Lindsay v. Gager

11 A.D. 93
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 11 A.D. 93 (Lindsay v. Gager) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindsay v. Gager, 11 A.D. 93 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Willard Bartlett, J.:

The allegations of the complaint, so far as it is necessary to con.-. •sider them upon the present appeal, may be summarized as follows :

Upon these facts, the plaintiff demands judgment for $9,785.30, being the amount credited to O. A. Gager upon the firm hooks for the year ending July 1, 1889, less the $1,142.30 which he paid, or caused to be paid, to the plaintiff.

We are called upon to consider the sufficiency of the second, third and fourth separate defenses which the defendants by their answer interpose to the cause of action set forth in the complaint.

The second separate defense is intended as a plea of accord and satisfaction. In it the defendants aver “ that the amount remaining due to the plaintiff at the expiration of his employment by the said firm of O. A. Gager & Co., on the 30tli day of June,. 1889, was ascertained and found by said O. A. Gager to be the said sum of $1,142.66, and that said sum was duly paid to the said plaintiff upon the 12th day of August, 1889, as a full and final settlement of any and all claims which the said Lindsay had against the said firm, or said O. A. Gager, growing out of his connection with them. That the said Lindsay was informed by the said Gager, when said payment was made, that the same was made in full of all claims of said Lindsay, and that said Lindsay, with knowledge that said money was paid in full of all claims, accepted and retained the said sum, and that he has never restored, or offered to restore, the said sum, or any part thereof, and that, as these defendants are advised [96]*96and believe, the said acceptance and retention of the said sum by the said plaintiff constitutes a full accord and satisfaction.”

The last clause which I have quoted leaves no doubt that this defense is intended as a plea of accord and satisfaction. But the plea of accord and satisfaction is fatally defective if it omits to aver in substance that the thing given or the act done in satisfaction of the claim was accepted as such. Blackstone, to illustrate what constitutes an accord and satisfaction, says: “ As if a man contract to build a house or deliver a horse, and fail in it, this is an injury, for which the sufferer may have his remedy by action; but if the party injured accepts a sum of money or other thing as a satisfaction, this is a redress of that injury and entirely takes away the action.” (3 Black. Comm. chap. 1, pp. 15, 16.) In pleading this bar, it is necessary to allege not only that the defendant gave the thing in satisfaction, but that the plaintiff received and accepted it in satisfaction. (Paine v. Masters, 1 Strange, 573; Maze v. Miller, 1 Wash. C. C. 328; Young v. Jones, 64 Maine, 563, 570; Morris Canal & Banking Co. v. Van Vorst’s Admr’x, 21 N. J. Law, 100 ; Hearn v. Kiehl, 38 Penn. St. 147.) In the case last cited, Woodward, J., says: “ The plea must allege that the matter was accepted in satisfaction.”

Now the plea in the case at bar does not allege anything of the kind. It does say that the plaintiff accepted and retained the $1,142.66 with knowledge that said money was paid in full of all claims, but there is no averment that he accepted and retained the same in full or in satisfaction of his claim. In Nassoiy v. Tomlinson (148 N. Y. 326), which was relied upon by the learned court at Special Term as sustaining the defense of accord and satisfaction now under consideration, there was no question of pleading, but the decision turned upon the sufficiency of the evidence to establish such a defense. The.defendants had sent the plaintiff a check for $300, which was all that they conceded to be due to him, with a request to sign and return an accompanying voucher which was a receipt in full. The plaintiff demanded more, but the defendants refused to pay more, and finally the plaintiff, after keeping the check seven months, indorsed it and obtained the money upon it. The court held that this course of action admitted of no inference but that the plaintiff agreed to accept the $300 in lieu of his larger [97]*97claim. The case is not an authority, however, in support of such a pleading as that before us here, but rather the contrary. I have examined the record which was before the Court of Appeals and find that the answer expressly averred that the plaintiff accepted the $300 in full settlement and discharge of his claim. (See vol. 1313, Court of Appeals Cases, in Brooklyn Law Library, Nassoiy v. Tomlinson.)

Nor is the second defense any better as a plea of payment than it is as a plea of accord and satisfaction. I was inclined to think otherwise in the course of the oral argument, but overlooked at the time the allegations of the complaint which are left undenied by this defense. Those allegations, which must be taken as true for the purposes of the demurrer, show that $9,785.30 was due and owing to the plaintiff by the defendants’ testator on the 30th' day of June, 1889, after the payment of the $1,142.66 mentioned in the second defense; and no fact is set up in said defense from which it can be inferred that this larger amount has ever been paid.

For these .reasons, I think the plaintiff should prevail on his appeal from that part of the interlocutory judgment which overrules the demurrer to the second separate defense.

The third separate defense sets up a former adjudication adverse to the plaintiff in a suit which he brought against the survivors of the firm of O. A. Gager & Co., seeking to charge that partnership with the claim which he now makes against the personal representatives of O. A. Gager individually. I do not see how the individual liability of 0. A. Gager could have been an issue in that action. The question there was whether the firm were liable. If they were not, it made no difference who was, so far as the disposition of that litigation was concerned. It seems quite clear that the court below was right in sustaining the demurrer to this defense.

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Bluebook (online)
11 A.D. 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindsay-v-gager-nyappdiv-1896.