Jaffray v. . Davis

26 N.E. 351, 124 N.Y. 164, 4 Silv. Ct. App. 315, 35 N.Y. St. Rep. 106, 79 Sickels 164, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1356
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 14, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by73 cases

This text of 26 N.E. 351 (Jaffray v. . Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jaffray v. . Davis, 26 N.E. 351, 124 N.Y. 164, 4 Silv. Ct. App. 315, 35 N.Y. St. Rep. 106, 79 Sickels 164, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1356 (N.Y. 1891).

Opinion

Potter, J.

—The facts found by the trial court in this case were agreed upon. They are simple, and present a familiar question of law. The facts are that defendants were owing plaintiffs on the 8th day of December, 1886, for goods sold between that date and the May previous, at an agreed price, the sum of $7,714.37, and that on the 27th of the same December the defendants delivered to the plaintiffs their three promissory notes amounting in the aggregate to $3,462.24, secured by a chattel mortgage on the stock, fixtures and other property of defendants, located in East *316 Saginaw, Michigan, which said notes and chattel mortgage were received by plaintiffs under an agreement to accept same in full satisfaction and discharge of said indebtedness. “That said notes have all been paid, and said mortgage discharged of record.”

The question of law arising from these facts and presented to this court for its determination is whether such agreement, with full performance, constitutes a bar to this action, which was brought after such performance to recover the balance of such indebtedness over the sum so secured and paid.

One of the elements embraced in the question presented upon this appeal is, viz., whether the payment of a sum less than the amount of a liquidated debt under an agreement to accept the same in satisfaction of such debt forms a bar to the recovery of the balance of the debt. This single question was presented to the English court in 1602, when it was resolved, if not decided, in Pinnel’s case, 5 Co. R. 117, “ that payment of a lesser sum on the day in satisfaction of a greater cannot be any satisfaction for the whole,” and that this is so, although it was agreed that such payment should satisfy the whole. This simple question has since arisen in. the English courts and in the courts of this country in almost numberless instances, and has received the same solution notwithstanding the courts, while so ruling* have rarely failed upon any recurrence of the question to criticise and condemn its reasonableness, justice, fairness or honesty. ISTo respectable authority that I have been able to find has, after such unanimous disapproval by all the courts, held otherwise than was held in Pinnel’s case, supra, and Cumber v. Wane, 1 Str. 426; Foakes v. Beer, House of Lords, 9 App. Cases, 605 (36 English Reports, 194) ; Goddard v. O’Brien, Queen’s Bench Div. (vol. 30 Am. Law Reg. 637, and notes).

The steadfast adhesion to tins doctrine by the courts in spite of the current of condemnation by the individual *317 judges of the court and in the face of the demands and conveniences of a much greater business and more extensive mercantile dealings and operations, demonstrate the force of the doctrine of stare decisis. But the doctrine of stare decisis is further illustrated by the course of judicial decisions upon this subject; for while the courts still hold to the doctrine of the Pinnel and Cumber v. Wane cases, supra, they have seemed to seize with avidity upon any consideration to support the agreement to accept the lesser sum in satisfaction of the larger, or in other words to extract if possible from the circumstances of each case a consideration for the new agreement, and to substitute the new agreement in place of the old, and thus to form a defense to the action brought upon the old agreement. It will serve the purpose of illustrating the adhesion of the court to settled law, and at the same time enable us perhaps more satisfactorily to decide whether there was a good consideration to support the agreement in this case, to refer to (the consideration in) a few of the numerous cases which the courts have held to be sufficient to support the new agreement.

Lord Blackburn said in his opinion in Foakes v. Beer, supra, and while maintaining the doctrine “ that a lesser sum cannot be a satisfaction of a greater,sum,” “but the gift of a horse, hawk or robe, etc., in satisfaction is good,” quite regardless of the amount of the debt; and it was further said by him in the same opinion “ that payment and acceptance of a parcel before the day of payment of a larger sum would be a good satisfaction in regard to the circumstance of time; ” “ and so if I am bound in twenty pounds to pay you ten pounds at Westminster, and you request me to pay you five pounds at the day at York, and you will accept it in full satisfaction for the whole ten pounds, it is a good satisfaction.” It was held in Goddard v. O’Brien, 9 Q. B. Div. 37; 30 Am. L. Reg. N. S. 637, “ A being indebted to B in 125 pounds, 7s. and 9d. for goods sold and delivered, gave B a check (negotiable, I suppose) for 100 pounds, *318 payable on demand, which B accepted in satisfaction, was a good satisfaction.” Huddleston, B., in Goddard v. O’Brien, supra, approved the language of the opinion in Sibree v. Tripp, 15 M. & W. 26, “ that a negotiable security may operate, if so given and taken, in satisfaction of a debt of a greater amount; the circumstance of negotiability making it, in fact, a different thing and more advantageous than the original debt which was not negotiable.”

It was held in Bull v. Bull, 43 Conn. 455, “ and although the claim is a money demand liquidated and not doubtful, and it cannot be satisfied with a smaller sum of money, yet if any other personal property is received in satisfaction it will be good, no matter what the value. And it was held in Cumber v. Wane, supra, that a creditor can never bind himself by simple agreement to accept a smaller sum in lieu of an ascertained debt of a larger amount, such agreement being nudwn paotvm, but if there be airy benefit or even any legal possibility of benefit to the creditor thrown in, that additional weight will turn the scale and render the consideration sufficient to support the agreement.

It was held in Le Page v. McCrea, 1 Wend. 164, and in Boyd v. Hitchcock, 20 Johns. 76, that “ giving further security for part of a debt or other security, though for a less sum than the debt, and acceptance of it in full of all demands make a valid accord and satisfaction.” That “ if a debtor gives his creditor a note endorsed by a third party for a less sum than the debt (no matter how much less) but in full satisfaction of the debt, and it is received as such, the transaction constitutes a good accord and satisfaction.” Varney v. Commey, 3 East, 25. And so it has been held “ where by mode or time of part payment, different than that provided for in the contract, a new benefit is or may be conferred or a burden imposed, a new consideration arises out of the transaction and gives validity to the agreement of the creditor. Rose v. Hall, 26 Conn. 392. And so if “ payment of less than the whole debt, if made before it is due or at a *319 different place from that stipulated, if received in full, is a good satisfaction.” Jones v. Bullitt, 2 Litt. 49; Ricketts v. Hall, 2 Bush, 249; Smith v. Brown, 3 Hawk. N. C. 580 ; Jones

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26 N.E. 351, 124 N.Y. 164, 4 Silv. Ct. App. 315, 35 N.Y. St. Rep. 106, 79 Sickels 164, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jaffray-v-davis-ny-1891.