Parks v. Libby

Peters, C. J.

It is a well-settled doctrine in this state that if any issue be judicially established between parties to a litigation, the benefit of the finding will inure in favor of the winning party whenever such issue again arises between the same persons or their privies in any other suit. This is upon the principle of estoppel which declares that an issue or fact once judicially proved is forever proved. But it must clearly appear, in order that a judgment shall have such a potential effect, that the facts in question are the same in each case. The issues must be identical.

*58The plaintiff here invokes this principle of estoppel, and claims that its application is complete.

The facts bearing on the question presented in the present suit are reported to us as follows : — “ February 1st, 1893, the defendant made a written contract with the plaintiff to drive the plaintiff’s logs and cedar to the booms in Clinton. Afterward, the same winter or spring, the plaintiff sold the logs and cedar named in the contract to one McNally, to be delivered before the next summer of 1893 at the booms in Clinton. In the early part of the summer McNally complained to the plaintiff, Parks, of shortage, and, on October 6, 1894, McNally began an action against the plaintiff, Parks, returnable to the Superior Court for Kennebec county at the November term, 1894, to recover damages for breach of the said contract between McNally and Parks in not delivering the logs and cedar as agreed. The plaintiff, Parks, thereupon notified the defendant Libby, of the beginning and pendency of the said action, and requested him to assume and provide for the defense thereof, informing him that he should hold him responsible for all costs, expenses and damage. The action, McNally and Parks-, was tried in the Superior Court for Kennebec county at the April term, 1895. In the preparation of the case for trial, and at the trial, Mr. Libby, the defendant was consulted and advised to some extent, and was present and testified at the trial. In that trial the main question at issue was, whether the logs and cedar had been driven down and delivered at the booms in Clinton, and the said logs and cedar were the same referred to in the written contract between the plaintiff and defendant. The verdict was for McNally in said action, and judgment was rendered for McNally against Parks, the plaintiff, for the sum of four hundred and two dollars and sixty-seven cents ($402.67) damages and costs of suit taxed at ninety-one dollars and sixty-seven cents ($91.67). The date of the judgment was the twenty-eighth day of May, eighteen hundred and ninety-five. This judgment the plaintiff, Parks, paid. The plaintiff, Parks, in the preparation and defense of said action of McNally, disbursed in counsel fees, witness fees and incidental expenses, the sum of one hundred and fifteen dollars and eighty-*59one cents ($115.81). The plaintiff, Parks, also spent some time in preparing the case for trial and in attendance upon the trial, for which he makes a charge of one hundred (100) dollars, he testifying that he spent twenty-five (25) days, himself and teams, and calling four (4) dollars per day a reasonable compensation.

“ The defendant, not contesting any of the foregoing propositions except the charge for personal services in preparing and trying said case, offers in defense of this action evidence tending to show that he did in fact drive the logs and lumber named in his written contract to the booms in Clinton within the time specified.

’“ To this evidence the plaintiff objects, on the ground that the defendant, Libby, having been notified to defend the former action, had had bis day in court upon that question and it is not now open to him.”

We think the facts disclosed by the report do not clearly show of themselves, without the aid of any other evidence, that the issues in both cases were alike. A want of complete identity is easily discoverable upon close examination.

In the first place it is stated that the “main” question at the first trial was whether the logs had been driven down and delivered as the defendant in that suit had agreed to do. That is not exact enough for such certainty as is required to allow the doctrine of strict estoppel to defeat a claim.

And this criticism is the more apropos when we notice from a recital of the two contracts in the writ, and the contracts are not otherwise copied, that the defendant in the former suit was required to deliver the logs to the purchaser “before summer,” while the time within which this defendant was bound to drive the logs to some boom is not specified in his contract. Non constat that the defendant in this suit was compelled by his contract to drive the logs within the same period of time, or that he could do so. Sometimes the early freshets do not furnish sufficient water for successful log-driving.

Another discrepancy between the two contracts appears to be that the driving contract of the defendant was to deliver the logs in boom at Clinton, but the contract of sale by the plaintiff was to *60deliver the logs into McNally’s boom; and it no where appears that the two destinations or places of delivery are the same.

McNally’s boom may not be the same as Clinton boom or booms.

Finally, another objection to subjecting the defendant to the judgment against the plaintiff with the same effect as if found against himself is, that the rule of damages in the two actions are not the same. This defendant may be liable for such damages as might arise from his negligence, while the plaintiff in the other action against him was liable for damages arising for not delivering a certain quantity of logs according to an agreement of sale. One stands in the position of a bailee and the other in that of seller of the logs. The damages for negligent driving might be, and ordinarily would be, widely different from damages for not delivering logs bargained and sold. The one might be no more than amounting to a part of the value of the missing logs. The other might be the total value of the missing logs themselves.

The evidence offered by the plaintiff should be excluded, and according to-the terms of the report the action is to stand for trial.

Action to stand for trial.