DISSENTING OPINION OP
MP. JUSTICE MACLEARY.According to my view of this case my colleagues have misunderstood the purport of the pleadings and have narrowed down the purpose of the suit beyond what is warranted by a fair consideration of the whole record. As I understand the matter this is a suit brought in the District Court of Ponce, against the defendants for a conspiracy to defraud the plaintiff out of an inheritance, and alleging that the defendants had come into possession of moneys belonging to the plaintiff and never paid over the same to her or accounted to her therefor, and incidentally to declare null and abrogate a certain contract made by defendants, to the plaintiff’s prejudice, which is therein set forth, and to compel the defendants to pay $5,000 damages to the plaintiff for such wrongful acts and injuries, and legal interest on the same from the 28th of January, 1901, and all costs of the proceeding. To this complaint defendant, Francisca Castaing, filed a demurrer because, as alleged, the complaint did not set forth sufficient facts to constitute a cause of action against the said defendant making the demurrer. The other defendant, Francisco Crosas, made no demurrer to the complaint; and can claim no injury from the adverse ruling, of the court. .
From the opinion given and the judgment rendered by a majority of the court I am constrained to dissent for the reasons which will be stated as briefly as the importance of the case will permit.
On the demurrer filed by the defendant, Casting, the district court made the following ruling:
“The plaintiff herein sets forth certain acts committed by the defendant, Francisco Crosas, and by his brother, Felix Crosas, *816whereby the plaintiff was deprived of certain moneys to which she was entitled — in other words, alleging that moneys belonging to her came into the hands of the two gentlemen above-mentioned and have never been paid to her in full. Don Felix- Crosas is dead and his widow is made a defendant herein in the capacity of his sole heiress. It is alleged in the complaint that she has accepted the inheritance. On the facts set forth the plaintiff would undoubtedly have a good cause of action against Don Felix Crosas if he was still alive, and it is the opinion of the court that she has a good cause of action against his estate. The demurrer of the defendant, Doña Francisca Castaing, is overruled with costs. ’ ’
Thereupon after the overruling of her demurrer the defendant, Francisca Castaing, filed an answer pleading that the same cause of action had been decided in the District Court of the United States for Porto Eico in favor of her deceased husband, Felix Crosas Dalmau; and further pleaded that her deceased husband, the said Felix Crosas Dalmau, had fully settled the claims sued on, before the institution of this suit, with Francisco Crosas, the father of the plaintiff, by a public document duly executed before a notary.
The defendant in the second place pleaded, admitting certain facts set forth in the complaint, naming them; but denying the fifth paragraph of the complaint, and she set forth the facts as she claimed them to be, further praying the court for judgment in her favor declaring that the case was “res judicata,” and rendering judgment in her favor discharging her from the said demands, and adjudging costs against the plaintiff.
In March last the District .Court of Ponce rendered the following judgment:
“In the city of Ponce, P. R., on this the 9th day of March, 1908, this case came on to be heard at the regular sitting, appearing the plaintiff, Doña Felicita Crosas y Baez, by her counsel; Don Ramón Dapena and Don José Tous Soto, and the defendápts,- Don Francisco Crosas Dalmau and Doña Francisca Castaing, as sole heiress of Don Felix Crosas, by their counsel, Don Gustavo' Rodríguez.' The court h&.ving heard the complaint' and the answer thereto, the evidence and *817the arguments of the parties, is of the opinion that in regard to the defendant, Doña Francisca Castaing, the law and the facts are against the plaintiff, because although the acquittance given in 1901 by Don Francisco Crosas to Don Felix Crosas does not affect in any manner the rights of the plaintiff, the latter has not shown nor alleged that in the case of the death of Don Francisco Crosas she would not receive the whole inheritance of 16,000 Spanish pesos with the corresponding discount. Therefore the complaint is dismissed in regard to the damages requested, with costs against the plaintiff, reserving to her the right to investigate and prove the payments made to her prejudice by Don Francisco Crosas and Don Felix Crosas, it being known to the latter that the former -did not have sufficient property to answer the plaintiff for said payments in ease Don Francisco Crosas; 'did not have means to secure the rights of the plaintiff to said inheritance.” •
Thereupon the plaintiff duly prosecuted her appeal from the said judgment to this court.
Upon the record as presented, the following questions clearly arise and should be decided:
First. Does the. plaintiff have a cause of action in this case, against either of the defendants, from the facts presented, prior to the death of her father, the defendant, Francisco Crosas?
Second. Is the matter complained of “res judicata,” by having been decided in the United States District Court for Porto Rico?
Third. In view of the pretended settlement which is alleged to have occurred between Felix Crosas and Francisco Crosas, involving the claim sued on, or the damages arising therefrom if any, is the plaintiff entitled to recover anything from the defendants, or either of them ?
Let us examine these questions seriatim.
The decision of the trial court is virtually to the effect that the suit could not be maintained by plaintiff until after the death of her father; because until that time her right is inchoate; unless she can show that he is insolvent and that his estate will not be able to pay her the amount of money *818to which she will be entitled; and in order to make the widow, Mrs. Crosas, liable, plaintiff must also show that Felix Cro-sas, the deceased husband of the latter defendant, knew that his brother Francisco, also one of the defendants, was insolvent and would not be able, to pay his daughter, the plaintiff, the legacy when she became entitled to it. "We should then decide whether or not this suit was prematurely instituted. As a general proposition it is clearly correct to say that a “right of action must be complete before the action is brought, and the subsequent occurrence of a material fact will not avail in maintaining it.” (See the case of Maryland Tube & I. Works v. West End Improv. Co., 87 Md., 207; 39 Atl., 620; 39 L. R. A., 810 and 813.)
But we must remember that this legacy was originally a devise of lands in Spain for life to Francisco Crosas, with remainder over to the plaintiff, and if she should die without issue with remainder over to Felix Crosas, the deceased husband of the other defendant Francisca Castaing. The land was sold under some sort of judicial proceedings in Spain, the legality of which is not questioned, and which must here be presumed, to be correct and legal. The proceeds of this sale, on the order of Francisco Crosas, were delivered to his brother, Felix Crosas, and by him brought to Ponce, P. R., and an accounting was said to have been made to the defendant, Francisco Crosas, who purported to represent not only himself, but his minor daughter, the plaintiff, who has since attained her majority and married. He seems not to have had any authority from any court to take any such action, and his authority to bind his minor child by any such settlement may well be called in question. It, however, appears that Felix Crosas, by the terms of this contract of settlement, retained more than half the money, derived from the sale of the lands inherited, in the accounting which the two brothers made between them. This fact alone is an indication of a fraud if not of a conspiracy. Then the proceeds of the sale of the lands devised should be treated, in applying the.rules of juris*819prudence to this ease, not as personalty but as realty, and the right of the plaintiff to demand an accounting must be considered to remain the same as if the lands had not been sold.
It has been held in the State of New York by the Court of Appeals, that:
“An action to establish an agreement by brothers and sisters to whom land has descended in common, to hold the same as joint tenants, and that it shall pass by descent or devise to the survivor and from the latter to a child of one of the brothers, and to set aside conveyances of the land by the survivor, is not prematurely brought by such child, on the ground that the survivor is not yet dead and that the child is not entitled to possession, since if the agreement is valid he has a vested remainder in the property and the right to protect the estate, so that he may receive the same when it should come to him by the terms of the agreement.” (This quotation is made from the head notes in Murphy v. Whitney, 140 N. Y., 541; 35 N. E., 930; 24 L. R. A., 123.)
It is true, as said in a note of German v. German, in 67 American Decisions on pages 453 and 454, that:
“Under the old chancery doctrine the remainderman, after a life estate in personalty, could call for security from the tenant for life that the estate would be forthcoming at his death, for equity regarded his tenancy merely as a trust for the remainderman; but tins practice has now been generally overruled, though it is held in somé cases that security may still be required where there is real danger that the property may be wasted, secreted, or removed: Anonymous, 2 Freeman, 206: Bracken v. Bentley, 1 Rep. Ch., 59; Foley v. Burnell, 1 Bro. C. C., 279; Sutton v. Craddock, 1 Ired. Eq., 134; Mortimer v. Moffatt, 4 Hen. & M., 503; Gardner v. Harden, 2 McCord Ch., 32; Smith v. Daniel, Id., 143; Merril v. Johnson, 1 Yerg., 71; S. C., 1 Hill Ch., 44; Henderson v. Vaulx, 10 Yerg., 30; Hudson v. Wadsworth, 8 Conn., 348; Langworthy v. Chadwick, 13 Id., 42; Homer v. Shelton, 2 Met., 194; De Peyster v. Clendenning, 8 Paige, 295, declares the New York rule, which is, in case of a specific bequest for the legatee, to give to the personal representative of the testator an inventory of the articles bequeathed, stating his possession of them and that when his interest expires they are to be delivered up.”
*820This applies to specific bequests of personal property or of money; and so it may be claimed that it is not entirely applicable to the case before the court at this time. And the, same learned commentator, Mr. Freeman, says in a lengthy note to the case of Allen v. De Groodt, a Missouri case, in 14 Am. St. Rep., on p. 628, that:
“In determining the rights and remedies of a reversioner or re-mainderman, the best guide is to consider the nature of his estate and that of the tenant for life, or of the other particular estate, which must terminate before the reversioner or remainderman can come rightfully into the possession of the property. As a general rule the tenant and the reversioner or remainderman are not at the same time entitled to the same right or remedy. Almost universally a tenant of the particular estate has the right to its possession, and the possession to which he is so entitled is not a formal one merely, but carries with it the right to the beneficial enjoyment of the property. If it is clear-from the instrument creating the two estates that the owner of the-particular estate is entitled to be in the possession and use thereof, it may be that such possession and use will result in the entire extinction of the subject matter of the estate, and thus wholly defeat the rights of the reversioner or remainderman. If the subject matter is, personal property, and the tenant is entitled to its use,, he has a right to use and enjoy it according to its nature, though this use may result in its total consumption. (Majors v. Herndon, 78 Ky., 128; Woods v. Sullivan, 1 Swan, 507; German v. German, 27 Pa. St., 116; 67 Am. Dec., 451.) On the other hand, if the property is not such as, is consumable in its ordinary use, the only right which the reversioner or remainderman has is the right to have the property forthcoming at the termination of the particular estate. ’ ’
The same remarks will apply to this as to the former note-in 67 Am. Dec., 453, to which reference is made in the last quotation. We may be said to be now virtually dealing with real estate, for so may the money derived from the sale of lands in Spain be by* ns considered. ■
In the examination of most of the authorities accessible-to ns we are impressed with the conclusion that we cannot do-better in this case than to follow the decisions of the New York, courts,' which seem to be well grounded both in reason and. *821authority. In the ease of Murphy v. Whitney, 24 L. R. A., p. 126, the Court of Appeals of New York, speaking through Mr. Justice Earl, uses the following language:
“It is no defense to this action that the time has not yet come when the plaintiff could come into possession of the property under the terms of the agreement. The time had come when, assuming the validity of the agreement, he had a vested remainder in the property, and the right that the defendant, Mary, had to the real estate or its proceeds was a life estate, the right to the income thereof during her life. As a remainderman he had the right to protect the estate, so 'that he might receive the same when it ought to come to him by the terms of the agreement. If the defendant, Mary, still had the land and there Avas danger, in consequence of her age and feeble mind and the undue influence, artifice and fraud of the other defendants, that she might convey it to a Iona fide purchaser ignorant of the agreements, he could come, into a court of equity and restrain the conveyance thereof; and, so far as the land has been converted into money and the defendants, Whitney and Moore, are appropriating the same to their own use, and there is danger that it may be dissipated and diverted from the plaintiff so that he may not be able to get it at the death of Mary, it would be a reproach to equity if its jurisdiction Avere not sufficient to give him some relief, so that the proceeds of ’the real estate may be preserved, not only to Mary during her life, but for his benefit at her death.”
Then it seems to me that under all the facts of this case, as shown in the record, and in accordance with the authorities which we have examined and cited, we should hold that.the plaintiff has a right to institute, her suit now, without waiting for the death of her father to occur, in order to protect her right, so that when the time arrives for -her to receive and enjoy the bounty of the testator there will be something substantial to take possession of and to use for her own benefit, as intended by the testator, who remembered her in his will.
The next question arising in the decision of this case is a consideration of the plea made by the defendant, Francisca Castaing, of “res judicata.” The former judgment pleaded was rendered in the District Court of the United States in *822June, 1905. It was in a suit in which the present plaintiff, Mrs. Felicita Crosas de Baez, and Mr. Francisco Crosas, one of the present defendants, were the plaintiffs, and Mr. Felix Crosas, the deceased husband of one of the present defendants, Mrs. Francisca Castaing, was the sole defendant. That is to say, that the parties in the two suits are the same with these changes, that Mr. Francisco Crosas who was formerly a plaintiff is now made a defendant, and Mr. Felix Crosas, who was formerly a defendant, has since died and his widow and sole heir is made a defendant in his stead.
. The judgment relied on as a former adjudication of the same questions involved in this case reads in words literally as follows:
“In the United States'District Court for Porto Rico. In Chancery. Felícita Crosas y Baez et al. v. Felix Crosas Dalmau. Bill for accounting. This cause having been heard and submitted to the court upon the sufficiency of the plea filed by the defendant to'the bill of complaint and the court having heard the argument of counsel and having' duly considered the questions involved, it is hereby ordered and considered that said plea constitutes a good and sufficient defense to all matters alleged in said bill. And it further appearing' to the court that in said bill of complaint no reference is made to the said notarial settlement set up in the plea aforesaid as a defense, the existence of which is not now .denied by the counsel for the complainants, it is considered by the court that the complainants have not come into court with clean hands but have attempted to deceive the court as to having made a settlement of the claims put forth by them in their said bill by concealing the same, it is hereby ordered that their said bill of complaint be dismissed at their cost. Dated and ordered in open court at San Juan this 19th day of June, A. D. 1905. (Signed) Chas. F. McKenna, Judge.”
It lias been held by the Supreme Court of Texas that:
“When the defendant pleaded a former recovery, and the record produced showed that the plaintiff had been nonsuited, the judgment was no bar to the action.” Pillow v. Eliot, 25 Tex. Sup., 323; citing as authorities the former cases of Hassell v. Nutt, 14 Tex., 265, and Foster v. Wells, 4 Tex., 101, decided by the same court.)
*823The Supreme Court of Illinois holds to the. same effect in a later case, saying:
"The dismissal of a bill for want of equity, on demurrer, when the bill shows that the remedy is at law, is equivalent to a dismissal for want of jurisdiction, and the decree will present no bar to an action at law to enforce the same right sought to be enforced by the bill. There can be no equity in a bill when there is a want of jurisdiction.” (Richards v. L. S. & M. S. Ry. Co., 124 Ill., 517.)
The Supreme Court of California takes the same ground in regard to this question, holding that:
“There can be no doubt that the first judgment set up in the answer was a bar to this suit. A judgment upon demurrer is not always a bar to a subsequent action, but only when it determines the whole merits of the case.
“Here the averment of the answer shows that the demurrer went to the validity of the contract which gave rise to the claim, and this averment is found to be true as alleged, by the judge at nisi prius, upon inspecting the record of that ease.” (Robinson v. Howard, 5 Cal., 430.)
Anri the Supreme Court of Massachusetts briefly says in one case which has been brought to our notice:
“In assumpsit a nonsuit upon the merits is not a bar to a future action.” (Bridge et al. v. Summer, 18 Mass., 370.)
Finally the question is set at rest by the Supreme Court of the United States in the weighty words following:
“It requires no argument to show that judgments like these are no bar to the present suit. In order that a judgment may constitute a bar to another suit, it must be rendered in a proceeding between the same parties, or their privies, and the point of controversy must be the same in both cases, and must be determined on its merits. If the first suit was dismissed for defect of pleading, or parties or a misconception of the form of proceeding, or the want of jurisdiction, or was disposed of on any ground which did not go to the merits of the action, the judgment rendered will prove no bar to another suit.” (Hughes v. United States, 71 U. S., 237.)
*824The judgment of the Federal Court not having been rendered on its merits, but being equivalent to a mere dismissal without prejudice, cannot be considered as a bar to this action although virtually between the same parties, though arrayed on different sides of the case, in the second action from what they were in the case in the Federal Court.
In order for a judgment to be a bar to a second action it must be shown from the record that the trial of the case was had, on its merits and that it- did not go off on a technical defect. (Richards v. L. S. & M. S. Ry. Co., 124 Ill., 517; Hughes v. United States, 71 U. S., 237; Gilman v. Rins, 35 U. S., 297; Foster v. Wells, 4 Tex., 101; Hessall v. Nutt, 14 Tex., 265; Pillow v. Eliot, 25 Tex. Sup., 323; Bridge v. Summer, 18 Mass., 370; Robinson v. Howard, 5 Cal., 430; Freeman on Judgts., sec. 261.)
The third and last question which seems to me necessary to be discussed involves the ruling by the court made on the demurrer to the plaintiff’s complaint, which was -at first overruled, but in the ,final judgment virtually sustained. Taking the view which I do of this case, that the action was not prematurely brought and that the plea of “res judicata” was not sufficient, it follows that there should have been a trial on the merits. If the complaint was defective for some matter of form, or if it failed to sufficiently, allege a conspiracy between the Crosas brothers to defraud plaintiff out of her inheritance, she should have been permitted to amend it and set out all that was deemed necessary and susceptible of proof. The case after a full trial on the facts can be much better disposed of in accordance with the dictates of justice. The judgment should therefore have been reversed and the case remanded for a new trial.