Court Opinion

ID: 1283468
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-30 05:20:48.4703+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:22:09.347222
License: Public Domain

79 S.E.2d 167 (1953)
238 N.C. 679
CAROLINA POWER & LIGHT CO.
v.
MERRIMACK MUT. FIRE INS. CO. et al.
No. 167.
Supreme Court of North Carolina.
December 2, 1953.
*170 A. A. Bunn, Kittrell & Kittrell, Perry & Kittrell, Henderson, E. S. DeLaney, Jr., Charles F. Rouse, A. Y. Arledge, Raleigh, for plaintiff appellant.
Murray Allen, R. P. Upchurch, for defendants other than C. J. Fleming, R. E. Tanner, R. F. Read, Robert F. Turner, T. P. Gholson and A. W. Gholson, Jr.
Gholson & Gholson, Henderson, for defendants, C. B. Turner, R. E. Tanner, Robert F. Turner and R. F. Read.
William T. Joyner, Raleigh, Gholson & Gholson, Henderson, for defendants C. J. Fleming, T. P. Gholson and A. W. Gholson, Jr.
DEVIN, Chief Justice.
The plaintiff labels its action as one in the nature of a bill of peace. The function of a bill of peace is well recognized in courts of equity. It is a proceeding instituted in that court to invoke the aid of its equitable jurisdiction on behalf of one who wishes to be made secure in his rights against the continued recurrence of vexatious litigation of unsuccessful claims, or to prevent a multiplicity of suits. Detroit Trust Co. v. Hunrath, 168 Mich. 180, 192, 131 N.W. 147. It is a bill in equity to procure repose from perpetual litigation, and for relief against a multiplicity of suits in those instances where the suitors' rights in a common cause may properly be asserted *171 in one action. "A bill of peace is an equitable remedy to prevent vexatious litigation which might arise either by the same plaintiff prosecuting several actions against the defendant for claims involving the same question, or where there are several claimants prosecuting separate actions against the defendant upon a common liability." McIntosh 1107; Adams Equity 199.
To the complaint the defendants have interposed demurrers on the ground that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, or to invoke the jurisdiction of a court of equity.
Both by statute, G.S. § 1-151, and the uniform decisions of this Court it is required that a pleading shall be given liberal construction in order to determine its sufficiency and its effect. Hollifield v. Everhart, 237 N.C. 313, 74 S.E.2d 706; Bumgardner v. Allison Fence Co., 236 N.C. 698, 74 S.E.2d 32; Wiscassett Mills Co. v. Shaw, 233 N.C. 71, 62 S.E.2d 487; Commerce Ins. Co. v. McCraw, 215 N.C. 105, 1 S.E.2d 369; Blackmore v. Winders, 144 N.C. 212, 56 S.E. 874. The office of a demurrer is to test the sufficiency of the complaint, admitting for that purpose the truth of all relevant facts well pleaded and such inferences of fact as may properly be deduced therefrom. But the demurrer does not admit conclusions of law asserted by the pleader. McKinney v. City of High Point, 237 N.C. 66, 74 S.E.2d 440; Leonard v. Maxwell Com'r, 216 N.C. 89, 3 S.E.2d 316; Wiscassett Mills Co. v. Shaw, supra. Nor does the demurrer admit the deductions which may be drawn or reasons advanced arguendo in support of the allegations of fact upon which the complaint is based.
The demurrer admits the following material facts:
That the 31 insurance companies, which had insured the owners of the Fleming warehouse and adjacent property against loss by fire, immediately following the destruction of this property by fire February 22, 1947, secured the cooperation of the insureds by means of the "loan receipts" described in detail in the complaint. In accordance with the terms of these loan receipts, the insurance companies paid to each insured the amount covered by his policy in the form of a loan and took from him a loan receipt whereby the insured agreed to repay the amount, without interest, in the event and to the extent of recovery from the person or corporation liable for the loss of the property, and as security the insured pledged with his insurance company his claim against such person or corporation. Each insured agreed to cooperate with the insurance company insuring his property and to appoint its representative with power to control litigation thereon in his name. It was alleged that pursuant to the agreement evidenced by the loan receipt certain named representatives of the insurance companies were given control over the litigation which the plaintiff alleged was agreed to be undertaken to fix the Carolina Power & Light Co. with liability for the loss sustained.
It is alleged that pursuant to this agreement the same counsel were employed, and that it was agreed that a test case be chosen, one in which they were most likely to prevail; that accordingly the Fleming case was chosen in the hope that a successful outcome would secure settlement of all claims by the Power & Light Co., the other 20 cases being held in reserve; that owing to delays caused by appeals to this Court the Fleming case was not tried until June 1950; that actions were instituted in the other 20 cases February 20, 1950, with same counsel, and containing identical allegations charging the Light Co. with negligently causing the fire. In each case, with the insured, was joined as plaintiff the insurance company which had insured his property.
The complaint alleges that in spite of the efforts of the plaintiff Carolina Power & Light Co. to have these 20 cases consolidated and brought to trial, all are still pending on the civil issue docket of Vance Superior Court, though more than six years have elapsed since the fire, and the Fleming case was finally disposed of by this Court three years ago. It is further alleged that the defendants have agreed to bring up one of *172 these cases at a time, and that the next one they will present will be that of Mrs. C. B. Church and her Insurer; that it will require many years in the regular course to dispose of these cases in view of the limited number of terms of Vance Superior Court; that in the meantime by reason of the contingencies inherent in the lapse of time the means of proof will be greatly hindered.
The demurrer admits the facts properly pleaded but does not admit the conclusions and arguments advanced by the plaintiff in support of its plea for the exercise of the equitable jurisdiction of the Court to restrain the prosecution of pending actions at law.
The question is thus presented whether a court of equity should intervene in actions at law pending and at issue to restrain further proceedings therein upon the facts here alleged. Are they sufficient to invoke this remedy, or is the relief sought obtainable in the present actions at law?
It may be noted that when the first appeal to this Court in the Fleming case was heard, reported in 229 N.C. 397, 50 S.E.2d 45, no action other than that of Fleming had been instituted to recover against the Light Co. for losses sustained. But in that case the Carolina Power & Light Co. moved that the insurance companies, insurers of the several property owners whose property had been destroyed in the fire, be made parties (notice of claims having been given), and in support of that motion the Light Co. urged substantially similar grounds as those upon which the present action is based. We quote from Justice Seawell's opinion in that case:
"The gravamen of the motion lies in the additional argument that all the adverse parties in interest have pooled their demands and entered into a combination to fix the liability on it in a test suit,in a sort of squeeze play,intending, if successful, that the judgment in this action shall be thereafter pleaded as res judicata. By virtue of this combination it is argued, the defendant is threatened with the harassment of a multiplicity of suits involving the same liability; and it is urged that because of the involvement of the principle of subrogation the action is of an equitable nature and that it is within the power and is the duty of the Court, in the exercise of its equitable jurisdiction, to protect the rights of the defendant and relieve it from the embarrassment of a multiplicity of actions by requiring that all the matters be heard in a single action." Fleming v. Carolina Power & Light Co., 229 N.C. 397, 50 S.E.2d 45, 49.
As no other action had then been brought this contention of the Power & Light Co. was not regarded as tenable. The motion to make the insurance companies parties in the Fleming case was denied, but on rehearing this order was modified so as to bring in as parties the five insurance companies which had made payments to Fleming on account of his loss.
The plaintiff in this action has undertaken the unusual method of an independent suit in equity to restrain proceedings in actions at law which are now pending in the Superior Court of Vance County. It is an effort to determine in advance a question which it is alleged will prove decisive of those cases. While the long arm of equity is available to prevent vexatious litigation and to procure repose for one who wishes to be made secure in his rights against the harassment of a multiplicity of actions for the same cause which has heretofore been determined in his favor, we doubt that the Court should be called upon to exercise its jurisdiction by an independent suit when apparently the same facts and the same pleas may be set up in the actions at law which are now at issue. It is alleged that the defendants, in the prosecution of their plan to try these 20 actions one by one, propose next to bring to trial the case of Mrs. Church. If so, it would seem to be open to this plaintiff in that action to interpose the pleas of res judicata and estoppel as a defense to that action and thus to determine the question for all subsequent actions in as ample a manner as is now sought to be done in this independent suit.
Nor would a court of equity be required to entertain an independent suit to require *173 the consolidation of the 20 actions at law referred to in the complaint, for the reason that the defendant in those actions (the complainant here) has a right to move in any one of them for a consolidation of all those cases for trial. 19 A. J. sec. 82. Each of the persons whose property was destroyed by the fire, with or without the joinder of his insurance company, was entitled to institute a separate action for a separate wrong. A complaint embracing the claims of two or more different persons whose separate property had been destroyed, though by the same fire, would have been demurrable. "Two or more persons injured by the same wrongful act must sue separately, since each injury is a separate cause of action." McIntosh, sec. 230; Fleming v. Carolina Power & Light Co., 229 N.C. 397, 405, 50 S.E.2d 45. Equity could not interfere to prevent these suits on account of their number. Nor would allegation that defendants had agreed to so handle these cases as to harass and vex the complainant entitle it to equitable relief when the same relief, to-wit, consolidation, is available in the actions at law. Boston & Maine Railroad v. Delaware & H. Co., 268 N.Y. 382, 197 N.E. 321. There is a distinction between a bill of peace of which equity will entertain jurisdiction, and a suit when the object is merely to procure a consolidation of actions which can be attained at law. High on Injunction, sec. 62; Adams Equity 199; Tribette v. Illinois C. R. Co., 70 Miss. 182, 12 So. 32, 19 L.R.A. 660. In Fleming v. Carolina Power & Light Co., 229 N.C. 397, 50 S.E.2d 45, it was said, "where a fire destroys the property of a number of parties, each injured party has a separate and independent cause of action". 19 A.J. sec. 82; Southern Steel Co. v. Hopkins, 174 Ala. 465, 57 So. 11, 40 L.R.A.,N.S., 464; Pittsburgh & W. V. Ry. Co. v. U. S., D.C., 6 F.2d 646.
In Georgia Power Co. v. Hudson, 4 Cir., 49 F.2d 66, 69, 75 A.L.R. 1439, where many suits were instituted against the Power Co. for damages caused by a dam, the Court said "that community of interest among the several parties in the questions of law and fact involved is not sufficient to confer jurisdiction upon the court to enjoin the prosecution of such actions, though they be brought against the same defendant and involve the same state of facts."
We do not think the allegations of the complaint as detailed, or the conclusion sought to be deduced from the facts alleged are sufficient to invoke the aid of equity to restrain these actions at law for the purpose of avoiding a multiplicity of suits.
Should a court of equity entertain jurisdiction in the premises and permanently restrain individuals from maintaining their several and separate actions against the Carolina Power & Light Co. upon allegation that their property was destroyed by fire through its negligence, upon the ground that the judgment in the Fleming case is binding upon all these claimants as res judicata, and as an equitable estoppel by judgment?
"It is a principle of general elementary law that the estoppel of a judgment must be mutual." Bigelow v. Old Dominion Copper Min. & S. Co., 225 U.S. 111, 32 S. Ct. 641, 642, 56 L. Ed. 1009. If the judgment in the Fleming case had been in Fleming's favor, would the Carolina Power & Light Co. have been bound as a matter of law in all the other actions instituted by claimants for loss in this fire, without right to defend on other or additional evidence? Bigelow v. Old Dominion Copper Min. & S. Co., supra.
Estoppel by judgment operates only on parties and their privies. It is a maxim of law that no person shall be affected by any judicial investigation to which he is not a party, unless his relation to some of the parties was such as to make him responsible for the final result of the litigation. An adjudication affects only those who are parties to the judgment and their privies, and gives no rights to or against third parties. 1 Freeman on Judgments, sec. 407. Privies are "persons connected together or having a mutual interest in the same action or thing, by some relation other than that of actual contract between *174 them." Black's Law Dictionary. "To make a man a privy to an action, he must have acquired an interest in the subject-matter of the action, either by inheritance, succession, or purchase of a party subsequent to the action, or he must hold the property subordinately." Ballentine's Law Dictionary. "Any of those persons having mutual or successive relationship to the same right of property." Webster.
In Elder v. New York & Penn. Motor Express, Inc., 284 N.Y. 350, 31 N.E.2d 188, 189, 133 A.L.R. 176, the principle of res judicata was stated as follows: "No plea in bar could estop the plaintiff from enforcing his rights since he was not a party to the prior action, unless he came within an exception to the rule of mutuality, which rule is embodied in the principle of res judicata. When issues on the same subjectmatter have once been settled by litigation between the same parties or their privies, before a court of competent jurisdiction, and the estoppel of the judgment is mutual, that is to say that the other party would be bound if the original decision had been to the contrary, then in the interest of reasonable finality of litigation that decision should be conclusive."
In Meacham v. Larus & Bros. Co., 212 N.C. 646, 194 S.E. 99, 100, a similar question was presented and the ruling of this Court thereon throws light on the case at bar. In that case four persons, Sedberry, Meacham, Alsobrook and Proctor were passengers in an automobile driven by one Martin and were alleged to have suffered injury as result of collision with the automobile of the corporate defendant, driven by defendant Bivens. Four separate suits were instituted, and the plaintiffs successfully resisted defendants' motion to consolidate. The Sedberry case was tried first, the others joining in as witnesses, and resulted in judgment for the defendants, nonsuit as to the corporate defendant and verdict in favor of the individual defendant on the issue of negligence. In the Meacham case tried next the defendants amended their answer to allege res judicata and estoppel by the judgment in the Sedberry case. From an adverse ruling below the defendants appealed. In the opinion of this Court written by Justice Schenck the question presented was stated as follows: " `Is the plaintiff, by reason of the facts admitted and appearing in the record, bound and estopped by the judgment and findings of the jury in the case of Sedberry v. Larus & Bros. Co. and H. S. Bivens, and is said judgment res judicata as to the negligence of the defendant H. S. Bivens, as between the plaintiff (Meacham) and the defendant here?' The answer is No." The Court in its opinion further noted that Meacham was not a party to the Sedberry case, had no legal interest in it, and there was no privity; that ordinarily only parties and privies are bound by a judgment and no estoppel is created. The Court said estoppels must be mutual and one not bound by an estoppel could not take advantage of it; that if the verdict had been in favor of Sedberry, Meacham could not have claimed res judicata in his favor. The Court also suggested that in the trial of the Meacham case new and different facts as to the collision might be developed.
In Falls v. Gamble, 66 N.C. 455, the headnote accurately summarizes the decision that no estoppel is created by the former judgment against one not a party to the record, though he instigated the trespass, aided in the defense, and employed counsel.
Also in Rabil v. Farris, 213 N.C. 414, 196 S.E. 321, 116 A.L.R. 1083, it was held that even the father and next friend of his infant child is not estopped, in a subsequent action, by the judgment in a former suit adverse to the infant. Though he was the father there was in law no privity and the former judgment not res judicata.
However, in Leary v. Land Bank, 215 N.C. 501, 2 S.E.2d 570, it was held that the judgment in the former action of Newbern v. Leary, 215 N.C. 134, 1 S.E.2d 384, was res judicata and a bar to plaintiff's action. It appeared in that case that the administrator of Newbern, an agent of the Land Bank, who had been injured and killed in a collision with the automobile of Leary Bros. recovered judgment against Leary. It was held that this judgment would bar Leary in *175 a suit against the Bank for damage to property in same collision on account of alleged negligence of Newbern, for the reason that Newbern was the agent and alter ego of Bank. This was based on the ground of privity between Newbern and the Bank by virtue of their relationship as principal and agent, the negligence of Leary having been determined in the former suit.
Generally, in order that the judgment in a former action may be held to constitute an estoppel as res judicata in a subsequent action there must be identity of parties, of subject matter and of issues. It is also a well established principle that estoppels must be mutual, and as a rule only parties and privies are bound by the judgment. These rules are subject to exception.
For instance, in Current v. Webb, 220 N.C. 425, 17 S.E.2d 614, 616, it was said, quoting from 2 Freeman on Judgments, sec. 670: "There is no doubt that a final judgment or decree necessarily affirming the existence of any fact is conclusive upon the parties or their privies, whenever the existence of that fact is again in issue between them, not only when the subject matter is the same, but when the point comes incidentally in question in relation to a different matter, in the same or any other court." On the same principle was based the decision in Harshaw v. Harshaw, 220 N.C. 145, 16 S.E.2d 666, 136 A.L.R. 1411; Piedmont Memorial Hospital v. Guilford County, 221 N.C. 308, 20 S.E.2d 332. However, the principle enunciated in these cases should not be extended to justify the holding that the decision in the Fleming case established the non-negligence of the Light Co. as a fact once for all determined.
In Cannon v. Cannon, 223 N.C. 664, 28 S.E.2d 240, 243, these and other cases were considered in determining the application of the principle of res judicata to the facts of that case, and Justice Seawell added this note of caution: "The right of a party to litigate his claim will not be defeated by a roving abstraction which does not meet the exigent standard of notice and hearinghis day in courtguaranteed to him by the constitution."
In Tarkington v. Rock Hill Printing & Finishing Co., 230 N.C. 354, 53 S.E.2d 269, 271, 11 A.L.R. 2d 221, Chief Justice Stacy used this language: "Hence, as between the parties there litigant, this matter would seem to be res judicata (citing the Cannon case). But of course, the judgment there would not be binding on the plaintiffs here. They were not parties to that suit, and they are entitled to pursue their rights in their own way. Meacham v. Larus & Bros. Co., 212 N.C. 646, 194 S.E. 99."
In Stansel v. McIntyre, 237 N.C. 148, 74 S.E.2d 345, it was held that where the defendants had Mrs. Austin brought in as party defendant for contribution as joint tort-feasor, and set up the judgment in another action between them and Mrs. Austin wherein the same matter (automobile collision) was involved and in which it was determined that Mrs. Austin had been contributorily negligent, it was held that the same question could not again be raised between the same parties. Justice Winborne in this case collected the authorities on the subject, and stated the principle that the estoppel of judgment must be mutual, and that there must be identity of parties, of subject matter and of issues. True, in the Stansel case it was intimated that the husband of Mrs. Austin, who was not a party, might be bound by the judgment, but this was for the reason that she was operating the automobile as his agent under the family purpose doctrine. Leary v. Land Bank, supra.
Estoppel is the outgrowth of equity, while res judicata is based upon legal principles, but both rest upon the maxim that no one ought to be twice vexed for the same cause. Watson v. Goldsmith, 205 S. C. 215, 31 S.E.2d 317.
In order to establish res judicata or the equitable principle of estoppel as applicable to the facts of this case it is necessary for the Carolina Power & Light Co. to show that the defendants, while not parties, were privies to the Fleming case and hence bound by the judgment, and that the estoppel by judgment in that case was mutual. The able counsel for the plaintiff *176 argues with much earnestness that the judgment in the Fleming case should be held binding on defendants here for the reason that under the agreement evidenced by the loan receipts each insured agreed to cooperate with his insurer and thereby appoint the manager or agent of the insurance company with power to collect his claim, and to prosecute in his name all legal proceedings necessary to enforce such claims, and that the effect of this was to vest control of all litigation in the hands of the insurance companies or their representatives, and this agreement included and covered the Fleming case. It is argued that each insured in this way participated in control of the Fleming case for the assertion and protection of his own interest in a similar case.
The principle invoked is stated in Restatement of Judgments, sec. 84, as follows: "A person who is not a party but who controls an action, individually or in cooperation with others, is bound by the adjudications of litigated matters as if he were a party if he has a proprietary interest or financial interest in the judgment or in the determination of a question of fact or a question of law with reference to the same subject matter or transactions; if the other party has notice of his participation, the other party is equally bound."
The rule is stated in 50 C.J.S., Judgments, § 783, p. 318, as follows: "A person who is neither a party nor privy to an action may be concluded by the judgment therein if he openly and actively, and with respect to some interest of his own, assumes and manages the defense of the action. A person who is not made a defendant of record and is not in privity with a party to the action may, as a general rule, subject himself to be concluded by the result of the litigation if he openly and actively, and with respect to some interest of his own, assumes and manages the defense of the action, although there is some authority to the contrary." See also Freeman on Judgments, sec. 432; 30 A.J. 960.
Undoubtedly, it must be made to appear that the relation of the defendants to the Fleming case was that of privies in order that they may be held bound by the judgment, or that the facts here alleged were sufficient to bring them within the exception pointed out. And equally so there must be some showing upon which to base mutuality in order to support the plea of estoppel.
In the Fleming case none of the twenty other claimants had any legal interest. Their property was not involved. They neither won nor lost by it. The status of their cases was unchanged save for the sentimental effect of the verdict. It could hardly be said that Mrs. Church, for instance, the plaintiff in the case next proposed to be tried, controlled the Fleming case. At most, it may be said that her insurance company's agent agreed that the Fleming case be tried first. All the cases stood upon the same footing, each claimant endeavoring to secure in his own case damages for the loss of his individual property. There is no allegation that these other claimants or any of them, either directly or through their respective insurance companies, participated in the trial of the Fleming case, or that they "openly and actively," and with respect to some interest of their own, "assumed and managed" the prosecution of the Fleming case, or that Fleming's counsel were not employed by him or that his counsel did other than represent his interest alone in the trial of that case. In this court counsel who were not of record as counsel for other claimants appeared for Fleming with Murray Allen and Gholson & Gholson. There was no allegation that Fleming was a mere figurehead, and that these defendants were in open and active control of his case. There was no community of property. The gravamen of the plaintiff's complaint is the loan receipt signed by each one of the defendants. A copy of this receipt is attached to the complaint. But this only evidenced that each insured gave authority to his insurance company to prosecute and litigate his claim in his name. It is alleged as a conclusion and deduction therefrom that the insurance companies selected certain representatives to control all the litigation but there is no substantial allegation that as a matter of fact these representatives took charge of the Fleming case *177 and openly and actively managed and controlled the trial.
Fleming by signing a loan receipt doubtless gave his insurance companies power to control his litigation with the Power & Light Co., but it is not alleged, nor does the record seem to indicate, that any one exercised control over his lawsuit, save himself and the counsel whom he had employed.
After examination of the complaint and exhibits, and the well prepared briefs filed by counsel, we reach the conclusion that the ruling of Judge Williams in sustaining the demurrer should be and it is
Affirmed.
PARKER, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.