New Haven Manufacturing Co. v. New Haven Pulp & Board Co.

55 A. 604, 76 Conn. 126, 1903 Conn. LEXIS 78
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 24, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 55 A. 604 (New Haven Manufacturing Co. v. New Haven Pulp & Board Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Haven Manufacturing Co. v. New Haven Pulp & Board Co., 55 A. 604, 76 Conn. 126, 1903 Conn. LEXIS 78 (Colo. 1903).

Opinion

Baldwin, J.

The substantial defense set up to this action is that the note was delivered to the payee on an express condition that its payment should be contingent on the acceptance of certain engines, which it had sold to the defendant with a warranty that they should work satisfactorily, and which proved unsatisfactory.

The complaint follows Form 213 in the Practice Book (p. 128), alleging in paragraph 1 that the defendant, on a day stated, by its note, promised to pay to the order of the Downingtown Manufacturing Company a certain sum at a certain place and time, for value received. This paragraph *128 was admitted by the answer, and it is contended that by this admission the defendant was precluded from setting up such a defense.

The answer in this respect had no other effect than to admit the due execution and delivery of the note described. Its other paragraphs, in which the defendant averred that the note was delivered conditionally, and was not in fact given for value received, remained proper subjects of proof.

Three beater engines and a certain paper machine were furnished to the defendant by the Downingtown Manufacturing Company, under contracts of purchase. The price of the engines was $3,000, and they were “ guaranteed ” to “ do the defendant’s work satisfactorily.” The defendant, upon trying them in its factory, was not satisfied with their working. Subsequently, at a time when the Downingtown Manufacturing Company claimed that about $5,100 was' due to it on the contracts, it was orally agreed by way of compromise between it, acting through a Mr. Miller, and the defendant, that the latter should pay and the former would accept, in full settlement of all accounts, $1,500 in cash and $3,000 payable by a two months’ note drawn to the order of the Downingtown Manufacturing Company, and that certain new parts for the paper machine should also be furnished without further charge. The defendant thereupon sent by mail a letter, with a check for $1,500, and another letter referring to the check as sent “ as per our understanding with Mr. Miller ... to complete payment for paper machine.” The second letter enclosed the note in suit, stating that it was “ tendered in payment for beating engines, it being understood that before the note becomes due we will have had ample time to determine whether the beaters fill our requirements according to specifications and guaranty, which would mean that we could use them economically, or without a large daily loss to ourselves in consumption of power. We will work at this matter faithfully in our endeavor to overcome the present difficulty, and we hope that for our mutual interests we may succeed in so doing.” The Downingtown Manufacturing Company replied by a letter *129 acknowledging the receipt of “ check for $1,500 and note for $3,000, in settlement of our account, as per agreement had with the writer.”

The terms of the note were, in fact, conformable to that agreement, and the new parts for the paper machine were subsequently furnished and accepted. Unless, then, the letter enclosing the note so far qualified its delivery that the Downingtown Manufacturing Company had no right to treat it as sent in pursuance of the previous agreement, that agreement was fully executed, and there was thus an accord and satisfaction of an unliquidated demand.

A compromise agreement by which each party absolutely undertakes to do certain things for the benefit of the other is upon a valuable consideration. The promise of the defendant to pay $1,500 and give the note was a valuable consideration for that of the Downingtown Manufacturing Company to furnish the new parts of the paper machine and accept the money and note in full settlement. It may be assumed to have been the intention of the parties that no settlement was to be effected, and that the original claim of the company would remain the same until each company had performed its part of the agreement. But it nevertheless became the legal duty of each to make such performance. See Goodrich v. Stanley, 24 Conn. 613, 621.

The defendant endeavored in its letter enclosing the note to add new terms to this contract. If the tender had been made on the express condition that the note should be retained by the payee until its maturity, and should become void if before that time the maker determined that the engines were not such as the payee had bound itself to furnish, a different question would be presented. Potter v. Douglass, 44 Conn. 541. But the letter transmitting the note first made a direct tender of it “ in payment for beater engines,” and then sought to create a new “ understanding ” in addition to that previously reached with Mr. Miller. This was not put forward as a qualification of the tender, but of the manner in which the note was to be held or used. The tender remained unqualified and unconditioned. It was made to pay a debt, *130 and if it should be accepted, that debt would necessarily be extinguished. Whether the note itself should ever be paid or not was immaterial as to the discharge of the original demand.

In making such a tender the defendant was fulfilling a contract duty. The Downingtown Manufacturing Company therefore had a right to accept it, as it did, as made under the contract with Mr. Miller, without thereby assenting to any modification of that contract which would in effect vary the obligation expressed by the note. C. & C. Electric Motor Co. v. D. Erisbie & Co., 66 Conn. 67, 95.

But were this not so, and could the company be considered as having, by accepting the note, assented to the proposed modification of the contract of settlement, the defense set up in the answer would have been unavailing, even if that company had been the plaintiff in the action. The answer avers that the note was delivered “ upon the express condition that it should be applied, when due, in payment for three duplex beating engines,” provided they were found before that time to work satisfactorily. This allegation was not supported by the proof. The letter enclosing the note tendered it expressly in payment for these engines. The “ understanding ” which it then proceeded to state, if agreed to by the Downingtown Manufacturing Company, would at most have created on its part a collateral obligation to respond in damages or submit to a recoupment, should the engines prove to work badly. Such an obligation certainly would not have affected the note if indorsed to a holder in due course. It could not therefore be treated as part of the note itself. That would remain unconditional, and while, if sued on by the payee, it might be met by a counterclaim, it could be met by nothing else. In the case at bar nothing has been pleaded by way of counterclaim. The answer must stand or fall on the ground of a.conditional delivery of the note in suit.

As this defense would be untenable, were the Downing-town Manufacturing Company the plaintiff, it is unnecessary to inquire whether the circumstances attending the indorsement were such- as to make the New Haven Manufacturing *131 Company a holder in due course. The note being a negotiable one, General Statutes, § 631, does not apply, and the indorsee had at least the rights of the payee.

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Bluebook (online)
55 A. 604, 76 Conn. 126, 1903 Conn. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-haven-manufacturing-co-v-new-haven-pulp-board-co-conn-1903.