Swofford Bros. Dry Goods Co. v. Goss

65 Mo. App. 55, 1896 Mo. App. LEXIS 146
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 3, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 65 Mo. App. 55 (Swofford Bros. Dry Goods Co. v. Goss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swofford Bros. Dry Goods Co. v. Goss, 65 Mo. App. 55, 1896 Mo. App. LEXIS 146 (Mo. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.

The plaintiff corporation sued the defendant on four promissory notes, for $100 each, and on an account for merchandise sold by the former to the latter, amounting to $327.35.

The answer alleged that for a valuable consideration the defendant became possessed of a certain account which was owing by the plaintiff to R. J. Morris, amounting to $870.50. It further alleged that the defendant, being the owner of said account, then and there offered and proffered the said plaintiff company to pay and discharge the said notes and account, by the delivery of said account so due the said R. J. Morris, as aforesaid, to the said plaintiff, the same to be delivered in full and entire satisfaction, one for the other; that the said plaintiff then and there represented that it was not fully apprised of the facts- in reference to said account, but that if said proposition was not satisfactory, upon further investigation, the said plaintiff would so notify said defendant. That no notice of dissatisfaction had ever been given by plaintiff, or received by defendant.

These allegations of the answer were controverted by the replication.

The defense of accord and satisfaction pleaded in the answer finds no support in the evidence, unless it be in the testimony of said Morris. He testified:

“I went into Mr. S wofford’s office and told him I had come up to see if we could fix up the account between them and Mr. Gross; that they had a claim against Mr. Gross, and that they owed him, and I would like to have a settlement in some way. And I told him that the accounts were very nearly alike, and that [59]*59I wanted to put one account against the other and make a' settlement and get rid of the whole thing; what I wanted was to get the thing all settled between, them and us. He said he was not fully informed in the matter, but that he would look the matter up, and I told him that I would go to North Missouri to visit, my mother for a few days, and I would be back in a few days to see if we could fix it up. I asked him on returning if they were ready to fix up the matter, and I couldn’t get much satisfaction' out of him at either time, and I finally told him I was going back to Pedro, and that is where I would be, and he said that if my proposition wasn’t satisfactory, that he would write- and let me know. I wanted to get the thing squared .up.”

There was testimony adduced tending to prove the account of the defendant and the assignment of it by Morris to defendant, and that Morris was acting as agent for defendant in the matter of the attempted settlement. There was no dispute as to the correctness of the plaintiff’s notes and account. It is conceded that the amount of the plaintiff’s claims exceeded that of the defendant by something like $100.

The principal question for decision is, whether the evidence was sufficient to authorize the submission of the case upon the theory of an accord and satisfaction.

An “accord” is defined to be “an agreement in case of a contract, where the creditor agrees to accept some other thing in lieu of that which is contracted or promised.” Anderson’s Law Diet. 15. Accord and satisfaction is the substitution of another agreement between the parties, in satisfaction of the former and the execution of the latter agreement. 1 Am. and Eng. Encyclopedia of Law, 94; Pulliam v. Taylor, 50 Miss. 251. Accord and satisfaction forms a complete bar to any further action on the original claim, but accord, [60]*60without satisfaction, does not bar the action, nor vice versa. Am. and Eng. Encyclopedia of Law, 94, and cases there referred to.

Whether an accord, with a tender of satisfaction, is sufficient without acceptance, is a point upon which the authorities are not agreed. It is, however, perfectly clear that a mere agreement to accept a less sum, in composition of a debt, is not binding and can not be set up in bar of an action on the original contract. 2 Greenl. Ev., sec. 31. The accord must be executed. Bank v. DeGraw, 25 Wend. 342. Accord and satisfaction must be advantageous to the creditor. He must receive from it a distinct benefit which otherwise he would not have had. 2 Parsons on Contracts, 822.

In Coblentz v. Mfg. Co., 40 Ark. 181, it was declared that an agreement by a judgment creditor, without consideration, to accept a less sum than the amount of the judgment, in full satisfaction of it, is an accord unexecuted — an agreement without consideration and invalid. A mere agreement to accept less than the real debt would be nudum pactum.” Bo Lord Ellenbokotjgh,' in 11 East, 390, is reported to have said: “It is true that if a creditor simply agree to accept a less sum from his debtor than is his just demand, that it will not bind him.” And this seems to be the established law. And it is the equally well settled law, that where there is nothing more than the simple payment — an acceptance of a less sum of money in satisfaction of the greater' sum due, without a release of the residue, it is in law no discharge or extinguishment of such greater debt. But if, in addition to the payment, there be some other collateral consideration such as in the law is sufficient to support a contract, then the agreement to relinquish the residue is not nudum pactum. Such collateral or additional consideration may consist of anything which would be a [61]*61burden or incumbrance to tbe one party or a possible benefit to the other. Maddox v. Bevan, 39 Md. 485; Lathrop v. Page, 129 Mass. 19; Howard v. Norton, 65 Barb. 161.

And the supreme court of this state, in Riley v. Kershaw, 52 Mo. 224, declared that payment of part of a debt, or liquidated damages, is not payment of the whole debt, even when the creditor agrees to receive a part of the whole and executes a receipt for the whole, except in fair and well understood compromises, carried faithfully into effect; or if the payment is in any way more beneficial to the creditor than that prescribed in the contract. Dentman v. Kilpatrick, 46 Mo. App. 624; Perkins v. Headley, 49 Mo. App. 556; Helling v. United Order, 29 Mo. App. 309. So, in Mullin v. Martin, 23 Mo. App. 537, it was declared that a composition agreement between debtor and creditor does not, unless it is performed, discharge the debtor from the residue of the debt.

The evidence, as we' have seen, does not tend to establish an accord. It is true the plaintiff was to look into the defendant’s claim and if not satisfied therewith was to notify defendant, and that plaintiff did not so notify defendant. This was a preliminary matter. TJntil the plaintiff investigated the correctness and justice of defendant’s claim, it was not willing to treat with him as to a settlement of the two claims on the terms proposed by the defendant. But if the plaintiff did not notify the defendant of its dissatisfaction with the defendant’s claim, and that from the conduct of the plaintiff in that regard the inference may be indulged that plaintiff was satisfied with such claim, still this is not enough. Even if the fact may be inferred that the plaintiff was satisfied with the correctness and justice of the defendant’s claim, there is no evidence tending to show that the plaintiff agreed [62]*62to accept the defendant’s claim in full satisfaction and discharge of its own; or, if so, that this latter agreement was executed.

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65 Mo. App. 55, 1896 Mo. App. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swofford-bros-dry-goods-co-v-goss-moctapp-1896.