Continental Gin Co. v. Arnold

1915 OK 960, 153 P. 160, 52 Okla. 569, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 324
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 23, 1915
Docket5142
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 1915 OK 960 (Continental Gin Co. v. Arnold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Gin Co. v. Arnold, 1915 OK 960, 153 P. 160, 52 Okla. 569, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 324 (Okla. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion by

MATHEWS, C.

The parties will be designated here as in the trial court. This action was instituted for the recovery of an alleged balance due upon notes. It appears that on July 25, 1905, defendant Ira L. Arnold signed six notes in the sum of $400 each, made payable to plaintiff Continental Gin Company for purchase of cotton gin machinery, and to secure the payment of the same he mortgaged to plaintiff certain real property upon which the said cotton gin containing said machinery was located, and certain other real property was mortgaged for the same purpose; said last-named mortgage being signed by the said Arnold and his wife, Cora L. Arnold. On March 18, 1912, plaintiff instituted suit on said notes, alleging that there was a balance due of $878.73 thereon. Defendants answered by general denial as follows:

*571 “Defendant says that he executed the notes and mortgages therein set out, but that said notes have long since been paid and should have been satisfied and returned to the defendant.”

To this answer, plaintiff filed a general denial. At the trial, defendant testified that the gin • outfit had burned down and the sum of $2,472.25 was collected upon the insurance, whiph was turned over to the plaintiff. That' this money was first placed in a bank pending settlement between plaintiff and defendant. . Then defendant was permitted to introduce the following testimony, over the objection of plaintiff: That he (the defendant) went to the office of plaintiff at Dallas, Tex., after the gin had burned, and saw the manager and told him that there was a settlement between them for the reason that the machinery delivered to him was not the kind of machinery he contracted for, and that there were other defects in the press and line shafts, and that they then came to an agreement that plaintiff would release the notes and accept $2,000 in full payment, and that defendant was to purchase another gin outfit from plaintiff, and the balance of the sum collected on the insurance policy, to wit, $472.25, was to be credited on the bill for new machinery. That he then returned home and directed the bank to turn the insurance money over to the plaintiff, and that it afterwards refused to sell him another gin outfit.

In line with the above testimony, the court gave the iollowing instruction, over the objection of plaintiff:

“If you believe from a preponderance of the evidence that a settlement of the notes and claim of plaintiff was had between plaintiff and the defendant, or Mr. Collett, an agent or district manager of the defendant [plaintiff], that is, if you find and believe that the adjustment of the insurance policy which belonged to the defendant and *572 which was paid to and transferred to the plaintiff and accepted by the plaintiff, or its agents aforesaid, as a full and complete settlement of whatever was due the plaintiff by the defendants, which, being taken in connection with prior payment in money, if any, by the defendants to the plaintiff, and that such settlement was had as a completa satisfaction of the debt due by defendants and the same was .so understood by the defendant, Ira Arnold, and Mr. Collett, the agent or district manager, then in such case, your verdict should be for the defendant.”

The plaintiff contends that the admission of the above testimony and the giving of the aforesaid instruction was error for the reason that the defendant in his answer pleaded payment only, and that the above testimony does not prove payment, but tends to prove accord and satisfaction. Defendant admits tha/t if the above testimony shows accord and satisfaction and not payment, then his answer would be insufficient to warrant the introduction of such evidence, but he insists that his 'testimony proves payment as alleged. Defendant in his brief sets out his contention thus:

“The testimony showed: That Arnold had purchased a gin from the Continental Gin Company. That he had given his notes and mortgages to secure the payment. When the gin was shipped to Arnold, it was not the kind of one ordered by him. The machinery was different and not of the value that it should have been. Arnold called the attention of plaintiff to this fact, and he agreed that Arnold should be credited with the difference between the cost of the machinery ordered and that delivered to him. Arnold made some payment on these notes, and finally when the gin was burned down and the policy had been paid into the bank at Ardmore, he made a trip to Dallas to see the Continental Gin Company, not for the purpose of paying less than he owed them, but for the purpose of seeing that he secured all the credits to which he was entitled. When *573 he arrived in Dallas, he talked this matter over with the plaintiff in error, and they agreed upon the amount due him. They found that, giving Arnold credit for all he was entitled to, he owed Continental Gin Company exactly $2,000. Arnold says :■ ‘It paid the old debt in full. The way we had gone over the bill of machinery, the difference in the price of the machinery I received and the price of the stuff I bought, this $2,000 would have paid the entire debt.’ This does not constitute accord and satisfaction, but it constitutes payment.” .

Plaintiff- states its contention as follows:

“The evidence referred to, therefore, did not show payment, but showed a new and substantive agreement between the parties by which there was to be a settlement, satisfaction, and discharge of the notes and mortgages. The defendant was to turn over his interest in the insurance money and to purchase a new gin outfit. The plaintiff for this consideration was to cancel and surrender the old notes and mortgages and give the defendant a credit of $472.25 on the new gin outfit. This agreement, if it had been fully executed, would have been an accord and satisfaction, but it was not payment.”

Defendant’s answer of general denial raised no issue in the case; but his imperfect and indefinite plea of payment, the same not having been challenged by motion or otherwise, will be held sufficient if his evidence tended to prove what in law constitutes payment.

It is correctly conceded by defendant that, if the facts upon, which defendant relies for a defense constitute accord and ¡satisfaction, then defendant’s answer is defective and insufficient to admit the evidence, complained of by plaintiff. But, if the evidence tends to prove payment, then there was no error in admitting the same and in the giving of the aforesaid instruction.

*574 After an investigation of the authorities on the subject, we have arrived at the conclusion that the evidence complainéd of does not constitute either payment or accord and satisfaction, and that the facts set out in this evidence do not come within the accepted definition of either.

“Payment” implies the 'delivery of value and that it is the value called for by the engagement to be discharged. Abbot Law. Die.
“The term ‘payment,’ in its legal import, means the Satisfaction of a debt by money, not by exchange or compromise, or an accord and satisfaction.” (City Sav. Bank v. Stevens, 15 N. Y. Supp. 139.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1915 OK 960, 153 P. 160, 52 Okla. 569, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-gin-co-v-arnold-okla-1915.