Richardson v. Nesbit
Richardson v. Nesbit
Opinion of the Court
This is a suit by appellee on a promissory note executed by Asher Richardson, payable to appellee, against Mary I. Richardson, executrix, and Littleton V. Richardson, executor, of the estate of Asher Richardson, deceased, it being alleged that the note had been duly executed on March 6, 1912, by Asher Richardson for the sum of $2,700, due 60 days after date, there being no direct allegation in the petition of the death of said Richardson; that on February 28, 1916, the claim, evidenced by the note and verified, was presented to appellants for allowance or rejection, and appellants tools no action, but refused so to do. Appellants pleaded, in answer, a certain instrument made by appellee and a number of others, by which they conveyed a number of tracts of land and other property to appellants in consideration of the sum of $87,500, and in said instrument the following statement and agreement was inserted:
“And we also hereby transfer, assign, and release to Mary I. Richardson and Littleton Y. Richardson, as independent executors of the estate of Asher Richardson, deceased, all claims or demands of every kind or character for property, debt, or damages which we now have or which may hereafter accrue to us, whether known or unknown to us against the estate of Asher Richardson, deceased, growing out of or based upon the contract of March 2], 1908, or the various extensions and modifications thereof between Asher Richardson and W. A. H. Miller, both deceased, or otherwise, it being the intention of the parties to this instrument to make it a full and complete accord and satisfaction by compromise and settlement of all differences, controversies, debts, claims, and causes of action of every kind or character now existing or that may thereafter accrue in favor of either party against the other, jointly or severally, with reference to the property, real, personal or mixed, covered by said contract and its extensions and modifications or other contracts or obligations, whether in writing or not, now existing between us and of all other claims or demands of every kind or character of the parties to this instrument by or against the estate of Asher Richardson, deceased, except, however, the notes given by the individuals herein in part purchase of some of the lands covered by said contract, which notes are not to be affected by this instrument, but are to remain valid obligations in the hands of the holders thereof against the parties executing said notes.”
Appellee filed a supplemental petition which, in its second paragraph, sought to construe that part of the release executed by a number of parties, appellee being one of them, to appellants, and an exception was sustained to that paragraph. In the third paragraph appellee averred that:
“Said instrument does not express the true intent and agreement of the parties thereto, in that it was then and there intended by all of the parties to said agreement and their respective attorneys that the scope of said compromise and settlement agreement should extend only to the then existing and future claims of plaintiff and associates against the estate of Asher Richardson, deceased, arising out of said contract of March 21, 1908, its subsequent extensions and modifications, and none other.”
There was no allegation of fraud upon the part of appellants to induce appellee to sign the release. The court tried the cause without a jury, and rendered judgment in favor of appellee for the amount of the note, interest, attorney’s fees, and costs.
“The rule of ejusdem generis is not in and of itself a rule of interpretation, but an aid to interpretation, when the intention is not otherwise apparent. It has no binding force in the construction of a contract when it is clear that a larger object was in the minds of the pai'ties to which the more general phrases can distinctly apply.” Elliott on Contracts, § 1582. *
The descriptive words used in connection with claims arising from the Riehardson-Miller contract exhausted that class, and it would have been unreasonable to give another description which described something else accurately. As said in the Missouri case of National Bank v. Estate of Ripley, 161 Mo. 126, 61 S. W. 587:
“Therefore, where the particular words exhaust the class, the general words must be construed as embracing something outside of that class. If the particular words exhaust the genus, there is nothing ejusdem generis left; and in such case we must give the general words a meaning outside of the class indicated by the particular words, or we must say they are meaningless, and thereby sacrifice the general to preserve the particular words. In that case the rule would defeat its own purpose.”
To the same effect are United States v. Mescall, 215 U. S. 26, 30 Sup. Ct. 19, 54 L. Ed. 77; Strange v. Grant County, 173 Ind. 640, 91 N. E. 242; Hoffman v. Light Co., 134 Wis. 603, 115 N. W. 385.
To meet the language of the release and compromise contract, appellant sought, in the third paragraph of the supplemental petition, to plead that the contract, if construed as embracing other claims than those arising from the Riehardson-Miller contract, did express the intention of the parties, but whether this arose from the failure of the scrivener to properly draw the release, from fraud on the part of appellants, or from mutual mistake is not pleaded. In fact, nothing is pleaded that would avoid the contract. The *691 paragraph states no defense and was open to general demurrer.
The court must necessarily have found for appellee on the ground that the release did not embrace appellee’s claim or that the evidence showed mutual mistake. Neither is tenable. The evidence utterly fails to show that there was a mutual mistake as to what was covered by the release. Evidence that the attorneys of appellee told him that the release did not affect his claim did not tend to show any mistake except upon their part, and did not offer anything against the fairness of the release. If, before appellee signed the note, either appellants or their attorney had misled appellee as to the import and scope of the release, a different case would be presented, but nothing of the sort was pleaded or proved. No evidence offered or received tended in the least to render invalid that part of the release which clearly included the claim of appellee.
We think the eleventh assignment of error is sufficient to raise the question of the sufficiency of the facts to sustain the judgment. The other assignments are not in such shape as to be considered or are immaterial and unimportant.
We are at a loss to know upon what ground the court decided in favor of appellee, whether upon the construction of the release, or upon the question of mistake, and as the ease is perhaps capable of further investigation, and it might be an injustice to appellee to render judgment in a case where the trial court held with him, judgment will not be rendered here, but the opportunity for another trial given.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
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Reference
- Full Case Name
- RICHARDSON Et Al. v. NESBIT
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- Published