Penobscot Railroad v. Mayo

67 Me. 470, 1878 Me. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 21, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 67 Me. 470 (Penobscot Railroad v. Mayo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Penobscot Railroad v. Mayo, 67 Me. 470, 1878 Me. LEXIS 9 (Me. 1878).

Opinion

Libbey, J.

This action is brought by N. Wilson, in the name of the plaintiff, as assignee or pledgee of the claim in suit. It [472]*472has twice before been before this court. Penobscot Railroad v. Mayo, 60 Maine, 306. Same v. Same, 65 Maine, 566. By the exceptions either party may refer to the former reports. The nominal plaintiff has no interest in the subject matter of the suit. So far as it had any interest it has been discharged. Penobscot Railroad v. Mayo, 60 Maine, 306, supra. The suit is prosecuted for the benefit of Wilson only. The writ contains three counts. 1. On an account annexed. 2. Money had and received. 3. On a promissory note for $4000 given by defendant to plaintiff, dated May 28, 1862, payable in one year with interest. The action was commenced January 3, 1870. Defendant pleaded and relies upon the statute of limitations. The case was referred under a rule of court on legal principles, the' referee to report any facts and questions of law that either party might desire with right of exceptions. So far as is material for the consideration of the questions involved, the following facts appear from the reports of the referee: On the 28th of May, 1862, the plaintiff sold to the defendant $68,700 of its bonds for $4000, the defendant giving his note therefor, payable in one year with interest. The plaintiff corporation by vote of the same date, pledged the note to the directors as security for the several amounts by them advanced to the company and then due them, and when collected to be divided among them in proportion to the sum actually due to each. When the defendant gave the note it was verbally agreed between the parties that if he did not sell the bonds or receive any compensation for them, his note should be canceled and given up to him without pay. On the 13th of July, 1864, the defendant falsely and fraudulently represented to the directors of the plaintiff corporation that he had turned over the bonds to the European and North American Railway Co., which had become the purchaser of all the property of the plaintiff, without pay or compensation therefor, suppressing the fact that he had previously sold the bonds and received therefor $22,900 in the bonds of the European and North American Railway Co., and thereby procured the surrender of his note without payment. The fraud was concealed by the defendant and did not come to the knowledge of the plaintiff till January 7, 1868. The account annexed to the [473]*473writ contains the following item: “1864, July 13: To your note of $4000, on interest from May 28, 1862, given up by reason of your false representation that you had surrendered the bonds for which it was given without consideration or payment, and if was therefore to be given np and canceled, whereas you had sold and received pay for said bonds in October, 1863,. long prior to getting it up, $6,400.” In the writ the plaintiff specified that, under the second count, it well prove “the account annexed and that the money was received by the defendant to the use of the plaintiff.” Upon these facts the referee finds, as matter of lawr, that the action can only be maintained on the note declared on in the third count, and that the action is barred by the statute of limitations. If the first finding is correct, it follows that the action is barred. This court so held in 65 Maine, 566, supra. That decision is invoked by the counsel for the defendant as decisive of the case as now' presented. We think it is not.

Undoubtedly the plaintiff' can maintain an action for the fraud of the defendant in procuring the surrender of the note without payment. It might maintain an action of case for the fraud, or of trover for the note. In either case the statute of limitations would commence to run from the time the fraud was discovered, or might have been discovered in the use of due diligence by tbe plaintiff. And if by the fraud the defendant procured money, or its equivalent, the tort may be waived by the plaintiff, and assumpsit for money bad and received maintained.

Did tbe defendant by procuring the surrender of hi s own note then overdue without payment receive the equivalent of money t

It has been repeatedly held that where a debtor procures a disr charge of bis debt by payment, in whole or in part, in counterfeit money, an action for money had and received may be maintained for tbe amount of the payment thus made, the plaintiff first tendering back tbe counterfeit money received. So an agent who dischai’ges a debt due to Ms principal by taking a note payable to-himself, may be held for money had and received, though tbe note is unpaid. Floyd v. Day, 3 Mass. 403. Hemenway v. Bradford, 14 Mass. 121. Hemenway v. Hemenway, 5 Pick. 389. Fairbanks v. Blackington, 9 Pick. 93.

[474]*474There is stronger reason for holding one who has procured the surrender of his own note, for money had and received, than where he has received the note of another. So where the defendants procured the plaintiffs, who were agents of the defendants’ creditors, to procure the discharge of their debt, and the plaintiffs did so by giving their principals credit therefor, and charged the amount to the defendants, it was held equivalent to the payment of money by the plaintiffs, and the receipt of money by the defendants, and an action for money paid or money had and received might bo maintained. Emerson v. Baylies, 19 Pick. 55.

In Perry v. Swasey, 12 Cush. 36, the maker of a note released to a third person a claim against him to an amount equal to the note, upon the promise of such third person to pay and take up the note. In discussing the question whether the holder of the note could maintain an action for money had and received against such third person, Shaw, C. J., in delivering the opinion of the court says: “We are strongly inclined to the opinion that the plaintiff is entitled to recover on the money counts, as for money had and received. Hall v. Marston, 17 Mass. 575. Mrs. Harvey placed money in the hands of the defendant for the use of the plaintiff. .... The discharge of a debt due in money is, for many purposes, equivalent to a payment in cash. One who has collected the debt of another, by taking a note in his own name, is liable as for money had and received.”

In Stuart v. Sears, 119 Mass. 143, the plaintiff was induced to allow the defendant in part payment of the sum due from him, a credit of $1000 in the settlement of their accounts, by the presentation by defendant of a false voucher therefor. It was held that the plaintiff might recover the $1000 under a count for money had and received, the court treating the allowance of the ■credit by plaintiff as money paid by him and received by the defendant. See Ames v. York National Bank, 103 Mass. 326. Baxter v. Paine, 16 Gray, 273.

In Hall v. Huckins, 41 Maine, 574, the defendant was indebted to the States of Maine and Massachusetts for the stumpage of certain timber. He claimed that the plaintiffs should pay him the amount, and in a settlement with them charged them the amount [475]*475claimed, and gave them an agreement to account to and allow them any and all deductions which he might obtain in settlement with those states. He obtained a certain deduction by Massachusetts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 Me. 470, 1878 Me. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penobscot-railroad-v-mayo-me-1878.