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Tuska v. O'Brien

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Feb 13, 1877
68 N.Y. 446 (N.Y. 1877)

Opinion

Argued February 1, 1877

Decided February 13, 1877

Erastus Cooke for the appellant.

A.J. Vanderpoel for the respondent.


This is an action to recover a stock of groceries taken by the defendant O'Brien, as sheriff of the city and county of New York, by virtue of attachments issued against the firm of Valk Brothers, who sold the goods to one Marx Long, and the latter to the plaintiff. Valk Brothers sold the property a few days before filing a petition in bankruptcy, and their vendee sold to the plaintiff two or three days subsequently. The sheriff sold the whole or the greater portion of the property as perishable, and under an order of the United States District Court deposited the fund in the trust company. John Sedgwick as assignee in bankruptcy of Valk Brothers, commenced an action in the United States District Court making the plaintiff, defendants Valk Brothers and Lang, parties, alleging and claiming title to all the property by virtue of the provisions of the bankrupt act, and that the sale to the plaintiffs was fraudulent and void. All the parties appeared and answered, the plaintiff alleging title in himself and denying all fraud charged against him. The decree was in favor of the assignee in bankruptcy awarding the fund to him. This judgment was set up in this action by the defendants, and the court held that it was res adjudicata between these parties as to the title of the plaintiff to the property in question.

The principal point urged by the learned counsel for the plaintiff is that the decree simply disposed of the fund in court, that the plaintiff in this action disclaimed any right or interest in the same, and has, notwithstanding that decree, a right to prosecute this action for the property. It is true that the decree is confined in terms to a disposition of the fund obtained by the sheriff on the sale of the goods, but a judgment is conclusive not only of the point which it professes to decide, but of matters which it was necessary to decide. (4 El. Bl. 788, 794.) It is conclusive of the thing directly decided, and of every fact essential to the adjudication. (5 Wright, 402.) In another case Lord ELLENBOROUGH held that an estoppel of a judgment extends, not only to what it affirms or denies expressly, but to so much of the pleadings and evidence as must necessarily have been considered by the court in proceeding to judgment. (3 East, 346; 4 Cowen, 562.) In this case the production of the record alone shows that the title of the plaintiff to this property was necessarily involved in that action. The assignee in bankruptcy could maintain his action only upon establishing his own title against the plaintiff in this action, and all the other parties. The plaintiff put in issue that title, and asserted it in himself, and was sworn in respect to it upon the trial. It must necessarily have been determined in order to reach the decree pronounced that the assignee's title was superior to the plaintiff's, and that the latter's title was invalid. It does not matter that the decree disposed of the fund only. The assignee in bankruptcy had the right, whether he was bound to do it or not, to accept the fund for the property, and hence the decree awarded him the fund. The plaintiff, if he had been successful in the United States Court in defeating the title of the assignee and establishing his own, would not have been compelled to accept the fund. He might have elected to pursue this action against the sheriff for the value of the property, and in that case the fund would have been restored to the hands of the sheriff, and the parties remitted to their former position. The point of conclusiveness applicable to this action is the title of the assignees to the property which was necessary to be found in order to justify the decree actually made. The plaintiff could not recover in this action on a naked possession. He must have had the general or a special property in the goods (7 Hill, 126; 49 N.Y., 259), and a plea of property in a third person is good. (1 Hill, 353.)

The estoppel is effective, although the judgment was in a court of equity, and the parties in this action were both defendants. (2 Sch. Lef., 690, 718; 2 Smith's Ldg. Cases, 766 [7th ed.].) The judgment involved the title to all the property seized by the sheriff, and if he has not accounted to the assignee for all of it, he is still bound to do so. The point, therefore, as to one load of the goods alleged to have been converted by the sheriff or his deputies, is not tenable.

The judgment must be affirmed.

All concur.

Judgment affirmed.


Summaries of

Tuska v. O'Brien

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Feb 13, 1877
68 N.Y. 446 (N.Y. 1877)
Case details for

Tuska v. O'Brien

Case Details

Full title:PHILIP H. TUSKA, Appellant, v . JAMES O'BRIEN, Sheriff, etc., Respondent

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Feb 13, 1877

Citations

68 N.Y. 446 (N.Y. 1877)

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