Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad v. Fulton

71 Miss. 385
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 71 Miss. 385 (Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad v. Fulton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad v. Fulton, 71 Miss. 385 (Mich. 1893).

Opinion

Cooper, J.,

delivered, the opinion of the court.

The facts involved in this cause, chronologically stated, are as follows:

On the twenty-sixth of January, 1893, one of the trains of appellant ran over and injured a mule belougitig to appellee. On the seventeenth day of March following, B. J. Semines & Co. sued out an attachment in the proper court in the state of Tennessee against appellee on a debt of $182.40, and summoned the appellant as garnishee therein. On the day following the appellant answered, stating that it had been informed that appellee claimed damages against it for the injury to his mule, which claim was contested, but stated that it would hold, subject to the attachment, whatever sum should be found due to appellee on said claim. On the twenty-first day of April, appellee instituted suit against appellant before a justice of the peace in this state to recover damages for the injury to the mule. On the twenty-second day of April, a train of appellant killed an ox of appellee, and on the twenty-fifth day of April he sued appellant before the same justice to recover its value. On the eleventh day of May, judgments by default were rendered against appellant in these cases, and on the same day it prosecuted appeals therefrom to the circuit court.

On September 7, an agreement of compromise was entered into between appellee and the appellant, by which appellee agreed to accept eighty dollai’s as payment in full of the judgments recited, and to dismiss the suits at his cost. The agent of the company, representing to appellee that he would remit to him the money, procured him to sign a receipt therefor, but no money was, in fact, paid or remitted to appellee. On September 9, the appellant filed another answer as garnishee in the attachment suit of Semmes & Co. against appellee, in which it stated that “ by an agreed settlement of a certain claim due J. W. Fulton by said company for stock killed, say that said company has agreed to pay him eighty dollars for said claim.” On this day (September 9) the a])[388]*388pellee was in the city of Memphis, and called on the proper officer of the company, and requested payment of the eighty dollars agreed to be paid to him by the company; but this officer, saying that he then had no voucher to pay by, requested appellee to return in an hour and he “would then see about it.” Appellee returned, and found that appellant’s agent had procured the attendance of an officer, who served upon appellee a summons in the attachment suit of Semmes & Co. Appellee then notified the agent of appellant that he repudiated the agreement of compromise, and would not be bound thereby. On the same day judgment was rendered in the attachment suit of Semmes & Co. against appellee in favor of the plaintiffs for the sum of $195.02 and costs of suit, and against appellant, as garnishee, for the sum of $80, admitted by its answer to be due.

In the circuit court, the two suits appealed from the justice of the peace were, by consent of parties, consolidated, and a trial of the same resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $175, from which the defendant appeals.

No point was made in 'the court below, nor is any now made here, as to the right of the plaintiff to the damages awarded by the jury, unless he is precluded by the adjustment made, in which he agreed to accept $80 in full of his demand, or unless, not being bound by that agreement, his right to a present recovery is limited to the balance due on his claim, after making a deduction of the sum for which judgment has been rendered against appellant as garnishee.

It is entirely clear from the evidence that there has been no accord and satisfaction of the plaintiff’s claim. That a present payment of the sum -lie agreed to accept was contemplated by the parties is made indisputable by the fact that the plaintiff gave a receipt for the sum as actually paid. It is true that a promise may be accepted as satisfaction of an accord, but when, as here, it is manifest that performance was contemplated by the parties, the mere promise to per[389]*389form is not satisfaction. Whitney v. Cook, 53 Miss., 551; 1 Am. & Eng. Enc. of L., 94. The defendant has not paid the sum agreed to be received by the appellee, and his right to recover on the original demand was not at all affected.

The remaining question involved is as to the effect of the judgment against the garnishee in the attachment suit of Semines & Co. against Fulton, the appellee. The action of the appellee was instituted in the justice’s court, in which there are no written pleadings, and, on appeal to the circuit court, was there triable de novo on oral pleadings, and in such cases the pleadings are presumed to have been of such character as to warrant the introduction of any evidence appearing in the record. The defendant introduced in evidence the record of the attachment suit, and is entitled to have it considered in any light in which it should have been available to it.

There is a wide diversity of views entertained by the courts of the various States as to the effect of a judgment against a garnishee who is afterwards sued by the original creditor, the defendant in attachment or judgment. In England it is held that a judgment against the garnishee is a bar to an action upon the same debt. McDaniel v. Hughes, 3 East, 367. The courts of Florida, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, and Massachusetts have announced the same rule. Sessions v. Stevens, 1 Florida, 233; Covert v. Nelson, 8 Blackford, 265; King v. Vance, 46 Ind., 246; Coburn v. Currens, 1 Bush, 242; McAllister v. Brooks, 22 Maine, 80; Norris v. Hall, 18 Id., 332; Perkins v. Parker, 1 Mass., 117; Hull v. Blake, 13 Id., 152.

In other states and in the supreme court of the United States, it is held that the judgment on pendency of garnishment proceedings may be pleaded in abatement of the plaintiff’s suit. Embur v. Hanna, 5 Johns., 101; Haselton v. Monroe, 18 N. H., 598; Ladd v. Jacobs, 64 Maine, 347; Irvine v. Bank, 2 Watts & Serg., 190; Near v. Mitchell, 23 Mich., 382 ; Clise v. Freeborne, 27 Iowa, 280; Brown v. Somerville, 8 Md., 444; Mattingly v. Boyd, 20 How. (U. S.), 128.

[390]*390In others, it has been held that, though the proceeding or judgment may not be pleaded in abatement or bar of the suit of the creditor, yet the court, in entering up judgment, would so frame the same as to protect the defendant, garnishee, in the other action from being called on to pay the same debt twice. Meriam v. Rundlett, 13 Pick., 511; Crawford v. Star, 9 Ala., 887; Smith v. Blatchford, 2 Ind., 184; McFadden v. O’Donnell, 18 Cal., 160; Pierson v. McCahill, 21 Id., 122; Shealy v. Toole, 56 Ga., 210; Hicks v. Gleason, 20 Vt., 139.

The course of decision in some of the states has not, probably, been at all times consistent, and we have not attempted to discover how the respective courts now hold, for that is immaterial. The different views entertained, and the general classification of the decisions, have been deduced from a review of the text of -Drake on Attachments, ch.

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Bluebook (online)
71 Miss. 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yazoo-mississippi-valley-railroad-v-fulton-miss-1893.