SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-7629-95T1
HARRIETT ZELLER,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
MARKSON ROSENTHAL & COMPANY,
Defendant-Respondent,
and
MICHAEL H. ROSENTHAL, Individually,
and RICHARD MARKSON, Individually,
Defendants.
________________________________________
Submitted March 24, 1997 - Decided April 14, 1997
Before Judges Havey, Kestin and Eichen.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Bergen County.
McDonald, Rogers & Rizzolo, attorneys for
appellant (Michael J. Rogers on the brief).
Apruzzese, McDermott, Mastro & Murphy,
attorneys for respondent (Melvin L. Gelade on
the brief).
No other parties participated in this appeal.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
EICHEN, J.A.D.
On May 17, 1995, plaintiff Harriet Zeller filed a complaint
against her former employer, defendant Markson Rosenthal & Company,
alleging that defendant breached its obligation to pay her
approximately $61,000 in sales commissions.See footnote 1 Defendant asserted a
defense of accord and satisfaction based on plaintiff's having
accepted its check in an amount less than her demand, and filed a
motion for summary judgment. The trial judge granted the motion
and dismissed plaintiff's complaint. We reverse.
In Peterson v. Hartford Accident & Indem. Co.,
32 N.J. Super. 23 (App. Div. 1954), we reviewed the principles governing accord
and satisfaction. There, we ruled that payments made by an insurer
had to be accepted by an insured with the intention they operate as
satisfaction of the insurer's entire liability under the policy.
In so ruling, we stated "[t]o constitute an accord and satisfaction
under the circumstances existing here it must appear that the
defendant offered the partial disability payments and that the
plaintiff accepted them with the intention that they operate as a
satisfaction of the defendant's entire liability under its policy."
Id. at 31. We also iterated the principles established by our
former Court of Errors & Appeals in Rose v. American Paper Co.,
83 N.J.L. 707 (E. & A. 1912) as to the nature of the tender required
to support an accord and satisfaction.
To constitute an accord and satisfaction
in law, dependent upon the offer of the
payment of a less sum than that claimed, it is
necessary that the money should be offered in
full satisfaction of the demand and be
accompanied by such acts or declarations as
amount to a condition that if the money is
accepted it is to be in full satisfaction, and
be of such a character that the creditor is
bound to understand such offer.
The party seeking to settle for a less
sum than is claimed to be due must, by his
words or conduct when making the offer,
clearly inform the other of what is sought and
expected. The transaction must be such that
the condition is as plain as the tender, so
that the acceptance of the tender will involve
the acceptance of the condition. In other
words, the tender and the condition must be
incapable of severance; for otherwise the
inference will not be drawn that the
acceptance of the tender involves the
acceptance of the condition.
[Peterson, supra, 32 N.J. Super. at 31
(quoting Rose, supra, 83 N.J.L. at 709
(citations omitted) (emphasis added).]
Hence, an accord and satisfaction requires a clear manifestation
that both the debtor and the creditor intend the payment to be in
full satisfaction of the entire indebtedness. In those cases in
which a check bears a notation indicating that it is being tendered
in full satisfaction of the disputed debt, we impute to the
creditor an intent to be bound by the amount of the check if the
creditor deposits the check for collection, notwithstanding the
deposit is made "under protest." See Loizeaux Builders Supply Co.
v. Donald B. Ludwig Co.,
144 N.J. Super. 556 (Law Div. 1976); see
also Chancellor, Inc. v. Hamilton Appliance Co.,
175 N.J. Super. 345 (Cty. Ct. 1980). See generally 15 Williston on Contracts §
1854 (Jaeger ed. 1972).
The facts in this case are not in dispute. The record
discloses that in January 1994, after plaintiff left defendant's
employ, she received a commission statement from defendant
indicating that defendant acknowledged owing her $39,770.11 in
sales commissions. According to plaintiff's calculations,
defendant owed her $61,160.77. In June 1994, plaintiff advised
defendant of her contrary calculations in writing. Six months
later, defendant revised its previous calculations downward to
$29,802.25, decreasing the amount it had determined it owed
plaintiff by approximately $10,000. Thereafter, plaintiff and
Michael H. Rosenthal, defendant's vice president, discussed their
disparate approaches to the method of calculating plaintiff's
commissions but were unable to resolve their differences. During
that discussion defendant did not mention to plaintiff the
consequence, if any, of plaintiff's acceptance of defendant's
tender of payment in an amount less than her demand.
Defendant sent plaintiff a check in the amount of $29,802.25.
Neither the check nor the transmittal letter indicated that
plaintiff's acceptance would constitute "full satisfaction" of
plaintiff's claim for additional commissions. The accompanying
letter stated as follows:
Dear Harriett:
Celesta has finished reviewing your
commission statements and your letter. She
finds that the commissions due are $29,802.25,
a check for which we have enclosed.
Very truly yours,
/s/Michael H. Rosenthal
Before depositing the check, plaintiff inscribed on the front
and reverse side, "Accepted on Account" and also endorsed the check
"under protest with full reservation of rights," indicating it was
not her intention to relinquish her claim to the balance of the
commissions she alleged was still due.
At depositions, plaintiff conceded that she understood that
the check represented the full amount of what defendant claimed it
owed her, but she also pointed out that she had not accepted the
check as payment in full of defendant's obligation. The trial
court concluded that the deposition testimony reflected "a
[sufficiently] clear manifestation of intent that the payment was
in full satisfaction." We disagree.
In Rose v. American Paper Co., supra, our former Court of
Errors & Appeals stated that "[w]hether a tender is accompanied by
such acts and declarations as are necessary on its acceptance to
constitute an accord and satisfaction must, of course, be
determined from the facts of each particular case." 83 N.J.L. at
709-10. The Rose Court then placed certain restrictions on the
type of proofs required to support a conclusion that a tender was,
in fact, conditioned upon the creditor's acceptance of the tender
as full satisfaction of the indebtedness. The Court stated that
the "condition may be expressed in the check itself, or in the
letter or account, or receipt accompanying the remittance, or even
orally in conversation." Id. at 709 (citations omitted).
Applying these principles here, we cannot conclude, in the
absence of any accompanying acts, declarations or oral statements
by defendant alerting plaintiff that her acceptance of the check
meant that she was acquiescing in the amount of the tender as full
settlement of her claim, that defendant sufficiently manifested its
intent that the tender be so construed. Similarly, the evidence is
insufficient to support the conclusion that plaintiff accepted the
check intending that it operate as satisfaction of defendant's
entire liability. The fact that plaintiff may have understood that
the check was given to her in payment of what defendant claimed it
owed her does not compel the conclusion that she agreed to accept
defendant's partial payment as payment in full.
In short, at the time defendant tendered the check, it did not
make clear to plaintiff the condition of her acceptance. In
contrast, plaintiff's endorsement of the check made it perfectly
obvious that she did not intend her acceptance of the check to
operate as full satisfaction of defendant's obligation. Under
these circumstances, we conclude the tendered amount merely
represented the undisputed portion of defendant's acknowledged
obligation to plaintiff for sales commissions and nothing more.
See Loizeaux Builders Supply Co. v. Donald B. Ludwig Co., supra,
144 N.J. Super. at 564 (citing 6 Corbin on Contracts § 1289
(1950)). Accordingly, plaintiff's acceptance of the check was not
an accord and satisfaction, and the judge erred in granting summary
judgment as a matter of law in defendant's favor.
Our determination in no way detracts from the strong public
policy of this state in favor of enforcing settlements. See, e.g.,
Pascarella v. Bruck,
190 N.J. Super. 118, 125 (App. Div.), certif.
den.,
94 N.J. 600 (1983). However, just as a settlement agreement
requires that the parties intend to be bound in order for the
agreement to be enforceable, Berg Agency v. Sleepworld-Willingboro,
Inc.,
136 N.J. Super. 369, 377 (App. Div. 1975), an accord and
satisfaction, to be effective, necessitates a finding that the
party making the tender and the party accepting the tender each
intends the acceptance to serve as full satisfaction of the entire
disputed obligation. In the absence of evidence of such intention,
the defense of accord and satisfaction is unavailing to defeat a
creditor's claim for payment in full. See generally, 6 Corbin on
Contracts, supra, at § 1277.
Summary judgment is reversed and the matter is remanded for
trial.
Footnote: 1 During the litigation, plaintiff withdrew her claims against the individual defendants, Michael H. Rosenthal and Richard Markson.