Dickerman v. Lord

21 Iowa 338
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 6, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 21 Iowa 338 (Dickerman v. Lord) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickerman v. Lord, 21 Iowa 338 (iowa 1866).

Opinion

Dillon, J.

1ment" SSSSt: ment. -After stating the nature of the action, the court instructed the jury that “ the first question for them determine is, was the plaintiff indebted to defendants in the sum of $174.91, at the time defendants brought their attachment suit against plaintiff, as alleged % ” The court, after alluding to the circumstances proper for the jury to consider in deciding this question, adds: “ Weighing all- the testimony and circumstances carefully, you will determine whether plaintiff had paid his account, in full, to the defendants before the commencement of the said attachment suit. If you find he had paid the account in full, and afterward defendants brought suit by attachment and recovered it [341]*341again, you will find for the plaintiff a verdict for the amount so paid by him. But if you find plaintiff had not paid the account of defendants before the attachment suit and the alleged second payment, you should find for defendants.” The foregoing portion of the charge was not excepted to, but that which follows was excepted to by the defendants.

“ Ordinarily,” continues the court’s charge, if a man pays money on an account against him, the law presumes that he owes the same, and will not allow him to recover it again, unless paid by accident or mistake; but if he pays such account after being sued thereon, in a state foreign to his residence, by the extraordinary process of attachment, and to obtain a release of his property and under protest that the account is unjust because it has already been paid,.it is paid under such legal compulsion that no presumption arises against the person so paying under protest.”

There was no evidence tending to show actual-fraud or intentional bad faith in either plaintiff or defendants.

The jury must have found as a matter of fact, that the account had been paid by the plaintiff prior to the attachment suit. As an original question, the correctness of this finding is by no means clear, but the evidence on this point was conflicting, so much so, that we would not be warranted in interfering, upon this ground alone, with the verdict.

The judgment below must therefore stand, if the charge of the court, above quoted, was, under the circumstances, correct.

Taking the charge together, and viewing it as the jury would doubtless view it,, it laid down this principle of law,' to wit: If an alleged debtor is sued in a State other than the one in which he resides, and his property is. attached, this, without more, and even if the attachment.. [342]*342suit is brought in good faith, will justify such alleged debtor, though he knew all the facts, in paying the amount claimed, and if he does so under protest, he may recover it back in the courts of his own State, if he can show that in point of fact the debt had before been paid, or was not just.

To this extent the law does not go. To justify recovering back money paid, when all the facts were known to the party paying, such payment must not have been simply an unwilling payment, but a compulsory one, and the compulsion must have been illegal, unjust or oppressive.

Now, is it such a compulsion merely to sue a man by attachment in a State foreign to his residence ? "We think not. In this case the alleged debt was contracted in Illinois, and the admitted payments made on the account were paid in or sent to Chicago, and it would probably be fair to infer that the understanding of the parties was that payment should be made to defendants at the place where they extended the credit.

Let us test the principle laid down in the court’s charge.

If I am sued in my own State, without attachment, and know the claim is unfounded and yet pay the- money, I cannot recover it back although I may, at the time of payment,.have said, I paid it under protest. And if I am sued by attachment, the result must be the same, if the attachment is the only circumstance relied upon to make the payment a compulsory one. And why ? Because iny adversary, in either case; has made use of no unjust or illegal means to enforce his claim, or pretended claim against me. It is my duty to meet him in limine, and litigate and settle the question of my indebtedness. It is for this purpose that courts are instituted. I cannot pay the amount, and by simply saying, I do so under protest, afterward re-open the question. When one pays money on an alleged claim against him, he is forever [343]*343concluded from saying he did not owe it, if he paid under no mistake of fact, and if the party receiving it made use of no illegal means to coerce the payment.

Now, these principles of the law are not varied by the simple circumstance that one is sued in a State foreign to his residence. The defendants, by the law of Illinois, in which State . they resided, and in which plaintiff contracted the account, had a right, if they could get jurisdiction, to sue the plaintiff in that State, and he being a non-resident, the laws of that State gave them a right to an attachment against his property found within the jurisdiction. In thus suing, therefore, they made use of no remedy which the law did not allow; and it will not do to hold that a payment, secured by none but the means provided by the law itself, is a compulsory or coerced one, there being no element of fraud or other ingredient of oppression in the case.

The plaintiff knew as well when he paid the money to the defendants, May 12, 1865, as he did a few days afterward, when he brought this suit to recover it back, that he did not owe it. He gained no new knowledge meantime; nor, indeed, any new evidence, such as a lost receipt for the amount. We must presume that the tribunals of our sister State would have fairly and correctly adjudicated the controversy between the parties. See how the principles asserted in the court’s charge would work. Here is a dispute between parties residing in different States. One of the parties is found in Illinois, and the courts of that State acquire, in due form of law, jurisdiction over his property and his person. He says: “ I will-not go to trial here; I will pay under protest, and then sue in my own State to get back the amount.” He does pay under protest, and returns to Iowa and sues the other party in that State by attachment. This party says, “ I will not go to trial in Iowa, [344]*344and I will also 'pay under protest, and afterward sue in my own State to get back tbe amount.” ^ A principle working such'results cannot be well founded.

What we hold is, that the mere fact (there being no element of fraud or other means of oppression) that a party is sued by attachment in the State where the plaintiff resides, but which is foreign to the residence of the defendant, will not, without more, make the payment of money compulsory in such a sense that it can be recovered back, if paid under protest and if it can be shown not to be due.

We find, upon looking into the adjudicated cases, that the views above expressed are well sustained.

The principles of law applicable to the case in hand are clearly stated by Shaw, Ch. J., in delivering judgment in Preston v. Boston (12 Pick., 7 — 13). It was an action by a tax-payer to recover of .the city of Boston an illegal tax collected by it. .

“ The only remaining question,” says the distinguished jurist just referred to, “ is, whether this money was paid voluntarily or under duress.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Iowa 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickerman-v-lord-iowa-1866.