
    Frank J. Lennon Company, Respondent, v. The New York Mail Company, Appellant.
    (Supreme Court, Appellate Term, First Department,
    June, 1913.)
    Judgments — recovery of, for part of entire amount — goods sold and delivered — bar to action.
    The recovery of a judgment for a part of an entire demand for goods sold and delivered is a bar to an action for the remainder of the account.
    Appeal by defendant from a judgment of the Municipal Court of the city of New York, borough of Manhattan, fourth district, rendered in favor of the plaintiff.
    Wilder, Ewen & Patterson, for appellant.
    George Ryall, for respondent.
   Seabury, J.

This is an action for goods sold and delivered by the plaintiff to the defendant. A running account existed between the parties, and the plaintiff sold and delivered bay and oats to the defendant from September 4 to September 30, 1912. Originally the plaintiff commenced an action in the City Court for the total amount of the items of this account. This action was discontinued, and the plaintiff commenced an action for two items of this account and recovered judgment against the defendant. This judgment has been paid. The plaintiff also commenced five other actions against the defendant upon other separate items, of this account, and has recovered judgment in each action. The present appeal is from one of these judgments. Upon the trial the defendant offered in evidence the judgment recovered by the plaintiff in the first action, and claimed that that judgment was a bar to the present action. The evidence shows that the plaintiff had one entire and indivisible cause of action against the defendant upon the running account. This cause of action could not be split up into the several items which composed it. The plaintiff’s demand being entire and incapable of division, and the plaintiff having recovered a judgment for a part of this indivisible demand, the judgment so obtained is a bar to an action for the remainder of the account. In Guernsey v. Carver, 8 Wend. 492, it was said that: The whole account being due when the first suit was brought, it should be viewed in the light of an entire demand, incapable of division, for the purpose of prosecution. The law abhors a multiplicity of suits. According to the doctrine of the court below, a suit might be sustained (after the whole became due) on each separate item delivered, and if any division of the account is allowable, it must, no doubt, be carried to that extent. Such a doctrine would encourage intolerable oppression upon debtors, and be a just reproach upon the law. The only just and safe rule is to compel the plaintiff on an account like the present to include the whole of it due in a single suit.” The rule enunciated in the case cited has since been continuously followed in this state. Bendernagle v. Cocks, 19 Wend. 207; Darrow v. Clipper Mfg. Co., 48 Misc. Rep. 635; Secor v. Sturgis, 16 N. Y. 547; Goldberg v. Eastern Brewing Co., 136 App. Div. 692; Pakas v. Hollingshead, 184 N. Y. 211. In Parsons on Contracts (9th ed., vol. 3, p. 210), it is said: “ But if at any time he sues for a part only of the sums due, a judgment will be held to be satisfaction of all the sums which could have been included in that action, and were due and payable by the terms of the contract; and therefore no further suit can be maintained on any of them. The reason for this rule is the prevention of unnecessary and oppressive litigation. ’ ’

It follows that the first judgment which the plaintiff recovered against the defendant was a bar to the present action, and that the judgment was improperly rendered in favor of the plaintiff.

Page and Bijur, JJ., concur.

Judgment reversed, with costs, and complaint dismissed, with costs.  