This action grows out of a collision of two automobiles, one belonged to the plaintiffs and the other to the defendants. At the time of the accident, Mr. and Mrs. Snyder had as fellow passengers in their *271car Mr. and Mrs. James M. Woods. As a result of the accident, Mr. and Mrs. Woods were injured and so were Mr. Snyder and his car. Mr. and Mrs. Woods sued both the Snyders and E. O. Marten to recover damages for their injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of those defendants. In that action, there was a verdict and judgment in favor of all the defendants therein. Thereafter, the present action was commenced by Mr. and Mrs. Snyder to recover damages for Mr, Snyder’s injuries in the same accident, which, they alleged, were caused by the negligence of the defendants Marten and wife.
The defendants, in their answer, in addition to general denials, interposed an affirmative, defense showing the former suit of Mr. and Mrs. Woods and the result of it. They further alleged that in that suit the defendants therein appeared separately, and that Snyder and wife by their answer admitted that E. O. Marten was negligent and admitted that Woods and wife were injured in the accident. It is further alleged that, at the trial of that case, the undisputed evidence showed that Woods and wife were injured; and that the judgment in that case was a final determination that E. O. Marten was not negligent in connection with the accident, and that the plaintiffs herein are thereby estopped from now claiming that the defendants E. O. Marten and wife or either of them was guilty of any negligence whatever in the accident. A general demurrer to the affirmative defense . was sustained. From a verdict and judgment for the plaintiffs, the defendants have appealed.
The question in the case is: Where two persons, wholly unrelated in business, each driving his own car, become involved in a collision between the two cars *272which canses an injury to a third person, who unsuccessfully sues both car owners to recover damages for their alleged negligence, may one of the co-defendants in the former suit .thereafter sue the other to recover damages alleged to have been caused by the latter’s negligence on that same occasion?
Whatever may be the.rule in equitable actions, where the constant practice is to decree between all the parties including co-defendants upon proper proofs and under pleadings which among other things bring the respective claims and rights of the co-defendants between themselves under judicial cognizance, or in actions at law involving constructive negligence and liability over, or actions at law upon contracts of indemnity or suretyship, we think the present case is controlled by the general rule that parties to á judgment are not bound by it in subsequent controversies between each other unless they were adversaries in the action wherein the judgment was entered. 15 R. C. L. p. 1013, § 487; 23 Cyc. 1279, § 11; Freeman, Judgments (4th ed.), § 158. • The object of the action by Mr. and Mrs. Woods was not to determine the rights of all the parties thereto, each as against all others, whether plaintiffs or defendants. It was to determine only their rights against those defendants. Neither of the defendants in that case was called upon in defending his position to. do anything other than to meet the charge that he was guilty of negligence so far as Mr. and Mrs. Woods were concerned, unless perchance there was the defense of contributory negligence charged against Mr. and Mrs. Woods, or some other affirmative defense of which there is no advice in the affirmative defense interposed in the present case. It was unnecessary for either defendant in that case to show that the other *273defendant was negligent—that was the burden the plaintiffs therein assumed. The defendants therein made no issue between themselves by their separate answers, nor did they attempt to do so. That these plaintiffs, in their separate answer in that ease, admitted that Mr. and Mrs. Woods were injured in the accident was binding upon no one other than Mr. and Mrs. Snyder, and the admission, by these plaintiffs in that same answer, that E. O. Marken was negligent in connection with the accident was unimportant. It does not appear whether therein they specifically admitted the negligence of Mr. Marken or whether they did so by not denying that charge contained in the complaint of Mr. and Mrs. Woods. The legal effect would be the same, it was binding on no one. By that admission, Mr. and Mrs. Snyder presented no issue to Mr. Marken. They were not answering any pleadings of his nor were they interposing any pleadings under our code of practice which he could move against, demur or reply to, or join issue in any manner upon. They were not crossing swords with each other, they were each only defending himself against the charge of negligence made upon him by Mr. and Mrs. Woods. In such a case, the finding and judgment of the court that neither of the parties defendant was guilty of negligence as to those plaintiffs do not conclude and determine any of the mere relative rights of the defendants therein as between themselves. Harvey v. Osborn, 55 Ind. 535; Keagy v. Wellington Nat. Bank, 12 Okl. 33, 69 Pac. 811.
The case of Boston & M. R. Co. v. Sargent, reported first in 70 N. H. 299, 47 Atl. 605, and on the second appeal in 72 N. H. 455, 57 Atl. 688, is relied on by the appellant. It was a case wherein a constructive tort*274feasor sued to recover contribution, or indemnity under an implied contract, from a co-defendant wbo was primarily liable for tbe damages. Tbe suit followed one wherein tbe injured party bad recovered judgment against a railroad company and a shipper for tbe de7 struction of a store house near tbe railroad tracks by fire communicated from a stove in tbe car on which tbe shipper’s goods were stored, tbe car being in tbe shipper’s control. Tbe shipper bad bad bis day in court upon tbe charge of his negligence and suffered a judgment therefor that be was directly obligated to pay, and in tbe subsequent suit by the railroad company (upon its paying tbe judgment) against the shipper upon bis implied contract of indemnity, it was held by tbe New Hampshire court that be was estopped by the former judgment from showing that be exercised due care in beating tbe car and that tbe railroad company was guilty of actual (not constructive) negligence which was tbe sole cause of the burning of. tbe store bouse, for those issues were found against him in that suit. Even in tbe case between tbe railroad company and tbe shipper it was held that tbe railroad company could not have indemnity unless it showed that, by tbe exercise of proper care, it could not have pre.vented tbe injury, and that since such fact was not litigated in the suit for tbe loss of tbe store bouse, it wqs incumbent upon tbe railroad company in its suit against tbe shipper to establish that it could not. have prevented tbe injury by tbe exercise of such care. But that case is not authority in tbe consideration of tbe present one wherein, when co-defendants, these parties in tbe suit of Mr. and Mrs. "Woods were charged as separate and distinct tort-feasors, each being accused of actual negligence. They were in no way related to each other by contract, direct or implied, and have not until the *275present suit had any opportunity to litigate their relative rights and liabilities growing out of the accident. Judgment affirmed.
Parker, O. J., Main, Touman, and Bridges, JJ., concur.