Beall v. Pearre

Eccleston, J.,

delivered the opinion of this court.

On the 19ih of March 1847, Abraham Brown, the intestate of the present defendant, instituted an action of assumpsit against the present plaintiff, upon a promissory note for $289.14.

It was agreed that the defendant 'might plead non-assumpsit, and offer “the special matter in evidence, as fully as if he had specially pleaded the same or given notice thereof to the plaintiff.”

The note was given in consideration of a contract in relation to 69 barrels of beef. Brown alleged the contract to be an absolute sale of the beef at $7.50 per barrel. Beall contended there was no sale, but that the beef was left with him *560to sell for Brown on commission; that it was estimated at $7.50 per barrel, on account of which, he, Beall, advanced to Brown, in cash, $220, and gave him the said note; and that Beall was to have all he could sell the beef for over $7.50 per barrel, and all that it sold for under that price Brown was to make tip by crediting the same on the note. It was alleged by Beall, that Brown falsely represented the beef to be of good quality, and that it won Id pass as No. l,in Baltimore; whereas it was then slippery, (which is the incipient stage of decomposition or decay,) and finally turned out to be so bad, that after diligent efforts to sell the same, the whole only produced $3.57, beyond the expenses of sales.

Brown claimed the full amount of the note, and offered evidence to support his right to recover the same. Beall offered proof to-sustain his defence, which was based upon the allegation, that the note had been given on account of the beef, which, at the time of the contract, the plaintiff falsely represented to be in good condition, and would pass as No. 1 in Baltimore, he then knowing it to be unsound, and Beall being then ignorant of the unsound condition of the beef.

The defendant, Beall, prayed the court to instruct the jury, that if they believed the beef was left with the defendant t.o sell for the plaintiff, or to do the best the defendant could with the beef; that the plaintiff obtained the note on which the suit was brought, from the defendant, by falsely pretending and alleging that the beef was of good quality, and would pass No. 1 in Baltimore, and that all he wanted with the note was, to show his partner what disposition he had made of the cattle; and that whatever the beef sold for, less than seven dollars and fifty cents per barrel, he would credit on the note; such false representations would be a fraud on the defendant; and if the jury should believe that the defendant, in consequence of such false representations, gave the said note, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover on said note.

This prayer the court refused to give, “upon the ground, that, from the evidence in the cause, it appears that the defendant, after he discovered the false representation, (if any,) acted upon the arrangement made between the parties at the time the note was obtained, and did not elect to return or *561offer to return the beef and rescind the contract, and that hd thereby affirmed the contract of bailment, and the plaintiff is entitled to recover upon the note, allowing to the defendant a deduction therefrom, whatever the beef sold for under the sum of $7.50 per barrel; provided the jury shall believe from the evidence, that the amount the beef sold for, less than the said sum, did not result from the fault or negligence of the defendant; unless the jury shall also believe from the evidence, that at the time the said note was given, (he beef was so spoiled of defective that it could not, without the fault or want of diligence of the defendant., be sold for anything. ’ ’

The alternative intended to be provided for commencing with the word “unless,” is not quite so explicitly stated as it might have been; but we understand the meaning of the court in the entire instruction, to be, that looking at the contract as one of bailment, then, in view of the circumstances presented in the first portion of the instruction, if believed by the jury to be true, the plaintiff would be entitled to recover upon, the note such balance thereof as should remain, after allowing the defendant a deduction from the amount of the note, for whatever the beef was sold for, less than $7.50 per barrel; provided the loss on selling the same did not result from the fault or negligence of the defendant; unless the jury believed, that at the time of giving the note the beef was so spoiled or defective, that without fault or want of diligence on the part of the defendant, it could not be sold for anything, and then, as there would be a total failure of consideration, the plaintiff could not recover on the note. In the last contingency mentioned in the instruction, the court must be understood as meaning, either, that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, or else, as meaning what is equivalent to it, which is, that the defendant was entitled to a deduction from the note for the beef, at $7.50 per barrel.

At the instance of the counsel for Brown, the court instructed the jury, that if they believed any article, other than the beef, was sold by Brown to Beall, and that such article formed a part of the consideration for which the note in dispute was given, and that such article was of value, then the plaintiff was not precluded from recovering on the note.

The court likewise instructed the jury, at the instance of the *562plaintiff’s counsel, that if they believed the beef was sold and delivered by the plaintiff Brown, to the defendant Beall, and although they should believe that the plaintiff made representations to the defendant as to the quality and condition of the beef at the time of sale, knowing them to be false, yet if they believed that the beef was of some value, and that the defendant, after he discovered that the representations so made to him by the plaintiff were not true, dealt with the beef as his own, and sold it without returning ihe same or offering to return it to the plaintiff; that “such facts did not constitute a defence or bar to the recovery upon the note;” notwithstanding they might believe that at the time of the sale, the plaintiff .made such false representations, knowing them to be false.

The verdict and judgment were in favor of the plaintiff, Brown, for the full amount of the note; which judgment was rendered on the 10th day of May 1849.

On the 1st of March 1850, Beall filed a bill on the equity side of Allegany county court, and obtained an injunction against all further proceedings on the said judgment. The bill of exceptions taken on the trial at law, including the instructions granted by the court, was filed as an exhibit with the bill, and after answer and proof, the court below dissolved the injunction and dismissed the bill. From this decision Beall appealed, and this court affirmed the decree. See 7 Md. Rep., 393, Beall vs. Brown.

Brown has since died, the present defendant, George A. Pearre, has taken out letters of administration on his estate, and this action has been instituted against him by Beall, to recover damages upon the alleged breach of warranty, in relation to the sixty-nine barrels of beef mentioned in the former suit.

The first count in the na.r. sets out a sale of sixty-nine barrels of beef, on the 20th of February 1846, to Beall by Brown, the latter warranting the beef to be sound, and that it would pass inspection as No. 1 beef in Baltimore, whereas it was unsound and would not pass inspection as warranted.

The second count alleges, that Beall took the beef to sell for Brown, that Brown warranted and represented the same to be sound, and would pass inspection as beef No. 1 in Baltimore; that Brown falsely and fraudulently induced Beall to *563take the beef from him for sale, and account to him for the same at $7.50 per barrel; that at the time of the agreement .Beall‘accounted with Brown at the above price, and paid him $220 in cash, and also gave him his note, at 90 days, for $289.14, as a further advance on the beef; that Beall was to have for his service and trouble in selling, all he could obtain on the sale, over the sum of $7.50 per barrel. This count also alleges, that the beef was unsound and spoiled.

The third count charges, that Beall purchased the beef of Brown, at $7.50 per barrel; that it was agreed that Brown should deliver the beef, and that Beall should accept it, and pay for tile same at that price. That at the time of sale Brown warranted the beef to be sound, and that it would pass as No. 1 beef in Baltimore. That Beall was to sell the beef, and retain for himself all he could sell it for over $7.50 per barrel, for his trouble and service; and whatever the beef should sell for less than $7.50 per barrel, Brown agreed to repay to Beall, and that he should lose nothing by the operation. It is also alleged, that Brown delivered the beef, and Beall paid him $220 in cash, and gave him his note for $289.14; that on the 15th of June 1846, “it proved and was manifest that the said beef at the time of said agreement, and also on the day and year last aforesaid, was and remained unsound and spoiled, and was not of a qualify to pass as beef No. 1 in Baltimore.” That Beall offered the beef in Allegany county, and failing to sell, he transported it to Baltimore, and made diligent efforts to sell the same, but the beef proved worthless, and he only realized $3.57 beyond the cost of sales.

The fourth count is for money had and received.

The first plea is, non-assumpsit, on which issue is taken.

There are other pleas, but it is needless to mention them, inasmuch as the issue upon the first includes the defence on which the case will be decided.

The following is an agreement made between the parties:

“We agree in this case, that the evidence offered in a former case of Brown vs. Beall, in reference to the same subject matter, shall be read and received in evidence in the trial of this case, as taken down in the trial of the said case of Brown vs. Beall, including the letters of Sewell, Janney and Owings, *564with all papers and accounts as received in said trial, subject to the same exceptions, which either party could have made to the said evidence at the trial when it was taken. The said letters of Sewell, Janney and Owings, to be received in evidence, as they were on the said trial. Either party shall be at liberty to offer such other testimony as he may deem proper and shall be admissible by the same or other witnesses.”

The parties also agreed, “that the clerk of the Circuit court for Allegany county, in making out the record for the Court of Appeals, shall not copy out the proceedings in the chancery case of Beall vs. Brown, which went to the Court of Appeals, as mentioned in the bill of exceptions; but shall insert in the record this agreement, and the record of said case in the Court of Appeals, shall be used as though it were fully set out in the record; neither shall the clerk of the Court of Appeals, in copying this present record insert the said chancery case.”

Beall, the plaintiff, read the evidence taken in the case of Brown vs. Beall, in the suit upon the note, as found in the printed record in the chancery case of Beall vs. Brown. He also gave some additional evidence, by two of the witnesses who were examined in the former case at law. Their additional evidence, however, relates to the same matters involved in that suit.

The present defendant offered in evidence the proceedings and verdict and judgment, including the evidence set out in the bill of exceptions, in the case of Brown vs. Beall, on the note, and all the papers in said case, including the agreement of counsel as to pleadings.

As a ground of defence to the present action, the appellee says, the plaintiff claims damages for an alleged breach of warranty, in regard to the quality and condition of the beef in dispute; when it is manifest that the same breach of warranty was relied upon by him as a ground of defence in the former suit against him, on the note. It is insisted that the claim now presented, was made as a defence in the former ease, was considered and decided adversely to Beall, and, therefore, he cannot now recover upon such a demand.

It is not pretended that any issue made by the pleadings shows that this question upon the warranty was presented, but jt is alleged the evidence shows that it was presented and de*565cided. If this be true, it is a good defence. In Shafer vs. Stonebraker, 4 G. & J., 360, the court say: “We conceive, therefore, it may be stated as a general rule, that a verdict and judgment upon the merits in a former suit, is, in a subsequent action between the same parties, where the cause of action, damages or demand is identically the same, conclusive against the plaintiff’s right to recover, whether pleaded in bar or given in evidence under the general issue, where such evidence is legally admissible; and that such prior verdict and judgment need not be pleaded by way of estoppel.” See, also, Garrott vs. Johnson, 11 G. & J., 173, 182.

In reply to this ground of defence, Beall says, although the proof may show that he gave evidence to support his defence in the former suit, on account of a breach of the warranty, yet, whether lie was entitled to such a defence, by his proof, never was submitted to, or decided by, the jury. They were instructed, that if they believed the beef was sold and delivered by Brown to Beall, and it was of some value, then, although the former may have made false representations in regard to the quality and condition of the beef, knowing them to be false, and Beall dealt with it and sold it as his own, he could not claim any deduction from the amount of the note. The court held the rule of law to be, that in a suit upon a promissory note, the maker could not reduce the note by proof of a partial failure of consideration. Such being the law, as announced by the court, and the jury having given a verdict for the full amount of the note, the present plaintiff assumes that the jury decided the contract io relation to the beef was a sale, and consequently they never did decide upon the merits of his defence, in the former suit; the instruction of the court having withdrawn from them any consideration of a question in reference to a breach of warranty, in the event of their finding the contract to be a sale, that the beef was of some value, and that he, Beal, dealt with it as his own, and sold it, without returning or offering to return it. Under these circumstances Beall’s counsel insists, that in the rendition of the former verdict, it not only does not appear that the jury passed upon the merits of his present claim, but it appears they did not. Admitting (without deciding) this to be true, why was it so? The *566answer given to this question by the party is, that the decision of the court necessarily withdrew the consideration of this claim from the jury. If, therefore, the jury did not, the court did, decide upon it. And we can see no good reason why a decision of a court upon a claim in a former action, is not as effectual a bar to a recovery in another suit, upon the same cause of action, as that of a jury.

The ruling of the court, we think, was erroneous. If the note was given for the beef, although the contract was a sale, yet the maker of the note had a legal right to insist upon either a total or partial want or failure of consideration, in defence, according to the extent of his proof. Cline & Francis, vs. Miller, 8 Md. Rep., 285, 286.

If, however, the court gave a wrong instruction, that could not confer upon the injured party the right to bring another suit upon the same claim. He might have appealed, and had the error corrected.

In Smith vs. Whiting, 11 Mass. Rep., 445, it was held, that a second action cannot be maintained upon evidence once offered and rejected in the trial of a like action between the same parties. Speaking for the court, C. J. Parker says: “Although the court may have decided wrong in rejecting the evidence in the former suit, yet this is not the way to remedy the misfortune, Exceptions might have been filed to the opinion of the judge, or a new trial might have been had.” And it is likewise said: “In the case at bar, the very evidence now relied on was offered, and an adjudication had upon it. A rehearing of the same action may be proper; but to sustain a new action, would be to ’ throw all judgments into uncertainty and confusion.”

In Grant vs. Button, 14 Johns. Rep., 377, it was decided by the Supreme Court, in New York, that “'matter which was properly offered as a defence in a former action, and rejected, cannot be made the subject of a new suit.”

The law is adverse to multiplying suits; and if a party has a choice between two actions upon the same demand, and he selects one, which is decided by a competent tribunal, either for or against him, as a general rule, he will not be permitted to resort to the other.

*567Beall’s counsel has insisted, through the whole coarse of bis argument, that in consequence of the instruction given by the court upon the theory of a sale, the jury certainly decided the contract in relation to the beef, to be a sale They may have done so. But it is not perfectly certain they did. The court’s instruction, provided they believed Beall was to sell the beef for Brown, did not take from the jury the consideration of the proof on the subject of warranty; on the contrary, it expressly authorized them to make such deduction from the note as the evidence in relation to the warranty would satisfy them was proper to be allowed. The court having submitted to them the inquiry, whether Beall received the beef to sell for Brown, and in case of their believing he did, then the inquiry, what deduction from the note Beall was entitled to on account of the warranty, it cannot be considered as free from all doubt that the jury decided the contract to be a sale to Beall. And if they found that he received the beef to sell for Brown, they could not have rendered a verdict for the full amount of the note, (as they did,) without deciding upon, and adversely to, Beall’s claim for any allowance on account of the alleged breach of warranty.

The verdict, however, may have been rendered by the jury, believing the contract was a sale. And if they so believed, then the instruction of the court on that hypothesis, was a decision upon, and adverse to, the claim of Beall, which authorized the jury to find a verdict for the former plaintiff’s entire claim, allowing no pari of that of the defendant. We, therefore, think, that in whatever aspect the former suit can be properly viewed, it does appear that Beall’s claim, upon the same breach of warranty now sued upon by him, was decided. That it was put in issue, has not been, and cannot be, denied. Nor has it been pretended that, in any stage of the proceedings, any application or effort was made to withdraw the claim.

If there was a warranty, and a breach of it, Beall had a legal right to avail himself of such a claim, in the first suit, by way of recoupment, in opposition to the note, even if the beef, for which it was given, was of some value, provided the jury believed the value of the beef included in it was less than the *568amount of the note. And if Beall was denied his right to recoupment in consequence of an eironeous instruction from the court, to the jury, he might have corrected that error by appealing. Having failed to seek the redress which the law afforded him, he is not entitled to relief in a new suit.

(Decided January 26th, 1859.)

It will be seen that the claim relied upon by the former defendant was an entirety, and not consisting of different elements or items, depending upon different proof. It. was based upon an alleged breach of warranty, the damages for which were unliquidated. And those damages, if the defendant was entitled to any, could not, with any degree of certainty, be assumed to be the difference between the price of the beef agreed upon originally, and the price or amount for which it was finally sold. For among other considerations, in estimating the damages, it would be proper for the jury to ascertain whether any, and, if any, what amount of loss on the final sales, resulted from negligence or want of care on the part of Beall. The rejection of such a claim by an adverse decision, precludes any recovery upon it in a subsequent suit between the same parties.

In the present suit, the court instructed the jury, “that if they should, believe from the evidence, that the beef in the declaration mentioned was deposited with Beall to be sold on commission, then their verdict must be for defendant; but that if they should believe that the beef was absolutely sold with warranty, then they might find for plaintiff.”

There was error, we think, in giving this instruction. By it the court told the jury they must give a verdict for the defendant, if they believed the beef was deposited with Beall to be sold on commission; and this they were told without any thing being said in reference to the terms on which they might have believed the deposit was made.

For this error the judgment will be reversed. But having come to the conclusion that the now plaintiff cannot recover in this action, there will be no procedendo. It is, therefore, needless to examine the other questions presented in the record.

Judgment reversed, and no procedendo awarded.