Daugherty v. Herndon

65 S.W. 891, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 175, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 238
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 16, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 65 S.W. 891 (Daugherty v. Herndon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daugherty v. Herndon, 65 S.W. 891, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 175, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 238 (Tex. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

STEPHENS, Associate Justice.

Appellee undertook to deliver to appellant within 100 miles of Shreveport, La., during the month of April, 1898, 3750. Louisiana cattle, and tendered many more than that number for appellant to select from; but of these appellant accepted •only 3396, and claimed damages for the shortage. On the other hand, appellee claimed that the cattle tendered met the requirements of the *176 contract, and brought this suit to recover damages for appellant’s refusal to accept them, and also to recover $973, balance due for the cattle delivered.

The main defense interposed by appellant was that of accord and satisfaction, which was thus submitted to the jury in the charge of the court: “Now if you find that there was a dispute between plaintiff and defendant as to the amount, and that defendant, through his agent, tendered to plaintiff a certain amount in New York exchange, conditioned that the same was tendered only as a full and complete satisfaction of all plaintiff’s claims against defendant, by reason of said cattle transaction, and if you further find that plaintiff, fully understanding that said amount was so tendered and conditioned on defendant’s part, accepted with, or without protest, and retained the amount so tendered in New York exchange, you will find for the defendant.”

The defense was overruled by the verdict and judgment appealed from, and the first errer is assigned upon the ground that the verdict is without evidence to support it, and contrary to the admitted facts.

When the last delivery of cattle was made, Saturday, April 30, 1898, a statement was made out by one Dawson, who represented defendant, as a basis of settlement, in which appellee was charged $910 for failure to deliver 455 cattle, and $63 for excess in freight paid by appellant on cattle delivered more than 100 miles from Shreveport. This statement was submitted to appellee the next morning. After looking over it and objecting to 'the above items he finally accepted payment in New York exchange for the amount shown by the statement to be due him. His version of the transaction was thus given in his testimony: “After last shipment of April 30th, Dawson told me to come down to the hotel and we would settle the next morning; that shipment was made Saturday evening, and Dawson said he didn’t have time to do anything then; next morning I went to the hotel, and he had the statement of account all figured out and I had nothing to say about it; I told him the statement was not correct, and I wanted the $910 he held out on the cattle, and he would not pay it, and I told him I would accept the draft of that date just as that much money, but not as a final settlement; I executed no release or acquittance. * * * Saturday evening before the last shipment went out, about 5 p. m., there were five cars of cattle coming in on railroad, and I told him to wait, and that there were more cattle, and he could get them; Dawson said: ‘Never mind, I will take them to-morrow or next day;’ I told him ‘All right,’ and the cattle came in all right; this was on Saturday evening; on Sunday evening, after I had seen him at the hotel Sunday morning, Dawson was at the stockyards and told me he would be out Monday morning; I went out Monday morning, shaped different ages in different pens, stayed on the fence until 10 or 11 o’clock waiting for him, then went to town and found Dawson had left town.”

On cross examination he testified: “Dawson showed me the statement; I took and figured on it, told Dawson I thought he should not *177 charge me the $2 a head forfeit. * * * Dawson insisted it was nothing' but right that I should allow Daugherty $2 per head; we were up there some little time and talked the matter over considerably. I will admit that this contract, the way Dawson figured it out there in April 30th statement, the number of head is correct; that growing out of that transaction that was all they owed me; Dawson offered to get me exchange for the amount shown to be due by the April 30th statement; I went with him to the bank to get the exchange. I knew he was going to get exchange for the amount of the statement; so knowing went to the bank with him; so knowing,! took the exchange and -realized on it.”

On redirect examination he testified: “May 1st, after we went to bank I left the check laying there, and protested against taking it; Dawson says, ‘That’s all I am going to give you.’ I says, T will take this money as what it is, but not in settlement.’ This was in the presence of the banker. When we left the room at hotel to go to bank, I did not know he was going to the bank to get exchange in payment of all my demands; I knew he was going there to get exchange in payment of his figuring on April 30th statement. What I said was I knew he was going to the bank to get exchange to pay for the amount shown by the way he had it figured in the April 30th statement; to pay what he had figured out in that statement. When we left the room at hotel I told Dawson he should not deduct the $910. I told him all the time, but I only expected what he had figured; I did not accept that exchange in payment of my demands.”

In response to the request of the jury to have appellee restate his testimony “as to whether he did or did not understand that when Dawson tendered him the New York exchange it was to be in full settlement of the transaction,” he stated: “I knew that Dawson was tendering the exchange in full settlement of the transaction referred to in the statement of April 30th, but I expected him to get the cattle next morning.”

This looks very much like an accord and satisfaction, for it seems to be well settled that the acceptance even under protest of less than is due in full payment of a disputed claim is a bar to recovery of the balance. Fuller v. Kemp, 138 N. Y., 231; 33 N. E. Rep., 1037; 20 Law. Rep. Ann., 785; Hussey v. Crass (Tenn.), 53 S. W. Rep., 983; Pullman v. City of St. Louis, 47 S. W. Rep., 563.

It is, however, insisted in behalf of appellee that a thorough analysis of the testimony warrants the conclusion that the alleged settlement made on the basis of the statement of April 30th was not understood by the parties thereto to be a final settlement; and to sustain this contention, in addition to the testimony quoted above and other circumstances, the following was read in evidence by appellee from the deposition of Dawson: “After the settlement was made (referring to the April 30th settlement) Herndon asked if he got up balance of cattle short on contract, would I receive them and allow the nine hundred *178 and odd dollars, and I told him if he got up three or ten cars without four or five days’ time, and notify me through Crumbaugh, I would come and get them, or have Mr. Crumbaugh do it for me, and would pay him back the nine hundred and odd dollars and pay him the contract price for the cattle to be delivered under the special agreement. The next morning I saw Crumbaugh at the depot, and told him to see Herndon at once, and ascertain whether he was going to get up the five ór ten cars, and to notify me immediately, and I would come or have him, Crumbaugh, receive them for me.”

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Bluebook (online)
65 S.W. 891, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 175, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daugherty-v-herndon-texapp-1901.