Court Opinion

ID: 8194089
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:17:13.837811+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:42.370354
License: Public Domain

Jones, J.
There is a familiar rule which has often been stated by this court that the payment of part of an undisputed liquidated debt does not discharge the debt altogether, even when it is expressly agreed that the payment is received in *100full satisfaction. This is based on the principle that such part payment furnishes no consideration for relinquishing the balance of the debt. The rule is of ancient origin. It ■may'be traced back at least as far as a decision of the court of common pleas thus reported by Sir Edward Coke:
“And it was resolved by the whole court, that payment of a lesser sum on the day in satisfaction of a greater, cannot be any satisfaction for the whole, because it appears to the judges that by no possibility a lesser sum can be a satisfaction to the plaintiff for a greater sum: but the gift of a horse, hawk, or robe, etc., in satisfaction is good. For it shall be intended that a horse, hawk, or robe, etc., might be more beneficial to the plaintiff than the money, in respect of some circumstance, or otherwise the plaintiff would not have accepted of it in satisfaction. But when the whole sum is due, by no intendment the acceptance of a parcel can be a satisfaction to the plaintiff: but in the case at bar it was resolved that the payment and acceptance of parcel before the day, in satisfaction of the whole, would be a good satisfaction in regard of circumstance of time; for peradventure parcel of it before the day would be more beneficial to- him than the whole at the day, and the value of the satisfaction is not material: so if I am bound in £20 to pay you £10 at Westminster and you request me to pay you £5 at the day at York, and you will accept it in full satisfaction of the whole £10, it is a good satisfaction for the whole: for the expenses to pay it at York, is sufficient satisfaction.” Pinnefs Case, 3 Coke’s Rep. 238.
This rule, however, does not apply when a debtor makes a composition with part or all of his creditors who agree to accept less than their respective claims. In such case each creditor., relying on the promise of the others, has a consideration — the promise of the others for his own agreement.
Counsel for plaintiff argue that in this case the claim of plaintiff was a liquidated demand existing in favor of a single creditor against his debtor, and that since the jury found no agreement for the guaranty as to reduction of *101price for the goods sold there was no consideration for the agreement to accept less than plaintiff’s claim.'
The account between the parties had continued for over a year. Defendant had made payments at different times, and from time to time had returned goods, which had been accepted by plaintiff.
In the answer the amount of plaintiff’s claim was not denied, but an offset was pleaded based on the agreement above stated, and that the reduction or offset claimed was more than sufficient to meet plaintiff’s claim. It appears from the pleadings and testimony that the offset claimed arose directly out of the contract relating to the sale of the goods and not out of any collateral transaction. It was an offset which if sustained would wholly defeat plaintiff’s claim. Under these facts we do not consider that the suit was brought on a liquidated demand.
“By the weight of authority, where the debtor has an offset or claim for damages against the creditor which the latter does not concede, his claim against the debtor, although not disputed, except in respect of the offset or damages claimed, will nevertheless be considered unliquidated, the view being taken that there is no material difference between a dispute directly involving the claim itself and a dispute involving an offset against the claim; that whatever may be the ground of the dispute the fact remains that there is one.” 1 Corp. Jur. 556, and cases cited; 1 Ruling-Case Law, 194.
It is argued by plaintiff’s counsel that the claim of defendant for an offset or reduction was wholly baseless; that it was a trumped-up defense “based on a myth.” The defendant and two other witnesses, his wife and daughter, positively swore that the guaranty agreement as to the reduction of prices was made, while plaintiff’s agent as positively denied it. On this issue the jury found for the plaintiff, and on this finding counsel base the argument that there was nothing to compromise, treating the finding of the jury *102as establishing beyond question that the claim of an offset was utterly without foundation and made in bad faith.
The jury were the judges of the credibility of witnesses, and if the correctness of their finding that the agreement was not made were the question before us, we should not feel justified in disturbing it. But the conclusion of counsel that because the jury answered this question favorably to plaintiff we are bound to hold that there was no controversy as a subject of settlement is not so clear.
That the parties went through the forms of a compromise of their controversy is beyond dispute. It is also undisputed that the plaintiff cashed the check with full knowledge of defendant’s claim that it was intended as payment in full. Under those circumstances it became immaterial whether the claim of defendant was in fact well founded or not, unless it was made fraudulently or in bad faith.
If a party could not peaceably and honestly settle out of court a claim made against him except at the risk of having the subject reopened by a lawsuit, there would be little inducement to an amicable adjustment of controversies. The only alternative would be to fight to the bitter, end in the courts any claim which an adversary might make.
One does not need much learning or experience in business to understand that the law has not yet become an exact science that witnesses are often mistaken, and sometimes untruthful; that juries are not infallible in their conclusions; that the results of litigation are far too uncertain, but that the expense and annoyance attending lawsuits are very certain indeed. Such considerations as these, and the fact that it is to the interest of the state that there should be an end of litigation, have led the courts to look with very great favor upon the peaceable settlement of disputes out of court and to hold that, “when a compromise has been fairly effected, its validity will be independent of the merits of the controversy on which it is founded, and it cannot be reopened for the purpose, or with the effect, of reviving the dispute *103which it was meant to terminate” (Kercheval v. Doty, 31 Wis. 476, 487), and that “no investigation into the character or value of the different claims submitted will be entered into for the purpose of setting aside a compromise, it being sufficient if the parties entering into the compromise thought at the time that there was a question between them.” Ibid. 487; Galusha v. Sherman, 105 Wis. 263, 81 N. W. 495; Kowalke v. Milwaukee E. R. & L. Co. 103 Wis. 472, 79 N. W. 762; Continental Nat. Bank v. McGeoch, 92 Wis. 286, 66 N. W. 606; Harris v. Kennedy, 48 Wis. 500, 4 N. W. 651; Zimmer v. Becker, 66 Wis. 527, 29 N. W. 228; 12 Corp. Jur. 336; 5 Ruling Case Law, 878.
At the close of the evidence defendant’s counsel asked that the following question be submitted to the jury: “Was there a bona fide dispute between the parties over the amount due to the plaintiff before the defendant forwarded the check of $500 in full payment of the account?” but the question was submitted in the form stated in the statement of facts.
We think that the question proposed by defendant’s counsel should have been given substantially as requested, but we do not consider that plaintiff’s counsel can avail themselves of this fact. Indeed they argue that the refusal to submit the question in the form proposed was not prejudicial to the defendant. The jury found that there was a dispute or controversy regarding the agreement.
Defendant’s counsel did everything in their power to have a question technically correct submitted to the jury, and in view of the instructions and the whole course of the trial it may be fairly assumed that the answer, of the jury would have been the same if the question as proposed by defendant’s counsel had been submitted. Hence it is our conclusion that the case should not be sent back for a new trial, but that the judgment should be reversed.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded with instructions to dismiss the complaint.