176 Mass. 460 | Mass. | 1900
In this case the plaintiff introduced evidence showing that she had been cheated by the defendant out of
The plaintiff testified that she had received various payments of interest from the defendant, and “ soon after his last payment to me on April 8,1891,1 received notice that Mr. Stedman was in insolvency. I then took the note and agreement to, and consulted with, my attorney, and afterwards proved the note upon the usual blank in the Insolvency Court.” It appeared that the defendant received a discharge in the insolvency proceedings. This is a suit in tort or contract, and the plaintiff has filed a special declaration setting forth the facts, and concluding with the averment that the defendant “ wrongfully and fraudulently appropriated and converted to his own use and embezzled said sum,” and a statement that “ the defendant owes the plaintiff the sum of $1,706.59, as shown by said account annexed, as money had and received to her use, with interest thereon from the date of the writ.” The account annexed charges the defendant with $1,152.50 and interest, and credits the defendant with the ten payments of $20 with interest.
“ At the close of the evidence the defendant asked the court to rule that, on all the evidence, the defendant was entitled to a verdict. More- specifically, that if the original indebtedness was a fiduciary one, the plaintiff lost the advantages of this character by accepting a note in settlement of the same. And also that, even although the debt were originally fiduciary, by the taking of the note under the circumstances shown, and the proving of it in the Insolvency Court as a claim against the defendant’s estate, the plaintiff has lost any advantage arising from the original character of the indebtedness.”
1. The plaintiff is not, as matter of law, barred from prosecuting this action by accepting the $20 enclosed in the letter of June 19, the two agreements of May 16, and nine instalments of $20 each paid under them.
Taking the letter of June 19 as a whole, it cannot be fairly held that the acceptance of the $20 sent in it, is an election by the plaintiff to hold the defendant liable to make restitution by transferring to her ten shares of the Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy stock, and by paying her the amount of the dividends declared thereon, until that stock should be handed to her,
Neither can it be held that the plaintiff has made such an election by accepting the written promises of May 16 and the nine instalments paid under them. The acceptance of these promises, and of the nine instalments of $20 each paid under them, are not inconsistent witli the plaintiff’s pursuing this action, unless the promises were taken in satisfaction of the original claim. A promise by a wrongdoer to make restitution is a promise to do what the law obliges him to do; the giving of such a promise does not of itself raise any presumption that it is taken in satisfaction of the original cause of action against the wrongdoer. It is because the giving of a non-negotiable promissory note in payment of a debt is nothing more than a promise to do what the law obliges the debtor to do that the rule is established that the giving of a non-negotiable promissory note is not prima fade payment of the debt for -the amount of which the note is given. Shaw, C. J., in Thurston v. Blanchard, 22 Pick. 18, 21. Earle v. Reed, 10 Met. 387, 390. That the giving of a non-negotiable promissory note is not prima facie evidence of payment, see Greenwood v. Curtis, 4 Mass. 93; Maneely v. M’Gee, 6 Mass. 143, 145; Greenwood v. Curtis, 6 Mass. 358, 371; Howland v. Coffin, 9 Pick. 52.
The promise in this case was little, if any, more than a promise of restitution ; for though the restitution which would have been enforced at law was the payment of the $1,152.50 with interest, yet equity has a concurrent jurisdiction with law in case of a fraud, and the restitution enforced there is the making of the representation good in kind. In this case equity would have made a decree directing the defendant to buy for and deliver to the plaintiff ten shares of Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy stock. The defendant’s promise in this case was a promise to pay the cost of the stock ($1,150), and until that was repaid to pay as interest $80 a year, payable quarterly, beginning on March 15, 1884; the $80 a year, payable quarterly, evidently was based upon the dividend which would accrue on ten shares of the stock in question, assuming that the rate of dividend continued unchanged. To this promise was added another, by which the defendant agreed to deliver ten shares of the stock within the year, with the proviso that the plaintiff was not bound to accept them in payment of the note. In other words, taking the two promises together as one, the promise was to make good the representation made by him, by delivering the stock, which he represented that he had bought, or by payment of the money it was represented to have cost, with the dividends which would be earned on that stock, giving the plaintiff the benefit of the assumption that the rate of dividend would continue unchanged; the option of taking the stock or the money being left to the plaintiff. That is practically a promise to make restitution. It is not so far different from a promise to make restitution as to make the acceptance of it, and of nine instalments of $20 each paid under its acts, inconsistent with the prosecution of this action, if the promises of May 16 were not in fact taken in satisfaction of the original cause of action.
In this case there was evidence that this promise was taken
2. The plaintiff, by proving her claim in the insolvency proceedings, has not lost her right to sue the defendant in spite of his discharge in insolvency. Pub. Sts. c. 157, § 84, after providing that no debt created by fraud (inter alla) shall be discharged, contains the provision that “ the dividend declared thereon shall be payment of so much of said debt or claim.” The original act exempting from the operation of a discharge of a debt arising from defalcation by public officer's and others standing in a fiduciary relation, provided that “ the creditor thereto may prove the same, and the dividend declared thereon, shall be payment for so much of said claim.” St. 1844, c. 178, § 3. That statute applied to defalcations by persons standing in a fiduciary relation, and did not include debts created by fraud; it was re-enacted in the General Statutes in substantially the language of the Pub. Sts. c. 157, § 84. See Gen. Sts. c. 118, § 79. By St. 1879, c. 245, § 5, that section of the General Statutes was amended by extending its provisions to “ a debt created by fraud or embezzlement of the debtor.” The statute, therefore, expressly provides that proof of the claim in insolvency shall not prevent the creditor from subsequently bringing a suit against the debtor in which his discharge shall not be a bar; and we are of opinion that, even if the testimony of the plaintiff is to be taken literally to mean that, in making her proof in
The statements of this court in Morse v. Lowell, 7 Met. 152, 153, Wolcott v. Hodge, 15 Gray, 547, 548, and Burpee v. Sparhawk, 108 Mass. 111, 114, 115, (on which the defendant relies,) were made with respect to the right of a creditor to whom a debt was due from one in a fiduciary capacity to sue after the debtor had received a discharge under the United States bankrupt act of August 19,1841, c. 9. In that act there is no provision allowing a creditor, to whom such a debt is due, to prove it without thereby waiving his rights as such creditor; in fact, there is no direct provision in that act that fiduciary debts, should not be barred by a discharge, but the conclusion that they were not so barred was reached, as matter of construction, from a consideration of several different provisions of the act. See Story, J., in In re Tebbetts, 5 L. R. 259. In Light v. Merriam, 132 Mass. 283, 284, (the other case relied on by the defendant,) the negotiable promissory notes which were delivered were accepted as payment, and formal releases under seal were given, and the remarks of the court are to be taken as applying to those circumstances.
3. The exception to the admission of the testimony of the plaintiff, that, in taking the note and agreement, she .had no intention or purpose of accepting them in settlement or in merger of the original cause of action for fraud, must be sustained. Connecticut Trust & Safe Deposit Co. v. Melendy, 119 Mass. 449, is really decisive of the point; for in that case it was decided (1) that where it is claimed that an agreement, the talcing of which is not prima facie payment, was taken in satisfaction of the original cause of action, the issue is whether the parties made an agreement to that effect; and (2) that in such a case the intention of one party is not material. In that case suit was brought on a promissory note, and the defence was set up that the note sued on was paid by the giving of another note indorsed by the defendants, Warner, Hubbard, and Post; this note was given in Connecticut, a jurisdiction in which the giving of a promissory note is not prima facie a payment. The plaintiff asked the court to rule that unless the defendants, Warner, Hubbard, and Post, “intended to give their note in
Exceptions sustained.