Gordon v. Moore

44 Ark. 349
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 44 Ark. 349 (Gordon v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gordon v. Moore, 44 Ark. 349 (Ark. 1884).

Opinion

Eakin, J.

On the twenty-fourth day of May, 1883, Moore recovered, by default, a judgment against Gordon for $2,293.20, being for the balance, with interest, due upon a certain promissory note executed to Moore by Robinson, Childress and Gordon on the twelfth day of January, 1881, and due at twelve months.

On the seventh of April following, Gordon filed this petition in the Circuit Court uuder section 1692 of Gautt’s Digest, setting forth, as amended, that Moore had sued Robinson and Childress upon the same note in the District Court for the Northern District of Mississippi at Oxford, and at the December term thereof, in 1882, had recovered a judgment against them for the same balance, which appears then to have been $2,202.90. He alleges that, in March, 1883, this judgment was discharged and satisfied upon the payment by Childress to Moore of the sum of $450, which operated as a discharge of the claim as to petitioner also ; that, in consideration of said payment, Moore had executed to Childress a release, as follows :

“E

“Know all men by these presents, that I, John P. Moore, of the county and State aforesaid, in consideration of the sum of four hundred and fifty dollars paid to me by I). C. Childress of Coahoma County, Mississippi, I have this day released said Childress from any and all liability to me upon a certain judgment rendered in my favor against said Childress, by the United States Court for the Northern District of Mississippi, at Oxford, in said State, at the December term thereof, 1882, and hereby authorize the clerk of said court to enter satisfaction as to said Childress upon said judgment, in accordance herewith.

“Witness my hand and seal this nineteenth of March, 1883.

“John P. Moore.”

This instrument was filed with the clerk of the said District Court, who made the following indorsement upon the margin of the recorded judgment:

“ This judgment is satisfied as to D. L. Childress, and is here so entered by authority of plaintiff on file, March 23, 1883.

“G. R. Hill, Clerk.”

The petitioner states that Moore well knew all these facts when the judgment by default was obtained, but that they had not come to his own knowledge until after the adjournment of the term. He therefore prayed that the judgment rendered against him in the Phillips Circuit Court be vacated, and that he be allowed a new trial, with other appropriate relief.

Moore, in response, admitted the recovery of the Mississippi judgment against Robinson and Childress, and the payment to him by Childress of the sum of $450, which should have been entered as a credit upon the balance, but which had been inadvertently omitted. He consents that the judgment in the Phillips court against petitioner may be to that extent modified. For the rest he says that Robinson was the principal in the note, and that Childress and Gordon were only his sureties, and denies that the release executed to Childress was intended, or did operate to discharge his claim against the principal, Robinson, or the other surety, Gordon. He says that petitioner was insolvent, and that he sued the principal with Childress in Mississippi, hoping to make his money there, but soon learned that Childress was insolvent also. The most that could be got out of him was the sum of $450, and that only by an agreement to release him from the judgment. He submits that petitioner was not released by the transaction.

Upon hearing by the court, the suretyship of Childress and Gordon was shown. Childress testified, in explanation of the release, that he then owned a half interest in the Brown and Childress place in Mississippi, which he desired to mortgage for a loan of money, and was obliged, in order to get a perfect abstract of title, either to pay off the judgment debt of Moore, or to have-it released as to himself. He never saw Moore about the matter, but transacted the business through others. A Mr. Carter made the trade with Moore, and a Mr. Brown paid Moore the money, and witness settled with Brown for it afterwards.

The Honorable Circuit Judge, confessing some doubt, expressed the opinion that, notwithstanding some slight differences, the facts of this case come within the principles announced by this court in the cases of Cavaness v. Ross, 33 Ark.., and that of Coblentz, 40 Ark., p. 180; and upon the authority of those cases he held that the agreement for a release, and the release itself, was nudum, pactum, not operating as a release of the whole judgment nor as a release of Gordon.

A judgment was thereupon rendered modifying the former judgment by allowing a credit of $450, the amount paid by Childress. The motion for a new trial was overruled. A bill of exceptions was properly taken, and Gordon appeals.

The general principle announced in Cavaness v. Ross is well settled, being this, that the payment of a less sum of money will not be good in satisfaction of a larger sum actually liquidated and clearly due and payable, unless there be in the transaction some other element of consideration of real or supposed benefit to the creditor or detriment to the debtor. The question arose upon a compromise, made pendente lite, by which the plaintiff accepted a less sum and dismissed the suit. Held, no discharge as to the balance.

The case of Coblentz v. Wheeler & Wilson Man. Co., 40 Ark., 180, comes somewhat nearer this. It was a case of injunction by Coblentz to restrain the sewing machine company from enforcing a judgment which it had obtained against him, upon the grounds that he had agreed ■with the agent of the company to pay, upon a certain day, a sum less than the amount of the judgment, and had attended at the end of the time appointed prepared to make the payment, but that the agent had not attended to receive it, and had afterwards caused an execution to be issued. The court held that the agreement was an accord unexecuted, without consideration, invalid, and not enforceable in equity. The decree below, dismissing the suit, was affirmed.

Iu the Cavaness case nothing was done but the payment of the money by the debtor. No release was given. The original notes were retained and afterwards assigned, as valid, to one ignorant of the compromise. The dismissal of the suit does not imply abandonment of the claim.

In the Coblentz case there was only a parol agreement for a future release of a judgment never carried into execution. No money was ever paid.

This cause is distinctive from either. There was not only payment of the sum agreed, and the actual execution of a release, but there was a power of attorney given the clerk to enter upon the margin of the record a full satisfaction of the judgment as to Childress. The authority was filed amongst the archives of the office, and the power was executed as directed. There was nothing further to be given up. Everything had been done, of the most solemn and positive nature between the parties and by the clerk, to carry out the intention and to give notice to the world of what had been done. There was an object which made it necessary that nothing should be left executory. That was, that the land of Childress might be no longer incumbered by the lien of the judgment, but left free for a contemplated mortgage.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Means v. Nelle Gertrude Berger Trust
799 S.W.2d 556 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 1990)
Miller v. Brown
258 S.W.2d 237 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1953)
Austin v. J. R. Watkins Company.
46 S.W.2d 16 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1932)
Biggs v. Davis
43 S.W.2d 724 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1931)
Martin v. State Ex Rel. Saline County
286 S.W. 873 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1926)
First National Bank v. Mayr
127 N.E. 7 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1920)
First National Bank v. Mayr
123 N.E. 829 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1919)
Sigler v. Sigler
158 P. 864 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1916)
Lashbrooke v. Cole
186 S.W. 317 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1916)
Smoot v. Checketts
125 P. 412 (Utah Supreme Court, 1912)
Dreyfus v. Roberts
69 L.R.A. 823 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1905)
Williams v. Blumenthal
67 P. 393 (Washington Supreme Court, 1901)
Marshall v. Bullard
54 L.R.A. 862 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1901)
Winter ex rel. Smith v. Kansas City Cable Railway Co.
61 S.W. 606 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1901)
Winter ex rel. Smith v. Kansas City Cable Railway Co.
73 Mo. App. 173 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1898)
Henson v. Stever
69 Mo. App. 136 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1897)
McChesney v. Bell ex rel. Shaw
59 Ill. App. 84 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1895)
Roberts v. Carter
31 Ill. App. 142 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1889)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 Ark. 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-moore-ark-1884.