Opinion
(June Term, 1847.)
1. A plea that the amount claimed by the plaintiff, together with the costs then due, had been tendered to him since the commencement of the suit is, as a plea, no bar to the plaintiff's action, though the money has been paid into court under that plea.
2. The proper course when no tender has been made before action brought is for the defendant to move the court that he may be permitted to pay into court the amount he admits to be due. If the plaintiff agrees to receive this amount in full of his claim, the suit is at an end and the defendant pays the costs. If the plaintiff prefers going on to trial, and he does not recover more than the amount so admitted, he is liable for the costs incurred subsequently to the payment into court.
APPEAL from WASHINGTON Spring Term, 1847; Caldwell, J.
This action was commenced by warrant. The magistrate gave judgment for the plaintiff and the defendant appealed to the county court. After this, and before the suit was returned, the defendant (202) tendered the amount claimed, with the costs then due, to the constable who served the process and who was the agent of the plaintiff for the collection of the money. He declined receiving it, and at the term of the county court to which the papers were returned the money was paid into the office of the clerk. The presiding judge ruled that the tender of the money after the action had commenced was not good, and the payment of the money into court could not avail the defendant, as there was no rule or order of court authorizing it. Verdict for the plaintiff, and the defendant appealed.
E. W. Jones for plaintiff.
Heath for defendant.
We concur with his Honor upon both points. In general, all pleas relate to the bringing of the action and are answers to the plaintiff's claim as it then exists. The plea of tender is no exception to the rule. It admits the cause of action and is a bar to its prosecution, because before its commencement the defendant had tendered to the plaintiff the money due him. This is shown by the form of the plea. In it the defendant avers "as to the said sum of $... and before the commencement of the suit, to wit, on, etc., aforesaid, etc." If this allegation is omitted, the plea is demurrable. Where the tender has been made at the proper time with an uncore prist, the defendant has a right to bring the money into court, because it constitutes a part of his plea; for the defendant must aver his readiness to pay the money admitted to be due, and that he hath paid the same into court, or that he now brings the same into court here ready to be paid to the said plaintiff, if he will accept the same, as the case may be. 3 Chit. Pl., 921. In Haughton v. Leary, 20 N.C. 14, it was expressly (203) decided that a plea of tender after suit brought is, as a plea, no bar. A plea, then, of tender and refusal, aptly pleaded and in due time, will bar the action and throw upon the plaintiff the costs of the suit. But though the defendant may by his negligence subject himself to the payment of the costs already accrued, he may protect himself from all that may subsequently be incurred. When he only disputes the amount to which the plaintiff is entitled he is at liberty to move the court for leave to pay into the office so much as he admits is due, together with all the costs which have accrued up to the time of making the motion; upon which the court makes the order, and the amount brought in is struck from the plaintiff's declaration. If the plaintiff accepts the money as the full amount due, the action is, of course, at an end; but he may deny that it is sufficient to satisfy his demands, and go on to trial. In that case, if the jury find that more is due the plaintiff than is brought in, the latter is entitled to a verdict for the overplus, and the costs are paid by the defendant. On the contrary, if they find it sufficient, the plaintiff pays all the costs incurred since the rule obtained. In no case can the defendant, after failing to make a tender at the proper time and pleading it in a proper manner, bring money into court but upon a rule first obtained, 1 Sellon's Prac., 305. The rule was not obtained in this case, and the presiding judge did right in giving the instruction complained of.
PER CURIAM. No error.
Cited: Winningham v. Redding, 51 N.C. 127; Cope v. Bryson, 60 N.C. 113; Pollock v. Warwick, 104 N.C. 642; Smith v. B. and L. Assn., 119 N.C. 256.
(204)