166 A. 849 | Pa. | 1933
Argued March 24, 1933. Appellant and appellees were partners conducting a securities brokerage business under the firm name of S. M. Vockel Co. Appellant determined to retire from the partnership, and his interest therein was fixed at $601000. The remaining partners wrote him a letter on December 10, 1929, wherein they stated that his interest in the business as previously determined was $60,000, which they agreed therein to pay in installments: $30,000 on January 10, 1930; $15,000 on February 10, 1930, and $15,000 on March 10, 1930, with interest at 6% on delayed payments. This arrangement was accepted by appellant. On January 10, 1930, appellees paid appellant $37,483.38 by check. Accompanying the cheek was a letter stating: "Because of certain facts that have arisen since our previous letter, the enclosed check for Thirty-Seven Thousand Four Hundred Eighty-Three Dollars and Thirty-eight Cents ($37,483.38) is tendered in full and final payment, including interest to date at 6% per annum."
Upon receipt, appellant indorsed the check and received payment thereon. Thereafter he commenced this action to recover the difference ($22,516.22) with interest, between the amount of the check and $60,000, the amount originally agreed upon as the value of his partnership interest. The defense was that the payment to appellant constituted an accord and satisfaction. The jury returned a verdict for appellees which the court below refused to disturb. This appeal followed.
Appellant urges that there can lie no accord and satisfaction where a liquidated debt is due, and consequently, where there is no bona fide dispute as to the amount of *350
the indebtedness. With this proposition we are in accord, but it does not conflict with the adjudication below. By the letter of December 10, 1929, a fixed sum was agreed to be paid appellant. Later, as appears from testimony concerning a conversation with appellant had by Bernard, one of appellees, and from other testimony concerning appellant's conduct in removing from appellees' office valuable records of listed customers, a part of appellees' assets, which it was charged appellant copied, and from the letter accompanying the check for $37,483.38, a claim against appellant arose in appellees. This claim was then asserted, thus raising a dispute neither frivolous nor insubstantial. The amount then due between the parties was not certain nor fixed, assuredly. The fact that a claim is, at one time, liquidated does not preclude a bona tide dispute as to the amount due arising at a later time as the result of offsets accruing. The fixed amount may thereupon become most indefinite and uncertain by reason of the claimed deductions. A sum once liquidated is not thereafter and forever unassailable: Brockley v. Brockley,
In this state of affairs the firm "tendered" appellant its check for $37,483.38, and stated in the letter of enclosure that this was "in full and final payment." The letter opened with the sentence:
"Enclosed please find statement of your interest in ourfirm taken from the books as of Dec. 31st, 1929."
The statement referred to computed the value of appellant's interest having in view this off set, and the letter enclosed a check for an amount they believed to be due, and asserted that the check was in full payment — full payment "of your interest in our firm," obviously.
Appellant states that there must be an intention not only on the part of the debtor, but on the part of the creditor, to compromise the dispute in order to effect an *351
accord and satisfaction. This court has consistently reiterated the principle: Foy v. Lilley Coal Coke Co.,
The above discussion disposes of the question as to the refusal of judgment non obstante veredicto. The decision on the motion for a new trial being within the discretion of the court below, we will not review it unless there has been an abuse of that discretion. There has been none in this case.
Judgment affirmed.