Richardson v. Thomas

28 Ark. 387
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 28 Ark. 387 (Richardson v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richardson v. Thomas, 28 Ark. 387 (Ark. 1873).

Opinion

Bennett, J.

At the November term of the circuit court of Jefferson county, Samuel B. Thomas sued Benjamin E. Richardson, as the executor of James Sheppard, on notes given by Sheppard for the purchase of a plantation, slaves, etc., in 1860.

Richardson appears and files an answer to the complaint of Thomas, which was demurred to, which demurrer was sustained by the court; and Richardson, as executor, declining to answer further, final judgment was rendered for Thomas, for forty-eight thousand, four hundred and nineteen dollars and seventy-five cents, for balance of debt, and the further sum of thirty-four thousand, one hundred and fifty-four dollars and seventy-eight cents, for damages; from which judgment Richardson, as executor, has appealed.

Was the demurrer to the answer properly sustained?

The answer of Sheppard alleges that the consideration for ■which these notes were given was a certain tract of land, slaves and farming utensils, in 1860, and that the notes were given upon the terms and conditions set out in the deed of conveyance made by Payne & Robinson, the assignors of the note, to Sheppard.

The answer further recites the deed and the cotemporaneous conversations and inducements which induced Sheppard to malee the purchase and execute the notes; states the breaking out of the civil war, and that since said purchase of land, etc., and execution of these notes, the slaves have been liberated by the act of the government, and are now free, and to the extent of the value of these slaves, the consideration of these notes has failed.

Sheppard then asks that, inasmuch as these matters and things cannot be taken into consideration in a court of law, this cause of action be transferred to the equitable side of the court.

The demurrer to the answer is based upon the following grounds:

First. Because the facts stated in said answer, or any one paragraph of said answer, are not sufficient to constitute a defense, counterclaim or setoff against the plaintiff’s complaint.

Second. Because, in the third paragraph of said defendant’s answer, he has alleged a verbal understanding and agreement between the said James Sheppard and the plaintiff’s assignors, of the notes sued on, when the answer further shows that said agreement of purchase, for which said writings obligatory, sued on, were given, was consummated and executed by a deed of conveyance.

The third, fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh grounds of demurrer consolidated, in effect are, that no one of the paragraphs of the answer, from the first to the fifteenth, states facts sufficient to make a complete defense within itself, and that no fact stated in any paragraph of the answer, or the whole taken together, requires the aid of a court of chancery, because there are no defenses to the notes, in law or equity.

So much of the demurrer as relates to the formal part of the answer is well taken. A defendant has the right to allege as many grounds of defense, counterclaim or setoff, whether legal or equitable, as he may have. Each, however, should be distinctly stated in separate paragraphs, and numbered, and must refer to the causes of action which it is intended to answer. The answer, in this cause, is paragraphed, but not as the law requires, because no one of these, from the third to the last, presents a perfect defense, and is in itself an answer to the action. Newman’s Pleadings, secs. 539, 540, 550; Civil Code, sec. 116.

Owing, however, to the fact that this cause has been before us in another shape (Sheppard v. Thomas, 26 Ark., 617) and the large amount of money involved, and for the purpose of bringing this litigation to a close, we have thought it best to pass over the informalities of the answer and look at it and see if there is in it, taken in parts or as a whole, any defense, either in law or equity, to these notes.

All those matters in the answer, touching the sale of the slaves and losses by the war, are no longer to be discussed. Sheppard can take nothing by that averment. Osborne v. Nicholson, 13 Wall., 654; Jacoway v. Denton, 25 Ark., 625. And it is certainly true that the attempt to set up in the answer a verbal agreement to contradict the notes, without an averment that by fraud or mistake this was omitted, is of no avail. Roane v. Greene, 24 Ark., 210, and cases cited.

The answer then, stripped of all its extraneous matters, rests solely upon the covenants of the deed conveying the property for which these notes were given.

By this deed of conveyance a lien was sought to be retained for the payment of the purchase money, and the vendors covenanted that they did thereby “ waive and relinquish all our right, in law or equity, to recover the same, or any part thereof, of or from any other lands, negroes or property of the said James Sheppard, but do hereby expressly exempt the same from all liabilities for the payment of said purchase money so remaining due and unpaid as aforesaid, and rely entirely on our said lien for security and payment as aforesaid.”

The notes sued on were given for the purchase money of the lands, negroes, etc., mentioned in this deed, and defendant Richardson, as executor, contends that this covenant in the deed, made at' the time the notes were executed, if properly construed, should be held to signify that Thomas, in his remedy upon them, should be confined to the property named in the deed as to the extent of his recovery.

The judgment of this cause was against the general estate of Sheppard, and not against this specific property.

Now does this avoid the contract by which the parties bound themselves ?

The first point for the consideration of the court is, what was the nature of the contract between these parties.

Taking the notes sued on and the covenant in the deed together, we are satisfied that they prove that the defendant was justly indebted to the plaintiff in the full amount specified in these notes; and that, in case of nonpayment of these notes, the plaintiff agreed to look to no other property in satisfaction and discharge of that debt, but the lands, slaves, etc., mentioned in the deed.

Now shall the notes and this covenant in the deed be construed together as if they were parts of one contract. It will not be questioned that the rights and obligations incident to a contract may be extinguished or modified by a new agreement between the same parties, plainly expressing or implying an intention so to extinguish or modify them. Bailey v. Johnson, 9 Cow., 115; Low v. Treadwell, 3 Fairfield, 441; Richardson v. Hooper, 13 Pick., 446; Cummings v. Arnold, 3 Metc., 486; Robinson v. Batchelder, 4 N. H., 40.

When the new agreement is a modification, either express or implied, of any of the express terms or stipulations of the original contract, it has been held to constitute a new contract, consisting partly of the original contract and partly of the new agreement engrafted upon it, and has been declared upon or been available by way of defense.

A contemporaneous memorandum on a note, or even on a separate piece of paper, is a part of the note, and may qualify and restrict it, and will bind all parties. Haywood v. Perrin, 10 Pick., 228; Hunt v.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Ark. 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-thomas-ark-1873.