Bobb v. Bancroft

13 Kan. 123
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 13 Kan. 123 (Bobb v. Bancroft) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bobb v. Bancroft, 13 Kan. 123 (kan 1874).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Bbeweíí, J.:

Plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, brought his action against the defendants upon a promissory note. The petition was in the ordinary short form. The defendants, or rather the two of them who were served, filed an answer with several defenses. To these a demurrer was filed, which was overruled as to the second, third, fourth, sixth and seventh defenses. To reverse this ruling on the demurrer plaintiff brings this proceeding in error.

[125]*125The second defense which presents the substantial merits of the controversy is as follows. It appears from the petition, it should first be stated, that the defendants were partners under the firm-name of Bancroft Bros. & Co.; that the note sued on was a partnership note, dated Dec. 28th, 1868, and due in one year. Now the second defense in the answer alleges that this note was the only indebtedness of the defendants to the plaintiff; that in March, 1870, the firm entered into an agreement with all their creditors, including the, plaintiff, which agreement is then recited in full. It is this in substance: The creditors make with the members of the partnership “the arrangement following for the settlement of their claims respectively against said partnership and its members.” The partners shall at once transfer to a trustee certain specified property in trust for said creditors. The trustee shall proceed without delay to convert the same into money, and, after paying the expenses of the trust, pay the same pro rata to the creditors, “ until the satisfaction of their claims,” and the residue return to the partners. Harvey Bancroft, one of the firm, shall also at once execute a mortgage on certain specified property to said trustee in trust for said creditors, conditioned that he will in three equal annual payments pay said creditors or said trustees for said creditors “any balance of their said claims which the said other property and assets, and the proceeds thereof, shall be insufficient to pay;” and then follows this stipulation: “ The foregoing conditions being complied with, we agree to extend the time of the payment of our claims, one-third in one year, one-third in two years, and one-third in three years,” which agreement was signed by all the creditors. The defense also alleges that defendants conveyed the property to the trustee as required, that the trustee^ received the property and accepted the trust, and that Harvey Bancroft executed the mortgage as stipulated in the agreement. The question then arises as to the effect of this agreement. Was it simply an extension of time by the creditors, or did it change the form of the debt, and the person of the debtor? Counsel for de[126]*126fendant in error claim that the intention of the parties, as expressed by the instrument, was —

“ 1st, That the defendants should convey certain property specifically described in the instrument to the trustee therein named.
“2d, That the defendant Harvey Bancroft and his wife should make and deliver to this trustee a mortgage upon certain property mentioned and described, which was to be conditioned that the defendant Harvey Bancroft should pay all of the indebtedness of the partnership which the property transferred to the trustee should be insufficient to pay.
“3d, That the creditors (including plaintiff in error,) would thereupon release their several claims as against the defendants respectively, and look only to the trust fund in the hands of the trustee for the payment of their several claims, and to Harvey Bancroft for any balance that might be due to them on their claims after the trust fund had been exhausted in the payment of their claims.
“4th, That the trustee should dispose of the property thus to be transferred to him without delay, and apply the proceeds pro rata to the payment of the various claims of their creditors until such claims should be satisfied.
“ 5th, That in case this trust fund should be insufficient to pay the full amount due to each creditor out of it, the creditors should postpone the payment of this deficiency so that Harvey Bancroft would be obliged only to pay one-third of it in one year, one-third in two years, and the remaining third in three years.”

Counsel also alleges in this second defense that such was the understanding and agreement of the parties. The contract speaks for itself. The parties have reduced their agreement to writing, and that writing is the best evidence of their agreement. True, if the contract is fairly susceptible of more than one construction, that which is alleged to be the true construction and the intention of the parties will be taken to be correct when the question arjses on demurrer. (Craft v. Bent, 8 Kas., 328.) But this rule does not apply when the contract is clear and unequivocal. Then an allegation that so and so was the intention and understanding of the parties, will be held for naught, as against the obvious import of the language. Now we fail to see in this contract anything [127]*127which directly or by implication contains any such stipulation as appears in the third paragraph of the quotation from counsel’s brief. There is certainly no express stipulation to release any one, or to look to any particular fund or funds for payment. On the contrary, the simple agreement of the creditors is, to give an extension of one, two and three years. That which the debtors were to do is plainly stated, and then as plainly is it said, “the foregoing conditions being complied with, we agree to extend the time of the payment of our claims,” etc. That which each party was to do appears as clearly and plainly as language can make it. The one was to secure, the other extend.

Counsel lays some stress on the use of the word “ settlement” in the first clause of the agreement, which is as follows: “The undersigned, creditors of the late co-partnership of Bancroft Bros. & Co., of Columbus, Ohio, make with the members of said partnership the arrangement following for the settlement of their claims respectively against said partnership and its said membersand argues, that as it could' not mean arrangement of accounts so as to ascertain the balance due, it must mean payment in full. The word “settlement” is not necessarily used with either signification. There would be no impropriety in its use in reference to just such a transaction as is disclosed here. The creditor extends time and obtains security. He may properly say he has thus settled his claim. He has made a new arrangement in reference to it. But whatever force the word “settlement” might have, standing by itself, it is here qualified by preceding language. The creditors make “the arrangement folloimng for the settlement,” etc. This refers us to the stipulations following to ascertain what kind of a settlement they did make. It is to them we must look to determine the nature of the agreement and the rights of the parties.

Counsel claims that such a construction makes the contract strange, harsh and inequitable. It does not seem so. The defendants were in debt. Some of those debts were due. As to the others we are not advised. They had some property [128]*128which was liable for those debts. It was their duty to pay them, and to use their property therefor. To convert property into money by judicial proceedings always involves considerable waste.

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Fulmer v. Hallbauer
289 P.2d 771 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1955)
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266 P. 941 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Kan. 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bobb-v-bancroft-kan-1874.