Chambers v. McDowell

4 Ga. 185
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1848
DocketNo. 22
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 4 Ga. 185 (Chambers v. McDowell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chambers v. McDowell, 4 Ga. 185 (Ga. 1848).

Opinion

By the Court.

Nisbet, J.

delivering the opinion.

The record exhibits some conflict of evidence, as to what was the agreement between McDowell and the plaintiff in error, Chambers, touching the notes given by the latter to the former, some of the witnesses testifying that they were given in extinguishment of the execution, and others that they were given as collateral security, and were in no way to affect the judgment, but that the defendant was to have indulgence so long as the instalments were promptly met. The court, very properly, left the facts to the jury, and they rendered a verdict for the defendant.

The positions assumed by the Judge, in his instructions to the jury, are,

1. If by the agreement between Chambers and McDowell, the notes were received by McDowell in extinguishment of the execution, then the levy of the execution, by his order, was a trespass.

2. If the execution was not agreed to be ¡extinguished, and the agreement was that prompt payment of each instalment should be a condition of farther indulgence, and the payments had not been promptly made, then the levy was not a .trespass.

3. If McDowell did agree, in consideration of new securities being given, to indulge the defendant in execution until the last note fell due, without regard to the punctual payment of each instalment as it was payable, then the levy being made before the maturity of the last note, was a trespass.

The first proposition is not controverted by the plaintiff in error; it is incontrovertible. If the notes were taken in payment of the execution by agreement, it is as effectually extinguished at [188]*188if paid in gold or silver. The judgment is satisfied, and the exei cution, having discharged its office, is defunct. It is as impotent p.s a blank sheet of paper. If the plaintiff has, by agreement, got his satisfaction ; all the right and power to enforce the defendí ant through the process of the court ceases; the judgment being-pleased, the execution falls as a matter of legal necessity. If under such circumstances, the plaintiff, by virtue pf the process of fhp pourt, seiz.es the. goods of the defendant, he is as rnuch a trespasser, as one who takes his neighbor’s property, without color pflaw.

So in relation to a debt not in judgment. If the creditor accepts; by agreement, other securities in substitution of his first securities* It is a release of the latter. It is the novation of the civil law, and may be plead in bar to an action to enforce the prior debt. 1 Evans Pothier, 3,85, 386. 19 Johns. R. 133, 134.

The second proposition is equally plain. If the defendant is indulged on the execution against him, upon condition that he promptly pays the debt by instalments, and fails to fulfil the condition, he can take nothing under the agreement, because he has not fulfilled his part of it. He shall not profit by his laches. The parties are remitted to the position they at first occupied. 1 Mass. 433. 7 JW264. 13 Mass. 319.

The third proposition of Judge Floyd may be varied thug: “A. plaintiff in execution, who has agreed with the defendant, upon consideration of new securities, to indulge him, by suspending, the executionfor a limited, time, and who orders a levy before the expiration of the time upon the goods of the defendant, is guilty of a trespass.”

As the case was first presented to us, exception to the charge pfthe coqrt was taken with numerous specifications, The counr sel for the plaintiff in error, however, finally reduced them to, one or two ; that one upon which he mainly relied, and which seems ]to me to be alone in conflict with the opinion of the court, is exi pressed in the following words:

“If notes with good security are given for a judgment debt, whether absolutely or only as collateral security, the plaintiff can? not proceed with the execution until the notes are returned.” ¥e have already determined that if notes are agreed to be taken in ^extinguishment of a judgment, it is a payment, and the execution js extinct. ¥e may, therefore, in the consideration of the ground [189]*189taken by the plaintiff in error, omit all reference to the word absolutely. We understand, then, his p osition to be, that if notes with security are taken as collateral security for a judgment, the judgment is released ipso facto; but it may be revived by a re^ turn of the notes. This must be the legal import of the terms in which the plaintiff in error has expressed himself. Now, how do the positions of the court and of the plaintiff in error, stand relatively to each other? The court rules, that if a creditor, upon sufficient consideration, indulges the defendant by agreement, for a limited time, and levies his execution before the expiration of that time, on the goods of the defendant, he is guilty of a trespass; that is to say, an agreement to indulge, for a limited time, is a release of the plaintiff’s right to levy within that time. The plaintiff in error complains of other portions of the charge, as well as this, and claims higher ground, to-wit, that the fact of taking collateral security, with or without an agreement to indulge at ail, is ,a release of the judgment. The complaint is not that the court is wrong in the extent to which it does go, but that it does not go far enough. First, then, I consider the doctrine as asserted by the plaintiff

[1.] It is generally true that a security for a debt is extinguished by taking securities for the same debt, which, in legal contemplation, are of a higher nature, and which afford a remedy .co-extensive with that given by the first security. Thus a simple contract debt is released or extinguished by a specialty security. 3 B. and C. 210, 211. 5 D. andR. 262, S'. C. Gro. Gar, 415. Bac. Ah. Debt. G. 1. 1 Saund. R. 295, note a. 3 East, 258, 9. 1 M. find S. 575. 3 Moore, 277. 2 Bing. N. C. 692. Chitty on Contracts, 782, 783.

As a general rule, the acceptance of other securities of the same or a lower grade, does not release the first security, and cannot be pleaded in bar. But if the creditor accepts, in full satisfaction, a security of the same grade, it may be plead in bar as an accord and satisfaction. 20 John. R. 76. 2 Metcalf, 233. 1 Wend. 172. 5 T. R. 515, 513. 3 Wend. 68, Chitty on Cont. 763, note 1.

It is also true, that if any security be taken as collateral to other securities held by the creditor, that security so taken, will not operate as a release of the prior securities. 1 Serg. and, Rawle, 294. 5 Mass. 11. 3 B. and G. 210. 4 G.and P. 151. 1 Mason [190]*190R. 482. 2 Conn. R,. 120. 1 Brock. C. O. R. 166. Story on Cont. 417. CJdtty on Contracts, 763.

In Twopenny and Boys vs. Young, 3 B. and C. 208, Baily, J. says: “ "Where there is that in the instrument which shows that the parties intended the original security to remain in force, the new one has not the effect of extinguishing it.” See also 2 B. and A. 38. In Emes and another vs. Widowson, 4 C. and P.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Beavers v. Cassells
192 S.E. 249 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1937)
Vandalsem v. Caldwell
125 S.E. 716 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1924)
Armstrong v. Van Dyke
198 N.W. 915 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1924)
Juchter v. Boehm, Bendheim & Co.
67 Ga. 534 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1880)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Ga. 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chambers-v-mcdowell-ga-1848.