Seligman v. Pinet

43 N.W. 1091, 78 Mich. 50, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 799
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 43 N.W. 1091 (Seligman v. Pinet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seligman v. Pinet, 43 N.W. 1091, 78 Mich. 50, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 799 (Mich. 1889).

Opinion

Morse, J.

Seligman sues upon a joint promissory note for $1,700, executed by the two Pinets and Shaw, dated July 3, 1888, and payable six months after date, to his order, at Seligman^s Bank of Commerce, East Saginaw. Upon this note, before suit, one of the Pinets had paid two-thirds of the principal, and interest due at the time of payment.

The defense was that Seligman agreed with Shaw that he would collect two-thirds of the note of the Pinets, [52]*52and extend the time of payment of the remaining third to Shaw until such time as certain profits from the barge Norway would be sufficient to pay such third. That in the fall of 1888 the defendants were the owners of said barge Norway. It was about to be sold by the United States marshal to satisfy a decree against it for certain claims upon the vessel. The defendant Alfred N. Pinet was absent in the Upper Peninsula. Adolph A. Pinet and Shaw were financially unable to redeem said barge from such sale, and the former was insolvent, which Seligman knew; and he was aware that he must look to Alfred N. Pinet and Shaw for the payment of this note, which he then held; that, before the sale of the barge, Seligman, at the request of Shaw, entered into a verbal contract with Shaw in which contract Shaw agreed to notify him when said barge was to be sold, and to buy it in for said Seligman, in consideration of which service Seligman agreed to purchase the said barge, and when said barge was purchased to give Shaw one-third of the net profits of the same, and, in the event of the sale of the Norway, Shaw was to receive one-third of the proceeds of such sale. The profits belonging to Shaw were to be applied on the note until it was paid, and time of payment extended until such profits should pay one-third of the same; that the remaining two-thirds should be collected of the Pinets. Seligman should have the right to retain said, undivided one-third of the profits and proceeds of the Norway, and as fast as the same was received apply the same on the note. When such profits or proceeds paid one-third of the note Seligman was to surrender the note to Shaw, and pay to him his remaining interest, if any, in the profits and proceeds of the barge. There was no averment in the pleadings that the Pinets were parties to this agreement, or that, when they paid two-thirds of the note, they paid the same undelr or in [53]*53view of such agreement. The defense was made in this suit by Shaw and Alfred N. Pinet, Adolph A. Pinet being defaulted for non-appearance.

It was shown on the part of the defense that Seligman suggested to Shaw that he should attend the sale, and bid the boat in as cheaply as possible, and in consideration for Shaw’s services -he should have a third interest in the barge. Shaw said to him that he would like “to have the boat put so it would pay for this note,” and Seligman consented that Shaw should go down and bid the boat in, and pay him 7 per cent, interest on the note until it was paid; that Shaw should have, time to take care of his share (one-third) of the note out of the earnings of the boat. In pursuance of this arrangement, Shaw went to Detroit and attended the sale, and at such sale Seligman bid the barge in for $1,525. After it was purchased Seligman said:

“The boat is mine; what do you want to do ?” Shaw said: “Beggars shouldn’t be choosers; I will leave it to you.” Seligman then said: “You go on and run the boat; I haven’t time to spend with it, and I don’t want anything to do with it. You go on and run the boat, .and do the best you can.”

This was about September 22, 1888. Shaw took charge of the boat. He made one trip to Tawas, upon which no profits were made. He then took the barge to Saginaw, and ran it as a lighter, and turned the profits over to Seligman. The boat laid up for the winter, and in the spring Seligman refused to let him handle the boat any longer. Shaw could not swear that any net profits were made, but was told by Seligman’s agent that the boat was in debt, — had not made anything as yet.

On cross-examination Shaw testified that the Pinets were not present when this agreement was made, and they were not parties to it, and that he ■ had no agree[54]*54ment or arrangement with them about it; that.he did not bid on the boat himself, as Seligman was present and did that for himself. There was no provision in the agreement as to what should be done in case the boat was lost or run behind, the expenses exceeding the profits.

Alfred N. Pinet testified that he went to Seligman’sBank, at Bast Saginaw, in December, 1888, or January, 1889, and paid two-thirds of this note to Mr. Emerick, who was the cashier or manager of the bank. He told Emerick that Shaw said if he (Pinet) would pay two-thirds Shaw would make the balance good. Emerick replied, “If Shaw said that, it is all right;” and received the money for two-thirds of the note. On cross-examination he testified that he went to see Shaw, and told him they ought to pay the note, and Shaw said that he had an arrangement with Seligman, as far as he was concerned, by which his part was paid, or just as good as. paid. Shaw claimed to him that his third was to be paid from the net earnings of the Norway. Pinet did not pay the two-thirds because of any agreement with Seligman, as he had none with him, nor was there any bargain with Emerick that he should be released by such payment.

No testimony was offered by the plaintiff in rebuttal of the defendants5 testimony, and the circuit judge-directed a verdict for the plaintiff for the balance due on the face of the note, to wit, $586.06. The court was of the opinion that the agreement would not have the effect to extinguish the liability of the defendants. The note being joint, the liability was joint, and—

“Each one was answerable for the whole of the note, and nothing short of an absolute release of one of the parties to the note could have the effect to discharge the entire joint obligation of all the parties.”

[55]*55The judge thought that if the agreement on the part of Seligman was not carried out, and the proceeds applied, in the way indicated by the agreement, upon the note, Shaw might have an action against him for breach of the agreement, but the agreement was not one that Pinet could avail himself of as a defense to the note.

The counsel for plaintiff, to support this judgment, maintain that in assumpsit against joint debtors it is no defense that one of them has heen discharged from his share of the debt by an unsealed instrument in writing, or by an oral agreement, although such contract or agreement is founded upon a sufficient consideration; citing McAllester v. Sprague, 34 Me. 296; Drinkwater v. Jordan, 46 Id. 432; Matthey v. Gally, 4 Cal. 62; Walker v. McCulloch, 4 Greenl. 428; Shed v. Pierce, 17 Mass. 623. The doctrine of these cases is stated by Mr. .Justice Heydenfeldt in Matthey v. Gally, supra, as follows:

“It is well settled that a covenant not to sue operates as a release, but the reason for it is only to avoid circuity of action. If the covenant not to sue be broken, the strict right of the covenantee is to recover on the covenant, and, as the recovery must be the same in both suits, the doctrine of release is resorted to to avoid circuity.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 N.W. 1091, 78 Mich. 50, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seligman-v-pinet-mich-1889.