1 N.Y.S. 814 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1888
The defendant gave three promissory notes to the plaintiff for ■one-half of the debt due him, which were accepted in full payment of the claim. They were secured by a mortgage on personal property of the defendant, executed by him, but which was not under seal. The rule established by Cumber v. 1 Wane, 1 Strange, 426, and in Pinnel's Case, 5 Coke 117, which has been the subject of numberless controversies, has been evaded by slight pretext, as one obnoxious to common sense, by the courts in England and in this ■country. In Foakes v. Beer, 9. App. Cas. 605, two of the noble lords who wrote opinions thought it would have been wiser and better if the resolution in Pinnel's Case had not been adopted, but thought the rule too old to be departed from. This view, while it displays devotion to ancient error, proclaims that the law is not a progressive science, and that once a rule always a rule, is still a governing principle. We have not yet' ingrafted this mode of perpetrating wrong upon our system, and it is to be hoped we never will. In the same case, but in an earlier stage of it, (Beer v. Foakes, 11 Q. B. Div. 221,) it was said of the rule, by Justice W atkin Williams; “Judges had long tried to escape from the doctrine which was a reproach to the law of England;” and this rested, no doubt, upon this absurdity, namely, that a larger could not be paid by a smaller sum, a figurative form of expression, shown to be so, for the reason that if the sum accepted in full payment were gi yen in the form of a note made or indorsed by another, or were represented by a chattel other than money, and of less value, it would bind the creditor. In the case of Bidder v. Bridges, 37 Ch. Div. 406, (reported April 2, 1888,) a check given by the plaintiff’s sollieitor for costs due from the former, for less than the sum, and accepted in full, was held to be an absolute payment, discharging the whole debt. Climber v. Wane and Pinnel's Case, and others kindred, were considered therein, and, indeed, the most recent of cases on the subject. It does not need a high order of intellectual strength to understand the utter impossibility of reconciling, in a spirit of justice, the recognition of a prejudicial difference between money and a chattel, leveled against the former, where the latter has the lesser value. The rule was in fact the result of a mathematical turn of mind in a judicial officer, who by force of habit or education was in close sympathy with the subtleties of special pleading, and its exquisite refinements, and exulted in them; in the application of which rights were often obliterated, and solemn compacts spurned for errors of form only. In modern days it was thought by some thac, from more enlightenment, the stride of intelligence, and a broader appreciation of right and duty, the rule would be rejected for its absurd conflct with the other and recognized mode of accomplishing the desired result, as suggested; but it has not been. Unhappily for the defendant herein, the point presented on his behalf was considered in Platts v. Walrath, Lalor, Supp. 59, and passed upon adversely to his defense, and that decision is quoted with approbation and reaffirmed in Keeler v. Salisbury, 33 N. Y. 648, where it was declared that a mortgage given by the debtor upon his own estate, to secure the payment of the lesser sum agreed upon, for full payment, would not take it out of the rule. If the security had been given outright, it was conceded that the accord and satisfaction would be complete; thus presérving and reasserting the difference between money and chattels, and reproclaiming the antique antagonism. As long as that case stands, the debtor obtains
Van Brunt, P. J., and Daniels, J. concurred,