Dix v. Trigger Contractors, Inc.
This text of 337 So. 2d 694 (Dix v. Trigger Contractors, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
D.R. DIX
v.
TRIGGER CONTRACTORS, INC., a Mississippi Corporation.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
Louie M. Bishop, Waynesboro, for appellant.
Guy M. Walker, Laurel, for appellee.
Before GILLESPIE, C.J., and ROBERTSON and LEE, JJ.
ROBERTSON, Justice, for the Court:
On a bill for attachment in chancery, Trigger Contractors, Inc., a Mississippi corporation, recovered a judgment for $3,246.56 against D.R. Dix, a non-resident of Mississippi, in the Chancery Court of Wayne County.
Dix employed Trigger Contractors, Inc., on Johnny May's recommendation, to disassemble the equipment at one oil well and to reassemble and rebuild it at another drilling site. Trigger performed this work during May and June, 1974, and submitted to Dix a number of itemized invoices totalling $5,885.50.
B.P. Trigg, president of Trigger, asked Dix for a payment on account and Dix, on June 7, 1974, handed a $1500 check to Trigg. Trigg deposited this check to Trigger's account in the First State Bank, Waynesboro, Mississippi.
Trigg testified that later on he talked to either Mr. Bill Flannigan or Mr. Dix about paying him the balance due, and either Flannigan or Dix advised him that they wanted to go over the invoices with him. Over the next two or three weeks, Trigg called them several times and "they informed me they had sent my check to Mr. Johnny May's office."
Trigg further testified:
"Well, I went by Mr. Johnny May's office and I said, `Have I got a check here?' and he handed it to me. And I said `$1,500.00'. I said `That's not all they owe me'. Mr. May said he realized it was not all that they owed me, and they had `Final Payment' marked at the bottom of the check, and I said, `I can't accept that'. I said `I need my money', and Mr. May first stated, he said, `I don't believe I would cash the check'. I said, `Well, I need some money now. I'm running low', and there was a gentleman by the name of Mr. George Jett sitting there and Mr. May stated to me, he said, `Well, let Mr. Jett look at it. He's been in this business a long time', and he looked at the check and he said, `Well, I don't know. You might be able to state on the back of it *695 that it's accepted as part payment only and show your balance owing'."
This $1,500 check was drawn by D.R. Dix on Deposit Guaranty National Bank, Jackson, Mississippi, dated July 3, 1974, and made payable to Trigger Contractors, Inc. In the lower left corner was written in "Final Payment". Trigg lined out the word "Final" on the face of the check and wrote above "Final" the word "Part", making the notation read "Part Payment". Typed on the back of the check was: "excepted (sic) by Trigger Contractors Inc. as part payment only. Balance due on account $2,885.50". Trigg signed underneath: "B.P. Trigg, President".
Trigg negotiated this check with the First State Bank of Waynesboro, Mississippi, on July 8, 1974, and that bank stamped on the back of the check: "Pay any bank P.E.G. First State Bank Waynesboro, Miss."
Trigger then filed suit for $4,385.50 on July 12, 1974. The bill for attachment averred:
"That no part thereof has been paid except that shown as credits on the statement of account and being in the sum of $1,500.00 having been paid and leaving a balance due of $4,385.50, as of the date shown on itemized Statement attached hereto."
No mention was made in the bill of the $1,500 payment made by check, dated July 3, 1974.
On July 29, 1974, Trigger amended its bill for attachment by adding another invoice in the sum of $361.02, thereby making the total due $4,746.52. No mention was made in the amendment of the $1,500 check cashed by Trigg on July 8, 1974.
Appellant assigns as error:
"II. That the Chancery Court erred in ruling that the check given by the Appellant, Dix, on July 3, 1974, which was marked at the time it was executed and delivered with the words, `Final Payment', and which was altered by the Appellee by striking out the word, Final, and the word, Part, put in its place, was not a full accord and satisfaction."
Trigger contends that its claim was liquidated and undisputed and that its President Trigg had no idea that Dix was not satisfied with the amount of the bill.
Flannigan, an associate of Dix, testified:
"Q Now when you went through those checks [invoices] did you contact Mr. Trigg or what did you do?
A No, I didn't contact Mr. Trigg. Mr. Trigg contacted me.
Q When did he contact you?
A He contacted me about a week before he filed that, whatever it is that's filed against the lease out there.
Q All right, did you and Mr. Trigg have a discussion?
A We discussed it.
Q What was the substance of that discussion?
A The substance of that conversation was that I thought he had charged us three times what he should have charged us and that if Mr. Dix waited for me to okay the bill it wouldn't be paid, because it was outrageously high and unreasonable.
Q Did you tell Mr. Trigg that?
A I told Mr. Trigg that.
Q Who authorized the writing of the $1,500.00 check and when?
A We kind of get together on it. I discussed it with Johnny May and I discussed it with Mr. Dix...."
.....
Q All right, and then what did you do?
A Mr. Dix wrote him a check for $1,500.00 and I told him to put on there `Final Payment'."
The general rule is stated in 1 Am.Jur.2d Accord and Satisfaction § 22 (1962):
"It is well established that if a check bearing a notation indicating that it is offered in full payment or settlement of a disputed or unliquidated claim is delivered by the debtor to the creditor, and this is made clear to the creditor, the latter cannot avoid the dilemma of returning the check or keeping it in full satisfaction of the claim by simply erasing, *696 obliterating, or canceling the words which import such satisfaction. So when a creditor accepts a check inclosed in a letter stating that the check is in final settlement, and on the check is a printed receipt acknowledging receipt in full settlement as stated on a memorandum attached to the check, acts of the creditor in erasing the word `full' before the word `acceptance' and writing in the word `part' does not change the effect of his acceptance of the check as an accord and satisfaction." (Emphasis added).
While this is a case of first impression in Mississippi (where the check has been altered and the condition changed), there are Mississippi cases that treat of accord and satisfaction.
In Cooper v. Yazoo and Mississippi Valley Railroad, 82 Miss. 634, 35 So. 162 (1903), this Court said:
"`Where ... a sum of money is tendered in satisfaction of the claim, and the tender is accompanied by such acts and declarations as amount to a condition that, if the money is accepted, it is accepted in satisfaction, and such that the party to whom it is offered is bound to understand therefrom that, if he takes it, he takes it subject to such condition, an acceptance of the money offered constitutes an accord and satisfaction.
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