Breck v. Blanchard

22 N.H. 303
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 15, 1851
StatusPublished

This text of 22 N.H. 303 (Breck v. Blanchard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Breck v. Blanchard, 22 N.H. 303 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1851).

Opinion

Reel, J,

The third and fourth replications are substantially alike. They furnish no answer to the plea. They neither deny the material facts alleged, nor confess and avoid them, unless they can be considered as a substantial denial of that allegation in the plea on which the whole defence hinges, to wit, that the execution in favor of Sabin against the plaintiff was, during all the time the trespass is alleged to have been continued, in full force, and in no wise paid or satisfied.

To make a payment effectual to dischai’ge a debt of any kind, it must be proved to have been made and received in discharge of the debt, and so as to extinguish it. Fitch v. Sutton, 5 East, 231; 1 Ch. Rep. 390. 2 Saund. Pl. and Ev. 716. And this fact it is equally/necessary should appear, where the satisfaction [308]*308or discharge of the debt is the natural fact, and the payment is no otherwise material, than as it is one of the facts necessary to be shown to prove such satisfaction or discharge. Here, in one of the replications, it is alleged thati! the plaintiff’s co- debtors, with the aid of the defendants, caused all the sums of money, mentioned in said judgment and execution, then due and owing, with all interest, to be paid to said H. Hubbard, the creditor and assignee; ” and in the other, it is alleged, that “ all the money due and owing on said judgment and execution, w7as paid to H. Hubbard, while he was creditor and assignee.” In neither of these replications it is alleged that the money was paid in satisfaction or in discharge of the judgment or execution.

In the plea, it is alleged that II. Hubbard, for a valuable consideration, assigned this judgment and execution to the defendant, Blanchard, &c.

There is nothing alleged in the replication inconsistent with the supposition, that the defendant paid to Hubbard the money due on the execution, as the consideration of the assignment, which the replication tacitly admits to have been made, and that the money was paid with the view of obtaining a transfer of an existing judgment and execution, and not with the purpose of satisfying or discharging it. In the third replication, it is said that the plaintiff’s co-debtors, with the aid of the defendants, caused all the sums of money mentioned in the judgment and execution, &c., to be paid to said Hubbard. These allegations would be proved by evidence, showing that the co-debtors procured their friends, the defendants, to pay to Mr. Hubbard the sums mentionecLin the judgment and execution, &c., as the consideration of the assignment to them of the same judgment. In the fourth replication, the allegation is, that all the money due and owing on such judgment and execution was paid to Mr. Hubbard, while he was creditor and assignee, without saying by whom the money was paid, or for- what purpose. This averment would be proved by evidence that the defendants paid the money to Hubbard as the consideration of his assignment of the judgment to them. Now it is a reasonable rule in the construction of pleadings, that where the language used is capable of [309]*309different meanings, or is in itself equivocal, it shall be construed most strongly against the party pleading it. 1 Ch. Pl. 522; Wimbish v. Tailbois, 1 Plowd. C. 46. Much more will language, used by a party in his pleadings, be restricted to its natural and obvious sense. Here the allegation is, that the money was paid. It might have been paid with different purposes. If it is understood that the payment was in satisfaction and discharge of the judgment, the pleading would be effectual, but if the payment was understood to be made for any other purpose, the replication would be bad. The allegation, that a certain sum of money was paid, or was procured or caused to be paid, does not naturally import any thing in regard to the purpose or object of the payment, and, without a manifest violation of the rule to which I have referred, it cannot be construed to mean paid in satisfaction and discharge.

The ordinary presumption is, that where a debtor pays to his creditor the amount of his debt, it is paid in satisfaction of the debt. And the plaintiff might with some plausibility claim the application of this presumption, if it had been alleged in his replications that the money was either paid by himself or by a co-debtor, who was equally bound with himself to pay it, but this is not done in either of them. In the third replication, it is alleged, that the plaintiff’s co-debtors, with the aid of the defendants, caused all the sums of money mentioned in the judgment to be paid to H. Hubbard, the creditor and assignee, but this phraseology is also equivocal. If the meaning was, that they caused the money to be paid for them and on their account, in discharge of their debt, then the plaintiff was authorized to aver, and the rules of good pleading required him to say, that his co-debtors paid the amount due on the judgment to Hubbard, who owned it, and he might then have asked the benefit of the presumption, that it was paid in discharge of the judgment. In the fourth replication, there is no room for any presumption, since it is merely alleged that the money was paid, without a word as to the person by whom or by whose procurement it was dofie, or on what account, or for what purpose it was done. Besides, the presumption to which I have referred, is rather a rule of evidence, than of the construction of pleadings.

[310]*310The precedents, so far as we have found any, all, in one phrase or another, distinctly express the idea that the money was paid in satisfaction of the claim in question. And the pleader, who voluntarily departs from the usual forms, has no right to complain, if his new form is not understood to embrace any thing more than is naturally and necessarily implied in the language he uses. 2 Saund. PI. & Ev. 713 ; 2 Ch. PL 473, 474.

The seventh replication denies none of the facts alleged in the second plea. They are therefore all confessed and admitted. Those facts show a perfect justification of the assault and imprisonment, for which the action is brought, under a valid judgment and execution. Is the effect of any of the facts, which go to make up this justification, avoided by the new facts brought forward by the replication ? These facts are, that after he was imprisoned, and before his release, being under duress of imprisonment, to obtain his release, he was compelled by Blanchard, by means of the writ of execution and by force, against his will to pay him $34.55, other than the sums mentioned in the execution, and sheriff’s fees thereon.

Now these matters do or do not avoid the effect of the things alleged in the plea, just as it is or is not held, that an abuse of legal process to extort money, not due upon such process, makes the .party, who is guilty of such abuse, a trespasser db initio, or, in other words, deprives him of the protection the process would otherwise afford him.

It is now well settled, that where there is an arrest for a just cause and under lawful authority, for unlawful purposes, it may be construed a duress. Richardson v. Duncan, 3 N. H. Rep. 508 ; Severance v. Kimball, 8 N. H. Rep. 386.

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Richardson v. Duncan
3 N.H. 508 (Superior Court of New Hampshire, 1826)
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Shaw v. Spooner
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Bluebook (online)
22 N.H. 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breck-v-blanchard-nhsuperct-1851.