1 Ind. 310 | Ind. | 1849
Trover. The action was commenced in the Miami, and removed, by change of venue taken by the plaintiff, to the Grant Circuit Court. There are two counts in the declaration. The first is for the conversion of “400 canal land certificates, commonly called canal scrips, of the denomination of 5 dollars each,” and of the aggregate value of 2,000 dollars. The second is for the conversion of “ divers other canal land ■ certificates,” of the denomination of 5 dollars each and of the aggre
The release pleaded was to one of the joint tortfeasors, but if valid as to him, it seems, though we need not decide the point here, it discharged all from liability. Allen v. Wheatly, 3 Blackf. 332.
Several other issues than that upon the replication to the third plea were made, and decided in the Court below for the defendants, but what we shall necessarily say in considering the one we have stated, will indicate our opinion upon all those issues.
The substance of the allegations raising the question upon which we make our decision, is as follows: The plaintiff declares for the conversion of 400 canal land certificates, (for it is alleged in all the pleas that both counts in the declaration are for the conversion of the same certificates, and the fact is admitted in argument). The defendants plead a sealed release. The plaintiff replies, in a manner somewhat analogous to the making of a new assignment, that the defendants converted 960 other and different canal land certificates of his, and that it was in consideration of their return, and for no other, that he gave the release pleaded, and that, hence, though it is general in its terms, it is without consideration as to those for the conversion of which this suit is brought— being 300, as shown by the replication, and not 400 as laid in the declaration. This replication, if well pleaded, and we think it is, the demurrer admits. We cannot put this case on the ground of a gift. Chitty, in his work on contracts, p. 50, says: “A gift is not good and binding unless it be by deed, or unless the thing which forms the subject of the gift be actually delivered to the donee.” Iiere was no actual delivery of the certificates by the do
A release without consideration, where the fact could be shown, was void at common law, and if executed without a seal, its want of consideration might be shown. Jackson v. Stackhouse, 1 Cowen 122. But if sealed it then, like all other specialties, imported a consideration which, at law, could not be controverted. Leonard v. Bates, 1 Blackf. 172.—1 Chit. PI. 362, note 2. Our statute, however, has abrogated this rule of the common law. By it, the consideration of any specialty, when made the foundation of, or set up as a defence to, an action, may be inquired into in like manner as though it were a simple instrument. R. S. 710, s. 214.—Leonard v. Bates, supra.—Patterson v. Salmon, 3 Blackf. 131. The release in this case was pleaded as a defence to the suit, and the question therefore arises, does the replication show it to have been given without consideration ? It exhibits these facts ■ — -that the defendants were wrongfully in possession of 1,260 canal land certificates, the property of the plaintiff, and that, upon the plaintiff’s releasing them generally from liability, they' returned to him 960 of those certificates. The question may, perhaps, be more distinctly presented thus: A man tortiously seizes and leads away two of his neighbor’s horses. The neighbor calls for them, and is informed that he can have one of the horses by relinquishing his claim to the other. He makes the relinquishment and receives back one of his horses. Is that relinquishment upon a valid consideration? We say not. The delivery up of one horse which the party was legally bound to return, would only be a consideration for a discharge from that obligation, not from that and another. It is true that, by such decision, the party releasing
We may remark that we do not design this decision to extend beyond the precise facts stated in the replication. If it was the intention of the plaintiff to make a gift of the unreturned certificates to the defendants, or there was a dispute as to the true number due, or the defendants, as bailors, had expended money or care and trouble about the keeping of said certificates, for which they were entitled to and claimed reward, these are circumstances that may vary the case. There is one other state of facts which we do not design this decision to reach, and upon which we give no opinion. Suppose the release in this case had been given after suit commenced and after the
—The judgment is reversed with costs. Cause remanded, &c.
An agreement to accept a 'collateral thing in satisfaction of a preexisting debt, is executed by a delivery to a person appointed by the party to receive it, and is a good accord- and satisfaction. —Anderson v. Pres. & Directors & Company of H. Turnpike, 16 Johns. 36.
Acceptance of a less, cannot be a satisfaction in law of a greater sum than due: nor can it operate as an extinguishment of the original cause of action, though accompanied by a conditional promise to pay the residue when of ability. — Fitch v. Sutton, 5 East. 230.
The acceptance of other security, though for a less sum than the original debt, as a satisfaction for the whole debt, is a valid discharge on the ground of accord and satisfaction. Le Page v. McCrea, 1 Wend. 164.
See Booth v. Smith, 3 id. 66.
"Where the thing given in satisfaction differed in quality from the thing demanded, the Courts never felt any difficulty to allow it to be a good satisfaction; as where a robe, or a hawk, were pleaded to have been given in satisfaction of a pecuniary demand; because the value of these things was, in some measure, arbitrary, and they might possibly be an equivalent to the plaintiff for his money; and the Court would intend that there was some circumstance which stamps a value on them in the eye of the plaintiff beyond flhat which they might seem to bear. But they thought it too much for them to intend that a less sum could be a satisfaction for a greater, a part for the whole, unless some circumstance that might make it so were stated. — 1 Bacon’s Abrigt. 41, letter a, note.