158 Mass. 349 | Mass. | 1893
This is an action of contract between two lawyers. The defendant signed the contract sued upon, in consideration of the plaintiff’s promise to do nothing about a claim of
“ William H. Baker, Esq. Dear Sir, — When you have collected from Messrs. Myers and Dimock the sum owed to me by them, which is now in suit, please pay to F. Alaric Pelton $133.25, and charge the same to my account. Mr. Pelton is attorney for Arthur Young & Co., and will give you a receipted bill against me in return. Yours.truly, William Griswold.”
“ When the above amount is collected, I will pay the same to plaintiff’s attorney, F. Alaric Pelton. W. H. Baker.”
The suit referred to was a suit against Dimock, in which Myers was surety on a bond given to dissolve an attachment. Griswold testified that the sum owed to him was not less than $551. After the agreement the suit was settled for $400. The money was paid directly to Griswold, and the jury would have been warranted in finding that this was done in pursuance of a scheme between the defendant and his client to evade the agreement with the plaintiff. The agreement was not performed, and the sum due to the plaintiff’s clients, Young and Company, has not been paid. The jury found for the plaintiff, and the case is here on exceptions, substantially to the refusal of the court to take the case from the jury, on the ground that there was no binding contract with the plaintiff, or that, if there was one, the condition of the promise was not satisfied, because the whole sum owed to Griswold was not collected, and what was collected was not collected from Myers and Dimock, but from Dimock, and was not received by the defendant.
The defendant’s promise ran to the plaintiff in form, but the most plausible defence would be the formal objection that, as the effectual counter promise to suspend action against Griswold must come from the plaintiff’s clients, the plaintiff was a stranger to the consideration. Gilmore v. Pope, 5 Mass. 491, 493. But it was for the convenience of all parties that the lawyers should agree directly with each other, and the jury were warranted in finding that the plaintiff bound himself personally to some ex
The jury were warranted in finding that the suit referred to was the suit against Dimock, the only suit that Griswold bad, so far as appears, and the one understood by all parties to be meant. The defendant’s promise, properly construed, did not require that all that Griswold claimed to be due to him should be collected as a condition. It was enough if a sum sufficient to pay the plaintiff was accepted as a payment of Griswold’s claim. Indeed, the literal meaning of the defendant’s words, “ When the above amount is collected, I will pay the same ” to Pelton, is not sensible unless the word “amount” is taken to refer to the $133.25, not to the whole sum owed to Griswold. It hardly is necessary to add, that it did not matter, under the contract, whether the money was collected from Dimock or from Myers, or from both.
It is urged that the judge should have ruled that, if Griswold forbade the defendant to pay the order, the plaintiff could not recover. The judge did instruct the jury to that effect, in terms sufficiently favorable to the defendant, but also instructed them that, if the defendant had control over the collection, so that he could receive the money or not as he pleased, his allowing Gris-wold to receive it would not make it any the less his collection. This instruction was not excepted to, and was a proper caution to the jury that the plaintiff was not to be defeated by a mere device.
The plaintiff’s clients, Young and Company, after the breach of the defendant’s agreement, brought a suit, and recovered judgment against Griswold upon their original claim against him. It is argued that this judgment unsatisfied in some way precluded the plaintiff from maintaining his action on the contract made
Exceptions overruled.