Washington v. Heid

504 P.2d 745, 264 Or. 179
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 504 P.2d 745 (Washington v. Heid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington v. Heid, 504 P.2d 745, 264 Or. 179 (Or. 1972).

Opinion

HOLMAN, J.

This is an action for damages for the alleged wrongful garnishment of $73.34 of plaintiff’s wages. Defendant counterclaimed for the balance claimed to be due from plaintiff to defendant on a promissory note. The trial court entered a judgment of involuntary nonsuit to plaintiff’s cause of action upon the ground there was insufficient proof of malice, of damages, and of lack of probable cause. On a motion for a directed verdict, the trial court ruled that defend *181 ant’s note had been paid in full. Plaintiff appealed, complaining of the nonsuit.

No question has been raised on appeal concerning the propriety of filing an action on a note as a counterclaim to an action for wrongful attachment.

Plaintiff owed defendant approximately $1,600 on a judgment and a balance of $600 on a note. Plaintiff was cited as a judgment debtor into court by defendant for an examination of plaintiff’s assets. When plaintiff appeared, the parties, at the suggestion of the court, attempted to settle their differences. Plaintiff was not represented by an attorney; defendant was. Following the conference between the parties, defendant’s attorney drew the following document which was signed by both defendant’s attorney and plaintiff:

“SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT
“I, HENRY H. WASHINGTON, hereby agree to pay to C. E. HEID the total sum of One thous- and two hundred ($1,200) dollars in full settlement of his claims against me. Said $1200. shall be payable as follows:
“The sum of Three hundred ($300) dollars on or before January 16, 1967; the sum of three hundred ($300) dollars on or before February 15,1967; the sum of two hundred ($200) on or before March 15, 1967; the sum of one hundred ($100) dollars on or before April 15, 1967; the sum of one hundred ($100) dollars on or before May 15, 1967; the sum of one hundred ($100) dollars on or before June 15, 1967; and the sum of one hundred ($100) dollars on or before July 15,1967.
“Any payment that becomes delinquent shall bear interest at the rate of 6 percent per anum [sic]. In the event that the total sum is paid in full as each installment falls due there shall be no interest accrue under this agreement.”

*182 Plaintiff thereafter became delinquent in, his payments under the agreement and defendant caused an execution to issue in the case in which he held the judgment and had plaintiff’s wages attached. This is the action of which plaintiff complains.

The parties agree that both the note and the judgment. were intended to be included within the claims which were the subject of the above contract. However, they- do not agree on the legal import of a matter about which the document is silent. Plaintiff claims the agreement was. a substituted contract and that,, once it was signed,, the judgment and the note were, satisfied and no attachment could, thereafter be levied upon the judgment. Defendant claims it was an executory/accord, and that-if its provisions were not carried out in accordance with its terms, he could enforce the original indebtednesses to their full extent. This is the only issue presented on appeal from the nonsuit. Plaintiff expresses his position as follows:

“The plaintiff’s theory in the case at.bar is that a novation [substituted contract] was substituted for the preexisting judgment, promissory note and N.S.F. check. The foregoing is either true or it is not. If it is not true the writer must admit, that the plaintiff’s ease must fail * *

The agreement is ambiguous in that it says nothing about the parties’ intentions in the event plaintiff breached it. The interest provision in the agreement serves as an indication that a substituted contract Avas intended. On the other hand, it seems unlikely that defendant would give up a judgment for $1,600 and the $600 balance due on a note in return for an agreement to pay him $300 at once and $900 in the future. HoAvever, an immediate $300 down payment might induce the making of such an agreement. At the .time the *183 agreement was made the note was not returned to plaintiff nor was a receipt for .its payment delivered to him. ■ Neither was a satisfaction of the judgment given.

Plaintiff did. not .testify concerning the understanding of the parties regarding their respective rights in case he became delinquent. He called as a witness the lawyer who represented defendant when the agreement was made who testified that the parties discussed the matter, that it was their intention the original indebtednesses could be asserted by defendant in case plaintiff became delinquent, and that plaintiff was told this was the-import of the agreement.

The question is posed whether there was sufficient evidence of a substituted contract to entitle plaintiff to go to a jury, ..assuming that it is a jury and not a court question. The burden is upon the plaintiff to prove it. was the intention of the parties that the prior indebtednesses be immediately discharged upon the signing of the.agreement. In Palmer v. Yager, 20 Wis 97 [*91] (1865), the court said that “[a]n intention to satisfy [pre-existing indebtedness] is not to be implied from the mere making of the promise. It must be established by some additional proof, the burden of which rests upon the debtor.” 20 Wis at 107 [*100].

Plaintiff has not carried his burden, since all he has offered is an equivocal contract and a witness who testified that such contract was an executory accord. Even if we assume that the lawyer who represented defendant at the time of the agreement was an adverse witness under ORS 45.590 and thus plaintiff was not bound by his testimony, we do not believe the ambiguous contract, without further evidence, was sufficient *184 tó make a jury question. 6 Corbin on Contracts 199-200, § 1293 (1962 ed) states as follows:'

“Whether the new agreement or ‘accord’ is itself accepted as an immediate discharge of the.prior claim—as a substituted contract—or is not so accepted, is merely a question of reasonable interpretation of the expressions of the parties. If the party committing a. breach of the new agreement is the debtor under the former one, and the interpretation is doubtful, the court is likely to resolve the doubt in favor of the creditor and to sustain his action on the first contract * * (Footnote omitted.)

3. The nature of the previous obligation is relevant to the manner in which a doubtful situation is looked' upon. Before á prior "judgment debt will be found to be discharged, “such intent must be clearly manifested,” Hartzog’s Estate, 270 Pa 172, 113 A 193 (1921). On the other hand, where the original obligation is unliquidated and the subsequent agreement is for a definite sum, courts will usually hold the subsequént agreement to be a substituted contract. Mays v. Stegeman, 213 Ky 60, 280 SW 464 (1926).

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Bluebook (online)
504 P.2d 745, 264 Or. 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-v-heid-or-1972.