160 P. 283 | Utah | 1916
On September 3, 1915, the plaintiffs, Ralph Hirsh and Solomon Dryfoos, copartners doing business in Philadelphia, Pa., commenced an action in the District Court of Weber County by serving summons on the defendant, a corporation doing business at Ogden, Utah, to recover upon an account for goods sold and delivered by the plaintiffs to the defendant “between July 1, 1914, and June 21, 1915,” amounting to $326.40, for which sum, with legal interest from June 21, 1915, plaintiffs demand judgment. The defendant appeared in the action and answered as follows:
“Admits the allegations of paragraphs numbered 1 and 2, and that portion of paragraph 3, alleging the sale and delivery of said goods, but denies that said sum of $326.40 has not been paid, but alleges that before the commencement of this action it tendered to the plaintiffs the full amount to which they were entitled and all that the plaintiffs asked at said time, and the said defendant now deposits in court the amount so tendered. That said tender was made in writing in cheek in the words and figures following, to wit: ‘Ogden Furniture & Carpet Company. No. 593. Ogden, Utah, 8 — 26, 1915. Pay to the order of Hirsh & Dryfoos, $326.40, three hundred twenty-six dollars, forty cents. To First National Bank, Ogden, Utah. Ogden Furniture & Carpet Co., B. F. Hundley, Manager.’ That at said time there was and ever since has been and now is sufficient funds in said bank to pay said check.”
“That at Ogden City, Utah, between July 1, 1914, and June 21, 1915, the plaintiffs, at the special instance and re-, quest of the defendant, sold and delivered to the defendant which were then and there received and accepted by the defendant from the plaintiffs certain goods, wares and merchandise of the fair and reasonable value of $326.40, which said amount last aforesaid became due and payable on June 21, 1915, that no part of said sum has been paid and the whole • thereof is now due and owing from the defendant to the plaintiffs. That the defendant at Ogden City, Utah, at 11 o’clock p. m., on August 31, 1915, deposited in the United States mail addressed to the plaintiffs at Philadelphia in the state of Pennsylvania, the defendant’s eheck No. 593, drawn on the First National Bank of Ogden, Utah, dated Ogden, Utah, August 26, 1915, payable to the plaintiffs for the sum of $326.40. That said eheck aforesaid was delivered in due course of mail to the plaintiffs at Philadelphia, in the state of Pennsylvania on September 7, 1915. That plaintiffs thereupon returned said check to the defendant at Ogden, Utah, on September 8, 1915. That said check aforesaid is the same check pleaded in defendant’s answer and with said answer deposited with the clerk of this court and offered in evidence upon the. trial hereof. That on August 26, 1915, and ever since said date the defendant had sufficient funds in said First National Bank' of Ogden wherewith to pay said check. That this action was commenced by the service of summons herein upon the defendant at Ogden City, Utah, on September 3, 1915. ’ ’
. Judgment was entered accordingly in favor of plaintiffs for $340.50, which included legal interest from June 21, 1915,. to the date of judgment, January 7, 1916, and for $16.90 costs. The defendant appeals.
Comp. Laws 1907, Section 3487, reads as follows:
That “the person to whom the tender is made must at the time specify any objection he may have to the money, instrument, or property, or he must he deemed to have waived it; and, if the objection he to the amount of money, the terms of the instrument, or the amount or hind of property, he must specify the amount, terms, or hind which he requires, or he precluded from objecting afterward.”
Under the findings as made by the court, supplemented by the evidence offered by the defendant, the situation of the parties to this action in effect is this: In August, 1915, the defendant was indebted to plaintiffs on account for goods sold and delivered by them in the sum of $326.40; that some time during that month plaintiffs wrote the defendant that they would draw upon it for said amount and expressed the hope that defendant would honor the draft; that on August 26th defendant’s manager made a check for the amount aforesaid in favor of plaintiffs drawn upon a bank at Ogden, Utah, in which the defendant had sufficient funds to pay the check when presented, and on the 31st day of August inclosed and mailed the check in a letter addressed to plaintiffs at their place of business in Philadelphia. The check was made and mailed pursuant to the plaintiffs’ letter informing defendant that they had drawn on it for the amount due from it upon the account. On September 2d, and before the letter and cheek had reached plaintiffs, their attorney, who was authorized to collect the account, went to the defendant’s place of business and presented the draft referred to by the plaintiffs and demanded payment thereof. The attorney was then informed that the defendant’s manager had paid the account by having mailed to plaintiffs a check covering the amount of the draft. No further demand was made on the defendant, nor was any claim made for interest, and nothing was said regarding the sufficiency or insufficiency of the check. Indeed, no objection of any kind was ever interposed. Now, let us assume that when the attorney for plaintiffs called on the defendant’s manager on September 2d and demanded payment of the draft which was drawn for $326.40, the precise amount of the account, the manager had tendered the attorney a check drawn on a local bank in which were ample funds to pay it for the amount of the draft and the attorney had made no objections to the check whatever, but had thereafter commenced an action upon the account, would not defendant’s plea of tender
“When, in an action for the recovery of money only, the defendant alleges in his answer that before the commencement of the action he tendered to the plaintiff the full amount to which he was entitled, and thereupon deposits in court, for the plaintiff, the amount so tendered, and the allegation he found to he true, the plaintiff cannot recover costs, hut must pay the costs to the defendant.”
The general rule no doubt is, that where a tender is made in a law case which, if accepted, is intended to operate as pay
We need only add in conclusion that the evidence offered by defendant’s counsel was all proper to show the real transaction between the parties, and was proper upon the question of waiver. The court, therefore, erred in excluding it.
It follows that the judgment should be, and it accordingly is, reversed, at respondent’s costs.