Grumley v. Webb

48 Mo. 562
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 48 Mo. 562 (Grumley v. Webb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grumley v. Webb, 48 Mo. 562 (Mo. 1871).

Opinions

CüRRiBR, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The possession and legal title to the leasehold described in the petition is in the defendant, but the plaintiff claims to be the [569]*569equitable owner of it, and brings this suit to recover the rents and profits and to divest the défendant of title.

As an answer to the plaintiff’s claim, the defendant avers a compromise and release of it. He sets up an accord and satisfaction in bar of the suit, alleging, in substance, that since the accrual of the cause of action sued on, the plaintiff and defendant have settled all matters in difference between them, inclüding said supposed cause of action, and that the defendant, in consummation of such settlement, paid the plaintiff the sum of $6,500, and that the plaintiff accepted and received the same in full satisfaction of all claims and demands then existing in his favor against the defendant — the claim now in litigation, as the defendant alleges, being one of them. . .

These allegations are put in issue by the pleadings. T'he case is thus made to turn upon the evidence adduced in proof of the alleged accord and satisfaction.

At the trial, the defendant, for the purpose of proving the averments of his answer, offered and read in .evidence a receipt dated March 7,*1865, which was duly executed by the plaintiff. It appears from this receipt that the defendant, on the day the receipt was executed, paid to the plaintiff the sum of $6,500, and that the plaintiff accepted and received the same as in full satisfaction of a certain judgment and “all claims and demands” then held by him against the defendant. So the receipt reads.

At first blush, the receipt seems to prove the defendant’s case, since the cause of action sued on accrued prior to the execution of the receipt. That view, however,. encounters objections. It is objected that, the receipt fails to meet the requirements of the .statute of frauds (Wagn. Stat 655, §2); and further, that a true construction of its terms excludes the cause of action now in suit. It is proposed.by construction to limit the effect of the receipt to the particular judgment therein set out and described.

The first objection is based upon the assumption that the plaintiff’s equity constituted an interest in real estate that could not be sold or conveyed except by some instrument in writing which should meet the requirements of the statute of frauds in relation to such sales and conveyances.

[570]*570It is then insisted that the receipt fails to meet these requirements. If that were so it would not invalidate the receipt as regards the use sought to be made, of it here. It was not given in evidence to prove either a sale or conveyance, but to establish the fact of an accord and satisfaction which included and extinguished the plaintiff’s equity. The plaintiff’s objection as regards the 'point now under consideration is without force, unless it is shown that the plaintiff’s interest in the leasehold was of such a nature that it could not be destroyed in the manner stated in the answer — that is, by an accord followed up and consummated in a complete satisfaction. The plaintiff’s counsel cite and rely upon Hughes v. Moore, 7 Cranch, 466, as the strongest-case to be found in the books in support of their position. But that case does not prove that the plaintiff’s equity could not be.extinguished by the accord and satisfaction evidenced by the receipt. It proves the direct opposite of that, as we shall presently see. In that case the equitable owner made a parol agreement, for a certain consideration agreed to be paid, to surrender and transfer his equitable interest in certain lands to" the bargainees who held the legal title.

The agreement was not reduced to writing, nor was anything done in execution of it. The equitable owner nevertheless subsequently sued the bargainees for the purchase money, and it was held that he could not recover, the court deciding that the agreement was for .the sale of an interest in land, and so ysdthin the statute of frauds — nothing having been done in execution of the agreement. But there is no vital resemblance between that case and the one now under consideration. There the suit was founded upon an unexecuted parol contract, and was brought to recover the unpaid purchase money.

Here (assuming that the receipt was intended to cover the matters now in litigation) the purchase money was paid down and in full, if the transaction can be regarded as partaking of the nature of a purchase. At all events the contract was executed, and upon that fact the present defense rests. The defendant is in possession and holds a perfect record title. He neither asks nor needs the assistance of the court. It is the plaintiff that is [571]*571calling on tie court for help. He invokes tbe extraordinary power of a court of equity to enforce what he claims as an equitable right. .He agreed on the value of the supposed equity (assuming as before that the receipt covers the case — a point which will hereafter be considered) and has been paid that value in full. He .accepted the sum so paid as a satisfaction, and abandoned' his claim. With the consideration money in his pocket, he now seeks in a court of equity to recover the property'itself! There is no equity here that a court of equity will deign to touch, and for the reason that the claim asserted is altogether inequitable and unconscionable.

The settlement, coupled with the $6,500 payment, extinguished the plaintiff’s equitable interest in the leasehold, and left nothing for a court of chancery to act upon; and this view is amply •sustained by the decision in Hughes v. Moore, the case cited and relied upon by the plaintiff ’s counsel. Chief Justice Marshall, in pronouncing the opinion of the court in that case, said: “To the majority of the court it seems that a compensation for the loss of the title to the land must be understood as a compensation for the land itself, and that the receipt of the money by Cleon Moore [answering to Grumley in this case] would not only have barred an action for damages, hut a suit in equity for the title.,, And again: “The majority of the court is of opinion that, under the contract as stated in this count also, the payment of the money agreed to be paid would have extinguished the right of Cleon Moore [Grumley] to the land in question.” That is precisely what is claimed by the defendant in the present action, namely, that the payment of the money, under the accord, extinguished Grumley’s interest in the property, and barred a suit in equity for its recovery. The decision in Hughes v. Moore, instead of sustaining the plaintiff’s theory, completely undermines and overthrows that theory in its application to the facts of the present litigation. (See Altham’s case, 4 Coke, 305-6; Perkins v. Forniquet, 14 How. 315 ; Vedder v. Vedder, 1 Denio, 259.)

But the main question in the case is, treating the plaintiff’s receipt as a good and valid instrument, sufficient to accomplish all the objects intended by it, what is its real scope and true construction? Does it include the claim asserted in this action?

[572]*572In the execution of that instrument the plaintiff acknowledged the receipt of $6,500 and declared the same tobe in full satisfaction of a judgment which he had recovered against the defendant and his former partner David S. Bigham, and that the sum so received was also “ in full satisfaction of all claims and demands” then held by him “ against said Bigham and Webb,

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48 Mo. 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grumley-v-webb-mo-1871.