Clayton v. Clark

74 Miss. 499
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 74 Miss. 499 (Clayton v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clayton v. Clark, 74 Miss. 499 (Mich. 1896).

Opinions

Woods, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The single assignment of error is as to the action of the trial court in overruling the demurrer interposed by plaintiff below to the pleas of the defendant. If the pleas had distinctly set up a payment of the note sued on by the tender of $1,000 — a lesser sum than that named in the note — by the debtor,' and the acceptance of this lesser sum by the creditor as full payment of the note, in pursuance of an agreement of both parties to that effect, before the day of the maturity of the note, then by all the authorities the pleas would have been good. For the reason, to quote Coke’s quaint language in Pinnel’s case, 3 Coke’s Reports, 117, that £ £ peradventure parcel of it before the day Avould be more beneficial to him than the whole at the day, ’ ’ [502]*502as multitudes of creditors who have been in sore straits can bear witness to from happy experience. But the pleas do not aver with sufficient distinctness any payment before the day of the note’s maturity, they only aver that about the thirtieth of July payment was made, when the copy of the note sued on shows on its face that the note was due August 1. It is to be observed, however, that the declaration on the note does not profess to give an exact copy of the note, but only a substantial copy, because, as is alleged, the note itself was not in the possession of the plaintiff, but was then held by the defendants. Now, to this declaration the pleas only answered that aboulj two days before the date of the note’s maturity as shown by the copy sued on, and not made from the original then in the defendant’s possession, payment was made by tender and acceptance of the lesser sum for the greater. But the plea is to be taken most strongly against the pleader, and about a certain time may mean a day or a week or a month after the time, as well as a day or a week or a month before the time.

We are unable to adopt as sound the argument of counsel for appellees that these pleas are pleas not of satisfaction and payment, but only pleas denying title in appellant to the note, because of the pleas averring that the note had been transferred and assigned by the payee to the payor. Whenever there is shown a legal assignment and transfer of an obligation to pay money by the obligee to the obligor, necessarily there is an ex-tinguishment of the debt, and in such case the debt may be properly said to be satisfied, to be paid. And, as perfectly appears, not only from the transcript before us, but as is substantially agreed by the counsel of the respective parties, the pleas interposed all set up one and the same matters of defense, so it, also, perfectly appears that this defense was a new contract entered into by the parties, whereby it was agreed that the payor of the note should pay to its holder and owner, and the latter should accept from the former a lesser, stipulated sum for the greater sum named in the note, in full satisfaction [503]*503of the debt, and as a full discharge of the payor from further liability, and that this new contract, with the concurrence of both parties thereto, has been completely executed by payment and acceptance of the agreed lesser sum, and the evidence of the indebtedness surrendered and delivered up to its maker by its holder.

With the case viewed in the light of the foregoing elucidation of the purpose and effect of the pleadings, this question — not a new one in our jurisprudence ■— squarely confronts us, viz.: Will the acceptance of a lesser sum, in money, by the payee of a note, than the greater sum actually due from the debtor, on the distinct agreement that such payment and acceptance of the lesser sum shall extinguish the whole debt evidenced by the note, operate to satisfy the note and discharge the debtor, unless the lesser sum of money is paid before the maturity of the note for the greater sum, or unless the lesser sum of money is paid at another place than that named in the note itself as the place of payment ? This question has, in two cases, been remarked upon by this court, and, though not necessary to the determination of the question presented in either case, was, in both instances, affirmatively answered, though in both the affirmative answer was given with evident reluctance and with doubt as to its soundness. We refer to the cases of Jones et al. v. Perkins et al., 29 Miss., 139, and Pulliam v. Taylor, 50 Miss., 251. In the former case, the defense was that the parties had contracted to pay and to accept $1,500 in New York in discharge of a debt for $2,000, payable by its terms in Mississippi; and the court held, as is universally held elsewhere, that this was a good defense. But that defense is not the one now before us. In the other case of Pulliam v. Taylor, the defense was that the debtor had compounded with his creditor, and the creditor had contracted and agreed to accept less than the whole amount of the debt, and had actually accepted the notes of the debtor for the smaller sum, to be paid in installments in equal annual payments thereafter, the notes being secured by mortgage, and [504]*504that one of the notes had actually been paid to the creditor; and this was held to be a good defense to a suit brought by the creditor on the original debt, in disregard of the new agreement to accept notes for a lesser sum. But neither is this the defense before us in the present case.

In the case of Burrus v. Gordon, 57 Miss., 93, in which this question was directly presented for determination, it was held that the plea of payment of a less sum for an original greater sum was bad; but the court contented itself with the bare statement of the holding, without reference to authorities, and without argument.

I It has been held in England, though not unbrokenly, nor I without now and then hostile criticism from bench and bar, that an agreement by a creditor with his debtor, to accept a smaller sum of money in satisfaction of an ascertained debt of a greater sum, is without consideration, and is not binding upon the creditor, even though he has received the smaller sum agreed upon in the new contract. And in the United States, blindly following what was supposed to be settled law in England for nearly three hundred years, our courts have uniformly announced adherence to this rule, though in most of the cases examined by us, no such announcement was necessary to their determination. The rule is, in nearly all the cases, declared to have been first announced in Pinnel’s case, 3 Coke’s Reports, 117, whereas, an examination of that mischievous and misleading reported case will make it appear at once that the question before us was not in any way involved. Pinnel’s plea was, that before the maturity of his bond for the larger sum, plaintiff had accepted a lesser sum agreed upon between the parties, in full satisfaction of the original debt. Now, all the authorities, American and English, including Coke himself, agree that this was a good defense, and that the plaintiff was bound by it, if defendant should properly plead it to a suit for the entire original debt. But the hapless Pinnel, in that remote period when courts were almost as jealous for the observance of technical [505]*505rules of special pleading as for the execution of j ustice according to right, was adjudged to pay the whole debt, the plaintiff having judgment against him because of his insufficient pleading, for,” says Coke, “he did not plead that he had paid the £5 2s. 2d. in full satisfaction (as by law he ought), but pleaded the payment of part generally, and that the plaintiff accepted it in full satisfaction.”

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Bluebook (online)
74 Miss. 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clayton-v-clark-miss-1896.