Court Opinion

ID: 6600087
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:06:53.867032+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:59.197777
License: Public Domain

DixoN, C. J.
In the suit by the present plaintiff against the former owners, to quiet the title to the lot in controversy, the record of wliich was given in evidence on the trial of this action, “Lucy P. Mullane, widow of William H. Mullane,” appeared as one of the parties defendant in the title, and judgment was rendered against her by the same name and descrip*451tion. In the complaint, after tbe title, tbe names of tbe defendants were not repeated, except as they appeared in tbe tabular statement set out in tbe body of tbe complaint, showing the description and quantity of tbe lands, tbe dates of sale and amounts for which sold, and tbe names of tbe former owners and those claiming under them. In this statement, “Mrs.-Mullane, widow of ¥m. IT. Mullane,” appeared as one of tbe former owners of tbe lot in question. Tbe summons, with a notice of tbe object of tbe action, was personally served in due form of law on “Lucy P. Mullane, widow of William H. Mul-lane,” as is shown by tbe affidavit of service. Tbe plaintiff was examined as a witness, and testified, without contradiction, that Lucy P. Mullane, the defendant in this action, is the identical person who was named and served as a party defendant in the former suit. IJpon this evidence, tbe court, in the fourth instruction given, having first called attention to tbe testimony of the plaintiff on tbe point, directed tbe jury that if the complaint in that action (the former suit) showed that tbe defendant was charged in said complaint as having an interest in said lot, then tbe judgment was conclusive of tbe plaintiff’s title, and be was entitled to recover in this action. This instruction may be interpreted in either of two ways, both of which seem to us to have been in law erroneous. It may mean that the jury were to determine, from tbe facts stated in the former complaint, whether the defendant in this action is the same person named and served in that suit or not; or it may mean, the fact of identity being conceded, that the jury were to consider and determine the sufficiency of the former complaint to charge the defendant as having an interest in the lot. In either point of view the instruction was incorrect. In the former, because the question of identity was one which from its nature could not by possibility be determined from any facts appearing in the complaint in the first suit; and in the latter, because the sufficiency of that complaint to charge the defendant with *452having an interest in the lot was a question of law for the court, and not of fact for the jury. The jury should have been instructed, that if they found that the present defendant was the same person named and served in the former suit, the complaint in that suit was sufficient, and the judgment therein a bar, and conclusive of the plaintiff’s title in this action.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and a venire de novo awarded. -