French v. Commercial Credit Co.

64 P.2d 127, 99 Colo. 447, 1936 Colo. LEXIS 247
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 9, 1936
DocketNo. 13,779.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 64 P.2d 127 (French v. Commercial Credit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
French v. Commercial Credit Co., 64 P.2d 127, 99 Colo. 447, 1936 Colo. LEXIS 247 (Colo. 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bouck

delivered the opinion of the court.

In the district court of Hinsdale county, French, the plaintiff in error, obtained a temporary injunction to restrain a threatened sale for alleged foreclosure of a chattel mortgage, which injunction, on hearing, was dissolved. He now asks for a reversal.

The litigation arises out of French’s promissory note for $644.76, dated August 22,1930, and secured by a chattel mortgage on an automobile. Before maturity the payee sold and assigned the note to the Commercial Credit Company, defendant in error. It was payable in twelve installments of $53.73 each. These were due on the 22nd day of twelve successive months, beginning one month after date of the note. The September, October and November installments were duly paid. French, finding it impossible to meet the subsequent payments promptly, thereupon wrote to the Denver office of the company asking it to grant a readjustment by extending the time for paying the. fourth and succeeding installments. On March 3, 1931, the company replied to French’s general suggestion with the following specific offer: “Please be *449 advised that it will be okey to make one installment to us if you will continue to make these payments to tis each month until you are caught up.” The offer was immediately accepted, French mailing to the company on the very next day (March 4) a check for the full (fourth) installment, which in his previous letter he had reported as ready to send. Later in the same month he remitted by check to the company another full installment by check. These were followed by like payments complying with the extension arrangement and made direct to the company in each of the next six months, leaving only one installment of $53.73 still to be paid, namely, the one which would fall due under the agreement on October 22, 1931. That sum French covered by his check of October 19, which he mailed in the usual manner. On it he noted: “Final payment on Whippet Car Note & Mrg. ’ ’ This last check the company refused to accept.

On March 7, 1931, a replevin suit to recover the mortgaged automobile had been commenced in Hinsdale county by the company’s attorneys, whose office was in Gunnison, Colorado. The summons was served upon French near Lake City, the county seat of Hinsdale county, two days later.

The record shows that the company had not then informed its attorneys of the extension agreement or of the payment made thereunder by French’s check of March 4, 1931. In fact, it does not appear that the company ever apprized its attorneys of the aforesaid payment, so made before suit was brought, nor of the agreement which the company had made direct with French. By letter dated March 21,1931, the company merely told these attorneys: “Please lie advised that we have received a draft from the above purchaser [French] covering one installment on his car. We are writing you to know whether we should apply this against the account or not. The account at this time is past due for January, February and March 22nd in the amount of $53.73 each.” At the time of writing this letter the March 4 payment, if not the second *450 payment also, had been transmitted to the company in strict compliance with its letter to French of March 3.

It was only when the second payment had, in accordance with the agreement, been forwarded by French prior to March 25 that the company in a letter to French of that date — after saying it acknowledged receipt and was applying it to French’s account — wrote: “This is formal notice to you, however, and this is done on the advice of our attorney, that we are. not surrendering our course of action on the replevin suit which has been started. We intend to push the replevin suit through to a conclusion. You will either have to give up the automobile. or pay your account in full, plus all of our attorney’s costs. It is possible that you could see them and settle the matter out of court and save yourself part of the attorney’s costs. However, the matter is entirely in their hands. They have instructions to push it through to a final conclusion, and any agreement will have to be reached with them. ’ ’

It is certain that, when the company and French made their agreement in the beginning of March, no replevin suit had yet been instituted and no “attorney’s costs” had accrued. If, then, the parties carried out that agreement without any default on the part of French, it stands to reason that no attorney’s fees would be earned in the collection of the note.

Manifestly the offer contained in the company’s letter of March 3 had been accepted and acted upon before the letter of March 25 was received by French on the 30th. Two installments had then already been paid in conformity with the definite arrangement made by and between French and the company itself without the intervention of the company’s attorneys.

The controversy between the parties is as to the legal effect of what they did and failed to do. There is no material conflict in the evidence.

French did not contest the replevin suit. Findings and judgment were there entered against him on September *451 8, 1931. The salient points of the district court’s attempted adjudication are as follows:

‘ ‘ * * * French is indebted to the plaintiff [company] in the sum of $107.44, the balance due upon his certain promissory note dated the 22nd day of August, 1931; that it is provided in said note that in the event it becomes necessary for plaintiff to employ an attorney to enforce the collection of said note, that fifteen per cent of the principal sum due thereon at the time of the commencement of its action, will be paid by the maker as attorney’s fees and costs of collection; that the defendant has agreed to pay and is indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $72.54 for its attorney’s fees and expenses of collection, which is a reasonable fee for its said attorneys; that the plaintiff corporation is the owner and holder of a chattel mortgage * * * upon one * * * automobile [duly described], which chattel mortgage is a first and prior lien upon said automobile, and that the defendant is in default in the payment of the promissory note hereinbefore referred to, which is secured by the aforesaid chattel mortgage, and that the plaintiff is entitled to the immediate possession of the personal property hereinabove described, or the value thereof at the time of the commencement of this action, which is herein found to be the sum of $483.57.
“Therefore, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed * * * that the plaintiff do have and recover of * * * French judgment in the total sum of $179.98 debt and for attorneys’ fees herein; and that the plaintiff do have and recover of and from the defendant, F. C. French, immediate possession of the aforesaid personal goods and chattels, or the sum of $179.98 in the event that possession thereof cannot be had, together with plaintiff’s costs * * * taxed at * * * $31.50 * *

French argues that the extension agreement in conjunction with the payments made to the company, including the rejected check for the last of the nine deferred installments, has brought about an accord and satisfaction.

*452

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 P.2d 127, 99 Colo. 447, 1936 Colo. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/french-v-commercial-credit-co-colo-1936.