Washington Securities Co. v. American Nitrogen Products Co.

253 P. 1070, 142 Wash. 624, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1130
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1927
DocketNo. 20341. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 253 P. 1070 (Washington Securities Co. v. American Nitrogen Products Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington Securities Co. v. American Nitrogen Products Co., 253 P. 1070, 142 Wash. 624, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1130 (Wash. 1927).

Opinion

Tolman, J.

Appellant, in the year 1923, became involved in financial difficulties and as a result a written agreement between it and all of its creditors was en *625 tered into. This is not the nsnal composition agreement, in that certain Canadian creditors agreed to take over assets in Canada in full settlement of their claims, certain other creditors agreed to take over and assume pressing obligations of the corporation in a large amount and to defer any payments to them until general creditors were paid as therein provided, and the business was to be continued, and it was further agreed:

“That the revenue derived from the operation of the LaGrande, Washington, plant shall be applied first to the payment of the expenses of operating said plant, and such repairs, betterments or improvements as it may be necessary to make, and other necessary expenses of the corporation. The foregoing includes a salary of $400 per month from April 1st, 1923, to C. F. Graff, but no salary shall be paid to E. L. Blaine after April 30th, 1923. After the payment of the foregoing the net proceeds derived from the operation of said plant shall be disbursed in the following amounts and order: [Among others and in proper order, fifty per cent, of the claims of general creditors].
“The third parties hereto agree that upon the payment to them, as above provided, of the amount of the respective claims as hereinabove set forth, they shall execute and deliver to the first party a full and complete release of all claims and demands.”

This agreement was signed by respondent, and its claim was therein listed at $615.

The appellant proceeded to carry on its business under the terms of this agreement. All of the prior conditions were met and performed, and in March, 1925, assuming that it had an offset to respondent’s claim in the amount of $147.26 and claiming an oral agreement by which the face of respondent’s claim was reduced to $575, it wrote respondent as follows:

“Under the creditors’ agreement executed in May, 1923, to which you are , a party, we are to pay off the *626 creditors there listed as to sequence and amounts. The general creditors, Group ‘F,’ to which you belong, is the nest unpaid item on the list. We are at this time able to apply a payment of 33 %% on this item, and as the amount due you is $287.50, your dividend is therefore $95.83. It affords us the greatest pleasure to enclose our credit memorandum accordingly to apply on our invoice against you of August 19, 1924, in amount $147.26.”

To which respondent replied:

“We have your credit memorandum dated March 16, 1925, in the amount of $95.83.
“The credit memorandum looks very nice, but may we not have your check therefor.”

Again on April 10, 1925, appellant wrote respondent:

“On March 18th we'had the pleasure of paying you by credit memorandum 33 %% of the amount owing you under a certain creditors’ agreement entered into in May, 1923. It pleases us no less to enclose herewith an additional credit memorandum in amount $51.43, covering the balance of our invoice of August 19, 1924, together with our check in amount $44.40. This check and credit memorandum represent another 33 Vz% on this debt.”

• Credit memorandum and check were enclosed as therein stated, and on April 22 of the same year appellant again wrote:

‘ ‘ On March 16th we had the pleasure of paying you 33 Yz% of moneys owing you under a certain creditors’ agreement entered into in May, 1923. On April 10'th we paid another third, and we are enclosing our check in amount $95.83 representing the final third payment on this debt.
“We can assure you it pleases us very much that we are enabled to clean up this obligation, and we desire to once more thank you for your co-operation. ’ ’

and enclosed check accordingly. Respondent answered neither of these last two communications, did not cash *627 either check, made no demand for payment, and in June following began this action to recover $615, tendering back the unendorsed checks. Appellant answered, setting up the creditors’ contract, alleging an oral agreement to reduce the claim to $575, and pleading as an offset its counterclaim in the sum hereinbefore mentioned.

The case was tried to the court. Evidence as to an oral agreement reducing the amount was ruled out upon the -theory that it was an attempt by oral testimony to vary the terms of a written contract. The counterclaim was allowed in full, but because of the failure to pay or -tender fifty per cent, of $615 less the counterclaim, the court in effect held that the creditor was released from its agreement, and accordingly entered a judgment against the appellant for $495.89 and costs, being the full amount of the claim, plus interest and less the counterclaim. From this judgment the appeal is prosecuted.

There being no cross-appeal, the allowance of the counterclaim by the trial court is final, and we must assume that such a credit existed and was properly claimed when dividends were declared under the creditors ’ agreement.

Manifestly, under repeated rulings of this court, the trial court was right in rejecting oral evidence tending to dispute the amount of respondent’s claim as listed in the written agreement, and there remains for our decision only the effect of appellant’s failure to tender dividends on the full amount of the claim as it then existed.

Authorities are not wanting to the effect that in an ordinary composition, the failure of the debtor to perform places the creditor in a position to sue for the original debt. In 12 C. J. 270 the rule is thus stated:

*628 “The cause of action for breach, or default varies according to the nature of the composition. If that is executory merely, and does not contemplate the release or discharge of the debtor until full performance, a breach or default avoids the composition and revives the original debt, and the creditor may sue for the whole of that debt of the balance over what he has-already received under the composition, as the case may be, or he may prove therefor in bankruptcy or insolvency proceedings, or under an assignment for the benefit of creditors, although he may -at his option stand upon the composition and sue for the sum or the balance of the sum agreed to be paid thereunder. Furthermore, the debtor cannot enjoin the execution of a judgment recovered for the original debt. When the composition is paid by a third person it would seem that the creditor cannot sue without returning what he has received under it.

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Related

In re Plaza Music Co.
10 F. Supp. 310 (S.D. New York, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
253 P. 1070, 142 Wash. 624, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-securities-co-v-american-nitrogen-products-co-wash-1927.