24 Ga. 288 | Ga. | 1858
By the Court. delivering the opinion.
The plaintiff is attempting to revive a dormant judgment against the defendants. The plea sets forth the defence fully. The evidence of the defendants supports the plea, and the reply of the plaintiff by proof, presents matter of evidence on which he relies to defeat the effect of the plea. The plaintiff insisting that the plea was insufficient in law to bar the plaintiff’s action, demurred to it. The Court below overruled the demurrer, and the judgment on the demurrer is excepted to and assigned as error.
The parties proceeded to trial, and after the evidence was heard, the presiding Judge charged the Jury that, under the proof, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. The plaintiffs counsel excepted to the charge and assigned error thereon.
The case of Heathcote vs. Crookshanks is not an authority for Fitch vs. Sutton. There the debtor compounded with his his creditors, and agreed to pay a less sum for a greater, which the creditors agreed to accept, the same to he paid in a reasonable time. When the debtor offered to pay subsequently, and, as he averred, in a reasonable time, the creditor refused to accept the smaller sum, and by his plea the defendant asks to be permitted to enforce the agreement The Court says he cannot do it because it is a nudum pactum. There is no consideration for it. In delivering his opinion, Ashurst, Justice says: "It is true, that if A. promise to give B. ¿815 and he actually pays it, he cannot recover it back again; hut here the question is, whether an agreement by the plaintiff to take a less sum is obligatory without acceptance. It is said that a tender is, in all cases, equivalent to a payment; but that is not so; for if a tender be pleaded in bar of a promise, it is no't taken as a payment, but as a bar to the action. This
in the case of Silver vs. George, 1st OampbelFs Rep., 392, the defendant gave in evidence a receipt in fuff of all demands. Against this defence it was proposed to prove that before the date of the receipt, the plaintiff’had assigned the whole of his effects for the benefit of his creditors; that the defendant had full notice of the assignment; that in reality no money passed upon the giving of the receipt; that the whole was a collusion between them to cheat the creditors; that the action was brought in the name of the plaintiff by the trustees, in behalf of themselves and other creditors. Lord Ellenborough, who delivered the opinion in Fitch vs. Sutton, said in this case: “ Sitting here, I can only look to the strict legal rights of the parties on the record; and there can he no doubt that a receipt in fuff, where the person who gave it was under no misapprehension, and can complain of no fraud or imposition, is binding upon him.” In the case before us, the money was paid, the receipt was given, the transaction was closed. It was an executed contract. There was no fraud or imposition,, and the parlies did what they intended to do. There was no misapprehension. If it be said that the plaintiff received half of the amount only, and that he did iot intend a full satisfaction as to both defendants; yet if his writing discharges both he must be bound, for he is presumed to know the legal effect of the instrument he signed. Lewis vs. Jones, 4 Barn, and Cress. 506.
But to pass to the evidence given by the plaintiff who examined the defendant Ayer. He testified that he settled with the plaintiff the half of said Ji. fa., as specified in the receipt. The defendant Bates was not present. The plaintiff remarked at the time that he should proceed to make the other half out of Bates the best way he could. It was understood between them, at the time of the payment and the giving the receipt, that the plaintiff was not to look to Ayer any further on said judgment or fi. fa., but was to make the other half out of Bates the best way he could. He was security on the appeal. The plaintiff received and accepted what was paid by witness Ayer, in discharge, of all his (Ayer’s) liability to the plaintiff on the judgment or fi. fa. The testimony then shows that the defendant Ayer paid the plaintiff one-half of the amount of the debt, which he received and accepted in discharge of, all his liability on the judgment and fi. fa. Here was a clear discharge of Ayer by the
This Court, in the case of Rankin vs. Tarver, 3 Kelly, 210, decided that when two judgments had been obtained on the same debt, one in Alabama, and the other in Georgia, the satisfaction of the judgment, in Alabama by the payment of a sum much less than the amount due, although the receipt which was offered in evidence in proof of satisfaction, stated that the money was received il in compromise of the judgment, hut not to affect any otherf may be shown, and when proven, should be held to be satisfaction of the judgment in Georgia. That is a strong authority in support of the principle contended for by the defendant in error here, and goes beyond what is necessary .to sustain the judgment of the Court below in this case.
Judgment affirmed.