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Redinger v. Boyd

Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia
Sep 16, 1924
97 W. Va. 150 (W. Va. 1924)

Opinion

Submitted September 9, 1924.

Decided September 16, 1924.

Certified Questions from Circuit Court, Taylor County.

Action by E.F. Redinger against W.L. Boyd. The Court overruled motion to reject defendant's plea and certified the questions arising thereon.

Affirmed.

G. W. Ford, for defendant.


Affirmed.


This action was commenced before L. C. Haymond, a justice of Taylor County, summons issued on the 23rd day of July, 1921, and was tried by the justice on the 4th day of August, 1921, and judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff for $121.74, from which judgment the defendant appealed to the circuit court of said county. The cause of action arose out of a collision of the automobiles of the plaintiff and defendant. Upon the trial of the action before the justice, the defendant filed two special pleas, No. 1 and No. 2. When the case came on for trial in the circuit court the defendant, by consent of the court, withdrew his plea No. 2, and the plaintiff moved the court to reject the defendant's plea No. 1, as being insufficient in law. The court overruled said motion and held said plea to be sufficient in law, and by agreement of parties the questions of law and fact arising upon said plea are certified to this court. This plea alleges that the cause of action arose from a collision of the automobiles of the plaintiff and defendant, and that the defendant Boyd believing that the plaintiff in this suit was guilty of negligence and by reason of which, he sustained damage to the amount of $59.95; that the defendant in the instant suit on the 24th day of June, 1921, instituted an action before Charles W. Monroe, a justice of the peace of said county, against the plaintiff in the instant suit, for the recovery of said damages; that upon said trial the defendant in that action and the plaintiff in this case, filed his claim of set-off, alleging that he sustained damage in said collision to the extent of $121.74, and notified the defendant, the then plaintiff, that said Redinger would move said justice for a judgment thereon, that issue was joined by both parties, the defendant denying the liability for damages claimed by the plaintiff, and the plaintiff denying liability for the claim for damages set forth in the defendant's "Bill of Offset"; that evidence was then introduced by the then plaintiff to support his claim for damages, and in denial of the set-off filed by Redinger; that this plaintiff did not introduce any evidence in support of his counterclaim, and moved the justice to dismiss said suit and to enter judgment against the defendant for the costs of said suit, which motion the justice sustained and dismissed said suit and entered judgment that the defendant take nothing by reason of his suit, and that the said Redinger take nothing by reason of his set-off, and further that the defendant pay the costs of said suit; that no appeal was had from said judgment and that it is in full force and effect; that the claim of E. F. Redinger against this defendant specified in said set-off filed in said suit before Monroe, arose out of the same transaction upon which was based the said suit of defendant against said E. F. Redinger instituted as aforesaid before said Monroe, to-wit, the automobile accident herein mentioned and matters contained in said set-off and was for committing the very same wrong and no other and now alleged in the summons and in the bill of particulars in the suit now pending.

This plea was filed in the justice's court. Section 50 of chapter 50 of the code prescribes the rules of proceeding before a justice; sub-division 4 of that section provides that "The answer of the defendant may contain, first a denial of the complaint or some part thereof; a statement of the facts constituting a defence of counterclaim." This plea No. 1 sets up a former adjudication of the damages set up in the present case. It alleges in substance that the plaintiff in this case filed his claim for damages growing out of the same automobile collision; in the present case the bill of particulars is the same as that filed in the former case, and that the said claim was passed upon after hearing the evidence, and judgment thereon rendered against the plaintiff upon said claim, and that said judgment was not appealed from and is now in force.

By section 52 of chapter 50 of the Code it is quite manifest that the demand to be set-off must be ex contractu, that it must be "founded upon contract express or implied." It seems clear that the justice erred in permitting the claim of the plaintiff to be filed. It is not such a set-off or counterclaim as is prescribed and defined in the section referred to. It is not founded upon a contract express or implied; the judgment of the justice is therefore erroneous, but it is not a void judgment. The justice had jurisdiction of the claim filed, in an independent suit, and having allowed the claim to be filed upon motion of the defendant and having heard and determined the matters in controversy between the parties, the only manner by which such erroneous judgment could have been corrected was by an appeal from said judgment.

"The judgment of a justice, though erroneous, is not void for off-setting against plaintiffs demand against defendant, and without his consent, and against his protest, a joint note of plaintiff and a third person held by defendant, and such erroneous judgment can be corrected only upon appeal, if an appellate court would have jurisdiction thereof, and a court of equity has no jurisdiction in a suit by or against such defendant to correct such erroneous judgment against him." Cross et al. v. Gall et al. 65 W. Va. 276.

The defendant having failed to avail himself of that remedy is estopped from instituting another suit for the same cause of action.

"It is well settled, that a point once adjudicated by a court of competent jurisdiction, however erroneous that adjudication, may be relied on as an estoppel in any subsequent collateral suit in the same or any other court, at law or in chancery, when either party allege anything inconsistent with it; nor is it necessary that precisely the same parties were plaintiffs or defendants in the two suits." Corrothers et al v. Sargent et al., 20 W. Va. 351.

The cases of Bowdish v. Grosscup, 70 W. Va. 758 and Stout v. Martin, 87 W. Va. 1, do not apply to the facts in this case; in each of those cases the counterclaim filed and discussed arose out of and were founded upon contract; in this case the counterclaim is for unliquidated damages for a tort.

And having considered all the questions properly certified to this court in this case, we affirm the decision of the lower court in overruling the motion to reject defendants plea No. 1.

Affirmed.


Summaries of

Redinger v. Boyd

Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia
Sep 16, 1924
97 W. Va. 150 (W. Va. 1924)
Case details for

Redinger v. Boyd

Case Details

Full title:REDINGER v . BOYD

Court:Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia

Date published: Sep 16, 1924

Citations

97 W. Va. 150 (W. Va. 1924)
124 S.E. 489