v.
John L. Birge, in error
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
The decree of the Court was entered up in pursuance of the verdict.
The decision of the Court is founded on the admission of Evans in these pleadings, and judgments of the Court rendered on Mr. Gresham's demurrer, and the final.decree rendered in the cause. From all these, he says it is manifest, that title to the lands is showm out of Evans, and therefore he is estopped. It is a judgment, that in Law he is estopped from asserting a claim to them, against the defendant, Birge. As to any admissions which the recitals in the bill contain, without referring to them in the way of specification, I remark that they are not an estoppel. As evidence against his title, they might go to the Jury for what they are worth. I do not think that there is any admission against his claim upon the lands, which, per se, constitutes an estoppel. In Lampen vs. Corke, Holroyd, J. says that estoppels are odious in the Law, (7 Eng. S. L. R. 209.) It is often so said, and truly said of estoppels, by recitals in deeds, admissions in pleadings, and all of that class. They are not to be readily allowed. Estoppels hjjudgme?it are, however, not odious. They are to be received with as much favor as any other defence, because it is the interest of the Commonwealth that litigation should cease. The Court clearly erred, if he is to be understood as holding that the admissions of Evans were in-Law^ an estoppel. I am inclined to believe that he did not so hold, but that he referred to [*272] the admissions, as inducement to the judgments in the cause, and that his opinion was founded on them.
It is very well settled, that a fact which has been directly tried and decided by a Court of competent jurisdiction, cannot be contested again between the same parties or their privies, in the same or any other Court. A judgment therefore of a Court of Law or a decree in Chancery, is an estoppel to the parties” thereto, and to those who are in privity with them. This is the rule. It is, however, carefully and strongly fenced. The judgment must relate to the same question, and must clearly decide it. If it came collaterally under consideration, or w7as only incidentally-considered, there is no estoppel. And if the decision of the question is ascertained inferentially, by arguing from the judgment or decree and the pleadings in the case, there is equally no estoppel. Laying dowm the rule, with the modifications stated, I subject this case to its test. (6 Wheat. R. 109. 1 Story’s Rep. 474. 4 Howard, U. S. R. 497, 498.)
There were two judgments in the cause, to wit: the final decree and the 'decision upon Mr. Gresham’s demurrer. The bill, among other things, assailed the sale of the lands, under Mr. Fay’s mortgage, upon the ground (which I did not before state) that the Sheriff had agreed with the defendant in execution, Evans, that he would sell them in parcels, but did in fact sell the whole together. The consequence was, as the bill charges, that it did not bring more than half its value. Gresham, as stated before,bought the land, and was made a party to the bill and demurred to it. The Court ruled that the demurrer be sustained upon two [*273] grounds: First. Because there was no tender of the purchase money; and, Second, because the Sheriff was legally authorized to sell the land in the way he did sell it. This was a judgment in favor of the validity of the sale, and of course in favor of Gresham’s title. The bill does not controvert the mortgage debt, or the mortgage judgment and execution at allit only controverts the sale. The land being sold under a valid judgment, as the property of Evans, and bought by Gresham, and the sale, after being attacked in the bill, being sustained by the Court in so many words, it is a judgment in favor of Gresham’s title, and it of course divests Evans’ title. It is a judgment upon the title of lands, in dispute between Evans and Gi-esham, rendered by a Court having competent jurisdiction. The same lands being now in controversy, that judgment does estop the plaintiff in ejectment, Evans, from assei ting a title to them against Gresham, and those who claiming under, are in privity with him. These things being so, the inquiry is, does Birge, the defendant in this ejectment, claim title under Gresham — is he his privy ? He is, as to all the lots of land making up the Fay Place, except one, to wit: Mi. 74. Gresham conveyed to Armstrong all except that lot. Armstrong to Brown, and Brown to Birge. Birge therefore acquired no title from Gresham to'that lot, and so far as that is concerned, is not in privity with him. Evans states, it is true, that the whole of the Fay Place, including thereby-lot No. 74, was sold at the mortgage, sale, and it is true that the judgment on the demurrer confirmed the sale; yet inasmuch as no title passed from Gresham, for lot 74, Birge cannot claim under him, and as to that, is not in privity wfith him. He therefore, as to that lot, is not entitled to a judgment of estoppel against Evans. It is argued that he is in privity wfith McLaughlin, and that Evans being es-topped as to him, he is also estopped as to Birge. The privily is made out thus: McLaughlin bought the lands at Sheriff’s sale, and it was afterwards sold under execution against him, as his property, and Brown became the purchaser, and Birge bought of Brown. It will be recollected that McLaughlin bought under an agreement wfith Evans, that he Evans, should be allowed to sell the land for cash, within twelve months, and have the benefit [*274] of what it brought over the principal antilegal interest, which he owed to McLaughlin, with attorney’s fees. Evans charges the facts of the sale in his bill — charges that McLaughlin bid off the land at $3100, got a deed, and had not paid the purchase money. He clearly calls upon McLaughlin to account for that sum. On the other.hand, McLaughlin answers that he did bid off the land, did get the Sheriffs deed, but did not get possession) and did not pay the bid of $3100, and claims, that he should not be held to account to Evans for that sum. Whether the sale to McLaughlin was a valid sale or not, was a question for the Jury to determine, in making up the account between Evans and McLaughlin By the plaintiff in error, it is argued that they did not in the verdict which was rendered, embrace this item of $3100; that the verdict is made up of items independent of that that the charges in the bill of payments made to McLaughlin,; justified the verdict, irrespective of any consideration of this sale; in short, that the verdict settled the accounts between these parties, growing out of the loan and the payments, and did neither affirm or disaffirm McLaughlin's purchase. The conclusion is that there is no judgment of the Court founded on their verdict, which affirmed that sale, and therefore no judgment which divested the title of Evans in the lands, and vested it in McLaughlin ; and if so, the decree does not estop Evans as to McLaughlin, and of course does not estop him as to Birge. The other side insist that the Jury must have embraced the purchase money in their verdict, and thereby divested Evans' title, and if it did, he,. Evans, is estopped as to McLaughlin, and as to Birge, who claims under McLaughlin. It is now apparent that the question is reduced to this, to wit; did the verdict of the Jury, and the decree of the Court thereon charge McLaughlin with his bid of $3100? If it did, it wjas done upon an affirmation of his title to the lands, including lot 74, which he bid off at Sheriff’s sale, and Evans is estopped by that decree. This was really the question made in the argument; neither the verdict nor the decree, in terms declare of what items the credits allowed Evans against McLaughlin were constituted. They are silent about this sale ; this being so, we are left to inference, and the rule is [*275] that an estoppel by judgment cannot be made out inferentially. If indeed, as might be the case, the inference was a necessary conclusion in law, from the issues made by the pleadings, it is not true, that a judgment may not be made an estoppel inferentially. But when the inquiry is whether the fact in question, as here, whether the Jury did charge McLaughlin with the $3100, is covered and concluded by the verdict, it cannot be granted inferentially. The estoppel cannot be made out, in the language of the Supreme Court of the United States, by arguing from the judgment. In making up his account against McLaughlin, Evans does not charge him with the $3100 specifically, although in the charging part of his bill, he claims it as justly due him. In that account he charges him with payments, and states a balance against h m. _ McLaughlin exhibits his account against Evans, and claims a large balance. What proofs were before the Jury does not appear. They found a small balance against McLaughlin, and decreed that the executions be entered satisfied, and that the notes be delivered up. Without saying more, it is very plain that; we do no.t know whether they embraced this item in their verdict or not; they may have done so — I think most probably did. The record does not show that they did. We cannot say that there was a judgment on the sale, and on the title, therefore, to the lands; we cannot say that there is an estoppel by judgment. Our judgment is, that this bill and answer, the admissions therein of the parties, and the judgments and decrees thereon, do not estop the plaintiff below as to the land not embraced in Mr. Gresham's deed. The exclusion of the evidence, therefore, on the ground of estoppel, we hold to have been erroneous.
Let the judgment be reversed.