68 A. 325 | N.H. | 1907
The only questions of law transferred are those raised by the exceptions to the denial of the motion for a nonsuit and verdict in favor of Mary A. Hubbell, to the verdict directed for the plaintiff against her, and to the final instructions given the jury as to the effect of evidence that certain sums were paid and accepted in full satisfaction of the debt.
There was no error in the denial of the motion for a nonsuit and verdict. Section 6, chapter 191, Public Statutes, suspends in favor of the executor the running of the statute of limitations as to all rights of action existing in favor of the deceased at his death, if suit is brought within two years. It does not bar an action otherwise maintainable brought after two years from the date of administration. Morse v. Whitcher,
No question is raised as to the right of Abbie A. Hubbell to possession under the bank mortgage if it was not foreclosed. The statement that the plaintiff's mortgage was subject to the bank mortgage qualifies the covenants of warranty on the part of the grantors and establishes that the grantee had notice that his security covered only an equity of redemption. Lawrence v. Towle,
There were no exceptions to the instructions to the jury, as the case was first submitted to them. It therefore must be concluded that all questions of fact raised by the pleadings and evidence were correctly submitted. After being out a long time, it appeared that the jury were unable to agree as to the payments that had been made, or whether they had been accepted in full payment of the note and satisfaction of the debt. It is to be inferred that the jury had agreed on all questions presented by the evidence upon the issues involved in the trial, except the *362 extent to which the debt had been satisfied and discharged. Upon the fact and character of the disagreement of the jury becoming known, the plaintiff assented to the payments claimed by the defendant, and the jury were instructed, in computing the amount due on the note, to allow the payments which the defendant claimed. The instructions previously given were withdrawn, and the jury were instructed, in substance, that the alleged agreement to accept the payments in full satisfaction and payment of the note was immaterial upon the question of the amount due, and were directed to return a verdict for the plaintiff for the balance due after allowing the payments claimed. To this instruction and direction of the verdict the defendant excepted. In this action, the verdict for the plaintiff upon the general issue must have been that the defendant did disseize the plaintiff as alleged, and the assessment of damages was essential only to determine the amount for which conditional judgment should be rendered. The verdict directed and the instruction given, after the difficulty of the jury was disclosed, appear to relate only to the question whether anything was due. It is therefore inferred that the jury had found the technical verdict in favor of the plaintiff except as affected by the alleged agreement of satisfaction, or else that it had been previously ruled, without objection from the defendant, that the evidence as to the bar of the statute and the foreclosure presented nothing for the jury. It has therefore not seemed necessary to consider whether a payment of a certain sum in full satisfaction and discharge of a mortgage debt is an acknowledgement of an existing greater debt, sufficient to repel the presumption of full payment arising from twenty years' undisturbed possession by the mortgagor, without other payment or recognition of the existence of the debt. The material question raised by the case is the legal soundness of the ruling that the payment and acceptance of a sum less than the amount due in full satisfaction and discharge of the debt is no defence to the collection of the balance.
The rule given the jury has been followed by this court. Page v. Brewster,
In Mathewson v. Bank,
In Fisher v. Willard,
In the remaining cases, the invalidity of a parol agreement discharging an ascertained debt upon payment of less than is due is reluctantly recognized in view of the weight of authority, but any circumstances which could be considered as furnishing a technical legal consideration have been seized upon to establish the validity of the discharge. It is to be noted that only in Page v. Brewster,
Discussion of the question generally starts with Lord Coke, A. D. 1602. In Pinnel's Case, 5 Co. 117, — 1 E. R. C. 368, the plaintiff brought an action of debt on a bond for payment of 8l.10s., November 11, 1600. The defendant pleaded that before that day, on October 1, at the request of the plaintiff he paid 5l. 2s. 2d., which sum the plaintiff accepted in full satisfaction of the debt. "The plaintiff had judgment for the insufficient pleading; for he did not plead that he had paid the 5l. 2s. 2d., in full satisfaction (as by law he ought), but pleaded the payment of part generally, and that the plaintiff accepted it in full satisfaction." The only point decided in Pinnel's Case was a point of pleading, now obsolete, for it is certain that no court, English or American, would now dispose of Pinnel's Case as it was determined in 1602. If the point of pleading was considered of any moment, the defendant would have leave to amend, and judgment would go according to the right — not the form.
But in deciding the case, "it was resolved by the whole court that payment of a lesser sum on the day in satisfaction of a greater cannot be any satisfaction for the whole, because it appears to the judges, that by no possibility a lesser sum can be a satisfaction to the plaintiff for a greater sum; but that the gift of a horse, hawk, or robe, c., in satisfaction, is good. For it shall be intended that a horse, hawk, or robec., might be more beneficial to the plaintiff than the money, in respect of some circumstance, or otherwise the plaintiff would not have accepted of it in satisfaction. But when the whole sum is due, by no intendment the acceptance of parcel can be a satisfaction to the plaintiff, but in the case at bar it was resolved that the payment and acceptance of parcel before the day in satisfaction of the whole would be good satisfaction in regard of circumstance of time, for peradventure parcel of it before the day would be more beneficial to him than the whole at the day, and the value of the satisfaction is not material. So if I am bound in 20l. to pay you 10l. at Westminister, and you request me to pay you 5l. at the day at York, and you will accept it in full satisfaction of the whole 10l., it is a good satisfaction for *366 the whole; for the expenses to pay it at York is sufficient satisfaction." While no case has been discovered resting on the point decided in Pinnel's Case, the matters "resolved" by the court have had great influence upon the law, as determined by decided cases which are generally and until recently, in the absence of statutory correction, universally in conformity with the dictum of the resolutions and the further point "adjudged" — that a release by deed without consideration was a good bar.
Two things were resolved: (1) That if the creditor accepted in discharge of the debt anything which might be by any possibility benefit to him, this was a good satisfaction; and (2) that payment of a lesser sum on the day in satisfaction could not by any possibility be beneficial to the creditor. The latter resolution was in no way involved in the case, and the conclusion was simply dictum. Lord Blackburn, in Foakes v. Beer, 9 App. Cas. 605, 616, 617. In the dicta of Lord Coke, nothing is said of a want of consideration for the creditor's agreement to accept the less sum in satisfaction of the debt; but in 1804, Lord Ellenborough, in Fitch v. Sutton, 5 East 230, relying upon the authority of Lord Coke in Pinnel's Case, introduced the idea of a want of consideration. "There must be," he says, "some consideration for the relinquishment of the residue; something collateral, to show a possibility of benefit to the party relinquishing his further claim, otherwise the agreement is nudum pactum." This statement of Lord Ellenborough has been followed by the courts, and is the foundation of the extended discussions which are to be found in the books. 12 Harv. Law Rev. 524. Much argument is found on the question whether in the particular case some consideration could be found for the agreement, or as Lord Ellenborough puts it, some "possibility of benefit" to the creditor. The cases are very numerous. 1 Cyc. 319-322; 1 Am. Eng. Enc. Law 415, 428; notes in 100 Am. St. Rep. 428-447, 64 Am. Dec. 138, 20 L.R.A. 785, 1 E. R. C. 368-405, 1 Sm. L. C. 146; Jaffray v. Davis,
But the courts, while following the dicta, "have rarely failed, upon any recurrence of the question, to criticise and condemn its reasonableness, justice, fairness, or honesty." Jaffray v. Davis, supra. Alderson, B, in Sibree v. Tripp, 15 M. W. 23, 38, says, after stating the rule: "The courts might very well have held the contrary, and have left the matter to the agreement of the parties"; while Lord Selborne, in Foakes v. Beer, 9 App. Cas. 605, 613, says: "It might be (and indeed I think it would be) an improvement in our law, if a release or acquittance of the whole debt, on payment of any sum which the creditor might be content to receive by way accord and satisfaction (though less than the whole) were held to be generally binding, though not under seal." In the same case *367
the history of the rule is given by Lord Blackburn, who, while yielding to the opinion of his associates as to the weight of authority, says (pp. 617, 622): "And, notwithstanding the very high authority of Lord Coke, I think it is not the fact that to accept prompt payment of part only of a liquidated demand can never be more beneficial than to insist on payment of the whole. And if it be not the fact, it cannot be apparent to the judges. . . . What principally weighs with me in thinking that Lord Coke made a mistake of fact is my conviction that all men of business, whether merchants or tradesmen, do every day recognize and act on the ground that prompt payment of a part of their demand may be more beneficial to them than it would be to insist on their rights and enforce payment of the whole. Even where the debtor is perfectly solvent, and sure to pay at last, this often is so." "To say that you may receive something which is not money, — a chattel, for instance, of inferior value, — but that you cannot receive money, is to my mind a very singular state of the law." Grove, J., in Goddard v. O'Brien, 9 Q. B. Div. 37, 39. In Johnston v. Brannan, 5 Johns. 268, 271, the principle under discussion is termed the "rather unreasonable rule of the old law "; while in Kellogg v. Richards, 14 Wend. 116, 119, it is said to be "technical and not very well supported by reason." Under the rule, "the creditor may violate with legal impunity his promise to his debtor, however freely and understandingly made. This rule . . . obviously may be urged in violation of good faith." Brooks v. White, 2 Met. 283, 285. "The principle of law . . . has been long established and is well settled; still very little reason can be given for it." Mitchell v. Wheaton,
But despite this criticism the rule has survived, in form at least. It is of course impossible to have examined all the cases; but so far as such examination has been carried, the number of cases in which the rule has been applied, and judgment rendered for the plaintiff, despite the agreement to discharge, is small in comparison with those in which the courts have been able to discover some circumstance, however trifling, which could be construed a technical legal consideration. The rule is not a statute, or even a rule of property. Its validity depends upon its consonance with reason. While the almost universal acceptance of it may commend it to the court with almost irresistible force, still it is open for examination as to whether it was originally sound and whether the weight of the authority upholding it is not diminished *368 or totally overthrown by the exceptions with which the rule cannot logically stand. Before reaching these questions, it is to be considered whether, if originally sound, the reason does not fail after the changes of three hundred years — a proposition for the affirmative of which there is authority.
"There was a time in the history of the law when, like everything else of that day, it was a system of metaphysics and logic, and when the case was decided without the slightest regard to its justice, solely on the technical accuracy of the pleaders on the several sides; defect of form in the plea was defect of right in him who used it. . . . Payment of debt and interest on a bond, the next day after it fell due, was no defence in a court of law; nay, it was no defence to prove payment without an acquittance before the day; nay, if you pleaded and proved a payment which was accepted in full of the debt, yet you failed unless your plea stated that you paid it in full, as well as that it was accepted in full, or perhaps because you pleaded it as a payment when you ought to have pleaded it as an accord and satisfaction. . . . It is not a century since it was solemnly decided, that if a creditor, finding his debtor in failing circumstances and being afraid of losing his debt, proposed to give him a discharge in full if he paid half the money, and the debtor borrowed the money and paid the one half on the day the bond fell due, and got an acquittance in terms as explicit as the English language could afford, yet if sued he must pay the rest of the debt; for it was impossible, say the court, payment of part could be a satisfaction of the whole; but if part was paid before the day, it was good satisfaction of the whole. . . . It avails little, then, to go back to the last century, or further, to cite cases in which a matter was of validity or effect according as it was couched in this or that form. Universally the law is, or ought to be, that the meaning or intention of the parties is, if it can be distinctly known, to have effect, unless the intention contravenes some well established principle of law." Milliken v. Brown, 1 Rawle 391, 397, 398. "The rule that payment of smaller sum is not a good accord and satisfaction for a larger one . . . was a deduction of strict scholastic logic, in the days when money was regarded as having a fixed and unchangeable value. Hence, a part payment of money due could never logically be treated, even by agreement, as equivalent to a payment of the whole. In the business methods of the present, it has come to be recognized that money, like other commodities, has fluctuations of value, not only in the general market, but also and more especially to the individual. To a merchant with a note coming due, $5,000 before three o'clock today, which will save his commercial credit, may well be worth more than $20,000 tomorrow, after his note has *369
gone to protest. . . . The rule was always regarded as more logical than just, and as coming very close to a contradiction of the general rule that the law will not measure the amount or value of the consideration if parties have agreed upon it." Ebert v. Jones, 206 Pa. St. 395, 398. See Lord Blackburn in Foakes v. Beer, supra. "The absurdity and unreasonableness of the rule seem to be generally conceded, but there also seems to remain a wavering, shadowy belief in the fact, falsely so called, that the agreement to accept, and the actual acceptance of, a lesser sum in the full satisfaction of a larger sum is without any consideration to support it, that is, that the new agreement confers no benefit upon the creditor. However it may have seemed three hundred years ago in England, when trade and commerce had not yet burst their swaddling bands, this day and in this country, where almost every man is in some way or other engaged in trade or commerce, it is as ridiculous as it is untrue to say that the payment of a lesser part of an originally greater debt, cash in hand, without vexation, cost, or delay, or the hazards of litigation in an effort to collect all, is not often — nay, generally — greatly to the benefit of the creditor." Clayton v. Clark,
In the application of the conclusion of Lord Ellenborough, that some possibility of benefit to the creditor would furnish a consideration for the agreement to discharge the balance, the courts have practically in many cases overruled the rule itself, while adhering to it in form. They proceed upon the assumption that the observation of Lord Coke, that the acceptance of any chattel in discharge of the debt was a satisfaction because the court could not know the value of the chattel, implied that anything except money, though notoriously of less value than the debt, would furnish a consideration for the agreement. Some of the grounds upon which a parol agreement for discharge has been held valid are, as said in a recent case, "interesting and amusing." Dreyfus v. Roberts, supra. Reference to them would only tend to display stronger light the disfavor with which the rule has been regarded, which sufficiently appears from the quotations already given. Many cases are discussed in Jaffray v. Davis,
But the cases which hold that the furnishing of security by mortgage, pledge, or notes of a third person for a part of the debt sufficient consideration for a discharge of the residue are without foundation, unless the payment of money is such a consideration. *370
These cases are numerous. Brooks v. White, 2 Met. 283; Guild v. Butler,
Difficulty has been found in technicalities of the plea of accord and satisfaction. Watson v. Elliott,
As has been seen, the absurdity of the results of the rule relied upon in this case has been commented upon in case after case; but persistence in error under the shadow of a great name still calls that right which is recognized to be wrong. Can the faulty structure stand, now that the foundation stone has been removed? The contention is that there is no consideration for the promised release or discharge, if less than the full amount of money is paid. In Kidder v. Blake,
Upon the theory that the detriment to the promisee which will furnish a consideration for a promise is any act or forbearance, Foakes v. Beer and the line of cases following its doctrine are exceptions contrary to principle; while whatever rule is adopted as to acts or forbearances that as matter of law cannot constitute detriment, numerous cases are found which must be recognized as exceptions. It is not necessary to consider further these abstract discussions of the subject. It must be and is conceded that the common definition of "consideration" found in the reports is, as above stated, in substance "a detriment incurred by the promisee or a benefit received by the promisor in exchange for the promise." If any act or forbearance by the promisee is a detriment which will sustain a promise, the sole question is of sustaining an exception in principle and following authority which "originated in misconception, is repugnant alike to judges and men of business, is not applied consistently to all the cases fairly within its scope, has been a source of highly artificial and technical distinctions, has been changed by statute in India and in ten of our states, and is likely to be generally superseded by similar legislation." 12, Harv. Law Rev. 531. Under the other definition of consideration, the doctrine can be upheld only upon the ground that as matter of law payment of a part of a debt before it is due cannot be beneficial to the creditor or a detriment to the debtor. Upon either view, we are met merely by an assumption of the judges which is unfounded in fact. Upon the question whether such payment is or may be beneficial to a creditor, sufficient has already been said. There is nothing new or modern in the proposition that it may be. In Reynolds v. Pinhowe (1595), Cro. Eliz. 429, the court said of a payment to the creditor, "it is a benefit to him to have it without suit or charge." "Payment without suit or trouble of that which is due is a good consideration." Johnson v. Astell (1667), 1 Lev. 198. These and other like expressions, cited in 12 Harv. Law Rev. 523, show that the opinions of the modern judges before quoted, that payment before it can be compelled may be beneficial to the creditor, are not new discoveries.
Nor if detriment to the promisee is to be taken as the sole definition of consideration, is the conclusion that the present parting with money is no detriment defensible, judged by the fact and the practice of business men. When the parties have made a contract and agreed on the consideration, — the immediate payment of a sum of money, — it is the refinement of logic to say that such payment is no detriment, or to say, as does Alderson, B. in Sibree v. Tripp, 15M. W. 23, 37, "it is not one bargain but two; namely, *374
payment of part, and an agreement without consideration to give up the residue." Such a statement is generally untrue. If A pays B $50 on a $100 debt, and then requests B to release him from the residue, there are two contracts if B agrees, and no consideration for the second; but such is not the transaction in fact, when A pays today $50 in consideration of B's agreement to discharge the whole debt. But, it is said, A is legally bound to pay B the $50; and as A only does what he is legally bound to do, there is no consideration. But the confusion arises from a failure to distinguish between legal and moral obligations. One may be morally bound to do precisely in terms as he agrees; but he is legally bound to do, as a practical proposition, whatever the theory may be, only what he can be compelled by law to do. The common law does not compel men to do as they agree. It gives damages for the failure to perform legal or contractual duties, but except in a few instances only can the specific performance of the contract be enforced. If A owes B a promissory note, no form of action is known by which B can compel A to pay it when due. If A does not pay as promised, in an action of assumpsit B can recover damages because of the breach of A's promise. Since the abolition of imprisonment for debt, the law does not take any steps to compel A to pay the damages. A's property, if he has any subject to execution, the law will seize and apply on B's damages. So that the most that A, who owes B a note, can be legally compelled to do is to suffer his property to be applied to pay B's damages. As to permit this is all A can be compelled to do, it is all that he is legally bound to do. The law does not prohibit his breach of his contract, but leaves him free to break it if he chooses, giving the other party the remedy of damages. Chellis v. Grimes,
Harriman v. Harriman, 12 Gray 341, decided in 1859, was a suit on a judgment for $140.03 recovered in 1839. The defendant was then poor and unable to pay, and the plaintiff told him if he would raise and pay $20 he would receive the same in full satisfaction of the judgment. The defendant borrowed and collected $20 and paid it to the plaintiff, who accepted it in full settlement and satisfaction of the judgment, and gave the defendant a receipt in full of all demands. If the defendant was poor and unable to pay, it is to be inferred nothing could be collected on the judgment. As a business proposition, the question for the plaintiff would seem to have been whether it was more beneficial for him to accept what the defendant could then raise and pay, in discharge of the judgment, or to wait for an increase in the defendant's financial resources. There seems no reason why the plaintiff should not have been permitted to decide this question, or why the receipt of money which the defendant could not then be compelled to pay, and which the plaintiff could not obtain without the defendant's consent, should not constitute a sufficient consideration for the agreement under which the defendant was induced to part with his money. But it was held to be well settled that the discharge was invalid for want of consideration. But it is now held elsewhere that acceptance of part payment from an insolvent or embarrassed debtor in full satisfaction of the claim is founded on a sufficient consideration (Engbretson v. Seiberling,
The law does not measure the adequacy of the consideration upon which the parties have agreed. Wald's Poll. Cont. 193; Lang. Cont, s. 55. If a payment which the debtor cannot be compelled to make because of lack of property furnishes a consideration, present payment which he cannot be compelled to make because of lack of judicial machinery to effect such result must be *376 equally efficacious. In the notes to Cumber v. Wane (1 Stra. 426), 1 Sm. L. C. (7th Am. ed.) 595, 610, it is doubted "whether the maxim that a smaller sum cannot be a satisfaction of a larger debt could apply to anything but a bond; . . . technically, it would be very difficult to make it apply to simple contracts. But as a principle of evidence, this rule, which requires for the substantiation of such agreements either a surrender of the instrument or a legal release, is a just, wise, and convenient rule, so great is the danger of fraud and mistake." This might have been a sound reason for a rule of evidence applying in all cases of discharge claimed by anything but full performance. But a payment of less before the day, or in another place at the day, or by a chattel, is not a discharge unless so agreed; and the necessity of the rule of evidence is as strong in the one case as in the other. No such rule has been applied, nor does it appear to have been attempted to support the maxim on this ground in the adjudged cases. The whole matter resolves itself into one of statement. If A holds B's note for $100, there is no reason in law or morals why he may not sell it to C for $50, or to B. An agreement by A to sell to B B's note for any sum less than there is due upon it is open to no objection arising from the intricacies of the plea of accord and satisfaction, or of any theory of consideration. Lang. Cont., s. 88.
The facts in the present case are not fully reported, but enough appears to justify the suspicion that the case may be within some of the exceptions. It is at least fairly inferable that the defendant was insolvent and had no other property except that covered by the plaintiff's mortgage, upon which another mortgage had precedence. Wakefield could recover nothing out of the property without paying the first mortgage. The defendant was under no obligation to sell or assent to a sale of the Enfield property; and if her consent to such sale was part of the agreement, there was a sufficient consideration under all the cases. Wakefield could have sold his second mortgage to the defendant for such sum as he saw fit; and the fact that the sum would not have equaled the amount due on the mortgage would not have invalidated the contract. Wakefield lived some six years after these transactions. There is no suggestion that he had any purpose except to be bound by the contract. His executor brings the suit; and the contention is, that because the parties regarded the transaction as payment or discharge instead of a sale, or because Wakefield neglected to deliver the note to the defendant as it has been suggested in argument he agreed to do (Draper v. Hitt,
No better guide for the determination of the rights of the parties in a contract can be discovered than their purpose and intention in making it. That having been ascertained, a sufficient reason for defeating such purpose is not found in the misinterpretation and misunderstanding of the language of a great jurist of the seventeenth century, however long continued. The rule that the payment of a less sum can never sustain an agreement to discharge a greater, because without consideration, however well supported by the authorities, is contrary to the fact at the present time, whatever the fact was when the rule originated, is based upon misconception, is not founded in reason, and cannot be followed without abandoning the greater principle that reason is the life of the law. In the words of the court in Clayton v. Clark,
While there was authority for the instruction finally given the jury, the discussion establishes that the instruction given and the direction of a verdict were erroneous. The verdict is set aside and a new trial granted.
Exceptions sustained.
CHASE, J. dissented: the others concurred. *378