Sanford v. Abrams

Judge McClellan

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an action of assumpsit, instituted by the plaintiff to recover of the defendant a reasonable compensation for services as agent of defendant in making a contract for defendant for the purchase of land from the Internal Improvement Board of the State of Florida. There was no special contract as to the compensation plaintiff was to receive. The amount of compensation was an unliquidated demand. It was tried by a jury, with pleas of payment and accord and satisfaction interposed by the defendant. We do not propose to consider all of the exceptions taken by defendant at the trial or to consider all of the errors assigned by the appellant.

The second error assigned is that the court erred in giving the charges asked by the plaintiff’s counsel, numbered from one to six inclusive. The first of these charges asked and given was: “ That under the pleadings in the case the issue is one of payment and accord and satisfaction, and that the jury cannot take into consideration any question involving issues not pertinent to that presented by the pleadings.” This charge is too restricted in its character. It assumed that the only issues presented in the case were that of payment and that of accord and satisfaction, and was well calculated to mislead the jury. While the plea of the general issue lnrd been struck put by order of the court, no judgment by default had been entered upon the -several counts in the plaintiff’s declaration. The effect of the pleadings, as they stood npon the trial then being had, was to admit the contract of employment, as alleged by the plaintiff in his declaration,'by the defendant and for the purposes so *191alleged in the plaintiff’s declaration. Yet it remained incumbent upon the plaintiff' to prove what his services were reasonably worth to the defendant under the contract as alleged in the declaration. Upon the question as to what the plaintiff’s services were reasonably worth to the defendant, the defendant had a right to cross-examine plaintiff’s witnesses and to introduce evidence in mitigation of damages as claimed by the plaintiff. Watson vs. Seat & Crawford, 8 Fla., 446.

This charge, in the opinion of this court, withdrew from the jury, or had a tendency to withdraw from the jury, the evidence before them, both on the part of the plaintiff and defendant, bearing upon the measure of the value of plaintiff’s services to the defendant under the contract, as alleged in plaintiff’s declaration. It was the province of the jury, in making up their verdict, to consider all of the evidence before them, pro and con, as to the value of plaintiff’s services to the defendant. The second instruction asked by the plaintiff and granted by the court is amenable to the same objection as that of the first. Tlte third, fourth, fifth and sixth instructions asked by the plaintiff and given by the court will be considered together, as they all bear upon the same subject matter; the plea ot accord and satisfaction, as pleaded by the defendant, and in order to determine whether the charges as given by the court were proper or improper, it is necessary to examine the evidence, as elicited before the jury, both for the plaintiff and the defendant. -

Every plea of accord and satisfaction must be supported by a contract expressed or implied to be effective.

We do not-for a moment consider this case as resting upon the doctrine established in-the English case of Cumber vs. Wane, or as.falling under the many qualifications of the doctrine of that case that have been made both in England *192and America by adjudication. In Cumber vs. Wane the doctrine is established that a partial payment in money by the debtor to his creditor upon a debt, the amount of which is fixed beyond controversy, or where the amount of the debt, may be ascertained by mere mathematical calculation, although paid and received in full, that such payment is no-satisfaction of the whole debt, and suit may be maintained for the balance of the original debt.

The broad distinction of ibis case now before this court from Cumber vs. Wane is that no amount had been fixed, but the claim of the plaintiff stood as an unliquidated claim or demand to be ascertained by evidence, and that could only be arrived at by evidence and not by mathematical calculation. That $2,000 was paid by the defendant to plaintiff before suit is not denied by the plaintiff. The evidence bearing upon the payment of the $2,000 by defendant to plaintiff is mostly in. writing, either by letter or by telegram, and their contents are not denied or questioned by either party to the transaction, but the disagreement grows out of the construction to be put upon tiie letters and telegrams that passed between the persons who were engaged in the negotiation of the settlement of the plaintiff’s claim or demand against the defendant. Mr. Greenleaf, in his excellent Treatise on Evidence, vol. 2, m. p. 28, top page 25, says, “ the facts in respect to the arrangement or accord between the parties being ascertained their effect is purely a question of law for the court and is not to be submitted to the jury.” Applying this law to the charges of the court,, we think the court erred in all of the charges asked by plaintiff and given by the court upon this subject.

The importance of this case to both parties requires that this court should pass upon the written evidence in this case-bearing upon the negotiation for a settlement of the controversy or claim of plaintiff against defendant. This case is-*193distinguished from most cases of a like character that comes before the court. In most cases the proposition to compromise, settle or accord and satisfy a debt, demand or claim comes from the debtor to the creditor. In this case the proposition in the first instance comes from the creditor, and we think has a bearing upon what took place between the parties to the negotiation for a settlement. The pecuniary wants of the plaintiff at the time, and his silence and inaction after the receipt of the $2,000, from April 17, 1882, to December, 1882, full eight months, must b.e considered in connection with the act of the plaintiff at 'the time of the receipt of the $2,000, to determine his intention and purpose at the time of the receipt thereof. The intention of the parties, as in all contracts, is to govern in forming a conclusion as to what was the effect of the negotiation. This intention must be arrived at by the language used in the negotiation, as evidenced by letters and telegrams, and as read by the surrounding circumstances immediately before and up to the date of the payment and receipt of the $2,000 that is claimed by the defendant to have been a full accord and satisfaction of plaintiff’s demand, sued for in this action. Was the $2,000 in cash deposited by the defendant’s agent in Ambler, Marvin & Stockton’s bank and received by the plaintiff received in satisfaction of the claim or demand sued for in this action ? The evidence in the case shows that previous to April 8th, 1882, the plaintiff had proposed to Messrs. Daniel and Foster, who were representing the defendant, Sanford, that the plaintiff would accept from the defendant $2,000 and a receipt for a lumber bill Sanford held against him and a deed for a lot purchased of Sanford upon which there was abalance due from plaintiff. On the 8th of April, 1882, the plaintiff wrote Colonel J. J. Daniel repeating this proposition. On the 9th of April, 1882, the *194plaintiff telegraphed E. E. Foster, to Quincy, Fla. : “lias Sanford accepted my proposition ? Answer at once.” On April 11th, 1882, Fleming & Daniel wrote the plaintiff that his letter of April 8th was received this morning. “We telegraphed General Sanford your proposition, and he has answered authorizing ns to settle for $2,000, and asked for information as to lot and lumber. We have written Mr. In-graham to wire Sanford the amount due by you on lot and lumber. Give us a little more time. We think we can arrange the matter satisfactorily.” On April 11th, 1882, E. K. Foster, the intermediator between the parties, telegraphed the plaintiff, to Lake Eustis, Florida : “ Sanford agreed to $2,000. Cabled for amount of lot and lumber bill. We answered, have had no reply. How late can we have to wait answer? I was absent when you dispatched yesterday.” On April 13th the plaintiff telegraphed E. E. Foster, Tallahassee, from Pendryville, Florida: “ Deposit $2,000 with Ambler by Friday, and all right.” On April 14th, 1882, E. E. Foster telegraphed the plaintiff from Tallahassee, Florida, to Lake Eustis, Florida: “ Telegram received by mail; wire down ; have telegraphed Daniel your dispatch.” On April 17th, 1882, the plaintiff wrote Messrs. Fleming & Daniel that he had received on Saturday a telegram from E. E. Foster stating that Mr. Sanford had declined to accept his proposition, and that he would commence suit at once. On April 19th, 1882, the plaintiff wrote Messrs. Fleming & Daniel: “Tavares, Florida, April 19th, 1882.— Messrs. Fleming & Daniel, Geuts: When I wrote yon from Orlando on Monday I was not aware that the Sanford matter had been settled. I arrived here this morning and found telegram from Ambler announcing that the $2,000 had been paid into his bank. Of course that dispenses with my last letter to you. Accept my thanks for your kindness in this business.” On the 31st of March, 1882, the plaintiff wrote *195Colonel Daniel: “ If Mr. Sanford agrees to ray last proposition please deposit the money in Ambler, Marvin & Stockton’s bank to the credit of my firm.” The money, $2,000, was deposited in Ambler, Marvin & Stockton’s bank, as requested tby plaintiff’s dispatch of April 13th, 1882, and was drawn out by the plaintiff on or before April 19th, 1882, and has never been returned or offered. It is contended by the counsel for the plaintiff, the appellee in this court, that the receipt and acceptance of the $2,000 deposited in Ambler’s bank by the defendant’s attorney was not received by him in satisfaction of his demand sued for; but he received it, expecting more, to wit: the lumber account and the balance due on the lot purchased from the appellant. If this position was tenable, then the plaintiff’s right to sue would rest upon a new contract, and his remedy would be on that and not upon the original cause of action.

The negotiation for a settlement was carried on in the utmost frankness by both parties, the plaintiff proposing a settlement on the basis of $2,000, receipt of a lumber account and balance due on lot, the whole amounting to, as appears from the evidence, $2,600, or $2,700. To this proposition the plaintiff is informed “ that Sanford agrees to $2,000.” Called for amount of lot and lumber bill. lie is further informed that Sanford has been answered, but have had no reply, and in the form of an interrogatory the plaintiff is asked: “ How late can we have t'o wait answer ?” To this the plaintiff replies: “ Deposit $2,000 with Ambler by Friday and all right.” On April 19th, 1882, he writes Messrs. Fleming & Daniel that when he wrote them from Orlando on Monday he was not aware that the Sanford matter had been “ settled.” What did plaintiff mean when he said deposit two thousand dollars in Ambler’s bank, “ and all right ?” Did lie mean that he considered the payment of the $2,000 offered by Sanford as a settlement of *196his claim against Sanford? If there was wanting anything to make it more clear what he meant, it is found in the plaintiff’s letter of April 19,1882, where he says he was not aware on the 17th of April, when he wrote Fleming & Daniel, “ that the Sanford matter had been settled." No allusion is made in the slightest degree to any expectation of the payment of anything more. Iiis need of money to carry on his enterprises ; his long sil’enee after the receipt of the $2,000, all go to bar his right to exact of the defendant anything more. .Besides, the whole purpose and object of the parties to this negotiation was to settle the whole claim by compromise, and not to procure or to make a payment upon the plaintiff’s demand for his services to defendant.

Mr. Greenleaf, in his work on Evidence, 2d vol., p. 537, says: “ If the claim be not liquidated, but open to a dispute, a receipt in full could be pleaded as an accord and satisfaction, on the ground that a fair compromise and settlement of the claim should be upheld,” and refers by note to a number of English and American cases to support this position. We have been unable to verify the cases referred to, except a few of them, which we think support the text. In the case of Stockton vs. Frye, 4 Gill, 408, it is laid down that a party aggrieved may determine the sufficiency or insufficiency of the satisfaction made and accepted by him, and in actions for general and unliquidated 'damages the payment and acceptance of a sum of money as a satisfaction, is a good bar. The case of Palmerton vs. Huxford, 4 Denio, 166, is to the same effect. The case of McDaniel vs. Lapham, 21 Vermont, 222, we think is very much in point. It is there determined that when a party makes an offer of a certain sum to settle aclaim, when the sum in controversy is open and unliquidated, and attaches to his offer the condition that the same, if taken at all, must be received in full, or in satisfaction of the claim in dispute, and the other *197party receives the money, he takes it subject to the conditions attached to it, and it will operate as an accord and satisfaction, even though the party at the time of receiving the money declares that he will not receive it in that manner, but only in part satisfaction of his debt as far as it will extend. In the case before the court, the parties were negotiating for a compromise and settlement in full of plaintiff’s unliquidated claim or demand against defendant. The defendant offered $2,000. This was received by the plaintiff, he saying deposit it in Ambler’s bank, and all right. The receipt and acceptance of the $2,000 by plainiff is only referable to the object and purpose of the negotiation that was to compromise and settle the plaintiff’s claim against defendant in full. The negotiation was not for a part payment of the claim, but for full settlement.

The court should, upon the evidence before it, have determined whether what passed between the parties was an accord and satisfaction, and not, by the charges given, have submitted to the jury as a fact tobe found from the evidence whether there was an accord and satisfaction. There being no dispute as to the facts before the court on this subject, it was a question of law for the court to determine, and not of fact for the jury, and for these reasons there was error in the charges asked and given by the court.

And for the same reason the court should have granted a new trial.

"We do not consider it necessary to determine the other errors assigned growing out of the pleadings.

Judgment reversed and new trial granted.