75 F. 852 | 6th Cir. | 1896
after stating the facts as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
The finding in favor of the plaintiff below was a finding which involved mixed questions of law and fact, and it was general in its form. It is well settled that in such a case nothing is open to review in this court except the rulings of the trial court in the progress of the trial, and that such rulings do not include the general finding of the circuit court, which performs the office and has the effect of a verdict of a jury; that is to say, it is conclusive as to the facts found. The strictness with which this rule is enforced is clearly set forth in the opinion of Judge Burton speaking for this court in Insurance Co. v. Hamilton, 22 U. S. App. 386, 11 C. C. A. 42, and 63 Fed. 93, where all the decisions of the supreme court upon the subject are fully reviewed. This practice in the federal courts of appeal differs from that in the state courts of this circuit where it is open to counsel on writ of error by exception to a general finding to raise the question in the appellate court of the sufficiency of the evidence as a matter of law to sustain such finding. We fear that this difference in the practice is not sufficiently well known to counsel, and we think that their attention should be especially directed to the very technical and severe rule of the federal appellate courts in this respect. When a party in the circuit court waives a jury, and agrees to submit his case to the court, it must be done in writing; and if he wishes to raise any question of law upon the merits in the court above he should request special find
The first assignment of error is based on the. refusal of court to allow the defendant below, after he had stated that he was insolvent at the time he made the agreement, to state whai the amount of his debts was, and that of his liabilities. It was possibly relevant to show that Humphreys was insolvent to explain the position of the parties in making the agreement, but we think the extent of his insolvency was a circumstance altogether too remote to have any bearing on the issues in the case.
The second and third assignments of error were based on the refusal of the court to allow Humphreys to testify that he had procured the money with which to pay the credits on the compromise notes from his brother and his mother, and that he had'agreed to repay them for these advances. It is claimed that these facts were important, as tending to show that Humphreys had changed his position in making the payments. We do not think that the claim is tenable. It is entirely immaterial where or how he procured the money with which to make the payments. The payment itself was a sufficient change of position to sustain an estoppel, if otherwise it could be sustained; and the fact that in making such payments he borrowed the money from some one else does not add to the force of the estoppel.
In Haggerty v. Simpson, 1 E. D. Smith, 67, a creditor had judgment, and it was agreed that, if certain compromise notes secured by indorsement were paid as they became due, satisfaction of the judgment would be acknowledged; and that, if either of the notes should not be paid at maturity, the partial payments on the notes should
“I am not aware of any principle of law or equity upon which it can bo reasonably urged that the plaintiffs were not at full liberty to treat the privilege theretofore enjoyed by the defendant as at an end, and no precedent: or authority in a like case is furnished us for such a claim. The agreement was a liberal one towards the defendant, and its strict enforcement is in no sense penal. He owed the whole debt. In law and in equity he still owes the whole debt, save the payments already made. * * * The defendant suffers no punishment. At most, he only fails to obtain an advantage for which he has paid nothing, which he was not bound to pay independent of the agreement. Here is no hardship nor oppression to be relieved against. * " * All he pays goes in extinguishment of his debt, and if he fails to receive the release which he anticipated it is his own fault. The agreement is still an act of liberality, and not of justice; and if the opportunity to avail himself of the plaintiffs’ liberality is gone, they are, nevertheless, just, though they collect the whole balance due. The condition on which they agreed to be generous is broken, and justice is all he can ask. Besides, the ground on which courts of equity interfere to relieve against forfeitures is not that, if such interference be withheld, the anticipated profits of an agreement will not be realized. But it is that otherwise the party will suffer an unconscionable loss. Courts interfere to prevent oppression, which it is against equity and good conscience to allow, and not to restrain what, independent of the broken contract, is just in itself.”
In Simmons v. Clark, 50 Ill. 96, a judgment creditor and his debtor made an agreement by -which the debtor agreed to pay two compromise notes and the creditor agreed to release the judgment, which was for a much larger amount, on the payment of those notes. The court held that the agreement, properly construed, was that the payment of the notes was to operate as a satisfaction of the judgment. The debtor made partial payments upon the notes, and the creditor, after the maturity of tlie notes, received further payments; but the court hold that the acceptance of those further payments did not affect his right to enforce the collection of Ms judgment. The supreme court of Illinois treated the question, as we do, as one of accord and satisfaction. It is well settled that an agreement by a creditor to receive something different from that which is owing in full settlement of his claim does not make a good plea in bar unless the agreement has been fully performed. Clifton v. Litchfield, 106 Mass. 31; Kromer v. Heim, 75 N. Y. 574; Hawley v. Foote, 19 Wend. 516; Hall v. Flockton, 16 Q. B. 1039; Bayley v. Homan, 3 Bing. N. C. 920; Wray v. Milestone, 5 Mees. & W. 21; Ex parte Gilbey, 8 Ch. Div. 248; Clarke v. White, 12 Pet. 178; In re Hatton, 7 Ch. App. 726; Early v. Rogers, 16 How. 599; U. S. v. Clarke, Fed. Cas. No. 14,812.
The last assignment of error which we deem it necessary to notice is the exception based on the introduction of (lie evidence of Mr. Paxton with reference to the Brown county suit, brought by the Third National Bank against the Boyd Manufacturing Company, the maker
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed, with costs.
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