(dissenting). The majority, persuaded by employer advocate rhetoric extolling the important role played by settlements in the orderly, expeditious, and smooth administration of justice, and the importance of protecting the inviolability of releases reflecting settlements,1 and by Judith Stefanac’s asserted familiarity with releases,2 holds *179that she is precluded from obtaining judicial determinations on the merits (i) of her assertion that a release she signed of all claims against Cranbrook was obtained by fraud or duress, and (ii) of her assertion that she was not required, before commencing this action, to tender to Cranbrook the consideration recited in the release, two weeks’ pay ($1,042.31), because Cranbrook owed her that amount as vacation pay, and (iii) of her underlying claims of wrongful discharge.
The majority so holds because Stefanac failed, before commencing this action, to tender to Cranbrook $1,042.31, recited as consideration in the release, although
—it was not until more than a year after this *180action was commenced that Cranbrook raised the issue of Stefanac’s failure to tender;3
—Stefanac tendered the $1,042.31 shortly after Cranbrook moved to dismiss because of failure to tender;4
—Cranbrook would assuredly have refused to accept the $1,042.31 had it been tendered at anytime earlier.
A
In deciding whether tender is required before suit, the circuit court and the Court of Appeals were, and this Court is, obliged to accept as true *181the allegations in Stefanac’s complaint and in her response to the motion for summary disposition. This Court is thus obliged to proceed on the assumptions, absent judicial determination at the trial level to the contrary, both that the release was in fact obtained by fraud or duress and that Cranbrook did indeed owe Stefanac two weeks’ vacation pay not paid to her when the release was signed.
It appears, however, from the majority and concurring opinions,5 that the disposition by the Court of this appeal is in part based on inferences that the majority has taken upon itself to draw without any issue in that regard having been raised in the motion for summary disposition or otherwise at the trial level.
B
The majority’s disposition barring Stefanac from obtaining judicial determinations on the merits is hypertechnical. It exalts form over substance to require tender before commencement of an action to set aside a release when it is apparent that the defendant would not have accepted the tender if it had been made promptly.
Courts generally excuse tender of consideration where tender would be futile.6 Surely it would not be seriously contended that Cranbrook would have *182accepted $1,042.31 from Stefanac, and thereby agreed to set aside the release, had that amount been tendered before this action was commenced.
Nor was Cranbrook prejudiced by the delay in tender.7
c
The majority’s reading of Leahan v Stroh Brewery Co, 420 Mich 108; 359 NW2d 524 (1984),8 is incorrect, and contradicts a well-established tenet of the law of contracts.9 Parol evidence is always admissible to show that a statement in a document is not true.
Although the release recites the payment of two weeks’ pay as consideration (severance pay), Stefanac is not precluded from contending that nothing was actually paid as severance pay because Cranbrook owed her as vacation pay the amount, $1,042.31, purported to have been paid as consideration. And, thus, no separate consideration was actually paid for the release of her underlying claims. And, therefore, because $1,042.31 is owing to her as vacation pay, she need not return the $1,042.31 if the release were to be set aside for fraud or duress. And, accordingly, there was no need to tender the $1,042.31 to protect against *183unjust enrichment of Stefanac should she prevail on her claim that the release should be so set aside.
The question whether a release without consideration is valid and the question whether recited consideration must in all events be tendered áre different questions. The question presented is not whether the release is valid or there must be consideration, but whether whatever is recited as consideration must, whatever the facts and circumstances, be tendered before suit.
I will concede, arguendo, that a release may in some circumstances be valid although no monetary consideration was paid.10 It does not follow that whatever is recited as consideration must be tendered before suit. The recital of payment may be false. The payee may be entitled to retain the amount paid if the release is set aside because the amount paid belongs in all events to the payee and was not paid as separate consideration for the release of the payee’s underlying claims.
There is ample, well-established authority that tender before suit is not required where the creditor (Stefanac) claims both that the release is invalid or otherwise does not bar the action and that the amount recited as consideration is, in all events, owing to the creditor (Stefanac) by the debtor (Cranbrook). 11 This exception is based on the reason for requiring tender, avoidance of the unjust enrichment of the plaintiff that would result if he were permitted to retain, after a release is set aside, consideration paid therefor.12
Where the plaintiff claims, and the court finds, that he would be entitled to retain the recited *184consideration after the release is set aside because the amount recited as consideration for the release represents in fact money that accrued and was owing to the plaintiff separate and apart from the claims that were settled by the release and that no consideration was in fact paid to settle those claims, tender is not required.
D
What motivates Cranbrook’s legal argument is not so much a desire to prevent prejudice to Cranbrook resulting from delay in tender or to prevent unjust enrichment of Stefanac resulting from retention of the $1,042.31, as it is a desire to convert the law of tender into a jurisdictional requirement — a new statute of limitation of sorts, in addition to the one that protects against stale claims — that bars the costly litigation of potentially embarrassing claims.
Cranbrook contends that rigid enforcement of the tender rule will reduce the proliferation of unjustifiable wrongful discharge litigation. The majority apparently agrees, stating that releases, because they are contracts to discourage litigation, should not themselves become the breeding ground for further litigation.13 The tender rule is, to the *185majority, a means of discouraging litigation of the validity of a release.
The purpose of the tender rule is not, however, to provide a "fair and necessary check against the instability of contracts,”14 but rather to provide a check against the unjust enrichment of the rescinding party that would result if the rescinding party were allowed to retain the benefits of the contract he attacks.15
E
The majority, in stating that tender is a precondition to suit "whenever a legal claim is raised in contravention of settlement agreement, even if joined with an equitable claim,” ignores not only the unjust enrichment rationale for the tender rule, but also a critical difference between an action in equity to set aside a release and an action on a "law” count in disaffirmance of the release.
The factual dispute in an action to set aside a release does not involve the merits of plaintiff’s underlying claim against the defendant that were resolved by the release if it is valid. It is only if and when the release is set aside that the plaintiff should be able to put the defendant to the expense of defending against the underlying claim.
I agree with the majority that the "very essence”16 of a release and settlement is to avoid *186litigation — litigation concerning the settlement of the underlying claims, not litigation of the validity of the release itself.
The rule in equity17 permitting a plaintiff to maintain an action to set aside a release without tender of consideration paid for the release does not put the defendant to the "annoyance and expense of litigation”18 of claims discharged by the release.
The consideration paid by a defendant to a plaintiff at the time a release is signed protects only against litigation of the underlying claims, and is not paid to secure, and cannot provide protection19 against, litigation of a claim that the release was procured by fraud or duress. The consideration does not protect, in the words of the majority, the "very instrument that is intended to ensure forbearance of litigation.”20
Since the consideration paid for the release does not protect against litigation of a claim that the release is invalid, the consideration need not be returned as a precondition to an attack on the validity of the release itself as distinguished from litigation of the underlying claims. To be sure, if the release is found to be invalid, the consideration paid to protect against litigation of the underlying claims must most certainly then be returned *187before the plaintiff may be permitted to proceed with litigation of underlying claims.
i
Stefanac was employed for more than two years as personnel director of Cranbrook, a private school located in a northwest Detroit suburb. Stefanac, on deposition, testified that on the morning of November 16, 1983, she was advised by her supervisor, Robert Kipp, that her employment was terminated. Later that day, William Powell, a Cranbrook administrator, entered her office and presented a release form. According to Stefanac, Powell waved several checks in front of her, but did not allow her to examine them. Stefanac believed the checks to be payroll and expense reimbursement checks. Stefanac testified that she asked Powell if he was implying that she would not receive the checks unless she signed the release and that Powell responded, "you’ve never been a dumb person.” Explaining that she needed the checks to support her children, Stefanac said that she was signing the release under duress.21
Cranbrook’s account of the events on the day Stefanac’s employment was terminated is significantly different.22_
*188Stefanac commenced this action alleging that she had performed her job dutifully and faithfully and that her discharge violated Cranbrook’s policy or practice of terminating employees only for major failures in professional conduct. She further alleged that she had been discriminated against on the basis of her sex23 and that terminating her employment violated public policy.24
Three checks were delivered to Stefanac after she signed the release. Two were for amounts owed her for travel reimbursement and retirement contribution.25 The third was designated as four weeks’ vacation pay and two weeks’ severance pay.26
The third check is in issue. Cranbrook contends that at the time it terminated Stefanac’s employment, it owed her four weeks’ vacation pay, and that the two weeks’ pay, designated on the *189voucher accompanying the check as severance pay, was the two weeks’ pay ($1,042.31) recited as consideration in the release.
Stefanac asserts that, at the time her employment was terminated, Cranbrook owed her at least six weeks’ vacation pay.27 Thus, when Cranbrook paid her six weeks’ pay, it paid her only the vacation pay it owed her and did not pay her the two weeks’ pay recited as consideration in the release.
n
I share the majority’s concern with protecting the integrity of settlements. It is, however, surely at least debatable whether the law should characterize as a settlement what occurred at Cranbrook on the day Stefanac was discharged.
A
Stefanac claims that a few hours after her discharge — before she had asserted a claim of any kind against Cranbrook — a Cranbrook official confronted her with a release form and led her to believe that the only way she could take home checks for amounts admittedly owed her was to sign the release.
A release is valid only if it is fairly and knowingly made,28 and is invalid if entered into as a result of duress29 or fraud.30 Parol evidence is admissible to show duress31 or fraud.32
*190The question whether Stefanac, in fact and law, suffered duress or was induced by fraud to enter into the release has not been briefed or argued. This Court, before adopting the view that the writing signed by Stefanac bars her claims, should, nevertheless, scrutinize both the writing and the context in which Stefanac signed.
B
The writing, prepared by Cranbrook, begins with an untrue recital. The opening line states, "For and in consideration of Cranbrook Educational Community’s (Cranbrook) acceptance of the voluntary resignation of Judith Stefanac . . . .” Stefanac did not voluntarily resign from Cranbrook. Her employment was involuntarily terminated.33
It would seem that a writing, prepared by Cranbrook, that begins with a knowingly false recital of fact warrants close scrutiny rather than the reverence with which the majority vests this writing. Cranbrook’s reliance on a writing prepared by it containing statements of fact known to have been false when made is a further reason to allow Stefanac the opportunity to show that other statements of the writing, including the recital of consideration and the disclaimer of duress, were also untrue.
It was not Stefanac who, armed with claims against her employer, negotiated with Cranbrook *191and ultimately accepted two weeks’ pay in full settlement. It was, rather, Cranbrook that sought out Stefanac only a few hours after the termination of her employment. Cranbrook confronted Stefanac with the writing before she had time to overcome the stress she claimed she experienced as a result of her discharge from employment, or time to consider possible courses or causes of action or to consult with a lawyer to frame a strategy for bartering for her claims.
[T]he very fact of "haste,” when coupled with nominal payment, is a potent factor courts take into account when cases like this arrive before them. [Hall v Strom Construction Co, 368 Mich 253, 261; 118 NW2d 281 (1962).]
Cranbrook’s conduct might be found by the trier of fact, were this Court to allow the factual issues to be decided on the merits, to be comparable to a preemptive strike by an insurer who obtains a "rush release” from an injured person shortly after an accident.34_
*192C
Cranbrook acted on the advice of counsel. Stefanac did not.
It has become common for employers to use the exit interview as a means of obtaining a "rush release” by offering a discharged employee separation or severance pay on a take-it-or-leave-it basis. The employee is told if he does not sign before he leaves the room, the offer will be withdrawn.
A system of justice that expects lawyers to move from take-it-or-leave-it positions to settle civil and criminal cases35 should ponder whether to bestow the imprimatur of legitimacy on a release signed by an unrepresented, discharged employee, lacking in economic resources, and responding under emotional stress to an on-the-spot, take-it-or-leave-it offer by a well-advised and economically advantaged employer.
There was a time when a lawyer would not prepare documents for a client to be signed by another party, known not to be represented by counsel, unless the lawyer or the client, in submitting the document to the other party, strongly recommended that the unrepresented party obtain counsel before signing the document and allowed time to do so.
In Wahsner v American Motors Sales Corp, 597 F Supp 991 (ED Pa, 1984), the plaintiffs, co-investors/operators of an automobile dealership, filed an action against an automobile manufacturer and its zone manager for bad-faith termination in violation of the Automobile Dealers’ Day in *193Court Act.36 The defendants interposed as a defense releases signed by the plaintiffs on the day their employment was terminated.37
The court noted that the plaintiffs were not given advance warning that their employment would be terminated, that they were not provided with an opportunity to consult counsel or given more than twenty minutes to decide whether to sign the release — a decision that could affect the rest of their economic lives.
*194Plaintiffs’ negotiation of more benefits than were originally offered did not, according to the court, substitute for the assistance of counsel. The court said that the plaintiffs were presented with an all- or-nothing choice; they were told that if they did not resign during the meeting they would leave the meeting with absolutely nothing. Holding that under Pennsylvania law, the conditions under which the men signed the releases might constitute duress, the court denied the defendants’ motion for summary judgment.
D
The law does indeed favor compromise and settlement. It also recognizes, I agree, that persons often face difficult choices, and that they should be held to their agreements.38 But it is the courts’ role to enforce compromises, not to create them.39 This Court invades the province of the trier of fact in finding that what occurred at Cranbrook on the day Stefanac’s employment was terminated constituted a "settlement” or a "compromise.”40
*195Stefanac testified that she was offered a choice of either signing away her claims against Cranbrook in exchange for two weeks’ pay or forgoing receipt at that time of amounts that Cranbrook conceded it owed her for vacation pay, expense reimbursement, retirement contribution and wages. If those were in fact the circumstances, the release no more represented an accord or settlement and has no more validity than if she had signed under threat of physical harm. The law does not permit an employer to withhold the payment of wages and other amounts due an employee to coerce the employee into releasing claims against the employer.
If there was no accord or settlement, if the release has no validity, cashing the check that included the two weeks’ pay was not a satisfaction.41
E
Had Cranbrook paid Stefanac the amounts it admittedly owed her and, after checks therefor had been delivered, offered Stefanac two weeks’ pay in exchange for a release of any and all *196possible claims,42 and had Stefanac signed the release and then accepted the check, a different question would be presented. Stefanac would then have been free to accept or reject the offer of two weeks’ pay in exchange for the release of all claims without forgoing the receipt of money admittedly owing. The release might then43 properly be seen as evidencing an accord and settlement.
F
Stefanac’s supervisors testified on deposition, in effect, that they did not withhold payment of amounts to Stefanac and that they had been instructed to deliver the expense reimbursement and retirement contribution checks to her without regard to whether she signed the release.44 The check for the two weeks’ severance pay was, however, included in the same check that had been written for the four weeks’ vacation pay Cranbrook conceded it owed her. That tends to support, somewhat, Stefanac’s assertion that she could not obtain the four weeks’ vacation pay unless she signed the release.
Be that as it may, this Court should provide Stefanac an opportunity to prove her claim that she could not obtain amounts admittedly due her without signing the release, and that the two weeks’ pay, recited as consideration in the release, was, as she asserts, owed as an additional two weeks’ vacation pay.
hi
The general rule is, indeed, that a person who *197claims that he has rescinded a contract cannot retain consideration received under the contract, and must tender recited consideration before commencing an action in disaffirmance of the contract.45 The rule is an expression of the principle that "you can’t have your cake and eat it too.”
A
The reason for requiring tender is to prevent unjust enrichment:
"The requirement that the other party to the transaction should be placed in his original position exists to prevent enrichment by the rescinding party at the expense of the other.” [Carey v Levy, 329 Mich 458, 465; 45 NW2d 352 (1951), quoting Restatement Restitution, ch 2, § 65e.][46]
The commentary provides, however: "[T]he reason for the [tender] rule limits it.”47 The commentary elaborates that tender is not required where *198the rescinding party was entitled "to retain what the other gave” as consideration.48
That statement in the commentary is based on the reason for requiring tender, to prevent unjust enrichment. If, as Stefanac contends, Cranbrook was indebted to her for the amount of the "consideration,” requiring her to return the disputed "consideration” would disturb, rather than reestablish, the status quo. Cranbrook would be unjustly enriched at Stefanac’s expense.49
There is considerable authority that tender before suit is not required where the alleged consideration either was, or arguably was, payment for *199an already existing debt between the defendant debtor and the plaintiff creditor:
[A] party who attempts to rescind a transaction on the ground of fraud, mistake, or otherwise, is not bound to restore that which he has received by virtue thereof, when, in any event, he is entitled to retain it as indisputably his own whatever may be the fate of his effort to rescind the transaction. [12 Williston, Contracts (3d ed), §1530, pp 646-648.]
There is not universal agreement concerning when recited consideration must be tendered.50 It has been said that there are many exceptions to the general rule requiring tender,51 including "that *200restoration is not necessary where the money received by the party was due him in any event and if returned could be recovered back.” Baker v All States Life Ins Co, 46 Ohio 308, 312; 96 NE2d 787 (1950).52
The factual scenarios underlying this Court’s decisions in Fritz v Marantette, 404 Mich 329, 335; 273 NW2d 425 (1978), and Urben v Public Bank, 365 Mich 279; 112 NW2d 444 (1961), are instructive. In Fritz, the plaintiff-seller of corn, brought an action to recover the unpaid balance on a contract from Marantette, the defendant-purchaser. The defendant said that the corn was inferior, that the plaintiff had agreed to a deduction from the contract price, and that the plaintiff’s acceptance of the check endorsed "corn contract paid in full” for the reduced price constituted an accord and satisfaction. The plaintiff crossed out the endorsement before depositing the *201check.53 The plaintiff did not return the proceeds of the check before commencing an action for the unpaid balance. This Court, observing that "whether a particular set of facts amounts to an accord and satisfaction is generally a question of fact for the fact-finder,” held that the trial court did not err in allowing the case to go to the jury.54
In Urben, an employee sued his former employer. This Court held that the question whether there was an accord and satisfaction is a question of fact.55 It does not appear that the final paycheck, claimed by the defendant to have been paid in full consideration of all claims, was tendered before suit. In Sall v Luxenberg, 302 So 2d 167 (Fla, 1974), the court said that the principle requiring tender would not be applied on the record in that case because "the consideration for the release which would determine the amount of tender is presently in dispute.”_
*202Fritz and Urben recognize that, notwithstanding that a check contains words of release, where there is a dispute whether the money received by the plaintiff constituted payment of a liquidated debt owed by the defendant, the question what debts were settled by the payment cannot be determined as a matter of law.56 Sail indicates that where there is a dispute, tender is not a prerequisite to commencement of an action.
The legal issue, obfuscated by the polarized employer versus employee posture in which the issue arrives for decision, might be clearer if the plaintiff were a businessman and not an employee claiming wrongful discharge. And the businessman asserted in his complaint, with apparent plausibility, that he had sold merchandise for $25,000 to a defendant who turned out to be a deadbeat, and that defendant deadbeat had strong-armed plaintiff businessman into accepting $10,000 and signing a release of the remaining $15,000.
I doubt that this Court would require the businessman to run the risk of returning the $10,000 to defendant deadbeat as a precondition to commencing an action for the $15,000, even though defendant deadbeat responded to plaintiff’s complaint by denying that he owed the $15,000 or the $10,000, denying that he was a deadbeat or that he had strong-armed the plaintiff, and by imploring this Court to underscore the importance of encouraging and protecting settlements and the sanctity of written documents by requiring the return of the $10,000 as a precondition to suit for the $15,000, trusting deadbeat to be found and to pay a judgment should the Court ultimately find for the plaintiff.57
*203IV
The majority extends Leahan beyond the scope of the decision in that case and, in so doing, ignores a well-recognized exception to the parol evidence rule.
A
The Court of Appeals and now the majority in this Court, reading Leahan out of context,58 interpret it as setting forth some sort of parol evidence rule. They erroneously read Leahan as precluding Stefanac from proving by extrinsic evidence, before being required to tender, that, if the release were set aside, she would be entitled nevertheless to retain the consideration recited in the release because Cranbrook owes her that amount as vacation pay and, thus, there is no need to tender that *204amount before suit to guard against unjust enrichment.
Leahan argued that the language of the letter he signed supported his claim that the consideration recited in the letter was paid solely in exchange for future performance by Leahan of "specific tasks and obligations” and that no consideration was paid for the release of the claims he sought to assert in the lawsuit. The Court looked at the language of the letter and ruled, as a matter of construction of the language, that the recited consideration was paid in exchange for release of the claims there described as well as for the "specific tasks and obligations” undertaken by Leahan.
The Court in Leahan thus merely resolved a dispute concerning how the language of the letter should be construed.59 The Court held only that *205Leahan had not established that the consideration was paid solely in exchange for the "specific tasks and obligations” and not for the release of the claims in suit.
B
If Leahan were read as barring evidence that recitation of payment of consideration was untrue, and thus no consideration was received, then *206Leahan would contradict a universal tenet of the law of contracts that the parol evidence rule does not prevent a showing that there has been nonpayment/failure of consideration:60
The vast majority of cases have held that it may be shown that the consideration has not been paid and that no other consideration has been given. This result does not contravene the parol evidence rule since this rule does not prohibit the contradiction of a recital of fact. [Calamari & Perillo, Contracts (3d ed), § 4-6, p 198. Emphasis added.]
[T|t may be shown by parol evidence . . . that the validity of the agreement was impaired by . . . lack of or failure of consideration rendering the agreement voidable or void. [4 Williston, Contracts (3d ed), § 634, pp 1017-1018.]
[T]he acknowledgment of receipt is ... no more than evidence of certain action by one party in paying and by the other party in receiving payment. The courts have uniformly decided that this evidence is not conclusive, and that any kind of relevant testimony is admissible to rebut it. [3 Corbin, Contracts, § 586, pp 489-490.][61]_
*207Decisions of this Court are fully in accord with the principle that parol evidence is admissible to show that no consideration was received. "Parol evidence is always admissible to show that a contract, although, apparently valid, has nothing to support it,”62 that no consideration was paid, and thus there was a "failure of consideration.”63
Application of the principle that the parol evidence rule does not bar showing nonpayment/failure of consideration is not precluded in the instant case because the "plaintiff is not claiming that she did not receive any money . . . ,”64 Stefanac sought to introduce evidence that the money she received was already owed her by Cranbrook. Such evidence would tend to show that there was no consideration paid to her and, in that sense, a failure of consideration. Since evidence of nonpayment/failure of consideration is always admissible, reading Leahan as barring such evidence is incorrect.
v
Tender of consideration, although a precondition to an "action at law,” is not a precondition to *208commencement of an action seeking equitable relief.65 The reason for this distinction is historical, resting on the different theories of rescission at law and in equity and the respective powers of the chancellor and the courts of common law.
The chancellor had the power to cancel or rescind a contract. A person could, therefore, bring an action seeking cancellation of a contract or release, as distinguished from an action claiming that the contract or release had been rescinded. This Court said:
It is said that plaintiff neither restored nor offered to restore to defendant the property received before seeking rescission. Neither was necessary. A bill in equity praying rescission proceeds on the theory that there has been no rescission, not on the theory that rescission has already been accomplished. [Witte v Hobolth, 224 Mich 286, 290; 195 NW 82 (1923). Emphasis added.][66]
*209The chancellor could guard against unjust enrichment of the rescinding party by conditioning a decree of rescission on the rescinding party’s return of consideration received:
A tender of restitution is not a condition precedent to a suit for rescission in equity, since the decree can be conditioned on the making of restitution. [De Blouw v Ramm & Co, 284 Mich 589, 595-596; 279 NW 919 (1938).][67]
An action at law, by contrast, proceeded on the *210theory that the rescinding party had, himself, rescinded the contract. Courts of law were thought to lack the power to render conditional judgments.68 Consequently, tender was considered a precondition to the institution of an action at law —a formality perfecting the rescinding party’s rescission.69
A
In Style v Greenslade, 364 Mich 679; 112 NW2d 92 (1961), this Court, on its own initiative, required a plaintiff who had begun an action at law in disaffirmance of a release to amend her complaint to seek cancellation of the release in equity. The plaintiff had commenced a negligence action for personal injury sustained in an automobile accident. The defendant, as here, moved to dismiss claiming settlement and release. The plaintiff, as here, responded that the release was procured through fraudulent inducements and misrepresentations. The plaintiff demanded a jury trial of the factual issues respecting the release.70_
*211This Court, a few months before the abolition of the distinction between law and equity,71 held that the plaintiff, seeking to avoid a release, should have proceeded in a chancery action, and remanded the case to the circuit court, enjoining further proceedings, "until plaintiff may bring and have determined an appropriate chancery action in accord herewith”:72
If the release is upheld in the chancery proceeding, that should end the matter. If the release is held invalid, plaintiff may then proceed with her law action involving questions of negligence and damages. [Id.]
From the records and briefs, it is clear that remand to the circuit court with leave to amend was a disposition raised by this Court on its own initiative.73
*212In Style, this Court thus held that the "law” action should be held in abeyance while plaintiff amended her complaint to add an equitable claim for cancellation of the release.74 The only differences between Style and the instant case are that Style was a personal injury action, not an action claiming wrongful discharge, and that this Court in that case was willing to permit an amendment of the complaint.
B
The same generosity of spirit that inspires the Court to permit Cranbrook to plead nontender more than a year after Stefanac had commenced this action should move it to allow Stefanac to amend her complaint to seek cancellation of the release on the ground of fraud or duress.
Stefanac did not, indeed, seek cancellation of the release in a separate action before commencing this action, or as a separate count in this action. Nor has she contended that this Court should apply in the instant case the rule developed in courts of equity that tender is not required where *213an action for cancellation of a release is commenced in equity.
I could nevertheless join in such a disposition of this case. Such a disposition is precedentially supported by this Court’s decision in Style where the Court acted on its own initiative. Alternatively, this Court could appropriately require further briefing of whether the Style disposition — remanding to add a count seeking cancellation and trial by the court75 — should be ordered in this case.
*214VI
The Court is so smitten with the importance of tender, that, without briefing, argument, or citation of authority, it appears to substitute a new gatekeeping rationale — protection of "settlements” —for the well- and long-established avoidance-of-unjust-enrichment rationale of the tender requirement:
[T]he tender rule set forth here requires that whenever a legal claim is raised in contravention of a settlement agreement, even if joined with an equitable claim, tender is a precondition. Anything less would nullify the purpose of the tender rule. [Ante, p 170. Emphasis added.]
The foregoing formulation expresses the Court’s concern that the rule requiring tender before com*215mencement of an action in disaffirmance of a release might be undermined by commencing an action seeking, in one count, rescission of the release (tender not being required), and, in another, a determination on the merits of an underlying claim for wrongful discharge.
The statement in the Court’s formulation, "[a]nything less would nullify the purpose of the tender rule,” is not followed with any discussion of the purpose of the tender rule. The only purpose heretofore recognized by this or any other court is avoidance of the unjust enrichment that would result if the plaintiff could keep separate consideration paid for a release after it is set aside.
Many leading authorities agree that, after the abolition of the procedural distinction between law and equity so that a trial court can, whatever the form of action or relief sought, indisputably enter a conditional judgment, there is no need to require tender as a precondition to commencing an action brought in disaffirmance of a release to guard against the unjust enrichment of the plaintiff.
No authority was found resurrecting tender, on a gatekeeping rationale, as an absolute precondition to suit. It appears that Michigan, if it persists in the obiter dictum announced by the majority today without briefing, argument, or citation of authority, will be alone in requiring tender on a gatekeeping rationale.
Modern procedural reforms,76 in conjunction *216with the consolidation in one court of jurisdiction of both equitable and law claims, eliminate the necessity of tender as a prerequisite to commencement of an action seeking to obtain rescission. Under unified proceedings, a court may enter a judgment conditioning rescission on the return of consideration received by the plaintiff, thus effectuating the purpose of the tender rule, the avoidance of unjust enrichment of the rescinding party:
In equity, his [the rescinding party’s] failure to make such an offer [to return what he has received] before commencing a suit for rescission did not preclude relief. The decree could be made conditional on an offer. At law, however, an offer was traditionally regarded as a condition of the right to commence an action based on rescission. The merger of law and equity and modem procedural reforms have made this distinction undesirable, and the rule stated in this Section reñects the increasing criticism of the rule at law. If the court has the power to assure the required return in connection with the relief that it grants, it is not necessary that there have been a prior return or *217offer to return. [3 Restatement Contracts, 2d, § 384, comment b, p 245.77 Emphasis added.]
Textwriters have said, and courts in other jurisdictions have held, that the requirement of tender before commencement of an action no longer has validity:
No reason is apparent for this [tender] requirement, since courts under the codes have the same power as the chancellor possessed to render a *218judgment which can be made conditional upon a return of the consideration, and some courts which have acquired the power to render a conditional judgment either by statute or otherwise, apply the equitable procedure in legal actions. [McClintock, Equity (2d ed), ch 6, §86, pp 231-232. Emphasis added.]
The rule of the law courts has retained an undeserved vitality. Today a court should hold that the equity practice applies to all actions, without regard to their historical origins in law or equity. Certainly this is fully justified where the procedural distinctions between law and equity have been abolished. In a court of general jurisdiction, having both law and equity powers, if the court can work out the problem of mutual restitution in one action it can do so in another, and it should make no difference that in an earlier period one was a suit in equity while the other was an action at law. [1 Palmer, Restitution, § 3.11, p 297. Emphasis added.]
It is gross error to refuse such a remedy [restitution] today, if it is within the powers of the court and accords with existing procedure, merely because some earlier court with more limited powers and less flexible procedure refused to grant it. [5 Corbin, Contracts, ch 61, § 1116, p 626. Emphasis added.][78]_
*219Law and equity have long been merged in Washington; they now are merged in the Federal courts. The court can pass upon the validity of the release and upon the validity of the cause of action, and, if it finds for plaintiff, offset the consideration against the judgment, all in one action. [Ted Price Construction Co v Cascade Natural Gas Corp, 307 F2d 741, 743 (CA 9, 1962).][79]
I suggest that the obiter dictum requiring tender where a count seeking equitable relief, cancellation of a release, is joined with a ”law” count *220should be reconsidered in light of the foregoing statements of textwriters and courts.
VII
I agree with the majority that the result for which the majority writes is "seemingly harsh”80— I suggest "unnecessarily harsh.” The purpose of the tender rule is not, again, to protect a release obtained by fraud or duress, but rather to prevent the plaintiff, if the release is set aside, from retaining money paid to the plaintiff to resolve the underlying claims.
I further agree with the majority that "[t]he plaintiff is not entitled to retain the benefit of an agreement and at the same time bring81 suit in contravention of the agreement.”82 A plaintiff should not be permitted to proceed with an action in contravention of a release unless he can first convince the court to set aside the release. If he does, he should then be required to return all consideration that the court finds was paid for the release of the underlying claims.
It would not, therefore, "undermine the very rule announced by this Court in Carey” if a plaintiff is permitted to defer tendering consideration until after it is decided whether the release will be set aside. Carey was not an action in equity to set aside a release, but rather an action at law in disaffirmance of the release. We all agree that a plaintiff should not be permitted to proceed in an action in disaffirmance of a release unless and until he tenders consideration paid for the release of the underlying claims.
Recognizing, now that the procedural distinction *221between law and equity has been abolished, that tender before suit is no longer a precondition to commencement of an action would not mean that a plaintiff may put the defendant to the expense of defending against the plaintiff’s claims on the merits of the underlying controversy before returning consideration in fact paid to avoid incurring that very expense.
A person who has signed a release who wishes to commence an action in disaffirmance of the release should be required to include in his complaint a separate count seeking to set aside the release. The trial court should not permit the plaintiff to proceed on counts seeking damages or other relief on plaintiff’s underlying claims unless the plaintiff prevails in his effort to set aside the release.83
Disputed issues of fact and law concerning the validity of a release should ordinarily be resolved before the plaintiff is permitted, over the objection of the defendant, to depose witnesses or otherwise obtain discovery respecting the underlying claims asserted by the plaintiff in the "law” counts of the complaint. If the release is found to be valid, the plaintiff’s action would be dismissed and the defendant would have prevailed before any discovery on the meritorious questions in the underlying controversy. If, on the other hand, the release is found to be invalid, the plaintiff should be required to pay to the defendant an amount equal to all consideration the court finds was in fact paid to the plaintiff to avoid litigating on the merits the underlying claims.84 The defendant, thus, would not be put to the expense of defending against *222plaintiff’s underlying claims unless the release is set aside, and consideration paid therefor has been returned.85
VIII
Stefanac’s claims of wrongful discharge, fraud and duress in obtaining her signature on a release and for two weeks’ additional vacation pay may be wholly without merit. She may not have been strong-armed into signing the release. Cranbrook may have acted with the utmost rectitude and justification. If so, a court would presumably so adjudicate were there a hearing on the merits.
To be sure, there is considerable unjustified, costly litigation brought by disgruntled employees who should have been discharged by forbearing and indulgent employers long before they were in fact discharged. Unjustified litigation is a pall, manipulated by far too many plaintiffs and defendants and their advocates, that both hampers the administration of justice and undermines public confidence in the courts. It is a pall that preceded the burgeoning wrongful discharge litigation industry. The court rules provide remedies therefor that some courts are implementing by assessing costs where warranted.
*223The particularly vocal complaints of employers and their advocates do not justify a new gatekeeping rationale for the tender requirement, now that its historical justification, a law court’s inability to enter a conditional judgment, no longer has any validity.
The question is important not only in wrongful discharge cases, but also in personal injury cases and in cases involving contracts other than a release claimed to have been obtained by fraud, duress, or other overreaching entitling a plaintiff to rescind. This Court has the duty to think beyond the case at hand, and to the rule of law that it is expounding not only for employer/employee cases but for all civil litigation.
IX
Contracts to relinquish the enforcement of legal rights warrant at least as much judicial surveillance as other contracts. This Court said in Denton v Utley, 350 Mich 332, 333, 339; 86 NW2d 537 (1957):
We are not saying that all releases are vulnerable. What we are saying is that releases have no particular immunity of their own to attack on the ground of mistake or fraud. There is no form of words, there is no formula, no instrument, no transaction, that rises above the chancellor’s scrutiny or resists his intervention. "Fiat justitia ruat coelum.”
"If fraud or mutual mistake has induced the making of an unconscionable contract, courts ought to be more concerned about granting relief, than desirous of clinching future wrongs by making such contracts incontestable.” [Emphasis added.]
*224The constitution confides to this Court both the power and the conscience of the chancellor. This Court cannot justify, on the basis that a ceremonial tender was not made, its failure to inquire into the bona fides of the release relied on by Cranbrook.
x
The real issue, avoided by the majority’s disposition in this case, is whether the release was obtained by Cranbrook by fraud or duress.
If it were to be judicially determined, a determination which the majority’s disposition precludes, that Stefanac was strong-armed into signing the release, the release should be set aside and she should be required to return the $1,042.31 before obtaining a determination on the merits of her claims of wrongful discharge unless, it were also so judicially determined, Cranbrook owes her that amount as additional vacation pay.
See n 13 and accompanying text.
The majority states:
Plaintiff admits that she read and executed the release agreement. She was the personnel director of the institution and, in fact, had dealt with similar release agreements in other employment termination situations. Thus, we can impute to her full understanding of the terms and conditions of the agreement. [Ante, p 167.]
Stefanac’s knowledge of the terms of the release does not negate her claim that her signature was obtained by fraud or duress. A person who signs in response to a perfectly clear threat acts knowingly. The signer could resist the threat and suffer the consequences, economic, physical or other. Signing to avoid suffering the consequences is a volitional act in the sense that the signer could accept the consequences of not signing, but is not voluntary in the legal sense of that term.
The concurring opinion goes a step further in factual assessment, a task ordinarily left to the trier of fact:
*179Lastly, I disagree with the dissent on one point. I do not believe the plaintiff was coerced into signing the release. The plaintiff’s failure to question the circumstances surrounding the defendant’s offer of alleged consideration reflects negligence, not on the part of the defendant, but on the part of the plaintiff. The dissent presumes that the immediacy of the defendant’s request that plaintiff sign a release agreement necessarily intimated that the defendant prohibited the plaintiff from retaining an attorney. I disagree.
The implicit alleged threat, "sign now or forego your money,” still carried with it the notion that the plaintiff should have been, with or without an attorney, concerned or at least hesitant about signing away her right to sue at any price, especially if she felt she had been wronged in her dismissal. Therefore, in my view, there was no actionable coercion in this case. [Post, p 227.]
The view expressed in the concurring opinion suggests that as the seriousness of the threat escalates, the person threatened is less justified, and more negligent, in signing. It was for the trier of fact to decide whether the threat was real or not, and of such immediacy that Stefanac’s signature was obtained by fraud or duress. A person not easily intimidated might reject outright a threat. The trier of fact might conclude, however, that a reasonable person in Stefanac’s position might respond to the threat by thinking twice about not signing the release, and, as a consequence, relinquishing or delaying receipt of monies owing to her. In other words, the trier might find that Stefanac did not act unjustifiably in reacting to the threat by thinking first about the consequences of noncompliance and, only after receipt of the money concededly due her, about the rights she lost by signing.
Cranbrook moved in September, 1984, a month after this action was commenced, for summary disposition on the basis of the release. Stefanac responded that the release was invalid because of fraud, duress, and lack of consideration. The motion was denied.
More than a year later, in November, 1985, Cranbrook again moved for summary disposition, alleging for the first time that Stefanac had failed to tender the consideration recited in the release. Stefanac responded that she should be excused from tendering because she had not in fact received any consideration.
The circuit court, relying on Leahan v Stroh Brewery Co, 420 Mich 108; 359 NW2d 524 (1984), decided by this Court in December, 1984, ruled that Stefanac’s failure to tender the consideration recited in the release required the dismissal of her complaint. The Court of Appeals, also relying on Leahan, affirmed the decision of the trial court, and did not reach the question whether Stefanac should have been provided an opportunity, after Cranbrook raised the tender issue, to tender the $1,042.31 before her complaint was dismissed.
Stefanac offered to tender the $1,042.31 three weeks later. This Court vacated the judgment of the Court of Appeals affirming the circuit court dismissal of Stefanac’s complaint and remanded the case to the Court of Appeals for consideration of whether Stefanac should have been allowed additional time to tender the consideration. The Court of Appeals, on remand, held that, under the circumstances, Stefanac’s tender had been made within a reasonable time, and remanded the case to the circuit court for reinstatement if tender were made within thirty days of the court’s order.
Stefanac deposited the $1,042.31 with the circuit court on January 29, 1988, two weeks after the circuit court entered an order reinstating her case.
This Court first denied, and on reconsideration granted, Cranbrook’s application for leave to appeal, and stayed proceedings in the circuit court.
See n 2.
5 Corbin, Contracts, ch 61, § 1116, p 627; Duncombe v Tromble, 219 Mich 8; 188 NW 267 (1922); Lackovic v Campbell, 225 Mich 1; 194 NW 789 (1923).
In Burns v Misura, 228 Mich 152, 155; 199 NW 606 (1924), this Court, quoting Rhines v Skinner Packing Co, 108 Neb 105, 110; 187 NW 874 (1922), said that where " 'a timely, perfect tender in every respect would have been unavailing [and] [i]t would have been rejected and the attitude of the defendant so shows,’” the plaintiff’s failure to tender should not preclude recovery in a court of equity.
Stefanac’s lawyer has not contended, however, that since tender assuredly would have been refused, it was not required.
Since Cranbrook did not reuse the tender issue until more than a year etfter this action was commenced, the only prejudice that Cranbrook could have suffered as a result of the delay in tender weis the expense of litigation sustained during the three-week interval between the time that it raised the tender issue and the time the circuit court decided it.
Cranbrook’s counsel may not have had the temerity to raise the tender issue because it was so clear that Cranbrook would not have accepted a tender of $1,042.31 had it been earlier offered. The timing of Cranbrook’s motion for summary disposition on this issue suggests that it was emboldened to do so by this Court’s decision in Leahan in December, 1984.
See ns 58 ff. and accompanying text.
See ns 60 ff. and accompanying text.
It is not necessary to consider or decide whether a release needs to be supported by the payment of monetary or other consideration.
See ns 49 ff. and accompanying text.
See n 47 and accompanying text.
The indispensable ingredient for the utility of agreements is the principle of enforceability. The uniqueness of an agreement not to sue is that it is an agreement not to enforce other rights —an agreement to forbear enforcement. In an increasingly litigious society, the utility of such an agreement takes on increasing importance, both for overburdened courts and for economic vitality. However, when the very instrument that is intended to insure forbearance of litigation itself fosters a separate layer of litigation that is intended to resuscitate the litigability of the matter that was the subject of the settlement, enforceability (judicial scrutiny) can be defeating of the very stability the contractual instrument is intended to foster. The tender rule, therefore, is of more than historical significance. [Ante, p 177.]
Ante, pp 177-178.
See n 47 and accompanying text.
We hold as a matter of law that a plaintiff must, in all cases where a legal claim is raised in contravention of an agreement, tender the consideration recited in the agreement prior to or simultaneously with the filing of suit. To allow a grace period for tender after the commencement of a lawsuit would undermine the very rule announced by this Court in Carey [v Levy, 329 Mich 458; 45 NW2d 352 (1951)]. Although seemingly harsh, *186we find that this rule is necessary in order to preserve the stability of release agreements. As we have previously stated, a defendant is entitled to rely on the binding nature of the agreement. The very essence of a release and settlement is to avoid litigation. The plaintiff is not entitled to retain the benefit of an agreement and at the same time bring suit in contravention of the agreement. [Ante, pp 176-177.]
Tender is not required before commencement of an "equity” action to set aside a release. See ns 65 ff. and accompanying text,
Carey, n 16 supra, p 465.
Even some protection.
Ante, p 177.
The release stated that Stefanac, in consideration of Cranbrook’s acceptance of her resignation and agreement to pay her for two weeks’ work, would release Cranbrook from all claims, demands, and causes of action. The release made no mention of severance pay, nor was severance pay discussed.
According to Powell and Kipp, after the termination of Stefanac’s employment, Kipp asked Powell to meet with Stefanac and present her with the release. Kipp instructed Powell to give Stefanac two checks (one for travel reimbursement and one for retirement contribution) but to tell her that she would not receive the third (itemized as including both four weeks’ vacation pay and two weeks’ severance pay — see n 26) unless she signed the release. Kipp said that legal counsel had advised him to have Stefanac sign a release and to condition her receipt of severance pay on her signing the release.
*188Powell testified that on meeting with Stefanac, he immediately gave her the travel reimbursement and retirement contribution checks and told her that he could not give her the third check unless she signed the release. Powell denies that Stefanac asked, "are you telling me that unless I sign this document, I’m not going to get my money,” and that he responded, "you’ve never been . . . dumb . . . .”
Powell asserted that he advised Stefanac not to sign the release until she felt better. Powell said that Stefanac responded that she had helped develop the release, that it did not mean anything anyway, and that she was going to sign it. Powell denied that Stefanac said— other than in the context of this lawsuit — that she had been pressured or coerced in connection with the signing of the release.
She cited rumors spread by Cranbrook employees about her sex life and explicit sexual advances made to her by men in authority at Cranbrook.
Stefanac asserted that she was. ordered to destroy a report showing sex discrimination practices at Cranbrook, and to dispose of records of a Cranbrook policy discriminating in the admission of Jewish students. Stefanac further charged that she was instructed to hire only males for certain positions and only females for other positions and that her knowledge of and opposition to these practices and policies led to the termination of her employment.
In addition, Stefanac may have received a regular paycheck for wages.
The check voucher indicates that the gross pay was $3,126.93 ($2,084.62 in vacation pay and $1,042.31 in severance pay).
Stefanac maintains that Cranbrook owed her four weeks’ vacation pay for her last year at Cranbrook and two or more weeks’ vacation pay for the preceding year.
Denton v Utley, 350 Mich 332, 342; 86 NW2d 537 (1957).
Weiser v Welch, 112 Mich 132, 136; 70 NW 438 (1897).
Stewart v Eldred, 349 Mich 28, 32; 84 NW2d 496 (1957).
Hobbs v Brush Electric Light Co, 75 Mich 550, 553; 42 NW 965 (1889).
Kulenkamp v Groff, 71 Mich 675, 678; 40 NW 57 (1888); Rood v Midwest Matrix Mart, Inc, 350 Mich 559, 564; 87 NW2d 186 (Í957).
Cranbrook acknowledged:
Although all parties involved acknowledge that she [Stefanac] was involuntarily discharged, Plaintiff signed a release of claims designating her departure as a "voluntary resignation . . .
In that context it has been said:
The element of time, such as the length of time that expired between the occurrence of the damage or injury and the signing of the release, may be an important factor in determining whether a release should be held invalid for mistake or fraud. If the releasee obtained the release within a few days after the injury occurred, there is a possibility that the releásor did not have a chance to discover the true extent of the injuries or to place a proper value on them. [66 Am Jur 2d, Release, § 62, pp 746-747.]
And further:
"The sharp economic inequality of the bargaining parties which generally exists in this class of cases has also been considered by the courts in their consideration of this doctrine.” [Id., pp 260-261, quoting Clancy v Pacenti, 15 Ill App 2d 171, 177; 145 NE2d 802 (1957).]
I do not wish to be understood as saying that there is anything wrong with a take-it-or-leave-it offer where the offeree is provided adequate time to obtain counsel and evaluate his legal position. A take-it-or-leave-it offer might be generous.
15 USC 1221-1225. But the duress issue was decided under Pennsylvania law:
Under Pennsylvania law, the conditions under which Wahsner and Novin signed the releases may constitute duress. Pennsylvania law is the appropriate law to apply here with respect to the validity of the releases. [Wahsner v American Motors Sales Corp, 597 F Supp 991, 997 (ED Pa, 1984).]
After the plaintiffs had been operating the dealership for just short of three years, they were called into a meeting of the board of directors and their resignations were requested. The plaintiffs, having had no forewarning that their resignations would be requested at this meeting, were flabbergasted at the request and refused to resign. They were told that if they did not resign the board would remove them and they would leave the meeting with nothing at all. When the two men again refused to resign, the board offered them $5,000 in cash settlement, two weeks’ severance pay, and use of the company car. The board allowed the two men twenty minutes to discuss the offer in private.
After discussing the offer together, the plaintiffs decided that they should resign. The branch manager reassured them that they would each receive $5,000 and agreed to provide them with letters of recommendation and continued hospital coverage. The plaintiffs then tendered their resignations. Both men received checks for $8,184.58 (two weeks’ severance pay plus $5,000 less withholding taxes), two weeks’ and three days’ vacation pay, use of the company car, continued medical insurance, and a letter of recommendation. The plaintiffs executed letter.8 of resignation, assignments of stock, waivers of certain rights under the stock agreements, and general releases.
On deposition, the plaintiffs stated that they believed that the branch manager’s statement that they would receive nothing if they did not resign meant that they would have to walk home because they had arrived in a company car. One of the plaintiffs also testified that he felt under great pressure to sign the release — he was concerned that he would have difficulty finding work elsewhere and he could not risk losing the security being offered because he had a family to support and a child with a heart ailment.
See n 35.
Baker v Chicago Fire & Burglary Detection, Inc, 489 F2d 953, 957 (CA 7, 1973).
The doctrine of duress has been greatly expanded since its early common-law origin. Despite the general enlargement of the doctrine of duress to encompass economic duress, the law in Michigan may have lagged behind. Some fairly recent Michigan cases cite Hackley v Headley, 45 Mich 569; 8 NW 511 (1881), for the propositions that a claimant who relies on a theory of economic duress must prove a wrongful or unlawful act, that refusal to pay a debt due on demand is not wrongful, and that fear of financial ruin is not sufficient basis for claiming economic duress. See Transcontinental Leasing v Michigan Nat’l Bank of Detroit, 738 F2d 163, 166 (CA 6, 1984) (applying Michigan law), and Apfelblat v Nat’l Bank, 158 Mich App 258; 404 NW2d 725 (1987).
Duress, under the modern formulation, is present when a person, by the unlawful act of another, is induced to make a contract under circumstances that deprive him of free will. Norton v State Hwy Dep’t, 315 Mich 313, 320; 24 NW2d 132 (1946).
*195The absence of any true negotiation between the parties has been regarded as an indication that there was economic duress. See Wise v Midtown Motors, 231 Minn 46; 42 NW2d 404 (1950).
See also Capps v Georgia Pacific Corp, 253 Or 248, 253; 453 P2d 935 (1969); Totem Marine Tug & Barge, Inc v Alaska Pipeline, 584 P2d 15 (Alas, 1978); German v Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corp, 169 F2d 715, 719 (CA 3, 1948); Manno v Mutual Benefit Health & Accident Ass’n, 18 Misc 2d 80, 83; 187 NYS2d 709 (1959); Tallmadge v Robinson, 158 Ohio St 333, 339; 109 NE2d 496 (1952); First Nat’l Bank of Cincinnati v Pepper, 454 F2d 626 (CA 2, 1972); 13 Williston, Contracts (3d ed), § 1603, pp 664-665 and § 1617, p 704; 1A Corbin, Contracts, § 171 (1989 Supp), pp 316-317; Restatement Contracts, 2d, § 176, comment a, p 482.
The disputed consideration, two weeks’ pay, was included in a check that was also for four weeks’ vacation pay Cranbrook conceded owing.
Including the claim for an additional two weeks’ vacation pay as well as the other claims alleged in her complaint filed in this action.
But see text following n 34 and also n 35.
See n 22.
Randall v Port Huron, St C & M C R Co, 215 Mich 413; 184 NW 435 (1921).
Other cases express the theory that where a party seeks to rescind a contract on the ground of fraud, he should tender promptly upon discovery of the fraud, lest he be held to have ratified the contract. See Crippen v Hope, 38 Mich 344 (1878); Burns v Reading Estate, 188 Mich 591, 602; 155 NW 479 (1915).
In Kirl v Zinner, 274 Mich 331, 335; 264 NW2d 391 (1936), one can find still another argument for requiring the return of consideration paid for a release before one who has signed it may maintain an action in disaffirmance of the release:
It is a general and salutary rule that one repudiating or seeking to avoid a compromise settlement or release, and thereby revert to the original right of action, must place the other party in statu quo, otherwise the very fact of payment, in consideration of the compromise or release, will likely operate as a confession of liability.
Restatement Restitution, ch 2, § 65e.
Where, aside from the transaction, the person seeking restitution would be entitled to retain what the other gave as the result of the agreement, the transaction does not enrich him even though he retains such things, nor does it diminish the net assets of the other .... [Id.}
The commentary is illustrated with the following example:
A owes B a sum which is uncertain, but which is not less than $100. By fraudulent representations A induces B to accept Blackacre with $100 in money, in exchange for Whiteacre and a release of the debt. B is entitled to rescission of the transaction upon tender of a deed to Blackacre without a tender of $100, which will be credited upon the original debt. [Id., illustration 8, pp 261-262.]
The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit was faced with a similar circumstance in First Nat’l Bank of Cincinnati v Pepper, n 40 supra, p 635. A lawyer, wrongfully asserting a lien on his clients’ records, demanded that they execute a settlement agreement within which they agreed to pay him legal fees allegedly due him. The court found that the settlement contract was entered into under duress. Addressing the tender rule, the court said:
Where duress of property or goods has been found, it has never been suggested that one adjudicated to have wrongfully withheld another’s property or goods for purposes of procuring forced assent to a contract resulting in an extortionary payment should receive back upon rescission the very property to which he had no right. Such a result would be extraordinary indeed and contrary to logic, reason and equity;- we decline to assume that it would be required here. [Emphasis added.]
Some cases do indeed require tender as a precondition to commencement of an action. Others have recognized that tender is timely if made with the filing of the plaintiff’s reply to a plea of the release. Cf. McGregor v Mills, 280 SW2d 161 (Ky, 1955). Others have allowed tender during the course of the trial. Cf. Keefe v Jefferson, 151 Minn 368; 186 NW 789 (1922). Still others suggest that tender must simply occur within a reasonable time under the circumstances of the case after discovery of the grounds for rescission. Cf. Carey v Levy, n 16 supra, p 464, and McDonald v Zinn Drywall, 134 Mich App 270, 277; 350 NW2d 864 (1984) (where the courts, having found that restitution was required, allowed the plaintiffs an additional thirty days in which to tender or have their suits dismissed).
The requirement of restoration, however, is subject to several exceptions. ... In other cases where on the particular facts it seems equitable to allow rescission without complete or perfect restoration of the consideration, the growing tendency favors the relief, and courts of law adopting the more liberal rule in equity no longer adhere to the strict construction generally upheld in the earlier decisions. [12 Williston, Contracts (3d ed), § 1530, pp 646-648.]
Even in jurisdictions in which the general rule is that a tender or return of the consideration must be made, it has been recognized that the rule is not inflexible and that there are exceptions thereto, and, in the final analysis, the question of whether the rule applies in a given case depends on the facts of such case. [76 CJS, Release, § 37, p 666.]
Occasionally, [a trial court judgment dismissing plaintiff’s case for failure to tender] is reversed because the requirement of restitution is viewed as too burdensome in the particular circumstances .... [1 Palmer, Restitution, § 3.11, p 301.]
*200"If, in the final adjudication, the equities of the parties can be protected, failure to make formal tenders is not fatal to the proceeding.” [Ted Price Construction Co v Cascade Natural Gas Corp, 307 F2d 741, 744 (CA 9, 1962), quoting Cain v Norman, 140 Wash 31; 248 P 71 (1926).]
Courts have excused tender where the plaintiff was in financial difficulty and unable to raise the consideration, Ted Price Construction, supra, pp 743-744, and where the plaintiff signed the release under duress, Perkins Oil Co of Delaware v Fitzgerald, 197 Ark 14, 30-31; 121 SW2d 877 (1938).
In Provident Life & Accident Ins Co v Bertman, 151 F2d 1001, 1005 (CA 6, 1945), the court said:
Appellant also contends that the appellee cannot question the settlement since he did not return the consideration paid to him. An exception to this rule is made in Ohio when the money received by the party was due him in any event and if returned could be recovered.
Similarly see Kentucky Central Life & Accident Ins Co v Burrs, 256 Ky 64, 68; 75 SW2d 744 (1984), Leaper v Vaught, 45 Idaho 587, 593-594; 263 P 386 (1928), Vavrika v Mid-Continent Co, 143 Neb 94, 96-97; 8 NW2d 674 (1943), and 1 CJS, Accord & Satisfaction, § 70, p 568.
Fritz v Marantette, 404 Mich 329, 331; 273 NW2d 425 (1978).
The Court explained that two interpretations of the facts could support a jury determination for the plaintiff: Either the jury could find that the debt was liquidated and undisputed, or the jury could find that the amount paid represented the undisputed portion of the com contract. Id., pp 334-335. By implication, if the check represented a compromise of a good-faith dispute concerning the worth of the com, the negotiation of the check would consummate an accord and satisfaction.
The plaintiff, a bank employee, sued the Public Bank, his employer. The bank responded that the plaintiff’s acceptance of a final paycheck was in full satisfaction of all salary owed the plaintiff. The defendant claimed the check was endorsed "[s]alary and overtime pay through August 14, 1958, plus 2 weeks severance pay in lieu of notice.” Urben, supra, p 283. The plaintiff maintained that at the time he accepted the check, his employer promised to settle for the balance at a later date. The plaintiff also claimed that the check did not contain the endorsement claimed by the defendant. The Court said that the cases cited by the defendant for its contention that the cashing of the check was an accord and satisfaction were all distinguishable because
[ujnlike the instant case, there was no dispute in the cases cited with respect to the facts surrounding the check and its acceptance. [Id., p 284.]
See Fritz, p 334, and Urben, p 284.
Cf. Fritz, supra.
At the time of his discharge from Stroh Brewery Company, fifty-four-year-old John Leahan was the senior corporate vice president of Stroh and president of two Stroh subsidiaries and was receiving an annual compensation in excess of $250,000 plus other benefits. In December, 1978, Leahan was summarily discharged and presented with a letter of resignation which had been prepared by Stroh and its legal counsel. Leahan was not allowed to consult with counsel and was told that he must sign the document or suffer the loss of all compensation and benefits. Leahan signed the letter that included a general release of all claims against Stroh. The letter promised Leahan sizeable benefits. The release stated that if Leahan performed duties requested by Stroh’s president and refrained from employment elsewhere, he would be continued at his base salary of $10,355 per month until March, 1979, that Leahan would serve as consultant to Stroh for $93,195, and that Leahan’s medical coverage and his membership at the Detroit Athletic Club would be continued.
The final paragraph of the letter stated that "[i]n further consideration of the foregoing,” Leahan would discharge Stroh from all claims and actions. Subsequently, Leahan commenced an action against Stroh, alleging age discrimination and breach of employment contract. Citing the release, Stroh moved for partial accelerated judgment. Stroh noted that Leahan had failed to tender the consideration supporting the release. Leahan responded that the contract was void for duress and lack of consideration and that he should be excused from tendering because all the beneñts paid to him were in consideration of his agreement not to compete.
In a concurring opinion, Chief Justice Williams said:
PQf plaintiff had offered proof that only part of the consideration he received was for the release . . . and if plaintiff had tendered back that part attributable to the release, then accelerated judgment should have been denied .... [Leahan, supra, p 114.]
The circuit court, agreeing with Stroh, ordered accelerated judgment on the grounds that Leahan’s failure to tender the consideration received was fatal to his claim. On appeal, Leahan, reiterating his claim that the letter did not provide for consideration, said:
A review of the December 4 agreement itself clearly shows that all the consideration paid to the Plaintiff was for speciñc tasks and obligations which the Plaintiff agreed to perform for the Defendants and not for the release provision. [Emphasis added.]
In reply, Stroh cited the language of the final paragraph of the letter: “[i]n further consideration of the foregoing” to support its contention that the release was supported by all the considerations described in the earlier paragraphs of the letter.
It was against this background that the Court of Appeals, unpublished opinion per curiam, decided May 27, 1982 (Docket No. 56225), said:
*205Plaintiff’s argument that none of the benefits received by him pursuant to the resignation agreement were consideration for the release agreement is directly contrary to the express language of the release agreement within the contract, and without merit.
This Court affirmed the Court of Appeals decision in Leahan in a per curiam opinion. This Court simply repeated the factual observation of the Court of Appeals to the effect that the express language of the release was contrary to the plaintiff’s assertion that the consideration was for tasks and obligations other than the claims in suit:
On this appeal, as in the lower courts, the plaintiff does not challenge the underlying principles of Carey v Levy, 329 Mich 458; 45 NW2d 352 (1951), and similar cases. He contends, rather, that in this case none of the consideration he received as a result of the December 4, 1978, agreement was for the release. Thus, he maintains that there is no amount that he is required to tender in order to challenge the release on the ground of duress.
We agree with the Court of Appeals that the express language of the release agreement is contrary to the plaintiff’s assertion. Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed. [Leahan, supra, p 113. Emphasis added.]
This Court’s brevity in Leahan left the door open for future misunderstanding. In Stefanac, the Court of Appeals tumbled in. Today, the majority follows. The majority quotes the following passage from the Court of Appeals opinion in Stefanac:
"[T]he consequence of the Leahan decision is that if a release recites that consideration was paid and if money was in fact paid, a plaintiff may not argue that the money was not actually consideration, regardless of any evidence to that effect. That seems to be what Leahan holds. If not, we believe it is up to the Supreme Court to say so. . . .” (Emphasis added.) [Ante, p 162.]
66 Am Jur 2d, Release, § 52, pp 730-731.
Similarly see Farnsworth, Contracts, § 7.4, pp 464-465; Simpson, Contracts (2d ed), § 99, pp 199-200; 2 Restatement Contracts, 2d, § 214, p 132.
A and B make an integrated agreement by which A promises to complete an unfinished building according to certain plans and specifications, and B promises to pay A $2,000 for so doing. It may be shown that, by contract made previously with B, A had promised to erect and complete the building for $10,000; that he had not fully completed it though paid the whole price. This evidence is admissible to show that there is no consideration for B’s new promise, since A is promising no more than he is bound by his original contract to perform. [2 Restatement Contracts, 2d, § 214, p 134, illustration 5.]
*207See also Baker v Chicago Fire & Burglary Detection, Inc, n 39 supra.
Jennison v Stone, 33 Mich 99, 101 (1875).
Maltz v Fletcher, 52 Mich 484; 18 NW 228 (1884).
Hagan v Moch, 249 Mich 511, 517; 229 NW 629 (1930) ("[A]nd though the lease recites a consideration, the receipt of which is confessed and acknowledged by the lease, the true consideration, or want of consideration, may be shown by parol.”), Bd of Control of Eastern Michigan University v Burgess, 45 Mich App 183, 185-186; 206 NW2d 256 (1973) ("A written acknowledgment of receipt of consideration merely creates a rebuttable presumption that consideration has, in fact, passed. Neither the parol evidence rule nor the doctrine of estoppel bars the presentation of evidence to contradict any such acknowledgment.”). Similarly see Madison Nat’l Bank v Lipin, 57 Mich App 706, 721; 226 NW2d 834 (1975).
Ante, p 172.
11A Callaghan’s Michigan Pleading & Practice, § 85.22, p 77. See Maurer v Iden, 242 Mich 568, 571; 219 NW 655 (1928) ("[w]hile restoration or a tender of restoration is a prerequisite to recovery in a suit at law on the ground of rescission, it is not a condition precedent in this type of case, where cancellation or rescission is sought by bill in equity”), and Mettetal v Hall, 288 Mich 200, 204; 284 NW 698 (1939) ("Restoration or tender before suit is wholly superfluous as a prerequisite to a suit in equity for rescission or cancellation”).
Similarly see Beedle v Crane, 91 Mich 429, 432; 51 NW 1070 (1892), Jandorf v Patterson, 90 Mich 40; 51 NW 352 (1892), Lightner v Karnatz, 258 Mich 74; 241 NW 841 (1932), Barke v Grand Mobile Homes Sales, 6 Mich App 386; 149 NW2d 236 (1967), Brown v Kelly, 252 Mich 540; 233 NW 408 (1930), Frenzel v Hayes, 242 Mich 631; 219 NW 740 (1928), and Anderson v Nelson, Olson & Nelson, 248 Mich 160; 226 NW 830 (1929).
The different theories of law and equity regarding rescission make it unnecessary for equity to adopt the requirement of law that the consideration received by the defrauded party must be returned or tendered before the action can be begun. In equity, the contract is not terminated by the act of the party but by the decree of the court or by acts under the decree, so that it is only necessary that the decree secure to the defendant the return of the consideration received by the plaintiff. [McClintock, Equity (2d ed), ch 6, § 86, p 231.]
In accord is Chaffee v Raymond, 241 Mich 392, 394-395; 217 NW 22 (1928). ("In an action at law, based on rescission, a tender is a prerequisite. [Citations omitted.] In equity, however, the rule is not so rigid, for there the bill must make profert of return of what has been received and the decree will place the parties in statu quo, as far as possible. We must hold that a bill to obtain rescission and place the parties in statu quo will not, as a matter of law, be dismissed for want of a tender before suit.”)
It was recognized as unjust to permit the plaintiff to get his money back and also to keep the property. This result might ensue if the remedy was awarded even though no tender had been made, because the courts of common law saw no remedy by which to compel a reconveyance by the plaintiff. It was otherwise in equity, since the Chancellor could make his decree of restitution expressly conditional on reconveyance and could also enter and specifically enforce an order for the plaintiff to reconvey. [5 Corbin, Contracts, ch 61, § 1116, p 626.]
It is to be observed that when suit is brought in equity to rescind a transaction no prior tender is necessary, since the decree itself effects the rescission and may be made conditional upon the return of any consideration that has been received. [Havighurst, Problems concerning settlement agreements, 53 NW U L R 283, 311 (1958).]
Cases in other jurisdictions holding that tender is not a prerequisite to an action in equity because the court’s decree may require surrender of benefits received by the rescinding party as a condition to rescission and protect the interests of the other party include: Knappen v Freeman, 47 Minn 491; 50 NW 533 (1891); Early v Martin, 331 Ill App 55; 72 NE2d 562, 565 (1947); Peaslee v Pedco, Inc, 414 A2d 1206, 1209 (Me, 1980); Minneapolis, St P & S S M R Co v Chisholm, 55 Minn 374; 57 NW 63 (1893); Lion Oil Refining Co v Albritton, 21 F2d 280, 281-282 (CA 8, 1927); Reliable Life Ins Co v Bell, 246 SW2d 371 (Mo App, 1952); Bariel v Tuinstra, 45 Wash 2d 513; 276 P2d 569 (1954). For Michigan cases see n 65 supra.
A reason commonly given for the position of the law courts was that they did not enter conditional judgments. In fact, in early history, conditional judgments were entered at law, but the practice seems to have been largely forgotten. In addition, the power of law courts to stay execution until specified conditions have been satisfied is ancient, though sparingly exercised. [1 Palmer, Restitution, § 3.11, pp 295-296.]
The conception developed in the law courts was that the plaintiff rescinded by his own act and then based his case on a rescission that had been perfected before the action was commenced. In order to perfect the rescission he must return or attempt to return an asset received which was capable of return in specie. If he failed to do so, courts regularly held that the action should be dismissed. [Id., p 295.]
The trial court ordered a jury trial of those factual issues separate from the trial of the personal injury action. The plaintiff appealed, claiming that the entire matter should be determined in one trial by one jury.
*211See n 75 for a discussion of whether the disposition by this Court in Style was consistent with the right to trial by jury.
The Court was deeply involved in the task, extending over many years, of revising the court rules and proposing revisions of the judicature act adopted and enacted in 1961. The Court surely was aware that the law/equity distinction was passé. See ante, pp 169-170, n 16.
Style, supra, p 683.
Analogizing to arbitration cases limiting attack to direct action in equity, the Court said: .
That was the method pursued with respect to a settlement and release in Denton v Utley, 350 Mich 332 [86 NW2d 537 (1957)]. In Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co v Norris, 363 Mich 279 [109 NW2d 790 (1961)], the same procedure was followed and in this Court’s opinion Denton v Utley, supra, was cited as controlling. [Id.]
Plaintiff’s brief listed equitable cancellation of a release as one of the three conventional methods by which a party may seek relief from a contract. Nonetheless, it appears that it was the Court that proposed the disposition of remand with leave to amend to seek equitable relief in Style.
See also Williams v Metoyer, 46 Mich App 573, 574; 208 NW2d 653 (1973):
*212At the suggestion of the trial court defendant’s motion was held in abeyance pending a determination by a court of equity as to whether or not defendant should be barred from asserting the defense of release. [Emphasis added.]
The validity of a release has been decided in an equitable action in many cases. Denton v Utley, 350 Mich 332; 86 NW2d 537 (1957), Hall v Strom Construction Co, 368 Mich 253, 261; 118 NW2d 281 (1962), Van Avery v Seiter, 13 Mich App 88, 93; 163 NW2d 643 (1968), Ryan v Alexy, 373 Mich 50; 127 NW2d 845 (1964), Flanagan v Harder, 270 Mich 288; 258 NW 633 (1935), Bartrand v Chesapeake & Ohio R Co, 87 Mich App 466; 274 NW2d 822 (1978), Farwell v Neal, 40 Mich App 351; 198 NW2d 801 (1972), Ware v Geismar, 8 Mich App 627; 155 NW2d 257 (1967), and Chuby v General Motors Corp, 69 Mich App 563; 245 NW2d 134 (1976).
Side by side with the cases where rescission was sought in equity, there is another line of cases in which the action was brought and tried at law. The majority cites several of the cases in this other line of authority. See ante, pp 163-164.
If Stefanac had sought, either in a separate action or in a separate count in this action to cancel the release, the factual issues respecting cancellation would probably have been tried before the court without a jury. See Chamberlain v Eddy, 154 Mich 593, 604; 118 NW 499 (1908); Head v Benjamin Rich Realty Co, 55 Mich App 348, 354; 222 NW2d 237 (1974).
Courts of law and equity were said to have concurrent jurisdiction in cases of fraud where the relief prayed for is especially equitable. Marshall v Ullmann, 335 Mich 66, 72; 55 NW2d 731 (1952).
Equity had jurisdiction where complete protection required the cancellation of written instruments or the rescission of a transaction. Haylor v Grigg-Hanna Lumber & Box Co, 287 Mich 127, 133; 283 NW 1 (1938).
Justice Black, writing for a divided court in Romero v King, 368 Mich 45, 55; 117 NW2d 119 (1962), opined that Style was due for "scrutinous re-examination” in light of the United States Supreme Court decisions in Beacon Theatres v Westover, 359 US 500, 510-511; 79 S Ct 948; 3 L Ed 2d 988 (1959), and Dairy Queen, Inc v Wood, 369 US 469, 472; 82 S Ct 894; 8 L Ed 2d 44 (1962).
Beacon Theatres and Dairy Queen extended the right to jury trial. Those cases held that where legal and equitable issues are intermixed in a single lawsuit, the right to a jury trial controls. Therefore, any issues common to both claims are first tried to a jury before the court decides any purely equitable issues.
Michigan’s adoption of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure together with the acceptance by most states of the view that a defense grounded on fraud and arising in the context of a common-law action is triable to the jury (cf. Bowie v Sorrell, 209 F2d 49 [CA 4, 1953]; Canning v Star Publishing Co, 138 F Supp 843 [D Del, 1956]), led commentators (see Fleming, Right to a jury trial in civil actions, 72 Yale LJ 655, 693 (1963), and 2 Honigman & Hawkins, Michigan Court Rules Annotated [2d ed], p 422) to predict the demise of Style insofar as it contemplated trial of factual issues to the court.
Beacon Theatres and Dairy Queen interpret the right to trial by jury under the federal constitution and are not binding interpretations of the Michigan constitutional right to jury trial. Const 1963, art 1, § 14. In Abner A Wolf, Inc v Walch, 385 Mich 253, 265-266; 188 NW2d 544 (1971), Justice Black wrote:
*214In Michigan, unlike the Federal practice with its involvement of specific acts of Congress and the Seventh Amendment, we determine properly under our Constitution the extent of equity’s jurisdiction, duties and powers. Our practice is governed by the rule set forth in Vaughan v Wayne Circuit Judge, 153 Mich 478, 480 [116 NW 1086] (1908), followed in F M Sibley Lumber Co v Wayne Circuit Judge, 243 Mich 483, 485 [220 NW 146] (1928). It calls up the application of sound judicial discretion with no constitutional right of sequence of trial or jury trial involved; whenever the jurisdiction of equity is unquestioned, as here in Wolf.
It may be that Michigan does not share the federal preference for jury trials voiced in Beacon Theatres and Dairy Queen. In Brown v Kalamazoo Circuit Judge, 75 Mich 274, 284; 42 NW 827 (1889), this Court rejected as unconstitutional a statute that would have extended the right to jury trial to actions traditionally equitable, and said that "[t]he right to have equity controversies dealt with by equitable methods is as sacred as the right of trial by jury.” In Michigan, thus, it may be that there is a constitutional right to a nonjury trial on issues of fact in actions sounding in equity. See note, The right to non-jury trial, 74 Harv LR 1176, 1190 (1961), and 2 Honigman & Hawkins, supra, pp 449-450.
Finally, as was noted in Farwell v Neal, 40 Mich App 351, 353; 198 NW2d 801 (1972), "[t]he Style decision . . . has yet to become the subject of 'scrutinous re-examination’ by our Supreme Court . . . .”
The distinctions between law and equity proceedings shall, as far as practicable, be abolished. [Const 1963, art 6, § 5.]
Honigman, recalling personal participation in the meetings and deliberations of the Joint Committee on Civil Procedure in 1958-1962, explained in the Committee Notes to Rule 12 (the rule providing that "[t]here shall be 1 form of action known as a 'Civil Action’ ”):
These rules are written to abolish, as far as possible, the *216procedural distinctions between law and equity. No attempt has been made to alter the substantive differences between law and equity. However, Professor Pomeroy observed, in the preface to the first edition of Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence (1881), that under such unified procedure "The tendency . . . has plainly and steadily been towards the giving an undue prominence and superiority to purely legal rules, and the ignoring, forgetting, or suppression of equitable notions.” The adoption of these rules is not to be construed as approving of this tendency. On the contrary, Professor Pomeroy’s words are to be taken as a warning so that we may avoid the consequences he describes. Only procedural distinctions are abolished or minimized by this set of rules. [1 Honigman & Hawkins, Michigan Court Rules Annotated (2d ed), ch 1, Rule 12 Committee Notes, p 9. Emphasis added.]
Rule 12 is now embodied in MCR 2.101(A).
See also 1 Moore, Federal Practice, Rules Pamphlet, 2.3[2], pp 12-13 for comments on the analogous federal rule.
Judicial authority to enter conditional judgments was deemed an exception to the general tender requirement for restitution in the Restatement Contracts, 2d, and the Restatement Restitution:
(1) Except as stated in Subsection (2), a party will not be granted restitution unless
(a) he returns or offers to return, conditional on restitution, any interest in property that he has received in exchange in substantially as good condition as when it was received by him, or
(b) the court can assure such return in connection with the relief granted. [3 Restatement Contracts, 2d, § 384, p 244.]
The offer of restitution, essential in the ordinary actions at law, is required only where a conditional decree cannot be rendered; in equity, however, and in proceedings at law in which by statute or otherwise a conditional decree can be rendered, there need be no offer to restore antecedent to the proceedings. The mutual restoration can be accomplished by the decree. [Restatement Restitution, §65, comment d, p 260. Emphasis added.]
See also Wahsner, supra, p 999, n 11. In Wahsner, on facts similar to those in the instant case (see n 36), the plaintiffs brought suit against, their employers for bad-faith termination. The plaintiffs did not return the consideration they received for releasing their claims. The court denied the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, explaining,
This section [§ 384 of the Restatement Contracts, 2d] provides that a party is not required to return benefits received in order to be granted restitution if "the court can assure such return in connection with the relief granted.” § 384(l)(b). Thus, . . . Wahsner and Novin may proceed if they return to defendants an amount equal to the benefits they received.
The power of the courts to make the remedy fit the special case is not extinct. Under modern statutory reorganizations and codes of procedure, that power is not diminished. Instead, under a very flexible procedure, a single court may now have all the powers of all the earlier complex systems of courts and may have available all the remedies of common law and equity, to be used separately or in combination. The decree of the court, therefore, should be moulded to suit the facts of each case as justice may require. [3 Corbin, Contracts, ch 29, § 613, pp 709-710 (discussing legal and equitable remedies for mistake). Emphasis added.]
*219In modern courts the procedure has much more in common with that of the chancellors than with that of the common law judges; and the rules of substantive law, including those determining the remedies that are available and the circumstances under which they will be granted, are the rules of equity wherever they differ from those of the common law, unless they are new legislative enactments. [5 Corbin, Contracts, § 1103, p 552 (discussing the effect of the amalgamation of equity and common law on the remedy of restitution). Emphasis added.]
But see ETC Corp v Title Guarantee & Trust Co, 271 NY 124; 2 NE2d 284 (1936), reh den 271 NY 659; 3 NE2d 471 (1936), where the court held that tender was required in an action at law even though the legislature had abolished the distinction between law and equity and substituted the present uniform procedure.
Professor Corbin commented:
The court was itself as much a court of "equity” as a court of "law”; and it was empowered and in duty bound to award restitution if the facts shown were sufficient to justify such a decree "in equity,” even though not sufficient "at common law.” All that was necessary was for the court to require the defendant to return the money on condition that the certificates were delivered into court and to adjust court cost as might be equitable.
Instead, the long litigation through all the courts was thrown away; and the greatly injured plaintiff, after great expense, was required to start all over again by making a physical tender that would be refused, or by bringing a new suit that he would describe as his "bill in equity” on exactly the same facts as before and ask for a conditional decree such as former chancellor Kent would have granted. [5 Corbin, Contracts, ch 61, § 1103, p 555, n 2.5.]
See n 16.
I would substitute "proceed with” for "bring.”
See n 16.
See Style v Greenslade, supra, discussed in n 70 and accompanying text.
That is, except such amount as the court determines defendant owed the plaintiff before the terms of the release were negotiated, agreed upon, and the release was signed.
I recognize that a person suing for wrongful discharge may claim that his damages arose at the moment he was discharged — in the instant case, when Stefanac was discharged a few hours before the release was signed. It would therefore be necessary to distinguish between damages that accrued after the discharge and amounts that accrued for services rendered before the discharge. Amounts paid in respect to the latter, although recited in the release as consideration, need not be returned if the release is set aside unless the Court (but see n 74) finds that the amount was in fact paid to the plaintiff in respect to an underlying claim. Amounts paid in respect to damages that accrued after the discharge or an underlying claim must, however, be returned if the release is set aside before the defendant should be required to defend on the merits of the underlying controversy.