Dow v. Epping

48 N.H. 75
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 48 N.H. 75 (Dow v. Epping) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dow v. Epping, 48 N.H. 75 (N.H. 1868).

Opinion

Sargent, J.

A plea of tender, paying money into court upon fhe common rule, and confessing judgment for a certain amount under the statute, in many particulars, stand upon the same ground and have the same effect. In either case the defendant may plead, as to the residue which is not tendered, paid or confessed, the general issue or may file an off-set.

In either case, the tender, the payment into court, or the confession, is held in general terms to be an admission of the contract declared on. Buzzell v. Snell, 25 N. H. 474, and cases; Kelley v. Dover, 18 N. H. 566, and cases; Corey v. Bath, 35 N. H. 331; Pittsfield v. Barnstead, 38 N. H. 115; Hackett v. B. C. & M. Railroad, 35 N. H. 398.

Where the cause of action in the declaration is single and indivisible, there the tender or confession is an admission of some cause of action corresponding with that laid in the declaration. Corey v. Bath. But where the cause of action'is divisible, as where there are several counts in the plaintiff’s declaration, the tender, payment or confession, cannot be construed as an admission in relation to any portion of the residue in respect to which the general issue is also pleaded. Pittsfield v. Barnstead, Hackett v. B. C. & M. Railroad, supra.

In such a case where the cause of action is divisible, the tender, confession, &c., accompanied by the general issue, is held simply to admit some cause of action alleged, and that plaintiff was entitled to recover the amount tendered or confessed for such cause, (Hackett v. Railroad,) and that the tender or confession is an admission no further than that, and in several cases it has been held that the plea of tender, confession, &e., stands upon the same ground as any other plea, and all stand upon the same common principle that where several pleas are filed, they are to be tried precisely as if each was pleaded alone, and that the admissions expressed or implied in one plea, cannot be used as evidence against the party upon any other issue ; (Buzzell v. Snell, supra;) and that a confession of the amount claimed upon a single item of plaintiff’s account, that claim or item being in its nature divisible from the other items in the same account, is to be regarded as a special plea to that particular item of the account, as to all the rest of which the general issue is pleaded; and that where there are several distinct pleas, the plaintiff cannot use- one plea, or any admission expressed or implied in it, as evidence of any fact which is denied in any other plea; and that where several issues are joined, an admission involved in one does not operate as an admission in relation to any other. Pittsfield v. Barnstead is a strong case directly in point. This must, we think, upon an [80]*80examination of the authorities, be considered as the settled law of this State.

In Pittsfield v. Barnstead, the confession was of a particular item in the plaintiff’s account. But the defendant may confess the plaintiff’s action to a certain extent, or that a certain amount is due the plaintiff without specifying the particular item or items in the plaintiff’s specification to which his confession is to be applied. Richey v. Cooper, 45 N. H. 414. In the case before us there are two counts in the declaration, one on a quantum meruit, the other on an account annexed to the writ. The defendant does not state to which count he intends to have the tender apply. If he intended it to apply to the first count, as he evidently did, it would simply be an admission that the town had used and received the benefit of the stones in question, and that they were worth fifteen dollars, and would admit nothing more than that; and if the plaintiff would recover more, he must prove under that count that the stones were worth more than that sum, or he must prove a special contract under his second count, and that the town had in some way promised to pay the sum of thirty dollars for the same, as charged in the account annexed.. We do not think that the plea of tender in this case can be held to admit any special contract, or to be an admission of anything under this second count in the declaration.

Had Willey who contracted for the stones in this case, authority to bind the town ?

Towns may choose highway surveyors at their annual meeting; Rev. Stats, ch. 55, sec. 3 ; but in case the town does not thus choose them, then the selectmen shall appoint them, and they shall enter upon their' duties on the fifteenth day of May. Pamph. Laws 1862, ch. 2620. The case finds that no surveyor for this district was elected by the town. It therefore became the duty of the selectmen to appoint one, and this appointment is to be in writing, and the officer is to be duly sworn, and his appointment and the certificate of such oath are to be recorded in the records of the town. Rev. Stats, ch. 36, sec. 6. The case finds that there was no such record in the books of the town. But it does not appear but that Willey was appointed in writing by the selectmen, and it does appear affirmatively that he took the oath of office before he received his warrant. It does not appear whose fault it was, whether Willey’s or the selectmen’s, that this appointment, if one was made, was not recorded, or whose fault it was that the oath thus taken was not properly certified and recorded.

But it does appear that the acting selectmen of the town, on the nineteenth of April, 1866, committed to Willey his warrant as highway surveyor of that district for that year, which we take to have been a warrant in common form as given in the Town Officer, 5th ed. p. 194, which was addressed to him as the highway surveyor of that district for that year, in which he was commanded and required in the name of the State, to give such notice as the law required to all persons whose names were contained in the accompanying list, to work out the taxes set against the name of each at a given time and place, giving him directions as to tha compensation to be allowed for such labor, limiting his [81]*81highway district, and ordering him, in case of failure to work out the taxes, to make distress, &c., and giving him orders how to proceed in such cases, and ordering him at the end of his official year to settle with, and pay over any balance in his hands to, the selectmen, which warrant was signed by all the acting selectmen.

Under this warrant, the case finds that Willey had acted as surveyor in said district. He had given notice to all whose names were in his list including this plaintiff, and they had all worked out their highway taxes under him as surveyor. After the taxes in this district had been all thus worked out, this bridge from some cause needed repairs, and the acting selectmen ordered Willey, as the acting surveyor of said district, to repair it, the selectmen as it would seem having some general oversight of the work and paying the bills for labor done on the bridge, in behalf of the town.

Willey bought the stones of the plaintiff to use in the repairs of said bridge, and they were thus used; the price was to be agreed upon after all should bo taken that might be needed for that purpose ; and the price was thus agreed on subsequently, at thirty dollars, and Willey gave a certificate in writing of that fact, signing it as such surveyor.

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.H. 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dow-v-epping-nh-1868.