Mills v. Wildman

18 Conn. 124 | Conn. | 1846

Stores, J.

Laying out of view the endorsement by Isaac Mills on the note in question of May 14th, 1824, the effect of which we do not consider it necessary to determine, and resting the case on the writing executed by him, on the 14th of October 1840, we are of opinion, that the report of the commissioners should be affirmed.

The appellants concede, that the promise made to the administrators of Wildman, and contained in the writing last-mentioned, is as effectual to revive the debt evidenced by the note, and to enable them to recover the amount due on it, as it would have been, if made to Wildman, in his life-time ; but they insist, first, that the terms of that promise are such that the administrators, in order to avail themselves of it, are required to show, that there had been a settlement between them and Mills, in his life-time, of all matters of indebtedness between him and the estate of Wildman, in which an agreed balance was found due from Mills to said estate ; and, sec*128ondly, that, if this was not necessary, the claim in the present case was not presented to the commissioners in such a manner that it could be legally allowed by them.

As the instrument in question contains an express promise, which excludes an implied one, the appellees, in order to recover, must rely exclusively upon such express promise: hence it is unnecessary to determine whether, if here were no express promise, the instrument contains any acknowledgment of indebtedness from which the law would raise an implied one ; and it is not claimed that there is in this instrument any denial of indebtedness which took away the effect of the express promise, if indeed any such denial would have that effect. The first question, therefore, is, upon the true construction of this express promise. In determining this, it is requisite to ascertain the intention of the parties, which must govern in this, as in the case of all other instruments. Looking at the subject matter of this writing, and the terms made use of in it, we think that its object cannot be mistaken, and that it was intended to obligate the maker of the note mentioned in it to pay any balance which should be due from him, on a fair adjustment of the accounts between him and the payee, irrespective of the circumstance whether that balance should be ascertained on a settlement which should take place of those accounts between the parties to that instrument, or in any other legal mode. The legal remedy on the note was either barred, or if, in consequence of some acknowledgment or promise not apparent upon it, it was preserved, it was in danger of being barred, by the statute of limitations; and the design of the writing was, to furnish evidence of a promise, which should revive or continue that remedy, but so, however, that when it should be paid or recovered, the maker should have the benefit of applying upon it any balance which might be due from the payee to the maker on other accounts. It was intended to furnish a legal remedy to the administrators of the payee on the note, for what should be justly due to the estate they represented, and, at the same time, to protect the maker against any further liability. In the absence of explicit language to evince, that it was intended by the parties that such remedy should attach only in the event of a settlement of accounts, which should thereafter take place, between the parties themselves, it would certainly be opposed to the *129ordinary rules of construing contracts, to hold the promise in the writing in question, to be thus conditional. The effect of sucha construction would be to make its enforcement entirely optional with the maker of the note; since it would be wholly defeated, by a refusal on his part to adjust the accounts between him and the payee ; and although it would be competent for him, by his agreement, to make the remedy against him conditional, it is altogether improbable to suppose, that the parties intended such a conditional liability, in the present case. The writing acknowledges the note to be a valid subsisting instrument, on which there is no full defence, unless indeed such a defence should grow out of an adjustment of the other matters of indebtedness between the parties to it. The object of the negotiation, which terminated in the execution of the writing, does not appear to have been to leave in question the validity of the note, but only the balance between the parties, on an adjustment of their other concerns. It would be an ample protection for the maker of the note to leave that balance to be ascertained in the ordinary tribunals of justice, if it could not be adjusted between the parties themselves; and it is much more rational to suppose, that when the parties had agreed upon the principle upon which the amount to be deemed due on the note should be ascertained, such amount should be left to be ascertained in the legal mode, than that a particular mode should be adopted, which might, at the option of one of the parties, prevent such ascertainment, and defeat the general object they had in view, the adjustment of all their concerns. It is not, moreover, presumable, that the administrators of the payee of the note would have relied on a promise, which could have been available only at the option of the maker, unless indeed the situation of the note was such that they could insist on no other, of which there is no evidence. And indeed, it is difficult to conceive an adequate motive why the maker should execute, or the administrators require, so formal an instrument, if it was designed to have no more efficacy than the appellants claim for it.

It is insisted, however, that the language of the writing fairly imports, that the accounts mentioned in it were to be adjusted only between the parties themselves, and that the maker of the note reserved the right of assenting to such adjustment, before *130he should be made liable : and that the phrase “ settlement of all accounts between me and the estate of Z. Wildman,” has here this meaning and effect. The term “ settlement ” in this instance, evidently means an adjustment or ascertainment of the balance subsequently mentioned in the writing, and which is the subject of the promise it contains. Used in this sense, it does not, either properly, or in common parlance, import, that such adjustment or ascertainment is to be made by the parties interested in it, rather than by others. Nothing is more usual than to refer the settlement or adjustment of accounts, as well as the determination of any other matter about which parties may differ, to third persons. The intention, in 1 his respect, must, therefore, be ascertained, by something else than the mere word itself; and it is incumbent on the appellants to show, by the context or some other circumstance, that it was used in such a restricted sense, as to denote that the act was to be done only by the parties to the instrument. In this we think they have not succeeded. The writing, as the sentence composing it is framed, speaks of the accounts existing between the maker of the note and the estate of the payee as being the,subject of the settlement, but not of the parties to the writing as the persons by whom such accounts are to be settled. Indeed, only one of those parties, the maker of the note, is mentioned in the writing. We are of opinion, therefore, that the construction of it is, that Mills would pay on the note the balance which would remain, after deducting what was due to him from Wildman, on all other accounts, from the sum due on the notes.

That such a promise will take the claim out of the operation of the statute of limitations, and that in an action to re-recover such balance, it may be proved, and allowed on the trial, is plain from the authorities, and, indeed, has not been questioned.

The commissioners constituted the appropriate and legal tribunal to adjust the claims of the respective parties in this case : and of their doings in this respect there is no complaint.

We have do doubt that the claim of the appellees in this case, was legally presented to the commissioners, whether it is to be considered as founded on the note, or the promise contained in the writing indorsed upon it, or both conjointly. In a formal declaration in a suit brought before one of the or*131dinary judicial tribunals, it appears from the authorities, that it would be necessary in this case, by the technical rules of pleading, to count not only on the note, but also on the promise made to the administrators of the payee. But in the presentation of claims to commissioners of an insolvent estate, no declaration or other pleadings are usual or necessary. It is not a technical proceeding. Where the claim is upon a written instrument, the delivery of it to the commissioners, with a verbal claim for its allowance, is all that is customary or requisite. To require the technicalities of pleading in the proceedings before such a tribunal, would serve only to defeat their object, and to produce embarrassment and confusion, delay and expence. In the present case, the note and the writing endorsed on it, were delivered to the commissioners, by the appellees, in the usual mode, with a claim for the allowance of the debt evidenced by them ; and that was all that was necessary.

We are therefore of opinion, that the superior court should be advised to affirm the report of the commissioners.

In this opinion the other Judges concurred.

Report of commissioners to be affirmed.