Bush v. Abraham

35 P. 1066, 25 Or. 336, 1894 Ore. LEXIS 21
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 35 P. 1066 (Bush v. Abraham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bush v. Abraham, 35 P. 1066, 25 Or. 336, 1894 Ore. LEXIS 21 (Or. 1894).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chier Justice Lord.

1. From the foregoing statement of the evidence offered under the pleadings, it will be seen that the main question was, whether there had been payment of the fifteen-thousand-dollar note, by reason whereof the notes upon which the present action is founded would become due and payable. The two notes upon which this action is brought are dated April third, eighteen hundred and ninety, are due one year after date, and each contains the condition that it is to be paid only when payment becomes due and is actually paid on the note given this date by the Glendale Lumber & Manufacturing Company to Sol Abraham, for a like term and interest, value received.” The contention for the defendant is that this note was never paid by the company, within the meaning of the condition to which the notes sued on are subject, and that, therefore, the sums of money specified in such notes never became due and payable. This contention embraces two propositions: (1) that the payment of the fifteen-thousand-dollar note contemplated by such condition is full payment in money of such note; and, ( 2) that the acceptance by the defendant, in consequence of the insolvency of the company, and to save himself from further loss and expense of a reconveyance of the [341]*341mill property in satisfaction and discharge of the purchase-price notes, and other consideration named, was, according to the terms of the agreement executed by the company and himself, a rescission of the original sale of such mill property, and not a substituted payment, or accord and satisfaction of such purchase-price notes, and hence, that the notes sued on never became due and payable. The condition is that the note is to be paid “ only when payment becomes due and is actually made” on the company’s note to defendant. Payment, in a restricted sense, is a discharge in money of a sum due. As usually understood, it means the transfer of money from one person, who is the payor, to another, who is the payee, in satisfaction of a debt. In such sense, it would not include an exchange or compromise, or an accord and satisfaction, but would mean the full satisfaction of a debt in money. But in its general sense, payment is the performance of an agreement, or the fulfilment of a promise or obligation, whether it consists in giving or doing. The discharge of a contract or obligation in money or its equivalent, with the assent of the parties, would constitute payment. It may be made in something else than money; in fact, anything that the creditor will accept as payment. It is a mode of extinguishing obligations. To constitute payment therefore, money, or some other valuable thing, must be delivered by the debtor to the creditor for the purpose of extinguishing the debt, and the creditor receive it for the same purpose: 18 Am. & Eng. Enc. title, Payment, p. 150. And a creditor maj»- accept a part of his debt before the whole is due in satisfaction of the whole, or, if the whole of the money be due and there is an agreement to accept something else, though of less value, in satisfaction of a debt, the agreement in such case would be a bar to a recovery of the residue. But an agreement to substitute any other [342]*342thing in lieu of the original obligation, is void unless mutually carried into execution: Smith v. Foster, 5 Or. 44. The note of the company for fifteen thousand dollars being negotiable, was payable in money by its terms and the law applicable to it, but, after such note became due, if the parties so agreed, its payment could have been made in something else than money as an equivalent, or something else than money, though of less value. The company might offer anything as a substitute for the money due on such note, and, if the defendant took it in payment and satisfaction of the same, such an agreement would be valid, and the note satisfied and discharged. As payment is but a mode of extinguishing a debt, it lies with the creditor whether he will accept something different from that which was owing as payment of his debt. So that, if the defendant chose to enter into an agreement with the company to accept something else than money, though of less value, in satisfaction and discharge of the company’s notes, it would, when consummated, be a substituted payment, and as effectually extinguish'such notes as though payment had been made in money. Such being the case, any agreement to that effect carried into execution by the parties would operate as payment of the note in question, within the purview of the condition to which the notes sued on are subject. We hold, therefore, that the payment contemplated by the condition need not necessarily be in money, but any mode which operated as payment by which such note was satisfied and extinguished, to which the defendant agreed.

2. The other proposition is that the agreement, in the light of the testimony, operated as a rescission of the original sale of the mill property, and notas substituted payment, or in the nature of an accord and satisfaction of the purchase-price notes, among which was the note [343]*343in question. Briefly, the undisputed facts show that the land and mill property were sold and conveyed by the defendant to the company for the consideration stated; that, at the time of the sale, there was paid the sum of three thousand dollars on the purchase price, and several notes given for the residue thereof, which notes were secured by mortgage on the property; that the company went into possession and operated the mill; that about a year thereafter it became unable to meet its obligations, and was, in fact, insolvent, whereupon it made certain written propositions to the defendant, which he accepted, whereby, in consideration of a reconveyance of the property, and to save the trouble and expense of foreclosure and sale, and in further consideration of an order on Beardsley for six thousand dollars, he agreed to discharge his mortgage of record, and to cancel and surrender the purchase-price notes which such mortgage was intended to secure, and to pay sixteen hundred dollars in the manner provided in such agreement. The testimony also shows that this agreement was carried into effect by the parties, and the agreement itself shows, as already stated, the consideration upon which it was founded. The defendant claims that the legal effect of these facts is to show that the transaction was a rescission of the original contract of sale of the mill property,—that the defendant simply took a reconveyance of the property and canceled and surrendered the notes,—and that, as a consequence, there was no payment or satisfaction of the notes in question, without which the notes sued on could not become due and payable, and that the trial court ought to have so charged the jury. The contract for the sale of the land and mill property was executed, and the company was the owner, and in possession of it, but was unable to pay the note in question when it became due. There was no doubt but what the property of the company was more [344]*344than sufficient to secure the payment of said note, but there were other purchase-price notes for large sums, which became payable subsequently, at different dates, and which such property would not be sufficient to satisfy and discharge.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 P. 1066, 25 Or. 336, 1894 Ore. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bush-v-abraham-or-1894.