Thurston, Gardner, & Co. v. James

6 R.I. 103
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 6, 1859
StatusPublished

This text of 6 R.I. 103 (Thurston, Gardner, & Co. v. James) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thurston, Gardner, & Co. v. James, 6 R.I. 103 (R.I. 1859).

Opinion

Bosworth, J.

These were actions brought • by Thurston, Gardner, & Co. of the City of Providence, against Charles T. James, to recover the amount of three promissory notes, two of them for $6,000 each, and one for $5,000. The notes were signed by the defendant, and two of them were indorsed by Alfred R. Fiske, son-in-law of the defendant. The note for $5,000 had no indorser upon it. There were several other causes of action embraced in the declarations, some in reference to which there was no dispute at the trial. There were three matters of claim under the money counts of the declaration, which were disputed on the trial. Upon the rulings and charge of the court, in reference to these three claims, as well as in reference to the three notes aforementioned, exceptions were taken, which are to - be considered in determining this motion for a new trial.

The first three exceptions relate to the rulings of the court úpon the claims set up under the money counts. The plaintifij at the request of the defendant, had caused a sum of money to be placed to the credit of a third person in a banking institution in New York, and had charged the money to the person to *111 whose credit it was placed. The defendant, at the time of making the request, desired that the plaintiffs’ name should not be known in the transaction, and stated, that if the Sickles’ patent was obtained, it would be all right; if not the money would be paid back. Subsequently the plaintiffs wrote to the party in New York, to whose credit the money was placed, on the subject, and received an answer denying all knowledge of the plaintiffs in reference to the money, and all accountability to them; saying, that when he saw the defendant, he would remind him what he paid him the money for. In a letter from the plaintiffs to the defendant the matter was spoken of as the loan to the third person. The defendant requested the court to charge the jury, that he was not liable for the amount claimed, unless a promise in writing to pay it was produced and proved. The court did not so charge; but did charge, that unless the jury were satisfied from the proof, that the money was paid to the use of the defendant and at his request, he was not liable in this action. It is plain, that there was no error in this charge. It was of no importance whether the promise was in writing or not.' If the money was paid for the defendant’s use, and at his request, he was liable whether the promise was verbal or written. If it was the debt of another, the defendant would not be liable under the money counts in the declaration, whether the promise was in writing or not. Under this charge, the jury must have found that the money was advanced on the personal credit of the defendant. To this fact the plaintiff, Gardner, on his direct examination in the cause, testified. We think the matter was properly left to the jury, and their verdict ought to be' satisfactory.

The second and third exceptions are of the same character, as to the claims of the plaintiffs for money advanced to Frieze, upon the Wilson note, and are overruled, on the same grounds.

One other ground is however embraced in the third exception. It seems that the amount of á note for $500, less the discount, was advanced by the plaintiffs to the defendant, which note was made by James J. Wilson, and was payable directly to the plaintiffs. This note was not indorsed by the defendant but was delivered by him to the plaintiffs, he request *112 ing them to. collect it. At the maturity of the note, it was not paid, and the plaintiffs sent it to New York, where it was sold for less than the amount due upon it. The amount collected was credited to the defendant, and the balance was claimed in this suit. The sale was made without the knowledge of the defendant; but on learning the fact he pronounced the sale a good one, and promised the plaintiffs to pay them the balance. We think the jury had a right to infer from this ratification of the sale, an authority to make it; and the judge did not err in refusing to charge the jury, that by reason of this sale the defendant was discharged from his liability,

The instructions claimed by the defendant as to the contract of October 29, 1852, could not properly have been given. This contract provided, that the defendant should perform certain services for the plaintiffs, for which he was to receive certain payments, which payments were by the agreement to be indorsed on the notes for $6,000 and $5,000, above referred to, as they were earned, until the full amount of the notes was paid ; and further, if the sums to be thus earned by the defendant should not be sufficient to pay the notes in full, at the time when they became due, then the notes were to be renewed for the balance for two years. This contract bore date subsequent to the date of the notes. At the times when the notes became due, nothing had been earned by the defendant, to be applied on the notes under the contract. The notes had all become due when the suit was commenced ; no part of them had been paid, and no renewal had been made or offered. The court were asked to instruct the jury, that under the contract, the defendant had a right to pay, and was only liable to pay in his services as specified in said contract; and consequently that the plaintiffs could not recover the amount of the notes in this suit. The plaintiffs had made a contract with the defendant collateral to the notes, which the defendant had not performed, and therefore he claimed, that he was not liable to perform the principal contract. The terms of the collateral contract can bear no such absurd interpretation. The court instructed the jury, that though by the terms of this contract the defendant had a right to- pay in his services, yet if he *113 had not so paid, he -was liable in a suit on the notes. By the fifth exception it appears, that the court refused to instruct the jury, that said contract being in evidence, it was a condition precedent, that the plaintiffs should not commence their action on the notes until the expiration of five years from the date of said notes. There was no such condition expressed, but merely an agreement, that if the notes should not be fully paid by the application of the defendant’s earnings at their maturity, they should then be renewed for two years. If there was such a condition precedent, it must be inferred, from this agreement for renewal; and in that case, the agreement would amount to an agreement not to sue for two years after the maturity of the notes. If the defendant had performed his promise under the collateral contract, i. e. made the contemplated payments before the^ maturity of the notes, and then renewed his notes for any balance that might have remained due, the purpose of the collateral contract would have been attained, and the plaintiffs would have been liable on the collateral contract for damages if they had refused to renew. But the evidence showed, that he had made no payment under that contract nor renewed the notes; and with respect to one of the notes in suit, the true time to which a renewal would have extended the liability of the defendant had expired when these suits were commenced.

It is well settled, that an agreement, or a covenant not to sue for a given time, does not amount to a defeasance and cannot avail as such, but is a covenant only on which an action may be brought for damages ; though a covenant never to sue may avail as a release to avoid circuity of action. Dorr

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Bluebook (online)
6 R.I. 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thurston-gardner-co-v-james-ri-1859.