Court Opinion

ID: 6241106
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-17 20:44:58.962458+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:58:12.047537
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Mr. Justice Gbeen,
The plaintiff’s statement of cause of action in the present case averred that the action was brought to recover assessment No. 12 for $150; assessment No. 13 for $110; assessment No. 14 for $10, and assessment No. 15 for $10, giving the respective dates upon which the several assessments were made. The defendant filed an affidavit of defence in which he set forth that a prior action had been brought against him upon the same policy to recover upon assessment No. 11 for $190, the date of the assessment being Oct. 4, 1884, and that on the trial of that action judgment was rendered in his favor. He therefore claimed that as the former action was based upon the same policy as the present one, no other recovery could be had in this second action. The first action was brought before a justice of the peace and the transcript of appeal shows that the former action was brought to recover assessment No. 11 for $190.
On the trial the defendant offered in evidence the record of the former action, and as the stenographer’s notes of testimony were not included some slight testimony was given to account for their absence. That evidence was simply the testimony of the present stenographer that she was unable to find the notes of the former stenographer. She did not testify to any search made anywhere. She said she did not know where Mr. Dougherty, the former stenographer, was, and she made no inquiry *25as to where he was, though she lived in the same house with his wife; she simply asked for his book, and does not even state the answer she received.
It is perfectly manifest that this evidence was entirely insufficient to prove either the loss of the notes or any kind of a search for them. As the counsel who offered the record also offered the preliminary testimony of loss, and search for the stenographic notes, it is safe to assume that the notes have become a part of the record in accordance with the statute that makes them such. Objection was made by plaintiff’s counsel to the admission of the offer of the record, on the ground, inter alia, of insufficient proof of loss and search, but the court overruled the objection. We think this was error and therefore sustain the first assignment.
The defendant next offered the deposition of a witness taken on the former trial with exhibits attached, relating to the condition of the company during the years 1881-2-8 and 4. It was objected that as the present action was founded upon assessments which were not made until after the year 1884, the certificate and exhibits were not relevant. It has not been shown to us, and we do not now see, how they were relevant to the matter in issue in the present action, and therefore we are obliged to sustain the second assignment.
The defendant then rested, and the plaintiff thereupon moved the court to rule out the testimony, which consisted of the imperfect record and the deposition above mentioned, but the court declined to do so. As we have already decided that these offers of testimony should have been rejected when they were made, it follows that the court was in error in refusing the motion to strike them out, and we therefore sustain the third assignment.
The defendant having rested, the plaintiff offered to prove by Mr. Golden, that he was one of the attorneys of the plaintiff at the former trial, that the matters at issue in that case were different from the matters at issue in the present case, that the matter in dispute on the former trial was whether or not assessment No. 11 had been regularly laid, and that it was not an exorbitant assessment, while the issue in this case is whether or not assessments Nos. 12, 13, 14 and 15 are right, and that the matter in dispute was entirely foreign to the liti*26gation in the present controversy, to which the defendant objected and the court sustained the objection.
In the case of Follansbee v. Walker, 74 Pa. 306, we held that it was competent to prove, even by jurors, that the question actually decided on the first trial was not the one at issue on the second. SHARSWOOD, J., said: “ Whenever it does not contradict the record parol evidence may be given to show that a former recovery was had, not upon the merits but upon some technical objection to the form of action or otherwise,” citing numerous cases in support of the ruling. We held the same doctrine in Coleman’s Appeal, 62 Pa. 252. It is plain that the offer in the present case was not to contradict the record in the former case, but in corroboration of it, and to show precisely what the subject-matter in controversy was, viz., that it was to recover another assessment, No. 11, not embraced among the assessments for which the present action was brought. We therefore sustain the fourth assignment.
The plaintiff next offered what was claimed to be the whole record of the former case, to wit, the parts that were admitted on the defendant’s offer, and also the notes of the testimony taken, and the charge of the court. The offer was rejected as a whole and in this we think there was error. If it had been admitted, when the notes of testimony came to be offered a question might have arisen as to their sufficiency, and the admissibility of the proof offered could then have been considered and decided. So also with the charge of the court. But to refuse to allow any proof on these subjects was error and we therefore sustain the fifth assignment.
The sixth and seventh assignments raise the same question and can be considered together. The learned court below took the view that because one action had already been brought upon the policy to recover one assessment, and that suit having been brought after the policy expired, the decision of that case was a final adjudication of all questions between the parties upon the application and policy in question. We are quite unable to agree to this doctrine. By the terms of the policy it was subject to assessments for all losses occurring while it was in force, whether they were made during its life or after it had expired. The first action was brought upon one assessment, made, it is true, after the policy expired, but *27only to recover the assessment made for losses then adjusted. Certainly this would not preclude subsequent assessments made to cover other losses not then adjusted, if they occurred during the life of the policy. The first action in such a case is not the same, nor for the same subject-matter, as the second. There is no inconsistency in sustaining both. If in other respects the liability of the assured exists, it cannot be defeated merely because a previous recovery had been obtained or defeated in an action to recover another and a different assessment. We are very clearly of opinion that the learned court below was in error in the ruling made upon this subject and we therefore sustain the sixth and seventh assignments.
Judgment reversed and a new venire awarded.