Summary
In United Mut. Fire Ins. Co. v. Saeli (272 App. Div. 951, affd. 297 N.Y. 611), the plaintiffs in the second action were the owner and insurer of the car driven by the successful plaintiff in one of the prior actions. The plaintiffs in the second action, whose rights or liability were derivative, could use the essential findings of the first actions as collateral estoppel (see Good Health Dairy Prods. Corp. v. Emery, 275 N.Y. 14, 17). Order affirmed, with $10 costs.
Summary of this case from Cummings v. DresherOpinion
June 25, 1947.
Appeal from Supreme Court, Wayne County.
Present — Taylor, P.J., Harris, McCurn, Larkin and Love, JJ.
MEMORANDUM BY THE COURT. In Saeli's action against the Carpenter Corporation and Carpenter he sought damages based on their negligence in causing the collision. He was beaten in that action. It was thereby definitely adjudicated therein on the merits that he was not entitled to recover in negligence from either defendant. Applying the fundamental rule against splitting a cause of action, Saeli could never have sued thereafter on any claim of negligence resulting in this particular collision. ( Payne v. New York, S. W.R.R. Co., 201 N.Y. 436, 440; Luce v. New York, Chicago St. Louis R.R. Co., 213 App. Div. 374, affd. 242 N.Y. 519; DeCoss v. Turner Blanchard, Inc., 267 N.Y. 207; Baltimore S.S. Co. v. Phillips, 274 U.S. 316.) Concededly had there been no adjudication except in Saeli's action against the two defendants, there would have been lacking mutuality of estoppel because that verdict might have been rendered on a finding of negligence on the part of Saeli and the defendants. Except for that reason there would have been present, by the adjudication in Saeli's action, all the requisites for applying the rule of prior adjudication in a subsequent action brought by either defendant to recover his or its damage. However, tried before the same judge, and with the same jury, was Carpenter's action, in which he sought a recovery for personal injuries from Saeli growing out of this same collision. The jury's verdict in Carpenter's favor necessarily determined that Saeli was the sole one at fault for the collision. Since all three were parties to this single trial, took part in it, and since the same evidence furnished the basis for the jury's findings in each action, it seems almost sophistry to say that by these two actions, it was not definitely and forever determined, since they are both now final adjudications, that the one solely to blame for this accident was Saeli. Had the Carpenter corporation counterclaimed in Saeli's action against it and Carpenter for its damage to its vehicle and had the jury on that trial rendered the same verdicts in favor of Carpenter and the corporation in Saeli's action, and in favor of Carpenter in his action against Saeli, the jury would have been compelled to have found on the corporation's counterclaim in its favor. In this present action brought by the corporation — for the insurance company as subrogee, stands in its shoes — these prior adjudications are pleaded as an estoppel of record on the issues of negligence and contributory negligence. Saeli's answer admits the adjudications, and by his stipulation he admits the amount of plaintiff's damage. His answer pleads no affirmative defense which could possibly defeat plaintiff's right to recover. To permit in this present action a relitigation of the issue of fault, as between the corporation and Saeli, in causing this collision, would be to ignore completely the reality of the situation.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs. [ 188 Misc. 393.]
The plaintiff Olney Carpenter, Inc., was the owner of a vehicle which, on July 15, 1945, collided with another vehicle owned and operated by the defendant, Anthony Saeli. At the time of the accident John Carpenter was driving the vehicle owned by the corporation, "* * * with the consent of the plaintiff, Olney Carpenter, Inc., express or implied, on the business of the said John Carpenter." The accident resulted in damage to both of said automobiles and in personal injuries to their respective drivers. Anthony Saeli thereupon brought an action against Olney Carpenter, Inc., and John Carpenter, to recover damages for his personal injuries and property damage. John Carpenter brought an action against Anthony Saeli to recover for his personal injuries. These actions were tried together, resulting in a verdict of no cause of action in favor of the defendants in the first action above mentioned, and in the second action, a verdict of $7,500 in favor of the plaintiff John Carpenter against the defendant Anthony Saeli.
The present action is one brought by Olney Carpenter, Inc., and its collision insurance carrier as subrogee against Anthony Saeli to recover for the damage done in the accident to the Olney Carpenter, Inc., car. The plaintiffs for a first cause of action set forth the judgments in the two actions first mentioned alleging: "30. That by reason of the said action hereinbefore referred to, a binding adjudication has been made by the courts of this state that Anthony Saeli was negligent in the operation of his motor vehicle at the time and place of the accident hereinbefore referred to and that John A. Carpenter was free from any negligence in the operation of the automobile owned by Olney Carpenter, Inc., at the time and place of the said accident." (Emphasis supplied.) Plaintiff's first cause of action contains no allegation that the plaintiff Olney Carpenter, Inc., was free from contributory negligence. It relies entirely upon the adjudication that the driver John Carpenter was free from negligence.
Plaintiffs moved for judgment on the pleadings on the first cause of action which judgment was granted. This appeal is from that judgment.
In order to determine whether the doctrine of res judicata is applicable, we must determine whether all of the issues necessary to determine the present action were litigated and adjudicated in either one or both of the prior actions. We are not informed by the record whether in the first action Saeli either pleaded or asserted upon the trial any negligence on the part of the corporation other than negligence of its driver, but even if he did put in issue such negligence, a decision upon that issue is not necessarily included in either of the verdicts rendered. Olney Carpenter, Inc., the owner of the car, could have committed negligence which concurred in causing the accident and John Carpenter, the driver of the car, could have been free from negligence on his part. (See Sobel v. O'Connor, 267 App. Div. 943, affd. 293 N.Y. 924.) The verdicts rendered in the actions already tried would be consistent with such a finding by the jury. Since the doctrine of res judicata is necessarily based upon a finding that all of the issues necessary to establish the present cause of action have been adjudicated in a former litigation between the same parties or their privies, it becomes apparent the fundamental basis for that doctrine is lacking here. There is no adjudication as to the negligence or freedom from negligence of the corporate owner itself. The issues as to liability here, are not identical with those adjudicated in the prior action.
The respondents rely heavily on the case of Good Health Dairy Products Corp. v. Emery ( 275 N.Y. 14). In that case the owner of a vehicle was allowed, as a defense in an action against her by a third party, to set up a prior judgment in favor of the driver of her vehicle against the third party. There, the liability of the owner was wholly derivative from that of the driver and the court pointed out that the case therefore fell within certain exceptions to the rule of mutuality.
The present case does not fall within the exception to the rule since there is no question of derivative liability involved in an action by the owner against the third party. Strictly speaking, there is neither privity between the parties nor identity of the subject matter ( Haverhill v. International Railway Co., 217 App. Div. 521, affd. 244 N.Y. 582). In a reverse situation, the driver could not assert affirmatively a prior judgment in favor of the owner against a third party ( Elder v. New York Penn. Motor Express, Inc., 284 N.Y. 350). Again, had Saeli won in an action against John Carpenter he could not set that up as a defense in an action against him by the corporation. John Carpenter's negligence would not be imputable to the corporate owner. ( Gochee v. Wagner, 257 N.Y. 344. See, also, Restatement, Judgments, § 96, Illustrations 4, 5; Daly v. Terpening, 261 App. Div. 423, affd. 287 N.Y. 611.)
There is neither privity of parties nor identity of the subject matter and consequently, the prior judgments may not be asserted affirmatively by the plaintiff corporation in its first cause of action against the defendant Saeli. It follows that its subrogee, the plaintiff insurance company, may not do so either.
I, therefore, dissent and vote for reversal and the denial of the motion.
All concur in memorandum, except McCURN and LOVE, JJ., who dissent and vote for reversal and for granting a new trial, in an opinion by McCURN, J., in which LOVE, J., concurs.