By the Court.
Benning, J.delivering the opinion.
[1.] Was the charge right? This is the sole..question.
*415A judgment is not, as we think, technically conclusive of any matter, if the matter is not such, that it had, of necessity, to be determined before the judgmentjcould have been given. This seems to be the best result of the authorities. (1 Starkie’s Ev. 223; Phill. Ev. 334; Notes to Phill. Ev. 845; (Note, 594, 826, 827;) Green. Ev. §528.)
Was the right asserted in the action of trover, such that it had, of necessity, to be determined by the Court in the Equity suit, before it could render the decree which it did render in that suit ?
The decree which the Court did render in that suit, as between Davis and wife, and the complainants, amounted to this: that the complainants had the remainder in the slaves after the death of Mrs. Davis, and that they were entitled to security from Davis and wife for the forthcoming of the slaves, at the death of Mrs. Davis.
Now, in order that this decree might be made, it was not a. matter of necessity that the Court should first determine the.question, whether or not the complainants did not have, not only the remainder in the slaves, but also an interest in the-slaves, jointly or in common with Davis and wife, for the life of the wife; or the question, whether, if they had such life-interest, the trustee under the deed was or was not entitled to the possession of the slaves, to the end that he might so administer them as to give all the tenants the enjoyment of' their interests. The only question which it was necessary to determine to render that decree, was this: were the complainants remainder-men under the deed ? If they were, the decree had to be rendered, as a matter of course, no odds, whether they, together with Davis and wife, were also the-life-tenants or not. Eor if the complainants were themselves, life-tenants along with Davis and wife, still, Davis and wife were as much entitled to the possession of the slaves, for her life, as they were. If that were so, they, and Davis and wife, were joint tenants or.tenants in common, of the life estate. And one tenant in common, or joint tenant, has as much right to the exclusive possession of the property as an*416other has. And if one has the exclusive possession, the-others cannot divest him of it. They may make him account for their interest in the profits, or may have a partition of the property. They cannot dispossess him. If they choose to let him keep the possession, they may do so. ' And if they do let him keep the possession, and ask- that he may give them security for the forthcoming of the property at the end of the life estate, (they having the remainder in the property,) and get a decree that he shall do so, is the decree inconsistent with the idea that they had not a life-estate in the property ? Certainly not. Therefore, should they after-wards choose to set up any right to the life-estate, that decree cannot he a bar to their claim.
It was, then, at least, not a matter of necessity, that the Court, before making the decree, which was made in the-Equity case, should have determined the question, whether the complainants or the trustee under the deed, had or had not any life-estate in the slaves.
But whether thej; or the trustee have any such life-estate,, is the question raised by the action of trover. The decree^ therefore, can he no bar to that action.
The plaintiff in error ought, we think, to have a new trial..