Rohrville Farmers Union Elevator Co. v. Frison

42 N.W.2d 354, 77 N.D. 235, 1950 N.D. LEXIS 123
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1950
DocketFile 7183
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 N.W.2d 354 (Rohrville Farmers Union Elevator Co. v. Frison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rohrville Farmers Union Elevator Co. v. Frison, 42 N.W.2d 354, 77 N.D. 235, 1950 N.D. LEXIS 123 (N.D. 1950).

Opinion

*236 Morris, J.

The plaintiff seeks to recover from the defendant the snm of $1220.00 which it alleges was paid to the defendant under a mistake of fact. The case was tried to a court without a jury. Prom a judgment in favor of the plaintiff the defendant appeals and demands a trial de novo.

The plaintiff is a grain warehouseman with its place of business located in the town of Rohrville. The defendant is a farmer operating in the trade territory served by the plaintiff. On September 4,1947, the plaintiff and defendant entered into a written contract whereby the defendant agreed to deliver to the plaintiff on or before December 4, 1947, five hundred bushels of No. 2 amber or better durum for which the plaintiff at that time paid the defendant the total purchase price of $1220.00.

On September 15, 1947, the defendant sold to the plaintiff on a similar contract 1,000 bushels of the same kind and quality of durum wheat for which he was paid $2,510.00.

On October 23, 1947, the defendant suffered a severe heart attack which resulted in his total incapacity and his confinement in a hospital until some time during the week before Christmas of that year. In the meantime the defendant’s Avife transacted all of his business for him.

The amber durum covered by the two contracts above mentioned and in addition thereto other amber durum and a small quantity of- barley belonging to the defendant were delivered to the plaintiff’s elevator. On November 5, 1947, the defendant’s wife went to the elevator and made a settlement covering all of the amber durum and the barley. As a result of this settlement she received a check for $3,483.00 payable to Joe Prison, which she deposited to the joint bank account of herself and her husband. As a result of a mistake by the plaintiff’s agent who made the settlement, the amount of the check included $1,220.00 for the 500 bushels of amber durum covered by the first contract and for which the defendant had received payment at the time the contract was executed.

Between November 4 and November 7, 1947, there was delivered to the plaintiff 728 bushels 10 pounds of red durum belonging to the,defendant which was not involved in any way in the settlement for the amber durum which Avas made on Novem *237 ber 5. The red durum remained in the elevator until March 17, 1949, when it was sold pursuant to a stipulation of the parties without prejudice to the rights of either party to the lawsuit. It was also stipulated into the record during the trial of the case that the “grain was sold on the 17th of March, 1949, for the sum of $1194.22 and that the plaintiff is holding the check in that amount subject to the decision of this Court but that such sale pursuant to such stipulation in no way involves the merits of this lawsuit.”

When the last of the red durum was hauled to the elevator on November 7, 1947, the price was $2.60 per bushel. On May 15, 1948, it was $2.08; and from August 2nd to August 10th, it was $1.75 to $1.76. The price when finally sold pursuant to stipulation was $1.77'and the accumulated storage charges then amounted.to $94.64. The fall in the price of red durum is the real cause of this lawsuit.'

The mistake in the settlement of November 5,1947, did not become known to the plaintiff’s agent in charge of the elevator until a month or so later when the error was discovered by plaintiff’s auditor and the agent notified thereof. The agent testified that when he learned of the error he knew that the defendant was very sick and the roads were blocked by snow. He did not inform the defendant about the error until the defendant came to the elevator in the spring or summer of 1948. Due to the fall in the price in red durum the defendant desired to haul it out of the elevator back to his farm to use for feed. The only serious dispute between the parties as to the facts concerns the time when the defendant came to the elevator to make arrangements for the return of the red durum. Plaintiff’s agent says it was about the middle of May, but the defendant insists that it was during the first part of August at the beginning of harvest. There is no dispute as to the fact that the defendant first learned that he had been paid twice for 500 bushels of amber durum when he. went to the elevator to arrange for the return of the red durum. After he had learned of the plaintiff’s claim of overpayment his wife figured over the accounts and verified the fact that a mistake had been made.

The plaintiff seeks to recover on the ground that its agent *238 overpaid tlie defendant because of a simple mutual mistake. The defendant, on the other hand, contends that plaintiff’s agent was negligent in figuring, up the settlement of November- 5, 1947; that defendant’s wife knew little about his business and accepted the agent’s figures without question; and that the agent is primarily responsible for the error. He further contends that on November 7-the defendant had in the plaintiff’s elevator red durum sufficient in value to have more than covered the overpayment at the price as of that time and for some considerable time thereafter; that the plaintiff, as a warehouseman, had a lien on the red durum for the amount due it; and that it could have foreclosed'this lien and sold the red durum in .an amount sufficient to pay the claim on ten days’ notice. He argues that its failure to foreclose its lien, or to notify the deféndant of the error promptly and thus give him an opportunity to sell the r.ed durum, when taken together with the fall in price, resulted in such a change in the defendant’s position as to bar the plaintiff’s right to recover the overpayment, at least to the extent of the reduction in value of the quantity of red durum that would have repaid the amount of plaintiff’s claim. The parties are agreed that at no time did the defendant attempt to sell the red durum until it was sold by stipulation.

It is the law in this jurisdiction, and in most others, that a payment madé under the influence of a mistake of fact may be recovered provided that the payment has not caused the payee to change his position to his detriment. Chrysler Light & Power Company v. Belfield, 58 ND 33, 224 NW 871, 63 ALR 1337; 40 Am Jur Payment Section 187. The defendant acknowledges the general rule thus stated but asserts that it does not ■apply where the mistake was induced by the negligence or forgetfulness of the payor without fault on the part of the payee. He would support his position by citing Fegan v. Great Northern Railway Company, 9 ND 30, 81 NW 39. There are statements in that case when considered without reference to the facts then before the court that seem to lend support to the defendant’s contention. However, that decision is well summarized in the two paragraphs of the syllabus which state:

“In an action to recover money paid under a mutual mistake of *239

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.W.2d 354, 77 N.D. 235, 1950 N.D. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rohrville-farmers-union-elevator-co-v-frison-nd-1950.