98 P. 883 | Mont. | 1909
delivered the opinion of the court. \
In this action the plaintiff seeks to surcharge an account stated between himself and defendant and to recover an additional amount thereon, after payment and discharge of the balance found, for error and mistake not known to the plaintiff at the time of the settlement and receipt of payment. The transaction out of which the controversy grew may be stated briefly as follows^ During the year 1906, the plaintiff entered into a written contract with the defendant to sell and deliver to it his entire crop of spring club wheat raised during that year, except a sufficient amount retained for seed for the following year, at the price of fifty-two cents per bushel. The plaintiff began to make delivery on November 5 and completed it on December 5. Upon the delivery of each lot it was weighed by the defendant’s agent in the presence of plaintiff or his teamster, triplicate scale tickets or receipts showing the weight being made out, one for plaintiff, and the others for use by defendant in keeping
“Belgrade, Mont. Dec. 5, 1906.
Mr. Joe Johnson Cheek No. 2597
Voucher No. “
Invoice Date Description
13 01 50 2,603% bu. Sp. Club 52e....................$1,353.82
52 06
Less contra ae................................849.00
Cheek ........................................504.82
Charge J. J.
Correct D. B. D.
Deceived of Gallatin Valley Milling Co. Dive hundred four & 82-100 Dollars, in full payment for above account.
Dated Dee. 5, 1906. JOS. JOHNSON.”
It is alleged as the ground of the action: That the amount shown by the receipts to have been delivered was incorrect and erroneous, in that in fact plaintiff had actually delivered 3,463, instead of 2,603%, bushels, and that therefore there was a shortage, to the disadvantage of plaintiff, of 859% bushels by error in defendant’s account; that this error was due to the “defective, false and erroneous weighing of said grain by defendant and its agents,” and resulted in showing a balance of $504.82 due plaintiff, instead of $951.76, the correct balance; and that the error was not discovered by plaintiff until in March, 1907, whereupon he, through his attorneys, pointed it out to the defendant and requested it to make the correction and pay to plaintiff the amount still due, and that the request was. denied. Judgment is demanded for $446.94.
The court found: That the gross amount of the crop was 3,710 bushels; that plaintiff delivered to defendant 3,331 bushels, being the gross crop less the amount retained for seed, fixed at 267 bushels, and 112 bushels deducted for shrinkage in weight from drying and cleaning; that plaintiff at the time of the settlement, on December 5, 1906, was entitled to credit for this number of bushels at fifty-two cents, the contract price, making the correct balance due him, after deducting $849 for advances, $883.30; that the error in the account resulting in credit to the plaintiff of 2,603%, instead of 3,331 bushels, was due to the “defective, false, and erroneous weighing of said grain by defendant and its agents” during the time of delivery; that at the time of the settlement plaintiff was ignorant of the facts and did not discover them until after he had receipted the account in full; and that, as soon as he did discover the error, he made demand upon defendant for its correction, but the request was denied. Judgment was rendered and entered for plaintiff for the sum of $378.30, with interest at the legal rate from December 5, 1906. Defendant has appealed from the judgment and an order denying its motion for a new trial.
Counsel contend that the judgment and order should be reversed, because the evidence is insufficient to sustain the findings, (1) in that it does not appear therefrom that there was- error or mistake in the weights shown by defendant’s account, and (2)
A definition of what constitutes an “account stated” is not necessary to a decision of the questions here presented. It is. alleged by plaintiff, and admitted by defendant, that the result of the meeting between them on December 5, 1906, was an ascertainment of the balance due from defendant upon a statement of their accounts and its discharge thereof by payment. We think, however, that the result was an account stated, within the rule of the decisions of this court in Martin v. Heinze, 31 Mont. 68, 77 Pac. 427, Noyes v. Young, 32 Mont. 226, 79 Pac. 1063, and Dorais v. Doll, 33 Mont. 314, 83 Pac. 884, as well as within the general definition.laid down in 1 Cyc., at page 364, as.follows: “In general terms, where an account is rendered by one person to another, showing a balance due from the one to the other, and the indebtedness thus expressed is acknowledged to be due by the person against whom the balance appears, or where parties having previous transactions agree upon a definite balance as due from one to the other, this will constitute an account stated.”
The rules - of law applicable to such eases as the present, wherein one of the parties seeks to avoid the settlement and reopen the account, are simple and of easy application. The balance ascertained from a statement of accounts was formerly held to be the result of so deliberate an act by the parties as to preclude an examination into the items for the purpose of correcting errors or mistakes; but this rule has been so far relaxed that, while the promise to pay the ascertained balance is in effect a new promise, the settlement being regarded as the consideration for it, the settlement does not create an estoppel, but furnishes a strong prima facie presumption that the result is correct. (Martin v. Heinze, supra; 1 Cyc. 451; Holmes v. De Camp,. 1 Johns. (N. Y.) 34, 3 Am. Dec. 293; Gillett v. Chavez, 12 N. M. 353, 78 Pac. 68; Ware v. Manning, 86 Ala. 238, 5 South. 682;
In Chappedelaine v. Dechenaux, supra, it was said: “No practice could be more dangerous than that of opening accounts which the parties themselves have adjusted, on suggestion supported by doubtful or by only probable testimony.” In Klauber v. Wright, the court, after stating that the evidence to surcharge an account should be clear and satisfactory, quoted with approval from the earlier case of Martin v. Beckwith, 4 Wis. 220, as follows: “Principle and public policy alike require that, when parties, after a full and fair opportunity of examining and deciding upon their mutual accounts, have adjusted and settled them, the settlement should be conclusive. Any other rule would be dangerous and oppressive, and often work the greatest injustice. ’ ’ In Linville v. State, it was said: ‘ ‘ The law favors the settlement of business transactions by the parties, and when they have made such settlements they will be held bound thereby, in the absence of fraud, mistake or other illegality. A voluntary settlement of accounts between parties, affords a presumption that all items properly chargeable at the time were included. The presumption is not conclusive, but
Applying these rules to the evidence presented by the record, we are constrained to hold that it does not justify the findings of the district court. Counsel for respondent frankly stated during the argument that they did not allege or insist that the evidence established fraud on the part of the defendant. They rest their argument in support of the findings solely upon the evidence which, they insist, tends to show inaccuracy in the scales used by the defendant’s agent in weighing the wheat as it was delivered. The evidence on this point is substantially the following: At the time the wheat was threshed, the machine measurement showed 3,730 bushels. Out of this the plaintiff weighed and retained 266% bushels. According to his testimony, the scales used by him in weighing this amount fell a half bushel short in a hundred. After taking out 266% bushels weighed in this way, he delivered the entire balance to defendant. During the delivery he concluded that something was wrong with the defendant’s scales, because, judging from the rapidity at which the bulk in his bin in which the wheat had
It is apparent from this evidence, we think, that the plaintiff failed to meet the burden cast upon him by the rules of law applicable. The only evidence offered of any substantial value, tending to show that he was not paid for all the wheat actually delivered after allowing for shrinkage, is the thresher measurement. The bin measurement is of little value or corroborative force, because it was not based upon actual measurement of the space filled by the wheat, but upon the measurement of two of its dimensions and plaintiff’s recollection, after the expiration of a year’s time, of the other. The county scale weight of the last lot delivered is of no value for purposes of comparison. Even if the weights of all the separate lots had been taken in the same way, in the absence of some evidence tending to show that they had been correctly taken, the court was left to guess as to whether or not such was the case. There was also some question as to the correctness of the machine measurement, for the scale was shown to have been out of order on a previous occasion to such an extent as to make a substantial overmeasurement, and though it appears to have been adjusted, yet, even so, owing to irregularity in the running of the machine, it would at times give overweight to a substantial degree. There was no evidence introduced tending to exclude the idea that there were not other causes of loss to the plaintiff, after making all due allowance for natural shrinkage because of moisture and from cleaning. Weighing this evidence against the evidence of the persons in charge of defendant’s scales, we do not think error or mistake is made to appear with sufficient clearness to justify a reopening of the account; but, assuming that the evidence is sufficient to establish substantial error in the weights furnished by defendant’s agent, the settlement was made and the account receipted with full knowledge on the part of the plaintiff of all the facts submitted at the' trial. There is no evidence that he was misled by any statement made as to any of them by any of defendant’s agents. Under the circumstances,
The judgment and order denying a new trial are reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to enter judgment for defendant.
Reversed and remanded.