Court Opinion

ID: 3233173
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:08:18.921628+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:18.214894
License: Public Domain

This bill was filed to collect an account and enforce a lien for work and material, the account claimed and filed being for the sum of $130. The respondent first filed an answer denying generally the allegations of the bill and specifically denied owing said "$130." He subsequently filed a plea since the last continuance setting up an accord and satisfaction. This plea does not set up a bona fide dispute as to the claim and the acceptance of the amount conceded by the respondent to be due so as to square up with the rule declared in the case of Ex parte Southern Cotton Oil Co., 207 Ala. 704, 93 So. 662. It sets up an agreement between counsel as to the amount to be paid the complainants and the payment to them, or their counsel, of the sum so agreed upon. The trial court, in effect, found that the plea was sufficient and was proven, thus finding for the respondent without going into the merits of the case. While there seems to have been an honest difference between Mr. Godbey and Judge Lowe as to the terms of the settlement, both of whom testified in the case, we are constrained to hold that the amount agreed upon was not paid as averred in the plea. Counsel for complainants testified that the amount to be paid was $10 less than the amount claimed, and which should leave $120 to be paid. Judge Lowe's recollection is that there was a dispute as to the amount claimed and that the amount agreed upon was to split the difference between the sum claimed and the amount conceded by respondent as owing complainants. It is true counsel for respondent was told by Mr. Godbey that $97.50 was claimed before the respondent sent the check for $87.25, but the evidence conclusively shows that a mistake was made by looking at the first page of the account and not the last one, as the final balance there disclosed was $130. In either event, however, the check as sent in, though varying a few cents, corroborates complainant's theory as to the terms of the settlement being $10 less than the sums stated to be due and was not one-half of the difference between the amount claimed and what was conceded to be due, whether we take $130 or $97.55 as a basis for calculation. If we take the former, the check should have been for one-half the difference between $130 and $82.45, the amount conceded as due by respondent, and which would be $106.22. If we take the latter $97.55, the check should have been for $89.90 and not $87.25.
The trial court erred in finding the issue for the respondent under this plea, and the decree is reversed and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
SOMERVILLE, THOMAS, and BOULDIN, JJ., concur.