delivered the opinion of the Court:
The first question is, should the decree of the circuit court have been reversed because the court refused to grant a change of venue in this case? The petition on which the application was made, was presented at the April term of the court, in 1876, and on the first day of the term next succeeding the filing of the bill. Notice that such an application would be made was served on the attorneys of the appellee, on the 11th day of that month. On the 25th, it was stipulated that the cause should be tried in vacation, but such a trial was not had, but at the April term, 1878, the cause was submitted to and tried by the same judge against whom the petition for the change of venue had been filed two years previously, and this, too, without any objection by appellant. "
We will not stop to inquire whether the circuit court erred in refusing to change the venue, inasmuch as appellant clearly waived all error, if any existed, by going to trial before the same judge, two vears afterwards, without objection. It would be vicious practice to permit a party, under such circumstances, to proceed to trial, try the experiment whether he could succeed, and if he failed, then to fall back on the refusal to grant a change of venue, and claim a reversal. To permit such practice would be to produce delay, unnecessary expense and vexation. If he were not required to abide by the decision on the motion until he could test its correctness, he should have objected to proceeding to a trial; but failing to do so, he has waived any error that may have been committed in overruling the motion, especially after such a length of time. There is no force in this objection.
Appellant claims that he should not be required to specifically perform the contract, because the agreement required the payment of $2400, with ten per cent interest; that only the principal, without interest, has been paid. It seems to be fully conceded that the $2400 was paid. It also appears that appellant prepared and tendered a deed, demanded the interest, but it not being paid, he brought an action of assumpsit for its recovery, but failed in the action. We regard the evidence as ample, proving that in that suit the question of whether appellee owed this interest, and the finding and judgment on that issue, was against appellant, and that judgment is in full force and unreversed.
All persons in the profession, we presume, know that a judgment rendered in a case where the court has jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the parties, is a bar to a recovery on the same cause of action, in all courts, whether of law or of chancery. This is so elementary as to require no discussion or citation of authority.
The question of interest was litigated and determined in the suit in assumpsit, and that question is res judicata, and we have no power to consider the question of whether the interest was paid, as that question is conclusively settled by that judgment.
If, then, appellee has paid, as it is conceded, the principal, and the judgment in the suit at law was that he owed appellant no interest, it follows that he has no claim for any unpaid balance of the purchase money; and inasmuch as appellee lias fully performed his part of the agreement, he was entitled to a specific performance of the agreement.
Perceiving no error in the record, the decree of the Appellate Court must be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.