7 S.D. 584 | S.D. | 1895
This is an action to recover $50, claimed tobe the value of a cow belonging to plaintiff, and alleged to have been killed by the negligence of operators and employes in the management of an engine and train passing upon defendant’s line of railway. Defendant entered a plea of accord and satisfaction, and by stipulation at the trial, for a defense to the action, relied solely upon the following undisputed facts found by the court, to whom the case was tried without a jury: On the 6th day of January, 1894, defendant offered plaintiff $12.50 in full satisfaction of his claim of $50. On the 16th day of the same month and year, plaintiff, by letter addressed and mailed to defendant at Chicago, offered to accept $12.50 in full satis
The theory upon which the case was presented and tried in the court below was that defendant’s original obligation to pay plaintiff $50 had been extinguished by a subsequent agreement upon the part of plaintiff to accept, in full satisfaction thereof, defendant’s offer of $12.50; but the undisputed evidence shows, and the court found, that the agreement had never been executed. To establish a plea of accord and satisfaction under the statutory or common law, it must not only appear that there was an agreement to accept, in full settlement of an obligation, something different from or less than that to which one of the parties thereto is entitled, but it must be shown that such agreement has been fully executed, and the obligation extinguished by the creditor’s actual acceptance of the consideration specified in the agreement constituting an accord. Comp. Laws, §§ 3483-3485. From the text and note under the title ‘‘Accord and satisfaction,” in the first volume of Encyclopedia of Practice and Pleading (page 73), we quote the following: “Accord and satisfaction generally is a good plea in all actions where damages only are to be recovered. * * * An agreement to accept something in satisfaction, accompanied by the delivery or performance of what is so agreed upon, satisfies and discharges his right of action. Such an agreement is called in technical language an ‘accord and satisfaction,’ and, when completely executed, forms a good defense to an action.” In the case of Hearn v. Kiehl, 38 Pa. St. 147, it was said that ‘ ‘it is