Campbell v. Consalus

By the Court, Peckham, J.

The only question of any moment presented in this case is as to the effect of the former judgment; whether it adjudged and declared the amount due, or only that something was due; or that the mortgage was not satisfied and paid. ■ If the latter only, then the finding of the referee was right. It is true that the state of the accounts between the parties was examined, thoroughly examined, in the first suit. That was deemed necessary, probably, to ascertain whether any thing was due. It is always necessary to a certain extent in such cases. Here the question may well have been so close in the judgment of counsel, as to render that course indispensable. But the question is what was necessarily adjudged in that suit. That suit was not to redeem. The comjfiaint contained no offer to pay what should be found due, if any thing; nor did the answer ask any judgment or decree for the payment of the amount due. In such case the court of errors held that the bill should be dismissed, if its allegations were not sustained. (Beekman v. Frost, 18 John. 544, 561.) To enable the defendant in the first suit to succeed, and obtain .the precise judgment he did obtain, it *511was only necessary for Linn to establish that the mortgage was not fully paid. The extent of the deficiency in payment was not material; so that if the plaintiff had proved that all was paid but ten dollars, the defendant in that suit might have rested, without any proof, with entire safety. The judgment would have been the same. This is the plain state of the pleadings in that suit, and the judgment a proper consequence from the facts, with such pleadings. It. seems to me entirely clear, then, that the former suit only adjudged that something was due, not the amount actually due. I am not prepared to say that the pleadings might not have been amended so as to have had a judgment in that case for the amount due, or so as to have allowed the plaintiff there to have, the mortgage satisfied on the payment of the amount reported and adjudged to be due. But as the case stood, the amount was not adjudged, but only the point that something was due on the mortgage. On such pleadings, (and their interpretation seems to have been agreed upon and coincided in by both parties,) it would have been fruitless for the plaintiff to have carried up the question, had he been dissatisfied with the amount found due by the referees. Had he succeeded in showing it to have been $>2700 too high, the judgment would not have been set aside, so long as any thing remained due.

This view is not changed by the stipulation of the parties in the first suit. It was a suit in equity, the purpose of that suit was plain, viz: to have the mortgage declared and decreed satisfied. All the evidence introduced to show an amount still unpaid was pertinent and admissible to the issue presented by the pleadings. The stipulation then was unnecessary to allow its admission. So far as respects this,,, mortgage, I do not perceive that the stipulation had any effect whatever. It did not change the pleadings nor the purpose of the suit. It did not agree that judgment should be entered for the amount that should be found due by the referees, nor that the referees should report the amount due.

*512[Albany General Term. May 6, 1861.

The doetrine of res adjudieata cannot extend beyond the judgment in the former case, and the facts necessarily found in rendering that judgment. If I am correct in my reasoning, the amount due was not necessarily found, and hence that fact was not adjudged. (See Smith’s Lead. Cas. 668, 676.)

I have examined the evidence in this case also, and am free to say, that I have great doubt whether I should have come to the same conclusion with the referee, as to the. facts. But there is some evidence to sustain his finding; and in a good degree the questions of fact as to the account turn upon the credibility of witnesses; and as to their credibility, the finding is conclusive, at least in a case like this.

The former suit cannot in any view affect Hall, whatever his character, more than it did the principal litigant, Consalus. I find no error in the proceedings before the referee, and the judgment on his report should be affirmed, with costs.

Gould, Wright and Peckham, Justices.]