194 Mass. 89 | Mass. | 1907
The ease having been tried before the judge, without a jury, the findings of fact are not open to review, but must be treated as conclusive if there is any evidence to support them. White Sewing Machine Co. v. Phenix Nerve Beverage Co. 188 Mass. 407, 409, and cases cited.
Unless certain promissory notes made by the partnership to the order of the plaintiff are to be credited as a partial payment the entire amount for which suit has been brought is due. It has been settled law in this jurisdiction for more than a century, that where a debtor delivers to his creditor either his own or the negotiable promissory note of a third party for the whole, or a part of the indebtedness, a presumption arises that it was given and received in satisfaction of the debt, although this presumption may be controlled by evidence that by acceptance the creditor did not intend to extinguish the original claim. Thacher v. Dinsmore, 5 Mass. 299, 302. Wiseman v. Lyman, 7 Mass. 286. Curtis v. Hubbard, 9 Met. 322. Brigham v. Lally, 130 Mass. 485. Dodge v. Emerson, 131 Mass. 467. Green v. Russell, 132 Mass. 536. Ely v. James, 123 Mass. 36, 44. Davis v. Parsons, 157 Mass. 584, 587. Brewer Lumber Co. v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 179 Mass. 228, 234. Jeffrey v. Rosenfeld, 179 Mass. 506, 509. Paddock & Fowler Co. v. Simmons, 186 Mass. 152, 153.
But as this rule of evidence was not the law of the plaintiff’s place of business where the notes were accepted, it is not applicable unless the contract was to be performed here. Carnegie v. Morrison, 2 Met. 381, 397. Tarbox v. Childs, 165 Mass. 408, 411, and cases cited. Andrews v. Pond, 13 Pet. 65. The auditor, upon whose findings the ruling as to the place of performance rests, not only reports that the malt was to be delivered at Boston
But while under the rulings this presumption must be included as forming a portion of the evidence upon which the finding of payment rests, the plaintiff contends that the entire testimony is insufficient to sustain the finding that there was a written agreement to receive the notes in payment, or that by their acceptance it intended to extinguish a part of the original debt. The inception of this agreement is contained in two letters, which are to be construed with later letters to ascertain whether any or all of the notes were given and accepted in partial liquidation, or as security. Before the organization of the corporation the plaintiff had dealt with the partnership to whose business the defendant had succeeded, and from the auditor’s report of their commercial relations, and the letters which passed between them, it is evident that the plaintiff was desirous of retaining the corporation as a customer, and when the arrangement was proposed regarded the financial condition of either as unexceptionable. In less than a year after the contract for malt was entered into the indebtedness on account amounted to a large sum which
If, however, the plaintiff was induced to accept the notes in partial payment by misrepresentations of the defendant acting through its treasurer, upon discovery of the fraud it had the right to rescind, and on rescission its original debt would have been fully restored. While there were material misstatements in the defendant’s letter relating to the cost of the brewery, and payment for its construction, to avoid the contract of payment the plaintiff must prove not only an intent to defraud, but that it actually had been misled by the deceit. Collins v. Denison, 12 Met. 549. Brady v. Finn, 162 Mass. 260. Hillyer v. Dickinson, 154 Mass. 502. Lee v. Tarplin, 183 Mass. 52, 56. Both questions were issues of fact, and the adverse findings that there was no purpose to mislead, as the defendant’s*treasurer, who also was a member of the firm, believed at the time that the firm was solvent, and that the misrepresentations did not influence the plaintiff’s conduct, are supported by the evidence. Holbrook
The remaining requests for rulings must be considered in connection with these special findings, which although adverse to the plaintiff are not shown to have been erroneous, and when thus considered those refused were irrelevant, and the rulings given were correct in law.
Judgment for the plaintiff on the finding.
The contract signed by the parties required the delivery of the malt at the Boylston Street railroad station in Boston, freight to be paid by the plaintiff.