Preston v. Grant

34 Vt. 201 | Vt. | 1861

Pierpoint, J.

The referee in this case has reported that there is due to the plaintiff from the defendant the sum of thii tyfour dollars and'twenty-three cents, unless the facts reported by him amount in law to an accord and satisfaction oi the claim so as to bar the plaintiff’s right of recovery. The referee finds that before the commencement of this suit, “ the defendant tendered to one Stone (who then had the note as the attorney of the Bank of Bratfelboro, to which the notes had been transferred) the sum of three dollars and ten. cents, saying that he tendered said sum as the balance due upon said notes; that said Stone received the same “ saying he would take said amount to the bank and that they might do as they were a mind to,” and that he after-wards endorsed the same upon said note.” To constitute an accord and satisfaction it is necessary that the money should be offered in satisfaction of the claim, and the offer accompanied with such acts and declarations as amount to a condition that if the money is accepted, it is accepted in satisfaction, and such that the party to whom it is offered, is bound to understand therefrom, that if he takes it, he takes it subject .to such condition.

When a tender or offer is thus made the party, to whom it is made, has no alternative but to refuse it, or accept it upon such condition. If he takes it his claim is cancelled, and no protest, declaration, or denial of his, so long as the condition is insisted on, can vary the result. This principle is too well settled in this State to require either argument or the citation of authorities to support it.

Do the facts reported amount to such an offer and acceptance ? The defendant said, “I tender the sum as the balance due on the *204note.” This is merely an'assertion of what he claims and an identification of the demand upon which he makes the tender. It is simply saying “I tender this sum it being all that is due upon the note.” This we think is the only fair construction that can be put upon the language. It would be somewhat difficult for a man to make a tender of what he conceded to be due upon a particular demand in mor-e simple and unequivocal language than that adopted in this case. It is only expressing in words the intent and purpose with which any tender is made. The person who makes a tender does it because it is the amount or balance that he concedes to be due, aud he makes it for that reason, and if he declares it to be so, it does not change the character of the act. If such language is to be construed into a condition, a man could hardly make a tender that should be sufficiently certain and explicit to be proved as applicable to a particular demand, without destroying its effect as a tender, for the reason that it was conditional.

There is nothing in the language used that could fairly convey the idea to Stone that it was offered upon the condition that if he took it, he did so in satisfaction of the note. Neither does the language or conduct of Stone when he received it indicate that he understood it. He received the tender, understanding that the defendant claimed that sum to be Poll that was due; he accepted the tender, aud said he would take it to the bank and they might do as they pleased, and that is precisely what every person does and has a right to do when money is tendered to him, he may accept it and abandon any further claim, or he may apply it on the claim, and sue for the balance, “ he may do as he has a mind to ” in regard to that. In this case the money was indorsed on the note, and this suit afterwards brought for the balance. Construing the report as we do, the transaction falls far short of an accord and satisfaction. It might be said perhaps that the evidence in the case, had some tendency to show an accord and satisfaction, and if the referee had found the fact that the parties understood it as an accord and satisfaction, such finding might have been conclusive, but he has not done so, but decided that upon the facts reported, it was an accord and satisfaction as a matter of law.

*205It is contended that this case comes within the principle recognized in McGlynn v. Billings, 16 Vt. 330. The cases are widely different. In that case there was no attempt to make a tender and neither party could have so understood it. The defendant in that case offered the plaintiff an order drawn by himself upon another person, as the balance due to him; the plaintiff declined- receiving it, and, the defendant then put the order into the hands of a third person, and directed him, in the presence of the plaintiff, to deliver it to the plaintiff, provided he would receive it as the balance due to him. The plaintiff did subsequently receive it. The court held that such an acceptance by the plaintiff, he knowing the terms upon which it was offered, operated as a settlement of his claim, notwithstanding the party when he took the order, declared that he did not receivé it in full.

The cases of Cole v. The Transportation Co. 26 Vt. 87; McDaniels v. Lapham, 21 Vt. 222, and McDaniels v. The Bank of Rutland, 29 Vt. 230, were all decided, so far as this question is concerned, upon the ground that the offer was made upon the express condition that if accepted it was to be in full, and so understood by the parties.

In Miller v. Holden 18 Vt. 337; Gassett v. Andover 2 Vt. 342, and Brigham v. Davis 29 Vt. 1, it was held that the acceptance of the money did not discharge the claim, on the ground that it was not accepted with the understanding that it was to be in full.

The principle recognized in all of these cases, when applied to the case under consideration, places the plaintiff’s right to recover the amount found to be due on the note, beyond controversy.

Judgment of the county court reversed, and judgment for the plaintiff to recover the sum of thirty-four dollars and twenty-three cents with the interest thereon and costs.

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