Court Opinion

ID: 8265938
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-16 16:01:25.116304+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:43:08.522444
License: Public Domain

NORTONI, J.
This is a suit for money had and received. At the conclusion of the evidence for plaintiff, the court instructed a verdict for defendant, on the theory that it conclusively appeared plaintiff had accepted full satisfaction from a joint tortfeasor for the tort out of which the cause of action accrued. Prom this judgment plaintiff prosecutes the appeal.
Plaintiff is an incorporated company, and owns large tracts of timber land in southeast Missouri on *52which it maintains sawmills and manufactures lumber. For about twenty years defendant was in plaintiff’s employ, and a considerable portion of this time he was engaged in measuring timber which plaintiff received from contractors. It appears plaintiff had contracts with three separate persons, Sam Riley, John Mozley and Martin P. Glasgow, for cutting and hauling logs from the forest on its lands to the sawmills. It was defendant’s duty to measure and receive'the logs -$hen delivered by the contractors mentioned. The contractors were to be paid by plaintiff for the cutting and hauling of the logs in accordance with the number of feet of probable lumber contained therein. The amount of such lumber and the amount that should be paid by plaintiff to the contractors therefor was ascertained and determined by defendant, who, according to the evidence, “scaled” the logs. The scaling we understand to be a system of measurement employed in such work. For the purpose of defrauding plaintiff, defendant entered into an arrangement with each of the three contractors above mentioned, whereby he became interested to the extent of one-half of their contracts, and made false measurements of the timber for the benefit of both himself and the contractor. . The evidence tends to prove that defendant would raise the scale or measurement of the logs and report fictitious amounts touching the same to plaintiff. On such fictitious measurements plaintiff paid each of the three contractors in full at the monthly settlements. The amounts thus received by the contractors were divided equally with defendant, who, as before said, became interested to the extent of one-half in the contracts of each. The evidence tends to prove that plaintiff paid out to the three contractors above mentioned, on defendant’s false measurements and reports, several thousand dollars, for cutting and hauling timber which it never received. Upon discovering the fraud so practiced *53upon it by defendant and bis coconspirators, the contractors, plaintiff instituted this suit against defendant alone for money had and received. There can be no doubt that originally the cause of action sounded in tort. For the tort and its consequences defendants are liable to respond to the injured party both jointly and severally. Plaintiff saw fit to waive the tort and pursue defendant on his several liability in assumpsit, as for money had and received. No one can doubt that such a course is eminently proper. [See Bliss on Code Pleading (3 Ed.), secs. 154, 155.] There can be no doubt that the action for money had and received is a proper one on the facts stated. This form of action will lie to recover money in the possession of one which in good conscience belongs to another, for it is equitable in its nature and proceeds in accordance with the maxim ex aequo et bono. Because of this, it is much favored and the tendency is to widen the scope of the action as it commingles the administration of equitable doctrines in conjunction with those of the law. [Houts v. Dunham, 162 Mo. App. 477, 142 S. W. 806; Crigler v. Duncan, 121 Mo. App. 381, 99 S. W. 61; Jenkins v. Clopton, 141 Mo. App. 74, 121 S. W. 759; Clifford Banking Co. v. Donovan Commission Co., 195 Mo. 262, 288, 94 S. W. 527; Moses v. MacFerlan, 2 Burr. 1005.]
But it- is argued the court very properly directed a verdict for defendant because it conclusively appears plaintiff accepted full satisfaction of the cause of action asserted from Sam Riley, one of the joint tortfeasors. If such were the fact, the argument would, no doubt, inhere with much force, but the record does not reveal it to be true. The satisfaction of a cause of action arising from tort by one of the joint tortfeasors or a release of such cause of action executed to one of the tortfeasors inures in favor of the other and may-be invoked by him as a complete bar to a recovery thereafter. No one can doubt this propo*54sition to be true, but it is not in every case where an acceptance of money from one joint tortfeasor appears that the other is discharged. For such a result, a satisfaction or release must appear. [See 1 Cooley on Torts (3 Ed.), pp. 235, 236, 237.] There is not so much as a suggestion in the evidence before us that plaintiff accepted from Sam Riley full satisfaction for the cause of action arising out of the joint tort or that it released him therefrom. It appears from Riley’s testimony that he, together with defendant and others, perpetrated the fraud'complained of. He admits that he personally received about $1500 as a result of the false measurements made by defendant. He a’dmits, too, that he agreed to repay this amount to plaintiff and that plaintiff agreed not to pursue him at law touching the matter. This is the full extent of the testimony which the court treated with as conclusively showing a satisfaction or release. This testimony reveals nothing more than a covenant not to sue Riley. Not a word is said therein touching a settlement of the entire cause of action or a release concerning the same. We understand the rule of de-cision in this state goes to the effect that, for an arrangement entered into with one tortfeasor to operate as a matter of law in favor of another joint tortfeasor as a discharge to him, it must appear therefrom, either — first, that there is a satisfaction of the claim, which, of course, extinguishes the cause of action; or, second, it should be stated in express terms to be a release in favor of the person making the payment. Unless one or the other of these conditions appear, a discharge may not be declared thereon as a matter of law. Nothing of the kind appears from the testimony before us and at most the arrangement amounts to no more than a covenant on the part of plaintiff not to sue Riley. We have but recently considered the question here involved in Judd v. Walker, *55158 Mo. App. 156, 138 S. W. 655, to which reference is made for the reasoning of the law.
Bnt it is said, if plaintiff prevails in the suit, it ought not to he entitled to recover from defendant and receive compensation as well to the extent of $1500 from Sam Riley. To the proposition thus stated we fully agree, for the law forbids more than one full compensation. But the rule is established in such cases to the effect that a partial satisfaction by one joint tortfeasor is admissible in evidence in mitigation. of damages sought to be recovered against another. To the extent of the settlement which plaintiff made with Sam Riley, defendant is entitled to mitigate the recovery against him. [See Judd v. Walker, 158 Mo. App. 156, 138 S. W. 655; Knapp v. Roche, 94 N. Y. 329.]
The judgment 'should be reversed and the cause remanded. It is so ordered.
Reynolds, P. J., and Caulfield, Jconcur.