Court Opinion

ID: 3483964
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 21:08:42.430511+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:35:45.103304
License: Public Domain

Joseph A. Lee sued the Singer Sewing Machine Company in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, and recovered a judgment for the sum of one hundred and ninety-one dollars and ten cents, from which this appeal was taken. The suit was in assumpsit upon the common counts, and attached to the declaration was a bill of particulars, which showed a balance due the plaintiff of two hundred and eleven dollars and four cents. The defendant filed the general issue plea and two special pleas, first payment, and second accord and satisfaction. *Page 667 
The plea of accord and satisfaction, under which the only question presented on the record arises, is as follows: "That the defendant at the time of the institution of this suit was not indebted to the plaintiff, but that prior to the institution of this suit the plaintiff had a certain claim against the Wheeler 
Wilson Sewing Machine Company for commissions to fall due from time to time in the future for and on account of the sales of certain sewing machines, which said claim would not be due and payable in full for a period of five years, and which said claim of the plaintiff was payable only when and as the proceeds of sales of said sewing machines were from time to time collected by the Wheeler  Wilson Sewing Machine Company and that the defendant became and was on the 19th day of December, 1905, the assignee of the said Wheeler  Wilson Sewing Machine Company and assumed to pay all its just debts and liabilities, when and as the same might become due and payable, and that the defendant offered to anticipate the times of said payments which might fall due in the future to the plaintiff and to settle in full its future liability to the plaintiff, which said liability was also dependent upon a contingency, to wit; the collection by the defendant of the proceeds of the sales of said machines which were sold on the installment plan, by paying to the plaintiff in full settlement of all his claims, present and future, against the defendant as aforesaid, a certain sum, to wit: two hundred and twenty-seven dollars and fifty cents ($227.50), which said offer the plaintiff accepted, and the defendant accordingly paid to the plaintiff the said sum of two hundred and twenty-seven dollars and fifty cents in full satisfaction and discharge of the plaintiff's aforesaid claims, present and future, and procured from the plaintiff the following acquittance and receipt in full in the following words to wit:
Singer Sewing Machine Company Central Agency, 19 W. Franklin Street, Baltimore, Md. December 19th, 1905.
Received of the Singer Sewing Machine Company the sum of two hundred and twenty-seven dollars and fifty cents in full settlement of all *Page 668 
claims I have against the Wheeler  Wilson Sewing Machine Company for commissions accrued or to accrue, growing out of business done by me for them or otherwise.
Witness H.D. Dietz.                                  Jos. A. Lee.
And that in consideration of said payment of said sum in advance of the due dates of plaintiff's aforesaid claim the plaintiff accepted in full satisfaction and in settlement of defendant's contingent liability therefor, as aforesaid, and discharge of all his aforesaid claims, present and future the said sum of two hundred and twenty-seven dollars and fifty cents."
The plaintiff had been an agent for the sale of sewing machines of the Wheeler  Wilson Sewing Machine Company, and under the terms of his contract with that company, as testified to by him, he was entitled to a commission upon sales and upon collections made by him, and the account which he filed with his declaration, which account is somewhat obscure and difficult to understand, was intended to show exactly how the balance claimed was arrived at. The correctness of the account was disputed by the defendant, but as that was a matter properly to be determined by the jury, and does not in any manner affect the question here before the Court, we will not discuss it, further than to say that it is made up upon the basis of sales claimed to have been made by the plaintiff while he was in the employ of the Wheeler  Wilson Company.
The defendant company about the 19th of December, 1905, took over the business of the Wheeler  Wilson Company, and proposed to settle with the agents of the latter company all their accounts against said company. It is as to the terms of this settlement that the real question in this case arises. The contention of the plaintiff was that he was entitled, under the agreement of settlement, to receive from the defendant fifty per cent of the commissions he would be entitled to on sales made by him for the Wheeler  Wilson Company up to the time of the transfer of the business of that company to the defendant, and as the total amount due him at the time was eight hundred and seventy-seven dollars and seven cents, the defendant was indebted to him under the terms of the settlement *Page 669 
in the sum of four hundred and thirty-eight dollars and fifty-three and a half cents. On the 19th of December, 1905, the defendant paid to the plaintiff two hundred and twenty-seven dollars and fifty cents, which he accepted in full settlement and discharge of all his claims against the Wheeler  Wilson Company.
The plaintiff's testimony as to the terms of the settlement and the circumstances under which the sum mentioned was paid and accepted is as follows: That when the defendant company took over the business of the Wheeler  Wilson Company they proposed to all their agents, of whom the plaintiff was one, to anticipate the commission accounts of their agents who had formerly represented the Wheeler  Wilson Company by paying to them fifty per cent of the commissions that they would be entitled to upon sales made up to the time of the transfer of the business of the Wheeler 
Wilson Company to the defendant company instead of keeping the account running and paying to the agents fifty per cent of the amounts collected by them from time to time, and the plaintiff accepted the proposition. That on the 19th day of December, 1905, the plaintiff had a settlement with the defendant on the basis of four hundred and fifty-five dollars of commissions accrued or to accrue in the future on account of the sales made by the plaintiff for the account of the Wheeler  Wilson Sewing Machine Company, receiving the sum of two hundred and twenty-seven dollars and fifty cents, from the defendant company, and giving the receipt which is set out in the defendant's plea of accord and satisfaction. That he expected to receive a larger sum, and that upon returning to his home after the settlement, and after an examination of his accounts, he discovered that he had not been paid by the defendant fifty per cent of the true amount of the commissions accrued or to accrue to him on account of sales made by him, and that he went back to the company to complain of the settlement, "and to demand that he be paid the difference between what he had received and the true amount due him asshown by his accounts." *Page 670 
The contention of the defendant is that the plaintiff agreed with the defendant company to settle in full all accounts for commissions accrued or to accrue for and on account of the sales of the Wheeler  Wilson Sewing Machines made by the plaintiff on the basis of fifty per cent of the amount thereof as shown by astatement thereof taken from the books of the Wheeler  WilsonCompany. The defendant offered evidence tending to support this contention, and to show that the settlement made with the plaintiff on the 19th of December, 1905, was in accordance with this agreement. The evidence adduced by the defendant, if believed by the jury, was sufficient to support the plea of accord and satisfaction, and thus defeat a recovery by the plaintiff.
The defense of accord and satisfaction consists of something given to or done for the defendant, and accepted by him upon a mutual agreement that it shall be a discharge of the cause of action. The agreement is the accord, and the thing done is the satisfaction. The mere payment of a smaller sum is no satisfaction of a larger debt due, but the payment of a smaller sum may be a satisfaction of a larger sum where there is a mutual consideration to support an agreement to that effect. The authorities are uniform in holding that anticipation of time of payment is a sufficient consideration to support a plea of accord and satisfaction. As early as the case of Pinnell, 5 Co. Reports 117, it was held, that where the whole sum is due by no intendment the acceptance of a parcel can be a satisfaction to the plaintiff; but that payment and acceptance of a parcel before the maturity of the debt in satisfaction of a whole, would be a good satisfaction in regard to the 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." In Sibree v. Tripp, 15 M.  W. 34, where the subject of accord and satisfaction was very fully considered, it was decided that a sum of money payable at a different time was a good satisfaction of a larger sum payable at a future day. The reason for the rule that part payment of a debt cannot be taken as a satisfaction for *Page 671 
the whole is that the creditors agreement is without consideration. "The rule, however, supposes the part performance of the original obligation — the payment of part at the time and in the manner originally stipulated for the payment of the whole; from which payment of a part rather than the whole no benefit can accrue to the creditor. But when a new duty is undertaken by the debtor which is, or may be burdensome to him, or beneficial to the creditor, a new consideration arises out of such undertaking and sustains the agreement; as when the debtor undertakes to pay and pays part at an earlier day, or at another place, or in another article than required by the original obligation." Rose
v. Hall, 26 Con. 395.
In Bowker et al. v. Child's and others, 3 Allen, 434, the facts were that the defendants were indebted to the plaintiffs upon four promissory notes, one of which was nearly due, and the others having sometime to run before maturity. A committee of the defendants' creditors, of which one of the plaintiffs was a member, recommended that they should pay sixty per cent upon all their notes, due or not due, calculating this amount upon the face of the notes, without addition or substraction of interest, twenty-five per cent cash, and thirty-five per cent in notes of a certain Lee Claflin or William C. Claflin, payable in six months from June 1st, 1857; and upon a final winding up of the defendants' affairs which should be on or before June 1st, 1858, they should pay to the committee from their surplus property, to be distributed among their creditors, such portion as the committee should advise. This recommendation was in writing signed by the committee, and the defendants on the 27th of May, 1858, executed an agreement under seal attached to the writing by which they bound themselves to comply with its provisions. On the 10th of June, 1857, one of the plaintiffs took the notes to Lee Claflin, and gave them up to him, and received the sixty per cent of their amount, the thirty-five per cent not being in a note, but by a separate agreement in cash with a discount of five per cent. The plaintiffs brought suit upon the original notes. *Page 672 
The Court, speaking through HOAR, J., said "In regard to the notes, the presiding Judge ruled that the making of the agreement, the taking of the sixty per cent and the giving up of the notes, under the circumstances as testified to at the trial, were a payment of the notes, and a verdict was ordered for the defendants. The expression used by the learned Judge was not precisely accurate, as the settlement proved was not strictly a payment, but an accord and satisfaction of the note, but no point has been made of this at the argument, nor do we suppose the contention of the Judge, or the parties was called to any other consideration than whether it amounted to a valid discharge and extinguishment of the notes and a bar to the plaintiff's action. The plaintiffs rely upon two grounds of exceptions; first, that an agreement to take a smaller sum of money in payment of a larger sum is without consideration, and not binding in law; and secondly, that it was a question of fact which ought to have been submitted to the jury, whether the plaintiffs agreed to discharge the notes without a further payment on them. There is no doubt of the soundness of the first proposition, as a statement of abstract law. But, as was said by Mr. JUSTICE DEWEY in Brooks
v. White, 2 Met. 286: "The same ancient authority which declares the payment and acceptance of a less sum on the day the debt becomes due, in satisfaction of a greater, is no defense beyond the amount paid, also declares that the payment and acceptance of a less sum before the day of payment has arrived in satisfaction of a whole would be a good accord and satisfaction; for it is said, peradventure parcel of the sum before the day it fell due would be more beneficial to him than the whole at the day; and the value of the satisfaction is not material.Pinnell's case, 5 Co. 117." Here there were four notes given upon payment of the sixty per cent as one entire satisfaction. Three of them were not due, one having more than two years to run. The payment was at a different time, and before the debt was due. This was a sufficient consideration to support an accord and satisfaction at law."
The defendant having interposed the plea of accord and satisfaction, *Page 673 
and having offered evidence tending to support the plea, was entitled to have had that defense presented to the jury by an instruction embodying a hypothetical statement of the facts upon which it was founded, and in no event was it proper for the Court to have excluded from the consideration of the jury the theory of his defense, or to have ignored it in the instructions granted.Eureka Fertilizer Company v. Baltimore Copper, 78 Md. 188;Corbett v. Wolford, 84 Md. 426.
At the conclusion of the testimony the plaintiff offered one prayer, and the defendant submitted five. The record states that the Court rejected all the prayers, but it was agreed at the argument that this was a mistake in so far as the defendants fifth prayer is concerned, which was in fact granted. That prayer merely told the jury that there was no evidence that the receipt offered in evidence was obtained by fraud, and no exception was taken to it by the plaintiff. The Court, in lieu of the rejected prayers, granted two instructions of its own. To the instructions granted by the Court, and to the rejecting of his prayers the defendant excepted.
The third prayer of the defendant was intended to present the facts which he had offered in support of the plea of accord and satisfaction, and, except in one respect, is free from objection. It failed to submit to the jury the fact that the sum of four hundred and fifty-five dollars was the amount appearing to the credit of the plaintiff upon the books of the Wheeler  Wilson Company. Instead of requiring them to find that fact, it merely required them to find that the plaintiff was satisfied that four hundred and fifty-five dollars was the amount appearing upon those books to his credit. For this error, which may be readily corrected at the retrial of the case, the prayer was properly rejected.
We find no error in the rejection of the first, second, and fourth prayers of the defendant. The first and second ignored the theory of the plaintiff's case and the testimony offered by him in its support, and the fourth asserted that the defendant's right to a verdict, would be defeated if they found the plaintiff gave the receipt offered in evidence, and that the same was *Page 674 
given without fraud practiced upon the defendant and that he gave it after full opportunity to examine the books, c., of the defendant. If the plaintiff's evidence as to the terms of the settlement be true, he would have been entitled to recover, notwithstanding the facts stated in this prayer.
The two instructions granted by the Court were fatally defective, because they each entirely ignored the evidence offered by the defendant in support of his plea of accord and satisfaction, which evidence, if believed by the jury, was sufficient, under the authorities cited, to have barred the plaintiff's recovery in this action. For error committed in these instructions, the judgment must be reversed.
Judgment reversed, and new trial awarded with costs to theappellant.
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