Mason v. Mason

WALKER, P. J. —

This was an action against the sureties on a bond in the sum of $500, made to the plaintiff (the appellee here) in consideration of the dismissal of bastardy proceedings instituted by her against the principal in the bond, whereby the obligors agreed to pay said amount unless the principal obligor fully complied with his agreement “to marry the said Mattie Cooley and properly maintain her during life and to support and maintain the child till it becomes 21 years old” the bond containing a provision that it should become void in the event of the death of the principal obligator. The defendants pleaded the recovery by the plaintiff of a judgment against them in a former suit on the same bond and the payment by them of such judgment, which was for $150 and the costs of the suit. The pleadings in the former suit were made exhibits to the plea. The court sustained the plaintiff’s demurrer to that plea. This action of the court is assigned as error.

In the argument made in support of this ruling the counsel for the appellee contend that the damages sued *379for in tlie present action, as stated in the complaint, were “damages accruing for breaches of said bond since October 6, 1910” — the date of the judgment in the former suit — and that therefore the right to recover them in this action is not affected by the judgment which is pleaded as a former recovery on the same cause of action. “A judgment or decree of a court of competent jurisdiction is conclusive, and becomes res adjudicaba, as to a subsequent suit, when it is ascertained that the matters of the two suits are the same and the issues in the former suit were broad enough to have comprehended all that Avas involved in the issues in the second suit; the inquiry being, not what the parties actually litigated, but what they might and ought to have litigated in the former suit.” — Wood v. Wood, 134 Ala. 557, 33 South. 347; Drinkard v. Oden, 150 Ala. 475, 43 South. 578; Tankersley v. Petis, 71 Ala. 179.

The question, then, is as to Avhether the issues in the suit, the judgment in Avliich is the matter pleaded, Avere broad enough to comprehend the claim asserted in the present suit. There is nothing in the terms of the complaint in the former suit to indicate that the plaintiff therein was confining her claim to only such damages as she had sustained by the failure of the principal in the bond to support and maintain herself and her child up to the date either of the institution of the suit or of the trial of it. By that complaint the plaintiff claimed as damages the sum of $500, which was the amount of the penalty of the bond sued on, and the breach of the condition of the bond which was alleged Avas that the principal therein “Avrongfully refuses and fails to support and maintain her, and wrongfully refuses and fails to support and maintain said child, but has, after marrying said Mattie Cooley, this plaintiff, wrongfully abandoned her and left the state of Ala*380bama, and gone to parts unknown to this plaintiff, to the damage of tbe plaintiff, as above stated.” Unless tbe law restricted tbe damages recoverable in that former suit to compensation for tbe prast failure of tbe principal in tbe bond to furnish the stipulated maintenance and support, it cannot well be said that the plaintiff therein so stated her claim as to show that she was seeking to recover only such compensation.

Conceding that the contract was not entire, so that only one suit could have been maintained for the breach of it (Code, § 2505), and that successive actions might have been brought upon it under the statute (Code, § 2494) allowing this “whenever, after the former action, a new cause of action arises therefrom,” yet if the plaintiff had the right, on the state of facts averred in the complaint in her former suit, to recover damages for the breach of the contract as a whole, the amount of the claim asserted by her in that suit, and the complete and final abandonment of his obligation by the principal in the bond there averred, persuasively indicate that that suit Avas an effort on the part of the plaintiff to recover everything that Avas then recoverable in a suit on the bond. Certainly it cannot be said that it clearly appears, from the terms of the complaint in that former suit, that it was based upon a cause of action separate and distinct from the one subsequently counted, on, as Avas the fact in the case of Gravette v. Allen Graphite Co., 1 Ala. App. 656, 56 South. 17, and in other- cases referred to in the opinion in that case. In that complaint there was no recognition of the continuing existence of the contract, nothing to indicate that the plaintiff Avas limiting her claim to compensation for the failure of the principal in the bond to support her and her child up1 to that time. — Marx v. Miller, 134 Ala. 347, 32 South. 765. On the contrary, *381its averments cannot well be understood as showing anything short of a total breach of his obligation by the principal in the bond, and that the plaintiff was availing herself of that breach as support for a claim of full and final damages. — Trustees of Howard College v. Turner, 71 Ala. 429, 46 Am. Rep. 326; Mobile & Montgomery Railway Co. v. Gilmer, 85 Ala. 422, 437, 5 South. 138.

And we are of opinion that for such a breach of the condition of the bond as was averred in the complaint in the former suit damages because of the failure of the principal in the bond to furnish the stipulated support after the date of the judgment rendered in that suit were recoverable in that action. The case of Parker v. Russell, 133 Mass. 74, was an action to- recover damages for the breach of a contract to support the plaintiff during his life. In the opinion in that case it Avas said: “In an action for the breach of a contract to support the plaintiff during his life, if the contract is regarded as still subsisting, the damages are assessed up to the date of the writ, and not up to the time Avhen the verdict is rendered. But if the breach has been such that the plaintiff has the right to- treat the contract as absolutely and finally broken by the -defendant, and he so elects to treat it, the damages are assessed as of a total breach of an. entire contract. Such damages are not special or prospective damages, but are the damages naturally resulting from a total breach of the contract, and are suffered Avhen the contract is broken, and are assessed as of that time. From the- nature of the contract, they include damages for not performing the contract in the future, as well as in the past. The value of the contract to the plaintiff at the time it is broken may be someAvhat indefinite, because the duration of the life of the plaintiff is' uncertain; but uncertainty in the dura*382tion of a life has not, since the adoption of life tables, been regarded. as a reason why full relief in damages should not be offered for a failure to perform a contract which by its terms was to continue during life. When the defendant, for example, absolutely refuses to perform such a contract, after the time for entering upon the performance has begun, it would be a great hardship to compel the plaintiff to be ready, at all times during his life, to be supported by the defendant, if the defendant should at any time change his mind, and to hold that he must resort to successive actions from time to time to obtain his damages piecemeal, or else leave them to be recovered as an entirety by his personal representative after his death.” These views have received the express approval of the Supreme Court of the United States in the opinion rendered in the case of Pierce v. Tennessee Coal Co., et., R. Co., 173 U. S. 1, 11, 19 Sup. Ct. 335, 43 L. Ed. 591, on a somewhat similar state of facts. This latter case was referred to approvingly in the opinion rendered in the case of Marx v. Miller, supra, and the ruling in it is in line Avith that made in the case of Trustees of Howard College v. Turner, supra, and with the general trend of the authorities. — 3 Paige on Contracts, § 1584.

In the case of Trustees of Howard College v. Turner, supra, a question Avas presented as to- the damages recoverable for the breach of an agreement evidenced by a certificate of permanent scholarship issued by the defendant. The analogy between that case and such cases as the one above quoted from was distinctly recognized by the court. It was said in the opinion: “The gravamen of the averment is the refusal of the defendant to recognize the binding obligation of the contract for the sale of the 'scholarship.’ This refusal the plaintiff Avas authorized to treat as a total breach, for which full or *383final damages could be recovered. A just analogy in principle is found in that class of contracts in which an obligor agrees to provide for and support an obligee during the latter’s natural life. A refusal to comply, at any given time, has been uniformly construed into an attempt on defendant’s part to abrogate the whole agreement, which is a total breach.”

From the conclusions that the claim asserted by the complaint in the former suit ivas broad enough to have comprehended the one sought to be maintained in the present action, and that damages because of the failure of the principal in the bond, after the date of the judgment in that suit, to provide the stipulated maintenance and support, were recoverable in that suit, it follows that that judgment, the result of a trial of the case had upon the merits, might well be pleaded as a bar to the plaintiff’s right to maintain the claim asserted by her in the present suit, and that the demurrer to the plea above mentioned should have been overruled.

Reversed and remanded.