Court Opinion

ID: 8504095
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-23 01:25:26.568002+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:50:48.641399
License: Public Domain

Upham, J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
It is important that the exception taken to the main-tainance of this action, on the present declaration, should be determined, as the exception goes not only to the present verdict, but to any verdict that may hereafter be obtained in the suit.
The form of the declaration is for money had and received, and the evidence offered in support of it is an account stated betwixt the parties. It is contended that this evidence will not sustain such a declaration, for the reason that there is a form of action especially designed for cases of this description ; and also that this is an account stated within certain dates merely, but unstated and unsettled as to accounts generally betwixt the parties; it, therefore, forms no evidence what will be the final balance of account betwixt these parties, because it is still open to the farther claim of an account unstated and uncertain.
We see no reason, however, why the account may not be considered as stated, to the extent specified in the agreement of the parties, subject merely to the set-off of the defendant for any unsettled account he may have prior to the time specified in the agreement, which set-off the defendant must sustain by the ordinary evidence. The parties must have meant thus much, or their act would have been entirely useless. In 2 Starkie's Evidence 123, an account is said to be sufficiently stated, although that portion of it which is due to the plaintiff only has been ascertained and stated, *230without making any deduction for counter claims of the defendant. Stuart vs. Rowland, 1 Showers 215, is cited as the authority to this point, and we see no objection to the principle of the decision.
But if the account in this case be considered as properly stated, there is still some difficulty as to the competency of such evidence to sustain a count for money had and received.
The earlier authorities are undoubtedly against such a doctrine ; and the general rule laid down in Cliitty is that in order to sustain such a count the defendant himself must actually have received money, and this at the time for the use of the plaintiff. 1 Ch. Pl. 305. And this doctrine is usually attempted to be sustained by some legal presumption.
It is said by Chief Justice Shaw, that the reason why money had and received will lie in favor of the holder of negotiable paper against the prior parties to it, is because it is presumed to be a cash transaction, and a money consideration is presumed to pass at the making of the note and at each endorsement. 11 Pick. 316, Ellsworth vs. Brewer.
What is termed a monied consideration in such case must include any articles given in exchange for a note, or the transfer of it by endorsement;. and it becomes a money consideration solely because the parties receive such articles, and give therefor a promise in money, making, by the agreement, one an equivalent for the other.
But where parties foot up accounts and acknowledge in writing a certain amount to be due, it is quite as easy to presume that the parties regard such articles as a monied consideration for the account stated.
Where the defendant has received the plaintiff’s property, and converted it into money, the plaintiff may sue for money had and received, thereby ratifying the act of the defendant, and treating him as his agent in selling the property and receiving the money.
So when some article at the time, by express agreement of the parties, is delivered and received as so much cash, *231and in lieu of money, the receiver is estopped to deny a receipt of money. 2 N. H. R. 333, Willie vs. Green.
On the same principle, where the parties have stated an account, and found a balance due which is payable in money, it must be considered as an express agreement that the articles constituting this balance are to be regarded by such settlement as having been received as money. The consideration of the account stated is as much a monied consideration as if a note had been given. The settlement and adjustment is as full as if made by note ; and there seems to be as much evidence that the parties designed it as an acknowledgment that the whole had been changed to a cash claim.
We think it far more conformable to the tenor and principle of modem decisions, to sustain a count for money had and received on an account stated, than to reject such evidence as inadmissible. A different conclusion would overrule in principle many analogous, decisions.
But there is an additional exception in this case, which goes to the verdict as rendered, and which must be considered. On trial it appears that “ the defendant, in order to sustain his off-set, proved that he performed services for the plaintiff in 1825 ; and the plaintiff, in order to show that this defendant had been paid for the same, offered evidence tending to show that he paid other laborers employed at the same time in the same business with the defendant as they wanted their pay, and that they received their pay in full.”
The testimony seems to have been admitted directly against the rule that provides that neither the declarations, nor any other acts of those who are mere strangers, are admissible in evidence against any one as affording a presumption against him. 1 Stark. Ev. 41. Also, that facts remote from, and irrevelant to, the issue betwixt the parties, are inadmissible. 1 Stark. 40.
It has been holden that the time at which one tenant pays his rent is not evidence to show at what time another tenant of the same landlord pays his rent. Peak’s Ca. 95.
*232But where all the manors within a particular district are held under the same tenure, and the issue is upon some incident to that tenure, the custom of one manor is evidence to prove that the same custom exists in another. 2 Stark. 381.
Had there been, in this case, a common contract made with this defendant and the other laborers, that they were to receive their pay at stated times, and it was proved that the other laborers received theirs, such evidence might perhaps have had some tendency to show a payment to this defendant. But here there is no common interest, or contract, or similar relative situation shown betwixt the laborers, except as laborers of the plaintiff.
It appears, that the defendant had an account with the plaintiff at that time; at least, he says at the foot of his account stated, that he claims some amount due him as a balance of labor on account previous to March, 1826. There may have been many circumstances why a different rule should have been adopted with this defendant as to payment from that of the other laborers.
But however this may be, we are clear that as the facts are now set forth there is no such relative situation shown as to these parties as to raise any legal presumption that payment to one tends to show a payment to the other. The defendant must go much farther in his circumstances before it would be safe to adopt a rule of this description; and we are of opinion that the evidence offered to this point was improperly admitted.

Verdict set aside.