February 8, 1923. The opinion of the Court was delivered by Action in Court of Magistrate for $100.00 damages on account of the alleged conversion of a bale of cotton covered by a crop mortgage given by one Hilton to the plaintiffs; the cotton having been seized and sold by the defendants.
Prior to the institution of this action the plaintiffs had brought an action in claim and delivery against the defendants for the identical bale of cotton involved in the present controversy. The result of that action was a judgment in favor of the defendants. The plaintiff attempted to appeal from that judgment to the Court of Common Pleas, but, the notice of appeal not having been served within the time required by law, the appeal was dismissed by his Honor, Judge Shipp. No Appeal was taken from his order. Thereafter this action in damages for conversion of the same bale of cotton was instituted. The Magistrate held that the judgment in the first action was res adjudicata of the matters involved in the second action and dismissed the action. Upon appeal to the Circuit Court his Honor, Judge Wilson, sustained the judgment of the Magistrate, and dismissed the appeal.
The present appeal involves the single issue of the correctness of the Magistrate's conclusion. Upon the authority of the cases of Cannon v. Cox, 98 S.C. 185; *Page 541 82 S.E., 399, and Johnston-Crews Co. v. Folk,118 S.C. 470; 111 S.E., 15, the judgment in the first action is res adjudicata of the matters set forth in the second, and upon the authority of the case of McMahan v.McMahon (S.C.), 115 S.E., 293, the plaintiffs are estopped by their election to pursue the remedies invoked in the first action which has ripened into a judgment. Although the remedies may be distinct as held in Reynolds v.Philips, 72 S.C. 32; 51 S.E., 523, they rested upon the identical facts; and a pursuit of one to judgment is a bar to a pursuit of the other.
The order appealed from is affirmed.
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