Hitchcock v. Hassler
Hitchcock v. Hassler
Opinion of the Court
This action was brought by the son and administrator of the late P. W. Hitchcock on a note found among the .personal effects of the deceased against Fred S. Plassler. The defendant interposed a plea of payment. A trial was had to a jury, and verdict and judgment for the defendant, and the plaintiff brings the cause to this court on error. Plaintiff in error makes five substantial points, besides several formal ones:
“1. Said court erred in overruling the motion of plaintiff in error for a new trial.
“2. Said court erred in its charge to the jury on the trial of said cause.
“3. Said court erred in refusing to give the charges asked for by plaintiff in error.
“4. The facts set forth in the answer are not sufficient defense in law to the. said action of said plaintiff in error.
“5. Said court erred in the admission of evidence offered by said defendant in error, to which said plaintiff in error objected.”
The instructions prayed by the plaintiff, but refused by
“á. The burden of proof of showing payment is upon the defendant, and he must make it out by the preponderance of testimony and to the satisfaction of the jury.
“5. If the jury believe there is no testimony showing a final settlement between Hitchcock and Hassler, and that at the date of Hitchcock’s death no balance had been struck between them, then there is no accord and satisfaction, and the plaintiff must recover.”
The court had already on its own motion given the substance of the first of the above instructions (No. 4), and having once given it it was not error to refuse to give it again, although had it not have already been given in substance, its refusal would have been error.
The second of the above instructions (No. 3) fairly presents the point upon which this case turns. It appears from the bill of exceptions that in the summer and fall of 1876 Senator Hitchcock, whose term of office would expire on the fourth of March following, was a candidate for re-election and took a deep interest in the canvass then pending throughout the state for th.e election of the members to compose the two houses of the legislature. So much, indeed, belongs to the public political history of the state. And there was evidence tending to prove that, recognizing the county of Pawnee as the center of an important political section of the state, the senator desired to secure to his personal and party friends the control of one of the established newspapers of that county. For this purpose he placed a sum of money in the hands of the defendant, a business man of that county and a well known political and personal friend of the senator, and as a memorandum took his promissory note for the said money, payable on' or before the first day of April next thereafter with interest. That upon the decease of Senator Hitchcock in the month of July, 1881, the said note was found
That of Good v. Cheesman, 2 Barn, and Ad., 328, came before the court of King’s bench in 1831, upon the follow-
'Uie case of Griffith v. Owen, 13 M. & W., 58, came before the court of exchequer in 1844. It was an action of assumpsit for a breach of contract for not delivering to the plaintiff certain promissory notes, etc. Plea that after
In the case of Babcock v. Hawkins, 23 Vt. R., 561, the supreme court of Vermont, per Judge Redfield, say: “ There is perhaps no subject connected with the law upon which there has been more discussion than that of accord and satisfaction, or upon which there is more want of agreement. But we think it must be regarded as fully settled, that an agreement upon sufficient consideration fully executed, so as to have operated in the minds of the parties as a full satisfaction and settlement, whether the new contract be ever paid or not, and that the party is bound to sue upon the new contract, if such were the agreement of the parties. This is certainly the common understanding of the matter.
Applying the doctrine of the above cases to the case at bar, and I think it fairly deducible that if the said sum of money was advanced by Senator Hitchcock for the' purpose of buying the whole or part of a certain newspaper establishment, that negotiations for such purchase failed, and thereupon the senator directed that the money be used for legitimate campaign purposes by the defendant for his, the senator’s, benefit, that neither Senator Hitchcock or his personal representatives could maintain a suit on the said note thereafter. And I think that there was evidence before the jury not only tending to prove such facts, but which sustains their finding to that effect. I quote from the deposition of A. J. Wright, taken and read on the part of the defendant: “I think in the spring of 1877 * * * Senator Hitchcock came in, and after the usual greetings, he asked me if I had seen Fred Hassler lately. I told him I had not. The senator said that he would like to have me tell Mr. Hassler, if I saw him, that he would like to have him come- up and see him. He then went on to state that he had let Mr. Hassler have, I think, five hundred and fifty dollars in money to aid him in buying an interest in the Pawnee Republican, but that the project had failed, and he had told Fred to go on and use that money in his, Hitchcock’s, interest, and that since the legislature had adjourned he had not seen Fred, and that he would like to have Hassler come up and settle the matter up.” But the strongest testimony, and that which, taken in connection with the above, makes a strong case for the defendant, is that furnished by the letter of the 12 Sept., 1879, from the defendant to Senator Hitchcock, put- in evidence by the plaintiff.
“Pawnee City, Neb., Sept. 12, 1879. .
“Dear Sib—Yours of recent date is to hand, and contents carefully noted. Judging from the tone of yours I
“Now as to the ‘good, fair, frank deal,’ what do you think? For your interest I expended $150 of my own funds, aside from time and labor, and leave it to your candid judgment to estimate balances. Instead of this deficiency I could have made considerable by uniting with your enemies here, but preferred not to take issue with those I presumed my friends at the time.
“ On several different times I called to see you privately in Omaha concerning this matter, believing there would be a satisfactory solution of the whole transaction, but at no time found you at home. So I hope you will not believe that I have endeavored to avoid meeting the matter fairly and squarely.
“ Truly,
“Fjred S. Hassler.”
Senator Hitchcock received this letter from the defendant nearly two years before his-death, and left it among his papers. It was introduced in this case as evidence that
It is deemed unnecessary to discuss the other propositions made by counsel in the brief, as in addition to the considerations expressed above, a thorough consideration of the whole case leads us to the conclusion that justice has been done in the case, and that the judgment of the district court must be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- G. M. Hitchcock, administrator, in error v. Fred S. Hassler, in error
- Status
- Published