Wolf Paper Co. v. Savits

50 Pa. D. & C.2d 639, 1970 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 161
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Delaware County
DecidedJuly 7, 1970
Docketno. 2836 of 1965
StatusPublished

This text of 50 Pa. D. & C.2d 639 (Wolf Paper Co. v. Savits) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Delaware County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wolf Paper Co. v. Savits, 50 Pa. D. & C.2d 639, 1970 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 161 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1970).

Opinion

deFURIA, J.,

Defendant, Savits, alleges that the basis of plaintiff’s claim has been fully and completely litigated and resolved in a prior proceeding in our court. He, therefore, asks that this suit be terminated on his motion for entry of summary judgment on the record.

[640]*640Defendant’s plea is seldom advanced. One reason, perhaps, for the rarity of the argument is that logic, reason and equity are shocked at the thought of more than one litigation over the same issue. Finality, after all, is not only a desideratum but the very purpose of litigation. The phoenix is not a favorite bird in the law.

Plaintiff answers that it may enter the legal arena once more because defendant’s position, technically, does not fit any of the legally accepted forms of defense since defendant was not a party to the prior litigation.

Is the law, the vehicle for justice, ever helpless when the form of a just claim or defense is deficient? If so, a Scandinavian rottenness permeates our legal fabric.

Plaintiff owned property on January 18, 1960, in Chester, which he desired covered by fire insurance in the additional sum of $12,000. Plaintiff asked defendant, Savits, a local agent or broker, as its agent, to obtain such insurance coverage. Savits dealt through Higham et al., additional defendant, as general broker, to secure the additional coverage.

Defendant proceeded to obtain two additional fire policies from six companies in the total sum of $12,-000, thus giving plaintiff an overall coverage of $22,500, since plaintiff was already insured by the Commercial Union Company for $10,500.

On May 12, 1960, plaintiff suffered a fire loss in excess of all coverage.

The six underwriters, plaintiff’s present complaint alleges, refused payment for two reasons:

1. Savits incorrectly warranted that plaintiff’s coverage with Commercial Union was for $16,500, instead of the lesser amount of $10,500.

2. The agent obtained by Savits, who wrote the [641]*641policy of one of the six companies, did not have authority to do so.

Defendant’s new matter raised the judgment in the prior suit against the insurance companies. Plaintiff’s reply holds that the prior decision was not dis-positive of the present claim.

Plaintiff marshals strong authority to show that defendant cannot use any recognized form of legal defense against the suit for the $12,000 loss. Res judicata is not applicable. Of the four identities required (res, cause, person and quality of person), the identity of persons and parties to the prior action is lacking: Stevenson v. Silverman, 417 Pa. 187 (1965). Defendant, Savits, was not a party to the prior suit.

Nor may collateral estoppel be asserted, because, of the four identities required in res judicata, three are required for collateral estoppel, and one essential, identity of the same parties to the prior suit, is again lacking: Thai v. Krawitz, 365 Pa. 110 (1950).

If defendant turns to estoppel by record, he finds no relief, since, again, this legal defense operates only between parties and privies: Puharic v. Novy, 317 Pa. 199 (1934).

Finally, although plaintiff admits that his present position is a complete reversal of its original position, plaintiff avers that pleadings are not conclusive except in the cause in which they are filed. When used in other proceedings, they do not estop the party from taking different positions in a subsequent suit, citing Lapayowker v. Lincoln College Preparatory School, 386 Pa. 167 (1956).

But the facts of record show that the central issues in the prior and present suits were in all respects the same, and that judgment was entered on the prior pleadings and proof.

[642]*642In the prior actions in 1961, plaintiff filed two suits against the six fire-insurance companies: Wolf Paper Company, Inc. v. Associated Excess Underwriters, Inc., et al., as of March term, 1961, nos. 1597 and 1598. The suits were consolidated for trial before the Hon. John V. Diggins, without a jury, who entered a verdict for plaintiff.

On February 18, 1966, Judge Diggins filed his opinion on post trial motions specifically finding that:

1. There did not exist a warranty that plaintiff held a policy with Commercial Union for $16,500;

2. The agent did have authority to write insurance for the company so denying;

3. Judgment in favor of plaintiff in the total sum claimed of $12,000 be affirmed.

The record discloses no further proceedings.

The record, thus, conclusively reveals that the exact issues now claimed in this subsequent suit were fully and completely litigated and determined, and judgment rendered thereon in favor of plaintiff.

Res judicata and collateral estoppel are time-honored doctrines used to promote the orderly administration of justice by preventing the relitigation of issues already judicially declared. To achieve this end, however, the doctrines require “mutuality of estoppel,” so that identity of parties is an essential of mutuality. The concert of mutuality is firmly established in Pennsylvania: Chandler’s Appeal, 100 Pa. 262 (1882); Evans v. Moffat, 388 Pa. 559, 131 A. 2d 141 (1957).

The general rules are not inflexible, however. They abide with justice and fairness rather than technical rigidities: Hochman v. Mortgage Finance Corporation, 289 Pa. 260, 263, 137 A. 252, 253 (1927).

Some exceptions are:

(1) Adding new parties to a second suit: Slater v. Slater, 372 Pa. 519, 94 A. 2d 750 (1953); Helmig v. [643]*643Rockwell Manufacturing Company, 389 Pa. 21, 131 A. 2d 622 (1957).

(2) Showing nonliability of the first defendant which exculpates defendant in the later suit: Bigelow v. Old Dominion Copper Mining and Smelting Company, 225 U. S. 111 (1912); Brobston v. Darby Borough, 290 Pa. 331, 138 Atl. 849 (1927).

(3) Using a criminal court verdict of guilty against defendant (for extortion) in plaintiff’s civil suit (to recover the money): Hurtt v. Stirone, 416 Pa. 493, 206 A. 2d 624 (1965), cert. den. 381 U. S. 925.

In 1942, Justice Traynor, in Bernhard v. Bank of America, 19 Cal. 2d 807, 122 P. 2d 892, frontally attacked the doctrine of mutuality of estoppel: “No satisfactory rationalization has been advanced for the requirement of mutuality.” Long before, Jeremy Bentham called the doctrine “destitute of any semblance of reason, and as ‘a maxim which one would suppose to have found its way from the gaming-table to the bench,’ ” as quoted by Judge Friendly in Zdanok v. Glidden Company, 327 F. 2d 944 (1964).

Justice Traynor points out a lack of mutuality in the doctrine itself. “The criteria for determining who may assert a plea of res judicata differ fundamentally from the criteria for determining against whom a plea of res judicata may be asserted. The requirements of due process of law forbid the assertion of a plea of res judicata against a party unless he was bound by the earlier litigation in which the matter was decided”: Bernhard v. Bank of America, supra, page 894.

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122 P.2d 892 (California Supreme Court, 1942)
Lapayowker v. Lincoln College Preparatory School
125 A.2d 451 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1956)
Hurtt v. Stirone
206 A.2d 624 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1965)
Posternack v. Am. Cas. Co. of Reading
218 A.2d 350 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1966)
Stevenson v. Silverman
208 A.2d 786 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1965)
Slater v. Slater
94 A.2d 750 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1953)
Helmig v. Rockwell Manufacturing Co.
131 A.2d 622 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1957)
Evans v. Moffat
131 A.2d 141 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1957)
Thal v. KRAWITZ
73 A.2d 376 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1950)
Hochman v. Mortgage Finance Corp.
137 A. 252 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1927)
Brobston v. Darby Borough
138 A. 849 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1927)
Puharic v. Novy
176 A. 233 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1934)
Chandler's Appeal
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United States v. Webber
396 F.2d 381 (Third Circuit, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
50 Pa. D. & C.2d 639, 1970 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolf-paper-co-v-savits-pactcompldelawa-1970.