Court Opinion

ID: 6584333
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:41:06.411144+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:24.666234
License: Public Domain

THOMPSON, J.
I. The referee reports that the defendants conceded that “whatever trade was made’’with the plaintiff in the purchase of the logs was made by Hall as their agent. Therefore no question in respect to agency is before this court.
On trial the. defendants claimed that by the terms of the trade the logs were to be measured by the “Blodgett rule,” and offered to show by defendant Wilder ‘ ‘ that the authority given to Hall was to purchase only by the Blodgett survey or rule,” which evidence was excluded. The referee has found that the logs were to be surveyed by the Maine rule, full measure, and that they were so surveyed by the plaintiff; and that the logs were surveyed by both plaintiff and defendants by the same rule, or at least each surveyed them by a rule which produced substantially the same result as the other. This is in effect a finding that the Maine rule and the .Blodgett rule are alike, each giving the same number of cubic feet in the log surveyed.
*582The defendants urge that it was error to exclude the evidence offered for the reason that it bore upon the probability of the contract having been made as claimed by them in respect to the rule by which the logs were to be measured. In support of this contention they rely upon Hardy v. Cheney, 42 Vt. 417. In that case the question litigated before the jury was whether the goods were sold on thirty days’ credit, or on a credit of sixty days. If on sixty days the action was premature. Baldwin was the traveling agent and salesman of the plaintiff and made the sale, as such agent, to the defendant. He was improved as a witness by the plaintiff, and among other things testified that he sold the goods to the defendant on a credit of only thirty days; that he told him his employers, the plaintiffs, never sold on longer credit than thirty days ; that he told the defendant he had no authority to give him more than thirty days’ credit, and that he did not agree to give or agree that the plaintiffs would give a longer credit than thirty days. The defendant testified that the agreement between him and Baldwin was for a credit of sixty days. Against the defendant’s exception, Hardy, one of the plaintiffs, was permitted to testify that Baldwin was under peremptory instructions not to sell on a credit exceeding thirty days, and this court held that this testimony was admissible as corroborative of the testimony of Baldwin.
In the case at bar it does not appear that Hall was improved as a witness and testified as to what were the terms of the trade. Hence the excluded evidence was not admissible to corroborate his version of the transaction. It was not admissible as evidence in chief of the terms of the trade actually made between the plaintiff and Hall. Unaided by other evidence, it had no tendency to prove what in fact was said and done when the trade was made. On the facts reported we think this evidence was properly excluded.
This view of the matter renders it unnecessary for us to *583consider the defendant’s claim that one hundred fifteen cubic feet of logs were to be equivalent to one thousand feet board measure.
II. Some time prior to March 14, 1884, the plaintiff and one of the defendants had a talk in which this defendant offered to pay the plaintiff what this defendant said was due on the logs, to which the plaintiff replied that he would take the money and apply it on account. No money was delivered to the plaintiff at that time. In a letter dated March 14, 1884, and addressed to the plaintiff, the defendant sent him six hundred nine dollars and fifty-five cents, which he received and credited the same on defendants’ account. The letter was signed by the defendants, and the body of it was as follows:
“ Dear Sir: — Please find enclosed our check for six hundred nine and fifty-five one-hundredths dollars.
“We claim this tobe in full settlement of account, but admit that you do not allow the claim.”
The defendant contends that the retention of the six hundred nine dollars and fifty-five cents by the plaintiff under these circumstances operates as an accord and satisfaction.
The referee does not find that the check was accepted by the plaintiff in satisfaction, or that it was in fact offered as an accord. This was a question of fact for the referee to determine. Miller v. Holden, 18 Vt. 340. Do the facts reported by him constitute in law an accord and satisfaction ? The answer to this question depends upon the construction put upon the letter of defendants. In Preston v. Grant, 34 Vt. 203, Pierpoint, J., says :
“To constitute an accord and satisfaction it is necessary that the money should be offered in satisfaction of the claim and be accompanied with such acts and declarations as amount to a condition that if the money is accepted it is accepted in satisfaction, and such that the party to whom it is offered is bound to understand therefrom that if he takes it he takes it subject to such condition.”
*584To the same effect are Towslee v. Healey, 39 Vt. 522; Boston Rubber Co. v. Peerless Wringer Co., 58 Vt. 551; Bingham v. Dana, 29 Vt. 1; Gassett v. Andover, 21 Vt. 342.
There was no declaration in the defendants’ letter that if the plaintiff took and retained the six hundred nine dollars and fifty-five cents it must be taken in full satisfaction of his claim. On the contrary, it in effect informed him that the defendants did not understand it was to have such an effect, and that he could take it without such taking operating as an admission on his part that it was in full satisfaction of his claim, or precluding him from any of his rights in the premises. This is the fair construction of the letter itself, and were it ambiguous, it must receive this construction in view of what occurred in respect to a payment before the letter was sent. We therefore hold there was no accord and satisfaction.

Judgment affirmed.

Start, J., being engaged in county court, did not sit.