Hart v. Gould

Sherwood, J.

Alvin N. Hart died intestate on the fourth day of August, 1874.

*264While living, and in the year 1867, he, Amos Gould, and Alfred L. Williams purchased several thousand acres of timbered lánds lying in the north part of this State. They owned the same in common. Gould acted as the agent of Hart in selling the lands, and sold large quantities thereof before Hart died. After his death the lands remaining unsold were divided between the parties interested, and the Hart heirs gave to said Gould a power of attorney to sell their lands, and he was to receive five per cent, therefor as commissions. The account of sales was kept by Gould, and the Hart heirs knew nothing of what was being done in the premises by Gould except as they were informed by him.

Ward H. Jennings was appointed administrator of the estate of A. N. Hart.

Amos Gould died on the fourteenth day of May, 1882, testate, and his son, Frederick Gould, his widow, Louisa Gould, and Morris Osburn, his son-in-law, were appointed executors of his will. Commissioners to hear and allow claims against Gould’s estate were duly appointed.

Ward H. Jennings, as administrator of Alvin N. Hart’s estate, presented a claim in favor of said estate, for moneys received by Amos Gould from the sale of lands prior to Hart’s death, to said commissioners for allowance. This claim was disallowed by the commissioners, and Hart’s administrator appealed to the circuit court for the county of Shiawassee.

The plaintiffs also presented a claim to said commissioners for allowance for moneys received by Gould upon the sale of lands made by him under the power of attorney received from them after Hart died. Upon the hearing of'this claim before the commissioners no witnesses were sworn. Frederick Gould, one of the executors, presented the books of Amos Gould to the Hart heirs, as containing all the knowledge he had upon the subject of the claim made, and as representing all the sales made and moneys received thereon by his father, Amos Gould, and which disclosed that there was due the plaintiffs on the ninth of December, 1882, the sum of $3,322.05; and the plaintiffs and the Gould executors, be*265lieving the books represented the true balance due the plaintiffs, reported the facts to the commissioners, and that sum was allowed to the plaintiffs on their claim.1

After this, on further examination of the facts, it was found that the statement contained upon Amos Gould’s book was not correct; that some lands which the books showed to be unsold had in fact been sold, and no credit given upon the books for the proceeds ; and that Gould had sold timber on other parcels of land to the amount of $700, no account of which appeared on the books. These amounts, it was found, would have increased the amount actually owing to the plaintiffs on their claim $1,020.

The Gould executors refused to pay this claimed balance.

The plaintiffs obtained a revival of the commission on ■claims, and presented an account for the $1,020 for allowance. The commissioners refused to allow the claim. Plaintiffs took an appeal to the circuit court, where the case was tried before Judge Newton by jury, and the claim was allowed at the sum of $1,407.98.

The defendants bring the case into this Court by writ of •error.

The fact of the indebtedness of the Gould estate to the plaintiffs in the amount claimed does not seem to be much controverted, nor the manner in which such indebtedness arose ; but it is claimed that such indebtedness, whatever it may be, was fully adjusted in a compromise made at the time of the settlement of the suit appealed to the circuit court by the administrator of the Hart estate,' and of the claim therein made by him.

On the seventeenth day of April, 1884, that suit was settled, and the executors of the Gould estate paid to the administrator of the Hart estate $4,000, and the suit was discontinued. At the same time they paid to the Hart heirs the amount allowed to them on their claim by commissioners ; amounting, at that time, to the sum of $3,637.27.

The defendants claim that these sums were received by *266the Hart administrator and the Hart heirs on a compromise- and settlement, and were to be in full of all claims, known and unknown, between the parties..

The plaintiffs, however, claim and insist that such was not the understanding or the fact when the adjustment was-made; that the $4,000 was received by the administrator of the Hart estate on a compromise of the claim allowed in favor of the Hart administrator, but of nothing else; that the other sum paid was on the allowance already made by the commissioners; that the claim for timber sold was not then known to the plaintiffs; and that the $320, for land sold by Amos Gould, had but recently been ascertained and discovered by either of the parties, and was expressly excepted out of the settlement, whatever it was.

The following are copies of the receipts given at the time the moneys were paid :

“ Received of M. Osburn, Louisa Gould, and Frederick H. Gould, executors of the last will and testament of Amos Gould, deceased, the sum of $3,637.27, in full payment and satisfaction of the claim allowed us by the commissioners on claims, in the settlement of the estate of the said Amos Gould, deceased, and the interest thereon to date.
“Dated April 17, 1881¡-,
“Benjamin E. Hart,
“Rodney G. Hart,
“Arthur N. Hart,
“By R. G. Hart.
“Isabella E. Hamilton,
“By R. G. Hart,
“Attorney duly authorized.”
“ Received of M. Osburn, Louisa A. Gould, and Frederick Iff. Gould, as executors of the last will and testament of Amos Gould, deceased, the sum of four thousand dollars, as full payment, satisfaction, settlement, and adjustment of the claims filed by me, as administrator of the estate of Alvin N. Hart, deceased, against the estate of Amos Gould, deceased, before the commissioners on claims in the estate of the said Amos Gould, and now pending on appeal in the circuit court for the county of Shiawassee, Michigan, and as full payment, satisfaction, settlement, and adjustment of any and all claims and demands, of whatever nature, and any and all *267rights of action, either at law or in equity, that the said Alvin N. Hart, or his said estate, or that he, as the personal representative of said estate of said Alvin N. Hart, deceased, may have had against the said Amos Gould in his life, or may now have against the estate of the said Amos Gould, deceased, or those interested therein, either legatees, devisees, or personal representatives.
“And I hereby consent that the said appeal, so pending as aforesaid, may be dismissed without costs to either party, and that an order to that effect may be made by the said circuit court.
“Dated April 17,1881¡,.
“Ward H. Jennings,
“Administrator of the Estate of Alvin N. Hart, Deceased.”'
“ In consideration of the payment of four thousand dollars, aforesaid, made by M. Osburn, Louisa A. Gould, and Frederick H. Gould, executors of the last will and testament of Amos Gould, deceased, to Ward H. Jennings, as administrator of the estate of Alvin N. Hart, deceased, and herein-before receipted for, and other considerations to us paid by said executors, for which this is our receipt, do hereby acknowledge full payment, satisfaction, settlement, and adjustment of any and all claims and demands, of whatever nature, and any and all rights of action, either at law or in equity, that we, or either of us, as heirs of Alvin N. Hart, deceased, or otherwise, may have had agaiust Amos Gould, deceased, in his life-time, or may now have against the estate of the said Amos Gould, deceased, either as heirs, legatees, devisees, personal representatives, or otherwise.
“Dated April 17, 188A
“Benjamin E. Hart,
“Rodney G. Hart,
“Arthur N. Hart,
“Isabella E. Hamilton,
“Per R. G. Hart, Attorney in Fact.”

Upon the subject of settlement and compromise, besides these receipts, there was considerable testimony given upon the trial tending to support the theory of each side, as to-what claims, and the extent of the same, were included in the settlement and claimed compromise, and these questions were- , fully and very clearly submitted to the jury by the learned circuit judge in his charge, and their verdict, unless errors exist elsewhere, must be held conclusive.

*268The record shows that the settlement and compromise, if any was made, was concluded by Mr. Geer, an attorney at law, and Rodney G. Hart, on the part of the plaintiffs, and by Mr. Hutchins, an attorney at law, on the part of the defendants. There had been a previous treaty had between the parties upon the subject, at Owosso, several days before, in which the terms of settlement were substantially agreed upon, but the final consummation, at the time the receipts were made, took place at Lapeer.

The charge of the court upon these questions to which we have alluded, was as follows:

“ The law favors the settlement of disputed matters between parties, and approves of compromises of unsettled and disputed claims, when parties enter into a settlement of their matters, the law will presume they consulted their own interests in making the arrangement, and such settlements will be encouraged by the law, and they will not be interfered with where there is no fraud or mistake.
“If a settlement, by way of a compromise of a disputed claim, is made, it cannot be avoided by either party, on a claim of any fraud about it, unless the party who makes such claim and seeks to rescind the settlement returns to the other party what he has received by virtue of it. If he keeps what he receives, he recognizes the settlement, and is bound by it.
“If the jury find that the receipts were signed at Lapeer with the understanding that they were not to include the money received for the land sold Taylor, and that the Taylor matter was to be adjusted as agreed by Hart, Geer, and Os-burn, at Owosso, on the fifth of March, 1884, and if you find that Osburn had agreed with Geer and Hart at that time that they would pay this item if they found it to be the fact that Gould had sold the land to Taylor, then the plaintiffs are entitled to recover the amount received for this land, — three hundred and twenty dollars, with interest on the same from January 26, 1881, after first deducting from the three hundred and twenty dollars the amount of commission at five per cent.
“ But if you find that the agreement by Osburn was to pay that sum only in the event of not settling the two claims, one by Jennings, administrator, and the other by the plaintiffs in this case, and if you find that such final settlement was *269consummated, then the plaintiffs cannot recover- in this action.
“ If the jury find that, when the receipts were signed by plaintiffs, they did not know that Amos Gould had sold the land to Taylor and the timber to. Gates & Fay, and did not compromise and- settle the two claims, but signed the said'1 receipts believing that the account rendered to them was a true statement of all the money received by Gould for the-sale of lands and timber under the power of attorney, then1 the signing of said receipts would have no effect on their right to recover in this action.
“If the jury find that Gould, in his life-time, received' $320 from Taylor, and $700 from Gates & Fay, in payment for lands or timber belonging to plaintiffs, sold by him; that he never accounted to plaintiffs for the same; and that, in-making the settlement and signing the receipts, these items were not known to or taken into account by plaintiffs, — then1 plaintiffs are entitled to recover these items, with interest from the time the money was paid to Gould.”

We think these charges fully cover the subjects under consideration, and state the law correctly. It is not claimed there was any release to the Gould estate in this case, and the record certainly shows that none was intended; and the doctrine that a receipt may be explained, and what it was intended to cover shown, is elementary: Smith v. Holland, 61 N. Y. 635; Michigan, Cent. R. R. Co. v. Dunham, 30 Mich 128; McAllister v. Engle, 52 Id. 56; Powell v. Powell, Id-432; Smith v. Schulenberg, 34 Wis. 41.

The defendants’ counsel insist that the plaintiffs’ claim, allowed by the commissioners, in its statement was sufficiently broad to cover the items for which they now make claim ; and the allowance before the commissioners should be held a. bar in the present suit.

Upon this subject the court charged the jury :

“ The defendant in this case, the estate of Amos Gould, says that if these two claims were not formally presented anff made a part of the plaintiffs’ contention in the former suit- or proceeding, that in fact, by agreement between the parties, the amounts allowed in the two former claims — the one-by Jennings, administrator, and the other by the present-claimants — were allowed by compromise and agreement be*270tween the executors of Gould and the administrator and the-heirs of Hart, the plaintiffs in this suit, and that such settlement was to embrace and cover everything and eveiy claim and demand between them and the estate of Amos Gould. If you find such was the fact, then your verdict will be for the defendant.
“If you find that both of these claims were not included in any settlement and compromise, but that one or the other was so included and covered by the settlement and compromise, and the other was not, then your verdict could only be for that claim, with interest, which -was not included in the compromise and settlement, after first deducting five per cent, commission.
“ But if you find that neither was included in the settlement and compromise, and had not been before adjudicated in the first proceeding, then the plaintiffs would be entitled to recover the amount of their claim, first deducting the commission of five per cent, to which Gould was entitled, .and give interest at seven per cent, from the time he became liable to pay such claim.”
“If the jury find that, at the time the receipt in question was given, the plaintiffs were ignorant of the sale of the timber made by Gould under said power of attorney to Gates •& Fay on the eighteenth day of April, 1881, said receipt would not be a bar to the plaintiffs’ right to recover in this action for the amount Gould received from Gates & Fay for ■said timber, unless you find that a settlement of the two claims — one by Jennings, administrator, and the other by plaintiffs in this case — was intended to include all dealings between Amos Gould and the estate of A. N. Hart, and the •dealings between Amos Gould and the plaintiffs in this suit, and that the same was made with the assent and approval of the plaintiffs in this suit.”

We regard the law given in these two cfiai’ges very proper upon the facts appearing in the record upon this subject. Spencer v. Vigneaux, 20 Cal. 442; Homer v. Fish, 1 Pick. 440; Le Guen v. Gouverneur, 1 Johns. Cas. 492; Hamel v. Grimm, 10 Abb. Pr. 150; Wells, Res Adj. § 375; Riddle v. Baker, 13 Cal. 304; Phelps v. Peabody, 7 Id. 52; Doty v. Brown, 4 N. Y. 71.

The record does not present a case for the application of the doctrine contended for by the defendants’ counsel.

It is hardly necessary to consider the case further upon the *271■oíher questions raised in the assignments of error. It is sufficient to say they have all received our attention, but we do not think any of them can be sustained upon the caso as presented, and the judgment at the circuit must be affirmed, with ■costs.

'The other Justices concurred.

See CMpman v. Kellogg, 60 Mich. 438 (head-note 1).