Credit Bureaus Adjustment Department v. Cox Bros.

295 P.2d 1107, 207 Or. 253, 61 A.L.R. 2d 750, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 314
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 295 P.2d 1107 (Credit Bureaus Adjustment Department v. Cox Bros.) 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
Credit Bureaus Adjustment Department v. Cox Bros., 295 P.2d 1107, 207 Or. 253, 61 A.L.R. 2d 750, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 314 (Or. 1956).

Opinion

LUSK, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment of involuntary nonsuit in an action on an indebtedness.

*255 Plaintiff sued as assignee of Northwest Oil Company, Incorporated, a corporation. The indebtedness was for gasoline sold by Northwest to the defendants, who were partners in the operation of a gasoline service station at Dallas, Oregon, which they leased from Northwest. On or about February 11, 1950, the defendants being no longer able to meet their obligations, the service station lease was turned over to a third party, certain credits on the defendants’ account were given for equipment, etc., leaving a balance owing, as claimed by the plaintiff, of $1258.03, to recover which this action was brought.

As an affirmative defense the defendants alleged that prior to the commencement of the action Northwest-agreed to accept in full satisfaction of the indebtedness the promissory notes of ten named individuals totalling some $1531, “and that the defendants thereupon caused the aforementioned individuals to execute notes in favor of Northwest Oil Company and delivered said promissory notes to Northwest Oil Company, and Northwest Oil Company accepted the same in full satisfaction of the claim sued upon herein.” Certain evidence adduced in the plaintiff’s case, both on direct and cross-examination, relative to the affirmative defense, is relied on by counsel for the defendants as establishing a novation as matter of law and requiring affirmance of the judgment. The evidence in this regard is as follows:

At the time that defendants surrendered their lease of the gasoline station and the final accounting was had the defendants turned over to E. D. Morrison, a representative of Northwest, the promissory notes in question. Eight of them are in evidence. One is dated January 1, 1950, and the others bear various dates in December, 1949. They are made payable to Northwest *256 Oil Co., Inc. The individuals who executed them were debtors of the defendants who had been unable to collect the indebtedness represented by the notes. In addition to these individuals both of the defendants signed some of the notes, and one of the defendants signed others. There is no evidence that Northwest caused the notes to be executed as alleged in the answer.

After receiving the notes E. D. Morrison delivered them to Northwest’s office in Portland. The notes were not set up in any account on the books of the company, nor were the amounts thereof credited to the defendants’ account. Northwest continued to send the defendants monthly statements of the account. Northwest made some efforts to collect the notes and received a few small payments which were credited on the defendants’ account. Apparently, two of the notes were paid in full and returned to the makers and the defendants were given credit for such payments.

E. D. Morrison testified that the defendant William Cox said at the time the notes were delivered to him that they hoped “the people would pay them some day and settle their account,” and “As fast as they could collect them they would send in the money and apply it to their account” with Northwest. Again, he testified that about a month later William Cox told him, referring to the makers of the notes, that “The men were hard to find and could not pay and it was going to take quite a while to get it. ’ ’ He denied more than once on cross-examination that the notes were accepted as payment, and testified that he did not pay much attention to the notes “because they were worthless to me, because they did not pay the bill, and all I thought about the whole thing was that they were made *257 out to help cause — make the customers pay him. They were used as a pressure.” He further testified that the notes ‘ ‘were given to me but they meant not a thing to me, because the understanding was that he still owed us a certain amount of money, whatever it was, and these were gotten to help force the customers to pay their bills maybe a little faster.” He testified that Northwest turned the notes over to a collection agency.

H. F. Morrison, manager of Northwest and father of the witness E. D. Morrison, testified that the defendants asked Northwest to help them collect the notes, and that he wrote some letters asking for payment. He was asked on cross-examination, “Didn’t you accept those notes?” and answered:

“I did not accept them, except with the understanding he accepted them on — the deal was: Cox went out and tried to collect from a lot of people and had no luck. The story that come to me, he went out on his own and got these people to sign these notes and give them to my son and maybe we could collect them and apply whatever — to his account. They were never considered whatever — . ’ ’

H. F. Morrison further testified that after the present action was commenced the defendant William Cox called him on the telephone and told him that “the equipment had been attached and it was not his equipment, the attachment would not hold, and wanted me to call off the suit, said if I would call off the suit he would arrange to pay us.”

Novation may be defined as “the substitution by mutual agreement of one debtor or of one creditor for another, whereby the old debt is extinguished, or the substitution of a new debt or obligation for an existing one, which is thereby extinguished.” 66 CJS 681, Novation § 1a. An essential element of novation is *258 that there must be a release of all claim of liability against the original debtor, since it is possible for a creditor to accept a new debtor as an additional debtor still holding the original debtor liable. Vawter v. Rogue Valley Can. Co., 124 Or 94, 99, 257 P 23, 262 P 851. The creditor’s assent to hold the new debtor liable is immaterial unless there is assent to give up the original debtor. Haines v. Pacific Bancorporation, 146 Or 407, 413, 30 P2d 763. A novation is never presumed, and the burden is on the party asserting that a novation has taken place to establish all the essential elements by legal and sufficient evidence. 39 Am Jur 266, 272, Novation §§21, 33; 66 CJS 714, Novation §26. The controlling element is the intention of the parties, and, unless there is a clear and definite intention on the part of all concerned to extinguish the old obligation by substituting the new one therefor, a novation is not effected. 66 CJS 703, Novation § 18e; 39 Am Jur 266, Novation § 21. And the mere fact that a creditor, with knowledge of the assumption by a third person of the debtor’s obligation, consents thereto, does not amount to a release of the original debtor or an ex-tinguishment of the original debt. North Western Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Eddleman, 247 Ky 116, 56 SW2d 561, 87 ALR 276, and annotation at p 281. Nor was the acceptance by the creditor of the notes of the various individuals who owed money to the defendants of itself evidence of an agreement to discharge the defendants from their obligation. As stated in 66 CJS 703, Novation § 18:

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Bluebook (online)
295 P.2d 1107, 207 Or. 253, 61 A.L.R. 2d 750, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/credit-bureaus-adjustment-department-v-cox-bros-or-1956.