Wildes v. Fessenden
Wildes v. Fessenden
Opinion of the Court
This cause has been very ably and elaborately argued by the counsel on both sides, as well upon the construction of the letters of the parties, as .ipon the authorities supposed to bear upon the case.
In has been suggested by the plaintiffs’ counsel, that the last clause in the letter of Fessenden, Thompson & Co. of February 8th, namely, “the bills drawn by W. & J. Thomas & Co. for £ 1350 account John Skinner and ourselves, you will place to our debit,” simply means, “you will charge them to the account of John Skinner and Fessenden, Thompson & Co.”; and that there was no intention on the part of Fessenden, Thompson & Co., by that phrase, to vary the existing relations of the parties with each other ; or, if there was, that the intention was so ambiguously and equivocally expressed, that the plaintiffs would easily misunderstand it. But in relation to the first supposition, it may be replied, that the letters of the plaintiffs of November 1836, acknowledging the acceptance of the bills, and which were directed as well to Skinner as to Fessenden, Thompson & Co., informed them to whose account they would be placed; and as to the other intimation, that it was so ambiguously or equivocally expressed that the plaintiffs would misunderstand it, it may be said, that the whole correspondence is loose, and implies very little of art in its construction. We think it is clear, that the request of Fessenden, Thompson & Co. was, that the bills should be placed to their
This construction, if it needed further support, is strengthened by the conduct of Fessenden, Thompson & Co. at home ; by the desire of Skinner, repeated several times to them, to have this account closed, and their agreeing with him so to do ; and by their showing the letter of February 8th to him, and stating to him that they had remitted to the plaintiffs £ 1000 for their account. What Fessenden, Thompson & Co.’s expectations were, in respect to the plaintiffs agreeing to their request, is another thing, and is unimportant as it regards the construction of their letter.
The next question of importance is, did the plaintiffs agree to this request ? This rests on the construction of the first clause in their letter of March 18th 1837 : “ We have re-
ceived your favor of the 8th inst., -and noted its contents.” These words, the defendants contend, are an agreement on the part of the plaintiffs to charge the bills in question to Fessenden, Thompson & Co., and to discharge Skinner. The construction given to the words, by the defendants’ counsel, is this : “We notice your request to charge the bills drawn on us by W. & J. Thomas & Co. to your sole account, and to discharge Mr. Skinner. You have remitted us, by your letter, £ 1000, and promise further remittances from sources pointed out by you. We are willing, therefore, to agree to your proposal, and so you may settle with Mr. Skinner as you please, and we will hold you accountable for the bills.” And the counsel insist that this is the obvious meaning of the words, and that Fessenden, Thompson & Co. might rightfully give that meaning to them. This construction the counsel attempt to fortify by the fact, that afterwards the plaintiffs did not address any letters to Skinner and Fessenden, Thompson & Co., and that they did not write at all on the subject, till after the lapse of four and a half months. The plaintiffs’ counsel, on the other hand, contends that these words are merely words of course, used by mer
We are not aware that the phrase noted its contents, or note its contents, have ever been the subject of judicial decision, so as to have acquired a meaning in the minds of the community, like the clauses in a policy of insurance, or the language in respect to bills of exchange. As the commerce of the world has extended, and the correspondence of merchants has been more and more enlarged and diversified, they have felt the necessity of abbreviating their communications, till at length they have almost a technical vocabulary of their own, not always very significant to the uninitiated, but yet sufficiently expressive of their general meaning. The terms note or noted its contents are used apparently in the first place as an acknowledgment of having perused the letter of their correspondent, and that the communications of the letter are understood and considered. The words are in their nature distributive, and are to be applied to the several subjects of the letter about to be answered. And in relation to the duties growing out of these several subjects, they may, and often do, imply obligations ; but we do not think they necessarily, ex proprio vigore, import a promise which may be enforced at law. And it may perhaps be generally said, that where these words imply obligations, such obligations would exist by force of the law merchant, without the use of the words. For example; a letter is sent which encloses a bill of exchange for acceptance, a bill of lading of goods shipped to the port of the correspondent, and an order for insurance ; and the party receiving the letter acknowledges it, and says he notes the contents, and says nothing further, but merely that the bill of exchange and the bill of lading were enclosed. He is bound to present the bill of exchange for acceptance, and receive the goods on the bill of lading, and to effect the insurance ; but these duties would have resulted without the use of the phrase •‘note the contents,” and could be enforced by showing that
The plaintiffs rely on the position, that a simple agreement, on the part of a creditor, to discharge one of a number of partners, or one of a number of joint creditors, is a mere nudum pactum, and cannot avail the party pleading it; that some new security must be given, or there must be such a course of dealings between the parties, as will afford legal evidence, to be submitted to a jury, that the claim has been discharged.
In the case of Lodge v. Dicas & Rondeau, 3 Barn. & Ald. 611, the two defendants were in partnership at the time the debt to the plaintiffs was contracted ; they subsequently dissolved, and it was agreed that Rondeau should receive the partnership debts and discharge the plaintiffs’ demands. Rondeau wrote to the plaintiffs, “ we have been arranging our accounts, and Mr. Dicas and myself have agreed that I should take the amount of your account on myself, which I will be responsible for to you.” Upon receiving this letter, the plaintiffs expressly agreed to exonerate Dicas from all liability as to the partnership account, and stated that they should charge it to Rondeau’s private account; he having continued to employ them as his agents. Abbott, C. J. in delivering the opinion of the court, says, “ even if it had been distinctly proved in this case, that the plaintiffs were acquainted with the fact that Rondeau, by virtue of the arrangement between him and the defendant, Dicas, was to receive the debts due to the partnership and take upon himself the payment of this demand, I should still have had great doubts whether the plaintiffs had released Dicas; but in the absence of that proof, I am clearly of opinion that there is no defence to the present action.” Referring to Rondeau’s letter, he says, “ that, however, was clearly not sufficient to show them the nature and terms of such arrangement; and unless that knowledge be brought home to them, there can be no doubt whatever in the present case.” David v. Ellice, 5 Barn. & Cies. 196, came before the same court, and the nois of tha.
In Gough v. Davies, 4 Price, 200, the note is thus : “A person depositing money with bankers, and taking their accountable receipts, does not, by continuing to leave his money in the bank after a dissolution of the original firm, and the constitution of a new one which consists of some of the members of the old bank and of other persons, discharge the former partners who have gone out, although he receives interest regularly from the new firm, gives them no notice, and continues to transact business with them in the common course, and that for a period of four years, and until they become insolvent.” In that case, the court say, “ there is therefore no evidence to show that Gough adopted the new firm. What more has he done than to say, ‘ I am perfectly willing to take your security for the new debt, but I do not release the old firm, I keep their accountable receipts,’ ” &c. If the new partnership had given him notice to produce the old receipts, he would have been nonsuited.
In the case of Smith v. Rogers, 17 Johns. 340, the defendants were indebted to the plaintiffs for goods sold, and shortly after they dissolved partnership, and a few days after, (April 22d,) Beinent, one of the defendants, wrote to the plaintiffs say
These cases, if admitted as fully declaring the law, seem decisive of the case at bar. But the defendants in reply contend that the cases of Lodge v. Dicas Rondeau, and David v. Ellice, are much shaken by the opinion of the court in the case of Thompson v. Percival, 5 Barn. & Adolph. 925, upon which case the defendants rely. That case was as follows : James & Charles Pera val, the defendants, had been partners, and the
That case of Thompson v. Percival, differs from the case at bar in this essential feature — that a new negotiable security was taken of one of the parties, and after its dishonor, time was given him ; and in that it resembles the cases of Evans v. Drummond, 4 Esp. R. 89, and Reed v. White, 5 Esp. R. 122, and the Massachusetts cases where, prima, facie, a negotiable note is held to be payment.
The defendants have also cited the case of Hart v. Alexander, 2 Mees. & Welsb. 484, as not only shaking the authority of Lodge v. Dicas and David v. Ellice, but as proving that a discharge may be inferred by the course of trade, where no separate security has been given. But in that case, the retired partner had been withdrawn for ten years before the failure of the other partners, who had also taken in others-; and it was submitted to the jury to decide whether, with the knowledge of the fact that the defendant had retired from the partnership, and the plaintiff’s consenting to take the remaining partners as his debtors and making new contracts with them, he did not dis
It is certain that these authorities affect the cases of Lodge v. Dicas and David v. Ellice, on which the plaintiffs rely. But the difficulty on the part of the defendant, Skinner, is, to bring his facts within the range of the cases cited for him. That of Thompson v. Percival proceeds on the ground of an accord and satisfaction ; and that of Hart v. Alexander on a long course of dealing and new contracts, not only with the other, but also with the new partners, knowing the defendant had retired ; while in the case before us, no accord and satisfaction took place, and there were no continued dealings between these parties.
The defendants have also referred us to the cases of Sheehy v. Mandeville, 6 Cranch, 264, and Harris v. Lindsay, 4 Wash. C. C. 271; in the latter of which the court say that partners cannot, by any agreement between them, affect the rights of their creditors ; but that where the creditor, with a full knowledge of such agreement, entered into a totally new contract with the paying partner, entirely changing the nature of the partnership debt and making it a different debt from that which the retiring partner was bound to pay, and subjecting him to a different kind of responsibility, the defendant Lindsay was discharged and it amounted to an acceptance of the other partner, Tomlinson, as the debtor; the propriety of which decision we do not draw into question.
And it is to be observed that neither of the cases, which are cited by the defendants, dispenses with a consideration. On the contraiy, they proceed on the ground of a consideration satisfactory to the party receiving it, whether the same be of greater or less value ; and in the cases of substitution, they are either of a new and more available security, or of a new debtor in place of the old. But in the present case, there was neither the substitution of a new debtor nor of other and different security.
Without taking further time in the examination of the various
The counsel of Skinner, in support of his defence, assume two positions. First, that there was an appropriation of remittances towards the payment of this debt. Second, that the silence of the plaintiffs, from the time of their writing in March, to August, is sufficient evidence of their acquiescence in the proposed discharge of Skinner.
The argument that there was an appropriation, in part payment of the bills in question, rests principally, if not wholly, upon the fact that Lombard & Whitmore paid their share of the interest in said bills, immediately prior to the remittance of the bill for £ 1000 ; and that Fessenden, Thompson & Co. informed Skinner that they had remitted it for that account, and also informed the plaintiffs’ agent, Austin, that they were remitting to meet those bills. This may have been the intention of Fessenden, Thompson & Co. But the question is not merely what was their intention, or their declarations on this side of the water; but whether they communicated such intention to the plaintiffs. If they did, it must be found in the letter of February 8th. I am at a loss to understand how, from that letter, the bill of £ 1000 could be considered by the plaintiffs as a special appropriation to pay, as far as it would go, the bills of £1350. The remittances were to be passed to the credit of Fessenden, Thompson & Co. generally ; and the plaintiffs were requested to place the bills to their debit. An appropriation can only be made where there are different accounts between the parties, or where the party is indebted on account, and on a bond or note ; and to make a payment an appropria tion, there must be a specific direction to which account, or to which bond or note, to apply it. Otherwise, the payment is on account generally, and the right of appropriation rests with the creditors ; and if not exercised, it is usually applied to the ex-tinguishment of that portion of the account which is prior in time. Now Fessenden, Thompson & Co. did not direct this £ 1000 to be applied to the extinguishment of the £1350, as far as it would go. If it had been so directed, the language
The further position of the defendants is, that the silence of the plaintiffs, from the time of their writing, in March, to tins middle of the following August, is sufficient evidence of their acquiescence in the proposed discharge of Skinner, and is in fact a ratification of the request to transfer the account, upon which Fessenden, Thompson & Co. and Skinner might safely act: As where a merchant forwards to his correspondent his account balanced, and no acknowledgment is made respecting it, lapse of time will be evidence to bind the party receiving it, and to hold him accountable for the balance : And so Skinner, presuming on such acquiescence, might have settled his share of the bills with Fessenden,- Thompson & Co., with perfect safety to himself. But in the present case, the lapse of time is not in itself sufficient to bind the party ; for on the 1st of June the plaintiffs suspended payment and went into liquidation. Besides ; the silence on the other side is not to be overlooked. On the 9th of February, the plaintiffs stated their account with Messrs. John Skinner & Fessenden, Thompson & Co. as of December 31, 1836, in which the bills are charged to them with the commission for accepting and paying, and they are credited with a rebate of interest, as the bills were not payable till some time in January; and this account was regularly forwarded. Yet neither Skinner, nor Fessenden, Thompson & Co. took any notice of it; they neither acknowledged it, nor renewed the request to carry the amount to the account of Fessenden, Thompson & Co., nor intimated that the £ 1000 was remitted
Without extending these observations further, it may be remarked upon the facts before us, that the plaintiffs have obtained no advantage by the proposal of Fessenden, Thompson & Co. to place the bill to their credit; nor does it appear that Fessenden, Thompson & Co. charged Skinner, on their books, with his proportion of the bills, at the time they remitted £ 1000 ; nor that Skinner gave them any credit for a remittance, on his account; nor that any change whatever took place in their accounts, in consequence of the letters being shown to him. Indeed it does not appear that the cargo, which it is said was purchased with the bills, went into the hands of Fessenden, Thompson & Co. exclusively, and that Skinner did not receive his full share of it. But be that as it may, it does not affect this opinion. The facts do not prove that Skinner has sustained any loss in consequence of the letter written to the plaintiffs of the 8th of February ; and clearly not after the plaintiffs’ answer was received; till which time the plaintiffs could not be affected by any negotiations of Skinner & Fessenden, Thompson & Co. as between themselves, because prior to the time of receiving that letter, Fessenden, Thompson & Co. had failed, and the relations of the parties were fixed by that event. Without therefore relying with too much confidence on the construction given to the letter of March 18th, it appears to us that no appropriation was in fact made by Fessenden, Thompson & Co. of the bill of £1000, or of any other specific amount, towards the payment of the bills of £ 1350 ; that the payments actually made by Fessenden, Thompson & Co. must, agreeably to the law merchant, be applied to the extinguishment of prior debts ; that no change of credit took place on the books of either party ; that no new credit was given; that no bill of exchange was drawn on Fessenden, Thompson & Co. by the plaintiffs, as evidence of an accord and satisfaction of the old debit; and that no consideration was in fact paid or promised for the proposed
Reference
- Full Case Name
- George Wildes & others v. Charles B. Fessenden & others
- Status
- Published