Erwin v. Jones

180 S.W. 428, 192 Mo. App. 326, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 79
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 28, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 180 S.W. 428 (Erwin v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Erwin v. Jones, 180 S.W. 428, 192 Mo. App. 326, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 79 (Mo. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

FARRINGTON, J. —

The plaintiff recovered a judgment against defendant for $3500 on account of damages occasioned by a alleged breach of contract to marry her. No point is made on the petition.

The defendant for answer filed a general denial, coupled with the following special plea which he calls ‘ ‘ Accord and Satisfaction: ” ‘£ Further answering the said petition, defendant says that on September &, 1913, long after the happening of the transactions referred to in plaintiff’s petition, all demands, claims and differences then existing between the plaintiff and the defendant were compromised and settled between them and that all the claims and demands mentioned and sued on in plaintiff’s petition were settled and compromised by a contract of compromise and settlement made and entered into by and between the plaintiff and the defendant by which said contract, in consideration of the sum of one hundred dollars, the plaintiff agreed to compromise and settle all said claims, demands and causes of action sued on in this suit and’ agreed to receive and accept the said sum in full satisfaction of all the claims and demands sued on in this action and which she then had or might have against the defendant; that by the said contract the defendant bound himself to pay plaintiff, in consideration of said settlement and compromise agreement of all the said claims and demands and differences existing between himself and the plaintiff, the said sum of one hundred dollars and then and there paid the plaintiff thereon the sum of ten dollars; that the remainder of said sum was to be paid to plaintiff on demand; that defendant thereafter tendered plaintiff the balance of the said sum and she refused and still refuses to accept the same; that plaintiff has ever since been [329]*329and he is now ready and willing to pay plaintiff the remainder of said snm and tenders the same into this court for her benefit; that plaintiff still retains the said sum so paid her on said settlement and compromise agreement; that at the time of entering into said settlement and compromise agreement and upon defendant paying plaintiff the said sum of ten dollars, and promising to pay her the remainder thereof on demand, the plaintiff executed in writing and delivered to defendant her acknowledgement of satisfaction and release of defendant for all the claims and demands she then had ’against the defendant for all differences existing between them, including all the demands and causes of action sued on in this petition. Wherefore defendant says, if the plaintiff ever had any cause of action, claim or demand against the defendant on account of the matters and things alleged in her petition, the same are compromised and settled and are no longer the subject of an action between them and the defendant has been discharged and released from all liability on account thereof.”

The reply of the plaintiff admitted that there was an agreement entered into between plaintiff and defendant whereby she was to receive one hundred dollars in lieu of all damages sustained by her by reason of the breach of defendant’s promise to marry her, and that ten dollars was paid on such compromise agreement, but that before the balance was paid the ten dollars was returned to the defendant and the compromise repudiated.

Plaintiff signed a writing, referred to in the evidence as a receipt and release, which on its face acknowledges the receipt of one hundred dollars paid. The fact is, however, as shown by the receipt set forth below as well as by the allegation in defendant’s answer, that the one hundred dollars was not paid, but that only ten dollars passed between them.

The receipt and release, so called, is as follows:

[330]*330“There being certain differences now existing between A. M. Jones and myself in regard to former relations between ns — ” now in consideration of the sum of one hundred dollars tome paid by A. M. Jones,I hereby accept the same in full satisfaction of any and all claims I may have against him. This Sept. 6, 1913.
‘ ‘ Mary Erwin. ’ ’
The receipt is as follows:
“$10.00 Wentworth Mo. Sept. 6,1913.
“Beceived from A. M. Jones, ten &......no/100, Dollars, part payment on agreement of Sept. 6,1913.
“Mary Erwin.”

We will take up the points pressed upon us for a reversal of this judgment and discuss the facts in connection therewith.

It is insisted that the court should have rendered judgment for the defendant on the pleadings in that defendant’s special plea was a plea of accord and satisfaction and that plaintiff’s reply admitted an accord and satisfaction. This point is not well taken because the special defense set up in the answer is not such as in law amounts to a plea of accord and satisfaction. It goes no farther than to aver that plaintiff and defendant did agree to compromise and settle their differences and that that agreement was that ten dollars should be paid down, which was done, and that the balance of ninety dollars was to be paid on plaintiff’s demand, and that after having paid the ten dollars and before the ninety dollars was paid, plaintiff refused to accept any further sum under the compromise agreement, and that defendant has ever been ready and willing to pay the remainder of said sum. This plea amounts to no more than an averment of an accord and on its face lacks the element of satisfaction. Both accord and satisfaction must enter into such agreement to be a bar to the original cause of action. [Crouch v. Quigley, 258 Mo. 651, 167 S. W. 978; Carter v. Railroad, 136 Mo. App. l. c. 724, 119 S. W. 35; Vining v. Fire Ins. Co., 89 [331]*331Mo. App. 311; Giboney v. German Ins. Co., 48 Mo. App. 185; Goff v. Mulholland, 28 Mo. 397; Russell v. Lytle, 6 Wend. (N. Y.) 390; Hunt on Accord and Satisfaction, sec. 3.] The cases cited hold that in order that there be satisfaction of an accord the agreement must be executed, that a mere executory accord is insufficient to sustain a plea in bar to the original cause of action, and that this rule is not affected by a part performance. The plea of defendant shows on its face that only ten dollars had been paid on the agreement before a repudiation took place, and there is no averment in the answer that there was an express stipulation to accept the new promise as a discharge of the previous liability.

It would seem that, under the rule declared in the cases of Gerhart Realty Co. v. Northern Assurance Co., 94 Mo. App. 356, 68 S. W. 86, and Curtis v. Browne, 63 Mo. App. 431, where the evidence clearly shows that the new promise will be taken in full discharge and accepted as satisfaction or payment of the original cause of action, then, although the new agreement has not been carried out, it will work an accord and satisfaction.. [See, 1 R. C. L., secs. 35 and 36.]

We are cited by appellant to the case of Putnam v. Boyer, 173 Mo. App. 394, 158 S. W. 861, and similar cases. There, the receipt and release were given and the full amount of the settlement actually paid and the compromise executed, while here the pleadings of both parties and the uncontradicted evidence of the plaintiff show that only ten dollars was actually paid. The plaintiff returned the ten dollars which was paid, together with interest, by sending defendant a postoffice money order for $10.50.

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Bluebook (online)
180 S.W. 428, 192 Mo. App. 326, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erwin-v-jones-moctapp-1916.