Dow v. A. C. Cheney Piano Action Co.

160 A. 274, 104 Vt. 350, 1932 Vt. LEXIS 154
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 4, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 160 A. 274 (Dow v. A. C. Cheney Piano Action Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dow v. A. C. Cheney Piano Action Co., 160 A. 274, 104 Vt. 350, 1932 Vt. LEXIS 154 (Vt. 1932).

Opinion

Slack, J.

At the times here material, the plaintiff was a lumber dealer doing business in Belmont, Vermont, and the defendant was a piano manufacturer located in Castleton, New York. On January 20, 1925, defendant gave plaintiff an order for four hundred thousand feet of No. 1 common and better hard maple to be delivered f. o. b., Castleton, New York, and eighty thousand feet of white birch to be delivered f. o. b. Brandon or Rutland, Vermont. The order contained these provisions : ‘ ‘ The stock to be first class in every respect and equal to what we have been receiving. 3% discount 15 days from date of invoice. Shipping instructions to follow.” Plaintiff accepted the order. The quantity of lumber thereby called for, *352 except as modified by agreement of the parties, was furnished by plaintiff and accepted by defendant. Some of it was shipped on shipping instructions given by defendant, and some was shipped without such instructions. The plaintiff claimed, and still does, that defendant did not receive the lumber as fast as it was bound to by the terms of. the contract, and that it deducted the 3% discount in instances where it had no right so to do. Both claims were, and are, denied by defendant. After all the lumber had been shipped and accepted by defendant and paid for as it claims, plaintiff brought this suit to recover, to quote from his specifications:

“(1). Discounts improperly deducted and interest thereon $526.45
(2) . Interest on delayed payment of invoices 436.99
(3) . Damage for not taking deliveries by September 1, 1925 1,008.99”

The court below heard the case on the merits, and found for plaintiff to recover $1,012.07, as of January 26, 1931. This amount includes $352.88 allowed on item (2) of the specification; $617.69 allowed on item (3), damages for not taking deliveries by December 1, 1925, instead of September 1, 1925, as computed in that item of the specification, and $41.50 for taxes paid by plaintiff. Item (1) of the specification was disallowed. This item is the difference between the amount due plaintiff as shown by his invoices of total shipments, $35,709.96 and the amount he had received from defendant, $35,302.86, which was $407.10, plus interest thereon computed by plaintiff.

The case is here on exceptions by both parties.

Such of plaintiff’s exceptions as are briefed relate to the dis-allowance of item (1) of the specification. Since these exceptions are not material in view of our disposition of defendant’s exceptions, they are not considered.

The defendant insists that the undisputed evidence shows a substituted contract which had been fully performed; shows a waiver by plaintiff of the claims upon which he now seeks to recover ; shows that he is estopped from asserting such claims, and shows an accord and satisfaction. It is necessary to notice only the last question. This was raised in various ways. The defendant, in effect, requested the court to find that the acceptance by plaintiff of a certain check given him by defendant *353 June 14, 1927, was, in the circumstances, an accord and satisfaction of plaintiff’s claims. In paragraph 27 of its findings, the court says: ‘ ‘ Plaintiff has not, by his conduct, waived his right now to assert his claim for interest or special damages,” and in the following paragraph, it says: “The check of June 14, 1927, and the letter accompanying it, when cashed by the plaintiff, was not an accord and satisfaction of the plaintiff’s claim.” Defendant excepted to the failure of the court to find as requested, to the findings, quoted, and to such other findings as bear upon the same subject-matter.

The plaintiff contends that the question of accord and satisfaction is not before us, because not specially pleaded. The defendant says that it is specially pleaded, but insists that this is not necessary under the Practice Act, G. L. 1791, sub-division II, as amended by Act No. 72 of Laws of 1921. As to the latter claim, it is in error. We held otherwise in Noyes et al. v. Pierce, 97 Vt. 188, 122 Atl. 896. To the same effect is Howard National Bank v. Wilson & Trustee, 96 Vt. 438, 120 Atl. 889. Both of these cases were tried below after the 1921 amendment became effective.

While the plea is not as specific as might be desired, we think .it contains the essentials of a plea of accord and satisfaction. It alleges, in substance, that there was a dispute between the parties as to when defendant was required, under the terms of the contract, to accept shipments, and a dispute as to its right to the discounts; that it sent plaintiff a check dated June 14, 1927, for $225.63 (after the dispute as to both claims had arisen), accompanied by a letter of same date stating that the check “settles your account in full”; that plaintiff immediately received and cashed such check without protest, wherefore the defendant says that the plaintiff has settled his claims against defendant, and each of them, and has been paid in full. To be sure, it does not follow the approved form by averring in express terms that defendant delivered the check to plaintiff in full satisfaction and discharge of plaintiff’s claims, or that plaintiff accepted it in full satisfaction and discharge of such claims, but that such is the import of the language used seems clear. But assuming that the plea does not put in issue this question, the plaintiff is no better off, since we have held that *354 the course of the trial may be such as to constitute a waiver of any question respecting the sufficiency of the pleadings to make available a defense not properly pleaded. Howard Nat. Bank v. Wilson & Trustee, supra; Bradley v. Blondin & Somerset Land Co., 91 Vt. 472, 475, 100 Atl. 920; Barre Trust Co. v. Ladd, 103 Vt. 392, 154 Atl. 680. Such was the situation here. The record shows that the trial proceeded to its conclusion upon the theory that this was one of the defenses relied upon. . In his opening statement, counsel for defendant called attention to the check and letter set forth in its plea, and plaintiff’s acceptance of such check, and claimed that any matters of dispute that might have previously existed were thereby settled. To this counsel for plaintiff replied, in effect, that that did not constitute an accord and satisfaction, thus indicating that he then understood defendant’s claim respecting the effect of this transaction. Later, the defendant introduced evidence, without objection, to show that plaintiff accepted and cashed this check without protest, and before he made any claim that it was not accepted for the purpose for which it was given, namely, to settle his account in full. Furthermore, as we have seen, defendant requested the court to find that the giving of such check, in the circumstances shown, and its acceptance by plaintiff, constituted an accord and satisfaction, and excepted to the action of the court in finding the contrary. All this occurred without any suggestion from plaintiff that this defense was not properly in the case. In this situation he cannot now be heard to claim otherwise.

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Bluebook (online)
160 A. 274, 104 Vt. 350, 1932 Vt. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dow-v-a-c-cheney-piano-action-co-vt-1932.