
    CHARLES S. RILEY & CO. v. W. T. SEARS & CO., Inc.
    (Filed 18 October, 1911.)
    1. Appeal and Error — Second Appeal — Matters Concluded.
    Questions wliich were well within the scope of the inquiry of the same case on a former appeal will not be considered on a second appeal, and the parties are concluded by the former ■decision.
    2. Same — Vendor and Vendee — Insolvent Corporation — Purchase Subject to Laborer’s Lien — Defenses.
    The vendee of the assets of an insolvent corporation sold by the receiver, having purchased them subject to the liens given by the statute, Revisal, 1206, for labor done and services rendered within two months next iweceding the institution of the proceedings in insolvency, resisted payment of the claims of these lienors; and on appeal to the Supreme Court it was ascertained that the claims were valid and judgment entered that the receiver pay them with whatever moneys of the corporation were on hand and collect the balance from the vendee and the surety on his bond given for their payment. Oil a second appeal: Held, the vendee was concluded, by the decision rendered on the first appeal, from further resisting payment to the receiver for the lienors, and the further defense that there were certain actions of tort then pending against the insolvent corporation is not available.
    Appeal from Peebles, J., at April Term, 1911, of New HaNOVER.
    Civil action, beard on motion made in tbe cause. From judgment entered, plaintiff Eiley & Co. excepted and appealed.
    
      Herbert McGlammy for ■■plaintiff.
    
    
      Kenan & Stacy and E. K. Bryan for defendant.
    
   HoKE, J.

On tbe bearing it appeared tbat tbis was an action by Eiley & Co., bolding a large claim against Sears Company, Incorporated, secured by mortgage as part of tbe assets, to dissolve tbe debtor corporation and distribute tbe assets according to law. In tbe progress of tbe cause sale was bad of a large portion or all of tbe property, and Charles S. Eiley & Co., creditor and mortgagee, became tbe purchaser at tbe price of $15,000, and after paying $2,000, an amount ascertained to be due under a mechanic’s lien, gave bond in tbe sum of $13,000, conditioned to pay sucb further claims as might be established-and declared as prior liens on the corporation assets. It further appeared that certain persons, claiming to be creditors by reason of wages due for labor performed for said corporation within two months before proceedings instituted, filed their petitions in the cause, asserting such claim, and, the same being resisted by plaintiff, at May Term, 1910, of said Superior Court, an issue was submitted and it was duly established that the petitioners were due from defendant corporation certain specified amounts as wages for work and labor and within the sixty days, etc. Judgment was therefore formally entered for these amounts, declaring same a prior lien on the property of the corporation. The receiver was directed to pay the full amount of these claims out of any moneys on hand, and if not sufficient amount on hand for the purpose, that he collect same from plaintiff, Charles S. Riley & Co., and on the bond given, as stated. Plaintiff appealed from this order to Supreme Court. The appeal was dismissed at Fall Term, 1910, and this action of the Supreme Court having been certified down, plaintiff made further resistance to the order, claiming that payment of the claims embodied in'the former judgment cannot now be properly made by reason chiefly of certain actions of tort now pending against defendant corporation, and which might also be declared liens on the assets. The court below being of opinion that plaintiff’s position was untenable, gave further directions that the receiver proceed to collect the judgment, and plaintiff excepted and again appealed to this Court.

Our statute in reference to these claims, Revisal, sec. 1206, provides that in proceedings of this character the wages due to “laborers and workmen and all persons doing labor or service, of whatever character, in the regular employment of such corporations, shall be a first lien upon the assets for the amount of wages due them, respectively, for their work rendered within two months next preceding the date when proceedings in insolvency shall be instituted.” And if this were a question now open to plaintiff, the statute and authoritative interpretations of it would seem to be against plaintiff’s position. Trust and Deposit Co. v. Fisher, 200 U. S., 58; Cox v. Lighting and Fuel Co., 152 N. C., 164; R. R. v. Burnett, 123 N. C., 210; Dunavant v. R. R., 122 N. C., 1001; Coal Co. v. Electric Co., 118 N. C., 232. But the position is not open. At a former term of the Court, the question as to the amount of these claims and their priority as liens upon the assets were investigated, and both the amount and the liens and the priority of same were fully established. Judgment to that effect was formally entered and signed by the presiding judge, and plaintiff’s appeal from such judgment, as heretofore stated, was regularly and formally dismissed. The questions which plaintiff now seeks to raise were, no doubt, fully considered and passed upon when the former judgment was entered; certainly they were well within the scope of the inquiry, and in such case we have repeatedly held that a litigant is concluded and cannot raise the same questions upon a second appeal. Roberts v. Baldwin, 155 N. C., 276; Holley v. Smith, 132 N. C., 36; Perry v. R. R., 129 N. C., 333.

There is no error, certainly which gives plaintiff any just ground of complaint, in entering the second judgment, simply that the receiver proceed to collect the money required to pay these claims. This will be certified, that appropriate measures be taken to enforce obedience to the judgment of the Court.

Affirmed.  