Putnam v. Grant

63 A. 816, 101 Me. 240, 1906 Me. LEXIS 19
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 3, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 63 A. 816 (Putnam v. Grant) 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
Putnam v. Grant, 63 A. 816, 101 Me. 240, 1906 Me. LEXIS 19 (Me. 1906).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

This was an action of assumpsit to recover a balance of $418.88, alleged to be due on a quantity of logs sold by the plaintiff to the defendants June 1, 1898. The defendants admitted in limine, that they were indebted to the plaintiff in the amount claimed, with interest from the time the logs were purchased, unless they could prove payment. The verdict was for the full amount claimed and the case comes to this court on a motion to set aside the verdict as against the evidence.

In setting up payment as a defense it was not claimed in behalf of the defendants that they had paid this balance of $418.88 directly to the plaintiff Putnam, but they contended that" by Putnam’s authority they had paid that amount to the Richards Paper Company, on Putnam’s account.

In 1896 nearly two years before the sale to the defendants of the logs sued for in this case, Putnam had sold pulp logs to the Richards Paper Company, and his account with that Company had” not been adjusted. The Paper Company gave its notes to Putnam for the logs to be delivered under the contract between them, and after the delivery of the last lot claimed to have discovered that the amount of the notes exceeded the value of the logs by $418.88, interest and discount being adjusted to June 1, 1898. The Paper Company had also purchased logs.from the defendants and was indebted to them at the same time. Thereupon, as the defendants say, it was arranged by consent of all the parties, that instead of paying the amount sued for directly to Putnam the defendants should pay it to the Paper Company and that in pursuance of this arrangement it was allowed on their account against the Company. The defendants admit, however, that when Putnam consented to have the Paper Company’s overpayment allowed on his account against the defendants, he protested that there was a mistake in the Company’s account. At the trial Putnam contended that there was nothing due from him to the Paper Company and that the defendants had no authority from him to pay to the Company the amount claimed on his account.

[243]*243The defendants further contended, however, that even if it should appear upon a full aud legal adjustment, that Putnam was not indebted to the Richards Paper Company and that he never expressly authorized the settlement made by the defendants with the Paper Company on his account, yet by his statements and conduct he justified them in believing that he admitted the debt to the Paper Company aud consented to its discharge in the manner proposed and that he was thereafter estopped from denying that there was such a debt or that it was so paid by the defendants.

It is the opinion of the court that the jury was authorized to find that the evidence did not create an estoppel against the plaintiff as "contended by the defendants, but that the evidence did warrant the conclusion that Putnam consented to have the defendants pay to the Paper Company on his account any sum which in fact might be found due from him to the Paper Company.

It was accordingly incumbent upon the defendants taking upon themselves the burden of proving payment in the manner stated, to show by competent evidence that Putnam was indebted to the Paper Company, at the time the defendants assumed to make a settlement on his account. The defendants had essentially the same burden that the Paper Company would have had in a suit brought against Putnam in its own name, to recover the amount of this alleged overpayment for logs purchased of him.

The logs sold by Putnam to the Richards Paper Company comprising 800,000 feet or more appear to have been delivered at various times during the months of March, April, May and June, 1896, payment to be made by cash or note upon the delivery of each 100,000. The scale bills for each lot delivered were duly received and retained by the Paper Company, and a written statement purporting to show the number of feet in each lot of logs received, according to the scale bills, the price per thousand, a computation of the total value and the amount credited to him, was sent to Putnam at the end of each month. Letter-press copies of all these monthly statements of the items and details of the credits given were made on a boob called an invoice book, which was kept in the custody of the Paper Company.

At the trial it appeared that due notice' had been given to Putnam [244]*244to produce these original monthly statements, to be used as evidence in the case. Whether they were still in existence after the lapse of eight years and whether it was in the power of the plaintiff Putnam to produce them did not appear. They were not produced; and although no evidence was offered showing that either the original scale bills received by the Paper Compauy or the invoice book containing letter-press copies of the monthly statements, had been lost or destroyed, neither the invoice book nor the original scale bills were produced in evidence by the defendants, nor' any explanation given of their non-production. But in lieu thereof the defendants offered the Paper Company’s aceouut book called a “journal,” authenticated by the testimony of the book-keeper who kept it, containing on the debit side of this transaction a record of ten notes sent to Putnam between March 24 and June 30, aggregating $5700, and on the other side a summary of credits as follows:

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Related

Hunter v. Totman
80 A.2d 401 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1951)
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203 F. 403 (Seventh Circuit, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 A. 816, 101 Me. 240, 1906 Me. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/putnam-v-grant-me-1906.