th, 1891, on bill and answers; an opinion was filed December 18th, 1891 (4 Dick. Ch. Rep. 217), holding that the said agreement was not ultra vires the corporation, and not illegal, and a decree was entered dismissing the bill on that ground. These facts appear by the original bill and answers herein, and by the records of the court.

Assuming that such decree is not impeachable for fraud, collusion or other vice, to what extent, if at all, is the decision of questions in the Ellerman suit conclusive in this action ?

Mr. Black, in his work on Judgments, thus states the general rule (§ 504):

“ A point which was actually and directly in issue in a former suit, and was ’ there judicially passed upon and determined by a domestic court, of competent jurisdiction, cannot be again drawn in question in any future action between, the same parties or their privies, whether the causes of action in the two suits be identical or different.”

The application of the rule in this case is resisted, on the’ grounds that the parties in the two suits are not the same; that the present complainants, not having been parties to the other suit, are not concluded by any determination therein, and that the decree in the Ellerman suit is not pleaded as an estoppel. The senior counsel of complainants took the position that all questions were opened anew for discussion, and that the court should be quick to embrace the opportunity to review its former decision, and correct it, if erroneous. Striking examples of such action in this state were cited, but they will be found, on examination, to be cases where justices of the supreme court, when the cases were in the court in bane, on rules for new trials, properly reviewed their own rulings, made at the circuit. We have here presented, not a question involving pride of opinion, but one which precedes all investigation in which it could manifest [660]*660itself, and that is, whether the court can re-examine the points decided as they are here presented, for if the decision of the questions involved in that suit is conclusive between the parties to this, they are not reviewable here, in a proceeding of this character.

It is urged that the objection has not been properly taken in the pleadings. If the question now to be decided was raised in the original bill, in which the cause of action and relief sought, viz., enjoining the consummation of the agreement of July 27th, 1891, were identical with that of the Ellerman suit, it would, if otherwise tenable, operate as a bar to the action, and, properly, should have been pleaded. But the cause of action in the supplemental bill is based on the agreement of January 15th, 1892, which abrogates the agreement of July 27th, 1891, and the former adjudication is introduced by way of evidence that certain questions now arising have been conclusively settled between the parties. This can be done without setting up the former adjudication in the pleading.

Are the complainants bound by the former adjudication of the questions arising in the Ellerman suit ?

As the rule in question is generally stated, the former judgment is binding only on parties and their privies, but the course of decision has been such as to embrace others who do not stand in a relation, strictly speaking, of privity with the original party, as a sheriff and his deputy, King v. Chase, 15 N. H. 9 (41 Am. Dec. 657); master and servant, in an action of trespass, Emery v. Fowler, 39 Me. 326 (63 Am. Dec. 627); the joint and several makers of a promissory note, Spencer v. Dearth, 43 Vt. 98; the true owner, and the bailee of complainant, Bates v. Stanton, 1 Duer. 79 ; a chattel mortgagee and the vendee of the mortgaged goods, Atkinson v. White, 60 Me. 396; a town and parties alleged to have caused an obstruction to the highway, in an action for negligence, Hill v. Bain, Town Treas., 15 R. I. 75 (23 Am. Rep. 44); see, also, Durham v. Giles, 52 Me. 206 ; Freer v. Stotenbur, 2 Abb. Ct. of App. Dec. 189.

Chief- Justice Durfee, in Hill v. Bain, referring to some of the cases, says (at p. 77):

[661]*661“ In these cases the defendants were permitted to avail themselves, by way of estoppel, of judgments to which they were neither parties nor privies.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 N.J. Eq. 656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willoughby-v-chicago-junction-railways-union-stock-co-njch-1892.