Markel's Administrator v. Spitler's Administrator

28 Ind. 488
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 28 Ind. 488 (Markel's Administrator v. Spitler's Administrator) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Markel's Administrator v. Spitler's Administrator, 28 Ind. 488 (Ind. 1867).

Opinion

Elliott, J.

— Jacob Markel, as administrator of the estate of Elizabeth Markel, deceased, filed a complaint against Thomas J. Spitler, administrator of the estate of George W. Spitler, deceased, to correct an error in the settlement, and to recover the balance due on a promissory note executed by said George W. Spitler, in his lifetime, to said Elizabeth Markel. The complaint lacks much of being a model in the clearness of its statements, but we gather from it, and an exhibit which is made part of it, the following facts:

That said George W. Spitler, in his lifetime, executed to said Elizabeth Markel his promissory note for $13,290, which fell due on the 2d of February, 1857, on which credits were subsequently indorsed as follows:

1859, May 14th......Cr...............; .$1,235 11
November 1st, ................. 5,008 17
November 18th, “ ................. 551 36
December 13th, “ ................. 980 25

Subsequent to the death of said George W., said Elizabeth [490]*490filed said note, with the credits so indorsed thereon, as a claim against his estate, in the clerk’s office of the Court of Common Pleas of Jasper county; that on the 18th day of February, 1864, the said administrator of George W. marked said claim “allowed,” on the appearance docket of said court; that said Elizabeth subsequently died, and the plaintiff herein was duly appointed her administrator; that subsequent to the allowance of said claim, the administrator of said George W. made the following payments thereon:

1864, April 4th,........................$2,306 14
October 8th,....................... 225 74

It is further alleged in the complaint, that on the 16th day of August, 1866, a computation was made of the balance due on said note, and that the defendant then paid the plaintiff the sum of $6,840 93, and at the same time agreed to pay the further sum of $333 63, and that, supposing said amounts covered the whole sum that remained due on the note, ■ the plaintiff executed to the defendant a receipt in full of said claim; that since said settlement, the plaintiff has discovered that an error was committed in computing the interest on said note, and that there still remains due and unpaid thereon the sum of $1,452 05, for which he demands judgment.

The defendant filed an answer in three paragraphs:

1. The general denial.

2. Payment before suit.

3. That after the allowance of said claim, the defendant made payments thereon from time to time until the 16th day of August, 1866, when he paid to the plaintiff the sum of $7,174 54, which was accepted and received by the plaintiff" in full satisfaction and discharge of said claim, for which the plaintiff then gave to the defendant a receipt in full, and the defendant denies that any mistake was made therein. A copy of the receipt referred to, is made an exhibit.

Objections were made to the third paragraph of the answer, first by a motion to strike it out, which was over[491]*491ruled, and then by demurrer, which was also overruled. To both of these rulings proper exceptions were taken.

The plaintiff then replied in denial of the second and third paragraphs. Trial by jury; verdict for the defendant ; motion for a- new trial overruled, and judgment. The plaintiff appeals.

The overruling of the demurrer to the third pai’agraph of the answer is the first error complained of. That paragraph seems to have been designed as an answer in accord and satisfaction; but, as such, it is clearly defective. The note was past due. The estate of Spitler was not being settled as an insolvent one, and it does not appear that there ivas any controversy as to the payments that had been previously made on the note, and under such circumstances the payment of a less sum than the whole amount due, cannot constitute a good accord- and satisfaction, nor is it a good plea of payment as to the whole sum alleged to be due. Indeed, it does not set up any material matter, not admitted in the complaint, and does not, therefore, confess and avoid the cause of action. It sets up the receipt, which the complaint admits was executed by the plaintiff, but alleges that it was so executed on the erroneous supposition, arising from an error in computation, that the amount stated therein was all that remained due on the note, when in truth, the amount remaining unpaid was much larger than that stated in the receipt. The receipt contains a statement that the amount then paid, as stated therein, $7,174 54, was “ in full payment of the claim.” The court below seems to have regarded this statement as conclusive on the plaintiff; if so, it was an error. No question is better settled than that a receipt may be explained or contradicted by parol evidence. A material error in any instrument of writing, caused by mistake in fact, may, as between the parties thereto, be corrected. The paragraph, however, concludes by denying that there was any mistake, which, as we understand it, applies to the allegation in the complaint of a mistake in computing the amount due. on the note. This [492]*492is the material allegation in the complaint, on which the plaintiff rests his right to recover, and the denial of it makes the third paragraph of the answer good on demurrer. The general denial being also pleaded, the court should have stricken out the third paragraph, on motion, but the refusal to do so is not assigned as error. And if it were, the judgment would not be reversed for that error, unless it appeared that it prejudiced the rights of the plaintiff on the trial of the merits.

It appears by a bill of exceptions that the plaintiff, during the trial, offered to prove by a competent witness, that the amount actually paid him by the defendant, on the 16th of August, 1866, when the receipt set out in the third paragraph of the answer was given, was only $6,840 91, and not $7,174 54, as stated in said receipt; that the sum actually paid was $383 33 less than the amount so receipted for, and that said difference has never been paid by the defendant, or by any other person for his use. This evidence was objected to by the defendant, and the court sustained the objection, and refused to allow the plaintiff to make said proof, or any part thereof. The ground of objection to the evidence is not stated in the record. No valid objection to it suggests itself to our minds, and we are not favored with any argument in behalf of the appellee. The receipt was only prima facie evidence of the amount paid. It was not conclusive. The evidence offered was material to the issue. It was consistent with the facts alleged in the complaint, and, we think, the court erred iu rejecting it.

After the evidence for the plaintiff was concluded, the defendant offered himself as a witness in his own behalf, to which the plaintiff objected, but the objection was overruled, and the defendant was permitted by the court to testify, and did testify to matters material in the case. In this, also, the court erred.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Ind. 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/markels-administrator-v-spitlers-administrator-ind-1867.