Davison v. Klaess

20 N.E.2d 744, 280 N.Y. 252, 1939 N.Y. LEXIS 1315
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 11, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 20 N.E.2d 744 (Davison v. Klaess) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davison v. Klaess, 20 N.E.2d 744, 280 N.Y. 252, 1939 N.Y. LEXIS 1315 (N.Y. 1939).

Opinions

Rippey, J.

Plaintiffs allege in their complaint, defendant admits in her answer or has conceded on the trial, and the lower courts have found that, between October 14, 1925, and August 18, 1926, plaintiffs delivered to defendant at her special instance and request certain lumber and building materials of the reasonable value and reasonably worth $7,686.54; that there was credited thereon $38.80, leaving a $7,647.74 balance due, for which plaintiffs rendered an itemized statement and bill to defendant on August 18, 1926, upon terms of payment stated in the bill to be “ Cash — Accounts Overdue Subject To Interest.” Throughout *257 all the transactions, defendant’s son, a building contractor, was acting as her agent. Defendant paid to plaintiffs on account $162.99 on September 24, 1926. In July, 1931, plaintiffs pressed for payment of the balance due. On July 22, 1931, the son wrote plaintiffs that he had spoken to his mother and that “ she was doing everything possible to settle the matter as soon as she could,” and later wrote that “ two thousand is all that she can have by the tenth, but she assures you that the balance will follow right along without delay.” The $2,000 referred to was paid on October 12, 1931. Five hundred dollars was paid on January 22, 1932, and another $500 was paid on May 3, 1932. The payments as made were credited to defendant on plaintiffs’ books. Interest was not from time to time computed and entered on the account by plaintiffs. On December 14, 1932, plaintiffs sent to defendant a statement of account without any specific computation of interest in any specified amount thereon, but the bill contained, as did the bill of August 18, 1926, the statement Terms: Cash — Accounts Overdue Subject To Interest.” This statement appears to be merely a list of debits and credits as appeared in the account on the books. On January 10, 1933, the son of defendant wrote plaintiffs: Enclosed please find check as promised for $500.00 on my Mother’s account. She will pay $500.00 or more every 6 months until debt is liquidated.” That promise, in terms, was not kept, although there were paid the plaintiffs three additional sums during 1933 and 1934 of $500 each. On May 15, 1935, plaintiffs rendered a further statement containing an itemized list of debits and credits as shown by the books indicating a balance due on the original items of $2,484.75, with the statement “ Accounts Overdue Subject To Interest.” Defendant paid $500 on account on May 20, 1935, and another $500 on March 24, 1936. In July, 1936, defendant requested a statement of the balance due, whereupon, on July 24, 1936, plaintiffs rendered a statement showing a balance -unpaid of $4,573.01, which included interest figured from August 18, 1926, on the partial-payment plan. Defendant refused to *258 pay any interest except on $1,484.75 from August 18, 1926, which she claimed was the sole amount due on the unpaid balance of the original bill. The issue here centers around the amount of interest to which plaintiffs are entitled.

There was no express agreement to pay interest. On August 18, 1926, the indebtedness was liquidated, the account stated and the amount due and owing definitely determined and agreed to be paid at that time in cash, but, if not then paid in cash, with interest to the dates of payment. The mere presenting of the bill, if there were nothing more, constituted a sufficient demand to start interest running (Blackwell v. Finlay, 233 N. Y. 361). The statement of account as rendered upon the terms stated was accepted by defendant and conceded by her to be correct and has never been disputed as to the amount then alleged to be due and never challenged as to interest thereon until ten years later when plaintiffs finally computed the balance of principal and interest due in compliance with defendant's request for a statement of the balance due for the purpose of finally settling the account. Upon the conceded.facts, when the bill was rendered and accepted on the terms stated, there arose an implied contract to pay interest from August 18, 1926, upon each and every part of the account until paid as part of the original debt and interest became an integral part of the creditors’ claim. (Braun v. Hess & Co., 187 Ill. 283; Lambeth Rope Co. v. Brigham, 170 Mass. 518; approved, 172 Mass. 581, 583; Carson v. Alexander, 34 Miss. 528; Matter of Crane v. Craig, 230 N. Y. 452; Prager v. N. J. Fidelity & Plate Glass Ins. Co., 245 N. Y. 1.) “ The debt by operation of law necessarily grew in amount as the duty of paying it was delayed, and cannot be legally satisfied except by the payment of the sum due upon it when it is attempted to be discharged ” (Chester v. Jumel, 125 N. Y. 237, 254). Recovery of interest herein so far as allowed may properly have been based upon the proposition that interest was reserved in the statement rendered by plaintiffs and accepted by defendant on August *259 18,1926, whereby it was mutually agreed that interest should be payable on any unpaid portion of the account as part of the original contract and debt.

Such being the contract between the parties and the applicable law, the agreement continued to remain as made unless it was changed or abrogated by mutual assent or plaintiffs were barred from recovering interest on the partial payments through waiver or estoppel. The defense to the payment of interest thereon was based exclusively on the ;pleaded defense that agreements were made between the parties on January 10, 1933, and on May 15, 1935, that no interest should be required to be paid on the partial payments. When, in an action at law, an interested party has adopted a theory for his case and the case is tried and disposed of by the trial court upon the theory advanced and that theory is adopted by the Appellate Division, it is too late to advance some different theory in this court. Plaintiffs produced oral evidence that no such agreements were made. The defendant produced no oral evidence at all on the trial. She relies exclusively as to the alleged agreement of January 10, 1933, upon a letter written on that date by the son of the defendant referred to above in which he says: “ Enclosed please find check as promised for $500.00 on my Mother’s account. She will pay $500.00 or more every 6 months until debt is liquidated.” Upon that statement alone the Appellate Division has found, contrary to the finding of the trial judge, the undisputed testimony of one of the plaintiffs and the uncontradicted evidence that no such an agreement was carried out, that such an agreement was made and was valid and binding upon the plaintiffs and indicated mutual assent to the proposition that the original agreement should be modified, abrogated or rescinded as to that portion by which the parties mutually agreed that interest should be paid upon all unpaid balances on and after August 18, 1926, as part of the original debt. There is nothing in that transaction to indicate anything of the kind. Standing as it does alone and as pleaded, it indicates nothing further than what is said, to wit, that *260

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Bluebook (online)
20 N.E.2d 744, 280 N.Y. 252, 1939 N.Y. LEXIS 1315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davison-v-klaess-ny-1939.