
    F. M. Fisk v. E. T. Parker, Sheriff, et al.
    A judgmont of dismissal is nothing moro than on© of nonsuit, and cannot support the plea of resjudi. cata, as to any of tlie matters at issue.
    Tlie reasoning, and opinion of the court upon a subject, on the evidence adduced before it, cannot have the force and effect of the thing adjudged, unless the subject matter be definitively disposed of by the decroo.
    from the Third District Oourt of New Orleans, Duvigneaud, J.
    
      F. A. Bartlett and G. A. Breaux, for plaintiff and appellant. T. H. Howard and A. G. Brice, for defendants.
   Land, J.

In November, 1851, George H. Wallace commenced suit by attachment against Bennett E. Smith, in the Third District Oourt of this city, and attached the slaves 31ary Ann and “ America,’’ as the property of the defendant. On the 7th of same month, Francis M. Fisk intervened in the suit and claimed the slave America as his property, and prayed for judgment recognising him as owner. To this petition of intervention the plaintiff filed, on the 29th of November, 1851, a general denial. On the 10th day of December following, the plaintiff filed a supplemental petition making Fisk a party garnishee to the action and propounding to Mm interrogatories, the third of which was — “ have you not in your possession or under your control, or had you not when seizure was made in your hands on the 6th day of November last, or at any time since, certain slaves belonging to said defendant, or which were standing in his name, to-wit: Francis Peterson, Harriet, Jane, Frank, Rkoda, Austin and Maria.”

To the answers of the guarnishees to the interrogatories, the plaintiff filed a traverse, which was tried together with the principal action and third opposition of Fisk, and thereupon the following judgment was rendered:

For the reasons assigned in the written opinion of the court this day delivered and on file, it is adjudged and decreed, that the plaintiff, George H. Wallace, recover of defendant, Bennett E. Smith, the sum of five thousand and sixty dollars, with legal interest from 6 th of November, 1851, until paid. That the intervention of F. M. Fisk he dismissed; that the said F. M. Fisk, as garnishee, deliver up to the Sheriff, the slaves Rkoda and Peterson, as subject to the plaintiff’s attachment, within two days after this judgment shall become executory, and in default thereof, that the plaintiff recover of the said Fisk, garnishee, the value of the said slaves Rkoda and Peterson, to be fixed by evidence on motion; it is further ordered, that the defendant, Smith, pay the costs of the main action, and that Fisk pay the costs of the intervention and of the traverse.”

Prom this judgment, Fisk, the intervenor, appealed to this court, and the appeal was dismissed, “ because much of the oral testimony was not reduced to writing, and partly because certain extracts from written books had not been produced by the party who offered them, and because there was no agreed statement of facts.”

The plaintiff, after the dismissal of the appeal, sued out an execution on his judgment and caused the slave “ America," to be seized as the property of the defendant. Thereupon, F. M. Fisk commenced this suit by injunction, to arrest and prevent the sale of the slave on the grounds of his possession and ownership. To this demand the defendants pleaded res judicata, by alleging that all of his rights have been adjudicated upon and against him, on his intervention and third opposition filed in the suit of Wallace v. Smith.

The exception of res judicata was sustained by the lower court, and the plaintiff has appealed.

It is to be observed that the petition of intervention in the suit of Wallace v. Smith, was filed and issue joined by answer of the plaintiff, before Fisk was made a party garnishee, and consequently before interrogatories were propounded to him.

And it is also to be observed, that the interrogatories, the answers, and the .traverse thereof, are silent as to the title to the slave America, and that the only pleadings in which the title to this slave was at issue, were the petition of intervention and the answer thereto.

Upon these pleadings, the judgment of the court was, that the intervention of F. M. Fisk he dismissed, and that he pay ihe costs of the intervention. This judgment did not determine the rights of the parties, but was one of dismissal or non-suit, and cannot support the plea of res judicata. Baudin v. Roliff, 1 N. S. 165. Nor will the reasoning and opinion of the court upon a subject, on the evidence adduced before it, have the force and effect of the thing adjudged, unless the sub. ject-matter be definitively disposed by the decree. Pepper v. Dunlap, 5 An. p. 200.

It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment be reversed, and the plea of res judicata be overruled, and the cause remanded to the lower court for further proceeding's according to law, and that defendants pay the costs of this appeal.  