Simons v. Supreme Council American Legion of Honor

70 N.E. 776, 178 N.Y. 263, 16 Bedell 263, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 709
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 26, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 70 N.E. 776 (Simons v. Supreme Council American Legion of Honor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simons v. Supreme Council American Legion of Honor, 70 N.E. 776, 178 N.Y. 263, 16 Bedell 263, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 709 (N.Y. 1904).

Opinion

Parker, Cli. J.

Defendant insists that it should have had judgment against plaintiff on the ground that plaintiff’s claim grows out of a-situation which was included in an accord and satisfaction; that there was a dispute between plaintiff’s assignors and defendant as to the amount due the former from the latter ■— an honest dispute — which resulted in the proposition by defendant to pay a given sum and no more in settlement of the matter, for which sum a draft was ‘accepted.

Now it is the settled law of this state that if a debt or claim be disputed or contingent at the timq of payment, the payment, when accepted, of a part of the whole debt is a good satisfaction and it matters not that there was no solid foundation for the dispute. The test in such cases is, Was the dispute honest or fraudulent ? If honest, it affords the basis for an accord between the parties, which the law favors, the execution of which is the satisfaction.

The father of the assignors of plaintiff obtained a benefit certificate, or policy of insurance, issued by defendant whereby the latter agreed to pay to the beneficiaries, plaintiff’s assignors, §5,000 upon proof of the death of insured. Insured died October 2,1900. Had he died two days earlier this controversy could not have arisen as then according to. the policy and defendant’s by-laws the beneficiaries would have been entitled to §5,000 beyond dispute and a payment of a less sum would not have prevented the beneficiaries or their assignors from maintaining an action to recover the balance. But defendant had amended its by-laws months before so as to reduce the amount payable on all policies maturing after October 1, 1900, §5,000 policies being reduced to §2,000. Defendant’s by-laws ■—■ made a part of the policy — authorized amendment. So when insured died this policy represented but §2,000 according to the by-laws.

*266 This court recently held that such an amendment is without power, and, therefore, ineffective. ( Weber v. Supreme Tent of K. of M., 172 N. Y. 490.) But that was not the position of the courts of this state prior to the amendment. Indeed, nearly seven years before the amendment the General Term of the fifth- department in Hutchinson v. Supreme Tent of K. of M. (68 Hun, 355) held that defendant had power to make an amendment .substituting for a disability benefit an annuity of 10 per cent thereof. Therefore, defendant’s amendment — in addition to being sustained by the authorities in some other jurisdictions —was supported by the only decision of importance in this state, at that time, bearing upon the subject.

It is not pretended that defendant’s representative fraudulently represented to plaintiff’s assignors that the policy had been reduced to $2,000. It had been so reduced by the formal action of defendant and according to a decision in this state its action was legal. When, therefore, its representative insisted that the policy had been reduced to $2,000 he stated the contract as defendant understood it and believed it to be. And hence when lie said that after deducting 5 per cent—as to which there is no controversy — there would remain but $1,900 due the beneficiaries, he stated defendant’s belief accurately. The beneficiaries asked for the $5,000. They were disappointed at the reduction. Here then was the dispute. The beneficiaries could have refused to accept the $1,900, and brought suit for the entire amount. But the only decision of moment in this state upon the subject held that defendant’s action was authorized and legal. The only other course open was to settle.

The law wisely,favors settlement, and where the parties are in a position to deal with one another at arm’s length, as these jjarties were, the law will support their settlement. How is the settlement in this case evidenced ? By the acceptance of the draft for $4,900 by the beneficiaries after they had been told by defendant’s representatives that such sum would be paid only on condition that the beneficiaries sign the blank *267 surrender form and give up the policy. About this there is no controversy whatever. The beneficiaries had the policy, upon which they could bring action for $5,000, and they, surrendered it to get a draft for $1,900 when they were told that that was all that was due, and all they could have, and that they should not receive that unless and until the surrender certificate was signed and delivered up with the policy. The beneficiaries accepted the terms when they signed the surrender certificate, delivered the policy, and accepted and used defendant’s draft for $1,900. It is not disputed that this transaction took place.

The beneficiaries would have it now that one of them, protested. But there is no protest in the papers. The surrender, which was indorsed upon the certificate of insurance, was signed by both beneficiaries, and reads “undersigned beneficiary named in the within benefit certificate acknowledges having received the amount herein agreed to be paid, and this certificate is hereby surrendered to the Supreme Council American Legion of Honor for cancellation.” How above that indorsement one of the beneficiaries, Howard L. Keyser, wrote the following: Receipt below given for $1900 only. 2 — 27 — 01.” That statement represents the simple fact that they received under the certificate $1,900. And it does not affect the character and legal effect of the instrument any more than as if the certificate of surrender had stated that “ Undersigned beneficiary named in the. within benefit certificate hereby acknowledges having received $1,900, the amount herein agreed to be paid.” It simply adds to the surrender certificate—which says the beneficiaries have received the amount agreed to be paid — what that amount was.

There is very little evidence of protest in the testimony of the beneficiary Keyser. But if it were far stronger, it could have no legal effect as against the written evidence of this settlement, consisting of the signed surrender of the policy and the draft payable to the beneficiaries, and not received until after the signing of the "surrender and the delivering up of the policy, as testified to by the beneficiary Keyser. He said *268 defendant’s representative told him, before he would give him the draft, “ The policy must be surrendered and this receipt signed. * * , * He told me I had to give up the policy and had to sign that blank form there. And that if I failed to do so I would not get the $1,900. After doing that he delivered the draft to me, and that is all I ever received.” This the beneficiaries followed by surrendering the policy for cancellation, which act, under the decision of this court in Larkin v. Hardenbrook (90 N. Y. 333), would deprive the beneficiaries of the right to maintain an action, although no consideration was paid, as it operates in law as a release and discharge of the maker’s liability in the absence of fraud or mistake.

That decision standing alone would, perhaps, require a reversal of this judgment. But it is not invoked for that purpose, as in my view an accord and satisfaction in law was established by plaintiff’s proofs. That case is cited in order primarily that attention may be called to a portion of the reasoning of the court. Judge Miller said—-all of.

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Bluebook (online)
70 N.E. 776, 178 N.Y. 263, 16 Bedell 263, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simons-v-supreme-council-american-legion-of-honor-ny-1904.