101 S.E. 11 | N.C. | 1919
The action was brought to recover the sum of $2,016.03, less $800, alleged to be due the plaintiff for work and labor done and materials furnished in the construction of a hotel building, at Spartanburg, S.C., the contractors, Longest Tessier, having sublet a part of their contract, viz., the plastering, to the plaintiff. Longest Tessier failed in business, and were adjudged bankrupts on 25 May, 1917. They were to furnish all labor and material required to perform the contract, as to furnishing labor and material, and, in order to secure their compliance therewith, they gave the usual bond with the defendant as surety. The parties proposed to settle their controversy and met for the purpose, and entered into a settlement, after which the $800 was paid.
The plaintiff further alleged:
1. That he was employed by the said Longest Tessier Company to do the plastering in said hotel building, and furnish labor and material therefore, and that, under said contract of employment, he did furnish material and labor, and did plaster said hotel, to the amount of $13,555.53, upon which amount there has been paid $11,539.50, leaving a balance due upon said contract for labor done and material furnished prior to the next payment hereinafter referred to of $2,016.03.
2. On or about 7 November, 1917, the defendant stated and represented to the plaintiff that the said sum of $2,016.03 due, as aforesaid, upon the Spartanburg contract, was, as a matter of fact, due to the plaintiff upon a contract entered into between the plaintiff and Longest Tessier Company to erect a building at Radford, Va., and the defendant, the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company, having access to said books, which plaintiff did not have, *541 represented to the plaintiff that the books of Longest Tessier Company showed that the statements made, as aforesaid, were true, and said defendant stated and represented to plaintiff that not more than $800 was due to him on the Spartanburg contract, and the balance was due on the Radford contract, and defendant offered to pay the plaintiff $800 if he would sign a receipt in full for all amounts due upon the Spartanburg contract, representing at the time that this was all that was due the plaintiff upon said contract; that the plaintiff thereupon, relying upon said representation, gave to the said defendant a receipt in full for all amounts due the (505) plaintiff on account of the Spartanburg contract, and also assigned to the defendant all his claim for compensation for the work done under the Spartanburg contract.
3. That the said settlement was obtained from the plaintiff either by mutual mistake or by false and fraudulent representations, and the plaintiff asks that the same be set aside and held for naught, but the plaintiff admits that the said defendant is entitled to an additional credit for the said sum of $800 received by him, as aforesaid, leaving as the amount due under said contract from the defendants $1,216.03.
The defendant denied the material allegations of the complaint, especially denying that $2,016.03 was due on the Spartanburg contract, and averred that, according to the books of Longest Tessier, the sum of only $639.19 was due thereon. It admitted payment of the $800, and the execution of the receipt by plaintiff and the assignment of his claim to the defendant. Defendant, by separate allegations, goes much into detail as to the occurrences during the conference had for a settlement, which we need not set out here. The jury found that there was a settlement, which was brought about by mutual mistake.
Judgment for the plaintiff, and appeal by defendant. after stating the facts as above: The gist of the controversy is that, as plaintiff alleges and contends, the settlement, receipt, and assignment were obtained, if not only by fraud, then by mutual mistake of the parties. The issue as to the fraud was withdrawn, leaving only the issues as to the settlement, the mutual mistake and the damages. There was ample evidence to support the verdict, and the motion for a nonsuit was properly overruled. *542
Two questions remain for consideration, first, whether the judge should have given a different instruction in regard to the quantum or degree of proof, and instead of charging that the burden was upon the plaintiff to satisfy the jury of the mutual mistake by a preponderance of the evidence, he should have told them that it must be done by clear, strong, and convincing proof. This is a misconception of the nature of the action and the issue. The plaintiff did not seek to reform or correct the settlement, but to set it aside entirely, so that the parties would be placed in statu quo, and in the latter case only a preponderance of the evidence is required. The distinction is based upon a sound reason. There is a difference between cancellation or rescission and reformation of an instrument. A noted textwriter says that courts of equity do not grant the high (506) remedy of reformation upon a probability, or even upon a mere preponderance of evidence, but only upon a certainty of error. Pomeroy on Eq. Jur., sec. 859. It is not so with us in regard to cancellation or rescission (Perry v. Ins. Co.,
Coming to the other question, we do not see why the parties could not agree upon, or establish a custom of dealing with each other, as to the application of the payments made by the contractors to the subcontractor — the plaintiff.
As to the four checks, aggregating $1,050, on each of which was the entry, "Spartanburg Contr." or "Spartanburg Hotel," indicating some connection between them and the Spartanburg contract, the evidence is that there was an agreement from the first between the contractors, Long
Tessier, and their subcontractor, William Long, that, without regard to any such entries, the payee in the checks might apply their proceeds, when collected, to any one of the accounts, there being several, the Spartanburg, the Radford, and others, or to general account, and the question as to how the application should be made to one account or another was not to be finally determined, until the settlement, and that this agreement and custom were in force at the time these checks were given. This, therefore, is not the ordinary case of a check being given, it being expressed on its face to be in full settlement, or that it should be applied to a particular account without more. Kerr v. Saunders,
Our conclusion is:
First. That the charge as to the burden and degree of proof was correct, for the plaintiff did not seek to correct the settlement, but to set aside or cancel it.
Second. That the instruction in regard to the checks was without any error, as there was some evidence of authority in the plaintiff to make the application as he did, it having been done in accordance with the usual manner of conducting the business, and, under an agreement, giving him such power, which was made before the money was paid by the contractors to him. *546
Before taking leave of the case, we deem it proper and just to state that the evidence fully satisfies us there was absolutely no ground upon which to base an allegation of fraud or bad faith on the part of defendants' attorney, but, on the contrary, it appears very clearly to us that he acted in perfect good faith, and with the utmost frankness, and that the error resulted from the bookkeeping of the contractors, which misled him as to the true balance due on the Spartanburg contract. If the checks had been credited on that account, the balance, as stated by him, would have been approximately correct.
No error.
Cited: Walker v. Burt,