Chapman v. Adams

Decision Date28 February 1920
PartiesL. WORTH CHAPMAN, Respondent, v. W. B. ADAMS and J. OWEN ADAMS, Appellants
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals

Appeal from Butler County Circuit Court.--Hon. Almon Ing, Judge.

AFFIRMED.

Action affirmed.

Lew R Thomason for appellants.

J. C Sheppard for respondent.

STURGIS P. J. Farrington and Bradley, JJ., concur.

OPINION

STURGIS, P.J.

The controversy in this case is as to whether defendants shall pay all that is due on a certain tax bill owned by plaintiff or only the face value thereof exclusive of interest. The tax bill was issued to a contractor for street improvement and is a lien on defendants' property fronting on the improved street. The only defense made by defendants is that a valid and binding agreement was made by them with plaintiff by which he agreed to accept the face value in full payment, thereby remitting the interest. The defendants offered to pay and tendered in court this amount. The trial resulted in a judgment for the amount tendered. The court granted a new trial and defendants appeal.

The facts testified to show that plaintiff brought suit against defendants on some other tax bills at a previous term of court. A compromise and settlement or accord and satisfaction was made in reference thereto by which defendants paid and plaintiff accepted the face value of the tax bills then in suit in full payment and satisfaction of same and that suit was dismissed. The present tax bill had not been sued on and about a month later plaintiff suggested to defendants that they settle the present tax bill on the same terms. Still later plaintiff wrote defendants a letter in which he said he was willing to settle this tax bill on the same basis as the others were, "with the interest off," and added: "If agreeable, please send check. . . . Please let me hear by return mail." Defendants say that shortly after this they went to plaintiff's bank for the purpose of paying off this tax bill, but plaintiff was busy and told them to come in again; that at another time they went there to pay and plaintiff said that he did not then have the tax bill at the bank, having put it up as collateral at another bank. According to defendants' evidence they made three or four efforts to pay off the tax bill on the basis of the offered compromise but they do not claim to have tendered any money and at none of these times did the plaintiff renew his offer or express his continued willingness to accept the face value in full payment. Plaintiff's evidence is that after making the offer he heard nothing from defendants and after some time he wrote them a letter withdrawing the offer of compromise; that defendants did not make any offer to pay or express any definite acceptance till after he had withdrawn the offer. It is conceded that no tender was made till after the suit was brought.

On these facts we think the plaintiff is entitled to recover all that is due. The defendants' theory is that there was a compromise settlement by which another agreement was substituted in satisfaction of the original demand; that where a creditor makes a compromise of his claim with his debtor by which the debtor agrees to do certain things in discharge of the debt, which he fails to do, the creditor cannot recover on the original debt but must recover, if at all, on the compromise agreement. Carried to its legitimate conclusion this defense might cut deeper than defendants' claim; for plaintiff has not sued on the compromise agreement but on the original demand and to recover on the compromise agreement is to sue on one cause of action and to recover on another. This point, however, is not raised by learned counsel for defendants.

The plaintiff's position is, that at most the defense is in the nature of a plea of accord and satisfaction, but that nothing is shown except an accord without satisfaction and that such is no defense. This we think is correct.

The courts and text writers have made distinctions between compromise and settlement and accord and satisfaction. The distinctions are somewhat shadowy and need not be discussed here. [See, however, 12 C. J. 315.] If this be called a compromise there was no sufficient settlement and if it be called an accord there was no sufficient satisfaction to make the new agreement a merger of the old demand and a bar to an action thereon. There is nothing more shown here than an offer by plaintiff to accept a less sum than was due on this tax bill and a withdrawal of that offer before any payment was made thereon. An accord is said to be an agreement whereby one party undertakes to give or perform and the other to accept in satisfaction of a claim something other than or different from what he is or considers himself entitled to. A satisfaction is the execution or carrying into effect such agreement. [1 C. J. 523; Dry Goods Co. v. Goss, 65 Mo.App. 55, 58.] Under this definition it may be said there was an accord between the parties but there was no satisfaction. The rule is that in order to bar an action on the original demand there must be an accord and satisfaction, that is an execution or carrying out of the accord. [1 R. C. L., sec. 35, p. 199.] "The general rule seems to be that readiness to perform and tender of performance by the debtor will not bar an action on the claim, as a party to the accord may accept performance of the accord or not as he desires. And...

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