Redmond & Co. v. Atlanta & Birmingham Air-Line Railway

58 S.E. 874, 129 Ga. 133, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 322
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 4, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 58 S.E. 874 (Redmond & Co. v. Atlanta & Birmingham Air-Line Railway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Redmond & Co. v. Atlanta & Birmingham Air-Line Railway, 58 S.E. 874, 129 Ga. 133, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 322 (Ga. 1907).

Opinion

Beck, J.

(After stating the facts.) It appears from the petition in this case that the plaintiffs accepted a certain sum tendered by the other party as the full amount due under the contract, though protesting that it was an improper amount and less than they were entitled to, and released the defendant, in consideration of such payment, from all further liability under the contract sired on. And it is insisted by defendant’s counsel that this constituted an accord and satisfaction, and that under the Civil Code, §3735, the plaintiffs are concluded, the agreement-having been actually executed by the payment of the money. Defendant insists that the payment and acceptance of the money, under the facts set forth in the petition, under the provisions of the code section just cited, is binding upon the plaintiffs as an accord and satisfaction, ■ whether the demand of the latter was liquidated or unliquidated. Dnder the view that we take of the questions made by the record, it is not necessary to decide whether [138]*138that contention be sound, or whether §3735 of the code is so modified by the provisions of §3734, when the two sections are construed together, that if plaintiffs’ demand was for a liquidated amount the acceptance of the amount embodied in the receipt constituted accord and satisfaction; for in this case the demand was unliquidated. The contrary view, urged by the plaintiffs, is not countenanced by the authorities when applied to their case as stated by them. “A debt or demand is liquidated, when agreed on by the parties, or fixed as to the amount, by the operation of law.” Hargroves v. Cooke, 15 Ga. 321. “The word ‘liquidated/ in the sense of the rule that payment of a lesser sum is a discharge of the remainder where the ainount in dispute is unliquidated, but that it is not a discharge where it is liquidated, means that the amount due has been ascertained and agreed on by the parties or fixed by operation of law. The rule does not apply where there is a bona fide dispute as to the amount actually due. Treat v. Price, 66 N. W. 834, 836, 47 Neb. 875.” “A demand is not liquidated, even if it appears that something is due, unless it appears how much is due; andNwhen it is admitted that-one of two specific sums is due, but there is a general dispute as-to which is the proper amount, the demand is regarded as ‘unliquidated’ within the meaning of the term as applied to the subject of accord and satisfaction. Lestienne v. Ernst, 39 N. Y. Supp. 199, 200, 5 App. Div. 373 (citing Nassoiy v. Tomlinson, 148 N. Y. 326, 331, 42 N. E. 715); Ives v. Jefferson County Sup’rs, 18 Wis. 166, 168; Clark v. Dutton, 69 Ill. 521, 523; Green-lee v. Mosnat, 90 N. W. 338, 339, 116 Iowa, 535 (citing Nassoiy v. Tomlinson, 148 N. Y. 326, 42 N. E. 715).” The two latter quotations were taken from 5 Words & Phrases, 4174.

A brief reference to some of the items of the account upon, which the plaintiffs’ demand in this suit is based will produce th& conviction at once that it was unliquidated. One of the items alleged to be due to petitioners was for removing a certain number of cubic yards of dirt, which “petitioners show that they were-compelled to handle in a manner not contemplated by the contract, and not provided for by the contract, and that said work was. reasonably worth the sum at which it has been charged up” in the.petition. Another large item was for handling “wet excavation,”' and “petitioners show that no contract price was fixed for hand[139]*139ling wet excavation, and that a customary and reasonable allowance for the same would have been $1.50 per cubic yard,” and that only seventy cents per cubic yard “was allowed for the same according to the final estimate of the defendant.” And “petitioners further show that the fills or slides in the tunnel amounted to 3,215 cubic yards, and that $3.00 per cubic yard was a reasonable price for handling this work, and petitioners show that no price was fixed in the contract for the payment of the same, but the defendant company arbitrarily undertook to fix the price at $1.25 per cubic yard.” Another item was for lumber which it is alleged was improperly rejected by the defendant’s engineer. It is unnecessary to enumerate all of the items charged in the petition; as it sufficiently appears, from what has been shown, that the indebtedness due to the. plaintiffs by the defendant was not ascertained or agreed upon by the parties, and can not be regarded as “liquidated” within the meaning of the term as applied to the subject of accord and satisfaction. The mere fact that the defendant acceded to the estimate of the engineer, and was willing to pay that amount without attacking it, and tendered that amount with the condition embodied in the receipt or release, did not have the effect to render the plaintiffs’ unliquidated demand a liquidated one; it did not render it one “ascertained and agreed upon by the parties or fixed by operation of law.” In the case of Chicago Railway Co. v. Clark, 178 U. S. 353, it was said, “The proposition is that the release was given without consideration, and that Clark was entitled to recover so far as the items of $40,000 and $9,558.63 were concerned, on the principle that where a liquidated sum is due, the payment of ’ a less sum in satisfaction thereof, though accepted as satisfaction, is not binding as such, for want of consideration. Cumber v. Wane, 1 Strange, 426. The rule therein laid down has been much questioned and qualified. Goddard v. O’Brien, 9 Q. B. Div. 37; Sibree v. Tripp, 15 M. & W. 23; Couldery v. Bartrum, 19 Ch. D. 394; Foakes v. Beer, 9 App. Cas. 605; Notes to Cumber v. Wane in Smith’s Leading Cases, vol. 1, 606; 12 Harvard Law Beview, 521. The result of the modern cases is that the rule only applies when the larger sum is liquidated, and when there is no consideration whatever for the surrender of part of it; and while the general rule must be regarded as well settled, it is considered so far with disfavor as to be con[140]*140fined strictly to cases within it. . . And the cases are many in which it has been held that where an aggregate amount is in dispute, the payment of a specified sum conceded to be due, that is, b3r including certain items but excluding disputed items, on condition' that the. sum so paid shall be received in full satisfaction, will be sustained as an extinguishment of the whole. In Fuller v. Kemp, 138 N. Y. 231, where certain items of an account were disputed, and certain items were undisputed, and defendant paid plaintiff only the amount of the undisputed items, the court held that the dispute over certain of the items made the account an unliquidated one, and that plaintiff, b3r accepting the amount of the undisputed items with notice that it was sent as payment in full, was precluded from recovering the balance of his demand.” The demand of the plaintiffs being unliquidated, it necessarily follows that the tender or offer of the sum mentioned in the receipt, upon the terms recited therein, was in effect an accord and satisfaction. By the acceptance on the part of the plaintiffs of the sum named, and the signing of the receipt containing the conditions u]3on which it was offered, the agreement to accept less than the amount of the unliquidated demand became executed; and when the plaintiffs attempted to collect the balance of the demand, the defendant could plead the executed agreement as an accord and satisfaction.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.E. 874, 129 Ga. 133, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redmond-co-v-atlanta-birmingham-air-line-railway-ga-1907.