43 Conn. 455 | Conn. | 1876
This is a bill in equity, brought by a husband against his wife, to recover moneys expended for furniture, for the repairs and alteration of houses, for jewelry, dresses, traveling expenses and personal luxuries, amounting in all to $30,996.64; and also for an account and delivery oí furniture, paintings,'’ bronze and table ware, in all of the value of ten thousand dollars, which the bill alleges the defendant has taken possession of, secreted, and refuses to deliver.
In bar of all these claims the defendant pleads accord and satisfaction, both evidenced by the following written instrument, called a receipt in full, and signed by the petitioner in his individual name:—“Received, New York, September 9th, 1870, of Dr. Peters, on behalf of Mrs. Bull, fifteen hundred dollars, and also sundry pictures, being all claimed by Mr. Bull in his list, except three bought at Dusseldorf in 1859, and the four purchased the same year in Trieste, which are yielded to her; this settlement being in full of all claims and demands against Mrs. Bull.”
The accord proved to have been made in connection with the giving^ of this receipt was, that the defendant should pay
The plaintiff admits the payment of the money and the performance of all the acts to be done on the part of the defendant, and the execution and delivery on his part of the receipt in full. But he claims that those payments were made on account of the firm of B. W. Bull & Go., of which he was a member, and had no relation to his individual claims as set forth in the petition, and that there was no consideration for the receipt in full, and that the signing of the receipt was obtained from him by force, fraud and mistake.
The record contains a special finding of all the facts relied upon; and the question is whether such facts sustain the accord and satisfaction so pleaded in' bar.
An accord and satisfaction may be briefly defined as “ the settlement of a dispute or the satisfaction of a claim, by an executed agreement between the party injuring and, the party injured,” or, to give a definition indicating more definitely its peculiar nature, it is “ something of legal value to which the creditor before had no right, received in full satisfaction of the debt, without regard to the magnitude of the satisfaction.” 1 Smith’s Leading Oases, (10 Am. ed.,) p. 558.
In this case if there was a sufficient accord there was also a sufficient satisfaction, for the record finds that “ everything required by the terms of said agreement, was then and there duly performed by the defendant.”
The parties are at issue upon three questions only, viz: 1st, Whether the accord embraced the claims in the bill or not. 2d, Whether there was a good consideration. 3d, Whether there was force, fraud or mistake sufficient to set aside the agreement.
First; Was there such a meeting of the minds of the par
And here the plaintiff claims that the accord had no relation to the matters in the bill, but was confined to the claims in favor of B. W. Bull & Co. This position however at the outset has to encounter these stubborn facts:—that the accord was evidenced by a written instrument which on its face purports to be a receipt in full of all claims and demands which the plaintiff had against the defendant, the language of which is broad enough to cover all the claims in the plaintiff’s bill, and there is not a word referring to any claim in favor of the firm; and moreover it is signed by the plaintiff individually.
But if we go back of these facts to examine the essence of the transaction, what do we find ? On the one hand, we see that it is certain that not only all the acts and words of the plaintiff, but the real intent of mind on the part of the defendant, covered all the claims of every nature in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant. On the other hand, the only question that can be raised is, whether the mind of the plaintiff so met that of the defendant as to make a valid agreement in discharge of the claims referred to. And the doubt on this point arises wholly from the fact that the finding gives the plaintiff the benefit of his secret and uncommunicated belief that Mr. Tallmadge, his attorney, would not draw a receipt that would cut off the claims in the bill. And the legal question is, whether this fact can defeat the accord.
We think it cannot, under the circumstances of this case. The defendant, by her agent, from first to last insisted on a receipt in full of all claims and demands, as an essential condition upon which alone she would pay the sums of money specified. To this condition the defendant at first objected, on the ground that they had met to settle the claim of B. W. Bull & Go., and not his individual claims against the defendant, showing by that remark that he had some idea of the effect of a receipt in' full. But finally, having had correct legal advice as to the effect of a receipt in full, he distinctly agreed to sign any receipt which Mr. Tallmadge might draw.
Now from the time the plaintiff agreed to sign any receipt which Mr. Tallmadge would draw, he uttered no word and gave no outward sign of dissent to the proposition of the defendant; but went on and delivered the receipt and accepted the money of the defendant, knowing (as we think the facts found require us to say,) that she understood the arrangement to be a full and complete settlement and discharge of all claims and demands he had against her.
Suppose the plaintiff, after first objecting to the condition prescribed, should, upon its being insisted on, have yielded, and accepted the proposition of settlement—would he be allowed to impeach the accord by setting up a belief kept in the secret recesses of his own mind and never disclosed to the other party ? Does the reference of the question to His attorney, well versed in the law, give him any greater right to nullify his agreement? Does it not rather make his posisition still more untenable, if not absurd ?
We find the plaintiff, who was a trained and intelligent merchant, entering into a compromise with his wife, not inadvertently or by surprise, but with his eyes open, after full information of all the essential facts, and pursuant to the advice of his own counsel learned in the law. He first asked his lawyer “ as to the effect and validity of a receipt in full,” and was informed, “ that a receipt in full would not be binding if obtained by force, fraud, or misrepresentation,” which was also equivalent to saying that it would be binding if not so obtained.
Under these circumstances, when the plaintiff executed the
Where a person gives his signature and outward assent to the terms of an agreement as known to be understood by the other party, the act of setting up a secret belief to nullify the contract so understood, after it has been executed, cannot well be distinguished in principle from that species of fraud known as the “ suppressio veri.”
The position of the plaintiff in this part of the case is most extraordinary, in that he seeks to appropriate to himself all the benefits of the defendant’s understanding of the contract, while, at the same time, he repudiates all its disadvantages, and substitutes therefor all the benefits of another and different contract, formed only in the secrecy of his own mind. The law refuses to be made the instrument of such injustice. There are high legal authorities to sustain the result we have reached on this part of the case.
This precise question has not perhaps been discussed by this court, but principles of construction have been adopted leading to the same result.
In Elting v. Sturtevant, 41 Conn., 176, the question was, what construction should be given to a receipt, and Carpenter, J., in giving the.opinion, on page 182, said:—“The difficulty is that there is reason to believe that the party receiving the money and giving the receipt understood it in one way, and the party paying the money and taking the receipt understood it in another. In such a case, the language being ambiguous, we ought to construe it as understood by the party taking it, especially if the circumstances will justify the inference that the other party knew that he so understood it.”
In other states we find well considered cases almost identical in principle with the one now under consideration.
In Vedder v. Vedder, 1 Denio, 257, Beardsley, J., in delivering the opinion of the court, stated the facts of the case and discussed the law applicable thereto as follows On the first of June, 1844, the defendant had a right of action against the
In Preston v. Grant, 34 Verm., 201, Pierpont, J., in giving the opinion said:—“ To constitute an accord and satisfaction it is necessary that the money should be offered in satisfaction of the claim, and the offer accompanied with such acts and declarations as amount to a condition that, if the money is accepted, it is accepted in satisfaction, and such that the party to whom it is offered is bound to understand therefrom that, if he takes it, he takes subject to such condition. When a tender or offer is thus made, the party to whom it is made has no alternative but to refuse it or accept it upon such condition. If he takes it his claim is canceled, and no protest, declaration or denial of his, so long as the condition is insisted on, can vary the result.”
In McDaniels v. Lapham, 21 Verm., 222, the same principle was adopted, and is thus expressed by Poland, J.: “When a party makes an offer of a certain sum to settle a claim, when the sum in controversy is open and unliquidated, and attaches to his offer the condition that the same if taken at all must be received in full or in satisfaction of the claim in dispute, and the other party receives the money, he takes it subject to the.condition attached to it, and it will operate as an accord and satisfaction, even though the party at the time of receiving the money declare that he will not receive it in that manner, but only in part satisfaction of his debt so far as it will extend.” We also find the same doctrine in McDaniels v. Bank of Rutland, 29 Verm., 230.
In Donnohue v. Woodbury, 6 Cush., 150, it was held, (Shaw, C. J., giving the opinion,) that “ if one owing a sum of money, the amount of which is not ascertained and fixed, offer his creditor a certain sum, declaring it to be for all that he is owing him, which sum is accepted by the creditor, such acceptance is a full discharge of the demand, although the words spoken by the debtor are not heard by the creditor through inattention or carelessness, provided they are so
The foregoing principles and legal authorities justify the conclusion that there was in the present case a sufficient meeting of the minds of the parties to constitute an accord and satisfaction which included the claims in the plaintiff’s bill.
We felt some hesitation on the question whether the furniture sought to be recovered in specie was, in fact, the subject of the accord and satisfaction. It is however certain from the finding that whatever right the plaintiff has to recover the same existed at the time when the accord was made, and might therefore have been embraced in a compromise covering all claims. In the first part of the finding it is included among the “unsettled, doubtful and controverted claims” existing at the time of the accord, but near the end of the finding the additional fact is stated that no controversy had then arisen as to the possession of the furniture, which is one item of evidence tending to show that this claim was not included in the settlement. On the other hand, if we hold the plaintiff as agreeing to what he knew or had good reason to believe was the understanding of the defendant, then all existing claims, known or unknown, were contemplated.
It is not very important for the purposes of this case which view we take of this question. There was nothing proved to connect the wife with this matter, except the fact that when the parties separated the furniture was in the house where they had been living and where the wife still remained, and that, a few days before the accord was made, she left the country, and the plaintiff has not been able to ascertain what has become of the furniture.
Now, notwithstanding the acknowledged flexibility of equity jurisprudence as a remedy for injustice, we do not see how it can be legitimately used in a case of this kind, to enable the plaintiff to find and recover his furniture. If it is his, the law gives a more summary process to take it when and where he can find it. If therefore we should except the furniture from the operation of the accord, further litigation under an invalid remnant of the bill would be fruitless, and the accord
2. The second element of the accord and satisfaction which is in dispute relates to the consideration.
The principle of law bearing on this point is well settled by many authorities, that “where the claim is not a money demand, or, if so, is unliquidated, or if liquidated is doubtful in fact or law, any sum, no matter how small, given and received in satisfaction of any demand, no matter how large, will legally satisfy that demand as a compromise.” Tuttle v. Tuttle, 12 Met., 554; Palmerton v. Huxford, 4 Denio, 167; Warren v. Skinner, 20 Conn., 562; Pierce v. Pierce, 25 Barb., 248; U. States v. Childs, 12 Wall., 233; 1 Smith’s Leading Cases, 555.
It is also well settled that a court will never in such cases inquire into the adequacy or inadequacy of the consideration. Reid v. Bartlett, 19 Pick., 273 ; Fisher v. May, 2 Bibb, 449; Taylor v. Patrick, 1 Bibb, 168; Union Bank v. Geary, 5 Pet., 114; 3 Leading Cases in Equity, 390, 406.
The facts bearing upon this part of the case are thus stated in the finding:—“On the 9th day of September, 1870, and prior to that date, there existed between the petitioner and respondent sundry unsettled and controverted claims, consisting of the claims and demands in the petitioner’s bill in equity, all of which were doubtful, except the claim for furniture purchased with the petitioner’s own funds; and if the court shall consider the last mentioned claim doubtful in law, then the undersigned so finds; otherwise it is not doubtful, except as to value and amount.”
It is clear that the last mentioned claim must also be considered doubtful. Only two other claims are referred to in the finding. One is the claim of B. W. Bull & Co., which is expressly found to be “unsettled, controverted and doubtful,” and the claim for pictures, which, although it is found that the defendant had no legal right to retain them, was yet an unsettled and controverted claim, if not doubtful of recovery in law.
The defendant paid fifteen hundred dollars in cash, and
We conclude therefore that the arrangement agreed upon by the parties in this case in respect to the consideration had all the essential elements required by law.
3, The only remaining question is, whether there was any force, fraud, or mistake, that can render the accord invalid.
The finding of the court that there was no force, fraud or misrepresentation, disposes of two parts of this objection. And as to mistake, what we have already said on this subject, while discussing the effect of the plaintiff’s secret belief, will suffice to show that there was no such mistake as entitles the plaintiff to favorable consideration in a court of equity.
We advise judgment in favor of the respondent.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.