Documentos de Académico
Documentos de Profesional
Documentos de Cultura
1882 Law of Contracts Wharton Vol 1
1882 Law of Contracts Wharton Vol 1
lliillli
fell
!^
/
.\l
,vi,l.;
. i
'
'
*
1
'I'l!
Si
I'll iilSt
li;:;
iHiii^ife^^''
HANDBOUND AT THE
UNIVERSITY OF
2007
witii
funding from
IVIicrosoft
Corporation
Iittp://www.arcliive.org/details/commentaryonlawo01wliaruoft
9-^6/
Sl=^
A COMMENTARY
ON THE
LAW
OF CONTRACTS,
BY
FRANCIS WHARTON,
LL.D.,
AUTHOR OF TREATISES ON COKFLICT OF LAWS, ON EVIDENCE, ON AGENCY, ON NEGLiaENCE, AND ON CRIMINAL LAW.
IN
TWO VOLUMES.
VOLUME
I.
PHILADELPHIA
Entered according
to
Act of Congress, in
tlie
year 18S2, by
FRANCIS WHARTOX,
In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.
\A
%
!L^
r
\y
k>
COLLINS, PRINTER.
PEEFACE.
For
tracts,
treatises based
country.
1.
committed to
to those of equity,
and has
branches of jurisprudence.
fore, so far as
now
abrogated,
England
;^
while in most of
mon law
at
fore, as
The
embodied
in the treatises of
and Sir
W.
Anson, are
far
more
in
sys-
The
true, for
such a work as I
now
offer
has been
much
treatises of
W.
But we should
and
lavr
common
Walsh
v.
Lonsdale, 46 L. T.
N.
S.
858 (1882).
iii
PREFACE.
that the cases in this country in which
discussed are vastly
these changes are
England. It
is
at least be postponed to
is its
mapped
out.
The law of
contracts being in
many
of
its
aspects cosmoearliest
times of which
we have
in
how
contracts
were considered
for a long
what they
But
few
last
made
in
some of
and the
its
not erroneous
treatise of Gains,
The
in
foreign jurists
who were
casuists
and on the
Roman law
> Of the inadequacy of the older English standards an illustration may be found in the case of Jordan v.
the
Roman
jurists,
Elliott,
Weekly
In the opinion of
is
and
of the assailed
were to
cited to the
be considered.
See infra,
of
147.
And
a defence
by the
as a person of courage
wonld be likely
states that the
supreme court
Pennsylvania in this
" civil" law took this position. Now, though this was the view of some of the scholastic civilians,
who misrepresented
the
Roman
law.
iv
PREFACE.
many
in
of a
contracts,
when he
final, differs
basis
Yet Savigny
is
not to be regarded as
branch of jurisprudence.
Milton
tells
us of an
Who
new
how
gives rise
sary to
new
distinctions,
being necescase.
show how
This
is
was not to
by
those
we have an interesting illustration in a thoughtful German work on contracts recently published,^ which shows how the tendency of thought with us and that in Germany are unconsciously approxishould follow.
who
Of
this
mating in
this relation.
Nothing
is
the modification, in
recent
English
was
Gradually, however,
alternative
was
was a
The
conclusion,
it
was
it
true,
was
the consideration,
;
was
said,
but, no matter
how
the rule
PREFACE.
was
stated, it
is
now
settled.
it
may
it
or
it
may
not be that
Now
is
an interesting fact
Roman
standI menit
modern jurisprudence.
because I did
tion this
until
book
in
this
place
not obtain
my
It
is
enough
Eng-
now
lish jurisprudence,
need unless
it
at least gives us
what
is
said
by great German
common
it is
to
We
I think, also,
it is
of political economy.
illegal to
buy
up produce on speculation, on the paternal theory of political economy; and he took particular pains to condemn the theory
of
laissez faire^
Adam
Smith's doc-
trines
in this
Lord Campbell, a
bargain
v.
discussion in Criminal
for
Law Magazine
Waddington,
and
Jan. 1882.
vi
It
is
on this important
we
American adjudication.
are dominant, and this
a striking exception)
wrongly
it is
of the present
work
to consider)
have at
we
find as a result
!Not only
is it
held in almost
ments to
portation,*
that they are not only distinctively American, but that they
peculiarly
demand
classificatioH.
If public policy
to determine
is
whether con-
tracts
are valid
or otherwise,
it
is its
critic
has
Hilton
Eckersley, 6 E.
&
B. 62.
Infra, 442.
Infra, 438.
Infra, 439.
As
to constitutionality of
such
legis-
3
*
Infra,
442 a. vii
PREFACE.
my
is
how
There
no
state in
the Union
which a student
not entitled to
know
whose law he
of which
bound
reports,
we have
at least twelve
we have annual
is
But
there
The more
is
ex-
the conclu-
new
be
gives a
tested.
new phase
issue
may
My
my
other works,
has required
the reports of
me
all
to carefully
examine
few years
with
ai> ability
at
But be
this as it
may, there
work
professing
and students
in
And
My
particular
to
John Douglass
for the press.
Brown,
Jr., Esq.,
received from
him
and correction
it
will be largely
my
indebted-
my
col-
PREFACE.
for his admirable printed expositions of several of the topics
I here discuss, but for the suggestions as to authorities he has
me
F.
Narraoassett PiiB, R.
Sept. 24, 1882.
I.,
W.
IX
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
CHAPTER
I.
Constituents op Contract,
1-28.
CHAPTER
II.
Infants, 29-74.
CHAPTER
Married Women,
III. 76-92.
CHAPTER
Aliens,
IV.
93-94.
CHAPTER
Agents,
V.
96.
CHAPTER
VI.
98-124.
CHAPTER
Corporations,
VII.
127-143.
CHAPTER
Duress,
VIII.
144-154.
xi
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER
Undue Influence and
IX.
Imposition, 157-170.
CHAPTER
Error and Mistake,
X.
171-211.
CHAPTER
XI.
212-231.
CHAPTER
Fraud,
XII.
232-279.
CHAPTER
Rescission
;
XIII.
Rectification, 282-293.
CHAPTER
XIV.
Impossibility, 296-331.
CHAPTER XV.
Illegality,
335-488.
CHAPTER
Consideration,
XVI.
493-540.
CHAPTER
XVII.
Conditions, 545-617.
CHAPTER
xii
XVIII.
619-624.
Alternative Promises,
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER
XIX.
627-674.
CHAPTER XX.
Deeds and Sealed Contracts,
677-691.
CHAPTER
XXI.
694-705.
CHAPTER
XXII.
707-721.
CHAPTER
XXIII.
722-755.
CHAPTER XXIV.
Money Paid to Another's Use,
756-771.
CHAPTER XXV.
Account Stated,
774-780.
CHAPTER XXVI.
Parties,
784^48.
CHAPTER XXVII.
Novations,
852-65.
CHAPTER
XXVIII.
869-918.
Mode of Performance,
xiii
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER XXIX.
Payment,
923-967.
CHAPTER XXX.
Tender,
970-995.
CHAPTER XXXI.
Accord and Satisfaction,
996-1008.
CHAPTER XXXII.
Set-off, 1009-1030.
CHAPTER
Release,
XXXIII.
1031-1042.
CHAPTER XXXIV.
Negligence
in
Contracting,
1043-1056.
CHAPTER XXXV.
Constitutional Limitation on Impairing Contracts,
1061-1071.
xiv
ADDENDA ET CORRIGENDA.
Vol.
I.,
56.
" "
end
of note 1, add:
v.
Dexter
Snow, 12
5,
Cush.
594;
Tuxbury
v.
Miller,
19
Johns. 311.
"
" "
623, at
end of note
v.
add:
at
first line.
See Conly
736, strike out
" that"
beginning of
to
"against,"
and "former"
[For volume
II.
to "latter."
XV
CONTRACTS.
CHAPTER
I.
an interchange of legal
If
not
accepted
-within
designated
rights, 1.
limits as to time
falls, 15.
and
place, proposal
may
be con-
16a.
concurrence
not
to
Provisional
be
Acceptance
must
to be
be communicated
post-
treated as final, 5.
when
required, 17.
Agreement
bound on mere
may
ing of acceptance
may
be implied,
amount to a contract
7.
to
pay
for
them,
place of contract,
20.
Time
is
When
rejected a proposal
exhausted,
21.
9a.
Until accepted a proposal
may
be re-
10.
Assent must be definite mere nonrefusal is not enough, 22. Grants under seal may bind grantor
;
brought
home
all parties
its
Proposer
may bind
open proposal
14.
25.
not continuous,
VOL.
I.
!]
So of anction
sales, 25 6.
CONTRACTS.
Telegrams
[chap.
I.
may
'
constitute a contract,
are to be dis*
27.
'Voidable' distinguished from ' 'void,
'
28.
1.
.
A
.
^ A contract
is
an
inter-
chaiige of legal
rights.
an interchange by agreement of legal be an interchange, involving must o a the assent of two Or morc persons. It must be by agree^ ment; a mere intimation oi purpose is not suincient.
CONTRACT
is
risfhts.
It
,.
,."
An
is
jj.
agree-
not a con-
;^
nor
is
Infra, 8, 588.
;
"
Ab. 8 Guthing v. 14 Lynn, 2 B. & Ad. 232 Taylor v. Brewer, 1 M. & S. 290. In Taylor v. Brewer the
citing Roll.
;
iibereinstimmenden Willenserklarung,
agreement was to do services for whatever remuneration should be deemed This was held to be a mere right. engagement of honor. Chief Justice Marshall (Sturges v. Crowninshield, 4 Wheat. 196) defines a contract as "an agreement in which a party undertakes to do or not to do a particular thing;" Blackstoue makes it "an agreement, on sufficient consideration, to do or not to do a particular thing." 2 Black. Com. 446. In L. 1, 2 D. de pact. (2, 14) we have the following: " Et est pactio duorum pluriumve in idem placitum
consensus."
among
those
in
distinction
from
older jurists
who
obligatory engagements.
property.
Roman
sense,
dominion over
specific
thing.
Within
this definition
he comprehends
(Allg. Landrecht,
re-
1) defines
a contract to be a
marriage has a lien on the other (ein auf diugliche Art personliches Recht),
and that
alienation of a right.
as equivalent to tradition.
Marriage
In Koch's Forderungen, 69, a contract is defined to be a reciprocal express agreement of two or more persons
for
with him
is,
therefore,
an obligatory
contract, which he defines to be "the union of two persons of different sexes for reciprocal sexual jwssession for
life
;
of a legal relation
between them. Savigny defines a contract (iii. 309) as the union of two or more persons in a common expression of will, by which their legal relations are determined
die
verschiedenen Geschlechts
Geschlectseigenschaften
.
zum
lebens-
CHAP.
I.
DEFINITION.
[1.
crime a contract. The agreement, to be a contract, must concern a right whose transfer the law will compel. It must
the term contract as limited to transfer of property (Grundlinien der Philoso-
is
"not meant
any change
to
produce, any
new
in
71)
is
duty or
right, or
cidence of opinion
only nominal, as
existing ones."
This
is
covered by the
of Savigny
the same as that though he refuses to regard marriage and treatit^s as contracts. Savigny coincides with Kant in holding marriage to be a contract, and makes
;
an interchange by agreement of legal rights. As illustrating an interchange of courtesies that do not amount to an
interchange of legal rights, see Potter
V.
Carpenter, 76 N. Y. 157.
act
of
1872
main, Savigny
"(a)
When
one person
signifies to
Windscheid, who will be constantly quoted in the following pages as one of the most reliable of German commentators, defines ( 305) a contract as consisting in the union of two declarations of intentions (der Vereinigung
is
said to
make
(?))
a proposal.
When
is
the person to
whom
the
proposal
made
signifies
is
his assent
said to be ac-
zweier Willenserklarungen).
claration of one party
is
The
de-
cepted.
to the effect
comes a promise.
(c)
is
other party
jection.
is
is
promisee.
((/)
When,
prom-
the other
isor,
It makes no mathe proceeds to say, which of these declarations has precedence. Mr. Pollock (3d ed. 1) defines an agreement as "an act in the law whereby two or more persons declare
has done or abstained from doing, or does or abstains from doing, or promises to do or abstain from doing something, such act or abstinence or promise
is
promise.
(e^
their consent as to
any
act or thing to
set of
each other,
must be concerned," he adds, "with duties and rights which can be dealt with by a
or other of them."
It
"
court of j ustice.
to go out for a
'
'
It
therefore excludes
promises.
(g)
An
is
by law
1.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
I.
consist, not
is
a contract.
(i)
enforce-
able
more
but not at
is
contract
which ceases
to
be
when
though not enforceable with us, may enforceable somewhere else. To say that void agreements are agreements which can be nowhere enforced would leave us no void agreements to speak of. To say that all agreements not enforceable with us are void would be untrue. On many such agreements parties may be held in other countries.
not be
ceases to be enforceable."
Roman
:
Of the above, the subsections down to (e) mfiy be accepted as giving a succinct and accurate statement of the
law, di-
The subsection marked (e) is it would have been better to have said: "Promises
law.
imperfectly expressed
;
As TO THEIR WORKIXG. Unilateral and bilateral (unilaterales and bilaterales). This distinction is based, not upon the way in which
(1)
the contract
respect there
bilateral,
is is
made
in consideration
of each other
no contract that
its effect.
is
not
form an agreement."
agreement is not constituted by a unilateral promise. The distinction taken between void and voidable agreements the term contract being reserved for agreements which are enforceable at law by one or both parties is one which will be generally accepted and of this Mr. Pollock remarks that it is "a clear improvement, for it makes the legal meaning of the words more precise and convenient, without doing violence to former or even to popular usage." The language of subsections (^) and (y), he adds, "is not exactly applicable to English law," and this observation he extends "in some cases to subsection (i) also." To sustain this he refers to agreements of imperfect
An
but lapon
If
only
one obligation springs from it, it is unilateral. According to the old Roman
law, an obligation
is
in form unilateral
is
creditor
and the
bilateral
contract, therefore,
is
Each
and
lucrative.
lucra-
An
obligation
which are not enforceable by law, yet are not void. To this it may
which are not enforceable by the laws of some country, and that there are
few
agreements,
theretore,
one in which each party gains something and parts with something. Onerous contracts are,
therefore,
in
the
main,
convertible
with
tracts
bilateral.
which,
>
Koch, Ford.
69.
CHAP.
2.
I.]
[2.
The
must
in
Parties
be both bound.
tracts
tive.
both bound
(re contracfa obligatio) were contracts which were not embraced within either
and
juris
of the classes
P9.ctio
5,
gentium," L.
which had been performed on the one side. The special contracts, which were privileged without form (consensu
contracta obligatio, consensual contract),
law on which the contract rests, and which recourse must be made for its enforcement. In the same way we may speak of contracts good in law, and contracts good in equity and of contracts for which distinctive statuto
;
were four
ductio,
emtio
venditio,
locatio
con-
societas,
and mandatum.
The and
it
(e. g.,
deeds
duly acknowledged and recorded), and contracts for which there is no distinctive statutory remedy.
(4) In boruEjidei
tractus.
would be inconvenient and oppressive to require them to be executed in the form of the stipulation. Societas and mandat were excepted as being virtually real contracts, not existing until
and
stricti
juris con-
tion.
This
there was on one side or the other something in the way of part performance.
oral, and law took the name of nexus (Koch, 2, p. 61). Five witnesses and a libripens were essential to perfect the transaction, which symbolized a weighing of gold and then a loan of the gold weighed. The creditor then asked the debtor whether he had received the gold, to which question the debtor replied, acknowledging the receipt and the debt. Of later introduction was the stipulation, in which there were no
as follaws
As TO MODE OF FORMATION.
and consen-
in the old
But outside of these forms there were two other modes by which parties could bind themselves. These were by performance on one side, and by a privilege
attached to certain single specified contracts
stipulation
was that
when
agreed, upon which the other (the and the necessity of precision promisor) answered. No fixed words in a transaction by which the will of were prescribed the only requisite was one person is subjected to the will of that the answer should apply exactly another person. These forms were of to the question. The form " spondes," two kinds oral and written verba, " spondeo," however, which in prior Of times was essential to the nexus, was literce; verborum, literarum obligatio.
nexus
and
stipulation.
the stipulation.
2.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
is
not
bound
promise to do a thing on an executed consideration is not a contract f nor is a promise to do a thing in consideration of an illegal or impossible engagement on the other side.' Without this recipunless the other
is
bound. ^
no contract can be constituted.* "It is a general principle," says Mr. Fry, "that when, from personal incapacity, the nature of the contract, or any other cause, a contract is incapable of being enforced against one party, that
rocal obligation,
party
self
is
it
specifically against
way might
in
it-
mer. "'^
important exceptions, prominent among which, it is alleged, is that of an infant, a party contracting with an infant being bound to the infant, but the infant not being bound to such
other contracting party.^
it is
now
generally agreed,
they cannot be
was
But this is a mistake. An infant, is bound by his contracts, though enforced against him until he is of full age.
Lees
I'.
Whitcomb,
5 Bing. 34
;
Head
v.
Diggon, 3 Man.
chell, 2 Jac.
For a long time the personal presence of the parties was essential.
thing.
When
that
it
Me. 20; Dresel v. Jordan, 104 Mass. 412 Keep ?>. Goodrich, 12 Johns. 397 Tucker v. Woods, 12 Johns. 190. In Cooke v. Oxley, 3 T. R. 653, Lord Kenyon said " the other party was not bound: was therefore nudum pactum.^' That in promises to marry mutuality is
Co., 53
; ;
it.
essential, see
Daniel
v.
Bowles, 2 0.
v.
&
P. 553
;
Wightman
v.
Coates,
15
Mass. 5
;
Russell
Cowles, 15 Gray,
;
but
582 Waters v. Bristol, 26 Conn. 398 Southard v. Rexford, 6 Cow. 254; Moritz V. Melhorn, 13 Penn. St. 334 and other cases cited, 1 Cli. on Con.
;
adopted in Stur-
gis V. Galindo,
3
*
Rep. 266.
5
Kennawayr. Treleavan,
;
M. &
W.
498
Arnold
r.
Poole,
4 M. & G. 860
CHAP.
I.]
[ 2.
and although when he arrives at full age thej may be repudiated by him.' But this is part of the limitation of the conThe contract is binding on him on a contingency, tract itself. i. e., its non-repudiation at a specified period; and it stands on the same footing, therefore, as sales on trial, and other conditional contracts.^
It
is
limited on an uncertainty
;'
is
It
defrauded,
where one of the parties can defend under the statute of frauds, and in cases where an agent turns out to be acting fora principal subsequentlydisclosed.
But
is
raised by confession
is
and
if
we
we must
no contract in any case in which one of the parties could interpose a good defence, no matter what that defence may be. In all these cases, also, the ratifihold that there
is
it is
more properly
called)* does
merely confirms a contract already existing.' In respect to contracts declared void on account of essential error, it may be said that the party who was under no mistake is bound, while the mistaken party is relieved. The answer to this, however, is, that the vacating as to one party
not start a
contract;
it
new
fails.^
The
rule
requiring mutuality
is,
the parties, but that each party should agree to perform his part. It may be that this part is to be performed only
on a contingency.
It
It
may
be that there
is
may
interposed in the
way
of performance.^
may But
be this as
is
it
made,
Infra, 32.
[rfra, 16,
'
and
^
J
493 296
et seq.
545.
3 *
Infra, 520.
Infra, 546.
8 et seq.
[nfra,
et seq.
See infra, 56
3.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
I.
and this mutuality is essential to the making of the contract. more difficult exception to deal with arises in cases of contracts with married women. A married woman may be incapable of contracting in a general sense of the term, and if
she makes a contract for the purchase of real estate, that contract cannot be enforced against her,
though
if
the contract be
a remedy
executed by her,
it
may have
N'ow, in the
is
first place, it
is
does not
Specific
refused in a partic-
no contract.
performance
in
is
refused in
many
in a court of law.
And
woman,
though technically unable to contract, may yet preclude herself by estoppel at least from fraudulently asserting title against a third party who is encouraged by her to buy a property to which she has a title, which she at the time knowingly suppresses.^ Bat, thirdly, and this is the best reason, after the married woman pays for and takes the property thus purchased by her, the vendor is himself estopped from denying her capacity. On the other hand, however, if we concede that she cannot be estopped, and that she has no contractual capacity whatever, then we must hold, in accordance with the great preponderance of authority, that there is no contract, and that where there is no contract the other party is not contractually bound. He may be bound for negligence, or for deceit, but he cannot be bound on a contract.'
3. It
is not necessary that all the terms in a contract should be free from ambiguity. If it were, no contract could be framed, since it is impossible to use
must be
of^deflnite^
All that
construe-
required
posal
is that the contract, as drawn from proand acceptance, should be susceptible of defi-
nite construction.*
It
may
when
410
*
Chamberlain V. Robertson, 31 Iowa, Neef v. Redmon, S. C. Mo. 1881, 13 Rep. 434, cited infra, 89.
;
See Vance
i:.
176.
*
As
to interpretation
and constrac-
See
infra, 89.
627
et seq.
CHAP.
I.]
MUST BE DEFINITE.
[3.
parties, either
may
by showing the business usage to which they be supposed to have adapted themselves, or by showing what was the meaning they themselves attached to the ternas
employed, or by putting in evidence
extrinsic
facts
ex-
To
how-
terms are hopelessly ambiguous, bp executed by the courts. In other words, a contract will not be executed unless its terms are certain and its enforcement practicable.^ But a party to whose fault an
'
Wh. on
Ev. 920
et seq.
infra,
646.
negotiation
Bispham's Eq.
377;
;
Spec. Perf.
203, 229
Fry on Walpole v.
v.
Watts,
in
Colson
v.
Thompson,
Marble Co. v. Ripley, Ewins v. Gordon, 49 N. H. 444 Bruce v. Bishop, 43 Vt. 161 Thruston v. Thornton, 1 Cush. 89; Dodd I'. Seymour, 21 Conn. 476 Benedict V. Lynch, 1 Johns. Ch. 370 Buckmaster V. Thompson, 36 N. Y. 558
;
thereby offered to purchase the vaults for 2500 cash, and to take over a
mortgage for 3500 on the lease, these terms to include the lease, goodwill,
fixtures, etc.
The
:
plaintiff's
agents
answered as follows
letter of
Whittlesey
v.
Delaney, 73 N. Y. 571
we
obtain
Differences
Parkins,
75
111.
;
338
when
possession
Baldwin
sell V.
Echols,
should be given, and eventually the plaintiff brought an action against the defendants claiming damages for breach
of contract.
46 Ala. 224
242.
Huflf v.
Shepard, 58 Mo.
Malins, V.
C, held
that
As
et seq.
641
the letters contained a binding contract It was held by between the parties.
In Guthing
v.
Lynn, 2 B.
&
Ad. 232,
the pur-
an agreement,
collateral to
the court of appeal on .Tune 22, 1881 (Jessel, M. R., Baggallay, L. J., and
chase of ahorse, that "if the horse was lucky" the vendee "would give
Lush, L.
Malins,
tract
J.,
"V.
cause the
had been entered into first, bename of the vendor had not
sufficient descrip-
In Donnison
v.
Caf6
been disclosed or a
of frauds
letters
London under
and secondly, because the mentioned only what was the property to be purchased and the price
;
3.]
CONTRACTS.
is
[chap.
I.
ambiguity
less favor-
And
what
is is
the sense in
called the formal
I
it,
but
left
the other
is
signed, as
have expressed
:
when
possession
was
to be
All
we have
this
certain terms
given, to be settled
hy a formal contract to be prepared by a solicitor in the ordinary way. "The only point, really," said Jessel, M. R., "that we have to decide is whether there is any
contract.
It is
are agreed
upon subject
to
such further
terms as
may
be agreed upon.
Now,
what
is
be ascertained
circumstances.
from
It
the
documents
said to be contained in
my
for
opinion there
:
is
two reasons
one
to ascertain the
it
meaning of the
letters
name nor
sufficient
as
ascertains
was given
same
rules of
case we.
stances
An
auctioneer
is
selling pro;
acceptance.
is
As regards
no possible acsays,
the
*
first
point, there
ceptance.
back
for
the price,
We
perty
sell.'
He
writes,
'
we
'
are
now
instructed'
is
who
tor,
is
although
it is
which
He may
by Frederick
offer therein
Clark
signed
'
to
accept the
sometimes called a power simply collateral without any interest in the property.
is
'
'
what
ward contract
from the
we
obtain
it
solicitors.'
What
does he
mean
tract,
solicitor is
Now
should like
but
is
to be
an open contract
to say a
have laid down this distinction, that, where all the terms of the contract are defined and settled, then the merely
saying there shall be a formal contract does not prevent specific performance.
It is
with no given price, no stipulation as to title, no day fixed, no other term introduced or does he mean to say,
;
mere form.
all
But where
it is
in-
tended that
and deand the other usual terms will be settled by the solicitor who will send you a contract ? I have no doubt the second is the pro'
We
have
settled the
price
'
that
what
is
no
he did not intend to bind his client to an open contract without any safeguard as to title to be furnished, or
Infra, 670
61.
Prichard
v.
Ovey, L.
J.
& W.
396
Kensington
v.
Phillips, 5
Dow,
10
CHAP.
I.]
MUST BE DEFINITE.
[3.
is
to prevail.'
it is
^Notwithstanding
settled that in
it
some
now
price given.^
Hence
was properly
how
much
P.
&
agreement to act on P. & Co.'s order, so that the price and quantity could be definitely fixed.^ But it was subsequently held in the same state, that a proposal by A., " that, if the city would build one half of a good bridge, he would build the other halt," constituted, when accepted by the city, a definite
any time being mentioned
as to com-
From
plaintiff
to
defendant,
"Sold The
New
but what he did mean was, We have settled the two main terms, namely, the property to be sold and the price
to
be paid for
it.
The other
terms,
which are to some extent formal and usual, and which to a great extent must be the subject of special agreement, must be settled by the solicitor.' I think there is no contract on that ground, and I am bound to say there is no contract on the subsequent letters."
In Miller
v.
it
telegrams together, the defendants say to the plaintiff that they will sell a certain quantity of corn, on certain
terms, and within a certain time
;
whicb the
but
sell to
for uncer-
They say in effect that plaintiff". they will hold the corn for a week, for the plaintiff to find a purchaser. The
plaintifi^'s
tainty.
In Lincoln
1882, 13
which the alleged contract was based were as follows From the plaintiflF to tlie defendant, "Telegraph how much corn you will sell, with lowest cash
:
he does not say that he will take the corn, but that he has sold it, and will see the defendants the next
tion, for
day."
Infra, 657.
Benj. on Sales, 3d
V.
Am.
ed. 89
;
price,
Buffalo."
From defendant
cases,
to
Flagg
V.
Fuller
plaintiff,
"Three thousand
cents,
one
Bean, 34 N. H. 304.
dollar five
open
one week."
Ahearn
11
3.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
I.
It is sufficient, if pro;
and these
terms can be explained and applied by parol proof.^ Thus, in a case before the English Court of Appeals in 1881, it was held, that a receipt given by an auctioneer at a sale of real " Received of Mr. S., the sum of 21 as estate, as follows
:
Sun Inn, Plaxton, on the above date, Mr. C. Pinxton, owner. Received by H. M., 29th March, 1880, H. M. ;" taken in connection Avith the
at
420
following
memorandum:
S.,
H. M.,
auctioneer," constituted, when explained by parol proof, a ''I binding contract, even under the statute of frauds.*
agree," said Jessel,
In a conveyance by a debtor for the benefit of his creditors the words used are all the property.' There is sometimes a contest, but there is never any doubt that parol evidence may be admitted to show what was part of that property. There is nothing requiring the description to be an inseparable incident. The words all the property immediately throw open an inquiry
vague.
is
is
well understood.
'
'
'
As
all
shows a sufficient dehave seen these words, 'All that land formerly in the occupation of B. and now of ,' and that is quite sufficient. Those who are old enough may remember that in the form used in a common recovery, very general words were used. They were quite sufficient as a description, although outside evidence was required to show what property passed. There is no such general rule as the learned judge in the court below supposed. It does not follow that, because some general words are used, the description is The learned judge in the court below says: insufficient. Suppose, for example, the vendor were to say, I sold, at the
iN'obody ever doubted
I
'
C, formerly bequeathed by A.
Sun
>
Long
App. 1881
J.,
s. c.
Jessel,
J.,
M.
R., Baggallay, L.
J.,
Infra, 661.
Lush, L.
reversing Kay,
in
Shardlow
v.
Cotterell,
Eng. Ct. of
L. R. 18 Ch. D. 280.
12
CHAP.
I.]
CONCUKRENCE ESSENTIAL.
I say
[ 4.
;'
what I
When
he says,
you to introduce parol evidence to show what the were to which that description refers,' I agree entirely. 'But,' the learned judge continues, 'a mere description of the thing sold as 'property' is not, to my mind, sufficiently definite to enable any such parol evidence to be adduced.' The error he makes there is, taking the word ' property'
articles
alone."
In a succeeding
is
chapter
it
struction of contracts
as limited
to be determined
;
by
legal precedent
parties
is to be carried out, the construction most consistent with good faith and legality is to be preferred, and that the whole context, aided by extrinsic facts, may be invoked to determine what the parties meant.^ 4. There must not only be a concurrence of mind at a particular time, but this concurrence must be as to thing. a particular There must be, to constitute Concuro 5^ rence must
.
more
fully, a proposal
squarely assented
to.
-rn
11-1
be as to the
same
thing.
et seq.
;
Bateman, 2 Wood.
Miles, 3
Cliff.
;
& M.
Utley
359
v.
Snow
v.
v.
Hyde Houeyman
2
608
Donaldson,
Hall,
Eoutledge
v.
Ori-
Bank
v.
Iron Co., 53
& &
Chinnock v. Ely, 4 Jordan i;. Norton, 4 S. 638 155 Appleby v. Johnson, L. P. 158; Crossley v. Maycock,
J.
191
De G. F. De G. J.
M.
& W.
R. 9 C.
L. R. 9
Me. 20 Belfast, etc. R. R. v. Unity, 62 Me. 148 Abbott v. Shepard, 48 N. H. 16; Bruce v. Bishop, 43 Vt. 161; Thruston v. Thornton, 1 Cush. 89 Allcott v. Flour Mill, 9 Cush. 17 Smith
; ;
Dickinson v. Dcidds, 2 Ch. Smith v. Webster, 3 Ch. D. Holland r. Eyre, 2 Sim. & S. 194; 49 Eliason v. Henshaw, 4 Wheat. 225 Carr v. Duval, 14 Pet. 77 Greene v.
C. P. 163
;
v.
Gowdy,
8 Allen,
566
D. 463
;
Lyman Rommel
v.
v.
Wingate, 103 Mass. 327; Gowing v. Harlow v. Knowles, 118 Mass. 232 Ocean Ins. Co. Curtis, 121 Mass. 320
;
13
4.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
I.
ing
and this has been held to be the case where the proposal buy with a warranty, and the acceptance to sell with;' where there was a difference as to what the warranty out a warranty was to be ;* where the proposal was for " good" barley, and the acceptance was for '* line" barley, there being a material difference between " good" and " fine ;"' where bought and sold notes differed in material points f where there was a material difference between the application for and the allotment of shares.^ Sending, also, a smaller quantity of goods
;2
was
to
V.
Crocker
o.
r.
Bruce
v.
Pear-
Tuttle
Love, 7
14 Allen, 242; Rommel v. Wingate, 103 Mass. 327 Hartford, etc., R. R. r. Jackson, 24 Conn. 514. That in sales
;
Johns.
Tucker v. Woods, 12 Barlow v. Scott, 24 N. Y. 40 Rittenhouse v. Tel. Co., 44 N. Y. 263 Allis v. Reed, 45 N. Y. 142 Demuth V. Am. Inst., 75 N. Y. 502 Potts r. Whitehead, 5 C. E. Green, 55, 8 C. E. Green, 512 McKibbiu v. Brown, 1 McCart. 13 s. c. 2 McCart. 498 Slaymaker V. Irwin, 4 Whart. 369 Morrow McKinley V. Waltz, 18 Penn. St. 118 Dana v. Shoot, V. Watkins, 13 111. 140 81 111. 468 Maclay v. Harvey, 90 111. 525 Johnson v. Stephenson, 26 Mich. 63 Baker v. Johnson Co., 37 Iowa, 189 North W. Iron Co. v. Meade, 21 Wis. 474; McCartney v. Hnbbell, 52 Wis. 361 Brown r. Rice, 29 Mo. 322 Bruner v. Wheaton, 46 Mo. 363 Hutchesou v. Blakeman, 3 Met. (Ky.) 80 Plant Seed Co. v. Hall, 14 Kan. 553 Solomon v. Webster, 4 Col. 335. That the acceptance must be definite, see infra, 22. That an essential error
470;
;
error
as
to
identity of things
sold
Johns. 190
;
Swayne,
Infra,
J.,
National
177, 202
1
Bank
et
v.
Hall,
101 U. S. 51.
seq.
;
207;
Champion r. Short,
ison
V.
Camp. 53
Bowker,
V.
man
L.
Marryatt,
v.
M. & W. 535 6 H. L.
v.
HutchHoney-
C. 112; Arduin, L. R. 5 H.
Andrews
; ;
Garrett, 6 C.
B.
(N. S.) 262 Holland r. Eyre, 2 Sim. & S. 194 Addinell's Case, L. R, 1 Eq.
in H. L. under name of JackTurquand, L. R. 4 H. L. 305 Utley V. Donaldson, 94 U. S. 48 First Nat. Bank v. Hall, 101 U. S. 43 Kyle V. Karanagh, 103 Mass. 356. 8 Smith V. Hughes, L. R. 6 Q B.
225
aflF.
son
V.
597
*
infra, 186.
v.
Jordan
Norton, 4 M.
r.
& W.
5
155.
'
Hutchison
;
Bowker,
et seq.
M.
& W.
;
535
6
infra,
186
a contract, see infra, 171 et seq. That the minds of the parties must assent "on both sides to one and the same set of terms," see Chevely v. Fuller,
Grant v. Fletcher, 5 B. & C. 436 Gregson v. Ruck, 4 Q. B. 737. See, for these illustrations, Leake, 2d ed.
30.
1
Jackson
305
;
13 C. B. 122
;
Hazard
v.
v.
Ins. Co.,
Sumner, 218
Lyman 14
Robinson,
infra, 185.
CHAP.
I.]
CONCURRENCE ESSENTIAL.
[ 4.
than ordered, when quantity is material, and on a shorter credit, is not an acceptance corresponding to a proposal ;^ nor is acceptance of goods of a quality materially different from that proposed.^ On the other hand, if there be an acceptance, the concurrence of minds requisite to make a contract is not prevented by the use by the party assenting of expressions of
reluctance or of dissatisfaction.^
Nor
is
immediately
Nor does
provided they are mere surplusage, deprive it of its binding Nor does a memorandum attached to the acceptance force.' fixing a time for a formal signature.^ There must be, in other
words, to constitute a contract, a concurrence of the minds
of the parties at a given time to a given thing.^
this concurrence
In old times
was given
by
Subsequently came in the agent, or nuntius, who was charged with delivering and receiving the acceptance of a proposition, and in whom, within such Then limits, the minds of the parties met and coalesced. came the postal service; and as multitudinous business com-
munications are
by
letter,
and
as
but when a proposal is thus transmitted, and when it is accepted, and the acceptance embodied in a reply duly mailed, then, on the putting the acceptance in this formal shape, there is the requisite
mitted from the one to the other
Bruce
Pearson, 3 Johns. 534
v.
'
i;.
Johnson,
193-4.
^
L. R. 9 C. P.
158
inf7-a,
infra, 190.
*
Hutchison
;
Bowker,
et seq.
M.
& W.
v.
535
'
V. V.
infra,
180
Asylum
citing Joyce L. 64.
e
Beav.
v.
English
5
&
H.
Pollock,
3(1
ed.
39,
Arduin, L. R.
Swann, 17
*
Shepard, 48 N. H. 14.
Clive V. Beaumont, 1
;
Branson
v.
Stannard, 41 L. T. (N.
De G, &
S.
S.) 474.
'
397
Baines
v.
Woodfall, 6 C. B. (N.
otherwise where mate-
As
to error
et seq.
S.) 657.
It is
171
open
Appleby
v.
15
5.]
coincidence of minds.
particularly
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
I.
Now, by the telegraph, and more by the telephone, negotiations, if not face to face, may be made almost instantaneously, mind to mind. But in any case, as will presently be seen more fully, the question whether a reply is in time* depends upon the mode
of communication.
Due
in
business expedition, as
we
will see,
forwarding proposal and reply. When, however, the proposition is forwarded and delivered, and the proposer puts himself in communication with his correspondent, then their minds meet, and an acceptance of a proposal thus made is, when forwarded in the way (unless it be other-
must be employed
tract
wise limited in the proposal) business usage prescribes, a conbetween the parties. The act of forwarding is the point
5. If terms be provisionally agreed to
,
by the
parties
with
Provisional
concur-
the understanding j are preliminary r j to a that they future and fuller contract, then the prior imperfect
be treated
as final.
agreement is regarded as merged in the later and complete document.^ And where it is part of an
acceptance or of a proposal that a written contract is to be framed, by the parties, without which the negotiations are
to be inoperative, then there
tract is framed.
is
Whether
it
minary proceedings should be thus inchoate is to be determined by an examination of the entire negotiations.^ A tentative scheme is not to be treated as a contract } and the contract
'
That a proposal
may
effect
ous,
be coutinuon a remote
v.
638
Adams v. Woodley,
M. & W. 74
Proprietors Eng.
&
contingency,
.
illustrated in Bornstein
See Xenos
Wickham,
V.
L. R. 2 H. L. 296; Morton
Winn
V.
Bull,
v.
L.
R. 7 Ch. D. 29
6 H. L. C. 238
;
Burn, 7 A.
V.
&
E. 19.
As
;
to continuetc.
Honeyman
Ridgway
Chicago
V.
v.
Marryatt, 6 H. L. C. 112
Millet
R.
Wharton,
R.
Bartlett, 3
Cush. 224
infra, 14.
r.
Sheldon, 9 Wall. 50
;
That a party is not bound by conditions on a railroad ticket printed in such a way as to elude attention, see
Harris
v.
R. R., L. R. 1 Q. B. D. 515
R. R.
and
8
See infra,
*
643.
Wh. on
Ev.
v.
1014.
Wh.
on Ev.
;
1090,
v.
and cases
Chinnock
Ely, 4
De G.
J.
&
S.
there cited
Smith
Webster, L. R.
16
CHAP.
is
I.]
MAY BE BY CONDUCT.
mere negotiation as long undetermined
[ 6.
to be regarded as a
as matters
;'
or as long
as
it is
writing.^
understood that the terms are not binding until put in But the fact that a more detailed contract is in;'
and,
be
when
may
'
be accepted and
It
is
a contract
may
to a
made by
letters,
binding bargain
;"^
agreement
is
to
inoperative until
tion
and that the question whether a specific have provisional force, or is to be entirely formally drafted, depends upon the circum-
when
documents.
ional or final
And whether
is
a particular agreement
is
provis-
to be tested in the
same way.
operate as an acceptance
^ ^
.
6. Acquiescence by conduct in
all
may
which such acquiescence is with ^ Contract f knowledge of the facts and is of a nature to imply may be by assent.^ Thus the reception and retention without objection of a banker's pass-book, returned by the bank, is a
cases
in
L. R. 3 Cli. D. 49
et
645.
"The tendency
of recent au-
Ch. D.
v.
3d
ed. 41,
648
'
to discour-
Infra,
644
et seq.
;
646
Brown
R.R.,44N. Y. 79
L. R. 9 C. P. 158.
*
Appleby r. Johnson,
age any fixed rule or canon as governing these cases." " It is not to be supposed," he says, adopting Lord Cranworth's words in Ridgway
6 H. L. C. 264,
t;.
Ridgway v. Wharton, 6 H. L. C. Maitland 305, by Lord Wensleydale Brown v. V. Wilcox, 17 Penn. St. 231
; ;
Wharton,
i.
p. 117.
Thomas
v.
" because persons wish to have a formal agreement drawn up, that therefore they cannot be bound by a previous agreement, if it is clear that the agreement has been made but the
;
645.
Infra, 619
et seq.
is
James, L.
J., in
Bonnewell
6
Jen-
Ridgway
v.
;
Wharton,
Rossiter
;
H. L. C.
v.
amount
'
to
an agreement."
See infra,
v.
Miller, L. R.
644-5.
Winn
Bull,
As
707
on Ea-
VOL.
I.
17
6.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
I.
prima facie approval by the depositor of the account contained in the book;' and an invoice makes ?i prima facie case against a business man who receives and retains it without dissent.^ Admission by silence, also, as well as admission by speech, may have a contractual force, and may bind as eftectually
as
may
words.^
When
put the actor in a specific attitude to other persons by which such other persons are induced to do or omit to do a particular thing, then he is estopped from subsequently denying that he occupied such position, and is compelled to make good any losses which such other parties may have sustained by his
course in this relation.*
The
may
He who
pay
fare;
he
who
takes
partic-
marked with a
ular price, binds himself to pay that price and the bookseller
sell
into an inn,
words be spoken '^ he who enters and occupies a chamber, to pay for his entertainleaves a horse at a livery stable, to pay for the
ment
he
who
horse's keep.
A nod
at an auctioneer
fall
particular price,
and the
of the
A
may
may be a proposal of a hammer may indicate the mere tacit recognition hy a man
of a
not only bind him to her, but bind him, on her account, to third parties.^ And, as a rule, a contract evidenced by conduct may bind as efi'ectually, there being no statutory prohibition, as a contract evidenced by
as his wife
words.*"
*
woman
On
we have
;
the following by
v.
Williamson
Field
V.
Williamson,
I..
R. 7
R. 148
Sweeting
Fisher
v.
Eq. 542.
*
B. 310
Seltzer, 23
v.
308
s
Grotenkemper
v.
Achtermayer,
See infra,
217.
Bush, 222.
1085, 1142,
silence,
Wh.
on Ev.
and
im-
Summerville
Picard
v.
That
when
infra, 85 et seq.
'"
amounting
6
to a suppression,
infra,
may
v.
Sears, 6 A.
&
E. 474;
289
et seq.
Harrison
Miles
v.
Wright, 13 M.
& W.
;
816
on Ev. 1151. * Henderson v. Stevenson, L. R. 2 Sc. Ap. 470 infra, 709 et seq. ' Anson on Contracts, 11 infra,
;
;
Wh.
Furber, L. R. 8 Q. B. 77
R. R., L. R. 2
v.
Brog;
den
ton
v.
v.
Hubbard
v.
Coolidge, 1 Met. 84
;
ThrusCarroll
Thornton, 1 Cush. 89
;
709
et seq.
Rice
v.
v.
Barrett,
Infra,
25 6
Payne
v.
Cave, 3 T.
Griswold
Haven, 25
18
CHAP.
I.]
MAY BE BY CONDUCT.
[7.
Paulus: "Qui tacet, non ntiqiie fatetur; sed tamen verum est, eum non negare."^ It should be remembered, however, that a provisional concurrence is not to be treated as final,^ and that an acceptance may be conditional.' It should be remembered also that the mere reception and temporary detention of money, in payment of a purchase not accepted, does not neces-
from disputing the acceptance;* nor, as must be an acceptance, as will presently be seen, of a proposal, to make a contract, does the mere non-refusal of an article sent, or of a proposal made, without any action implysarily estop the party
there
usual as
who
of services
from the work without repudiating it, then an en- ^ay^^^^ ffasrement to pay a reasonable price for the work is amount to ^ ^
assumed.
The
an agree-
case
is
menttopay
man
ing into such a relation involves a promise to pay for the services thus to be received.
laborer comes to
my
employment.^
Bodine v. Killeen, 53 N. Y. Beaupland v. McKeen, 28 Penn. 124 West. Un. Tel. Co. v. R. R.,
;
;
and Koch
86
St.
111.
246
Pickrel
V.
v.
Rose, 87
111.
263
Louis
Shields,
62
Mo.
247;
Thompson v. Matthews, 56 Miss. 368 Woodworth v. Wilson, 11 La. An. 402. Where one party proposes a business act to be done by another, and this is
done by the other party, in accordance with the request, which is notified to the proposer, this is an acceptance.
consensum non inferente, Gluck's essay, Ueber die Wirkung des Stillschweigens auf einen geschehenen Antrag, and Kori's essay, Ueber die
Stillschweigenden
*
3
*
Willeuserkharung.
Supra, 5.
Infra, 16.
Demuth
v.
Institute, 75 N. Y. 502.
Infra, 22.
Infra, 708
Paynter
v.
Boyd
'
i\
1 C.
& M.
273
;
810
Lamb
v.
;
v.
Williams, Bunce, 4 M.
L.
S.
Pegge
121
"Qui
L. R. 9 C. P. 373
7 Greenl.
;
seutire videtur,"
received
by the
Day
v.
Caton,
119
with several important limitations. Lippeuius, Senkenberg, and Schott have discussed the question in
treatises Jon
Mass. 516
;
Brackett
Norton, 4 Conn.
524 Smith v. Morse, 20 La. An. 220. As to implied indebtedness, see infra,
Silentium et consensus
708
et seq., for
other cases.
19
7.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
I.
But this is not the case when the party to whose benefit the work enures has no knowledo:e of the doinor of the work at the time when it is done;^ nor when the services are rendered as gratuities or courtesies f nor when the party employed has
a stated salary independently assigned to him.^
services for
But, subject
which a commission
is
In constands
who
payment to be made in his behalf, is bound to reimburse the party making the payment.' And even when such payment is not encouraged by the party on behalf of whom
made, yet if it is made under compulsion of law, this implies a promise from such party to pay it.^ But a mere volunteer payment on behalf of a party not encouraging it does not imply such a promise.^ What has been said with regard to
it is
payment for goods.^ The acceptance of goods from a tradesman with whom the receiver is accustomed to deal, creates an implied promise to pay for them ;^ and when, after an order for goods, goods deviating from the order are sent and accepted, there is an implied contract on the part of the receiver to pay for them.'" A sale, also, is implied in a
contracts of
Infra, 719
V.
Pollock, 3d ed. 10
White
8
Corlies,
46 N. Y. 467.
Richard-
That when a term of service has been broken into, back wages may be recovered on a quantum and that a convieruit, see infra, 717 tract partially performed may be the
Infra, 720.
;
15 M.
& W.
;
Conn, 409
Johns. 188.
">
87
Downs
Oxendale
;
v.
Wetherell, 9 B.
v.
&
C.
386
Richardson
v.
V.
Dunn, 2 Q. B. 222
;
Thompson
r.
Matthews, 56 Miss.
368.
5
i?.
lor,
Camp. 49
511.
;
Alexander
Exall
v. v.
v.
TayVane,
M.
'
& W.
308
;
Wagar, 26 Mich. 452; see Whether, when there is a infra, 22. reception and retention of goods less in amount than the order calls for, the
Wilson
sender can recover
is
Infra, 759
Partridge, 8
hereafter consid-
T. R.
Sapsford
Fletcher, 4 T.
R. 511.
1
Mere non-rejecimply
Infra, 757
seq.;
England
v.
a promise to pay
infra, 22.
When
20
CHAP.
I.]
[ 8.
recovery in trover, and in a recovery of damages, in cases where the value of the thing converted is inchided in the damages
recovered.
ment of which the property vests in the defendant."' In Pennsylvania it is held that a judgment on which execution is sued out in trespass or trover for carrying away goods, is
to be regarded as divesting the plaintiff's title in the goods.^
we have just seen, may be by conduct, or may be by word of mouth, or they may be by Contracts .. 1 ,, ,, writmg, or they may be by record and in these are resoivrelations they may jiresent innumerable variations, proposal relation, however, which will now and acIn one important ^ ceptance. be considered, they may be regarded as possessing a common requisite. There is no contract, so it is maintained, that may not be resolved into a proposal and an acceptance.
8. Contracts, as
they
'
.-,
emanating simultaneously from two contracting minds. But the answer is that, as a matter of fact, there is no contract in which the initiative is not taken in the way of a suggestion or proposal from one party, followed up either by acceptance, or by counter-suggestion or counter- proposal from the other party and, ultimately, no matter how protracted may be the negotiations, they are consummated, if there be a The proposal by itself contract, in proposal and acceptance. is no more a contract than a single pier on one side of a river It is the acceptis a bridge, or a single hook is a coupling.
;
i.
e.,
lump
as a whole,
Benj. on Sales, 3d
citing
Am.
ed. 49,
and the vendor sends only a part of the order, and the goods sent are received and enjoyed by the purchaser, the question arises whether the vendor can recover at all, and if so, to what extent. This question is discussed in future sections
;
Brinsmeed
;
v.
Harrison, L. R. 6
v.
C. P. 584
1,
Lovejoy
v.
Murray, 3 Wall.
16
Hyde
Nobles, 13 N. H. 494;
;
infra,
Rotch v Hawes, 12 Pick. 138 Osterhout v. Roberts, 8 Cow. 43. * pioyd v. Browne, 1 Rawle, 121 see Fox v. Northern Liberties, 3 W. &
S. 107.
898
et seq.
As
to
21
8.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
I.
poses necessary to
make up one
assailed
joint conclusion.^
It
is
true
is
by Mr. Pollock,
work on
was "
two
editions."
He
main-
is
declared in a set
both execute a deed or sign a written agreement," wherever, in such cases, "the parties intend not to be equally bound to anything until their consent is formally declared." " In such
a case," he holds, "
it
cannot be said that the proposal and all events, not the true
and
asks
final
agreement."
He
who
and who
is
the acceptor?
On
question
may
not
be capable of solution
is
proposer or acceptor.
Parol evidence
parties to a contract;
indicate
who was
proposer and
and though the lease itself does not who was acceptor, yet, in the
and an acceptor, and, were this material, brought out by parol. !No contract consists exclusively of the words in which it is ultimately expressed.
the fact could be
It consists, not simply ^f those words, but also of all others
which, in a proper issue, may be admitted for its explanation and rectification, and in it are to be incorporated all the relative surrounding circumstances which may serve to put it in its true light.^ An indorsement on negotiable paper, to take another illustration, consists merely of the indorser's name; and here, we may say, there is neither proposal nor acceptance. But this indorsement is in itself a contract in short-hand; and the words of which it consists embody, in their surroundings, a proposal from the party seeking the accommodation, and an acceptance from the party granting it.^ The same criticism may be applied to brokers' memoranda. If there be a range of contracts of which instantaneousness may
ii.
990; Winds-
Wh. on
Ev.
1061.
22
CHAP.
I.]
REQUISITES OF PROPOSAL.
it is
[ 9.
be predicated,
Myriads of contracts may be made in what to an uninitiated observer may appear to be the same instant. Yet not only may these contracts be severed, but each one of them contains in itself a proposal and an acceptance, which may be brought out by parol proof.^ No matter how apparently simultaneous, on the face of a contract, may be the action of the parties, there is no case in which, if the inquiry be material, evidence may .not be received showing what are virtually proposal and acceptance. It should at the same time be kept in mind, that, unless some action is required on the part of the proposer to give efficiency to an acceptance, an acceptance is sufficiently consummated by performance of the
business centres.
consideration.^
9.
When
is
there
is
a proposal
to bind,
is
efl'ective
p^.^ ^^^j .^
a period as
may
not to bind
reasonable
^*^'
mind
In deterrain-
If a parcel of perishable
goods
is
things be prompt.
The question of
reasonable time, therefore, depends (in absence of indications on the face of the agreement) in part on the usages of trade, in part on the nature of the business.* The question, also, may be conditioned by mode of communication. When this
J
Wh. on
See
Ev. 968
et seq.
2 3
Infra, 17.
Wh. on
;
Ev.
968
et seq.
;
Dane, 43 N. Y. 240 (where a delay of months was held to avoid) Johnston v. Fessler, 7 Watts, 48 Mactier
four
;
v.
Frith, 6
Wend. 103
Potts
;
v.
White-
Dunlop v. Higgins, 1 H, L. C. 381 Ramsgate Hotel v. Montefiore, L. R. 1 Ex. 109 Eliason v. Henshaw, 4 Wheat. 225 Beckwith v. Cheever,
Ch. 592
;
; ;
head, 5 C. E. Green, 55
8 C. E. Green,
;
Abbott v. Shepard, 48 N. H. 14; Loring v. Boston, 7 Met. (Mass.) 409 Barnes v. Perrine, 9 Barb. 202 Chicago, etc. R. R. v.
1 Fost. (21 N.
;
;
H.) 41
Maclay v. Harvey, 90 111. 525 Stockham v. Day, 50 Iowa, 247 Martin v. v. Stockham, 32 Md. 196 Black, 21 Ala. 721 and cases cited in Wald's Pollock, 9; Pollock, 3d ed.
512
;
Judd
24-25.
28
9aJ
is
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
I.
by
immediate
reply, as has
been said,
eacyi
to be expected
;*
while,
when
telegraph, and the post are resorted to, the delays incident to
account.
is
to return
an immediate answer, if an immediate answer is not returned the proposal will be regarded as declined. And it was held in Illinois, in 1880, that where an offer is made by post, it being understood between the parties that there should be an answer by return post, the making of the offer implies the stipulation that the answer should be sent by return of post.^ But "an offer which is in its nature continuous and open for some period of time, and which is also conditional upon an event which may not immediately happen, but must at all events be attended with some delay, becomes a valid contract on good consideration, if accepted in fact, and upon the fulfilment of the condition, within a reasonable time and before an
actual retraction of the offer. "^
9a.
posal force
is re-
When
a proposal
is
is
ex-
i's^ex-
But a mere
letter of inquiry
cannot be
hausted.
treated as a rejection.^
v. Fessler, 7 v.
'
Johnson Maclay
Watts, 48.
111.
plaintiflF that
he would
sell certain
iron
all
Harvey, 90
text,
525.
v.
warrants
open
As sustaining the
see
Boyd
Monday.
plaintiff:
On Monday morning
the de-
That a guar-
meaning
of "forthwith"
and similar
may
"Please wire whether you would accept forty for delivery over two months, or, if not, longest limit you would give." It was held that this was not a rejection of the defendant's offer, which was still open during the Monday, and which, when accepted, formed a contract binding the
be of essence, see
infra, 887.
Bernstein
v.
v.
defendant.
*
citing Train
Pick. 380;
Leake, 2d ed. 47
;
Goward
v.
a proposal,
14.
Stevenson
v.
McLean, L. R.
5 Q.
B. D. 346.
24
CHAP.
I.]
REVOCATION OF PROPOSAL.
[ 10.
made
ac-
ean be no question that if the person addressed hesi- cepteda tates, the person proposing can withdraw the pro- ma/brreposai before the persf)n addressed signifies his accept- not after"*
ance.
A similar
when
wards,
is made by mail or by telegraph.^ "If there be no contract until acceptance, there is nothing by which the proposer can be bound."'' Before acceptance a proposal is "but an ofter to contract, and the parties making the ofi*er might undoubtedly withdraw it at any time before acceptance."^ The right to revoke before acceptance is one which prior conditions cannot limit. Thus, at an auction sale, the bidder may recall his bid at any time before the hammer falls, though the conditions of sale are that no bidding shall be retracted,^ and the seller may retract though the sale was to be without reserve.' It would be a petitio principii to say that the party retracting was bound by contract not to retract, since it is to
the proposal
But as we will soon see more fully, when an acceptance has been duly posted or telegraphed, a revocation is ordinarily too
late,'
Whether
there
is
a revocation,
is,
Thus
New York
pay said Q. four and a half cents per foot for from six to fourteen thousand feet of the same kind and quality of the timber as aforesaid, and delivered at place aforesaid during the winter, to be paid on
clause:
I agree to
Vangerow, 603 Windscheid, Pollock, 3d ed. 22 Routledge v. Grant, 4 Bing. 653; Honeyraan v. Marryatt, 21 Beav. 14 6 H. L. C. 112
'
;
"and
Shotwell,
13 Bush,
271
and cases
ed. 41.
v.
305
hereafter cited.
' '
Benj. on Sales, 3d
Am.
Stitt v.
Huidekopers, 17 Wall. 384 Beckwith Faulkner V. Cheever, 21 N. H. 41 V. Hebard, 26 Vt. 452; Boston & Me.
;
6,
267, 443.
R. R. Co.
V.
Bartlett,
3 Cush. 224
;
Warlow
v.
v.
Harrison, 1 E.
&
E. 295
Crocker
Co.
V.
v.
Moline
v.
Harris
Nickerson, L. R. 8 Q. B. 286.
Benj. on Sales, 3d
Am.
ed. 41.
25
11.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
I.
There was no acceptance by Q. It was held that the clause quoted was a mere proposal, not binding until acceptance, and that it could therefore be revoked at any time before acceptance; but that the proof of revocation before acceptance must be made out by the party setting up the revocation, and that the question whether there was a revocation, supposing there was no order revoking produced, and there was conflicting testimony, was one of fact to be decided on all the circumstances of the case.^ It is also to be kept in mind that, as the performance of the consideration involves an acceptance, and as it is not necessary that the performance of the consideration should at the time be communicated to the proposer unless required by the terras of the contract, a proposal cannot be revoked after the consideration has been performed.^ But the consideration must be entirely performed before the promisee can sue. It is not enough for it to be The condition begun. must be performed entire.^ 11. When a proposal, therefore, is fully acted on by Revocation ^^^^ P^^^y addressed, this establishes between the requires parties a Contractual relation which cannot be broken notice unless by the provisions of the transaction itself, or brought party ad^J ^ revocation communicated to the party addressed,
the
first
111
r.
..IP
"I
dressed.
rpj^^
proposal, in fact,
is
virtually this:
offer continues
ofter to
do
but
my
open only
al-
stances
is
a reasonable period.
And
right to revoke the proposal at any time before acceptance." Hence, a revocation to be operative must be brought home to the party holding a proposal which is still in force; and an acceptance prior to the reception of such revocation,
Quick V. Wheeler, 78 N. Y. 300. In a Michigan case, in 1880, P. sent
pleted."
It
this
was an
Weiden
* '
v.
rods for
for
my
I
which
26
CHAP.
I.]
REVOCATION OF PROPOSAL.
[ 12.
after it was forwarded, binds the proposer.^ In an English case, decided in 1880,^ the defendants, at Cardiff, Wale^, wrote on October Ist, 1879, to the plaintiffs at New
though
York, offering 1000 boxes of tin plates on terms specified in their letter and on receipt of the letter, on October 11th, an acceptance was telegraphed by ocean cable, which was followed by a letter of acceptance posted on October 15th. On October 8th, however, the defendants, in a letter received by the plaintiffs on October 20th, explicitly withdrew their offer. It was held by Lindley, J., that a withdrawal of an offer is not effective until communicated to the party to whom it is sent, and that posting a letter of withdrawal is no such communication. The same position was shortly afterwards taken by Lush, J.^ And it is argued by Mr. Pollock^ that " it seems impossible to find any reason in principle why the necessity for communication should be less in the case of a revocation which is made not by words but b}' conduct, as by disposing to some one else of a thing offered for sale."* And it is settled in England that it is not necessary that the revocation should be made in any formal terms. A sale, for instance, to
;
is
a revocation of the
Except in
^^^^ '^^ P''" poser's
.'^'
if
A. be notified of the
sale.^
The
be effective against the party addressed, must be brought home to him, does not apply when the proposer dies before the proposal is accepted. In
Supra, ^10; Leake, 2d ed.42; Benj. on Sales, 2d Eng. ed. 52, 3d Am. ed. 41 et seq. ; Stevenson v. McLean, L. R. 5 Q. B. D. 346 Craig v. Harper, 3 Cush. ]58 Boston, etc. R. R. v. Bartlett, 3 Cush. 224 Wheat v. Cross, 31 Md. 99 Judd v. Day, 50 Iowa, 247. * Byrne v. Van Tienhoven, L. R. 5 C. P. D. 344. See further, infra, 18. 3 Stevenson v. McLean, L. R. 5 Q.
'
; ; ; ;
Till
sanity
proposer
knows that before the acceptance the had done something absoIntely inconsistent with the proposal
(e. g.,
may
be so read as
to
support the
But the
B. D. 346.
3d ed. 26. v. Dodds, L. R. 2 Ch. D. 463, C. A. (reversing Bacon, V. C), it was held, that, if the party addressed
*
Op.
cit.
In Dickinson
Dickinson
v.
Dodds, L. R. 2 Ch. D.
463.
27
13.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
t.
But
poser's estate
bound.^
death
It
may
is
When
has this
13.
effect, it
Can
any time
within that date would be good ? That he can is ^ keepopena afiirmcd by leading authorities in the Roman law;^
a'speclfied date.
and there
gygjj
withdraw the offer within the The person addressed may have several other opportunities of the same kind open to him there may, for instance, be several houses offered to him for rent; and an inquirer of this class has usually such an option. One is offered to him at a designated rent, a fixed period being given to him in which he is to make up his mind. Trusting to this, he declines others. The very fact of his entertaining
not, being advised of this fact,
period limited.
the
offer,
how
slight, of his
v.
The
conflict in
the analo-
Dodds, L. R. 2 Ch. D. 475 Anson, 24 Blades v. Free, 9 B. & C. 117; Campanari i-. Woodburn, 15 C. B. 400 Lee
;
Wh. on
Ag.
101,
v.
v.
V. Griffin, 1
B.
&
S.
272
:
Frith
v.
t- .
Law-
Mactier
Frith, 6
Wend.
103.
Pratt
Trustees,
'
Warner
Pollock,
Humphries, 2 M.
&
G,
93
111.
475.
is
charity
853.
*
In Dickinson
L.
J.,
if
well, L. J,, in
Drew
r.
Nunn,
L. R.
Bram4
Dodds,
ut
is
supra,
Mellish,
Q, B. D. 669.
* ^
^
said:
a
"It
Infra,
dies, the
is
Beach
v.
117a. Church, 96
111.
177.
;
offer
Van-
dead
v.
Burtees, 25 L.
gerow, 603
Windscheid,
305.
28
CHAP.
I.]
STAND.
[ 13.
is
To
an illustration given by Mr. Bell.^ "If, for example, a merchant propose to sell to another a cargo of sugar or of tobacco, and agree to give him a certain time to determine whether he will buy the goods or not, engaging not to dispose of them till the time has elapsed, and in the mean while he dispose of them, and disappoint the person to whom the promise has been made, who may have rejected an advantageous offer from another dealer, it seems unjust that, for the disappointment thus occasioned, there should be no remedy. "^ But wherever there is a wrong there is a remedy and we are entitled to hold, on prin;
ciple, that
good for a specific period, is thus acted on, to the proposer's knowledge, by the party to
proposal, to be
when a
whom
To On
it is
addressed,
it
'
time to the other party for acceptance, the offer may nevertheless be retracted in the interval, if no consideration has been given for the promise."^ By Mr. Pollock, also, we are told
Infra,
493 c<
seq.
Appleton
Story on
v.
Chase, 19 Me. 74
;
Train
v.
Bell
on
Sales,
quoted
Boston
&
;
Co. v. Bartlett, 3 Cush. 225 " The Ball, 18 Johns. 337 Willetts v. Ins. only answer to this in the English law Co., 45 N. Y. 45. To the same effect is appears to be, that no one is entitled Story on Cont. 496 Metcalf on Cont. to rely on a unilateral engagement 19-21 2 Kent Com. 477 n. d. ; Wald's gratuitously made and without consid- notes to Pollock, 8-9 1 Duer on Ins. eration. But one cannot help feeling 118. ^ Sales, 3d Am. ed. 41. that a rule so different from what com^ To this point the American editor monly happens in the intercourse of life raises that inconsistency between cites Craig v. Harper, 3 Cush. 158; law and justice which is sometimes Boston, etc. R. R. v. Bartlett, 3 Cush. complained of." As will be seen, how- 224 Hochster v. Baruch, 5 Daly, 440 ever, the English rule is not settled to Burton v. Shotwell, 13 Bush. 271 the extent supposed by Mr. Bell. And Falls v. Gaither, 9 Port, 605 Eskridge the engagement is not without con- v. Glover, 5 St. & P. 264. In Eskridge sideration when the party receiving v. Glover, 5 St. & P. 264, there was a the promise suspends, no matter to proposal by A. to B. to exchange horses
Cont. 496.
8
Me. R. R. Brooks v.
how
*
with a
specific
sum
to be given to B. to
where.
the matter even, with the privilege to B. to decide upon the proposal
make
29
13.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
I.
that
"even if he (the proposer) purports to give a definite time for acceptance, he is free to withdraw his proposal before that time has elapsed. He is not bound to keep it open unless there is a distinct collateral contract to that eifect, founded on a distinct consideration."^ But the authorities cited by Mr. Pollock do not justify this broad assertion; and it is, in fact, much modified in a note on the same page of the second edition of his work, where he tells us " that an action would
lie for
a breach of promise to keep the offer," which would not be the case if the party were not in some sense bound by his promise.'' So far as concerns Mr. Benjamin's summary, it
hy a certain day. It was held that under this agreement A. had the right
to recede before the
said:
"Nothing can be
clearer
than
day designated.
And
41
'
;
see Beckwith
v.
Cheever, 21 N. H.
Faulkner
v.
Cooke
v.
engagement was all on party was not bound it was therefore nudum pactum.'^ " It is not To this Buller, J., added
contract, the
one side
;
the other
Oxley, 3 T. R. 653
V.
Great North. R. R.
P. 16
;
V.
Hochster
;
B. 678
;
Frost
v.
sale."
From
these
we
Routledge
v.
must
Dickinsons. Dodds,
Eskridge
v.
Glover,
&
P. 264.
by
Cooke V. Oxley, 3 T. R. 653, which is supposed to rule that an offer which is to remain open till a specified date does not bind the proposer, does not,
as will be seen,
tion.
make a sale at
a future
sustain
that
posi-
Cooke certain tobacco at a certain price, Cooke having till four o'clock on
sell
play with
it
fast
bound,
Before
he received the proposal subsay so he could not repel or ignore the proposal, and
if
;
the
hour designated, Cooke notified Oxley that he agreed to take the Oxley, however, refused to tobacco.
it,
it
as continuing.
he wished to have bound Oxley, he "I accept your should have said
:
deliver
and a
for
suit
was brought
me
in
against
him
damages.
plaintiff,
verdict
but judg-
(See Benjamin on
note
Pollock,
9.)
Because the declaration did not aver any such relation between the parties, judgment was arrested; That this is the purport of the decision in this
famous case
is
30
CHAP.
I.]
STAND.
[31.
It
is
of
J.,
in
:
valho, 16 East, 47
intention of
oflfer.
the party
making the
Cooke
judge,
o'clock," and if, as may have been the upon the record, and a writ of error case so far as the declaration in Cooke was afterwards brought on the judg- V. Oxley averred, instead of agreeing ment of this court, by which it appears to this, he turns his back on me and that the objection made was that there walks oflf, a continuing oflfer on my was only a proposal of sale by the one part cannot be inferred. There must, party, and no allegation that the other in such case, be a continuing oflfer on party had acceded to the contract of which the party addressed relied and sale." In other words, as is stated by this, if he seeks to recover on the proJudge Metcalf (who rejects, as " un- posal, he must aver and prove. To reasonable and inconsistent with good this eflfect, see Routledge v. Grant, 4 faith, and at variance with acknowlBing. 653 Dickinson v. Dodds, L. R. edged principles of law," the rule that 2 Ch. D. 463; Larmon v. Jordon, 56
;
v. Oxley, I say to a customer, face to face, " I will hold this matter open for you till four
if,
But
as in Cooke
an oflfer to sell within a specific limit does not bind the proposer), " in setting forth an
oflfer
111.
204.
v.
In Dickinson
Dodds, L. R. 2 Ch. D.
averring
an
acceptance
though on the same day, a party does not show necessarily that there was any mutual assent. The oflfer, as has before been stated, may have been retracted, or rejected, or have expired, within an hour from the time it was made. And as this depends on such a
variety of circumstances, peculiar to
memorandum, on which suit was brought, was as follows " I hereby undertake to sell to Mr. George Dickinson the whole of the dwelling-houses, garden ground, stabling, and out-buildings, etc., for the sum of 800, etc. (Signed) John Dodds.
463, the defendant's
:
P. S.
This
oflfer
Friday,
9 o'clock
A.M.
(the twelfth)
(Signed) J. Dodds."
each case,
it
The
fied,
acceptance
was made, does, of course, evince a mutual concurrent assent of the parties,
bill for
spe-
Judge Metcalf further argues that Cooke v. Oxley is inconsistent with Adams v. Lindsell, 1 B. & Aid. 683, which held that an
suggested."
oflfer
James, L.
J.,
said
"
It is clear settled
in a letter is to be regarded as
all
continuing during
the mail.
the time
it is
in
law, that this promise being a nudum pactum was not binding, and that, at any moment before a complete accept-
Such (unless revoked by telegram or other more rapid mode of communication) is undoubtedly the
ance by Dickinson of the oflfer, Dodds was as free as Dickinson himself. Well,
that being the state of things,
it is
said
31
13.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
if
I.
a nullity, and that a promise to hold open a proposal, out any consideration, cannot, tlierefore, be enforced.
here maintained
is
withis
is,
What
if
is
to be inferred. It is true that if the party addressed should say, " You may do as you please ; I will abandon no right,
even in the slightest degree, in consequence of what you tell me; I will pursue my inquiries just as if I never heard from you I shall not take the least amount of trouble in looking
;
we might
say,
"This
is all
the party
quence of what has been said to him the proposal does not bind." This would undoubtedly be the case with a proposal to a party who takes no action whatever on the proposal.
;
mode
in
which Dodds
Chic.
etc.
R.
R.
r.
v.
240
Gillespie
Dane, 43 N. Y. Edmonston, 11
Humph.
et seq.,
553.
Now
withdraw
is
my
offer.
In Benj. on Sales, 3d
Am.
ed. 64
apprehend there
neither principle
withdrawal of the
called a retractation.
stitute a. contract,
offer,
It
or
what
is
Cooke v. Oxley is elaborately vindicated and to the position in the text that the detriment to the vendee by keeping the matter open is a con;
must, to conof
sideration,
it is
at the
same moment
such detriment, or "inconvenience," But this is the case with for granted.
all propositions
continuing up to the
ance.
If
moment of
the
accept-
tinuing
then
acceptance
objection to
comes to nothing."
the above reasoning
The
is
the assertion
with which it starts that the agreement was a nudum pactum. So far as the particular case went, this may have been so. But ordinarily the proposal means "I will agree to keep the matter open for a day (or week, as the case may be), if you will consider the matter and not commit yourself at once to some other pending proposal." This
:
is
a sufficient consideration.
Here the offer is substantially this "I will keep this thing for you until to-morrow in consideration of your putting aside other competing openings." If the promisee, having this offer in view, rejects other offers which he might otherwise accept, this detriment is a good consideration. In Hallock v. Ins. Co., 2 Dutch. 268, Cooke v. Oxley is spoken of as having been effectually overruled in England; and in Boston, etc. R. R. v. Bartlett, 3 Cush. 228, Fletcher, J., says that Cooke v. Oxley "has certainly, in later cases, been entirely disregarded, and cannot now be considered as of any
{Infra, 547.)
:
authority."
32
CHAP.
I.]
CONTINUOUS PROPOSALS.
[ 14.
But
if
how trivial, taken in consequence of the proposal by the party addressed, or in a suspension by him, no matter how brief, of inquiries elsewhere, the proposer being cognizant thereof, this makes a binding contract. Even the mere holding the matter under advisement is a consideration that binds. The party proposing says: "If you will consider this proposal, I will give you a day to The fact that it decide." This the party addressed accepts.
thus to be acted on is a concession that forms an adequate consideration.^ Sometimes it may be a matter of much importance to the proposer to be able to say "I have offered
is
:
who
has
it
under consideration."
it
But,
the
little,
be seriously enter-
it the time and examination necessary for due deliberation. And this is a sufficient consideration. 14. "We have seen^ that a continuous proposal only binds "Whether a proposal is confor a reasonable time. tinuous depends not only upon the language used, not Wnding but upon the mode of the negotiation. If it should {5nuous? be said, " these goods are yours if called for during business hours to-day," and the party addressed accepts, either expressly or tacitly, in conformity with the usages of business, the proposal, this is a sale defeasible on part of the vendor in case the purchaser does not comply with the condition of calling for the goods. An action for the price, based on the contract, would lie against the vendee if he took the goods au action for the damages incurred would lie on the contract against the vendor in case he did not deliver the goods when called for within the time limited. Yet, on the other hand^ the proposal may be simply this: "If you call at any time within ten days, I will procure a certain article for you at a certain price." In such case there is no sale, though (if the transaction be not void as a gambling adventure) the proposer would be liable, in case his promise was not made goody for
;
'
See
Supra, 9.
VOL.
I.
88
15.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
I.
Or
may
be to
and the proposal may be made face to face, but may not be assented to when assent would be practicable and in accordance with business usage. In such case the proposal is not binding Mr. Leake^ if not continuing, though if continuing it binds.^ gives the following examples of rulings on offers limited in
continuance
drawn, by ordering goods upon the terms of the tender.^ An agreement to carry all goods presented for carriage at a certain rate during twelve months is to be construed as a mere offer that may be accepted from time to time by delivering goods for carriage ;^ and an analogous interpretation has been applied to an offer to guarantee the payment of a particular line of bills for twelve months.' In such case the guarantee may be revoked at any period during the continuance, except so far as The modification, before acceptance, of it has been acted on.^ the law under which a continuing proposal is made, if material,
may
operate as a revocation.'^
If not ac-
SS
de-
signated
liimt as to
Whatever we may think as to the questions is plain that, when the party addressed ^^s a spccific time within which to accept a proI r 15.
abovestated,it
\
timeor
posai'iaiis.
/.
The
'
Mactier
dell,
v.
389.
8
As
to
contin-
Vangerow,
5
ut
ning considerations, see inj'ra, 515. That a party delivering goods to a proposed purchaser on trial, is bound by
his proposal to sell, see
supra; Jackson
C. 75
;
Galloway,
Frith, 6
Bing. N.
;
Mactier
Wend. 103
; ;
White
Hunt
v.
Wy-
198,
46 N. Y. 467 Potts Longr. Whitehead, 5 C. E. Green, 55 worth V. Mitchell, 26 Ohio St. 334;
V. Corlies,
Maclay
v.
v.
Harvey, 90
111.
525
;
Smith
Witham,
L.
V.
Eskridge
R. 9C. P. 16.
r.
&
P. 264.
Tliat
when
Burton
Offord
Ibid.
v.
6 6
V.
Davies, 12 C. B. N. S. 748.
to
infra, 19.
As
continuous guarantees,
34
CHAP.
I.]
CONDITIONS OF ACCEPTANCE.
If so, unless the condition
perfected.*
is
[ 16.
place of acceptance.
complied
with, no contract
Pollock,^
is
"The
"may
is
proposal
it is
to be accepted.
If no time
is
must be communicated to him within a reasonable time."' Even a partial payment, by the promisee, if made conditionally, does not bind him to a proposal which he does not accept. Thus, in an Illinois case in 1880, the evidence was, that V.
made
day
the followinsj
memorandum
in his
to P. a bill of
lumber
to complete a
this
was a mere
itself
an acceptance.*
An
;
may
be conProposal
ditional
that
to say,
,
it
may
be conditioned upon
Thus a proposal
on
trial
may
be accepted dependent on
oft'er,
111
^^^ acceptance
may
and the ditionai. contract, supposing there be no unfair advantage taken by the purchaser, does not bind unless the goods prove satisfactory.^ AVhen the proposal is thus made, the purchaser is entitled to hold the goods during the period limited for trial.^ And where the proposal is to take with a right to return if not liked, this makes a sale with a right of contingent rescission.^ On the other hand, the acceptance, though partial, must be unqualified to be operative, that is to say, the accept'
Infra, 881
Savigny,
viii.
371
2 Phila. 289
8
Bowney
v.
Clark, 22
Puchta, Pandekt.
Lindsell, 1 B.
251
681
;
Adams
;
v.
Pitts. L. J. 69.
Collen, 7 M.
sliaw, 4
Stocken
v.
v.
Eliason
Hen-
Hunt
v.
Wyman,
Wheat.
and cases
cited
infra, 589.
'
Wh.
* 3
*
Con. of L.
Ellis v.
Mortimer, 1 B.
et seq.
;
&
r.
P. 257
3d ed. 24.
Supra, 9
;
Reed
Upton,
10 Pick. 522.
392.
Smith
V.
Weaver, 90
That
currence
*
is
not
by business usage the proposal may be conditioned on acceptance by next convenient mail, see Carmichael
v.
Witherby
Sleeper, 101
Mass.
138.
Newell,
85
17.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
I.
ance must go to some one specified thing put forth by the propromise, also, to pay on performance of an act from posal.^ which the promisee will incur a loss, becomes binding on the
performance of the
act.^
Nor
is
the promise
less
binding from
is
But
if
the promise be on a
is
no contract.*
And, where an
application
was made
to an institute for an
allotment of space in its hall for exhibition, the applicant paying the stipulated entrance fee, and the institute reserving
the right of rejection,
it
a contract to award the desired space.^ Agreements contingent upon the action of other parties are hereafter distinctively
considered.*
16
a.
What
as
joint enterprises.^
scriptions
has just been said applies to subscriptions to Whether such subscriptions bind,
sufficient consideration, will be hereafter
having
terprises!
Considered.^
At
present
we have
they are accepted they are merely inchoate, and have no binding force.^
17.
Where
the proposal
is
Acceptance
must be communicatedwheu
require
.
^"^^ being Communicated, or when anything is to be done by the proposer in order to make an accept
ance operative, the fact of the acceptance must be commuiiicated to the proposer.^'' Thus, where a party
is
to him, he
company, and these shares are allotted is communicated to him proposal being conditioned on communi
Hilton
v.
Morse
V.
Deniuth
See
v.
Institute, 75 N. Y. 502.
Infra, 528.
infra, 528, 595.
.
Worrell
;
v.
see 1 Ch.
'
Infra, 528.
on Con. 10th Am. ed. 29 infra, 505. 3 Great N. R. R. v. Witham, L. R. Barnes v. Perrine, 9 Barb. 9 C. P. 16 205 Willetts v. Ins. Co., 45 N. Y. 45, and cases cited, tn/ra, 524,589. As
;
Ives
r.
Ayer's
v.
App., 28 Penn.
Perry, 5 Ohio, 58
Grat. 146.
'" Leake, 2d on Cout. 993.
179
Commis.
v.
Stuart
R. R., 32
ed. 34.
Gray
v.
36
CHAP.
I.]
COMMUNICATION OF ACCEPTANCE.
[ 17.
cation of acceptance.^
plicant
is
not enough
nor
is it
enough
whom
the
An
acceptance of an offer of
But
may waive
having been communicated to him.* Nor need the notice be express. It may be implied from the conduct of the parties.* An agent specially appointed by the receiver to deliver his acceptance to the proposer, is regarded as the mere extension of his employer; and as long as the acceptance remains in the agent's hands, it is supposed to remain in the principal's hands. Hence there is no contract in such a case until the acceptance is delivered to the proposer.^ On the other hand, notice of acceptance is not necessary in cases where the proposal is conditioned on certain things to be done by the acceptor, and the doing of these things is made known to the proposer. In other words, where certain things are to be done by the promisee on condition of promisor's promise being performed, the promisor becomes liable on his promise on the promisee's performance of the condition.' But wherever the proposal requires a counter-offer on the part of the promisee, and not the mere performance of a condition, then the counteroffer must be communicated to the proposer. It follows that, when a promise is a consideration for a promise, then the parties must reciprocally accept each other's promises, and in order to accept, the promises must be reciprocally com-
municated.*
Pellatt's case, L. R. 2 Ch.
Ibid.
;
6 C. P.
527
Gunn's
case,
L.
R.
3 Ch. 40 3 Ch.
36
Sahlgreen's case,
L.
R.
323;
567 efseg-.;
Robinson's
case,
L.
R. 4 Ch.
322
Ward's
Richards
;
r.
6 C. P. 591
^
infra,
v.
Thayer
ler, 1 C.
M. & R. 692 Mclver v. Richardson, 1 M. & S. 557; infra, 570. * Richards v. Assurance Asso., L. R.
See Bryant
7
v.
523
Lang. Sum.
13.
37
18.]
18.
.
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
I.
Agreement tobebound
posting of
ance^niay be implied.
or through s ' does not bind o a messeng-er, know it is accepted, may be conceded in
me
until I
all cases
in
which the proposal, either from its express terms or fi'om the course of business to which its interpreta^Jq^
\q
subjcct,
is
dependent for
its
notification to
me
of
its
acceptance.
is
We
me
may
On
it is
competent for
by a
no objection to this position that by it one bound and the other not. This objecparty is tion if good would vitiate all conditional sales and sales on trial yet conditional sales and sales on trial, as we will see elsewhere, have in many instances been held good.^ The proposal is simply this: ''If you will post an acceptance to this offer within a fixed time, or a reasonable time, as the case may be, I will forward you the goods, or perform for you the service." On posting the answer by the party addressed, the proposer becomes bound on his proposal, though the answer never reached him. Even supposing the loss occur through the negligence of the post-oflSce, and not his own negligence, yet, on such a proposal, the loss falls on him who designated this channel of communication, or did business in subjection to a usage by which it is designated, more properly than upon the party forwarding the acceptance.^ This reasoning applies more strongly to cases of acceptance by telegraph (supposing that be the mode of acceptance designated or sanctioned by practice), since there is recourse over to the telegraph company in case by its negligence the acceptance is not communicated.* It is on the assumption that in proposals communicated in the ordinary course of business there is an implied agreement to be bound by an acceptance if forwarded promptly by post or telegraph, that we can sustain the numerous rulings in England and the United States, that an acceptance,
It is
me by
conditionally
>
Newcombe
;
v.
De Roos, 2
E.
&
E.
3
*
Hallock
v. Ins. Co.,
2 Dutcber, 268.
271
6
That pro-
Ex. 118.
*
Supra, 16
infra,
545
et seq.
38
CHAP.
I.]
COMMUNICATION OF ACCEPTANCE.
effect
[18.
when
you
it is
forwarded.*
is
If
it
tion, the
answer
is
will be
this."
sideration
other openings.^
'
But an acceptance by
J., Brit.
post, to bind,
Tel. Co.
Brogden V. R. R., L. R. 2 App. Ca. 691 Vassar V. Camp, 1 Kern. 441 Trevor v. Wood, 36 N. Y. 307 Howard v. Darley, 61 N.
J., in
;
Y. 362
268,
*
Hallock
v. Ins. Co.,
2 Dutcher,
In
and cases
v.
cited infra.
13.
Adams
"We
"re-
The
making, during every instant of time their letter was travelling, the same identical offer to the plantiff and then the contract is completed by the acceptance of it by the latter." The position that an acceptance duly posted binds the proposer from the date of posting was afterwards affirmed in the house of lords in Dun lop v. Higgins, 1 H. L. C. 381, a case in which the proposal did not designate the time and mode of acceptance. The acceptance was posted on the same day the proposal was received, though not in time for the first mail that might have been caught and the letter containing the acceptance was delayed so that it did
; ;
was
tiffs,
was addressed, immediately on receiving it, sent an acceptance by post. It was held that this acceptance bound the defendant (the proposer), though he had sold the goods
it
whom
to another party
day in the morning of which it might have been received. It was held that the acceptance bound the proposer, though he had between the forwarding and reception of the letter disposed of the goods. That the acceptance, if
thus forwarded promptly, binds has been decided in several subsequent
cases.
Infra, 20
;
of their acceptance.
To the position
not complete
till
8 C. B. 225
;
the acceptance
replied:
is
no contract could ever be completed by the post. For if the defendants were not bound
452 Stocken v. Collin, 7 M. & W. 515 Townsend's case, L. R. 13 Eq. 148; Wall's case, L. R. 15 Eq. 18 Household Ins. Co. V. Grant, L. R. 4 Ex. D.
; ;
by
their offer
when
accepted by the
216
19
27
W.
R. 858
41 L. T. N.
S.
298
answer was received, then the plaintiffs ought not to be bound till after they had received the notifiplaintiffs till the
Am. L. Reg. 298 (qualitying Brit. & Am. Tel. Co. v. Colson, L. R. 6 Ex.
118)
;
had received their offer and assented to it and so The deit might go on ad infinitum. fendants must be regarded in law as
cation that the defendants
;
Brogden v. R. R., L. R. 2 Ap. Ca. 691. In Household Ins. Co. v. Grant, ut supra, it was held that non-delivery of the
letter
if
39
18.]
CONTRACTS.
;^
[chap.
is
I.
no
when
the acceptance
The same rule Thomson v.
is
negligently
cases of
by the recent
adopted in Scotland
Byrne
v.
Van Tienhoven,
L. R. 5 C. P.
James, 18 Dnnlop, 1. In this country, this is, in most jurisdictions, the law in cases in which the acceptance is forwarded without delay. Tayloe v. Ins. Co., 9 How. 390 Min;
D. 344, and Stevenson v. McLean, L. R. 5 Q. B. D. 346," and the case is declared in Hallock v. Ins. Co., 2 Dutch. 268, " to be against the whole current of authorities." On the other hand McCulloch V. Ins. Co. is supported with much
acuteness by Prof. Langdell (Cas. Cont.
ii.
V. Lead Co., 4 Dill. 431 Beckwith v. Cheever, 1 Foster, N. H. 41 Abbott v. Sheppard, 48 N. H. 14; AveHll V. Hedge, 12 Conn. 436 Vassar j;. Camp, 14 Barb. 341 s. c. 11 N. Y. 441 Clark v. Dales, 20 Barb. 42 Brisbau V. Boyd, 4 Paige, 17 Mactier
175, McCulloch
to,
and the
generally followed
C. J., then goes
admitted.
on
to
say
for,
any
61 N. Y. 362
Potts
v.
Whitehead,
5 C.
making the
offer
may
Hallock v. Ins. Co., 2 Dutch. 268 Hamilton v. Ins, Co., 5 Barr, 339 Wheat v. Cross, 31 Md. 99
E. Green, 58;
;
;
;
he chooses, render the formawhich he proposes dependent upon the actual communicaalways,
if
Stockham, 32 Md. 196; Chiles V. Nelson, 7 Dana, 282; Hutcheson v. Blakeman, 3 Met. (Ky.) 80; Cornwells v. Krengel, 41 111. 394 Levy V. Coheik, 4 Ga. 1 Bryant v. Boose, 55 Ga. 438 Falls v. Gaither, 9 Port. 605 Whiston V. Stodder, 8 Mart. 95 Malpica V. McKown, I La. R. 248 Lungstrass V. Ins. Co., 48 Mo. 201. In Massachusetts, however, it is held that an acceptance by post must, in
v.
; ; ; ; ; ;
Stockham
'
'
The
question was
Co.
the subject
of
elabo-
of
JJ.
(Bramwell, L.
the
McCuUoch
V.
natural
cases
;
mode of communication
letter
in
(But see Mclntyre v. Parks, 3 Met. 207.) As also dissenting from English rule, see Gillespie v. Edmonston, 11 Humph. 553. McCulloch v. Ins. Co.,
278.
and that
such even
40).
where the
In Byrne
J.,
never reaches
its
desti-
Am. Rep.
Van Tienhoven,
L. R. 5 C.
lowed.
however, has not been elsewhere folThe learned editor of the 3d Atia. ed. of Benj. on Sales, 75,
says:
V. Ins.
"The
Co.
is
principle
of
McCulloch
"It may be taken as now where an offer is made and accepted by letters sent through the post, the contract is complete the mo.
said:
settled that
'
Supra, 9
Maclay
v.
Harvey, 90
111.
525.
40
CHAP.
I.]
COMMUNICATION OF ACCEPTANCE.
[18.
the aceeptina^
the proposer.^
By
in*
P^i*ty,
whom it was entrusted by such agent not being the agent also of the Indian Contract Act, " the communiis
cation of an acceptance
when
it
it is
put
makes
person
when
it is
is complete as against the person who put into a course of transmission to the
person to
whom
it is
who makes
it
whom
it
is
ment the
posted."
it is
posted.
When, however,
it
He
further said:
"I am
will
aware that
be seen that they are based on the principle, that the writer of the offer
whom
.
the offer
himself
or, in
Against this
made
But
the post
office
cannot be regarded in dealings between man and man and that an uncommunicated rea state of
;
mind not
me
to
be
drawal of an
case
I
offer.
In this particular
vocation
is, for
all practical
purposes,
all.
and
in point of law,
is
no revocation at
This
to
no evidence of any authority in fact given by the plaintiff to the defendants to notify a withdrawal of
find
States.
their offer
by merely posting a
is
letter
me much more
and there
compels
fact,
the general principles of English law than the view maintained by Pothier. I pass, therefore, to the next question, namely, whether posting the letter of
revocation
tion of
it
me
the
ber
is
to the plaintiff
was a
to
sufficient
communica-
day
when
the letter
the
plaintiff.
The
offer
reached him."
of Jurisprudence
was posted on the 1st of October, the withdrawal was posted on the 8th, and
did not reach the plaintiff until after
3d Am. ed.
69.
he had posted
accepting the
offer.
may
be taken
now as settled, that where the offer is made and accepted by letter sent
through the post, the contract
pleted the
is
forwarded
{infra, 27).
com-
moment the
letter accepting
Thayer v. Ins. Co., 10 Pick. 326; Bryant v. Booze, 35 Ga. 438 suprOf 17.
;
41
18.]
CONTRACTS.
it
[CHAP.
I.
made when
But according
to
where there is a telegraph by which the letter could be countermanded, until the delivery of the letter, since till then the letter would not be out of the power of the sender. That this, however, was not intended, appears by the following illustration annexed " B. accepts A.'s proposal by a letter sent by post. The communication of the acceptance is complete as against A. when the letter is posted as against B. when the letter is received by A." That a contract does not become binding until the acceptance of the proposal comes to the knowledge of the proposer is maintained by Hasse,^ Wachter,^ Bekker,' Wlirth,* Mittermaier,' Seutfert, and Arndt.' Other high authorities argue that a contract is complete on acceptance, some,
:
it is
way
{e.g.
is
it
known
The
first
can be no fixed
is
rule,
Bluhme'
the accepting letter in the post, and gives the proposer the
down
reaches
'
ii.
p. 371.
int.
i.
pr.
;
247
421
156.
*
s Jalir. ii.
*
les
*
*
ii,
25; Serafini,
telegrafo in relazione
commerc.
privee
;
la correspondence
7 231 see Vangerow, 603. To the same effect, see Merlin, Repertoire, Vente, 1 Troplong, Vente, i. No.
;
telegraphique,
1864
Hepp, de oa Muhleubrnch,
;
postele
331
Pachta,
251
Siutenis, 96
;
Savigny, Syst.
thorities cited
22;
Pardessus,
Mas.e, Dr.
235
Ency. Abth.
ii.
266.
42
CHAP.
I.]
COMMUNICATION OF ACCEPTANCE.
[ 18.
Windscheid^ distinguishes between cases where the proposal emanates from the future debtor and those in which The first is complete on it emanates from the future creditor. acceptance; the second is to be regarded simply as a question addressed to the future debtor, in which case it is necessary that the answer should reach the person putting the question. Yangerow, in discussing the above theories, justly remarks that, unless a proposal is made in definite terms, and in such a shape that an answer of simple acquiescence would form a contract, it is merely tentative, and cannot bind the proposer until 'the action of the other party is made known to and accepted by him. Supposing, however, a true proposal, in the above sense, be made, then he argues that the contract does not
the proposer.
come into existence until the acceptance of the proposal is made known to the proposer. A contract does not exist, until the minds of the parties unite as to a specific act, and to this it is a prerequisite that each knows what the other's mind on the negotiation between them is. This is settled in cases where
as when one party accepts language the other party does not understand ;^ and where the party to whom the acceptance is made is deaf, so that he cannot hear it.^ The same rule applies to contracts between
absent parties.
destination
there
is
proits
has arrived at
specific act.
it is
objected, that, if
essential to
its ac-
ceptance, then it is also essential to the contract that the existence of this prerequisite should be made known to the acceptor and so on forever, so that on this theory no contract could be ever complete. But according to Vangerow, since a proposer is
bound by his proposal, so far as concerns the other party, until it is withdrawn, and since in the case before us there has been no withdrawal down to the time of the reception of the acceptance by the proposer, then at that time the minds of both contracting parties meet in consent, and the contract is complete.
>
Pandekt.
306.
L.
I.
15,
de 0.
ct.
A. (44, 7).
IJ. de V. 0.
(3, 15).
43
19.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
I.
the proposition
so
much
formal acceptanceMs assumed. In such cases the proposer, according to Vangerow, may be supposed to know of the accept-
the proposer
is closed on mere however, conceded by Vangerow that, though not bound contractually until he is advised of
if
given the party addressed the right to expect that a contract will be executed ; and if he (the proposer) backs out before
notification of acceptance, in such a
suffers injury,
liability,
way
compensate for this injury. This however, ceases, when the time is expired within
he
is
bound
to
which an acceptance could be expected. But it is not disputed by Vangerow that it is within the power of a party to agree to bind himself on the posting of a reply and his admission
;
is
based
on this concession.
reasons above given.
is,
If it was,
Whether
in point of fact
such a promise
was made is to be determined by the proposal itself, as interpreted by its own context, by the prior dealings of the parties, and by the general course of business at the time. And if the law in any particular jurisdiction be settled to be that posting a letter of acceptance is an acceptance, then promises made in such jurisdiction are presumed to be made subject to such law.^ 19. It has been said both in England^ and in this country,' *^^^ ^^^ proposcr is bound by an acceptance when Rule de pends on duly postcd, ou the ground that the post-office is constituted bj' him his agent for this purpose. But proposal,
implied agency.
^^^^ Cannot
now
constitute A. as
be sustained. An agreement to my agent to receive letters cannot my appointing him my agent to carry
livering letters,
letter
it would apply to all other modes of deand would make it impossible for me to give to an express agent or even to an errand boy without
If it could,
See
Wh.
'
et
9.
seq.
How.
390.
44
CHAP.
I.]
EFFECT OF ACCEPTANCE.
[ 20.
as to all other forms of agency, and the distinction between special agents and geneThere is no agency, thereral agents would be obliterated.
fore, to be
would be good
implied from the mere fact of giving a party a When, however, the post-office, and the letter to deliver.
office,
telegraph
modes of doing
business,
and
usage an acceptance posted or telegraphed is regarded as adequately communicated, then, in all cases in which a proposal does not designate the mode of
local
local
when by
law or
acceptance,
it
may
ance will be good if sent by post or telegraph. The risk is one the proposer himself takes.' As we have already. seen, the proposer, on the question of time of answer, is bound by his proposal according to its terms. If it contains no limit,
by which it is to be answer posted or telegraphed to him in reasonable time binds him. If the proposal requires an answer byreturn mail, then an acceptance put off for two days is too late.^ 20. So far as concerns the mode in which the acceptor's oblifijation is to be construed, and in which it is to ^, = Place of be performed, the place from which the acceptance acceptance is sent is that which supplies the governing law.^ "g piace^of
then, according to the course of business
interpreted, an
'
,
It
is
contract.
where the through proposition is made not in writing, but a messenger, and where a written contract signed by one party is forwarded to be signed by the other, and where a bill or promisory note In each of these is submitted to a party for his signature. cases, the place where one party assents to the other's proposifor the first
time coalesce.
The same
rule applies
tion
is
two
parties
is
concerned.
*
And
if
from
this
See cases cited supra, 18 Abbott Shepherd, 48 N. H. 14 Mactier v. Frith, 6 Wend. 103 Northampton Ins. Co. V. Tuttle, 40 N. J. L. 476. On this topic see examination of cases in Pol;
Supra, 9, 15.
V.
Longworth v. Mitchell, 26 Oh. St. 234; Maclay v. Harvey, 90 111. 525 See supra, 15, and prior cases in this
section.
*
lock,
ib.
Wald'sed. 15
;
18
As
to
infra, 871.
et sea.)
22 Alb. L.
J. 424.
45
21.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
I.
and other circumstances we can infer that the place of such acceptance was rescarded by the parties as the place where the matter was to be determined, then the law of such place is the lex loci contractus^ and is also the lex loci solutionis^ so far as concerns the acceptor's liability.' At the same time while the
admission of a debt contained in a letter is sufficiently made at the place of posting, it is continuous in its effect until it reaches its destination, and may be considered as also made
there.'^
however, as concerns the mode of performing it is subject is the law of the place of performance.' The performance of the contract is to be in the place assigned by the contract,* though when no
So
far,
place
is
designated,
case.**
it is
to be inferred
from
all
the circum-
stances of the
21.
The time of
contract^
When the acceptance is implied in the performance of the consideration, then the time of the contract is the time of the performance of the consideration.^ It is true
the goods.^
that
it
But it is impossible to see how a contract can be made, so far as third parties are concerned, to relate back to a period when it did not exist." As will hereafter be
to the proposal.'"
seen,
money
demand
;'^
may be made
Wh.
&
Con. of Laws,
;
421,
and
<
Newcomb v. DeRoos,
v.
^ s
i
2 E.
E. 270
;
Dunlop
Higgins, 1
15
et seq.
H. L. C. 381 Taylor v. Jones, L. R. 1 C. P. D. 87 Taylor v. Nicholls, L. R. Chapman v. Cottrell, 1 C. P. D. 242 3 H. & C. 865 Tuttle v. Holland, 43
;
; ;
Stockdale
;
v. v.
224
Seagrave
;
C. P. 305
Taylor
Jones, L. R. 1 C.
P. D. 87.
8
Vt. 542
469.
*
Webber
v.
Donelly, 33 Mich.
Pelthouse
v.
Bindley, 11 C. B. N. S.
869.
v.
Kennedy
Lee,
3Mer.441
Dick-
L. R. 1 C. P. D. 242.
Wh.
Con. of L.
486
infra, 874.
"
Infra, 881.
46
CHAP.
I.]
[22.
is essential,
nominal
varied by
may be
is
To bind
''
the party to
,
whom
the proposal
addressed,
, Assent must be de-
go to the proposal specifically.* One party cannot bind another by sending goods to him and saying, " if you do not refuse these goods you are bound for
them.*'
non-r'efusai
^**
enough
Mere
The
proposal, in order to
In the same light are to be considered services accepted as courtesies or as family attentions.' In any view, a mere proposal, unassented to, forms no contract.^ At the same time, as we have already seen, a person who knowingly encourages another to do for him work which is usually paid for as a matter of business, becomes liable to pay such other person for the work. Under
definite character
he
is
bound to answer.
this
Infra, 885a.
agreed
Corlies, 46 N. Y.
on
for
Pollock,
v.
Bindley, 11 C. B. N. S. 869
V.
Corning
Bindley,
be charged with extras furnished, see Eaton V. Gay, 44 Mich. 431. 6 Supra, 3 Corser v. Paul, 41 N.
;
Colt, 5
Wend. 253
and
cases cited
v.
infra, 184.
In Felthouse
buy
if I
consider the
H. 24 Mattocks v. Lyman, 18 Vt. 98 McGregor v. Wait, 10 Geary, 72 Bartholomew V. Jackson, 20 Johns. 28 Borland v. Guflfey, 1 Grant Cas. 394, and other cases cited, Wh. on Ev.
; ; ;
horse is mine at 30 15s." The mere non-answering of this letter was held not to constitute a contract. See Leake, 2d ed. 28. On the other hand, " acceptance by the grantee, of a
1138.
627
^
As
et seq.
Infra, 719.
Taylor
v.
Corning
V.
v. Colt,
Wend. 253
deed or land contract, executed by the grantor only, binds such grantee." Lyons, J. Hubbard v. Marshall, 50 Wis.
327
;
Blessing, 8 S.
&
R. 243
infra,
9
707
et seq.
;
Supra, 7
et seq.
and see
infra,
184,
citing
Lowber
v.
Connit, 36 Wis.
707,
47
22]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
I.
way
the acceptor.
out express notice to him, slid covertly into a contract in such a way as to materially modify what would be its ordinary meaning.
brought to the notice of the other party, and if not put in such a way as to attract his attention, will not bind him. It is only as to the matter in respect to which his mind and that of the carrier met that he is bound.^ And even if notice be brought home to him, yet if it be against the policy of the law, as are all unreasonable releases of common carriers from the duty of care, the limitation will not bind.^ The rule that
a party
is
presumed to know the contents of a document make it my duty to inform myan informal contract in such a
I
;
way
am
required to exercise
man
and I
am
only chargeper-
when
am
Besides, to impute to
me
my attention, would make a maxim which was designed to prevent fraud an engine of fraud, by enabling one party to
surreptitiously'
work
into a contract
conditions of which
And
this infer-
when
the condition
is
body of the contract. We are not required to look for a sweeping abrogation of a book contract in a few small lines inserted in its margin or on its back. The contract, if the carrier meant to make it special, should have been constructed as a special
Infra, 572
v.
'
Wh. on
Neg.
587
;
Sands, 54 N. Y. 512
cited, infra, 572.
and other
As
cases
Harris
Parker
v.
v.
See infra,
438.
to telegraph
Burke
lone
V.
limitations see
'
Wh. on
Neg.
761.
Infra, 196.
Elmore
v.
48
CHAP.
I.]
MODE OF ACCEPTANCE.
[ 24.
contract.
minor inserted in a contract rehite to subordinate specifications, and we are not called upon to look to them to see whether
they give the contract a shape repugnant to what it purports to be on its face. In proportion, therefore, to the repugnancy of such conditions to the body of the contract, is the inference strengthened that they were not seen.^ Whether
there
is
is
23.
1
An
exception to the
1
maxim
accepted to be binding,
the
common law
11
is
supposed to be found in
1
,
Grants underseai
if held as an escrow, or delivered to a ^auto" '^^'it'^o"* party, thoui^h not communicated to the com r J o mumgrantee.' But this exception is more nominal than cation to
the grantor,
third
real,
in
the hands or a
in
grantee.
is a proposal to the grantee that he should take the property as from the date of the delivery.
The acceptance
24. It
is
the
self
party to
whom
the proposition
it
is
addressed
should be specified in ^
by name.
'
who
actionin
^vith*Yt^*^
renders
me
in a
part with
fall oifers
terms.
by German authors, Auslobung^ and is defined to be a public announcement, that to any person performing a particular service, a designated benefit Although in the classical Roman will be given in return. law, assuming, as it did, that to a contract it is essential that
proposition of this kind
is
called,
See infra,
438, to the
eflFect
that
Infra, 572.
;
such releases are against the policy of the law. That written terms, when in conflict with printed, prevail, see infra, That as a rule ignorance of 652.
fact is a defence, see infra, 185
seq.
et
Woodhury
to
v.
by vendee
infra, 720.
VOL.
I.
49
24.]
CONTRACTS.
its
[CHAP.
face, contracts
I.
based
upon general proposals were unknown, such contracts are universally admitted by modern Roman jurists to be of binding force.' The proposal is regarded as a bid which becomes a contract when acted on by a party within the range of those to whom it is addressed. There is, therefore, an important
distinctive feature of proposals thus directed to persons of a
now
before us
concerned, upon
something being done by the party accepting them.'' It is not enough that there should be a mere acceptance. The service {Leistung) called for, must be performed.^ Thus, an offer of a reward on returning stolen property is not binding until the stolen property is returned an ofter of membership in a stock company is not consummated until the first instalment re:
is
paid.
It
is
and not technically accepting the offer, that makes the contract between the party making the proposal and the party
acting on
is
it.
a mere proposal
Until the performance of its condition, the offer ; but when this condition is performed by
an ascertained person, the contract is complete.^ There can, however, be no recovery except by a party who had notice of
*
Vaiigerow,
603, iii.
;
255
Ihering,
309.
Crocker
in re,
v.
Kelly.
Jalir. iv. p.
*
93
Windscheid,
39 Conn. 159
;
Fitch
v.
Snedaker,
Anson,
Jones
v.
38 N. Y. 248
;
V.
Bank, 8 N. Y. 228
Fur-
Jf.
Y. 604
;
man
*
Anson, 24, adopted in Pollock, 3d. ed. 12 1 Ch. Cont, 11th Am. ed. 11; Williams i\ Carwardine, 4 B. & Ad. 621 Gerhard v. Bates, 2 E. & B. 476 Neville v. Kelly, 12 C. B. N. S. 740 Tarner v. Walker, L. R. 2 Q. B. 301 Spencer v. Harding, L. R. 5 C. P. 563 Shuey v. U. S., 92 U. S. 73 Janvrin v. Exeter, 48 N. H. 83 Davis
Supra, 17
; ;
;
Furman v. Parke, 1 Zab. 310; C.) 53 Cummings v. Gann, 52 Penn. St. 484
Goldsborough
Eagle
v.
v.
Cradie, 28
Md. 477
;
f.
Gilmore
Montgomery v. Hanson v. Pike, 16 Ind. 140 Hayden v. Souger, 56 Ind. 42 Stamper v. Temple, 6 Humph.
Lewis, 12 Ohio, 281
111.
Robinson, 85
174
113
Morrell
v.
r.
Salbadore
See Stamp
183.
An. 338.
V.
art,
v.
Cass Co., 11 N.
W.
Rep.
Mete. 56
Loring
v.
v.
Boston, 7 Mete,
409
Crawshaw
Kincaid
v.
Roxbury, 7 Gray,
;
That on this ground the right of holders of negotiable paper to sue on such paper may be sustained, see infra,
374
795.
50
CHAP.
I.]
[24.
the proposal
when he rendered
the service.
If there could,
we
would have a contract without two contracting parties. The proposer must make the proposal known before the acceptor undertakes to perform the condition, and the acceptor must have the reward in view at the time he renders the services on which he claims.^ Suppose, that to an advertisement of a
in factories,
to tlie
ing
general
proposal,
see
infra,
1054.
It
Wright
198;
v.
Trainer,
Int.
Weekly
Notes,
32 Leg.
264.
Court of the United States, in Shuey r. U. S., 92 U. S. 73, that a general proposal
"To
a certain extent,"
says Mr.
that
"
this notion of
(i. e.,
by
made by public advertisement may be revoked by an advertisement of equal publicity, even as against a person who
on the proposal not knowing it has been revoked. Of this, Mr. Pollock " this is, perhaps, a convenient says
acts
:
rule,
as
and
it
also receives
much
case of
man-
Williams
621.
tract
If
it
v.
Carwardine, 4 B.
yet
it
be
be
concerns
doubted),
is
sustained by a
may
be an accept-
cited in
Wh. on
Ev.
673.
As to revoking oifer
Crocker
;;.
to sell tickets,
any communication
proposer.
J.,
of the proposal to
see
v.
Shuey
U.
S.
can be sustained on
But the statement of Parke, that 'there was a contract with any
person
who performed
;
the condition
is
known
advertisement,'
it
savors of
the
The revocaup to
v.
v.
is
ascertained obligation
maintained in Janvrin
;
publishing of the
oflfer.
And
ratio decidendi,
such we need
if
Exeter, 48
N. H. 83
;
Wentworth
day it cannot be maintained. The modern cases not already cited have
turned only on the question whether the party claiming the reward performed
the ree^uired condition according to the
Gilmore v. Lewis, Day, 3 Met. 352 12 Ohio, 282. That after a reasonable time, an oifer of a reward is inferred to be withdrawn, see Loring v, Boston, 7
Met. 409.
'
Russell
V.
V. it
Auditor
In Williams
;
Carwardine, 4 B. & Ad. 621 was held that the defendant was
51
25.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
I.
ants with
reward on the discovery of lost property, two or more claimequal rights appear ; or, suppose, that a certain
is
amount of stock
sum, and it turns out that there are more persons subscribing and paying in than there is stock to satisfy : in what way are the claimants in such cases to be met t So far as concerns the parties applying for a reward, it has been held in Germany, that, if they stand in precisely the same position, the re\v^rd A similar principle may be is to be divided between them.' invoked to determine eases in which there are more persons subscribing and paying in on stock allotments than there is stock to satisfy. Where a portion of the thing lost is found and restored, the reward may, it is held, be apportioned.^ 25. Under the same head may be classed time-tables issued by railway companies, which bind the companies to So of railreasonable punctuality;^ and which, so it has been road timetaoes. argued, make the companies liable for any damage received by a party from a failure on their part to keep the time advertised by them. It has even been held in England* that, when a traveller oflers to take a ticket to any place to which
company
contracts with
him
to receive
him
as a passenger to
But
this view, as
and Wightman, J., was not necessary to the decision of the case, and was dissented
Lord Campbell,
C. J.,
liable
information
supplied,
though the reward was not the controlling motive which induced the plaintiff to supply the information. But in Fitch V. Snedaker, 38 N. Y. 248, it was held,
that,
aware of tlie reward. See infra, ' Vangerow, 603, iii. 285.
507.
Symmes
v. Frazier, 6
Mass. 344.
when the
Leake, 2d ed. 25 ; Anson, ut supra, citing Le Blanche v. R. R., 1 C. P. D. 286 ; and see Gordcoi v. R. R. , 52 N. H. 596 ; Sears . R. R., 14 Allen, 433; Strohn v. R. R.,23 Wis. 126;
'
Thompson
v. R. R., 50 Miss. 316 ; Wh. on Neg. 662, 810. * Denton i>. R. R., 5 & B. 860; a
52
CHAP,
r.]
[ 25 a.
is
from by Crompton,
actually sold there
It is clear that
where there
a ticket
A company
its office
may withdraw
modes of
closing
or other
notice.^
may
and when the conditions of the proposal are of credit. complied with, there is an acceptance.* A written promise, also, to accept a bill binds the promisor to any persons who may bona fide take the bill on the faith of the promise.* And it is further held that a promise by P. to accept any bills that D. may draw binds P. to any person who buys D.'s bills on faith of P.'s promise* These rulings may be explained on the ground that the payee acts as the agent of the drawer, and the medium of completing the contract. By Mr. Pollock^ the explanation is that the " undertaking must be considered as addressed to any one who shall so advance money." The case is analogous, in that view, to a general proposal to any one
posal,
fuller report
appearing in 25 L.
R.,
1
J.
Q.
"As
you
B. 129
you
H.
request,
we
Hamlin v. R. Gordon . R.
Crocker
v.
&
N. 408.
see
R., 52
N- H. 596.
;
We
will, therefore,
ment
of
any
bills
U. S.,
under the
letter of credit in
92 U.
*
Banking Co. ex parte, L. R. Maitland v. Bank, 38 L. J. C. 363 though see Seott . Pilkington, 2 B. & S. 11. As to whether a guaranAsiatic
;
2 Ch. 391
;
tor
is
by guarantee,
one
liead
;
Any
Birck-
sue B. as guarantor. GrifRembert, 2 Rich. S. C. L., N. S. 410 and see Manning v. Mills, 12 Up. C. Q. B. 515, cited Brandt, Suretyship, 96.
fin c.
;
may
it is V.
act
upon a
letter
of credit
Coolidge
v.
v.
when
generally addressed.
Boyce
Brown, 6 Hill, 634, 2 Denio, 375 Wheeler . Mayfield, 31 Tex. 395 Mayfield v. Wheeler, 37 Tex. 256; Drummond i. Prestman, 12 Wheat. 515; Lowry . Adams, 22 Vt. 160. When it is sent to A. with intent that it
should be shown to B. to induce B. to act
Bank
V.
v. Payson, 2 Wheat. 66 Edwards, 4 Pet. Ill Central Richards, 109 Mass. 413 Greele
;
Ian
and cases
Op.
cit.
3d ed. 21.
53
256.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
I.
who
should do a particular act, and the acceptance is the doing of that act in conformity with the proposal. 256. In the same relation are to be considered auction sales, in respect to which it has been held that a So of auction sales,
nicrc announcement of an auction sale at a particuday does not bind the auctioneer to sell on that day ;^ but that advertisements of sales without reserve mean "that neither the vendor nor any other person in his behalf shall bid at the auction, and that the property shall be sold to the highest bidder, whether the sum be equivalent to the real value or not."^ The reason for the distinction between announcements of sales and announcements of sales without reserve, is thus stated by Sir W. Anson^ " The substantial difterence between the cases seems to lie in this, that not merely the number, but the intentions of the persons who might attend the sale must
lar
:
be unascertainable
relations
nor could
it
would be eventually altered by the fact of their attendance. A. might come, intending to buy, but might be outbid. B. might come with a half-formed intention of buying if the goods went cheaply. C might come merely for his amusement. It would be impossible to hold that an obligation could be established between the auctioneer and this indefinite body of persons, or that their losses could be ascertained so as to make it reasonable to hold him liable in damages. The highest bidder, on the other hand, is an ascertained
person, fulfilling the terms of a definite oifer.
therefore, bears out the propositions laid
This.distinction,
at the
down
com-
mencement of
'
this discussion."*
The
seq.
oflter
of a party desiring
Harris
v.
Nickersou, L. R. 8 Q. B.
Harrison, 1 E.
286.
*
Warlow
V.
&
E. 295
As to mode of signifying proposal and acceptance, see supra, 6. As to the employment of puffers at auctions,
;
in Ex. Ch. 1 E.
&
E. 309.
In this case
as to agreements to
in-
Watson and Martin, BB., and Byles, J.. held that the case was not to be distinguished from that of a reward offered
Cont. p. 28.
by advertisement,
the contract
is
or of a statement in
War-
low v. Harrison, as above stated, to " overstep the true principles of eontract." Pollock, 3d ed. 18.
ding
itself,
As
to offer
no higher 6ona ^de bidder appear. See criticism in Pollock, 3d ed. pp. 16 et
628.
54
CHAP.
to
I.J
GENERAL PROPOSALS:
BIDS.
[ 26.
we have seen, is made sometimes by a bid, nod in apyiroval of a price suggested by the sometimes by a auctioneer and the falling of the hammer indicates the auctioneer's acceptance of the proposal, which can be withdrawn
buy
at auction, as
;
until the
hammer
falls, is
is
falls.*
"
the
hammer
like an
ofi'er
In such a
case there
may Nor
be withdrawn with-
From
A merchant
him
to sell
-r^
rom genepropo-
may
advertise to
sell
rai
lar price,
bedistin-
to all persons
who may
bMs
for
bound
customers.
landlord
is
not
bound
to accept as a tenant
his announcement, and on the person applying being acceptable; the proposal, on the other hand, makes a specified oifer, by which, if accepted, the proposer is bound.
make good
Hence an advertisement
not imply a promise to
by tender, does
an
when such made;* and the advertisement of a sale at auction does not, as we have seen, bind the auctioneer to put up all the property advertised.^ It is true that where
the highest bidder,
offer is not expressly
there
'
is
Payne
V.
Cave, 3 T. R. 148
Sweet-
makes the
;
ing
V.
when
the article
a bid
is
highest bidder
and
ao-
kemper
2
v.
that
when
is
made
there
is
an
supra, G.
Penn.
5 C. P.
3 Ibid.
19,
doubts the conclusion in Payne V. Cave, and argues '' that the true view seems
Harris
v.
Nickerson, L. R. 8 Q. B.
286.
55
27.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
I.
agreement in respect to thera, the application for the shares in pursuance of the offer or agreement may make a complete contract without any further notice of allotment.^
definite
But a general
commodity
to bidders is
may be employed either to propose or to and become, in either case, part of the evidcnce by which a contract can be established.^ The raay^coT^ stitutecon- original written proposal or acceptance by telegraph is a sufficient memorandum in writing under the statute of frauds; but to satisfy the statute the writing must be signed by the party charged. When so signed, and assented to orally by the other side, it constitutes a contract of sale
27. Telegrams
accept,
under the statute;^ supposing that it adequately expresses the terms of the proposal or acceptance, as the case may be.^ To satisfy the statute, it has been held that the original message
must be produced.^ But in those jurisdictions in which the company is the agent of the sender, the message as delivered by the company must be regarded as the message of the sender, under the statute, and if duly signed or attested by the company must be regarded as duly signed or attested
telegraph
Ham-
591 Saveland v. Green, 40 Wis. 431 West. Un. Tel. Co. v. Meyer, 61 Ala.
;
Jenner's
158; 682
*
;
Williams
Taylor
r.
Brickell,
37 Miss.
v. St.
Robert Campbell, 20
Spencer
;
v.
561
Thetcher
v.
v.
Mo. 254.
Wh. on
Tarner
3
Walker, L. R.
2 Q. B. 301.
Wh. on
V.
sou
755
7;
r. Freer, L.
land
;
Henkel
v.
v.
4 Biss. 357; 4 Dill. 431 Durkee ?;. R. R., 29 Vt. 127; Trevor v. Wood, 36 N. Y. 306 Beacli v. R. R., 37 N. Y. 457; Leonard v. Tel. Co., 41 N. Y. 544 Benford v. Sanner, 40 Penn. Robinson Works v. Chandler, 56 St. 9
Unthank
Reuss v. Coupland v. Arrowsmith, 18 L. T. (N. S.) 755 Unthank r. Ins. Co., 4 Biss. 357 Dunning V. Roberts, 35 Barb. 463 Crane v. Maloney, 39 Iowa, 39; Wells v. R. R., 30 Wis. 605 see Stevenson v. McLean, L.
V.
Francis, L. R. 5 C. P. 295
;
v.
Lead
Co.,
R. 5 Q. B. D. 346.
Trevor
r.
McElroy
land
6
Durkee
That
7.
may be inferred
Ind. 575
Matteson
v.
Noyes, 25
111.
from Henkel
v.
Pape, L. R. 6 Ex.
56
CHAP.
I.]
TELEGRAMS.
[ 27.
by the sender.^ A party may agree to make a contract dependent on receipt of telegram, and such contract is binding on
Whether the sender of a telegram makes the telegraph company his agent so that he becomes responsible for the message delivered by the company at its
a telegraphic acceptance.^ place of destination, has been
in a case in which, after
much
discussed.
In England,
some negotiations
that fifty
"fifty"
rifles,
so as to read
"the
rifles," so
rifles
was held that the company was not and that therefore the plaintiff could not recover.^ In this country, however, the prevalent opinion is that the sender is bound by the message as delivered by the telegraph company,* though where no agency on the part of the telegraph company is established, the original must be produced, or its loss explained.* It has been objected that this, in consequence of the numerous mistakes incident to the transmission of letters by telegraph, exposes the sender of telegrams to undue risk and no doubt
sender of the telegram),
it
seri-
But
to this
may
The mistakes of agents charged orally with more numerous and more
if
we
no blunder
(2)
v.
To
relieve tele-
Durke
v.
Dunnv.
ing
Trevor
Wood, 36 N. Y. 307
39 Iowa, 39;
;
me
for
$700,"
is
not an acceptance of a
it is
bill in
an
Lynch, 52 Md. 270. 2 Household Ins. Co. v. Grant, L. R. 4 Ex. D. 223 Lewis v. Browning, 130
v.
;
Bank
Wis. 431 Taylor v. St. Robt. Campbell, 20 Mo. 254 Scott & J. on Tel. 345. * Wh. on Ev. 1128; Benford v. Matteson v. Sanner, 40 Penn. St. 9 Noyes, 25 111. 591 Williams v. Brickell,
;
; ;
37 Miss. 682.
Mass. 195.
8
Henkel
Pape, L. R. 6 Ex.
7.
Bee infra,
57
28.]
COIS^RACTS.
[chap.
I.
graphic communications from the restrictions of the Taw of agency would be to expose the business of the country to a
exposed to^by treating the operator by insisting on this agency, and then holding the company responsible to the sender under the law of agency, that general accuracy can be secured.^ It follows, also, from what has been stated, that the deposit
far greater peril than as the sender's agent.
it is
It is only
of an acceptance in a telegraphic
office,
duly addressed to a
al-
proposer by telegram,
is
though never received by the proposer, supposing the acceptance to follow within reasonable time.
It is true that this has been doubted in England f but in cases where the proposer has selected a telegraphic company as his agent in making
his proposal, or
where he by
hold that
it is sufficient if
That
this
is
the case in
Much
is, since, if it was a "contract" it was not always "void," and if it was always " void" it never was a " contract") implies, that a " contract"
is
See supra,
V.
18.
Willes,
J.,
God
win
s
Francis, L. R. 5 C. P. 295.
Wh. on
Ev.
v.
1128
Minnesota
Lead
though it is otherwise in this country, Wh. on Neg. 758. That the sendee has no claim for non-delivering, see Wh. on Neg. 757.
365.
Supra, 18.
58
CHAP.
I.]
*'
VOID.'
[28.
never existed between the parties, whereas in fact a conbetween the parties, though it was afterwards
avoided.
On
is
often
used in reference to apparent agreements which are not real agreements, and which are, therefore, not contracts at all.
Now
is
not, as
is
sometimes
said, that a
it
voidable contract
(since
but that
it
liberty, on
i.
e.,
two
the
Mr.
minds
as to
is
Supra, 2.
by some person
,of
entitled so to do."
That contracts
infants
are at
common
"an
that contracts
114
et
seq.,
117a; that
;
it
is
is
so as to so as to
that
it
agreements induced by fraud, see infra, 283 .that, on the other hand, there is no contract when the parties do not
;
sitpra,
177
v.
and
see, generally,
agreement not enforceable in law is said to be void," for the reason that there are agreements that cannot be sued upon, and yet are recognized by law for other purposes, and have legal He adds: effects in other ways." Perhaps it would be better to say that a voidable contract is an agreement such that one of the parties is
' '
Rounsavell
The
text.
distinction given
is
by Mr. Pollock
(3d ed. 7)
entitled at his option to treat it as never having been binding on him." ' That " void" when used in formal
"An
is
which
documents
able" in
about,
is
all
where there
Coll.
is
a thing contracted
Ca., 3
Co.
Rep. 586
;
Bryan
v.
v.
Banks, 4 B.
& AM.
Malins
Freeman, 4 Bing. N. C.
this is the case in con-
and that
v
see
;
aflfected.
Davenport
Governors,
on the contrary, takes its full, proper, and legal effect, unless and until it is disputed and set aside
etc. v. Knotts,
L. R. 4 Ap.
59
28.]
CONTRACTS.
it is
[CHAP.
it
I.
impossible to deny to
tfe
a secondary
illus-
parties.
Of
this
we have
have been repeatedly declared to be void,' yet in the hands of bona fide indorsees without notice, such notes have been held to bind.* I^or can property sold and delivered in pursuance
of a Sunday contract, void though
Infra, 382.
it be,
be recovered back.'
'
Infra, 383.
Infra, {
386.
60
CHAP.
II.]
INFANTS.
CHAPTER
INFANTS.
Infancy
at
II.
common
law
embraces
and exe-
twenty years,
29.
cuted contracts,
50.
When
30.
last
though
it
may
51.
subject
him
to a quantmu meruit^
Other contracting party bound, 32. Only infant can set np privilege, 33.
Infant cannot be
made
liable
on con-
Avoidance
34.
Infant
may
be dnring minority,
may
contract, 53.
title, 35.
Doubts whether prejudicial engagements are void or voidable, 36. Negotiable paper voidable, 37.
54.
may
necessary,
And
Contracts of
void, 39.
agency not
necessarily
Knowledge of law
57.
is
not
necessary,
Nor partnerships, 40. Nor suretyship, 41. Nor contracts for labor, By statute all contracts
be void,
43.
continued enjoyment of
42.
profits, 58.
59.
So of continuance in possession,
of infants
may
Silence
to es-
toppel, 60.
is
one of no-
may
disaffirm
61.
Infant's lease
able,
Conditional ratification
plied with, 62.
may be com-
quent deed,
45.
Executory contract, when resisted, must be shown to have been ratified, 63,
Infant liable for necessaries, 64.
Compensation not required for what has been wasted in infancy, 47. But cannot inequitably recover back,
48. Other party can reclaim or rescind contract, 48 a. If taking benefits, muat bear burden,
But only for value received, and not on account stated or note, 65.
Rules as to negotiable paper,
66.
49.
61
31.J
Infant
CONTRACTS.
Money
Infant
[chap.
lent not necessaries, 72.
73. 74.
II.
70.
Services rendered in
Contracts of marriage,
preserving
in-
may
be estopped,
the English commou law, a person under twentyone years of age is incapable of binding himself Infancy at common absolutely and irrevocably by contract. This limitlaw emation is not based on mental incapacity. There are braces twenty some infants under twenty-one far more capable of years. making intelligent and beneficial contracts than are many persojis over twenty -one, just as there are many married women who are more capable of business than many unmarried women. The reason for the limitation is the importance of protecting children from improvident engagements. In order to enable this to be done ettectivelj- some arbitrary limit must be assigned and held to inexorably. Under the English common law this limit is the close of the twentieth year.^ 30. So far as concerns testamentary capacity, a person is of age on the day before that which is the twentyWhen the " The first birth.^ rule,"
29.
,
By
last year of
anniversary of his
same
saysMr. Metcalf,^" would doubtless be applied against expires. defendant, who should attempt to avoid, on the ground of infancy, a contract made by him on the day before
the twenty-first anniversary of his birth."*
exercise
jority.5
infancy
And
the right to
the
31.
Contracts of mtants
voidable.
Although there
is
much ambiguity
it is
in the
now
null
by
'
(1)
'
50
Metcalf
Inf.
2d.
ed. 2.
'
*
To
and no action can be brought on the ratification of any contract made during infancy."
lutely void
;
4 B. 447
597.
*
&
;
Ad. 264
State
V.
Herbert
v.
See 20
Am.
Jur. 252.
62
CHAP.
II.]
INFANTS.
[ 32.
They
require no consideration
his
They
repudiation, to be
effective,
brought to the notice of the party on his arrival at full age.^ infant's transfer of a note to an indorsee for valuable consideration is voidable only -^ and so of a compromise of a suit f and of an assignment of debts,^ and of an account stated ; and of contracts for labor ;^ and of a contract for the charter of a vessel; ^ and of a trading contract for the purchase
Thus an
of goods.^
32.
From
this it
Other contracting
maintain an action at law against the other con- party bound on tracting party nor can the latter set up want of such con;
mutuality.^
Supra, 28
fact
tract.
'
infra,
;
f>6
Gibbs
v.
Williams
.Tudkins
V.
v. v.
Moor, 11 M.
& W.
;
256.
;
&
;
Ad. 902
;
Walker, 17 Me. 38
Ala.
Vent
V.
Clark
v.
10 Pet. 71 619
State
Irvine
v.
Irvine, 9 Wall.
;
Goddard,
164
Lowe
Plaisted, 43 N. H. 413
But a contract
(the infant) to
Whitcomb
v.
Joslyn,
51
Vt.
79
Worcester v. Eaton, 13 Mass. 371 Kendall v. Lawrence, 22 Pick. 540 Boyden v. Boyden, 9 Met. 521 Kline Conroe v. BirdV. Beebe, 6 Conn. 594
;
;
and
do
his wages
so,
sail, 1
v.
Staf-
ficial to
ford,
Cow. 179
;
Bool
v.
Mix, 17
Q. B. 757.
Wend. 119
(N. Y.) 121
Law
v.
Wheaton
ter
V.
v.
East, 5 Yerg. 41
Slaugh260
271
;
Walker v. Ellis, 12 111. 425. Warwick v. Bruce, 2 M. & S. 205 Bruce v. Warwick, 6 Taunt. 118, In
7 s
;
Cunningham,
v.
24
20
Ala.
Thornton
as
is
v.
Illingworth, 2 B.
&
C. 824,
Schneider
Stuart
r.
Staihr,
Mo.
See
noticed by Mr. Benjamin (Sales, p. 23), all that was decided was, that such
a contract could not be ratified after ac-
discussion in 1
Am. Lead.
242
ed.
et
seq.
Am.
28
2
infra,
283
272.
3
*
Ware
v.
McCarty
v.
Kennedy
For the position that a bond with penalty executed by an infant is void, has been cited Baylis v. Dineley, 3 M. & S. 477 but in this case, as is noticed by Mr. Pollock, " nothing more is decided than that, being under seal, it cannot be ratified save by an act of at least equal solemnity with the original instrument." 9 Supra, 2 Bruce i;. infra, 523
tion brought.
; ; ;
63
34.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
11.
was an infant preclude a recovery by the indorsee against the maker of negotiable paper.* A court of chancery, however, on the ground that it cannot put conditions in such cases upon
the
plaintift",
brought by an
And
is
it
making binds
If
no consideration for the promise to the infant, the answer is that the infant's promise is not only susceptible of ratification, but binds when he comes of age should he waive the plea of infancy when sued.* 33. ITo person but the infant, or his personal representatives, is entitled to set up his infancy.^ It is a priviinfant can lege, howcver, on which he is entitled to fall back in connection with contracts concerning personal, as privilege. well as real estate.'^ And though the infant's heirs,^ and administrators,* can thus take advantage of his incapacity, And it is not enough this is not the case with his assignee.'" majority, on a debt incurred when sued after the infant, for by him in ijifancy, simply to plead infancy. He must aver that he disaffirmed the contract within a reasonable time after
be objected that there
is
coming of age."
34.
As
may
be avoided during
coming of
age.'^
v.
Nelson
v.
v.
Boyden, 9 Met. 519 Watts, 412. 1 Grey v. Cooper, 3 Doug. 68 Jones Nightingale v. V. Darch, 4 Price, 300 Dulty v. Withington, 15 Mass. 273
fer, 7
;
;
Austin
infra, 55.
Martin
Parsons
'
v. Hill, 8
v.
Hoyle
Stowe, 2 Dev.
&
B. 323
ininfra,
up an
;
Flight
V.
Warwick
U.
S.
I'.
Infra, 523.
etc. v. R. R.,
Black, 8
citing
Bainbridge, 1 Mason, 71
Pollock on
Cont.
p.
42,
Thompson, 5 Johns. 160 Voorhees v. Wait, 3 Green <N. J.), Gullett v. Lumberton, 1 Eng. 343 .Ark. 109.
Hartness
v.
;
6
J
Skinner
Irvine
V. v.
I.-.
Irviue, 9
Derocher v. Mills, 58 Me. 217; Vent v. Osgood, 19 Pick. 572; Gaffney v. Hayden, 110 Mass.
chael, 5 Ex. 114
;
cer
Carr, 45 N. Y. 406.
137 Whitmarsh v. Hall, 3 Denio, 375 Meredith v. Crawford, 34 Md. 399 Ray
; ;
64
CHAP.
II.]
INFANTS.
[36.
"Whether an avoidance during minority is final, is doubtful. On the ground that an infant's contract, unless for Avoidance 1 , ,1 11 necessaries, does not absolutely bind, it would seem maybe ^ that he is not absolutely bound by his rescission of a nori":^ contract, but that such rescission is open to repudiation by him wlien at full age.^ It has, however, been otherwise ruled in Massachusetts ;^ and there may be cases {e. g., subscriptions by infant shareholders) in which, it is argued by
.
Mr. Pollock, the nature of the case is such as to make a rescisby such infant necessarily final.^ And sales of land cannot ordinarily be avoided during minority.* 35. There can be no question that an infant may be the recipient of property, unless of a character which Infant may the policy of the law debars him from holding.' He hold propand may also pass title. This is the case with regard to erty pass title. negotiable paper f and it has been held 'that a transfer over by an infant transferee of stock is valid. A gift to an infant, also, may be supported, if accompanied by delivery
sion
of the chattel.^
36. It has,
by an
dicial
where
tracts
however, been doubted whether engagements infant are not absolutely void when prejuDoubts to his interests.^ And there may be cases whether prejudicial the policy of the law requires that such con- engagements are should be absolutely void, as when a minor void or
;"'
or attempts to
voidable.
Haines, 52
111.
;
485
Van
v,
Pelt
r.
Cor-
lei
Lowe
Sinklear, 27
infra,
6 7 8
107a.
North Western R. R.
;
Dunton
v.
v. MoMiBrown, 31
Hunter
;
v.
578
v.
Grangiac
Piersou
V.
293
1
v.
Snow
;
see
626
Am.
^
L. C. 317
Shipman
Knotts
v.
v.
v.
Horton, 17
Conn. 481,
Infra,
;
Infra, 45.
45
Stearns, 91 U.
;
Bank, 97 Mass. 345 Roberts' App., 85 Penn. St. 84 Fanning f. Russell, 94111. 386 see Jones i\ Lock, L. R. 1 Ch. Ap. 25 as to paralS. 638
Taylor
Smith I'. Spear, N. J. Ct. App. 1881, 14 Cent. L. J. 16, and valuable note by Mr. Stewart. 9 Baylis v. Dineley, 3 M. & S. 477 Keane v. Boycott, 2 H. Bl. 515 see Tyler on Inf. 2d ed. 10.
;
">
Fridge
v.
State, 3 Gill
&
J. 115.
VOL.
I.
65
36.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
II.
bind himself to future action by bonds with penalties.^ These as' nullities, not because the party entering into them is an infant, but because, in the first case, the law will not allow a guardian or other trustee to use his trust in order to obtain an advantage from his ward, and, in the second case, it will not regard a ratification by a party on arriving at full age as operating to give eft'ect to acts to be performed long after this period. As the law, also, discountenances speculation by a minor on interests likely to come to him by the death of relatives, his release or hypothecation of
transactions, however, are treated
his interest in a succession will be treated as void.^
And
at majority.^
But
pre-
make
it
necessarily void.
Other-
wise the question would depend upon an uncertain test (i. e., probability of detriment), as to which there could be no uni-
form
rule.*
And
is,
power
Fisher
v.
v.
Mowbray,
8 East, 330
S. 477.
Met. 415
St. 9.
PearsoU
v.
Chapin, 44 Penn.
Baylis
*
Dineley, 3 M.
v.
&
Cronise
v.
Langford
'
Frey, 8
!?.
Hump.
443.
Cronise
Mr. Benjamin, Sales, 2d Am. ed. 29, comes to the same conclusion, after a careful survey of the cases. To the same effect may be cited the learned
authors of
Sir
1
see Baylis
i-.
Dineley, 3 M.
&
;
S.
477
v.
Am. Lead.
Cas. 300,
and
Latt
V.
V.
Booth, 3 C.
&
K. 292
;
Lawson
W.
Langford
98-9.
On
the other
Frey, 8
*
Hump.
443.
division of void
and voidable
Am.
it
ed.
"When
is it is
the agreecansaid to be
;
liard
ment
of
an infant
such that
common law
but
altogether exploded by if not ful, modern authorities." That " void" is used by judges and text writers, and
on Contracts, 101, in Hilon Contracts, ii. 129, and in Robinson v. Weeks, 56 Me. 102. That "void" is used by judges in the sense of voidable is shown in Thornton v. Illingworth, 2 B. & C. 824; Ayres v. Hewitt, 19 Me. 281 Conroe r. Birdsall,
in Story
;
Curtin
v.
Patton,
11 S.
&
Contracts,
svpra, 28.
329
and
see further,
v.
Rich-
Infra, 39.
mond,
Allis v. Billings, 6
66
CHAP.
II.]
INFANTS.
[ 36.
of attorney to bind
void, if
him permanently, no
e.
contracts of an infant
reason of infancy.
g.^
They may be
made
just seen,
is
unless this be
Wheris
so
is
without a
fair
to be inferred, then
to be void,
ratification.^
is
On
the other
all
bound by
on infants
But
law imposing
disabilities
is
designed not merely for the protection of particular infants, but for the establishing of a period of minority during which
business responsibility
is
in
abeyance.
The welfare of
the
community, so
it
may
particular period of
life
own
were
account.
This
lield liable
on
liams
v.
r.
Moor, 11
M.& W.
;
256
Aldrich
Batch-
Grimes, 10 N. H. 194
;
Reed
v.
v.
v.
Warren, 4 Vt. 149 Reed v. Batchelder, IMet. 559 Kennedy?;. Doyle, 10 Allen, 161 Mustard v. Wohlford, 15 Grat. 329; Harner u. Dipple, 31 Oh. St. 72;
; ; ;
Goodsell
Myers, 3
Barrett,
9
Little
v.
Duncan,
Rich.
Oole
V.
V.
Pennoyer, 14
111.
158
;
Fetrow
v.
same
Weaver
v.
The following cases tend in the direction Lawson v. Lovejoy, 8 Greenl. 405 Robinson v. Weeks, 56
: ;
Guthrie
v.
Morris,
Me. 106
;
Oliver
v.
Houdle.t, 13 Mass.
6
Cummings
Powell, 8
Conn. 503
J.
&
115
;
Lev-
land,
pushed further.
land,
Ch. 368
v. v.
Herman,
Frey, 8
33
Md. 132
;
Langford
v. v,
58,
said
Humph. 446
; ;
Wheaton
v.
" The instrument, however solemn, is void, if upon its face it be apparent
that
it
East, 5 Yerg. 41
Chandler
Strain
McKinWright, 7
in
is
Ga. 568.
But
fant."
This
affirmed in Fetrow
v.
existed unfairness
and imposition
Wiseman, 40 Ind. 148 (Ewell's Lead, Cas. 21), citing, among other cases,
the agreement.
'
Cooper
v.
Hunt
V.
Massey, 5 B.
Wil-
Wilde, B.
67
38.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
ir.
advantageous contracts. So far from an infant in such case being secluded from business, he would have an additional motive to business risks; the motive that while his gains would be his, he would not be responsible for his losses. 37. There is no reason, on principle, why, if an infant's promise to pay by word of mouth is voidable, it should bccome void when put in the shape of negopaper^* voidabie. And the present tendency is to hold tj^ble paper.
that an infant's
bill
or note,
when made
motive of his business interest, is voidable only.^ The same rule applies to endorsements on negotiable paper ^; and to nonnegotiable paper.^ In any view, parties liable on negotiable paper cannot defend on the ground that an intermediate endorser was an infant.*
fact that an instrument executed by an infant is seal does not make it void. In cases in which under And so of sealed inan infant can bind himself, his liability is not defeated by the fact that the instrument by which he expresses it is sealed.** The distinction, in fact, between sealed and unsealed contracts is, as we will hereafter see, purely
38.
,
The
>
Hunt
V.
V.
Massey, 5 B.
23
&
Boody Wright
McKenney,
;
*
;
Jones
V.
Dulty
V.
Supra,
Conn v. V. Steele, 2 N. H. 51 Coburn, 7 N. H. 368 Earle v. Reed, 10 Met. 389; Gcodsell v. Myers, 3 Wend. 479 Everson v. Carpenter, 17
;
dall
Wend. 419
S.
Hesser
v,
Steiner, 5
W. &
241
Cheshire v. Barrett, 4 McCord, Bobo v. Hansell, 2 Bailey, 114; Fant v. Strain t\ Wright, 7 Ga. 568 Cathcart, 8 Ala. 725 Buzzell v, BenTo same effect, see nett, 2 Cal. 101. Byles on Bills, 10th ed. 59 Pollock on
476
;
infra, 45 Maxwell, 66 N. C. 45 Parsons v. Hill, 8 Mo. 135 Weaver V. Jones, 24 Ala. 420 Harrod v. Myers, 21 Ark. 592. In Baylis v.
;
.
seq.;
;
Skinner
v.
Dineley, 3 M.
&
S. 477, as is stated
Cont.
Am.
ed. 40
Young
v.
Bell, 1 Cr.
C. C. 342.
And
v.
by "Nothing
(a bond)
it
cannot be ratified
Waters, 38 Me. 450; Withington, 15 Mass. 272 Frazier v. Massey, 14 Ind, 382 Briggs V. McCabe, 27 Ind. 327.
Hardy
Nightingale
;
r.
See Swafford
292.
6
v.
Story ou Notes,
78
see infra,
66.
68
CHAP.
II.]
INFANTS.
[ 40.
artificial,
and not deserving, so far as concerns capacity to execute contracts, any furtiier respect. 30. It used to be said that an infant cannot execute a power of attorney under seal.^ Where, however, the execution of such a power is important for the of^a^ency preservation of an infant's estates, and is not de- notnecesi sanly void. gigned to establish a permanent continuous agency,
'
there
is
no reason
why
it
and a
in the
void.2
management of the
infant's affairs,
is
voidable, not
On
general agent
40.
void, since
it
The
is
better opinion
is
nership
the partner-
ship be continued by
him without
it
disaffirmance,
^or partnerships.
when he
ners,*
binds
him both
as to his part-
and
And
to repudiate a partnership
age
is
may
be
of an infant
The same rule applies to the shareholder. On the whole," says Mr.
'
liability
Pollock,
"it
is
an
'
v.
Waples
;
v.
Hardy v. Waters, 38 Me. 450 Towle V. Dresser, 73 Me. Whitney Keegan v. Cox, r. Dutch, 14 Mass. 457 116 Mass. 289 Lawrence v. McArter, 10 Ohio, 37 Pyle v. Cravens, 4 Litt.
*
son
v.
Marr, 1 H. Bl. 75
;
Oliver
i'.
(Ky.) 17.
'
That an appointment by an infant ot an attorney in fact is void, see Story, Agency, 463 note to Tucker i'. More;
4 M. & W. 650 Carnahan V. Alderslice, 4 Harring. 99. * Moley v. Brine, 120 Mass. 324. * Pollock on Cont. 3d Eng. ed. 55 Lindley on Partnership, i. 82-84 Goode v. Harrison, 5 B. & Aid. 147
WoodroflFe,
;
land, 1
Am. Lead.
v.
Miller
^
v.
Thomas
Roberts, 16 M.
& W.
778
Goode
Harrison,
ul
supra.
69
42.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
II.
And
providing that
it
all
contracts
shall
be void,
who
as
between himself
and his partners, bound by the terms of the partnership without any formal ratification; and "a court of equity," adds Mr. Pollock, " taking the partnership accounts, would, it is
apprehended, apply the same rule to the time of his minority as to the time after his full age."^ 41. The mere fact that a contract is for suretyship does
XT^
it.^
Hence an
nizance
may
be only voidable.*
.-i
-^
But
/.
ordinarih' a
i-ii
An
may
in like
is
manner be
^*OT contj-actsfor
when he
of full age.^ o
He
may, however, avoid the contract and recover the value of his services on a count for work and labor done, making allowance for any legitimate set-ofts.' If a
illustrated in Curtin
v.
Patton, 11 S.
J.,
citing
Lumsden's
case,
L. R.
4 Ch.
:
&
R. 311.
31
see
;
exact
v. Fearnley, 4 Exch. 26 Northwest R. R. v. McMichael, 5 Exch. 123; Birkenhead R. R. v. Pilcher, 5 Exch. 121. Infra, 49. 2 Pollock on Cont. 3d. Eng. ed. 61.
Leeds R. R.
an infant's
by
which
ified,
6
it is
" confirmed."
That an in-
may be rat;
Cockshott
V.
V.
Bennett, 2 T. R. 763
;
Owen
V.
Patton, 11 S.
3
Thomas
r.
Moses Houston R. R.
For analogous
Margaritz,
Barr, 428
Ind. 148
;
Fetrow
Williams
see Allen
r.
v. v.
V. Miller,
Wiseman, 40
Harrison, 11 S. C. 412
tracts to be void see
Maples
v.
Wightv.
Wheaton
East,
Patchin
v.
Am. ed. 200 Walker, 17 Me. 38 Thomas Moses v. Stevens, V. Dike, 11 Vt. 278 2 Pick. 332 Vent v. Osgood, 19 Pick. 572; Bishop v. Shepherd, 23 Pick. 492; Peters v. Lord, 18 Conn. 337;
^
Judkins
Ap. 31
Maples
Wightman, 4 Conn.
The confusion arising from the 376. ambiguous use of the terms " void" and "voidable" in this relation is
Felmit, 4 Dev.
&
B. 498
Van
Pelt
See,
Weeks
70
CHAP.
II.]
INFANTS.
is
[43.
main, to the infant,
it
beneficial, in the
may
master a power of dismissing or of imposing penalties upon the infant.^ On the other hand, a contract binding the infant to serve at all times, but leaving the master at liberty to dismiss him at any time, will be held invalid as against the infant.' Statutory contracts of apprenticeship and enlistment bind infants when the statutory directions are pursued, though
it
is
which
be disaffirmed by them on arriving at full age.' The parent, however, is bound absolutelj' by the covenants, if duly
may
in-
England from ^y statute ^ all conimprovident bargains b}' minors, and the growing tracts of conviction in that country, that the line between made void.
43.
"^
The
evils
which
resulted in
.
r.
Leighton, 5 N. H. 343;
McCoy
r.
time
it
was entered
infant,
into,
and
fully con-
As
11th
is
by the
when he
arrives at age,
as void, so as to enable
him
to recover
relying
on
Holmes
r.
r.
a higher rate of compensation, even though, in consequence of the rise of wages, such compensation, had there
Corpe
Overton, 10 Bing. 252 (see infra, 48), does not sustain the doctrine that
an
infant,
hy avoiding
executed,
his
contract
been no contract, might have been reSee Breed v. Judd, 1 Gray, 460 and see infra, 48 a. > Wood V. Fenwick, 10 M. & W. 195
covered.
;
when
dered.
r.
r.
partly
forfeits
the
Leslie v. Fitzpatrick, L. R. 3 Q. B. D.
229.
*
Ibid.
R.
v.
Lord, 12 Q. B. 759.
;
Mayall, 25 N. H. 82
Hill, 110.
and McCoy
v,
Whitley i\ Loftus, 8 Mod. 190 McKnight v. Hogg, 3 Brev. 44 King v. Amesly, 10 M. & W. 195 Woodruff v.
; ;
Huffman by Medbury
In
Watrous,
Logan,
Vent r. Osgood, 19 Pick. 572, Putnam, J., put the question on the " By the avoidance the right ground contract was annihilated, and the parties are left to their legal rights and remedies, just as if there had never been any contract at all." But the contract, if an advantageous one at the
:
Wh.
Cr. PI.
and
Beard
People
v.
v.
Gates,
People
Gates, 43 N.
71
43.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
II.
minority and majority should be firmly fixed, led, in 1874, to the adoption of the following statute (37 & 38 Vict, c. 62): " 1. All contracts, whether by specialty or by simple contract, henceforth entered into by infants for the repayment
of
money
accounts
which an infant nuiy by any existing or future statute, or by the rules of common law or equity enter, except such as now by law are voidable." " 2. Ko action shall be brought whereby to charge any person upon any promise made after full age, to pay any debt contracted during infaticy, or upon any ratification made after full age of apy promise or contract made during infancy, whether there shall or shall not be any new
consideration for such promise or ratification after full age." " In fact," says Mr. Pollock,* when commenting on this statute,
all
to be to reduce
full age,
whether
is,
"The
proviso
about new consideration," he adds, " was presumably introduced by way of abundant caution, to prevent colorable evasions of the act by the pretence of a new contract founded on a nominal or trifling new consideration. Where a substantial
consideration appears on the face of the transaction, these
words can hardly be supposed to impose on the court the duty of inquiring whether the apparent consideration is the whole
He proceeds to argue that, when an infant buys and pays for goods, the statute does not entitle him, when of full age, to recover back the moneys paid. "Such a consequence would be most unreasonable, and is not required by the policy of the statute, which is obviously to protect infants from running into debt, and to discourage tradesmen and others from giving credit to them, not to deprive them of all
of the real consideration."
discretion in
making purchases
for
ready money."
"
On
this
72
CHAP.
II.]
INFANTS.
it is difficult
[ 44.
to see
what
result
obtained by the
first
section
which
is
At common
by the
he cannot henceforth so bind himself. No more complete protection can be imagined, and the first section appears superfluous." In Connecticut, certain contracts by infants are made void by statute.^ In other states, such contracts are void, unless there be a written ratification.^
44.
The
absolutely incapacitating infants, except so far as law^que""^ concerns the purchase of necessaries, than would be poi'Jg"^'^ ^
done by making their contracts simply voidable. With this is to be considered the growing sentiment in England, that it is better that young men under twenty-one should be completely excluded from business. To enable them to make voidiil>le engagements, so it is argued with much force, is worse for them than would be entire incapacity, since bargains made by unprincipled parties with infants under such circumstances would have in them a gambling element which would be an excuse for extortionate conditions. It must not be forgotten, also, that at common law, the question An over-populated state, where is afl:ected by local policy.
it is
number of persons
in busi-
whose distinctive industries long apprenticeships are desirable, whose climate and traditions do not stimulate early development, naturally fixes majority at a more advanced period of life than a state whose soil and industries call for large additions of young, active, and adventurous laborers, and whose climate and traditions lead to the assumption of responsibility at an early age.^ There are states in this country, for instance, in which a modified business capacity
ness
for
states in
which
Inf.,
it
may
be
>
Rogers
v.
Hard, 4 Day, 57
376.
See Tyler on
2d
ed., 50.
V.
Wightman, 4 Conn.
Wh.
Con. of Laws,
113.
73
45.]
better, in the long run,
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
IF.
making
business contracts.
is
this class
common law
rule.
The matter,
it
In
law most favoring capacity will prevail, unless there be a positive local law to the contrary.' 45. An infant's conveyance of real estate is good until avoided,* and a lease beneficial to him may abso, Infant's leases and lutcly bind him after he has enjoyed the profits.' Unlcss it be repudiated when he comes of age, his conreal estate veyaucc of real estate will be held good in all cases bie an'd* maybe in which there was no fraud, and in which he had avoided by mi subsequent the opportunity to excrcise an election.* Ihat an infant's lease, without reserving rent, is not absolutely void, is held, according to Mr. Pollock, by Lord Mansfield and Lord St. Leonards,' and this is clearly the case " with a lease reserving a substantial rent, whether the best rent or
.
...
not;"^ nor, so it has been held, can such a lease be well avoided by the infant, on arriving at majority, leasing the same land to another person, unless there has been re-entry by the infant or some notorious act indicative of resumption of
possession.'
A purchase
fant
is
The
fact
intermediately conveyed to an
itself preclude the infant from an ascertainable fact of which
Infancy
is
Wh.
kins
r.
Dixon
i-.
259.
Supra, 35
i.
Bac. Ab.
9
Inf.,
Irvine
v.
Irvine,
Wal.
;
p. 38, citing
Zouch
v.
v.
Parsons, 3 Burr.
617
Spencer
v.
Carr, 45 N. Y. 406
1794
^
^
Allen
Allen, 2 Dr.
& W.
307.
Skinner
Brady, 14
b,
Ir.
C. L, 61.
V.
Stearns, 91 U. S. 638
Co. Lit. 2
i.
Tunison Johnson
Chamblin,
88
111.
;
378
fancy,
638.
Knotts
Stearns, 91 U. S.
Rockwell, 12 Ind. 76
Jen-
74
CHAP.
II.]
INFANTS.
[ 47.
with due diligence, may be taken, and if there be a must fall on those who have taken title carelessly.* Avoidance of a deed of real estate after the infant has come of age, may be inferred from his conveying such real estate to a third party, in all cases in which the infant has remained in possession or in which (he not remaining in possession), by the
notice,
loss, it
of
real estate
46.
without
Whether a
Djsaffirm-
,18 disaffirmand anceof ^' discredits the entire contract.^ But an infant, when ^ rescinding a contract to work for a term of years, may recover on a quantum meruit for his services rendered.* 47. As we will hereafter see more fully, when a contract is executory on both sides, a rescission by the infant compensatiopnotrerelieves the other party from the duty of performr quired for ance. When it is executory on the part of the what has adult, but executed on part of the infant, and the wasted in infant rescinds, he may recover back from the adult infa,ncy. what he has paid. According to Chancellor Kent,^ "If an
Ordinarily, however,
.
of anceofpart
disamrmance goes
"^
./
money on his contract, and enjoys the benefit of and then avoids it when he comes of age, he cannot recover back the consideration paid. On the other hand, if he avoids an executed contract when he comes of age, on the ground of infancy, he must restore the consideration he has received."*
infant pays
it,
It
is
true that
it
such,
who
;
agrees to release
dower
for a consideration,
and
see
'
Ibid.
;
Dunbar
v.
Todd, 6 Johns.
Medbury
Hoxie
v.
Watson, 7
Hill,
100
v.
gee Cresinger
o.
Welsh, 15 Ohio,
seg.
156.
That an
infant,
is
when
disaffirm-
ing a contract,
when
able to
Supra, 2
infra,
50
Tyler on
301
Inf,
6
2d ed.
Millard
35.
v.
do so, and that when the money is expended, he may avoid without refunding, see Reynolds v. McCurry, 100 111.
356.
Hewlett, 19
Wend.
75
47.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
II.
back money received by her for the release.^ But the right rule is, that where there has been a fair bargain, the benefit of which has been received by the infant, then, if he repudiates the contract when he comes of age, he should return what he has received, if retained by him.'* If he has sold goods, and been paid for them, he will not, on retaining the
price, be assisted
in
But
if
he no
money
if
when he comes
of age he repu-
amount
is
The
may
be this:
the goods or
may
be
ought to infer from the very fact of infancy. money If the or goods received are wasted, and the infant, on coming of age, should say, " I will not keep to this bargain, but repudiate it," then the other party must bear the loss as a consequence of his improvidence. It would be otherwise, as we will see,^ as to things remaining in the infant's hands after he comes of full age. The very retention of such things is a ratification of the bargain.^ Relikely to be the case, the adult
Shaw V. Boyd, 5 S. & R. 309 see Walsh V. Young, 110 Mass. 396 Doe
'
; ;
Ala. 446
Hill
v.
v.
Anderson,
Sm.
& M,
70,
216
Smith
Evans, 5 Humph.
V.
Abernethy, 7 Blackf. 442. 2 Infra, See Williams v. 48 a. Brown, 34 Me. 594 Shaw v. Cuftin, 58
;
;
and other
ed. 37.
s
2d
Dana
v.
v.
Me. 254
201
;
Riley
v.
v.
Mallory, 33 Conn.
;
Chandler
Oliver
over-
Kerr v. Bell, 44 Mo. 120. ' Badger v. Phinney, 15 Mass. 363. * Price V. Furman, 27 Vt. 268 Edgarton v. Wolf, 6 Gray, 456 Gibson v. Chandler v. SimSoper, 6 Gray, 279 mons, 97 Mass. 508 Green v. Green, 7
; ;
v.
Coates, 15
Gray, 445
359.
^
^
Badger
48
a.
r.
Phinney, 15 Mass.
Infra,
accepted
in
;
Bartlett
Drake,
100
Mass.
;
174
Dill
v.
Bowen,
Walsh
v.
and
v.
Johnson, 26
76
CHAP.
II.]
INFANTS.
[48.
we
will see,^
the bargsiin.
But
if
Where an
infant,
when within
,
f.,.,
i"
But cannot
inequitably
^ack^'''^
was held in England that he could not recover back, at his majority, the sum paid, without putting the other parties in statu quo.^ And an infant paying a prethe profits,
it
mium
;^
nor
as
can an infant,
part
when repudiating
a mortgage given by
him
payment of land purchased by him, retain the land,* unless the funds received by him as a consideration are no
The
is
substan-
'
See infra,
59.
Holmes
;
r.
illegality in the
side.
Moore, 552
see
Welch
v.
Welch, 103
et seq.
Cope
V.
v.
Mass. 562
752.
3
*
and
Price
v.
Walsh
v. v.
Young,
Stoolfoos
Jenkins, 12
Cnrtiss
& R.
;
399
Lenhart
v.
St. 59
Urban
As
96.
plaintiff,
must
he received before he can recover back what he paid, see Locke v. Smith, 41 N. H.
restore the consideration
price only
That an infant can recover hack the (when practicable) on reMallory, 33 Conn. 201
Kerr
v.
v. Bell,
346
Hubbard
v.
Cummings,
Greenl.
44 Mo. 120.
In Chandler
Simmons,
v.
13
Carr v. Clough, 26 N. H. 280 Heath v. West, 28 N. H. 104 Farr v. Sumner, 12 Vt. 28 Taft v. Pike, 14
; ;
;
Drake,
if
it
an
money
received,
Weed v. Beebe, 21 Vt. 498 Edgerton v. Wolf, 6 Gray, 453 Bartlett V. Cowles, 15 Gray, 445 Bartholomew V. Fennemore, 17 Barb. 428 Strain v. Wright, 7 Ga. 568 Williams v. Norris,
Vt. 405
;
;
by him for a conveyance of real estate, he could avoid the conveyance without repaying the amount. To same eflFect
as to personal property, see
White
47.
v.
This distinction
Littell,
157;
;
Smith
v.
v.
Evans, 5
more
5
6
Humph.
;
70
Betts
Carroll,
216.
Walsh
Zouch
V.
77
48 a.]
is
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
II.
given as a shield and not as a sword ;" and " that it never shall be turned into an offensive weapon of fraud or injustice."
This maxim is adopted by Chancellor Kent,' On the other hand, money advanced by an infant for business purposes can be recovered back when the infant retained no benefit from the
contract.^
And money
may, therefore, hold that where an infant repuon arriving at age, a contract by which he canre^iaim has obtained assets he has in infancy wasted, he can^^^ ^ made to pay an equivalent for such assets; ed ccmtra^t while, on the other hand, if he retains the assets, but disaffirms and repudiates the contract, the other contracting party can reclaim these assets, though he can sustain no action against the infant for any deterioration they may have suffered in the infant's hands.* In case, however, the goods have
48 a.
diates,
2 Com. 240. Cope V. Overton, 10 Bing. 252 3 Moore & S. 738. Robinson v. Weeks, 56 Me. 102 Medbury v. Watrous, 7 Hill, 110. In Ruchizky v. De Haven, 97 Penn. St. 202, it was held that an infant's executors could recover from stock-brokers money advanced by him to them on a gambling stock speculation which they engaged in on his account. The court said that "if the parties had been sui juris, the contract having been fully executed, we would not interfere to help either party. But such is not the for, as we have said, Ruchizky case was a minor, and hence was entitled to legal protection and guardianship. It is said they knew not that he was a minor but what does that matter ? He was, nevertheless, an infant, and their want of knowledge did not make
'
We
to
he must first restore the consideration he received that he cannot have the benefit on the one side without restoring the equivalent on the
;
other.
general rule,
cation
Vt. 149,
'
If this
is not worth possessBut all this is foreign to the case in hand, for we have here a contract condemned by public policy a con-
vilege of infants
ing.'
void 06
initio.
It
Boody
V.
V.
Fitts
Hall, 9 N. H. 441
;
Price
v.
v.
The defendants
Whitcomb
Jos-
have endeavored
it,
Badger v. Phinney, 15 Mass. 359 Kitchen v. Lee, 11 Paige, Henry v. Root, 33 N. Y. 526 107 Strain i-. Wright, 7 Ga. 568 Jefford v.
; ;
78
CHAP.
II.]
INFANTS.
[ oO.
An
infant
who
burden.
until he
arrears,
An
is
who
holds
beneflt"^^
"u"^*^^*'*'^
And an
if
bound,
full age, to
meet any
As
tory contract,
has been already incidentally noticed,* an execurequires the action of i. e., one which
between*'" executory
who
entered into
it
during
and executedeontracts.
was no
ratification
An
affirmed
its
an executory contr&ct requires affirmatory action for The executed contract requires the action of a court to disturb it the executory contract the action of a court to enforce it. The principle pervading both lines of
;
establishment.^
cases
is,
that a bargain
option of disaffirming
tinction between the
Ringgold,
6
made by an infant, he should have the when arriving at full age. The disis,
two
Ala.
544
Manning
v.
com-
Benj. on Sales, 3d
V.
Am.
;
ed. 22;
;
but
it
Boody
V.
Price
v.
Whitcomb
i.
the law of partnership would, and that the same results would follow, except
Joslyn, 51 Vt. 79
2
Kettle
;
V.
Eliot,
;
RoUe Ab.
731,
it
may
*
K.
2 Bnlst. 69
v.
See
while
s
still
a minor."
See supra,
40.
Evelyn
*
Supra, 47.
;
Coombs,
V.
Northwestern R. R. v. MoMichael, 5 Ex. 114. Of these cases Mr. Pollock says: " It may perhaps be doubted whether the reason on which
3 Ex. 565
these authorities are grounded would
Hunt V. Peake, 5 Cow. 475 Wilt Welsh, 6 Watts, 9. 6 Williams v. Moor, 11 M. & W. 256
;
Conklin
enship
v.
Blank-
v.
Stout, 25
132.
79
52.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
II.
burden of proof,
iti
if
while,
burden being on the party seeking to make good contract. When a contract is executed by an infant, and a title vests in him, this cannot afterwards be disturbed, nor can he, while holding the property, recover back what he paid for it.* And " if an infant buys an article which is not a necessary, he cannot be compelled to pay for it; but if he does pay for it during his minority, he cannot, on attaining his majority, recover the money back."^
ant, the
against
him the
51. When an exec utori/ contract is disaffirmed by an infant, the other contracting is released i o party " anceofexe/ ironi cutoryconall liability. 1 he agreement becomes a nullity, Heves'^other ^^^ when one party is not bound, the other party is not bound.^ Where, however, an infant, on arriving thouehit may subat majority, repudiates a contract of labor for a term jecthimto e I uot years, he may sue his employer on a quantum a quantum
Infant's
disaflarm./
meruit.
52.
Where an
on contract ingin
tort,
on a contract ^7 ^ ^^^^ ^" ^^^ coiitract, he cannot be made liable by suing him in tort.'' Thus, an infant innkeeper is not liable for losses sustained by his guests.^ Even
liable
.
infant cannot be
made
an
actioii
does not
lie
against
him
'
Supra, 35.
'
Turner, L.
J.,
in Taylor ex parte,
;
377 Ray v. Haines, 52 HI. 485 for analogous cases see infra, 711 et seq.
; ;
8 DeG. M. & G. 254 Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 24, citing Robinson v. Weeks, 56 Me. 102 Breed v. Judd, 1 Gray, 456 Harney v. Owen, 4 Blackf. 337 Bailey l\ Bamberger, 11 B. Mon. 113; Smith v. Evans, 5 Humph. 70; Hill V. Anderson, 5 Sm. & M. 216;
;
Jennings
V.
v.
Randall, 8 T. R. 335
;
Price
Burley
r.
v.
Russell, 10 N. H. 184
ris,
Prescott
v.
Nor-
32 N. H. 101
;
West
Moore, 14
Vt. 447
Tilson
v.
r.
Merriam
Conroe
People
Cunningham, 11 Cash. 40
Kendall,
Strong,
1
v.
Cummings
201,
v.
See,
V.
v.
25
Wend. 399;
;
however, Riley
Mallory, 33 Conn.
Schenck
V.
South. 87
Stool;
where
it
foos V. Jenkins, 12 S.
&
R. 400
Penrose
1 Roll.
v.
Wilt Cur-
See supra,
Supra, 42
; ;
2, 47.
Crosse
v.
Androes,
Ab. 2 D.
Sloan
v.
v.
Hayden, 110
Hall, 3 Denio,
pi. 3.
Mass. 141
Whitmarsh
80
CHAP.
II.]
INFANTS.
full age,
[53.
plain-
firming himself of
tiif.*
Nor
does an action
against
him
Nor
him from afterany action on the contract, does the fraudulent misrepresentation afford any answer upon
made such
representations estop
;'
nor, in
on contract,
is
not barred by a
plea of infancy.'
That an infant
iuries sustained
,
The same rule applies to replevin.* cannot be made liable for tort for inT
^g^to^^^its
by a horse hired by him, but driven 1 1-w beyond the limit agreed upon, is asserted in _Penn-
TIT-
not based
on contract.
Pollock on Cont. 3d Eng. ed. 74 Johnson v. Pie, 1 Sid. 258 1 Keble, 905 aff. in Adelphia Loan Ass. v. Fairhurst, 9 Ex. 422 Stikeman v. Dawson, 1 DeG. & S. 113 Brown v. McCune, 5 Sandf. 224 an action, however, on contract.
I
;
V.
Wells, 1 B.
&
S.
836
DeRoo
;
v.
Fos-
Ecksteeu
V.
v.
31 Leg. Int.
Stikeman v. Dawson, 1 D. & Sm. 90 Burley v. Russell, 10 N. H. 184 Merriam v. Cunningham, 11 Cush. 40 Stoolfoos v. Jenkins, 12 S. & R. 399. But see Matthews V. Cowin, 59 111. 341 Pergin v. Sutclifle, 4 McCord, 389 Kilgrove v.
ter,
12 C. B. N.
S.
272
;
349
and
criticism in Metcalf
on Con-
In Stoolfoos
J.,
v.
tracts, 51.
In 1
Am. Lead.
is
Cas. (4th
said
"
If
an
disapproved
on the ground that "the representation, by itself, was not actionable, for it was not an injury, and the avoidance of the contract, which alone made
it
himself to be of
was the existence of a perfect on the part of the infant." This was adopted in Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 22, where the question is examined in detail. The question is left open in Merriam v. Cunningham,
so,
legal right
though extremely reprehensible, would not make the contract obligatory. So, if, under a similar representation, he should borrow money, and give his bond for it, payment would not be compelled." 5 Vasse V. Smith, 6 Cranch, 226 Lewis V. Littlefield, 15 Me. 233 Wal;
;
11 Cush. 43.
See infra,
1047.
lace
V.
Moss,
Hill
(N. Y.),
391
DeRoo
V.
V.
Foster, 12 C. B. N. S. 272;
;
Prescott
V.
Norris, 32 N. H. 101
;
Eaton
Moore,
Hill,
50 N. H. 235
;
West
v.
Campbell v. Stakes, 2 Wend. 137 Schenck v. Strong, 1 South. 87 Strain though see in V. Wright, 7 Ga. 568 Pennsylvania, Wilt v. Welsh, 6 Watts,
; ;
9.
8 Badger v. Phinney, 15 Mass. 364 Boyden t-. Boyden, 9 Met. 521 Jefford
; ;
Ct. 100.
8
Burley
v.
Russell, 10 N. H. 184
;
V.
VOL.
I.
81
53.
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
II.
is to affirm such liaalthough an infant cannot be made liable in tort for overridiuga hired horse,^ yet if he hurt a horse in doing something for which it was not hired to him (f.^., jumping and not riding, the horse being refused for jumping), he is liable in tort for the injury.'' The question whether an infant is chargeable in an action for fraudulently obtaining goods with intention not to pay for them, is one of much difficulty. On the one hand, it may be argued that when capax doli he is indictable, under such circumstances, for obtaining property by false pretences and if criminally indictable for the fraud, he
Bylvania.^
bilit3\2
And
:''
is civilly
it
On
make him liable in all cases of would do away with the protection of infancy
this
is
But
not
so.
false pretences,
tained in cases
and civil suits for fraud, could only be suswhere there was nothing in the infant's appear-
ance and surroundings to give notice of his infancy. The cases, therefore, in which such responsibility would attach, are comparatively rare; and the protection given to infancy,
as a rule,
is
if
doli,
a person who, in
appearance,
of full age,
who
is
capax
and who
is
per-
mitted by his guardians to do business on his own account, is held responsible for tort. At the same time there is a strong current of authority to the effect, that unless there is some
special
damage
in the
way
tence,
was in the nature of a under the circumstances, to deceive even the circumspect, he cannot be made liable for a false
false pretence
J
Wilt
V.
Welsh,
Watts, 9
Penrose
V.
Campbell
v.
Stakes,
V.
Wh.
1149.
;
pitts v. Hall, 9 N.
H. 441
Wallace
Stakes, 2
3 4
Wend.
v.
137.
Jennings
Rundell, 8 T. R. 335.
10 Phila. 618
HI. 341
;
Burnard v. Haggis, 14 C. B. N. S. 45; Horner v. Thwing, 3 Pick. 492; Eaton V. HiH, 50 N. H. 235 Towne v.
;
see
Shaw
Coffin,
58 Me.
254.
82
CHAP.
II.J
INFANTS.
[55.
But for a purely non-contractual tort an supposing he is over fourteen years of age f and between seven and fourteen, he is liable, on proof of malice, the burden of proof being on the plaintiff.^ And even
aiRrmation of age.^
infant
is
liable,
may
Even the
which in England
ty to restore things
makes
preclude a party from recoverino; in equity from an bieinequiintant property that he has obtained by a raise repre,
,
;'
lentiy^ob-
who
has had
tamed.
he is of full age, recover, on his majority, such money a second time from the party from whom it was obtained.^ And it has been further held, that a minor who holds himself out as of full age, and as such becomes a bankrupt trader, cannot subsequently contest the bankrupt decree
statement
tliat
on the ground of his infancy.^ 55. In case of the death of an infant before reaching majority, his
representatives
subject
to
may
the
disaffirm contracts
Priviesmay
disaffirm contract.
made by him,
stated.
conditions
above
Thus
his executors
his
dis-
may by
v.
'
Johnson
See
Wh.
v.
Cr. L.
8th ed. 67
e<
V.
Cune,
2
224;
seq.
McGee
117, 118
That an infant
V.
liable in cases of
non-
Lewis
V.
V.
contractual tort,
see further
Prescott
Prescott
V. Hill,
Norris, 32 N. H. 101
;
Eaton
Norris, 32 N. H. 101.
5
50 N. H. 235
;
Loop
v.
v.
Loop, 1
Humphrey
Douglass, 10
75,
Wells, 1 B.
&
S.
836;
6
Clarke
v. V.
v.
Stiteman
Sikes
v.
v.
Johnson,
Cory
16 Mass. 389
Brown
;
Wilt
v.
v.
Maxwell, 6 Welsh, 6
1
Watts, 9
Int. 349
Hughes
Gallans, 31 Leg.
v.
Supra, 33
;
Stone
Barham
Turbeville,
see
Swan, 437.
48.
83
56.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
II.
made by
him.^
The
disaffirmance,
however, must be made by heirs, if the contract relate to real estate, or by executors, if to personalty. His guardian is not
his representative for this purpose.'^
56.
The
privilege
is
personal.'
No
matter
be the ratifications of
how
closely these
may
press
rjij^g
age
IS
necessary.
upon his majority, they are without effect, party to whom the ratification is imputed must f j
be of full age, or otherwise it will be inoperative.* On the other hand, we must remember that an infant can avoid a contract during infancy, though it is doubtful, as we have seen, whether such avoidance is otherwise than provisional until he is of full age.' As to real estate, full age is necessary, it is said, to disaffirmance.^ It must also be remembered that, as is said by high authority, " voidable means not invalid until ratified, but valid until rescinded."^ !N^on-avoidance of a contract at full age, therefore, when the contract is brought to the party's notice, is, if intelligent and deliberate, a ratification.^ Undoubtedly much confusion has arisen from
the use, in this relation, of the word " ratification," as if it involved the assumption, that prior to such " ratification" the supposed " contract" was not existent. But this is a wrong
...
meaning of the term. A contract made by an infant, supposing him to have the mental power to do business, and supposing that he and the other contracting party agree as to one and the same thing to be done, binds him unless it is disaffirmed by him when he reaches full age. When he reaches
b.
Shipman
v.
StaflFord v. Roof, 9
?
Cow. 626.
in re
In Taylor
it
v.
Johnson, 46 L. T. N.
fant
citing
Lord Colonsay,
Overeud,
Hastings,
Gurney &
^
Co., L. R. 2 H. L. 375.
?'.
of proof of fraud or
undue
influence,
by his personal representatives. ' Towle V. Dresser, 73 Me. * Mete, on Cont. 55, and cases
infra,
6
cited,
bl
et seq.
Supra, 34.
That affirmance must take place before action brought, see Thornton v. Illingworth, 2 B. & C. 824 Thing r.Libbey, 16 Me. 55 Conn v. Coburn, 7 N. H. 372; Hale v. Gerrish, 8 N. H. 374 Aldrich v. Grimes, 10 N. H. 198
25 Vt. 646.
;
Goodridge
v.
84
CHAP.
IT.]
INFANTS.
[ 57.
full age,
may
be enforced against
him, dating not from his majority, but from the period of its The same distinction applies to the conoriginal inception.^
According to Mr. Chitty :' " In the case of a continuing contract, which is voidable only by an infant on his coming of age, he is presumed to ratify such contract; if he do not, within a reasonable time after he
tracts of lunatics, mutatis mutandis.^
full age,
of,
reject,
such contract
unless, that
is,
the other
party dispense with such disaffirmance."^ The distinction is continuing contract, unless repudiated, continues in this:
force.
On
a disaffirmance,
and has
57.
overcome by proof of actual prior ratitication.' Supposing that there be no fraud on the part of the
to be
it is
making oATwIs^
should
be aware of
its legal ~
effects.
He may
/
^*"'^^
sary.
have as
knowledge of these effects the day But the line after as he had the day before he comes, of age. drawn by the law is necessarily arbitrary; and, as soon as he becomes of asre, a knowledoje of the leo;al character of his acts is imputed to him. It is true that there have been intimalittle
>
1 Cont. lltli
Am.
ed. 216.
114.
v.
As sustaining the
Morrill, 3
To
this
is
text, see
Gibbs
v.
Taunt.
617
;
Taunt. 35.
s
307
Irvine
V.
Irvine, 9 Wall.
;
cited, {lupra,
/;,,
28
;
infra, 58.
Boody
McKenny, 23 Me. 517 Tucker V. Moreland, 10 Pet. 58 Heath v. West, 26 N, H. 101 Boyden Boyden, 9
; ;
63
Hoit
v.
;
Underhill, 9
N. H. 436, 10 N. H. 220
Lay, 4 Pick. 48
Allen,
;
Thompson
v.
v.
t-
Proctor
v.
Sears,
Met. 519
Jackson
;
v.
Carpenter, 11
95
Kline
v.
Beebe, 6 Conn.
19
Johns. 539
Bool
Lee,
v.
1,1
Mix, 17
251
;
Wend. 120
;
494
Goodsell
v.
Myers, 3
Kitchen
V.
v.
Paige, 107
;
Drake
v.
Millard
Hewlett,
Ramsay,
5 Ohio,
Phillips
As
to
continuing considerations,
see
McC. 241
and
cases
cited supra,
infra, 515.
As
to
continuing
offers,
31.
supra, 9.
85
58.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
II.
unless
is
made with
meant that
loose talk
may
be accepted as true.
But
to say that a
knowledge of the
would be
difli-
and which would often be made dependent upon the testimony of the party himself long afterwards when his views may have changed, but would invalidate all ratifications, since there is no ratification all of whose legal consequences can be foreseen. Hence the better opinion is that a ratification, made by a person of sound mind, on arriving at
cult to establish,
undue influence, though the party making it was not at the time aware that it bound him in law.'* If, however, the ignorance of the party ratifying be in any way induced by
the other side, then the ratification will not be regarded as
operative.'
58.
infant, not in itself unreasonable, by a continuance on his part, after he arrives at ao;e, to intelligently enjoy its fruits.* " Uence acceptance ot rent, after majority, is a ratiti-
contract
by an
^^
ratified
'-
...
enjojroent of profits,
cation of a lease
with regard to
Harmer
V.
v.
Killing,
Esp.
;
103
Thing Mayo,
S.
Libbey, 16 Me. 57
;
Smith
v.
9 Mass. 64
Curtin
v.
v.
Fatten, 11
&
R. 311
Hinely
v.
Margaritz, 3
Barr, 428;
(S. C.) 168
;
Norris
Vance, 3 Rich,
Ind. 148
357.
v. Gaither, 83 N. C. and infra, 168. * Boody r. McKenny, 23 Me. 517 Boyden v. Boyden, 9 Mete. 519 Aldrich v. Grimes, 10 N. H. 194; Delano Henry v. Root, v. Blake, 11 Wend. 85
See Turner
;
357
* Benj. on Sales, 2d ed. 27; Mete. Stevens v. Lynch, 12 on Cont. 59 East, 38 Morse v. Wheeler, 4 Allen,
; ;
v. Hays, 17 Deason v. Boyle, 1 Dana, 45 Alexander v, Heriot, 1 Bailey Eq. 243 Cheshire v. Barrett, 4 McCord,
33 N. Y. 526
Iowa, 311
; ;
Pursley
241.
570
Taft
v.
Supra, 56
;
Smith
v.
v.
Low,
At-
That mistake
kins, 489
*
Thing
v.
Holmes
86
CHAP.
II.]
INFANTS.
is
;'*
[60.
;*
a bunleii
A convey-
gage of the same land made during minority, is a ratification of the mortgage.* Acquiescence for a series of years in a sale But mere cantiot be excused on the ground of forgetfulness.' temporary retention of goods is not sufficient to sustain the inference of ratification f nor will an assumption of a debt unless specifically pointed to such debtJ Continuance by a servant in a contract of service, after he is of full age, isa ratification
of the contract.^
59.
may ratify f and so the payment of rent on a lease taken during ^nuance^in minority;^*' and the carving out of inferior interests, possession.
may
retaining the control of the
S 60.
1
title. '^
Silence by
A
5
a vendee
-1
-.
vendor
minority, does not operate to affirm Uie conveyance, ^ountto is reached ;'2 estoppel.
*
v.
McMichael,
Ga,
>
Supra,
58.
v.
114.
*
Moreland, 10 Pet.
1 Greenl.
;
58
11
Hubbard
Eagle Co.
v.
v.
Cummiugs,
see Miller
' *
v.
Thomasson
Story
V.
Williams
Johnson, 2 Y.
v.
Boston Bk.
220
;
see Williams v. Mabee, 3 Halst. Ch. 500. 5 Tunison v. Chamblin, 88 111. 378.
Hoyle i;. Stowe, 2 Dev. & B. 320 cf. Holmes v. Blogg, 8 Taunt. 35. '2 Tucker v. Moreland, 10 Pet. 58 Irvine v. Irvine, 9 Wall. 617 Boody
; ;
is
not a ratification,
Todd V. Clapp, 118 Mass. 495. Tobey v. Wood, 123 Mass. 88.
Spicer
v.
V. McKenny, 23 Me. 523 Emmons v. Murray, 16 N. H. 394 Kline v. Beebe, 6 Conn. 494 Jackson v. Carpenter, 11 Johns. 539 Bool v. Mix, 17 Wend.
;
;
; ;
As
to
51.
;
Coombs, 6 Greenl. 89 Kline v. Beebe, 6 Conn. 494 Henry v. Root, 33 N. Y. 526 Lynde v. Budd, 2 Paige, 191 see Bigelow v. Kinney, 3
v.
;
Dana
v. Ramsay, 5 Ohio, 251 Welsh, 15 Ohio, 193 Doe Hastings V. Abernethy, 7 Blackf. 442 Prout v. V. DoUarbride, 24 Cal. 195 Wiley, 28 Mich. 164; Norris r. Vance, 3 Richards. S. C. 164; Wallace v. Latham, 52 Miss. 291.
120
Drake
v.
Cresinger
Vt. 353.
87
61,]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
11.
though it is otherwise, if, after arriving at twenty-one, the vendor sees, without notice, the vendee put valuable improvements on the propert}' conveyed. Such silent acquiescence on his part amounts to an estoppel, and precludes him from afterwards invalidating the sale.^ And an enjoyment of the purchase-money for a long series of years, with tacit encouragement to the vendee to settle permanently, operates as a coniirmation,* especially when the vendee has gone on without molestation to make improvements on the land.^ The same
rule applies to
all
contracts.
But
})re-
elude repudiation
61,
when
An
is
by the execution,
second
firms tirst^
to a third party
it
necessary, that
The second
first.'
But
to
required,
must be
The
question
whether there must be a re-entry depends upon whether the lex rei Slice sustains deeds from parties in merely constructive posIt would be unfair, however, to treat a second deed, session.' made after majority, as an avoidance of a first deed, made during minority, unless the vendee under the first deed has If the vendor and the notice of the vendor's avoidins: act.
>
Wliart. on Ev.
1144
;
et seq.
Gillespie v. Bailey, 12
W.
Va. 70,
v.
Lent, 6 Paige,
Jones
Gregory v. Mighell, 18 Ves. 328 r. Phoenix Bank, 4 Seld. 235 Wallace v. Lewis, 4 Harring, 75
296
;
635
Cresinger
v.
i'.
v.
Hoyle
Slater
"<
Stowe, 2 Dev.
&
B. 320 L. 61,
see
Brady, 14
v.
Ir. C.
Wheaton
v.
As
to
Riggs
estoppels during
infancy,
see
infra,
See Jackson
;
Carpenter, 11 Johns.
74
et seq.
539
v.
Jackson
Bool
v.
v.
v.
Burchin, 14 Johns.
Richardson
v.
124
Mix, 17
Wend, 119
Mus;
Kline
V.
tard
cf.
Cocks
Tucker
88
CHAP.
II.J
INFANTS.
first
[63.
with non-notification,
may
his
title.^
62. Where an executory contract by an infant is ratified by him conditionally, after he comes of age, the con- ^yj^^^^ j.^^j_ dition must be complied with, in order to enable fixation is * conditional ... the ratification to operate.^ A promise to pay when condition must be able will not be efl:*ective as a ratification without complied
.
proof of ability.'
63.
with.
We have
.
An
.
in force
ot the case,
and must be
must be
repudiated to be avoided.
On
principle, also, an
havebeen
executory contract, made during infancy, binds until ratified. repudiated ; but a refusal to comply with it, on suit being
brought,
is a repudiation, and when the other party sues after such repudiation, there must be specific proof of intermediate aflirmance to overcome the proof of repudiation presented by
must be shown that the defendant, before the suit was brought, aflirmed the contract.* " A mere acknowledgment of the debt, such as would take a case out of
resisting the suit.
It
is
'
et seq.
Saxby, 3 Esp. 159 Thompson V. Lay, 4 Pick. 150 Proctor v. Sears, 4 Allen, 95 Everson v. Carpenter, 17 Wend. 419. As to condi
; ;
Barr, 428
;
Hinely v. Margaritz, 3 Fetrow v. Wiseman, 40 Ind. 148 Alexander v. Hutcheson, 2 Hawks, Ordinary v. Wlierry, 1 Bailey, 535
R. 305
;
&
28
Mayer
v.
v.
et seq.
Chandler v. Glover, 32 Penn. St. then see Bobo v. Hansell, 2 Bailey, 114, and see infra, 588 et seq.
509
*
;
Supra, 56.
V.
Mo. 347. And see to same general effect. Tucker v. Moreland, 10 Pet. 75 Robinson v. Weeks, 56 Me. 102 Aldrich v. Grimes, 10 N. H. 194; Emmons v. Murray, 16 N. H.
Ferguson
Bell, 17
STlirupp
Fielder,
Esp.
628;
Thornton v. EUingworth, 2 B. & C. 824; Hale v. Gerrish, 8 N. H. 374; Robbins v. Eaton, 10 N. H. 561 Tliompson v. Lay, 4 Pick. 48 Rogers V. Hurd, 4 Day, 57 Wilcox v. Roath, 12 Conn. 550 Bigelow v. Grannis, 2 Hill, N. Y. 120; Curtin v. Patton, 11
;
;
Hoxie Mayo, 10 Mass. 137 Chandler v. Simmons, 97 Mass. 871 Burnham v. Bishop, 9 Conn. 330 Kline v. Beebe, 6 Conn. 494; Mil385
;
Morrill
v.
V.
v.
lard
V.
V.
Hewlett, 19
Wend.
;
301
Spencer
Stowe,
Carr, 45 N. Y. 406
Hoyle
v.
2 Dev.
&
Bat. 320.
89
64.]
CONTRACTS.
durinsj minority."^
[CHAP.
to pay,
II.
made
is
But a promise
whether in
spoken of, constitutes a ratification.^ There need not, howan express promise to pay on demand,' provided the promise involves an express adoption of the debt.* Part-payment, after attaining majority, however, is not a ratification.'* By statute in England, and in several states in this country', a ratification of an executory contract must be in writing.^ When a sale of real estate by an infant is repudiated, and defence taken on suit brought on the contract, strong proof of ratification after majority and before repudiation must be adduced to overcome the repudiation.^ 64. Were an infant not liable for necessaries supplied to him at periods when he is absent from home, or Infant liabie for neWithout the support of parents or guardians, the cessanes. privilege of minority, designed for his protection, might expose him to cruel wrong. He might have an estate fully adequate to his su[port and 3'et, as it could not be made available for the payment of necessaries, persons on whom he calls to supply him with such necessaries might- refuse to supply them, or might furnish them only on exorbitant terms.
r.
-i
Parker, C.
;
J.,
Whitney
v.
r.
Dutch,
r.
Thrupp
v.
v.
Fielder,
2 Esp.
;
628
14 Mass. 457
;
"Wilcox
Roath, 12
Robbius
Eaton, 10 N. H. 561
Hinely
v.
479 120
553 289
2
Dunlap
and see Conklin I?. Ogborn, 7 Ind. Murray v. Shanklin, 4 Dev. & B, Dunlap v. Hales, 2 Jones, N. G.
V.
See Hartley
;
r.
E. 934
Stern
v.
381.
Smith
Mayo,
9 Mass. 62
;
Ford
v.
Conawayr. Shelv,
Conklin
Ogborn, 7
Ind. 553.
In Hale v. Gerrish, 8 N. H. 374, an admission that the debt was due, and that the other party would get his pay, but refusing to give a note, was held no ratification. 7 Boody v. McKenney, 23 Me. 517 Jackson v. Carpenter, 11 Johns. 542 Jackson v. Burchin, 14 Johns. 124
309.
; ;
Mayo, 10 Mass. 137. * Hale r. Gerrish, 8 N. H. 374 Benham r. Bishop, 9 Conn, 330 Goodsell
; ;
Bool
v.
Mix, 17
Wend. 120
R. 517
; ;
Curtin
v.
v.
Patton, 11 S.
&
Cresinger
V.
Myers, 3
i-.
Welsh, 15 Ohio, 193 and other cases cited, 1 Chit, on Con. 11th Am. ed. 219.
Alexander
90
CHAP.
II.]
INFANTS.
[66.
Hence
it is
an infant his estate may be made liable.^ 65. The liability, however, is only for the value of the thinsrs furnished, and not for their price as ajrreed upon by the parties at the time.^ Hence a deed given for value, by an infant to secure the payment of necessaries account The value is always open to examina- n^t^g^ ^ is voidable.'
tion as a question of fact.*
by an and that a debt of Rule as to this class cannot be charged as a balance of an negotiable paper. 1 account stated, even though there be a promise proved to pay such balance.^ But so far as this involves the position that bills or notes made by infants are always void, Such paper, even though negotiable, is it is no longer law. now held, at common law, voidable only, even though void under statute.^ And it has been held by high authority, that on a negotiable note given by an infant, the plaintiff may re 66. It has been ruled that a negotiable note given
is
void,' '
1111
>
Co.
Lit.
172 n; Wharton
;
Kenzie, 5 Q. B. 606
4 M.
& W.
;
727
1 Bibb, 519
Glover
v.
v. Ott, 1
McCord,
572
221.
Dubose
Wheddon, 4 McCord,
L. R. 3 Ex. Ch. 90
Kelly
v.
Davis, 49
Gordon v. Potter, 17 Vt. 348 Hussey v. Jeveett, 9 Mass. 100 Stone V. Dennison, 13 Pick. 1 Breed
N. H. 187
;
V.
Shelton
v.
Pen-
5 McCrillis v. How, 3 N. H. 348 Swasey v. Vanderheyden, 10 Johns. 33 Fenton v. White, 1 South, 100; McMinn v. Richmond, 6 Yerg. 9 Morton i\ Steward, 5 HI. Ap. 553 see, how;
dleton, 18 Conn. 417 Strong v. Foote, 42 Conn. 203 Dubose v. Wheddon, 4 McCord, 221 Parsons v. Keys, 43 Tex.
;
Trueman
V.
v.
Hurst, 1 T. R. 40
In-
gledon
?
557.
Supra, 37
;
Hunt
v.
v.
Massey,
5 B.
Locke
v.
V.
Smith, 41 N. H. 346
;
McKenney, 23 Me.
Earle
Price
v.
Earle
v.
Goodsell
v.
Martin
v.
Everson
Carpenter, 17
Wend. 419
; ;
Ingledew i;. Douglass, 2 Stark. 36 Hedgley v. Holt, 4 C. & P. 104 Williams 1-. Moor, 11 M. & W. 256. Locke V. Smith, 41 N. H. 346
; ;
Henry
V.
j;.
Root, 33 N. Y. 526
Hesser
v.
Steiner, 5
W. &
;
S.
;
476
Fetrow
Earle
v.
Swift
v.
Bennett,
Lines, 6
10 Cush. 436
W. &
S. 80
Beeler
Johnson v. v. Young,
Yerger, 9.
91
69.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP.
is
II.
cover for as
ries.^
much
of the debt as
object of restrictions of this class being to postbusiness capacity until the age of twenty-one, PO"^ Articles of trade not articles fumished to an infant to enable him to carry necessaries. on trade, no matter how essential these articles may be to his credit, or how dependent he may be on his
67.
The
business,
are
not
considered
necessaries.^
On
the same
which he Such articles, however, in a bill of sale of this class, as are used by him in the necessary support of his family, are excepted from this
reasoning, articles required by
in farming, in
is
him
rule.''
68.
Under
necessaries
g^^^^^r provided, as wiil presently be seen, they are Otherwise astoeduca- reasonably called for by the infant's condition of
other services.
life.'
Under
this
head
fall
teaching a trade to an
position-/
the burial, with suitable expense, of the infant's husband f and the due support of the infant's wife ;^'' and of his children."
69.
What
life
may
not be
It
is
'
v. v.
Reed,
10 Mete.
(Mass.)
^
^
Cooper
v.
v.
Simmons,
&
;
N. 707.
Peters
479
Price
Manby
Scott, 1 Sid.
112
;
see Bradley
thrie
to
v.
v.
Gu
v.
Fleming, 6 M.
& W.
;
and
see as
Lovett, 6 Mass. 78
u.
divisible
considerations,
infra,
Raymond
v.
511.
2
Love
Booth,
V. Griffith,
1 Scott,
458
Latt
Helps
v.
Clayton, 17 C. B. N. S.
Mason v. Wright, 13 Met. 308 Merriam v. Canningham, 11 Cash. 40 though see Rundell v. Keeler, 7 Watts, 237 Watr.
C.
&
K. 292
;
553.
Chappie
v.
Cooper, 13 M.
& W.
;
^52.
Watts, 344, to the effect that an infant with his guardian's assent may so bind himself.
son
V.
Hensil,
Abell
Turner v. Trisby, 1 Stra. 168 Tapper r. v. Warren, 4 Vt. 149 Cadwell, 12 Met. 562; Roach i^. Quick, 9 Wend. 238, and cases cited infra,
>
;
Decell
V.
-69.
Turberville
;
Whitehouse,
1 C.
&
"1
Beeler
P. 94
*
12 Price, 692.
Young,
1 Biljb, 520,
and
cases
Infra, 69.
92
CHAP.
II.]
INFANTS.
[ 69.
who
is
should be brought up with liberal tastes, so that his money can afterwards be dispensed in such a way ^n%\^io"! as to promote public culture, and that his mind edoneta-
should be improved so that his influence should be afterwards used wisely and eftectively. Hence it is, that he
will be entitled,
will secure
eftected
by making him personally liable to parties who, on fair terms, furnish him with goods by which not merely his education, but his liberal support and training, in view of his future responsibilities,
may be
purposes of pleasure are not necessaries f though it may be otherwise when their use is requisite to health, and they are
not unsuited to the infant's condition and means,' whne, as has already been noticed, adaptation to station
of law for the court. the circumstances
saries or not, is a question of fact for the jury,
;
is
depending on and the two principal circumstances are, whether the articles are suitable to the minor's estate, and whether he is, or is not, without other means of supply." " Whether the articles sued for were necessaries or not, is a
.
in directing a
'
Maddox
V. V. v.
v.
M.
Peters
Fleming, 6 M.
177.
son, L. R.
3Ex.
93, n. (3);
14L. T. N.
S.
Davis
Kenna
Merry, 61
111.
illus-
Hedgley v. Holt, 4 C. & P. 104 Charters V Bayntun, 7 C. & P. 52 Davis v. Caldwell, 12 Cush. 513 Strong v. Foote, 42 Conn. 203 Rundel v. Keeler,
;
67
Wharton
;
7;.
Mackenzie,
Q. B.
606 90
;
Ryder
v.
Wombwell,
L. R. 3 Ex.
7 Watts, 237
Mohney
v.
Evans, 51
Penu.
519.
St. 80; Beeler d. Young, 1 Bibb, That even the guardian's assent
Leake, 2d ed. 550. Rainwater v. Durham, 2 Nott & McC. 524; see Mason v. Wright, 13
*
Met. 306.
^
Cornelia
v. Ellis,
11
111.
584
see 1
W. &
S.
80.
pj-ima
93
70.]
CONTRACTS.
as,
[chap.
II.
monds or race horses, cannot be necessaries for any minor. "^ But the finding of the jury in such respect is open to revision
by the court; and in a recent English case, the court of exchequer chamber held that a jury were not at liberty to find that jewelled cuflT buttons of the price of 2bL are necessaries to a young man of fortune.'* As has been already incidentally noticed, necessaries furnished for the support of an infant's wife and children are to be regarded as furnished to himself.
"What
70.
is
supplied to
them on
As
J.,
necessaries
cannot be
'
Shaw, C.
;
Davis
v.
Caldwell, 12
v.
V.
Mackenzie,
Dalton
v.
Fleming, 6 M. & W, 42 Wharton v. Mackenzie, 5 Q. B. 606; Bent v. Manning, 10 Vt. 225 Merriam v. Cunningham, 11 Cush. 40; Hall v. Weir, 1
Cush. 512
;
;
Ryder
;
w.
Wombwell,
L. R. 4 Exch. 38
ter,
;
Vt. 225
Tupper
ton
V.
V.
Stan-
Allen,
261
;
Eames
v.
Pweetzer,
101
V.
Wilson, 3 Day, 37
Johnson
v.
Lines, 6
W. & S.
80
Rivers
v.
Gregg,
5 Rich.
Eq. 274;
v.
Lefils
Sugg, 15
J.,
with the
Ark. 137.
Ryder
Wombwell,
L. R.
4 Ex.
;
" that all such articles as are purely ornamental are not necessary, and are to be rejected because they cannot be requisite for any one and for such matters, therefore, an inthe true rule
;
Hands
fant
corps,
liable
v.
Slaney, 8 T. R. 578.
An
in-
who was
for
member
of a volunteer
fant cannot be
made
responsible. But,
if
him
the the
they are not strictly of this description, then the question arises, whether they were bought for the necessary uses of
the party, in order to support himself properly in the degree, style, and sta-
public defence.
Esp. 152.
is
Coates
v.
Wilson, 5
an
infant,
which he moves if they were, for such articles the infant may be responsible. That must be a question for the jury." While whether the articles were necessary in the infant's
tion of life in
:
company
Hands
v.
Slaney, 8 T. R. 578.
8
Benj. on Sales, 3d
Am.
ed. 25,
particular station
of law
is
a mixed question
and
is
fact,
position
rison
V.
Turner v. Trisby, 1 Str. 168 Abell V. Warren, 4 Vt. 149; Tupper Roach v. V. Cadwell, 12 Met. 562 Quick, 9 Wend. 238 Beeler v. Young,
citing
;
;
1 Bibb, 519.
94
CHAP.
II.]
INFANTS.
[ 72.
home and there suitably maintained.^ with which an infant is already sup- j^f^^^ plied by parent or guardian are not necessaries.^ must be without ^ T> ^ n But the mere fact that an infant has an income paid home ^"pp^^"*into his own hands which would have enabled him
to an infant living at
And
articles
<
'
a tradesman supplying
from recover! ng.^ 71. If an infant's property is exposed to waste or other peril, the proper course is to apply to his guardian Q^j^i^.^^ Hence remieredm for the pay of services in its preservation. preserving , it has been held that an infant is not liable to a infant's third party for the premium on insuring his prop- not nTcLerty ;* nor for repairs done to his house which would ^^"*^^otherwise have been in danger of great dilapidation f nor for
necessaries
,
,
.
.
him with
expenses of law-suits, unless absolutely essential to the infant's personal support, the guardian being the party to act in such
cases
under the court having charge of the infant's estate. Money is not ordinarily included under the head of necessaries.'' Even though actually spent by the j^joueyg infant in the purchase of necessaries, it cannot, such lent not necessaries. .. n 18 the prevalent Jjinglish opinion, be recovered from the infant by the lender.^ In this country, however, it has been held that a person lending money to an infant to pur 72.
iT-,Ti
Bainbridge
;
v.
Pickering,
W.
Angel v. McLellan, 16 Mass. 28 Wailing v. Toll, 9 Johns. 141 Bredin v. Diven, 2 Watts, 95 Guthrie v. Murphy, 4 Watts, 80 Johnson v. Lines, 6 W. & S. 80. ' Swift V. Bennett, 10 Cush. 436 Davis V. Caldwell, 12 Cush. 512 Strong V. Foote, 42 Conn. 203 Kline v. L'Amoreaux, 2 Paige, 419 Hull v, Conolly, 3 McCord, 6 Beeler v. Young, 1 Bibb, 579 Simms v. Norris, 5 Ala. 42 Perrin v. Wilson, 10 Mo. 451 Parsons V. Keys, 43 Tex. 557. But in Ryder V. Wombwell, L. R. 3 Ex. 90, it was held that evidence that the infant was already well supplied, without evidence
Black. 1325
; ;
knew this, was inadthough see, contra, Foster v. Redgrave, L. R. 4 Ex. 35, n. (8), This point was left open in Ryder v. Wombthat the plaintiflf
;
missible
See Leake, 2d
Burghart
v.
v.
Hall, 4 M.
6
Peters
Fleming,
M. &
v.
& W. W. 42.
727
Noyes, 32 N.
Tupper
Phelps
v.
v.
v.
Wright, 38 Vt. 494. ? Darby v. Boucher, 1 Salk. 279 Walker v. Simpson, 7 W. & S. 83. ^ Ellis v. Ellis, 5 Mod. 368 1 Ld.
Thrall
;
Raym.
344.
95
74.]
CONTRACTS.
furnishes the necessaries;^ and,
[chap.
II.
man who
when an
infant
is
him money
73.
An
with an infant
Contract of marriage
infant's
contract
by infant
is
voidable,
while an infant
may
is
but adult is
bound.
may
ratify it
when
Marriage settlements by an infant are voidable, though since, when a female infant marries a husband of full age, her personal property at common law passes to him when he assumes possession, the settlement of her personal property made by a duly executed marriage contract binds the husband, impressing on the property thus taken by him the conditions of the particular trust.' But, unless authorized by statute, even an order of the chancellor having jurisdiction does not operate to make a marriage contract, otherwise invalid, binding on an
infant.*
And
a settlement
is
made by
voidable
is
templation of marriage,
disaffirming
74.
Ck)nn
;^
though
after marriage
We
V.
Coburn, 7 N. H. 368
;
Price
r.
r.
Watson
Cross, 2
8
Duv. 147.
v.
void,
Randall
Sweet,
Denio, 460.
v. Leslie,
and a
ratification of
it
See to same
Esp. 28.
eflFect,
Clarke
Rowe
;
;
v.
Hopv.
v.
Holt
V.
V.
Hunt
Willard
v. v.
v.
r.
Lomax,
Worrall, 5 C. P. D. 410.
6
26 Barb. 610
21 Hun, 489
St.
Treskow,
Rush
v. v. v.
521
;
Develin
and
6
see
Drury
v.
v.
Drury, 2 Eden, 39
464
76
*
;
Cannon
Alsbury,
A. K. Mar.
;
McCartee
Field
7
Warwick
lb.
;
r.
Milner
8
;
Temple
v.
Warwick
V.
Pratt, 1
153.
'
Supra, 60
96
CHAP.
II.]
INFANTS.
[ 74.
may
a contract
tract.
may
it
estop
,.
Infant
The doctrine
and
further,
title
But
to
make such
estoppel effectual
it
should be based on an
attitude which
is intelligent, deliberate, and persistent. If mere transient approval by an infant of another's purchase should bar the infant's rights, the protection of infancy would be destroj'ed. His rights would be assigned away indirectly in the face of a rule established by the policy of the law that his direct assignment of such rights would be invalid.^ In cases of fraud, however, the better doctrine, as Mr. Bigelow
well states,^
is
married women,
"may
Both are liable when properly sued for their torts in an action which does not seek the enforcement of a contract or demand damages for repudiating
property against a purchaser.
or for fraudulently inducing the plaintiff to
make
a contract
and in an action for a fraudulent representation of title, whereby the plaintiff has been induced to expend money for
the purchase of property belonging in reality to the defendant,
sum
paid.
is
Now
the
ground of many estoppels, if not also of this very class of equitable estoppels), it is but right, on analogy, that the infant
or feme should be rebutted
sion."*
But an
infant
Bispham's Eq. 2d ed. Bige 293 low on Estoppel, 447, (3d ed. 515 ;) Overton v. Banister, 3 Hare, 503
120
Whittington
see Jennings
v.
v.
and
*
roe, 51.
Esron
110
S.
v.
Nicholas, 1 D. G.
v.
&
S.
118
See
as
to
estoppel
of
married
Thompson
; ;
women,
*
infra, 89.
cit.
Op.
3d ed. 516.
& &
S.
J.
380
StikeS.
J.
man
Dawson,
v.
458
Hall
v.
Unity Ass.
90
63
VOL.
I.
^7
74.]
CONTRACTS.
full
[CHAP.
II.
ing himself of
up
in
infancy.^
Nor
age is not estopped from afterwards setting is an infant estopped by a recital of his age
an indenture of apprenticeship.^
v.
Telegraph Co.
369
;
Davenport, 97 U.
S.
Stoolfoos v. Jenkins, 12 S.
&
R. 399
685.
13.
Com.
v.
v.
Sherman, 18 Penn.
v.
St.
see
343
Merritt
Home,
Oh.
St.
307;
As
of
to
Goodman
Winter, 64 Ala. 410. ' 1 Ch. on Cont. 11th Am. ed. 208 Burley v. Russell, 10 N. H. 184 Mer; ;
of estoppel
infra, 89.
As
how
set
may
be
riam
v.
Cunningham, 11 Cush. 40
oflf,
98
CHAP.
III.]
MARRIED WOMEN.
[76.
CHAPTER
At common law, married women, with
certain limitations, cannot contract,
III.
MARRIED WOMEN.
Husband may be wife's agent, Husband cannot divest himself duty by his own wrong, 86. But liability ceases when wife
without cause,
87.
85.
of his
estate
may
leaves
May
And when
ance,
goods or money,
77 a.
88.
Cannot bind future acquired estate, 78. By statute disability has been much
qualified, 79.
Married
toppel,
contracts, 89.
liability,
Contracts
future
separation
in-
80. Otherwise as to mere separation, 81. Her contracts before marriage pass to husband, 82.
valid, 90.
Husband
liable
for
necessaries fur-
Husband
nished wife,
92.
76.
By
the
common
1.
woman
may
sent,
following cases:
When
At commarried
unheard from for seven years, though he may women, with certain really at the time be alive ;^ and this has in some exceptions, states been extended to all cases of final and perma- camiotcontract. nent abandonment.^ J3nt mere temporary desertion does not by itself have this eftect.' Hence, a note given by a wife, whose husband had deserted her, while living apart
'
Doe
V.
Jesson, 6 East, 80
1
Loring
;
sole trader.
V.
King V. Paddock, 18 Johns. 141. In Valentine V. Ford, 2 Browne, 193, it was held that an absence of two years might have this effect. In Black v. Tricker, 59 Penn. St. 13, desertion by husband, leaving the wife dependent on her own exertions for support, was
Steineman,
Mete. Mass. 211
As to the presumption of death in such cases see Whart. on Ev. And see Schouler, Husb. and 1274.
Wife, 89
' c< seq.
;
V.
Rhea i". Renner, 1 Pet. 105 Ayer Warren, 47 Me. 217; Gregory v.
4 Mete. Mass. 478
;
Pierce,
Black
v.
99
76.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
III.
from him, for necessaries used by her in her own support, is void, and her promise to pay it, made after her divorce and before her remarriasje, is without consideration and invalid.' When, however, the desertion is such as to entitle her to an independent domicil, in which she is thrown on her own resources for support, then she may independently sue and besued.^ 2. AYhen her husband has been banished from the country, or when a punishment imposed on him has been commuted on the condition of expatriation, though on his return her independence in this respect is lost.' 3. Where the husband is an alien, and the wife, deserted by him, does business as a feme sole.* 4. When, by local custom, she is a feme covert trader, her husband not meddling with her trading.' In Pennsylvania this privilege is given and limited by statute. Desertion, leaving the wife dependent on her own exertions, may entitle her to be regarded as a feme sole trader.^ In South Carolina, also, the custom of London in this respect is recog-
nized.
But
v.
it is
With
'
Hayward
Carrol
v.
r.
InJ'ra,
8
81.
v.
Blencow,
4 Esp. 27
Spooner
Cornwell
ton
Brewster, 2 C.
&
;
P. 35
V. Hill,
Hayw.
406.
TroughThat a sen-
husband was an alien, resident in Russia, while she was an English subject. In the same case it was further held that the fact that the husband was an alien enemy
does not give the wife business capacity.
6
Caudell
v.
v.
Shaw, 4 T. R. 361
;
although he has not yet been sent away, enables her. to bind herself, see
Beard
see
et seq.
6
Franks ex parte, 7 Bing. 762 and also when he remains away after his trans;
Featherstone, 6
W. &
S.
portation. Carrol
*
On
646.
^
Valentine
v.
commenting on Walford v. Duchess de Pienue, 2 Esp. 554 Franks r. same deft., ibid. 587 Gaillon v. L' Aigle, 1 Bos. & P. 357 Kay v. Duchess de Pienne, 3 Camp. 123 Barden v. Zeverberg, 2 M. & W. 61 concludes, " that it would be enough to show that the husband never had an English domicil, or, at all events, to show that he never resided in England." In De Wahl V. Braune, 1 H. & N. 178, it was
81,
after
Whether a decree
see Black
v.
necessary
Hentz
V.
Clawson, 34
v.
Leg. Int.
Cleaver
v. Scheetz,
Westernitz
As
privilege, see
King
v.
Thompson, 87
Penn.
St. 365.
McDowall
Starr
v.
Wood,
v.
2 Nott
& McC.
;
242
and
see Radford
W.
Va. 572.
100
CHAP.
III.]
MARRIED WOMEN.
[77.
woman
is
at
common law
incapable
of
making
Even
common
estate."*
And
v. Drury Lane, 2 Chit. R. Winslow v. Croker, 17 Me. 29 Howes . Bigelow, 13 Mass. 384 Washburn V. Hale, 10 Pick. 429 Morgan v. Bank, 14 Conn. 99 Hyde v. Stone, 9
Glover
;
Alger, 81
117
and cases cited in Wald's Pollock, 69, and Story's Eq. 1397.
In Robinson
v.
Pickering, 44 L. T. R.
N.
S. 165,
L. R. 16
Ch. D. 660,
it
was
Cow. 230. 2 Johnson r. Gallagher, 3 D. F. J. 514 aff. in London, etc. Bank of Australia V. Lempriere, L. R. 4 P. C. 572. 3 Mayd v. Field, L. R. 3 Ch. D. 587 Godfrey v. Harben, L. R. 13 Ch. D. 216 Davies r. Jenkins, L. R. 6 C. D.
;
;
woman from dealing with her separate property until judgment. See London Law Times, 10th
strain a married
April (p. 412) and 15th May (p. 38), 1880; 2d April (p. 382), 1881.
728;
Poole's Est., L. R.
6C. D. 739
see, to
same
v.
aflFect
in this country,
;
Cheever
Ste-
phen V. Beall, 22 Wall. 329 Heburn V. Warner, 112 Mass. 271 Insurance
;
Co.
V.
V.
Babcock, 42 N. Y. 613
McVey
Cantrell,
70 N. Y. 295; Maurer's
Phillips v.
v.
Johnson v. Gallagher, 3 D. F. J. London Bank of Australia v. Lempriere, L. R. 4 P. C. 572 see Conn Burch v. v. Conn, 1 Md. Ch. 212; In Breckenridge, 16 B. Mon. 482. Patrick v. Littell, 36 Oh. St. 79, it was held that an agreement by a married woman to pay for services to be
*
515
36 Oh.
v.
Cannon, 23 Mo. 457 Davis v. Smith, Sup. Ct. Mo. 1881 Hooton v. Ransom, Burnett v. Hawpe, 25 6 Mo. Ap. 19
;
rendered in procuring a loan of money to remove a mortgage on her real estate binds her separate estate. Boynton,
J. said;
"She"
101
77.]
CONTRACTS.
;
[chap.
III.
and the
trust es-
it was created.^ 3. Debts conby a married woman, living apart from her husband, are presumed to have been intended by her to be charged to her separate estate ;^ and the same presumption exists when
a married
woman gives
husband
estate.
engagement entered into. The announced in previous adjudications of this court require an affirmative answer to this question. 20 Ohio St. 371; 35 ib. 270; ib. 296.
of the
principles
She agreed to pay an attorney's fee for making an examination of her title, and a commission of $100 to the defendants for securing the loan. The services stipulated for were fully performed; the defendants paying $50 from their own funds to the attorney making the abstract of title. The plaintiff refused to accept the loan, or to pay for
the services rendered in procuring
it.
Mrs.
de-
mand, we are also of the opinion that a personal judgment against her was proper." Her obligation is one upon which, were she sole, she would be
liable at law.
It is
a contract or obli
28 of the
Code, as
amended March
30, 1874,
;
she
and being
We have
the agreement
having direct reference to Mrs, Patrick's separate estate, but made for its benefit. The object was to remove an existing incumbrance upon the property, and it was to accomplish this
object that the services of the defend-
she were
It
unmarried.
was
one of the objects of this section, as thus amended, to so far modify the disabilities of coverture as to authorize a
The
loan was to be secured by a new mortgage upon the same property affects the question but very little. She was to get rid of a mortgage debt then due and pressing, by substituting another there
for, to
judgment to be rendered woman, where such judgment would have been proper had she remained unmarried."
personal
against a married
Pike V. Fitzgibbon, L. R. 17 Ch. D. 454 44 L. T. N. S. 562 Rice v. R. R,, 32 Oh. St. 380 Pfirsching v. Falsh, 87 Collins v. Underwood, 33 Ark. 111. 260
' ;
;
;
The question is, whether an intention upon the part of Mrs. Patrick to charge her separate estate with payment for the services rendered, and money paid by defendants, for the benefit of such
from the character of the transaction and the nature
estate, will be implied
265.
8
Ibid.
Morrell
v.
Cowan, L. R. 6 Ch. D.
is
166.
This topic
well discussed in
et
102
CHAP.
III.]
MARRIED WOMEN.
[ 77.
makes with him a joint promissory note,' or gives her note in payment of her husband's debt.^ But on such engagements, a married woman cannot be personally sued. The remedy is in rem against the separate estate.^ The execution by a married
*
Davies
v.
Jenkins, L. R. 6 Ch. D.
sole,
To this Mr. Wald, the American editor of Pollock on Contracts, adds, Williams v. Urmston, 35 Oh. St. 296 Cowles V. Morgan, 34 Ala. 535 Nunn 7'. Givham, 45 Ala. 375 Burnett v. Hawpe, 25 Grat, 481 Lincoln v. Howe, 51 Mo. 571. 2 Wicks V. Mitchell, 9 Kan. 80, cited Wald's Pollock, 69.
728.
;
band but
of
for herself,
whom
an
she
obli-
whom
make her
is
adopted
ed.
.Johnson
v.
v.
Gallagher, 3 D. F.
8
& J.
For
by Mr. Benjamin,
L. R. 2 Eq. 182
5 Ch.
Sales, 3d
Am.
Rogers
Ward,
Allen,
389.
form of decree, so as to bind personal estate, see Picard v. Hine, L. R. 5 Gh. 274. Mr. Pollock holds the older cases,
cited in Sug. V.
Picard
v.
Hine, L. R.
&
P. 206, to be over-
ruled," referring to
Picard
v.
Hine,
ut
;
supra; Pride
v.
Bubb, L. R.
Ch. 64
He
is
regarded as a sort of
person
and see Butler v. Cumpston, L. R. 7 Eq. 20. That a note given by a married woman in payment of property purchased by her is to be inferred to have been meant to bind her separate estate, see Williams r. Urmston, 35 Oh. St. 296. In Vermont it is ruled that a married woman
Ap. 274
;
is
sole in
;
dealing
way
as a corporation sole is
And
in sup-
cited
by Mr. Wald,
in re, L.
R.
" It is not the woman, woman, who becomes a debtor, but her engagement has made that particular part of her property which
12 Ch. D. 490
:
as a
Priest
v.
Such
is
495. when
is
and liable to satisfy the engagement. She herself is not a debtor, within the meaning of the bankruptcy act." To the same eflFect, see Bispham's Equity, In Mathewman's case, L. R. 3 102. Eq. 781, the law was stated to be that if a married woman, " having separate
separate estate,
Elliot
V.
I.
married
equity,
it
woman
being a creature of
feme
power
to
deal with
it,
103
77.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. in.
woman, of a formal separate instrument of indebtedness, has been held evidence of an intention on her part in this way to bind her separate estate,' and an assignee with notice is bound by such action on her part ^ But unless the consideration of the obligation passes to the married woman herself, the intention to bind her separate estate, such is the better opinion, must appear on the document, to subject her separate Whether the engagement estate to liability for the payment.^ was made in reference to the wife's separate estate, is a matter to be determined from all the circumstances of the particular case and, as we have seen, the inference is peculiarly strong where it appears that the wife is living apart from her hus;
Mo. 457
;
Schafroth
r.
Ambs, 46 Mo,
;
it
and equity
Kimm v. Weipport, 46 Mo. 532 114 Lewis r. Yale, 4 Fla. 418; Miller v.
;
can be satisfied," Bispham's Eq. 102. This view has been accepted in numerous courts in the United States.
Newton, 23 Cal. 554 Hatchinson v. Underwood, 27 Tex. 255. That a more restricted view is maintained in several
state courts will be hereafter seen.
'
Bispham's Eq.
102;
Picard
v.
Cheever
elder
V.
V.
v.
Batch;
w.
Sargent, 47 N. H, 265
;
Frary
East-
Booth, 37 Vt. 78
;
Welland
v.
v.
Imlay v. Hunting- Hedden, 3 Green, Ch. 512 Perkins v. ton, 20 Conn. 175 Wells v. Thorman, Elliott, 8 C. E. Green, 529 Phillips v. 37 Conn. 318 Gardner v. Gardner, 7 Graves, 20 Oh. St, 371 Vizonneau v. Paige, 112 Yale v. Dederer, 18 N. Y. Pegram, 2 Leigh, 183 Garland v. 265 Ballin v. Dillaye, 37 N. Y. 35 Coleman v. Pamplin, 32 Grat. 305 Gosman v. Cruger, 69 N. Y. 87 John- Wooley, 10 B. Mon. 320 Ozley v. Ikelson V. Cummins, 1 C. E. Green, 99 heimer, 26 Ala. 332 Kimm v. WeipVan Kirk v. Skillman, 5 Vroom, 109 pert, 46 Mo. 532 Metropolitan Bank I.eaycraft v. Hedden, 3 Green Ch. 512 V. Taylor, 62 Mo. 338. Warne v. Routledge, L. R. 18 Eq. Perkins v. Elliott, 8 C. E. Green, 529 Johnson v. Vail, 1 McCarter, N. J. 423 500. ' Nourse r. Henshaw, 123 Mass. 96 Cooke V. Husbands, 11 Md. 492 Buchanan r. Turner, 26 Md. 5 Vizon- Yale V. Dederer, 18 N. Y, 265 22 N. Y. neau v. Pegram, 2 Leigh, 183 Penn v. 450 68 N, Y. 329 Manhattan Co, v. Whitehead, 1 7 Grat. 503 Greenough v. Thompson, 58 N, Y, 80 Johnson v. Wigginton, 2 Greene, Iowa, 435 Har- Cummins, 1 C. E. Green, 97 Harrison ris V. Harris, 7 Ired. Eq. Ill Coleman V. Stewart, 3 C. E. Green, 451 Peake V. Wooley, 10 B. Mon. 320 Fears v. V. La Baw, 21 N. J, Eq. 269 Pippen Brooks, 12 Ga. 200 Dallas v. Heard, V. Wesson, 74 N. C. 437 see Schouler 32 Ga. 604; Gunter v. Williams, 40 on Husb. and Wife, 237 e seq. Whitesides v. Cannon, 23 Ala. 572
; ; ; ;
104
CHAP.
III.]
MARRIED WOMEN.
however, a married woman, on whom a separate estate has been settled, has no power over such estate beyond what is given to her by the instrument creating it, and this instrument is to be so construed as to give her no power of disposal beyond what its terms expressly specify.^ By a clause forbidding the anticipation of income, a married woman may have a separate income so secured to her as to be protected against her own debts.^
United
States,
away the
v. v.
Picard
;
v.
Hine,
v.
L. R.
Ch. Ap.
Berry, 48
Mitchell,
274
Johnson
Gallagher, 3
De G.
F.
see Lippincott
&
J. 494.
*
94 U.
;
S. 767.
But a
different opinion
Metcalf
V.
Cook, 2 R.
I.
;
355
Lancaster
well,
2 Whart. R.
11
Brown, 44 Penn. St. Brown, 61 Penn. St. 320 Swift v. Castle, 23 111. 209 Cookeson v. Toole, 59
; ;
on the subject has been entertained in other states, and the general tendency of the division is, perhaps, to put estates of both kinds, so far as regards
Willard v. Eastham,
v.
Yale
Dederer, 18 N. Y.
;
111.
515; Bressler
V.
v.
Kent, 61
;
111.
426;
v. v.
265
Ballin
v.
Dillaye, 37 N. Y. 35
Hume
Harris
Harris,
Eq.
;
Ill
Ewing
v.
Reid
Lamar,
Peake v. La Bau, 6 C. E. Green, 282. The South Carolina rule was, however, adopted in Rhode Island (Metcalf v.
V.
Eq. 27
;
Marshall?;. Stephens,
v.
Hump. 159
;
;
Bradford
Greenway,
52 Ala.
435.
17 Ala. 797
Short
v. Battle,
456
Doty
v.
Mitchell, 9
Sm.
& M.
"In the
Young, 7 Cold. 461) Mississippi (Doty v. Mitchell, 9 Sm. & M. 435) Hlinois (Swift v. Castle, 23
ever,
V.
; ;
Young
103), "it
diffe-
111.
209
Bressler
v.
Kent, 61
111. 111.
426
20)
;
is
a manifest
overruling
Young
in
v. Graff",
28
statute,
Maryland (Miller v. Williamson, 5 Md. 219 Tarr v. WilIt was also recliams, 4 Md. Ch. 68).
and formerly
which is the creature of courts of equity and this view seems to be taken, also, by the courts in Illinois (Cooke;
(Machir
519)."
v.
That
son
V.
Toole, 59
111.
;
111.
;
515
Bressler
v.
426 Cole v. Van Riper, 44 111. 58 Carpenter v. Mitchell, 50 111. 470; Rogers v. Higgins, 48 111. 211) and, after some fluctuation, by those in Alabama. See Short v. Battle, 52 Ala. 456 overruling Molton i*. MarKent, 61
; ;
argued by Mr. Pollock, citing LindThat she 1, 86. may thus be a partner of her own husis
ley on Partnership,
in re,
3 Biss. 405.
104.
tin,
43 Ala. 651
Glenn
v.
Glenn, 47
105
77 a.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
III.
power of disposition in advance; and creditors are restricted to dividends and profits already accrued.^ And the restraint
against alienation protects even against liability for fraudu-
married woman England, the same now power of alienation as she would have if she were single.^ 77 a. When a married woman contracts for remuneration
lent acts.^
gift to the separate use of a
gives her, in
and she may sue on the con^J^^ct, the covcrture being no defence on the merits, buVnot for goods or some jurisdictions though in it may be necessary on money. technical grounds to join the husband in the suit.* It is also "settled law that a married woman, though incapable of making a contract, is capable of having a chose, in action conferred upon her, which will survive to her on the death of her husband, unless he shall have interfered by doing some act to reduce it into possession."' And while a married
tract for
\Tq^ COD
for her
own
services, she
is,
as
is
*'
''
"^
woman
cannot, at
common
money
by her,
all chattels in
her
may sue for money received by a third party to her use, which money has not been reduced in her husband's possession.^ But
reduction into possession by the husband divests her of her
Thus, even where the husband opens an account with a banker in his wife's name, the money deposited remains his property.^ And when an account is opened by the husband in his own and his wife's names, with authority to the wife to draw, the balance on his death remains his propinterest.
erty."
>
Butler
v.
Roberts
M. &
153.
5
W.
97
Guyard
v.
Sutton, 3 C. B.
v.
R. R., 13 C.
Arnold
v.
v.
Woodhams,
v.
L. R. 16 Eq,
J. C.
B. 474.
29
Thomas
Price,
46 L.
L.
761
Stanley
589.
'
Stanley,
R.
C.
D.
Bird
7
Jessel,
M.
Jones
8
Cuthbertson, L. R. 8 Q. B. 504.
L. R. 7 Ch. D. 293.
* Leake, 2d ed. 560 Weller . Baker, 2 Wils. 423 Bendix v. Wakeman, 12
;
328.
106
CHAP.
III.]
MARRIED WOMEN.
[79.
woman make an
women
engagement expressly
estate
in
reference to a separate
hereafter to be
and if she is future ac^ capable of binding her separate estate, by engage- ^"^"T*^ ment, to be enforced in equity, it is also argued that she cannot be denied this capacity in reference to an estate to which she is entitled, but on which she has not yet entered.^ But the better view is that she cannot, by mere estoppel, unless there be fraud, convey that which she could not pass by deed.^ And it is now settled by the court of appeal in England, that a married woman's covenant, purporting to bind any separate estate to which she was entitled at the time, does not bind after-acquired separate estate; and a judgment on such covenant binds only so much of the separate estate to which she was entitled at the date of the covenant, as is in
existence belonging to her at the date of the judgment.^
79. Both in England and in the United States, statutes have been adopted by which the common law re- g statute
striction just stated has been
more or
less
removed.*
disability
The
muchquaii^
'
'
lock in his
Ch. 591
Read
Hall, 57 N. H. 482;
;
Bodiue
35 Oh.
v.
Kileen, 53 N. Y. 93
;
Nash
v.
v.
and
Mitchell, 71 N. Y. 199
St.
;
Fallis
v.
Keys,
Wife,
debts
202.
When
woman
contracts
debts,
265
v.
Norton
v.
Nichols, 35
before
marriage, these
Mich. 148
terson
Scranton
Stewart, 52 Ind.
111.
111.
68; Nixon
V.
Halley, 78
611
Pat-
Lawrence, 90
174.
In
heyden
*
v.
An
article
by Mr. Westlake, on
relation,
abandoned, in submission to
Fitzgibbon, L. R. 17 Ch. D. 454.
Pike
V.
ried
of
Women,
44-46.
legislation
An
on
Inf.
analysis
Ch. 314
;
Teal
v.
Woodworth, 3 Paige,
111.
American
this topic
v. v.
164; see
and Gov.
107
79.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
III.
In some states modifications have been made annually for a series of years; and the task, as we are told by an able and experienced critic,^ " would involve the collation of two or three hundred separate enactments, in nearly forty difi^'erent states, during a period of thirty years or more, and which have been discussed in perhaps a tbousand or two of decided cases," " The chief embarrassment," it is added, "of any attempt to state accurately or completely the existing law on this subject, would be found in the fhct that while these statutes are destroying piecemeal the ancient common-law system of marital property rights, expounded and eulogized by Blackstone, it has not been replaced, even in states where not a vestige of the common law on this subject remains, by a new system, symmetrical, consistent, or complete." So far, however, as concerns the topic immediately before us, we maysay that in most states married women are now made capable of suing and being sued on contracts made by them personally. And as a matter of private international law, we may hold that a married woman incapable of contracting by her personal law, may make a valid contract in a state imposing no such disability.^ When
to classification in this place.
'
Law
own
exist
account,
in
important
10
differences
the various
statutes,"
In
Dampfs Appeal,
is
Weekly
J,
Notes, 443,
118,
valuable
summary
of recent
on this topic will be found in an appendix to Schouler on Husb. and Wife, 1882, Mr, Hitchcock, in the
statutes
article
"A
mar-
ried
woman
above
cited, says
"In general
manner prescribed
(Rumfelt
V. v.
by the
statute,
St,
women
Clemens, 46 Penn,
455
make
Dunham
husband. But here, again, discrepansome statutes permitting cies appear her the largest liberty, including the power to form business partnerships and to contract directly with her husband, while others permit her to contract with third persons in general, but not to form partnerships, and not As at all with her husband. sole trader, to the right to become a that is, to carry on business on her
;
Wright, 53 Penn. St, 167 Brown v. Bennett, 75 Penn, St. 420 Innis V. Templeton, Pittsburgh Legal
; ;
Journal of Oct. 20, 1880, p. 73.) It is true this rule does not apply to a sale
or transfer of a wife's personal estate,
The 4th
when a
married
personal
woman
estate,
shall be entitled to a
'
the proceeds
108
CHAP. a
III.]
MARRIED WOMEN.
sets
[80.
woman
creditors, the
up a separate estate as against her husband's burden is on her to show that the property is
judicially separated from her husband, becomes, for business purposes, a ferae sole ; and " a wife deserted
by her husband
is
who
fiabmtV'^*
in
be competent for her, either in person or by attorney, to sign, seal, and deliver a refunding
son,
it
shall
band's estate,
it
'
that
bond in pursuance
owned
gift,
it
at the time of
her
marriage, or
else
acquired
it
after-
and
wards by
bequest, or purchase.
such
be done, or
be necessary
lawfully re-
the burthen
is
upon her
to
it
with the
same
effect
if
estate as
sole.
The
ried
woman
power to transact business generally, but to bind herself by such acts and
instruments as
may
'
be necessary, or
which were not furnished by the husband.' (Black. J., in Gambier v. GamAgain it was bier, 18 Penn. St. 363.) said by the same learned justice in Keeny v. Good (21 Penn. St. 242), To bring the property of a married woman under the protection of the act of 1848, it is made necessary by the letter, as well as by the spirit of the statute, to prove that she owns it. She must identify it as property which was
'
how she
nothing
came by
unless
full
it
it
afterwards.
it
Evidence that
to
It is to
she purchased
amounts
That
under the
New York
ment
to
statute a married
woman
is
own
of
In the absence
pay
for necessaries
which are
has no separate estate, see Tierney v. Turnquist, 85 N. Y. 516. In Massachusetts a married woman
such proof, the presumption is a violent one that her husband furnished the means of payment.' Like doctrine will be found in Gault v. Saffin (44
St. 307), and many other cases which we need not revert." Wilson V. Silkman, 97 Penn. St. 509, and see Horton v. Dewey, S. C. Wis. KSl, 13
Penn.
to
may now
Major
V.
Ken-
nedy
1
V.
infra,
"Even
where a widow
109
82.]
tinues."^
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
III.
The same
however, amounting to divorces from the matrimony. By the latter kind of divorce, it need bond of scarcelj' be added, the wife's incapacities are removed in all cases of which the divorcing court has internationally jurisdiction of the cause.^ And as a general rule, the wife, after divorce, is entitled to do business as a feme sole.^ Even after a divorce from bed and board she has been held so entitled.* 81. The mere fact that a woman is separated from her busband, living apart from him by agreement, can Mereseparation from no more, at common law, confer on her business husband Capacity, than could at common law an agreement does not create inde- i. c c between a parent and an infant confer business capapendent iiabihty. ^j^.^ q^ ^^^ infant.' That she lives and trades as it
cial separations, not,
i.
i.
\^
'
make her
sui jurist
But absolute
desertion
by the husband, compelling her to take an independent position, and to do business for her own support, may enable her to acquire an independent domicil for divorce purposes, and to sue and be sued.'^ 82. The contracts executed by a married woman before her marriage, bind, at common law, her husband, and enure
>
Wait
V.
v.
Whart. Con.
V.
Wells
kinson
V.
Thompson, 62 Mo. 148. * Pierce v, Burnham, 4 Met. (Mass.) 303 Dean v. Richmond, 5 Pick. 461
;
Benadum
166
6
;
r.
Pratt,
v.
Oh.
St.
403;
Burr, 10 Paige,
to effect of divorce
on marriage
settle-
Clark, 6
v.
W. &
S. 85.
ment, see Fitzgerald v. Chapman, L. R. 1 Ch. D. 563 Burton v. Sturgeon, L. R. 2 Ch. D. 318. But divorce has
;
Marshall
Rutton, 8 T. R. 545.
;
no retroactive
effect in
making
action-
6 Clayton v. Adams, 6 T. R. 605 Hayward v. Barker, 52 Vt. 429 Concord Bank v. Bellis, 10 Cush. 276
;
Keen
'
Barnett, L. R. 1 Q. B. D.
i-.
Malbon, 31 Beav.
L. R. 1
48
Fitzgerald
v.
Chapman,
etc.
2d ed.
354
;
559
see
Coleman, 39 Penn. St. 299. Con. of Laws, 224 Rhea v. Renner, 1 Pet. 105 Ayer v. Warren, 47 Me. 230 Abbot v. Bayley, 6 Pick. Gregory v. Pierce, 4 Mete. Mass. 89 Ames v. Chew, 5 Mete. Mass. 31, 478 320 Rosenthal v. Mayhugh, 33 Oh. St. 155 Blumenberg c. Adams, 49 Cal,
v.
Wh.
308.
110
CHAP.
III.]
MARRIED WOMEN.
[ 84.
new
is
1
nage pass
eer by judgment,
1
18
to her husband.
husband
is
though
it is
and
false pretences.*
liable for
'*^*
*^'
woman, cannot
And where
a wife
is
sui
not liable for her torts in matters as to which she acts independently.^
is
husband
84.
on her
tracts
A married woman, though incompetent to own account, may bind her husband by conmade by her for ordinary household expenses,
relation, as
contract
bind ims-
shaped by society, places in ^^ent^^ the wife's hands the management of household affairs.^ But the agency is limited to household matters, unless otherwise implied from the prior procedure of the parties;^
The family
though whatever
'
is
Morris
v.
Dodgson
1
v. Pickering, 6 N. H. 124 Emerson, 16 Vt. 653; Mackinley v. McGregor, 3 Wliart. 369 Murphy v. Hubert, 16 Penn. St. 50. In Seaton v. Benedict (5 Bing. 28 2
;
Pickering
v.
Felker
13
v.
Katz, 6
W.
Sim. L.
C, 7th Eng.
"
&
As
V.
to
novation see
infra,
C. J., says:
A husband is
only liable
852
'
*
et seq.
Hawk
Harman,
etc.
5 Binn. 43.
Tyler on Inf.
Liverpool
;
2d ed.
v.
233.
9
assumption that she acts as his agent. If he omits to furnish her with necessaries,
'
Assoc,
v.
Fairhurst,
Exch'. 422
St. 497.
6
Keen
Hartman, 48 Penn.
Cobbett
.
Hill
v.
V.
Peake
V.
Lane
Mullen, 47 N. Y. 577
Fiske
v.
v.
Bai-
150
Burt
'
Emerson
V.
v.
Meredith
Footner, 11 M.
& W. 202
Ill
84.]
CONTRACTS.
its social
[chap.
III.
keeping
basis,^
condition in view,
may be
furnished on this
category.^ The principle is not aft'ected by the statutes giving independent status to married women.^ The tradesman is not bound to inquire as to the husband's circumstances or the wife's necessities,* Independently of this implied agency, she may bind her husband by doing business on his behalf with
his authority,
and when
it
acquiescence
is
enough), there
nothing, at
common
law,
which precludes her from binding her husband.^ That her husband lives with her when she is carrying on trade, and joins with her in enjoying the profits, constitutes him principal in the trade, liable for her acts.^
But
unless there be
be brought
See Schouler,
et seq.
left it to
about by implication from other provisions not directed to the rules of evidence connected with the marital rela-
Breinig
;
v.
156
2
iiifra,
92.
Powers
V.
Weir
V.
Groat, 4
Hun, 193
:
Flynn
V.
Messenger, Min. Sup. Ct. 9 N. W. Rep. 759, where it is said " The principle laid down in Powers v. Russell,
presumption of the common law arising therefrom. These principles apply with equal force to the employment by the wife of servants for
tion, or the
'
and dispose
think
it is
of this case."
to be
"We
also
knew
living
woman,
the
with
her
husband, and
at least,
by
the
be that she was purchasing them on her husband's account, and for the iise of his family and she could not be made individually liable without an express
;
Eames
v.
See infra,
*
92.
Wh.
on Agency,
Church
v.
agreement to become so, or that the goods should be charged or the credit given to herself.'" "If it was intended to make so impontant a change
in the law
is to
of society, it
McGregor, 3 Whart. 369 Abbott V. Mackinley, 2 Miles, 220. So far as concerns her purchase of goods
kinley
v.
;
for
household use
is
concerned,
his
express
112
CHAP.
III.]
MARRIED WOMEN.
[84.
such agency ,. express or implied, shown, the husband is not bound either by his wife's independent business engagements, or by her purchases of articles not necessary for the support
of the household in accordance with the station of the par-
appear that the wife has a separate income, and that articles in the same line supplied to her (not for joint household use) were previously charged to her sepaties.^
And
should
it
by the same tradesman, this will preclude his reIt is now settled in England that a husband who is able and willing to supply his wife with necessaries, and has forbidden her to pledge his credit, is not liable, though living with his wife, for necessaries furnished the wife by a tradesman ignorant of the husband's prohibition.2 So far as concerns articles not of immediate necessity.
rate account
protesting,
is
an acquiescence.
1 Parv.
v.
Rees,
in the
Waithman
and
also
by the judges
for
&
C. 637
Phillipson
Jolly
v.
Hayter, L. R. 6 C. P. 38
Griffin, 5
saying that the wife had authority to pledge her husband's credit. I quite
agree that
if
V.
Rees, 15 C. B. N. S. 628.
the husband
if
knew
that
al-
Bentley
v.
Shelden
'
he had
Debenham
v.
Mellon, L. R. 5 Q. B,
;
aff.
in
;
House
L. R. 6
673
Ap. Ca. 24. In the House of Lords, Lord Blackburn said "I think
:
that
if
the
living
together, that
a presumption of fact
he himself had sanctioned the transactions, by paying them; or in other ways, it might very well be argued that he would have given such evidence of authority that if he did revoke it, he would be bound to give notice of the revocation to the tradesmen and to all
acted
upon the
;
faith of his
husband
authority.
do not
think the authority would arise so long as he supplied her with the means of
That would but where an be the general rule agent is clothed with an authority,
authority and sanction.
is
re-
But that is not the present question, which is this: Had the wife a mandate-to order the clothes which it would be
procuring the articles otherwise.
made known
'
to those
who have
dealt
life to
with him, they would be entitled to The principal is precluded from say, denying that that authority continued
to exist,
for-
to befor-
bidden her to pledge his credit, and had given her money to buy clothes ?
I
lieve, as reasonable
did
merly
exist.'
by the
many
cases in
VOL.
I.
113
85.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
III.
a prohibition by the husband, notice of which is brought home to the creditor, will in any view relieve the husband from liability.^
him
when
she
is
dependent on him, and when he has the means, the necessaries of life.2 And it is also agreed on all sides, that, when
the articles furnished are not necessaries in the sense of being needed to support life, though suitable, as articles of dress, to the wife's station, a tradesman supplying the wife with goods does so at his own risk, and cannot recover if it appear that the wife has an adequate allowance from the husband, and is forbidden to buy goods on his credit, though the husband and
it
is
A wife's action, as
may impose
her husband's agent, in excess of her authority, liability on him if subsequently ratified by him.*
Husband
"f^^y,^^
85.
is
agent.
may appoint her husband as agent and may manage her separate estate.' The
;
of
any misconduct.
bills
The
plaintiff ad-
but there
is
here."
The
were made out to the wife, and that he never made any inquiries as to her authority. The learned judge nonsuited the plaintiff; nor is there any doubt that the authorities fully
Feb. 11,
1882.
we have
the following "Baron Huddleston and a common jury were engaged a few days
he acted." 1 Reneaux
2 '
Infra, 92.
Ibid.
;
Reneaux
v.
v. v.
v.
ut
Phillipson
*
Hayter, L. R. 6 C. P. 38.
Benedict, 3 B.
Elderton.
The
the
plaintiff, a
butcher,
had
Montague
;
&
C.
;
supplied
defendant's
wife with
631
Seaton
v.
Benedict, 5 Bing. 58
Prestwick
Millard
8
pounds, of which sum about seventy pounds remained unpaid. The defendant was quartered in India, and his wife lived in England, for the most
part, with her mother, at the periods
v.
Wh. on Agency,
; ;
Reed
v.
v.
Buckley
Wells,
when
plied.
Rowell v. Klein, 44 Ind. Cubberly v. Scott, 98 111. 38; Bennett v. Stout, 98 111. 47 McLaren
33 N. Y. 518
291;
She had an allowance from the defendant. The separation was for a meritorious cause, and not by reason
V.
Ready
v.
Bragg,
Head (Tenn.),
511.
114
CHAP.
III.]
MARRIED WOMEN.
all
[86.
86.
As
is
when he
bound
depending on him for this support.^ He does not cannot relieve himself of this duty by deserting her; and sdfofhir' no matter how absolute may be his repudiation of duty by his ^ own wrong her, he is liable, if he does not duly support her, for
*'
by third parties for her support.^ The same rule is maintained in cases where the husband drives the wife from their house by his cruelty.^ She is entitled, under such circumstances, to procure, on her husband's credit, articles proper to the situation in life in which her marriage placed her.' Nor is it necessary that she should have been driven from the house by physical violence from him. It is enough if her position is made morally intolerable by him.^ In England, where a woman has been wrongfully deserted by her husband, money advanced to her when necessary for her actual support can be recovered from him in equity,^ and the same view has been taken in Connecticut.^ Notice on the husband's
necessaries furnished
Arnold
v.
Kenyon
v. Farris,
47 Conn. 510,
see Schouler,
et
seq.
2
See also
Wh.
v.
1563.
3
Emmett
Norton, 8 C.
&
P. 506
;
where will be found a valuable article by Mr. L. T. Michener giving the English cases. From the opinion of Pardee, J., in Kenyon v, Farris, the following
is
Smyth, 3 Bing. 127 Allen V. Aldrich, 9 Foster, N. H. 63. * Rawlyns v. Vandyke, 3 Esp. 250 Ilouliston V. Smyth, 3 Bing. 127 Brown v. Ackroyd, 5 E. & B. 819 Hancock v. Merrick, 10 Cush. 41 Reynolds v. Sweetzer, 15 Gray, 78 Blowers v. Sturtevant, 4 Denio, 46 Breinig v. Meitzler, 23 Penn. St. 156 Hviltz V. Gibbs, 66 Penn. St. 360.
Honliston?;.
5
extracted
"In
Harris
v.
Lee, 1 P.
Wms.
left
482,
respondent's wife,
for cause, to
who had
him
:
and
for necessaries.
The court
said
see
borrow money, though for necessaries, so as to bind the husband, yet this money being applied to the use of the wife for her use and for necessaries,
the plaintiff that lent this
money must
persons
Deare
v.
fore, as
lis
87.]
part, either generally
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
iir.
by publication or specially by private nor, on communication, will not relieve him from liability him when the the other hand, is notice necessary to protect wife has notoriously separated from him in her own wrong.^ note given by a wife, separated from her husband, for necessaries has been held to be void.^
;'
87,
A husband's
him
is
by his misconduct.
And
the
and
pay him
his
be obliterated. So far as the husband is concerned, they are practically convertible terms. His burden will not
money and
in
And
559,
Marlow
1 P.
Wms.
money
If
an infant to pay a debt for necessaries, and in consequence thereof the infant does pay the debt, here, although he may not be liable at law, he must
nevertheless be
so in L.
an actual expenditure for them the law has discharged its duty to the
;
husband
ity for
equity.'
In
Deare
v.
Soutten,
R.
is
Eq. 151
:
in protecting him from liabilanything beyond them it only discharges its duty to the wife by
;
as follows
making
it
impossible for
him
to escape
'A person who has advanced money to a married woman deserted by her husband for the purpose of, and which has been actually applied towards her
support,
is
liability for
entitled in equity,
not at law, to
to
is
him
if
he refuses
to elect,
to
adopt any,
if
he
is
she
the husband.' In giving the decision, Lord Romilly, M. R., said: 'I am of
permitted
is
providing always
that she
is
a proper suit
entitled to a
of necessity.
plaintiflf is
the defendant
have no application,
under all circumstances, supply necessaries to the wife at times they may not be had without money, and accidents of time, place,
credit will,
;
or distance
may
&
J. 45.'
"
He then proceeds
to
quote
may
be
from the latter case, and from Walker 1-. Simpson, 7 Watts & S. 83, to the same effect, and concluded as follows
:
and willing to place money in her hands upon her husband's credit, who
able
"We
its
dis-
these authorities,
necessaries and
because
we think
for the
money loaned
Infrn, 88.
may
well
H.iyward
r.
116
CHAP.
III.]
MARRIED WOMEN.
is
^
[ 88.
cir-
better opinion
ont such a case against him as would entitle her to a decree of divorce should it be sought by her. Hence, in such cases, the burden of showing ^ the wife
'
' _
_
But
liability ceases
j^aves^'
^^^ithout
cause.
on the party suing the husband. And the husband may set up as a defence any provocative misconduct on the part of the wife which would entitle him to a judgment had she proceeded against him for Adultery on the wife's part relieves the husband divorce.^ from the duty of her maintenance, even though the party furnishing her with the goods has no notice of the adultery f though a verdict of adultery not followed b}- decree is not
had cause
for leaving is
I^or
is
it
suffi-
88.
ceases, also,
ration,
The wife's power to bind her husband for necessaries when they are living in voluntary sepa-A-nti also she receiving from him an allowance for her when wife
.
support.*
will
not
^^'''
necessary to protect
may
its
repudiation be given. ^
is
It
on the
Mainwariiig
;
v.
Leslie,
2 C.
&
P.
U.
v. v.
Flinton,
B,
& Ad.
227
507 200
Hlndley v. Westraeath, 6 B, C. Blades v. Free, 9 B. & C. 167 Hardie v. Grant, 8 C. & P. 512 Thorue
; ;
;
Cooper
Lloyd, 6 C. B, N. S. 519.
v.
Needham
Govier
Bremner, L. R. 1 C.
P. 583.
v. Hancock, 6 T. R. 603. Hodgkins v. Fletcher, 4 Camp. 70 Johnston v. Sumner, 3 H. & N. 261
*
V.
Hunter McCutchen
;
v.
v.
Cunningham
;
Simpson, 7 v. Galloway, 71 111. 517 Schnuckle v. Bierman, 89 III. 454 Brown v. Patton,
; ; ;
v.
Richardson
51.
v.
Dubois, L. R. 5 Q. B.
Pick, 3 M.
See Mizen
v.
v.
Cunningham
and
Irwin, 7 S.
& W. & R.
481
247
Humph.
135
Williams
v.
Prince, 3
v.
Strobh. L. 490.
Keyes, 7 N. H. 571.
117
89.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
III.
by him for the wife is adequate.^ But the more reasonable view is, that the mere fact of separation is sufficient to put persons dealing with her on inquiry how far her authority to bind her husband continues.^ If, on the whole case, however,
it
is
insufficient, the
whatever supplies
may
be required
89.
,,
The contract
of a married
Ma.rriGQ
dated by estoppel, so far as to make her bound by a pped and Contract by which she would not otherwise be bound. may enThus a married woman's sale of real estate, otherforce executed conwise invalid, will not be validated by encouragement
women
'
_ ^
make on
valuable and expensive improvements.^ Nor is such estopjjel worked by the additional fact that the married woman held herself out to be unmarried.' But if a married woman induces a purchaser to buy an estate to which she has
it
an adverse title, she being cognizant at the time of such title but fraudulently concealing it, she will be estopped from afterwards setting up her title against him.^ The condition of fraud is on principle important in all jurisdictions in which a married woman is not contractually liable; and adopting this
1
Frost
V.
But
18
see
Mainwaring
M.
v.
& M.
Penn. Penn.
111.
St.
St.
;
400
476
Miles
Co.
2 C.
2
&
P. 507
Edwards
Towels, 5
Ind. 385
Kane
M. & G. 624.
Johnston
;
232
Morrison
v.
Sumner, 3 H. & N.
494.
*
H. & N. 87Y Mott V. Comstock, 8 Wend. 544 Caney r. Patton, 2 Ash. 140 Jacohs v. Featherston, 6 W. & S. 346 see Hultz v. Gibbs, 66 Penn. St. 360. 3 Hodgkinson v. Fletcher, 4 Camp.
261
BiflFen v. Bignell, 7
; ; ;
Liverpool Ass.
v.
Fairhurst, 9 Ex.
422.
6 Bispham's Eq. 2d ed. 293, citing McCullough V. Wilson, 21 Penn. St. 436 Couch v. Sutton, 1 Grant's Cas.
;
Connolly
Bispham's Eq. 2d ed. 293, citing Drury v. Foster, 2 Wal. 24 Rangeley Concord Bank v. V. Spring, 21 Me. 130 Bemis v. Call, 10 Bellis, 10 Cush. 276 Allen, 512; Merriam v. Boston R. R., 117 Mass. 241 Glidden v. Strupler, 52
<
;
Drake
v.
v.
Cald-
As
to estoppel
by infants
As
to
whe-
78.
118
CHAP.
III.]
MARRIED WOMEN.
Mr. Bigelow^
states the
[89.
law to be that "parties and married under women, are not estopped unless their conduct has been intentional and fraudulent.'"''' And he goes on to say that " in cases of fraud unmixed with contract, whether by concealment or active conduct, the curdistinction,
disability, as infants
'
Women,
Herringtoti,
39.
But
it
by no means
He
111.
;
cites
;
Kane
Co.
v.
232 Schnell v. Chicago, 38 111. Davidson v. Young, 38 111. 148 Rogers r. Higgins, 48 111. 211 Schwartz Miles v. LinV. Saunders, 46 III. 18 german, 24 Ind. 385 McCoon v. Smith, 3 Hill, 147 Schenck v. Stumpf, 6 Mo. Ap. 381.
50
382
by a contract with her. She cannot bind herself personally by any contract she may make. It is not like most
contracts of an infant, voidable only, but while it remains wholly unexecuted on her part is absolutely void.
it
cannot be enforced
To
:
this,
among other
II.
The element
is
of reciprocity or mutuality
Reed
V.
v.
Hall, 57 N.
111.
482
:
Pat-
absent.
contract executed
terson
Lawrence, 90
174
;
Anderv.
in whole or in part,
son
t'.
Armstead, 69
111.
;
452
Meiley
Dukes v. Spangler, 35 Oh. St. 119 Rusk v. Fenton, 14 Bush, 490 Davis v. Zimmerman, 40 Mich. 24 Levy v. Gray, 56 Miss. 318.
Butler, 26 Oh. St. 535
; ; ;
may
ment.
will
;
woman
has been
of the
and
it
makes no
difference
that she
payment
could not have been compelled to perform the agreement. 2 Bishop on Married
Women,
rests
250.
'
But
if
the agree-
Redmon, S. C. Mo. 1881. The " This is a case of the first court said impression in this court, and there is a
Neef
V.
:
ment
As a general rule
except
in
sole,
merely in mutual promises, then, in principle, -as the promise of the married woman is a nullity, it cannot constitute a consideration for the promise of the other party, and,
therefore,
it
a married
woman
cannot,
is
void as to him.'
Ibid.
nor as such sue or be sued.' Cord on Married Women, 532. Any form of
*
Conceding that he miglit rescind the contract by tendering to her what he had received, in part performance of the contract on her part, shall he retain
received,
and
119
89.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
III".
is
recitals, is
much
conflict of opinion.
The
preponderating view
dictions
is
where she has no business capacity ;^ though this is not without strong dissent and occasional departures from the rule even in states where it is nominally recognized.^ Under recent statutes conferring capacity on married women, estop*
an by her to complete the performance on her part ? "It is not the case of a mere payment of money on a verbal contract and an attempt to enforce specific performance, because there has been a part performance of the contract. Here is a contract in writing, signed by the party to be charged, and while the
refuse to perform his contract, on
offer
and part The defendant refused to convey to her on the ground that she was a married woman, and as the contract could not have been enforced against her, neither
ried
of a tract of land
woman
payment
of the
purchase-money.
could
it
In
Beck,
J.,
'
Admitting that
per-
the contract,
is
a nul-
long as
it is
entirely executory
formed or partly performed by plaintiflf, could not have been enforced against
her,
it
for that
him when she has executed her agree- its obligation. " But notwithstanding ment either in whole or in part. If the conclusion thus stated, we must after having received a part of what hold that if the contract was void as to she was to give, he may still rescind the one party, it was void as to the
the contract, because he cannot compel the performance of the balance of her
contract, equity will not let
other.
'
Supra, 2.
of
Bank
America
v.
v.
Banks, 101 U.
him do
so
S. 240;
Lowell
without returning or
in part performance
vitality, as against
oflTering to
return
overruling Fowler
21
;
Shearer, 7 Mass.
;
him, to enable her to get what she bargained for unless he will place her in statu quo by returning what he has received from her.
Merriam v. R. R., 117 Mass. 241 Jackson v, Vanderheyden, 17 Johns. 167 Sparrow v. Kingman, 1 Const. 242; Wallace v. Miner, 6 Ohio, 364;
;
Straun
V.
v.
Straun, 50
111.
;
111.
33
Patterson
;
Lawrence, 90
174, 612
Barker
v.
v.
Circle, 60
Mo. 258
;
Gonzales
Hukil,
The principle which exonerates her from personal liability on any contract she may make, is a shield for the protection of herself and husband, and is not to be used as a weapon for their
destruction.
49 Ala. 260
Est.
2
and cases
cited Big.
on
3d ed. 277.
"In Chamberlain
at bar, there
v.
Robertson, 31
V. Spangler, 35 Oh. St. 119 West, 8 Ohio, 222 Massie r. Sebastian, 4 Bibb, 433 Strong v. Waddell, 56 Ala. 471 King v. Rea, 56 Ind. 1. As to parallel cases of estoppel by
;
Dukes
V.
Hill
120
CHAP.
m.J
MARRIED WOMEN.
wherever there
is
[91.
pels operate
capacity to contract.^
in
This
is
the rule in England,* and has been extended to cases of contract in several adjudications
this country.^
And
even
though the capacity to be bound by an estoppel in pais is not conferred by an enabling act, it may be asserted that, if the capacity to be bound directly is given, that to be bound indirectly follows.*
90.
A contract for
invalid.'
for future
ration,
is
sufficient consideration,
fair
"
j^nv^M
and equitable,
will,
now
prevalent, be sustained.
And
a husband will be enjoined from molesting his wife in contravention of provisions of articles of separation f and may be enjoined from suing for restitution of conjugal rights, in violation of a deed of separation.^
91. In both law and equity, agreements between husband and wife are void, so far as concerns the
Agree-
tween hus-
^^^
^?^
'
Kuiglit
V.
cases in
which
Lush
in re,
v.
Vaughan
363.
*
separatibn
See
Patterson
Lawrence and
Ch. 55
Simpson
v.
v.
140
McCrocklin
;
Westmeath
C.
meath, 1 Dow.
Eq.
&
519
WestBispham's
v.
115, citing
Stapilton
v.
Stapilton,
Mon. 370 Carter v. Carter, 14 Sm. & M. 59; Collins v. Collins, Phill. Eq. 153 Hill on Trustees, 669 (4th Am. ed.), cited Bispham's Eq. 115. ^ Saunders v. Rodway, 16 Beav. 207. s Wilson V. Wilson, 1 H. L. C. 538
;
Williams
8
v.
V.
Hamilton
Hamilton, 89
349. That
duce her to return to him is void, see Copeland v. Boaz, 9 Baxt. 223 contra,
;
Phillips
V.
Meyers, 82
111.
67.
121
91.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
III.
and wife with regard to the wife's separate property is valid, And even as regards subsequent purchasers without notice.^ contracts, present separation, such in all matters relating to
as has been seen,
to property
may be valid. But in England contracts as between husband and wife should be through the
trustee.''
is
intervention of a
A voluntary settlement
when not
by a hus-
not invalid
common law
otherwise when
The
Teasdale
v.
Braithwaite, L. R. 4
Ch. D. 85; Kelly v. Case, 18 Hun, 472. See Hall v. Hall, 52 Tex. 294, where it was held that a note executed
col-
lect
for
the sale.
by husband to wife for the separate moneys of the wife lent to the husband
is
Hargis,
of the court (the issue being the validity of this settlement), said:
valid.
Gibbs
Jones
v.
v.
v.
V.
Harding, L. R. 5
Clifton,
Ch.
contracts
336.
3
101 U. S. 225
78
into a
Linker Fowler
Majors
V.
N.
;
Y.
68;
Everton, 89 HI. 56
;
Horder
Frank, 61 Ala. 67
Lea, 159
Ir.
;
361
an obligation arising out of the reof her property, under an agreement made before its receipt or reduction to possession, such as the chancellor would on her application
of
ception
In Sanders
Ky.
make upon
parties
an intended marriage entered in Feb. as fraudulent against creditors. And into the following agreement with much greater reason it can be An article of agreement entered into said that such a contract is possessed between J. B. Sanders of the first part of vital force when preceded by a bona and Orra A. Davis of the second part. fide ante-nuptial contract, and supThe said J. B. Sanders agrees to give ported by a valuable consideration Orra A. Davis (provided she marries (relinquishment of dower), moving him) as good a house, to have and to from her to him at the instant of its hold forever, as her sister, Helen M. execution. Latimer ?;. Glenn, 2 Bush,
1878
Stout, had, or a
sum
of
money equiva;
Sanders
535 Campbell v. Campbell's Trustee, Miller v. Edwards, 7 MS. Op. 1881 Bush, 397 Lyne v. Bank, 5 J. J.
;
Marsh. 550."
*
Infra, 376
Clark
v.
Rosencrans,
31 N. J. Eq, 665.
122
CHAP.
III.]
MARRIED WOMEN.
[91.
burden is on the wife, when setting up a conveyance from the husband as against creditors, to show the fairness of the transGross inadequacy of consideration in such cases is action.^ projected marriage, it should be added, an index of fraud.^ is a sufficient consideration, and a settlement based on such a
Wilson
V.
clear
and
satisfactory evidence
that
79.
made
in good faith,
lu Fisher v. Shelver, Sup. Ct. of Wis. Nov. 1881, the question is thus discussed by Orton, J. " It is said by Mr. Justice Taylor, in Horton v. Dewey This court has repeatedly held, in a contest between
:
moving from some person other than her husband The evidence in this case certainly does
not
fulfil
preponderance
ownership of
den of the proof is upon her to prove, by clear and satisfactory evidence, such purchase, and that the purchase
ground weakness
Considering
of the plaintiff's case,
the
was for a valuable consideration paid by her out of her separate estate, or some other person for her ;' citing
Stanton
neffer
v.
V.
much
v.
Ilor-
Duress,
13 lb.
603;
;
Weyv.
mouth
Duress
and tended to supply a want of testimony, and, in application to the facts of the case, were erroneous in law, and were calculated to mislead, and probably did mislead, the jury to the prejudice of the appellant."
Beard
v.
v.
Dedolph,
lb.
;
29 lb. 136
Stimson
v.
White, 20
562
Elliott
v.
Bently, 17 lb.
;
591
Infra, 518.
Putnam
nan
V,
HanV.
Infra,
*
537.
v.
Hogoboom, 31
lb. 82
;
Kesner
U.
S.,
98 U. Eq.
S,
;
50 Grain Crooks v.
;
Crooks,
J.
And
'
it is
App., 87 Penn.
speed, 87
St.
;
570
In all such cases the burden of proof showing the bona Jides of the purchase is upon her, and she must show by
290
14 Bush, 485.
123
92.]
CONTRACT:
[chap.
III.
from their husbands, impart would make them good against when without consideration. The burden is in such
to receive gifts
that a
judgment
is
band
to wife
make
92.
husband
is
liable
Husband
liable for
necessaries
ornament as are suited to the Maintenance of children, when left to the wife's care, falls under this head f and such is the case with proper furniture;^ and proper service;^ and
furnished
wife.
Medical attendance on the wife during sickness,'" fall under the same head.
la Montagnie, 73 N. Y.
7 8
Boyd
;
V.
Be
498
512.
^
5 Bing. 550. T.
R.
176;
Bazeley
Forder,
ul supra.
;
Gamber
;
Gamber, 18 Penn.
Moyer, 45 Penn.
St. St.
Leake,
5
2d ed. 574
A.
Grindell
;
v.
363; Grabill
533
3
v.
Godmond,
Hinde
;
Longworth, 11 Wheat.
St.
199
417
Turner l\ Rookes, 10 A. & E. 47 Brown r. Ackroyd. 5 E. & B. 819 Baker v. Sampson, 14 C. B. N. S. 383; Wilson v.
E.
&
755
Wilson
*
Ford, L. R. 3 Ex. 63
9
;
Pierce
v.
Pierce,
Notes, 304.
Supra,
Peters
v. v. v.
Fleming,
M.
& W.
42
;
Bazeley
Forder, L. R. 3 Q. B, 362
Raynes
Breinig
Schouler,
et
Bennett,
see, contra, as a common law rule, Ray V. Adden, 50 N. H. 82 Cgffin v. Dunham, 8 Cush. 404 Sheldon v. Pen-
but
Dow
v.
Eyster,
101
79
III.
254; Pearson
;
v.
Darrington, 32
P.
Willey t'. Beach, 115 Mass. v. Evans, 51 Penn. St. 80; Rea v. Durkee, 25 111, 503. For the analogous case of necessaries to inseq,; see
;
Ala. 227
'0
see supra,
v.
559
Mohney
Harris
v.
Lee,
Wms.
482;
See
Mayhew
for
Bazeley
v.
tence.
burn, C.
J., diss.
124
CHAP.
IV.]
ALIENS.
[ 94.
CHAPTER
ALIENS.
Capacity of aliens limited,
93.
I
lY.
Contracts with
94.
alien
enemies
void,
98.
''
As is shown more
in the
iurisciictions
civil
United
States, '
same
citizens.
The
onlj'
limitation
is,
on their business
vented from holding real estate permanently unless they become residents, or declare an intention to become naturalized.^
94.
the
home government,
equity.^
"o^^'^^
The
war with
residence be per-
may
bring suit
if his
mitted by the sovereign of the foriim,^ And permission is to be inferred from non expulsion.^ As a general rule, however,
trading without license with public enemies
is
void at com-
mon law
during
1
;^
with
bellig-
erent insurgents.'
hostilities.'"
Whart. on Conf.
See Phillips
;
of
Laws,
17.
Infra,
475
Patten
v.
Nicholson,
v.
Moore, 100 U. S.
Wheat. 204.
^ 6
208
483.
Hanenstein
v.
Lynham, 100 U.
;
S.
i^f^a^ 475.
Walls
v.
V.
Williams,
Salk.
46
Ah. Alien, 1 Ch. on Con. 11th Am. ed. 258 B. Branden v. Nesbitt, 67 R. 23 Albrecht V. Sussman, 2 V. & B. 323 Barrick r.
Infra,
473-8
Roll.
Bonlton
^
282
Russell
v.
Bnba, 2 C. B. N.
S.
563
Scholefield
;
v. v.
Griswold
Infra,' 478.
125
^6.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. V.
CHAPTER
AGENTS.
Agent 96.
V.
may
96.
The power
tract
is
binTprin^^ cipai by
the authorities are grouped and Criticised. To now go over the same ground would not only unduly
swell the present treatise, but
would be virtually
is
to
intended
enough now to say, in general, that though in the classical Roman law an agent's power to bind his principal by independent contract was disputed, this
power,
when
rightfully exercised,
the English
sally held,
common
law.
A principal, it is
now
also univer-
is
when such
representations were
led to a contract
Special
authorization
is
is
charged.
principal, also, is
gestae,
made
in furtherance of the
principal's plan. When an agent ignorantly makes a false statement of which the principal knows the falsity, the principal cannot avail himself of a bargain based on such repre-An agent, also, authorized to sell, may do whatsentations.*
ever
this
is
is
and may sell on credit when though this does not necessarily imply a power
>
126
CHAP, v.]
to pledge or to barter.
AGENTS.
[ 96.
Unless clothed with real or apparent authority- from his principal, he cannot, ordinarily, transfer
his principal's title.
He
is
authorized,
when
representing his
and
it
when
within the agent's range ;^ and this is eminently the case with corporations, who can act only through agents:^
an agent's misrepresentations may avoid a contract :^ an agent may become personally liable on an illegal contract :* an agent cannot take advantage of his opportunities as nor can he usually set up agent to prejudice his principal illegality against his principal ;^ nor can he hold to a contract obtained by unduly influencing his principal :^ an agent is liable to his principal in account stated and for value due :^ the construction of letters of agency which will best sup;''
:^
may
though
a principal
is liable
an agent
for
is liable
and
to
principal after
notice :"
an agent
may
to
payment
rized,
is
is
duly authoi^"
Infra, 269
et seq.
">
Infra, 102.
Infra, 1027.
"
12 i3
"^
Infra, 1052.
Infra, 1054.
Infra, 755.
s 6 ^ 8
'5
is
'?
Infra, 810 a.
jnfra, 992.
Infra, 278.
As to inferences from
eiseg-.
Infra, 656.
127
97.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VI.
CHAPTER
LUNATICS, DRUNKARDS,
Total mental incapacity precludes contract, 98.
VI.
AND SPENDTHRIFTS.
able, 112.
By
con-
Party
101.
is
may
Exception as to necessaries,
Prevalent view
is
now
is
ground 114.
mental
incompetency,
capacity there
is
but
that contract
voidable
when made
And And
116.
117.
Non-repudiation
And by undue
Contracts bind
cial, 106.
influence, 104.
may
be ratification,
for hold-
117
a.
when
fair
and
benefi-
Otherwise
when
there
fraud, 119.
Ratification to be inductively
shown,
And may
transfer title
120.
dorse, 108.
No defence
may
be
necessaries,
contracts
122.
On
competency,
Spendthrifts
123.
placed
111.
may
be incapacitated by
Total
98. Theoretically there is no person who can be spoken of as perfectly sane, and no one as perfectly insane. men-
Between
perfect
cludes contract.
were possible to
See
St.
ed. vol.
i.
et seq.
CHAP. VI.]
[ 98.
a contract no fixed standcannot, therefore, say of ard of intelligence is required. any particular party actually assentinor to an act, that he is
To make
We
But
is
this incapacity
may,
many
and old persons whose powers of recollection and discrimination have almost entirely ceased. Of these we may say generally that such persons, not having contracting minds, cannot The true test is, not whether the party is capable contract.^ of fully understanding the nature of an act and foreseeing its consequences, for this cannot be absolutely predicated of any person, but whether he is capable of seeing the act in the relations in which it would be seen by ordinary observers. If utterly deficient in this respect, he is insane.^ The same reason
'
Sentance
v.
Pool, 3 C.
;
&
P. 1
v. v.
Hall
11.
Administrators
may
avoid con-
V.
Warren,
9 Ves. 605
Banks
;
Good-
And
fellow, L. R. 5 Q. B. 549
iiin,
Ball
Man-
and guardians,
Burke v. Allen,
Stevens, 48 N.
v.
And
29 N. H. 106
Young
v.
Lunatic liable
Idiots
H. 135
Y. 378
V.
Van Deusen
;
Sweet, 51 N.
;
Baldwin
46
Dunton, 40 111. 188 Emery v. Hoyt, III. 258 Somers v. Pumphrey, 24 Ind. 231. In 1 Wli. & St. Med. Jur.
;
by Lord Mannin, 3 Bligh (N. S.), 1, from lunatics by the test of permanency. As to idiocy, Lord Tenterden says " I find in an old book on
are distinguished,
v.
Tenterden, in Ball
4tli ed.
is
considered as follows
Lunatics in any
1.
Also
alphabet, he is not within the legal definition of idiocy yet it is impossible to hold that persons
of learning the
By
early
for avoid-
4.
Subseqiient tendency to
hold
5.
6.
all contracts
to third parties, 6 a.
no further qualified are capable of executing a deed." And he further holds that it was right to tell a jury that to constitute mental incapacity, " it was not necessary he (the party whose sanity is in dispute) should be without any glimmering of reason." Dennett v, Dennett, 44 N. H. 531
Mann
V.
V.
v.
Brown
Contracts executed in
as to
Dunn, 93
rey, 24
511
9.
171
Ind. 231
Partnership contracts
ipso facto,
Gregor, 30 Wis. 78
3 Bush, 300.
Coleman
v.
Frazeri.
not dissolved,
by lunacy,
VOL.
I.
129
100.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VI.
is
not thinking at
all.
99.
The
rule laid
down by Coke,
that a
man
some time so applied as to preclude either a party, or his representatives, from subsequently setting up his mental incapacity as a ground for avoiding a contract.
avoidance of contract
This rule is as without foundation in the Roit is repugnant to reason and good morals.^ 100. The extreme view of Coke, that mental incapacity cannot be set up to avoid a contract, was followed, Subsequent tendency to in natural reaction, by the acceptance of the rule hold all that all contracts are avoided by proof of mental contracts with lunaincapacity.* It is true that it is probable that tics void. nothing more was meant by this, than that when a man is transparently an idiot no contract made by him will be enforced.' It is certain that it was never meant, that when there is nothing in the conduct and appearance of a party to notify those dealing with him that he is insane, and
man law as
'
&
;
4 Co. 123;
1 Fonblan;
eh. 2, 1
Pollock,
Wald's
ed. 78.
The Roman
authorities
where lunacy was pleaded as to an action for work and labor done, Lord Tenterden said, " no person can be suffered to stultify himself, and set up his own lunacy in dep. 30,
a defence
fence."
He proceeded, however,
to
say
L. 25 C. de
nupt.
26, 5
28,
;
5,
4;
6,
L. 8, 1,
D. de tut. dat.
;
would be otherwise, where the mental incapacity of one party was used by the other party to extort unthat
it
fair conditions.
v. Whidden, 2 N. H. 435 Kingman, 5 Pick. 431 Grant v. Thompson, 4 Conn. 203 Rice V. Peet, 15 Johns. 503 Hope v. Ever*
;
Windscheid makes Wahnsinn convertible with lunacy, as afterwards defined, and Geisscheid, Pandekt. 54, 11.
tesschwackheit
See Lang
V.
Mitchell
above.
In the
Roman
Fitzgerald
v. Potts,
v.
is furiosus,
D. de
Reed, 9 S.
Miss. 346.
5
& M.
94
Hines
56
post. 3, 1
42, 5.
Cicero, Tusc.
5,
speaks of
L. un. C. 9, 7.
v.
Dexter v. Hall, 15 For an exposition of the fluctuations of English law, see Pollock,
this effect is
To
Wall.
op
9.
Jodrell, 3 C.
cit.,
78-9.
130
CHAP. VI.]
[ 102.
when such
be to his ad-
it
kinds should in
all
101.
Even supposing
as to preclude a party
tract, his estate will nevertheless be liable for necessaries furnished for his support.
Such, as we have to n^eces-*^. humanely prescribed in reference to ^^"^^ infants,^ and such, for the same reason, is the rule in reference The wife of a lunatic may buy necessaries to insane persons.^ for herself on his credit, though he be at the time coniined in
an asylum.' And a lunatic's liability for necessaries continues even under a statute which provides that all the contracts of a lunatic under guardianship shall be void.* Legal expenses
incurred in the protection of the lunatic and his estate
fall
As
insanity
all
is
dis-
turbance of
that no
its ef-
Prevalent
rule absolutely
thlTwhrre^
'
Supra, 64
1
;
et seq.
Wh. &
Bagster
v.
St.
ed.
Portsmouth, 7 D.
;
&
&
;
R.
614; 5 B.
&
C. 170
v.
Niell
v.
Morley, 9
P.
Ves. 478
679
6
; ;
Dane
Kirkwall, 8 C.
Richardson v. Strong, 13 Ired. L. 106 Carr v. Holliday, 5 Ire. Eq, 167 Northington ex parte, 1 Ala. Sel. Ca. 400 Coleman v. Frazer, 3 Bush, 300 McCormick v. Little, 85 111. 62 Infra,
; ; ; ;
121.
N. H. 569 LinKencoin V. Buckmaster, 32 Vt. 652 dall V. May, 10 Allen, 59 Skidmore V. Romaine, 2 Bradf. (N. Y.) 122;
Crillis, V. Bartlett, 8
;
v.
Shaw
Van Horn
La Rue
v.
v.
v. Bartlett, 8 N. H. 569. Meares in re, L. R. 10 Ch. D. 582 Williams ?;. Wentworth, 5 Beav. 325 Hallett v. Oakes, 1 Cush. 296 see su
pra, 71
infra, 122.
131
102.]
there is capacity there
is liability
CONTRACTS.
fects
,
,
[CHAP. VI.
is
can be imposed.^
. , ,
.
The monomaniac
,
.
held by
contract
i8
maniac
^^'^^
is
responsible in matters to
persons perfectly sane as there persons perfectly in^ \ ^ -xt^ sane. JNo bargain was ever made in which one of
;
there
sides, in
which
Hence,
swinging
and then rebounding by insane persons are void, the courts have settled on the rule that the question of competency is one of fact to be determined on the special circumhis contracts,
up by a party to avoid
If the party
making a contract
was
at the time
is
contract
void.
is
some degree, howarising is, was there reason suflicient for the particular act ? " Whether in any particular case," says Mr. Pollock,^ "a state of consciousness of this kind (drunkenness) does or does not amount to absolute deprivation of a consenting mind for the purposes of contract, is a question which it would be probably impracticable and certainly undesirable for a court of justice to enter into.
fact of apparent consent indicates
The mere
The
question then
first
The same considerations apply with almost or quite the same force And he declares the English rule capacity of a lunatic." to be "that the contract of a lunatic or drunken man, who by reason of his lunacy or drunkenness is not capable of understanding its terms or forming a rational judgment of its efiect upon his interest, is not void, but only voidable at his option and this only if his state is known to the other party." Wherever there is mental capacity to contract, in other words, there a contract may be made, subject to be avoided at the
to the
mind has
there
When
Wh. &
St.
ed.
631
et seq.
132
CHAP. Vr.]
is
[ 103.
no capacity to contract, i. e., in cases of idiocy and frenzy, is no contract for want of a consenting mind.' The distinction between " voidable" and " void" contracts has been already generally discussed.^ It is proper here to say, that the fact that " void" and " voidable" are used in many cases as conve-rtible terms makes it necessary to appeal rather to the reason on which such cases rest than to their particular
then there
words.^
103.
A party
who
make
him
if fair,
may, never-
through his representa- conditionup mental deficiencies as a defence when ^'^^y^''''^'^^*^such deficiencies were fraudulently acted on by the opposing party to extort an undue advantage.* And imbecility or hal'
Tliis is
now
;
finally established in
was made in good faith and for his and without knowledge of his incapacity, and that it has been so far
benefit
106.
In
may
v.
Hovey
V.
Young
V.
Stevens, 48 N. H. 133
Allis
performed that the other party cannot, be rescinded, be placed in statu quo, these facts must be alleged and proved. Riggs V. Tract Soc, 84 N. Y. 330, reif it
Billings, 6 Met.
;
415
Howe
v.
v.
Howe,
9
99 Mass. 88
;
Ingraham
Baldwin,
S. C. 19 Hun, 481. In Haydock Haydock, 34 N. J. Eq. 570, affirming S. C. 33 N. J. Eq. 494, it was said
versing
V.
by Reed,
J.,
:
38 N.
111.
J. L.
;
286
of Appeals
undue
62; Scanlan
lerain i\
V.
v.
Cobb, 85
111.
111.
;
296
Wil-
re-
Dunn, 93
511
;
Van Patten
In testa-
55 Ind.
310
Hardenbrook
;
v.
Sher-
wood, 72 Ind. 403 Rusk v. Fenton, 14 Bush, 490 Elston v. Jasper, 45 Tex.
;
mentary cases, undxie influence is always defined as coercion or fraud, but, inter vivos, no such definition is applied. Where parties hold positions in which one is more or less dependent upon the
other, courts of equity hold that the
v. Mcthough the court use the term void, the word is shown by the context to be meant in the sense of
409.
In Matthiesen R. R. Co.
supra,
Mahon,
weaker party must be protected, and they set aside his gifts if he had not
proper advice
other."
*
independently
157
et seq.,
of the
voidable.
2 '
Supra, 28
Infra,
v.
232
et seq.
The subject
c< seq.
considered more in
St.
Gartside
detail in 1
Wh. &
ed.
Dane
V.
v.
Kirkwall, 8 C.
;
&
P. 679
Dent
L. R. 1 Ch. 252
Grant
138
104.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VI.
ground
had the parties been of equal intelligence.^ But mere mental disparity between the parties, there being no fraud, will not be ground for interference.^ If it were, few contracts would remain undisturbed.^ And the better rule is,
sustained
" that
if
chase was
made
in
good
faith,
and
when
known
nor suspected,
and that the contract was executed on the part of the purchaser without knowledge or belief of the existence of the incapacity of the grantor, the contract will be upheld."*
104.
The question
itself
And on
undue
influence
enfeebled
may make
less
a will in
make a
contract in solitude.
To
more or
completely
;
and
;
it
is
Seely
v. Price,
Jacox
v.
v.
Patrick,
Wilson
v.
v.
Oldham, 12 B.
Mon. 55
289
Birdsong
v.
Birdsong, 2 Head,
Head, 289
166.
Killian
v.
Badgett, 27 Ark.
Henderson
3
*
Allore
v.
V.
Jewell,
94
U.
S.
506;
Harding
Wheaton,
2 Mass.
;
378
Mann
v.
v.
Taylor
Atwood, 47 Conn.
Beals
v.
Shakespeare v.
Markham, 72 N. Y. 48
2 Barr, 105
;
Hunt v. Moore,
196
557 KeeBuf-
Yauger v. Skinner, 1 McCarter, by Green, C. S. P. Wilder v. Weakley, 134 Ind. 181; Ballard v. McKenna, 4 Rich. S. C. Eq. 358. The
389,
;
See, 10 Barr, 60
jury
may
consider
how
far the
party
v.
Moore v. Hershey, 90 Penn. St. Whitehorn v. Hines, 1 Munf. Jones V. Perkins, 5 B. Mon. 222 blei;. Cummins, 5 Hayw. Tenn.43;
;
was
liable to be deceived,
though the
Galpin
400,
Markham, 72 N. Y.
v.
and
falow
V.
Buffalow, 2 Dev.
v.
&
B. Eq. 241
Cadwallader
4 Des. Eq. 350; Mo. 73 see Turner v. Rusk, 53 Md. 65 Clearwater Myatt v. Walker, V. Kimler, 43 111. 272 44 111. 485 Emery v. Hoyt, 46 111. 258 Cadwallader v. West, 48 Mo. 483;
Rutherford
Halley
v.
Ruff,
Troester,
72
weakness
the
see
contract
should be annulled.
And
Owing's
See infra,
157.
134
CHAP. VI.]
[ 105.
case, therefore, in which he is not at some degree influenced by such other party. The question, then, is. Was such influence undue? This is a question of fact, to be determined by induction from the circumstances
hard to conceive of a
least in
And
is
not equitable,
Imbecility,
proportion
whom
fraud,
made.
ground
for avoidance.^
intellect
a person of
life
weak
will be sustained,
when
An
elderly
woman
of
weak understanding, with independent may make a valid contract for the pur-
worthy advice, when validity would be denied to contracts which the same person was cajoled by undue and imp)roper influence to engage. 105. Whether parties dealing with a lunatic have notice of his lunacy is to be inferred from the circum- j^^oticeto stances of the case. The mere fact that the bargain be inferred from facts. * he makes is adventurous is no such notice. "A merchant," said Chief Justice Gibson,^ " may be mad without showing it and when such a man goes into the market, makes strange purchases, and anticipates extravagant profits, what are those who deal with him to think? To treat him as a madman would exclude every speculator from the transactions of commerce." But when the conduct of the party in question is such as would create, in the minds of reasonable men, doubts as to his sanity, this is enough to put parties
for speculations in
,
1-1
;
Niell
V.
Stock;
&
B. 23
;
Sen-
tance
Conant v. P. 1 Somes v. Skinner, 16 Mass. 348 Caulking v. Fry, 35 Conn. 170 Johnson v. Johnson, 10
v.
Poole, 3 C.
&
Hale v. 2 Strob. Eq. 262 Brown, 11 Ala. 87; Jones v. Perkins, 5 B. Mon. 222 Wilson v. Oldham, 12 McFadden v. Vincent, 2L B. Mon. 55
derson,
; ;
;
Tex. 47.
ence
ered.
2
The subject
of
undue
influ-
is
Ind. 387
Wray
v.
Wray, 32
111.
;
Ind. 126
;
Jeneson
V.
i'.
Jeneson, 66
259
Jacox
v.
Beals
Neely
An-
135
106.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. VI.
dealing with
is
him on inquiry.' That an inquisition of lunacy prima facie proof of insanity will be hereafter seen.^ contract made with a lunatic in good faith, and 106.
in
bind^when
fair
by the lunatic,
,
and
benencial.
by the
Z'
Hence where a lunatic paid a deposit on a purchase of real estate from vendors who had no knowledge or notice of his lunacy, the contract being fair, he was held not entitled to recover back the sum so paid.* Even where a house taken on lease by a lunatic was unnecessary for his use, it was held that his lunacy was no defence to an action for use and occupation, it not appearing that the plaintiff wascognizant of the lunacy and took advantage of it.^ And when by a fair bargain goods are sold to and enjoyed by one apparently sane, his lunacy cannot be set up in bar of payment of their price.* Nor does the mere fact that the contract is improvident, so far as concerns the lunatic, vitiate it, if there was no fraud,
side.''
Lincoln
v.
La Rue
v.
v.
Infra, 123.
Beals
;
As tending
P. 679
;
'
Molton
V.
Dane
son
v. v.
v.
Kirkwall, 8 C.
&
;
Nel-
Tribe, 3 F.
&
F. 297
;
McCrillis
v.
v.
Duncombe,
9 Beav. 211
Sawyer
Bartlett, 8 N. H. 569
Young
v.
Stev-
ens, 48 N. H. 133
Kendall
v.
Allen, 59
Arnold
Me. 308 Hallett v. Seaver v. Phelps, 11 Pick. 304 Fitzhugh v. Wilcox, 12 Barb. 235; Riggs v. Tract Soc, 19
Oakes, 1 Cush. 296
;
;
Lufkin, 56
Hun, 481
Lancaster Bk.
;
v.
Moore, 78 Penn. St
407 Loomis v. Spencer, 2 Paige, 158 Behrens v. McKenzie, 23 Iowa, 333 Carr v. Holliday, 1 Dev. & B. 344
Carr
V.
v.
Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Hunt, 79 N. Y. .541 S. C. 14 Hun 169 Wilder v. Weakley, 34 Ind. 181;
; ;
;
Sims
v.
Henry
McLure,
NorthingBeller
v.
.ton ex parte,
37
Ala. 496
.Jones,
22 Ark. 92.
tracts
*
may
In Kendall
lunatic,
v.
May, 10 Allen,
59, the
6
^
Dane
;
v.
Kirkwall, 8 C.
v.
&
P. 679.
placed under
See Baxter
7 D.
Portsmouth, 2 C.
&
P. 178
&
R. 617.
136
CHAP. VI.]
107. It
is
[ 107.
was once
always a defence to an action on a specialty, no matter how fair may have been the conduct of the
other party, or
lunatic;'
astodeeds.
how
and though
by a lunatic of
even
it
But
on what this distinction rests. A person who is sane enough to make a contract without a seal is sane enough to make a contract with a seal.* If a party dealing bona fide with a person whose insanity is latent is entitled to protection, there is no reason why he should be stripped of this protection in cases in which a seal happens to be attached
see
If a party
is
sufficiently
him
And
unless
we hold
'
of ten
See Baxter
;
Portsmouth,
5 B.
&
3
with
The
suit
was
C. 170
v. Silk,
Camp.
2
126.
Ince, 7
which the
plaintiff took
Elliott
;
De G. M. & G.
e. g.,
with the lunatic at the latter's request. This was allowed. " If without harm," said Chapman, C. J., " he could enjoy
luxuries
fancies,
485
'
aliter as to
voluntary deeds,
53
disentailing deeds.
Hovey
v.
v.
Hobson,
Gibson
V.
Van Deu;
such enjoyments to a reasonable extent. If he enjoyed journeys, it was proper that he should be indulged in them." And the following was adopted from " The Persse in re, 3 MoUoy 94
,
:
sen
Sweet, 51 N. Y. 378
Desilver's
v.
Est., 5
Walker,
6 Barr, 371;
Ct.
Crawford
;
v.
Scovell, S.
Sm.
105. That deeds of insane persons are only voidable in Maryland, see Turner
V.
Rusk, 53 Md. 65
v.
and
so in
New
the fullest
comforts of
Jersey, Blakeley
Blakeley, 33 N. J.
Eq. 502.
*
up
to the
Beavan
It
is
v.
agreed, even
by those who
ments and substantial comforts, the court will, if necessary, go beyond the
limits of income."
hold that a lunatic has no capacity to execute deeds for real estate, that such deeds may be ratified by the grantor
137
107.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. VI.
which the other contracting party had no suspicion, does not avoid a deed, there are few titles to real estate that can be regarded as secure.^ If there be fraud (and without fraud we cannot conceive of a deed being executed by a person obviously and unquestionably insane), this, coupled with the insanity, vitiates the deed.
But
if
of lunacy,
when duly
sequent deeds.^
What
A
is
may
party who is competent to make an uncompetent to make a sealed contract. There is nothing in a seal which requires for its imposition any greater power or maturity of intellect than is required for the signing of a name, l^or is there anything in sealed contracts which, as a rule, requires any such increased power or matur-
impaired mind.^
sealed contract
ity.
As
things
now
{e. g.,
negotiable
do sealed contracts.
is
The
distinction, in
much
The true
rule
is
"A
voidable deed
grantor,
when
insane,
ment, ratify and adopt it as his deed, as by receiving the purchase-money due under it, this would give effect to it and render it valid in the hands of the grantee."^ And in respect
when
sound mind, or during a lucid Allis v. Billings, 6 Met. 415 Arnold v. Iron Works, 1 Gray, 434 Gibson V. Soper, 6 Gray, 279 Howe v. Howe, 99 Mass, 88 Trunkey, J., Crawford v. Scovell, ut supra; Key v. Davis, 1 Md. 82; Chew v. Bank, 14 Md. 229. See Campbell ly. Hooper, 3 Sm. & Matthews v. Baxter, L. R. 8 G. 153 Ex. 132 Allis t\ Billings, 6 Mete. 415
of
v.
Miller
r.
v.
interval.
Craig,
36
111.
109
Somers
Pum-
Dennett, 44 N. H. 531.
*
Eaton
v.
v.
v.
Eaton, 37 N.
85
L. 108;
;
Rusk
lau
Scanv.
Cobb,
296
Nichol
v.
'
Thomas, 53 Ind. 42
55 Ind. 310
*
;
Freed
Brown,
hfra, 123.
Supra, 38.
Allis
v.
Ingraham
v.
Baldwin, 5 Selden, 45
;
Billings,
v.
Met.
415
Bensell
adopted in Blakeley
Blakeley, 33
138
CHAP. VI.]
to persons
[ 108.
whose insanity
is
latent,
and who
possess at the
time of the transaction a contracting mind, contracts by specialty should be placed under the same rule as parol contracts.' When advantage has been taken of mental incapacity, they should be set aside. When no such advantage has been taken, but the transaction was fair and reasonable, it should
be sustained.^ 107 a. "
''
man of non-sane memory," it is said by Coke,^. " may, without the consent of another, purchase . ' ^ Lunatics lands;" and "idiots, madmen, lepers, deaf, dumb, may take
^
and blind, minors, and all other reasonable creatures, have power to purchase and retain lands and tenements."*
By
deed poll a
title
and
And
may
it
was held
in
Michigan, in 1881,
cedent indebtedness,
tion being fair
108.
,
be
made
and
conveying property is insane, there having been no judgment of lunacy ,1 1 against him, and no notice to or negligence on the
fact that a person
The
.
and may
endorse.
N.
J.
Eq. 502
S. P.
;
Bassett
v.
v.
Brown,
1
'
As
I.
Allen
Berryhill, 27
v.
* *
Breckenridge
;
Ormsby,
1,
6.
;
Marsh. 236 Waters v. Barral, 2 Bush, 598. And see as generally sus-
2 Br.
& Had.
Bank
^
6
Com.,
Am.
ed. 714
Concord
supra.
Hovej
v.
Hobson, 53
;
v. Bellis,
10 Cush. 276.
v. Bellis, ut
Me. 451
Allis
v.
Concord Bank
Arnold v. Richmond Iron Works, 1 Gray, 434 Gibson v. Soper, 6 Gray, Howe v. Howe, 99 Mass. 88 279 Valpey v, Rea, 130 Mass. 384 Eaton
;
; ;
V.
Eaton, 37 N. J. L. 108
;
Key
;
v.
Davis,
;
Md. 82 Chew v. Bank, 14 Md. 299 Evans v. Horan, 52 Md. 602 Rusk v. Fen ton, 14 Bush, 490 Ashcraft v. De Armand, 44 Iowa, 229 Scanlan v. Cobb, 85 m. 296 Nichol v. Thomas, 53 Ind. 42 Freed v. Brown, 55 Ind.
1
; ;
Campbell v. Kuhn, 24 Alb. L. J. 217, citing Garnons v. Knight, 5 B. & Gould v. Day, 94 U. S. 405 C. 671 Buifnom v. Green, 5 N. H. 71 Hastings V. Merriam, 117 Mass. 245 Regan v. Howe, 121 Mass. 424 Merrills v. Swift, 18 Conn. 257; Tibbals v. Jacobs, 31 Conn. 428; Church v. Gilman, 15 Wend. 656 Mitchell v. Ryan, 13 Oh. St. 377; Hosley v. Holmes, 27 Mich.
; ; ;
;
310
Elston
v.
139
108.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VI.
when
it is
iNor
when the
contract
is
so far executed
And
an endorsement by a lunatic to a
it
true that
.that a lunatic
ment.^
But
maker of a note
is
no
Elliott
v.
V.
Ince, 7
De G. M. & G. 475
;
Lancaster Co. Bank v. Moore, 78 Penn. St. 407 Wilder v. Weakley, 34 Ind. 181. Caulkins v. Fry, 35 Conn. 170; That Miller v. Fiuley, 26 Mich. 249.
La Rue
;
maker had received no consideration, which fact the plaintiff had admitted
in
conversation,
proof having
been
below
a
made
the
that the
offer
was
such
is
paper,
for
and the
the
plaintiff
35, 37.
Poole, 3 C.
holder
value,
consideration
If
&
i.
P.
1, as to
:
385, says
the
one could indorse a bill or note in such a way that its appearance would excite
who made
for
and yet be so drunk as to know nothing of what he was doing and unless the indorser were utterly incapacitated, it should seem that a third party, taking the note innocently and
no
siaspicion,
An
infant
who makes
or indorses a note
may by
for
value,
ought
to
hold
it
against
lunatic
St.
St.
of consideration-
holder had paid value were enough, the lunatic could not defend for fraud
or
543.
*
Pollock, 3d ed. 99
v.
et
seq.;
State
want
of consideration.
Then an
in-
McCoy, 69 Penn. St. 204. In Wirebach v. Bank, ut supra, Trunkey, J., said: " The question now presented is, will an action lie on the accommodation indorsement of a promIf the deterissory note by a lunatic ? mination of this was not made, it was very clearly indicated in Moore r. Hershey, 9 Norris, 196. There the action was by an indorsee against the maker of a promissory note, and evidence was offered to prove that the
Bank
nocent holder could recover, though the judgment would sweep away the
lunatic's entire estate,
been benefited a farthing. Nor would a nominal sum be sufficient. It is said the law protects those who cannot protect themselves, but it would be sorry
protection,
if
against a helpless
get
it
renewed
and recover
fair
and
140
CHAP.
VI.]
[ 110.
109. The fact that a party was insane before executing a particular contract, and was insane afterwards, does
DUSlllGSS
he was sane at the time capacity such prior and subse- [ucid'interhowever, If, it was made.^ quent insanity be proved, the burden is on the party ^'^^setting up a lucid interval to prove it.^ But periodic and intermittent incapacity {e. g.^ epilepsy) cannot be presumed to be continuous and permanent.^ 110. Were a monomaniac precluded from executing connot invalidate the contract,
if
would be
efficient
special topics.*
Hence,
it
capacity to
make
monomania does not impair a contract on a matter to which the monoResponsibility, in other words, as to a
proper.
relate."
it is
and then
its
When
money
it
is
a pre-existing debt, or
loaned,
measure
is
certain,
V.
V.
Wh. on
Ev.
1253
Attorney Gen.
;
and the insane man is liable for no more than the amount of such debt or loan. The holder of a madman's note
stands in no better position than the payee.
Staples
?,'.
36 Ind. 69
State
v.
v.
Wilner, 40 Wis.
7
An accommodation maker
is
or
304; State
Reddick,
Kan. 143:
indorser, in fact,
principal debtor,
infant or
Brown
*
v.
Riggen, 94
111.
560
Carpen-
representative
may
defend as in other
ter V. Carpenter, 8
forms of contract.
We
are not
per-
See 1
Wh. &
et seq.
who
Bro. C. C. 443
man."
1? M. & VV. 623 Tozer v. Saturlee, 3 Grant (Penn.), 162 Blakeley v. BlakeLilly v. Wagley, 33 N. J. Eq. 502
; ;
;
goner, 27
tler,
111.
395 62;
;
McCormick
v. v.
v.
Lit-
85
111.
Curtis
Brownell,
42 Mich. 165
Jones
Perkins, 5 B.
Hovey v. Hobson, Dennett v. Dennett, 44 N. H. 531 Somes v. Skinner, 16 Mass. 348 Osterhout v. Shoemaker, 3 Hill, N. Y. 573 HaU v. Unger, 2 Abb. U. S. 507; Lozear v. Shields, 23 N. J. Eq. 509 Turner v. Rusk, 53 Md. 65 Speers see Bond r. V. Sewell, 4 Bush, 239 Bond, 7 Allen, 1. That an insane deL. R. 5 Q. B. 549
;
55 Me. 256
;
141
110.]
CONTRACTS.
is
[CHAP. VI.
And
They do not
which they do not relate.^ It is sufficient if there be mental capacity enough to transact with intelligence the par-
ticular business.'
The proper
test
is,
at the
time of the contract, insane as to the particular thing to which the contract related ? It is not necessary to inquire whether the party in question was generally insane. We have to limit
ourselves to the litigated transaction,
his capacity in that relation.
He may
understanding in reference to other matters, but this will not validate the contract if in reference to its subject matter he was under the influence of insane delusions, of which the other party had notice. On the other hand, no matter how
numerous and how strong may have been his insane delusions on other topics, this will not invalidate a contract made by him concerning which he had no insane delusions,* " It is to be noted," says Mr. Pollock, in 1881,' " that the existence of partial
amount
The judge
may
be,
must
whether
own
affairs in the
matter in hand.".^
lusion as to a particular topic incapacitates as to
such
topic, see
;
Boyce
v.
tained,
though the
lessor
Lemon
v.
Jenkins,
48 Ga. 313.
'
Wh.
Mar-
Staples
V.
was impregnated with, sulphur, though he was otherwise sane. See to same effect remarks of Bramwell, L. J., in Drew v. Nunn, L. R. 4 Q. B. D. 669. 3d ed. 105. ^ To this are cited Jenkins v. Morris,
v. Nunn, L. To same effect is Hovey v. Hobson, 53 Me. 451 Dennett v. Dennett, 44 N. H. 531 Blakeley v.
Den-
L. R. 14 Ch. D. 674
Drew
Mann
R. 4 Q, B. D. 669.
Betterby,
21 Vt. 326
;
Baldwin
Farnam v. v. Dun-
188
;
Blakeley, 33 N.
Craig, 36
111.
J.
Eq. 502
Miller
v.
109.
As
see
to the coexist-
Ball V. Mannin, 1
S.), 1.
Dow. &
v.
C. 380
business capacity,
Wh. &
St.
3 Bligh (N.
In Jenkins
Morris,
et seq.
142
CHAP. VI.]
111.
[ 111.
As has been
J.
.1
,
who
insane,
is
On
rescis-
sion parties
when
*^sfafJo^f<f
he received as consideration.^
ever,
an
money of land
not a
dian of the lunatic.^ But the better rule is, as stated by Mr. Pollock,^ that " when a contract has been entered into in good faith with a person who appears and is believed to be of sound
mind, but who is, in fact, of unsound mind, and the contract has been performed, so that the parties cannot be replaced in their original position, it cannot be set aside by the person of unsound mind, or his representatives." And he cites to this effect the following passage from the judgment of the exchequer chamber in a leading case, in which the law was in
this respect definitely settled
" The modern cases show that mind (lunacy or drunkenness, even if such as to prevent a man from knowing what he is about) was unknown to the other contracting party, and no advantage was taken of the lunatic (or drunken man), the defence cannot prevail, especially where the contract is not merely exe:
when
that state of
et seq. 111.
Infra, 285.
v.
Baxter, L.
R
for
Scanlan
Cobb, 85
;
296.
' Supra, 107 Hovey v. Hobson, 53 Me. 451 Gibson r. Soper, 6 Gray, 279 see Eaton v. Eaton, 37 N. J. L. 118; Nichol V. Thomas, 53 Md. 42 ; Lagay v.
;
breach of contract in not completing a purchase plea, that at the time of inaking the alleged contract the defendant was so drunk as to be incapa;
Wald's ed. 81. * Molton V. Camroux, 4 Exch. 17 aflf. Beavan v. McDonnell, 9 Exch. 309 Price V. Bennington, 3 Mac. & G. 486
3
Pollock,
knowing what he was about, as the plajntiff well knew replication, that after the
ble of transacting business or
;
Elliott
As a merely void
Ince, 7 D.
M. G. 475.
Mr. Pollock
adds:
"The
cannot be ratified, this nealty raised the question whether the contract was void or only voidable
agreement
mem-
143
113.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VI.
stated,
may
decree of dissolution.
drunkenness.
Were
But
% 113.
Distinctive rule as to
As to others it is res inter alios acta.^ On the one hand, proof of latent lunacy
of marriage will not avoid a marriage
;
at the time
since other-
contracts.
scent, and titles by succession would, in many cases, be made to depend upon occult and uncertain conditions. Mere collateral delusions, also, do not avoid a marriage and no matter bow eccentric a person may be, his marriage,
;
marriage
regarded as passing
title
under the distribution statutes.* An inquisition of lunacy, that a party to a marriage was insane at the time, is only 'prima facie proof of such insanity; and his sanity may be es-
On the other hand, a marriage which a lunatic has been fraudulently induced to solemnize will be annulled ; though not ordinarily after
tablished in the face of such finding.'
bar of
it
Banker
v.
Banker, 63 N. Y. 409.
Camroux) that it was only voidable, and the replication therefore good." See to same effect Eaton v. Eaton, 37 N. J. L. 118 Evans r. Horan,
Molton
V.
;
Infra, 123.
52 Md. 602
Scanlan
v.
r.
Cobb, 85
111.
Portsmouth i*. Portsmouth, 1 Hag. Hancock r. Peaty, L. R. 1 P. & D, 835 see Atkinson v. Medford, 46 Me. 510; Middlebo rough v. Roches5
Ec. R. 355
296 229
Ashcraft
De Arman, 44 Iowa,
i.
ter,
12 Mass. 363
Wightman
;
i-.
"Wightv.
Rusk
i\
man,
Banker
Lindley on Part.
and
Isler
v.
Baker,
Banker, 63 N. Y. 409; Atkinson v. Medford, 46 Me. 510 Crump v. Morgan, 3 Ired. Eq. 91 Foster r. Means,
;
Humph.
3
Clement
v.
Matti-
Infra, 123
Wh. on
Ev. 403,
son, 8 Rich. 98
Cole
v. Cole, 5
Sneed,
;
812, 1254.
57
v.
Rawdon
V.
v.
Wiser
Ward
144
CHAP. VI
[ 113.
A voidable
be ratified
may
by him when in his right mind ;^ and this holds good as to marriage by an intoxicated person.^ But a marriage absolutely void (e. g.^ by a total maniac) is on principle not susceptible of subsequent ratification.*
Lockwood, 42 Vt, 720; ut supra. That under N. Y. Stat, such marriage is only voidable, see Stuckey v. Mather, 24 Hun, 461. 2 Bishop, Mar. and Div. 6th ed. 135;
1
Wiser
v.
Rawdon
v.
Rawdon,
making an attempt to strangle herself. The judge. Sir J. Hannen, summed up clearly and fairly, and pointed out that the woman did not seem capable of
understanding actions free from
influence of delusions,
fore incapable of entering into
Cole
V. Cole,
5 Sneed, 57
Rawdon
r.
the
3 Rich, 193.
;
Crump V. Morgan, 3 Ired. Eq. 91 Ward V. Dulauey, 23 Miss. 410. In the London Law Times for Jan. 7, 1882, p. 168, we have the following:
" The Lancet remarks that, in the divorce court, on Friday, the 16th
and he dethe
This
Dec,
was
which has been decided, and is not by any means a solitary one, so far as the insanity and marriage are concerned. During the
case of the kind
we
be-
The
In
case
Hunter
v.
Edney.
married,
woman was
riage to be
riage
The husconsummated. the mother of the woman, who took her home after she had been seen by Dr. Miskin, a general practiband sent
for
quence of insanity. In one a man heard a voice telling him he must not touch his wife, ^and the same patient later heard a voice telling him not to
then she was Some few weeks later, Dr. Savage, of Bethlem, saw the case, and decided that the woman was suffering from melancholia, and not fit to enter into a contract, and that in his opinion she had so suffered for some time. The
was
insane.
The case decided is a first one, and is incomplete. What line would have been followed if the marriage had been consummated, and, still more, if a child had been begotten ? The inability to contract would have been the same, but we fear there might have
eat.
jury
whole case took but a short part of one day, and there was really no opposition, for though the wife was in court, and elected to go into the witness-box, she did not deny any of the statements made, but said that she had no knowledge of some of the things which were proved to have taken place during the
divorce was justifiable. In murder cases the feeling of many is moved against taking human life, but the life-long misery caused by an unjust marriage in which one of the con tracting parties was insane, is a suflFering of the innocent which is unhappily
that a
all be-
VOL.
I.
10
145
114.]
CONTRACTS.
a.
[chap. VI.
113
-^^ replied that divorce statutes are meant to relieve from intolerable wrong, and the wrong of adultery is none the less intolerable, because the party committing it was This view was intimated in England in the Morinsane.^ daunt case, although that case was decided upon the peculiar
rule as to divorce.
has been argued, that as an insane person is irreon ground of adultery cannot be granted against an insane person.^ To this it may
It
sponsible, a divorce
parties
construction of a statute.'
The
is
now
it
an insane
Party may himself avoid contract on
Although
it
it
is
now
insane, a
ground of mental
incompetency.
would otherwise bind him, may and when it avoid it, is still unexecuted, by setting up his incompetency at the time of the contract.^ And when a contract is
contract which
when
Matchin
St.
r.
Wh. &
3
Med. Jur.
watched." P. D. 145,
mittee of
In Baker
it
r.
Baker, L. R.
Stat.
20
& 21
the cases,
Mordaunt
r.
See Mordaunt, L.
R. 2 P. 109, 382.
*
Baker
Baker, L. R. 5 P. D. 145,
aflfirraed 6 P.
D. 12
Mordaunt
v.
Mon-
Hancock v. Peaty, L. R. 1 P. &D. 335, that "thequestion for the court is, whether the mind of the conIt is said in
crieffe,
5
L. R. 2 H. L. (Sc.) 374.
;
Bradford
tracting party
is
the evi-
v. Worthy, 36 Ga. 45 Abend, 89 111. 78. 6 Beavan r. McDonnell, 9 Exch. 309 Lang V. Whidden, 2 N. H. 435 Seaver
v.
; ;
Worthy
dence establishes that the mind was, at the time of entering the contract,
diseased, the court will not enter into
r.
Phelps,
11
Pick.
;
304;
Gibson
r.
v.
Grant
Thomp-
Per
is
Johns.
Paige, 158
Bensell
;
i:
Chancellor,
Whart. 371
Morris
v.
Clay, 8 Jones,
V.
Nichols,
31 Vt.
;
328;
N. C. 216; McCreight v. Aiken, 1 Rice, 56; Titcomb v. Vantyle, 84 111. 371 McCarty v. Kearnan, 86 111. 291
;
Wray
V.
Van
Patten
r.
v.
Beals, 46 Ind. 62
S.
Fitz-
gerald
Reed, 9
& M.
277.
94
Broad-
it is
may be brought
when
sane.
lb.
water
V.
Dame, 10 Mo.
146
CHAP. Vr.]
117 a.
fair,
have been
far as concerns the part executed, while the unexecuted part cannot be enforced.^ But no proceedings can be taken by the
is
restored.*
1
And so of 115. The same "^^ admin, p istrators. tors and heirs of a party claimed to be a lunatic' 116. On the guardian, curator, committee, or assignee of a person found to be a lunatic the duty is incumright passes to the administra-
I'll
And
hisguar^
^^^?
""
by such
^
official
assignee.
may
be ratified
or annulled
may
be)
being entitled to bring suit to recover back property which the lunatic had sold, but which he had not the capacity to convey.*
one party to an executed contract was execution cannot be set up by the other party in bar to a suit brought against tracUng"'^ him to comply with the conditions undertaken by notavoM^' him, if these conditions are not dependent on acts
117.
The
fact that
its
which the
plaintiff
is
incapable of performing.'
117 a. Following the distinction already noticed between " void" and " voidable" transactions,^ we must hold
that,
when a person
capacity to contract
makes an apparent
is
contract,
diaSo'n^ay beratwca-
void
is
from that of the other contracting party .^ however, when one of the contracting parties
'
otherwise,
not absolutely
Beavan
v.
McDonnell,
9 Excli. 309.
As
*
511.
Turner
r.
Rusk, 53 Md.
117
65.
a.
As As
to
* McCrillis v. Bartlett, 8 N. H. 569 Gibson v. Soper, 6 Gray, 279. In Baker V. Baker, "L. R. 5 P. 142, it was held that the committee of the estate of a
;
to
and "void-
able" contracts, see supra, 28, 56. ' Beverley's case, 4 Rep. 123 6;
was the proper party to sue for a divorce on account of the adultery of the lunatic's wife.
lunatic
*
^
Allen
v.
Hovey
V.
v.
Lazell
infra, 177.
147
118.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. VI.
without capacity to contract, and does contract as to a matter within the range of his capacity. Supposing that he should subsequently turn out to have been " insane" at the time of such contract, and may even have been so judicially pronounced, yet, on his restoration to sanity, such contract binds him if not repudiated by him when brought before him for The question, however, may after all be one ratification.^ merely as to the meaning of the words. A person who has recovered from an attack of insanity continues to enjoy the fruits of a bargain made by him when at least partially insane. He does not repudiate the contract, and, as he does not, his action may be called non-repudiation. Yet it is none the less ratification, though he has not said one word in affirmance of the bargain. For ratification in this, as in the p)arallel case of infancy, is a matter of induction from all the circumstances
of the particular case.^
In 118. Intoxication is a term embracing many degrees. some countries, few bargains are struck at the fairs
Mereintoxication no
^
hoidkig contract
void.
done without one at least ^^ the parties having previously taken some stimuIntoxication also may be by other modes than lant.
busiiicss IS largely
'
whcrc
i"
'
when
essential to sus-
impending, so as to strengthen them for the task. It does not follow that a man is unfit for business because he is acting under stimulants. Some of the most eminent statesmen and lawyei*s e. g., the younger Pitt, and Luther Martin made their best speeches, and conducted
is
'
It is
am
cases.
See cases cited, 106-113; Blakeley r. Blakeley, 33 N. J. Eq. 502, and a learned note thereto Matthiesen
;
McMehan, 38 N. J. L. 537 Evans r. Horan, 52 Md. 610; Freed v. Brown, 55 Ind. 310 Murray v. Carlin,
R. R. Co. V.
; ;
67
111.
;
286
Searle
v.
r.
Galbraith, 73
111.
111.
Dunn,.93 111. 511. See also St. Med. Jur. 7. When Bramwell, L. J., in Drew v. Nunn, L. R. 4 Q. B, D. 669, said, "If a man becomes so far insane as to have no mind, perhaps he ought to be deemed dead for the purpose of contracting;" he probably had the distinction of the text in mind.
lemin
1
r.
Wh. &
269
Titcomb
Vantyle, 84
85
111.
371
Infra, 120
supra, 58
et seq.
McCk)rmick
v. Littler,
32
Wil-
148
CHAP.
VI-]
[ 119.
when under
stimulants.
To
is
say, there-
Nor
this
all.
party
who wanted
to
make
play fast and loose, would only have to get drunk, or appear
to get drunk, beforehand,
ate as he chose.
in itself fair,
and then he could affirm or repudiHence the mere fact that, when a contract, was executed, one of the parties was under the
it.^
Between drunkentiess when set up as a defence indictment for crime, and drunkenness when set up ^ *
,
to
an
otherwise
in case of
as avoiding a contract
made under
its eftects,
first
the
case
In the
is
no
defence, though
the grade.
may be shown for the purpose of lowering He who voluntarily becomes drunk, voluntarily
v. McCoy, 69 was held that drunkenness of the maker of a note would
Cooke V. Clayworth, 18 Ves, 12; Moss V. Tribe, 3 F. & F. 297 Mathew Pittenger V. Baxter, L. R. 8 Exch. 132 V. Pittenger, 3 N. J. Eq. 156; Johns French v. V. Fritchey, 39 Md. 258 French, 8 Ohio, 214 Henry v. Ritnour,
;
Pen n.
Penn.
St. 245.
In State Bk.
St. 204, it
See S. P. McSparSt.
ren
i-.
Neeley, 91 Penn.
;
17
Miller
to
v.
v.
Ball, 72
111.
;
108;
Mil-
and see
same
Belcher
v.
Caulkins
v.
ler V. Finley,
V.
26 Mich. 249
111.
Schramm
v.
O'Connor, 98
539; Pickett
To the same
effect
Wh. &
St.
Med. Jur. 16 a; Burroughs r. Richman, 13 N. J. L. 233; Wigglesworth V. Steers, 1 Hen. & M. 70; Mansfield v. Watson, 2 Iowa, 111; Cummings v. Henry, 10 Ind. 109 Joest v. Williams, 42 Ind. 565 Broadwater v. Darne, 10 Mo. 277; Eaton v. Perry, 29 Mo. 96; Keough V. Foreman, 33 La. An. 1434. As holding to a strict rule, see Foot v. Tewksberry, 2Vt. 97; Caulkins r. Fry, 35 Conn. 170; Druramond?;. Hopper, 4 Harring. 327 Jenners v. Howard, 6
;
; ;
Walker
v.
Van
;
Wyck
v.
roughs v. Richman, 13 N. J. L. 233 Johns v. Fritchey, 39 Md. 258; Cummings v. Henry, 10 Ind. 109 Joest v, Williams, 42 Ind. 565 Bates v. Ball, 72 111. 108; Mansfield r. Watson, 2 Iowa, 111 Broadwater v. Darne, 10 Mo. 277 Eaton v. Perry, 29 Mo. 9^6 Cavender v. Waddingham, 5 Mo. Ap. 457 Phelan v. Gardner, 43 Cal. 306. A contract voidable from the drunk; ; ;
&M.
94.
may
122.
be subsequently
ratified.
Infra,
Klohs, 61
149
120.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. VI.
The same rule applies to the drunkard's liability for torts. But it is generally otherwise when a party is sued on a contract made by him when so stupidly drunk as to exhibit his incapacity to those dealing with him. It is true that we can
conceive of a latent phase of drunkenness which
itself.
may
not so
There are undoubtedly stages in intoxication, exhibit also, to which we could not assign incapacity without assigning it to other cases of exhilaration, and without, therefore, preposterously extending the limits of incapacity. But on the other hand, a contract made by a man when obviously so drunk as to be incapable of rational action, will not be enSuch a contract forced against him when on its face unfair. must be inferred to have been fraudulently obtained and, hence, its performance will not be enforced by the courts.' At the same time, if a contract made when drunk is ratified when
;
sober,
it
As a general
rule, there-
in a state of intoxication
;
(1) where the intoxication produced mental incapacity and (2) where it produced mental excitement, subjecting the party to the undue influence of the other contracting party, who thereby gains an unfair advantage.' 120. As is shown in the kindred case of ratification on
:
Pitt V. Smith, 3
Camp. 33
;
Cory
v.
Say
v.
v.
Barwick,
"
B. Men. 225
&
B. 196
;
Gore
v.
Gibson, 13 M.
& W.
12
V.
;
623
Cooke
Bliss r.
Jones v. Perkins, 5 ; Richardson v. Strong, 13 Ired. L. 106 Morrison v. McLeod, 2 Dev. & B. Eq. 226. In Pitt v. Smith,
; ;
Camp.
33,
Kingman,
5 Pick.
;
431
Rice
v.
Peet,
15 Johns. 503
C. (N. Y.) 332
Wager
r.
Reid, 3 T.
v.
&
Hutchinson
Tindell,
;
Bur-
roughs
V.
Richman, 1 Green, N.
V.
Campbell
"V^ilson V.
Dulany
Johns
kins
V.
V.
v.
233 Binn. 133 Bigger, 7 Watts & S. Ill Green, 4 Harring. Del. 285
J.
makes
it
Spencer, 2
ing party.
Gore
v.
Gibson, 13 M.
& W.
623
Matthews
v.
V.
Men-
Infra, 120.
Wigglesworth v. Steers, 1 Hen. & Munf. 70 Birdsong v. Birdsong, 2 Head, 289 Belcher v. Belcher, 10 Yerg. 121
;
Lightner, 18
111.
282
Scanlan
v. Ritev.
Cobb, 85
296
;
Henry
Mansfield
Wat-
150
CHAP.
VI.]
[ 121.
may
c
1
be inductively RatmcaTT
shown from
11
all
tiontobe
inductively
retention by a party
when
is is
sober, of things
bought
The bargain
is
ratification by a party capax negotii.^ Even executory contracts may be thus " It has been argued that a contract made by a ratified
;
open to subsequent
person
who was
But
in the
is
abso-
lutely void.
it is difficult
plaintiff,
still I
you
to
it.'
And
if
true, I was drunk when I made mean, now that I am sober, to hold the defendant could say this, there must
'
drunkard, as
is
is liable for
necessaries sold
him
inanactioQ
|.^gg^'^*'
and not for an account stated, or for goods bargained and sold.' The creditor is entitled to recover from
French
field V.
v.
But that equity will only relieve where has been practised, and not otherwise, see Hutchinson v. Brown, 1
fraud
Matthews
y.
132; Barrett
v.
Prentice
v.
v.
Achorn, 2
Wager
;
Reid, 3 T.
v. v.
&
C.
Patrick,
Bibb,
168; Fitzgerald
v.
Seymour
Pittenger
;
Delancy, 3
Pittenger, 3
v.
Reed, 9 S.
*
& M.
94.
Cowen, 445
N.
J.
Kelly, C. B.,
Eq. 156
J.
Hutchinson
;
Tindall,
L. R. 8 Ex. 133,
supra, 118.
3 N.
Jones v. Perkins, 5 B. Scanlan v. Cobb, 85 111. 296, at p. 298; White v. Cox, 4 Hayw. (Tenn.) 213; Campbell v. Ketcham, 1 Bibb, 406 Rutherford v. Ruff, 4 Dessaus. 350 Johnson v. Medlicott, 3 P.
Eq. 357
;
Mon. 222
Shaw
v.
Thackray, 3 Sm.
Supra, 58.
Gore
V.
V.
Gibson, 13 M.
& W.
;
623
Rich-
Joest
Sawyer v. Lufv. May, 10 Allen, 59 Seymour v. Delancy, 3 Cow. 445 Prentice r. Ahorn, 2 Paige, 30 Vanhorn v. Hann, 39 N. J. L. 207 Jenners v. Howard, 6 Blackf. 240 Darby v. Cabarme, 1 Mo. Ap. 126 Jones V. Perkins, 5 B. Mon. 228.
V.
;
Smith, 3 Camp. 33
56 Me. 309
;
;
ton,
Kendell
151
123.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VI.
when
him
when
drunk."'
Legal ex-
122. As necessaries
may be
be"nece*^ penses of suits involving the protection of the drunksanes. ^j^ ^^^ of his estate.*
123.
prima
Inquisition facie
An
inquisition of lunacy
.
is
in a contest
fiartics to tcst
dence*
But the inquisition is admissible as prima The same rule applies to inquisitions in
cases
of
drunkenness.^
v.
Gibson, 13
Benj.
"
Leonard
i-.
in
on
v.
Wadsworth
v.
3d Am.
V. Bartlett,
8 N. H. 569
Richardson
Meares
V.
in re,
pacity to do business
determined
Williams
Hailet
71, 92.
'
v.
Wentworth,
1
Oakes,
Cush. 296
supra,
and seeTozeri;. Saturlee, 3Grant, Penn. 162. In Van Deusen v. Sweet, 51 N. Y. 378, it was held that an inquisition
to the effect that a grantor at the
Sergeson
v.
v.
Sealey,
2 Atk. 412
;
time
Faulder
Silk, 3 8 C.
Camp. 126
P.
;
Kirkwall,
Hall, 15
&
;
v.
v.
of the
compos mentis,
of
Frank, 2 M.
&
9
Rob. 315
r.
incompetency
and
this
was
folv.
Sawyer v. Lufkin, 56 Me. 308 Stone v. Damon, 12 Mass. 488 Hamilton v. Hamilton, 10 R. I. 538 Hoyt v. Adee, 3 Lans. 173 Hart V. Deamer, 6 Wend. 497 Banker v. Banker, 63 N. Y. 409 Gangwere's Est.,
; ; ; ; ; ;
Wal.
Banker, 63 N. Y. 409.
Supra,
113.
And
see Goodell
v.
Harrington, 3 T.
v.
&
C. 345.
In
L'Amoureux
Crosby, 2
"As
14 Penn.
St.
417
McCreight
v.
Aiken,
As assigning greater conclusiveness see Fitzhugh v. Wilcox, 12 Barb. 235 Wadsworth v. Sherman, 14 Barb. 169. In Leonard v. Leonard, 14 Pick. 280, it was said that "as to most subjects, the decree of the probate
1 Rice, 56.
;
lunatic,
tinues,
is
disability of the
but that it is not conclusive in regard to all." See L'Amoureux v. Crosby, 2 Paige, 422. Cf. Wh. on Ev. 1254; Leggate i'.
;
ward
and
until he
is
by the
v.
court,
See article in 16
;
Alb. L. J. 292, S. P.
Breed
Pratt,
152
CHAP. VI.]
[ 124.
European states, as is elsewhere shown,' proby which persons shown to be irreclaim- g^g^,^ able spendthrifts are put under the charge of guard- thrifts may
124. In several
cess is given
lans,
and decreed
,.
be incapacitated by
American Union.
But a decree to
such statutes have no extra-territorial force.^ In most jurisdictions the object of the procedure is to prevent the
hira.^
And
The
to incapacitate
the spendthrift from making contracts (except, as has just been seen, for necessaries) which will further impoverish his
estate.*
18 Pick. 115
Crowninshield
;
Hun,
327
;
CrownMarHutchinson v.
v.
Lagay
v.
Hicks
v.
woman
was
notoriously
Kneedler's App.,
92 Penn.
Hall,
St. 428.
See, as sustaining
who had
dition.
'
15 Wallace, 9
;
Caulkins
v.
N. H. 106 Paige, 422; Fitzhugh v. Wilcox, 12 Barb. 235 Wadsworth v. Sherman, 14 Barb. 169 Nichol v. Thomas, 53 Ind. 53 Elston v. Jasper, 45 Tex. 409. In
; ;
;
122.
Bartlett, 8 N. H. 569.
3
*
Whart. Conf.
V.
of
Laws,
122.
;
Smith
V.
Manson
153
127.J
CONTRACTS.
[chap, VIC.
CHAPTER
Vll.
CORPORATIONS.
A
corporation
is
an
artificial
person
between usurpation of power and exercise of power, 137. Corporation may borrow money and
Distinction
issue negotiable paper, 138.
Parties interested in corporation
Contracts prohibited
valid, 129.
by charter
in-
may
enjoin
139.
it
from acting
is
ultra
vires,
When
140.
contract
fiting
by
it
cannot impeach
oflScers,
132.
Corporation
may
be estopped as to
bo7ia
and
by a corporation,
142.
Can only
135.
127.
corpora
is
tion
an
Business requiring long and continuous attention could not be effectively conducted if on the death of any one of the parties concerned his share in its control
artificial
person created to
facilitate
nor
business.
would parties be willing to take risks in adventures whose insolvency would expose them to the loss not
common
stock,
endued, under a distinctive name, with certain business functions and with the capacity of self-perpetuation either per-
manently or
modern
r.
As
to definition, see
Leake on Cont. 2d
ed. 581
Braham,
154
CHAP. VII.]
CORPORATIONS.
[ 128.
and to these corporations belong as a class two leading incidents (1) their members may from time to time die, but their existence and continuous legal capacity are not thereby affected,
:
provided the succession of an adequate corporate number is kept up (2) while they make themselves liable for any contracts they may enter into, this liability does not, unless ex;
tended by statute, or unless there be some personal obligations assumed by the members individually, extend beyond the corporate estate. The corporation, therefore, and the persons comprising it, are in no sense convertible. The members of
the corporation are not (with the exceptions just stated) liable
for the corporation's debts, or personally compellable to per-
form its contracts. The corporation does not receive into its membership the legal representatives of its deceased members* It is a distinct existence, localized in- the state where it is chartered and has its principal seat, though even a majority of its members may reside elsewhere, and existing, notwithstanding changes in its membership, as long as the state
it ordains.' By the Roman law, as well as by our own, a corporation (Juristische Person) is invested, within its sphere, with the same contractual capacity as a natural person.'' Out of its orbit, however, it has no power.^
chartering
128.
It used to be
iT-iibound, IT
mode
by
only
of articulation
if it
^^'^
through its seal, it does not speak at all.* But this limitation is no longer applied.^ Within its orbit a corporation may bind
'
How. 497 Tileston v. Newell, 13 Mass. Peabody v. Flint, 6 Allen, 52 406 Weckler v. Bank, 42 Md. 581 Straus
;
v.
V. Ins.
Oh. St. 59. * Wh. on Agency, 57 Windscheid, Pandekt. 58 Savigny, ii. 265-74. 3 L. 10, de I. F. (49, 14). That a
Co., 5
;
;
Smith Morawetz on Corp. 167 Gas Co., 1 A. & E. 526 3 N. & M. 771 Gibson v. East India Co., 5 Bing. N. C. 262 Bank U. S. v. Dandridge, 12 Wheat. 64 Canal Bridge v. Gordon, 1 Pick. 297 Commercial Bank v. KortChristian Church right, 22 Wend. 348
^
;
;
v.
Sheffield v.
corporation
status, see
*
has
no
extra-territorial
Andress,
Ind.
259.
157
Athens
v.
Wh, Wh.
Con. of L. 105.
;
Thomas, 82
Bl.
Com. 475
Anson
on Con-
tracts, 45
on Agency,
58.
155
128.]
itself contractually
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VII.
by
its
agents.
And
give
this
its
may
be in two
ways.
In the
to
first
place, it
may
agents specific
do particular things. In the second place, it may officers with certain functions, and it is bound by any acts of these officers in performance of these functions.^ And in all matters essential and incident to the discharge of its corporate duties, it may bind itself, without seal, by specific resolution, by by-laws, as well as by the appointment of officers and servants to perform particular classes of duties.^ A seal is not necessary for the appointment even of agents to execute documents under seal.^ Where, how-
power
appoint particular
'
Infra,
130; Kennedy
r.
Ins. Co.,
3 Har.
&
J. 367.
As
illustrating the
Chestnut Hill Turnpike Co. r. Rutter, 4 S. & R. 16; Berks, etc. Turnpike
V.
Myers, 6
S.
&
R.
12
McMas;
;
Birmingham Banking Co. ex parte, L. R. 6 Ch. 83, in which it was held, that
a corporation can (unless prohibited) mortgage any part of its property, as
well for an existing debt as for a
loan.
r.
Bank
;
of Chillicothe
new
Palm
Board
HI.
V.
corporation,
J.,
it
it
was said by
cinnati R. R.
of
V.
James, L.
dispose of
unless
it is
doing."
Stratton
*
agent, see
Wh. on
Agency,
Rep. 30 b
v.
59
Angell
&
Ames on
Corp. 284
;
Sutton's Hos-
Greenebaum, 39 Walker, 11 Wis. Buncombe Co. v. McCarson, 1 334 Dev. & B. .306 Buckley v. Briggs, 30 Mo. 452 Kiley v. Forsee, 57 Mo. 390 Kitchen v. R. R., 59 Mo. 514 Selmap. Mullen, 46 Ala. 411 Western Bank v. Gilstrap, 45 Mo. 419.
Education
609;
Blunt
v.
pital, 10 Co.
South of Ireland
According to Sir
W. Anson
is
(p. 45)
&
R.
El.
846
Nicholson
t:
Bradfield, L.
Wells v. Kingston, L. R. 10 C. P. 402 Riche r. Ashbury, L. R. 9 Ex. 224; Bank of Columbia V. Patterson, 7 Cranch, 299; Fleckner r. Bank U. S., 8 Wheat. 338; Bank U. S. v. Dandridge, 12 Wheat. 70; Eureka v. Bailey Co., 11 Wall. 488 Canal Co. v. Knapp, 9 Pet. 541 Goodwin v. Screw Co., 34 N. H. 378; Stamford Bk. v. Benedict, 15 Conn. 445 Perkins r. Ins. Co., 4 Cow. 645
1 Q.
B. 620;
and
second,
where
;
it
inconvenience
see to
tist Church V. Melford, 3 Halst. L. 185 McCullough V. Ins. Co., 46 Ala. 376; Buckley t;. Briggs, 30 Mo. 452.
Bank
;
U.
S.
v.
Dandridge,
12
Wheat. 64
ley,
16 Conn. 2 Mete.
Com. Bk.
v.
Kortright, 22
Wend.
People
V.
Mawran,
Denio,
389
156
CHAP.
VII.]
CORPORATIONS.
[ 129.
is prescribed by the charter, it must be used ;^ though, as will hereafter be seen, the defect may be cured by estoppel in cases of executed contracts with third parties
ever, a seal
acting: bonajide.
129.
A contract
which the corporation comes into existence, is invalid,^ But it does not follow that because an act is prohibited in a charter it
or of the legislation, under
is
prohibited
Inyaiid'^'^^^
It
may
purely corrective, as where a penalty imposed upon the exercise of a particular act. If so, the act is not invalid, though the corporation has to pay the penalty of doing it.^ Whether, when a prohibition not simply corrective is in a charter or in independent binding legislation, this prohibition makes contracts as to such action void ab initio^ has been much discussed. In New York such contracts may be only voidable.* In !N'ew Jersey they are regarded, and with better reason, in all cases in which the prohibition is a matter of public legislation, as from the outsfet illegal and void.* Such, also, is the English
by way of a mere
fine is
rule.^
more
fully,
is,
'
Koehler
v.
in
New
York, by statute,
all
banking
Bank U.
v.
contracts
made by
corporations without
Hitchcock
Harris
351
New York
ney
V.
WhitPhil. Loan
;
Farmers' Bank
;
v. v.
Bearing, 91 U.
Pratt, 115 Mass.
Fuller
v.
S. 29
Central
Bank
v.
Nav. Co., 21 Conn. 559 Hood v. R. R., 23 Conn. 609 Crocker v. Whitney, 71 N. Y. 161 Maryland Hosp. i-. Foreman, 29 Md. 524 State Board v. R. R., 47 Ind. 411 Wood v. Caldwell, 54 Ind.
; ;
;
539.
4
See Moss
Averill, 10 N. Y. 460
Morris R. R.
v.
Sussex R. R., 20 N.
7 H.
Westlake, 36 Iowa, 546 Hazlehurst r. R. R., 43 Ga. 13 Montgomery v. Plank Road, 31 Ala.
271
;
Pangborn
v.
J.
Eq. 542.
6
L. 653
1
76
Marion BanS:
;
v.
Dunkin, 54 Ala.
Jnfra,
670
Morawetz on Corp.
471
and other
154.
Corp. 40.
That
157
131.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VII.
through agents,
it
is
bound by
.
its asrents'
contracts
/.
i
*'
office,
But
make, do not bind his principal as against parties who ought to have taken notice of this limitation.^ A general agent, however, employed to conduct the business of the corporation generally, binds the corporation, if the appointment is consistent
with the charter, in
131.
all
A corporation is also
of
its
,
and
deceits
, Liable for
.
,,
agents,
,
when
agents'
Wher-
maiice'and Gvcr they Can Contract, they can subject their prinneghgence. gipals to liability for their deceitful misstatements or
malicious misconduct.*
>
Hence, a corporation
171,
* Ibid.
is
Wh. on
; ;
Agency,
57, 59,
670 Gibson r. East Ind. Co., 5 Bing. N. C. 275 Church r. Gas Co., 6 A. & Ferguson v. Wilson, L. R. 2 E. 846 Ch. 77 Trundy v. Farrer, 32 Me. 225
;
270
McKieman
Lfmsen, 56 Cal.
Greene's
61.
Brice's
Angell
v.
;
& Ames on
.Joint
Corp.
388
Barwick
Stock
v.
Smith
I'.
Bayley
8 C. P.
;
R.
;
148
Wilcox, 66 111. 417. 2 Wh. on Agency, 687 Angell & Ames on Corp. ch. 9 U. S. r. City Bank, 21 How. 356 Frankford Bank
;
; ;
V.
Conant
;
v.
Belv.
v.
Moore v. R. R., L. R. 8 Q. B. 36 Bolingbroke i;. Board, L. R. 9 C. P. 575 Edwards r. R. R., L. R. 6 Q. B. D. 287 Houldsworth r. Bank, 5 App. Cas. 317 Butler V. Watkins, 13 Wall. 456 Person V. Sanger, 1 W. & M. 136 Tlflayer
;
lows Falls Co., 29 Vt. 263 Bank Steward, 37 Me. 519 Cocheco Bank
;
V. r.
Gloucester
;
Bank
Haskell, 51 N. H. 116
r.
Bank
;
of Genesee
v.
Patchin, 13 N. Y. 309
;
Pope
v.
Bank,
N.
J.
57 N. Y. 126
Watson
v.
Bennett, 12
1
Salem Bank, 17 Mass. 33 Andrews V. Suffolk Bank, 12 Gray, 461 Kibbe V. Ins. Co., 11 Gray, 163 Goodspeed v. East Haddam Bank, 22 Com. 530 Wat;
;
Barb. 196
Leggett
Bank,
r.
son
V.
V.
Allerton
v.
Eq. 541
Harrisburg Bank
;
Tyler, 3
Allerton, 50 N. Y. 670
Mnndorff
Watts & S. 373 Lamm r. Port Deposit Co., 49 Md. 233 Humphrey r. Mercaut. Western Cottage Ass., 50 Iowa, 607
; ;
Co.
St.
Bank of r. Reddish, 51 Iowa, 55 Mary's r. Calder, 3 Strobh. 403; Holt V. Bacon, 25 Miss. 567.
;
.
Wickersham, 61 Penn. St. 87; Tome V. R. R., 39 Md. 36 Carter v. Machine Co., 51 Md. 290; Daly r. Bank, 56 Mo. 94 Madison R. R. i-. Norwich, 24 Ind. Indianapolis R. R. v. Anthony, 457 43 Ind. 183 Scofield v. State, 54 Ga.
;
158
'
CHAP. VII.]
cious prosecution^
CORPORATIONS.
[ 131.
As to the difficulty of imputing fraudulent intention to a corporatioh," says Mr. Pollock,^ "which has been thought to be peculiarly great, it maybe
and
remembered that no one has ever doubted that a corporation may be relieved against fraud to the same extent as a natural There is exactly the same difficulty in supposing a person. corporation to be deceived as in supposing it to deceive; and
it is
cases, to
tion
mind of the person who is its agent in the transaction. Lord Langdale found no difficulty in speaking of tworailway companies as guilty of fraud and collusion,' though not in an exact sense.' However, the members of a corporation cannot, even by giving an express authority in the name
'
of the corporation,
make
it
responsible, or escape
from being
removing an obstruction of an alleged highway), which, though not a personal wrong, is of a class wholly beyond the competence of the corporation, so that, if .lawful, it
trespass in
act."^
A corporation, also,
municipalities,
politically
is
liable
Western Union
;
but
this
was rather
2 Col. T. 141
pell, 61 Ala.
South R. R. Co.
;
Chapv.
527
That
than judicially, such as has been sometimes the case in England, where municipal charters were forfelted for political offences.
But that
such cases see infra, 277. Copley V. Grover, 2 Woods, 494. 2 Maynard v. Ins. Co., 34 Cal. 48 47 Cal. 207 Vinas v. Ins.' Co., 27 La.
'
; ;
were held
Syst.
ii.
p. 340.
Ann.
367.
In the
Roman
law, muni-
v.
were held
1,
Vangerow,
55.
In L. 15,
Phosphate Co., 3 App. Ca. 1264. * Solomon v. Laing, 12 Beav. 382. Mill v. Hawker, L. R. 9 Ex. 309 no judgment on this part of the case (according to Mr. Pollock) being given It has been in Ex. Ch. L. R. 10 Ex. 92.
held in Georgia that as directors of a corporation are ^uast trustees they cannot bind
it
possunt?
The
dolus,
in
such cases,
is
by a contract
v.
to
pay usury.
Planters' Co.
159
133.]
for injuries caused
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. VII.
its
by the negligence of
alterns
when engaged
And
this lia-
on parties with
whom
and
parties.^
third parties.^
not liable
not,
But while a
is
with
yet
tion
if
damage.'
132.
Mere
A de facto officer,
the fault of the
no matter
how
irregular
may have
faith.
is
them without due authority or due preliminary check and if loss ensues from this, the loss should be borne by the party to whose
stockhold-ers if they permit agents to act for
;
The stockholders is peculiarly imputable. cannot set up as a defence to suits brought against them irregularities which their own vigilance would have prenegligence the loss
vented.^
133.
Representationsof agents bind corpora-
The
-,
performance of formal preknowledge, ^ or as to the ^ liminary conditions by the corporation, bind the corporation to parties with whom it may contract on the basis of such representations.^ Hence the cashier of a
Wh.
et
'
Mahony
;
v.
Mining
1
r.
Co., L. R. 7 H.
seq.
<
L. 869
Brady's case,
488
78.
Sampson
s
6
Co.
infra,
;
679
Infra, 140-1.
Co. r.
Wh. on Agency, 269 on Ev. 1170; Nat. Ex. Drew, 2 Maoq. 103; Mackay v.
Wh.
160
CHAP. VII.]
CORPORATIONS.
as to bona fide third parties
[ 134.
by certifying
is
untrue,
and
from the bank.^ cashier may give a certificate of deposit which binds, though untrue.^ But a representation by an agent of a corporation, such representation being not only without authority, but not within the range of his duties, does not bind his principal.^ The rule above stated applies generally to fraudulent representations by agents.* 134. It must appear, however, from the document itself, that it was meant to bind the corporation. Thus a Document "st ^^ deed bv the treasurer of a corporation, acknowledged " duly exeto be his "free act and deed, and executed under cutedto his "hand and seal," has been held to be his deed, and not that of the corporation.'' And a statement of oflicial position is mere surplusage, if the party signing the deed speaks in his own name.^ On the other hand, where the party signing the document obviously means to do so in his capacity as agent, mere formal variances will be disregarded, and the corporation will be held bouud.^ Parol evidence also will be admitted to show that the name signed, though not technically that of the corporation, was adopted by the coris
poration as
its
own.^
When
Commis-
a seal
is
required,
it
must be
Com. Bk.,
sioners
v.
L. R. 5 P. C. 394;
Franklin Bank
Infra, 269.
v.
Steward, 37 Me.
519.
*
Merchant's Bk.
604
;
Coloma
2
v.
Eaves, 92 U. S. 484
99 U. S. 676
1
; ; ;
Brinley
v.
Orleans
V.
r. Piatt,
Fogg
v.
to
same
effect,
;
Griffin,
Allen,
Fairfield
5 Ex. 173
Norton
v.
v.
Herron,
6
1 C.
&
P.
648
Freese
Bank
;
of
Sencerbox
^
McGrade,
Minn. 484.
Monroe
V.
Field,
2 Hill, N. Y. 445;
810 a.
v. Bank, 9 Barr, 28 Stewart Huntington Bk., 11 S. & R. 267 Carey v. Giles, 10 Ga. 9 Payne v. Bank, 6 Sm. & M. 24. ' Merchant's Bk. v. State Bank, 10 Wall. 604; Farmer's and Mech's Bk.
Spalding
Button
v. v.
361; Collins
Ins. Co., 17
V.
Barnes
V.
Cooke
Despatch Line of Packets v. BelMelledge v. Co., 12 N. H. 205 Iron Co., 5 Cush. 173; Pease v. Pease, 35 Conn. 131. 8 Melledge v. Iron Co., 5 Cush. 173. In Minot v. Curtis, 7 Mass. 444, the
^
lamy
VOL.
I.11
161
135.]
CONTRACTS.
is
[CHAP. VII.
used.^
As
is else-
where shown, corporate action, when on its face adequate and conformable to the charter, will be presumed to" have
been regular.*
135.
banking corporabanking, cannot, do acTwihL without specific additional powers from the soverr^^t"^^ eign, bind itself by contracts of common carriage nor can a manufacturing company without such powers go into the mining business. The corporation, in other words, cannot be bound to any act not appertaining to the proper
within
chartered limits.
tion, for instance, chartered to
it
When
all
corporation
tracts
is
con-
which are not incidental to such purpose are invalid. The test is not judiciousness. Such contracts may, to a dispassionate and intelligent observer, appear wise. The test is,
is
If not,
it
is
on
would be valid.' "A corporation," so is the rule stated by Gray, C. J., in the Supreme Court of Massachusetts in 1881,^ " has power to do
face invalid
;*
while otherwise
it
it is
authorized by
its
act of incorpora-
and no
other.
by the govern-
2 How. 424; Old Col. R. R. v. Evans, 6 Gray, 38 and cases cited infra.
;
names
infra,
>
as well as individuals."
Colchester
v.
Lowten,
r.
Yes.
&
B.
810a.
V.
;
Horn
;
11 Allen, 326
567
Koehler
Johns. 422
65
;
Curtis
Leavitt, 15 N. Y.
;
Infra, 141
Wh. on
B. 397
;
Ev.
,
Hood
v.
v.
VanStew-
>
ef se^.
V.
R. R., 4 E.
V.
&
v.
wickle
art's
v.
Appeal, 56 Penn.
111.
413
Galena
Mass.
R. R.
E. C. R. R., 11 C. B.
Co.
Corwith, 48
*
423.
r.
Ashbury
Riche, L. R. 7 H. L.
Glass
Ill
Mass.
315;
Ossipee
;
117 Macgregor r. R. R., 18 Q. B. 618 Prince of Wales Co. v. Harding, E. B. & E. 183; Mulliner v. R. R., L. R. 11
;
Man. Co. v. Canney, 54 N. H. 295 Hood r. R. R., 22 Conn. 1 Thompson v. Lambert, 44 Iowa, 239 Cent. R. R.
;
;
v.
Ch. D. 611
R.
v.
Reed, L. R. 5 Q. B.
Co.
v.
Davis
v.
R. R., infra,
137.
D. 488
White Valley
Vallette,
162
CHAP. VIT.]
tnent, nor
tracts It
is
CORPORATIONS.
[ 135.
by the stockholders, as authorized to make conwhich are beyond the purposes and scope of its charter.
all
charter
exceeds
its
may
the
sub-
its
who have
stock
may
avoid any contract made by the corIf it makes a contract its powers.
its
charter,
and
the contract
will sustain
no
cor-
Thus a
company under-
independent line of steamers to a foreign port,^ or dealing with real estate on speculation.^ " That which the crown has
not granted by express unambiguous terras, the subject has
'
In no species of
monopoly
is
granted."*
In England
franchises
it
is
it
employ
cifically
its
and property
spe-
and
for
v.
;
65
v.
Clay Co., L.
1 Dr.
& Sm.
v.
154
Commia.
1.
v,
Horsey's case, L. R. 5
v.
Holmes
Newcastle Abat;
Colman
R. R., 10 Beav.
v.
toir Co., L.
R. 1 Ch. D. 682
v.
Ashbury
Carington
;
Wycombe,
ed. 587.
L. R. 3 Ch.
R. R. Carriage Co.
L. 653
;
Riche, L. R. 7 H.
377
*
Leake,
2(1
Hope
v.
;
Financial Society, L.
Brown's Leg. Max. 607, citing Feather v. R., 6 B. & C. 283 The Rebeckah, 1 Rob. 227.
;
R. 4 Ch. D. 327
cial
Coal Co. in
v.
re,
White
etc.,
R. R., 1 H.
in re,
Southall
V.
R. R.
&
163
135.]
its
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VII.
property,^
and
to
paper,
if it
be authorized to do trading business.^ It is, however, conceded in England that the acts of a corporation within its
chartered sphere are to be considered as prima facie authorized
;
presumption is liberally applied to whatever may be regarded as conducive to the protection of the interests the corporation was chartered to promote. If it is acting appa-
and
this
its
creation, the
burden
to
is
on
it,
should
it
its acts,
show that
Leake,
Clipper Co.
v.
purpose cannot devote any part of its funds to objects unauthorized by the
terms
of
its
in re, L.
R. 6 Ch. 83
incorporation,
however
Jacob, L. R. 1 C. P. 513
St. Co. in re, L. R.
may
ap-
Anglo Danubian
;
20
pear to be."
And when
the legislature
D. 470.
2
on a particular
East Ind. Co., 5 B.
in
Murray
&
Aid. 204.
Infra, 137.
Taylor
it is
v.
R. R., L. R. 2 Ex.
Lord
etc.,
Cranworth,
V.
Shrewsbury,
356.
And
laid
down "
it
that
if,
on
be
N. W. R. R., 6 H. L. 135, as adopted by Mr. Pollock (Wald's ed. ^^ Prima facie corporate 104), said: bodies are bound by all contracts under
R. R.
their
appears
to
common
seal.
When
the legisit
gives
of
law
or
of
body prima facie an absolute But this prima right of contracting. facie right does not exist in any case when the contract is one which, from the nature and object of the incorporation, the corporate body is expressly or impliedly prohibited from making
;
bound
to treat a contract
and therefore void." Blackburn in Riche v. Ashbury R. R. Car. adopted in AshCo., L. R. 9 Ex. 262 bury R. R. Car. Co. v. Riche, L. R. 7
;
such a contract
is
said to be ultra
vires.
its
r.
And
cases, is
whether there
is
anything on
Brown,
Wend.
590.
ultra vires
The expressions
vires are
preferred
more
correct in
be enforced."
In East. Co. R. R.
L. C.
legal" or
v.
"legal."
Ashbury R. R.
266
;
Lindley, op.
cit.
Pollock, 3d
must now be considered as a well-settled doctrine that a company incorporated by act of parliament for a special
ed. 131.
"As
164
CHAP. VII.]
136. In the
CORPORATIONS.
[ 136.
prohibiting laws impairing the obligation of contracts, corporations, unless the power of amending them be reserved in the charter,
^.
stitutional provision
^ractice^^^
J t^is
an immunity from legislative control not enjoyed by them in England and in view of the fact that charters convey such high prerogatives, we would suppose that they would be subjected to a construction at least as strict as that placed on charters in England. Such, no doubt, is the rule with us in all cases involving a contest between the state granting the charter, and the corporation chartered.^ Contentions, however, as to chartered limits arise generally between the corporation itself and third parties; and in this relation the tendency of our decisions, so far at least as concerns bona fide purchasers without notice, has been to allow corporate action a wider range than in England. This may be attributed to several causes. In England, in the
possess
;
country.
first place,
cautious and
deeds of
powers of attorney, convejnng only the In this country, on the other hand, private charters are usually drawn by the representatives of the corporation to be chartered, and are often passed in the terms which these representatives propose.
authority they specifically describe.
These comprehensive charters create a public sentiment in acall corporations are supposed to possess
them by the and such implied are necessary to enable them
their
Bank
R. Co.
Co.
v.
v.
powers as to perform
Fertilizer
N. Y. 599
v.
prescribed
v.
v.
duties.
Schuyler, 34
id.
30
Railway
;
Company
;
Hyde Park, 97
Lalng, 12Beav.
v.
Stace
&
U. S. 659
;
Salomons
Hawkes,
Worth's case, L. R. 4 Ch. 685, note." Woods, J., Scoville v. Thayer, Sup. Ct.
U.
'
H. L. Cas. 348.
S. 1882.
"And
poration
it
is
See Morawetz
v.
has
no
its
implied
its
power
to
People
1^3.
capital as
all
charter,
and that
165
136.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. VII.
it is notorious that some possess. That a railroad company, for instance, should be supposed to have power to endorse commercial paper is natural in a community in which there are many such companies which have and when such power is this power expressly given to them largely exercised by corporations of this class, it is natural
;
that
it
reason
should be supposed to belong to all others. A second is, that in this country, charters are now largely
power
In most
among
certain requisites
do banking business may do so by complying with and the artificial persons coming up to do business under these statutes are entitled to do this business as
;
England, when
it is
whole existence, to be
no state shall impair the obligation of contracts, a corporation once chartered is an independent power. In the fourth place, from the very fact of the multitudes of corporations by which the business of the country is conducted, great injury would
if
corporations should
For
these and
other reasons, our courts, with but few exceptions, have held
that business corporations are entitled to exercise whatever
would be exercised by natural persons doing kind under general powers of attorney. of business the same If an agent, under a general power of attorney, can issue negotiable paper, or can pledge assets, or can take or grant And if a corporation exceeds its leases, so can a corporation. powers, it can only be called to account in two ways. The first is by injunction by its members, which will presently be
incidental powers
166
CHAP. VII.]
noticed.
CORPORATIONS.
[ 137.
by proceedings of ouster and dissoluSo far as concerns bona fide purchasers, its contracts within the above limits are legal, even though at the first view ultra vires, and it is estopped from setting up their illegality.^ Any contract, however, by such a corporation, designed to pervert the trust of which it is the agent, and of
is
The second
its
is
designed
transparent,
is
is
illegal.*
An
it
important distinction
to be noticed
between
between""
usurpation
'of power
and misuse
"the exercise by a corporation of a power not conof power. r n lerred upon it, varying from the objects ol its creation as declared in the law of its organization, of which all persons dealing with it are bound to take notice; and the abuse of a general power, or the failure to comply with pre1
'
or failure
is
not
known
not
so
bound
bound.*
'
b}''
its
If a
;
Matthews, 98
Co.
v.
and
U.
621
Whitney Arms
;
Bar-
officers
its
low, 63 N. Y. 62
Oil Creek R. R. v^
St.
account in bank,
that these officers
it
will be
presumed
160;
Reno Real Est. Co., 91 Penn. St. 367 Hays r. Gallon, 29 Ohio St. 330 State Board of Agr. v. R. R,, 47
;
Ind.
v.
Thomas
v.
R. R., 101 U. S. 71
Gray, C.
J.,
R. R., S. C.
Bissell V. R. R.,
22 N. Y. 285
Canal Co., 22 N. J.
Mass. 1881.
*
Coleman
V.
v.
R. R., 10 Beav. 1
Bag-
may shaw
Morawetz on Corp. 31. In Mahoney Mining Co. v. Bank, Sup. Ct. U. S. 1882 (21 Am. Law Reg. 101), it was held that, where a mining corporation, by its charter, had power to raise
Riche, L. R. 7 H. L. 653,
money
for
use in
its
corporate business,
and L. R. 9 Ex. 224, the objects for which a company, registered under the
167
137]
is
CONTRACTS.
is
[chap. VII.
do
association to be,
to
railway plant,
rolling stock
;
to carry
on the business
of mechanical engineers
and general
work,
as or
sell
contractors
to purchase, lease,
and
sell
buildings
to
purchase and
coal,
sell,
merchants,
timber,
metals,
buy and
any such materials on commission or as The directors agreed to puragents.' chase a concession for making a railway in a foreign country, and afterwards (on account of difficulties existing by the law of the country) agreed to assign the concession to an association formed there, which was to supply
the materials for the construction of
the railway, and to receive periodical
when
by act of parliament for a particular purpose, is limited, as to all its powers, by the purposes of its
tion, created
all
other companies,
appear
to
me
to be statu-
company upon
this agreement,
it
was
vires.
dum. The object and policy of those The judges below were divided upon provisions of the statute which prethe question whether it had been rati- scribe the conditions to be expressed in the memorandum, and make these fied by the stockholders so as to bind the company. But in the House of conditions (except in certain points) Lords it was unanimously held, by Lord unalterable, would be liable to be deChancellor Cairns and Lords Chelms- feated if a contract under the common seal, which on the face of it transford, Hatherley, O'Hagen, and Selborne, that the contract was not within
gresses the fundamental law, were not
memorandum
ratified,
of asso-
nllra vires of
the
and was,
therefore, void
and
ac-
company,
trators.
as well as
its
incapable of being
and the
delegated to
It
directors or adminis-
Lord
Selborne said
is
'
The
brought upon a contract, not directly or indirectly to execute any works, but
to
find capital
for
a foreign railway
was so held in the case of East Anglian Railway Company, and in other cases upon railway acts, which cases were approved by this house in Hawkes' case and I am unable to see
;
168
CHAP.
It
is
VII.]
CORPORATIONS.
[ 137.
tion as
any
same conflict of opinion exists on this queson the parallel question of the bestowal of
garded as incidental to, or consequential upon, those things which the legislature has authorized, ought not (unless expressly prohibited) to be held,
way
acts, and statutory corporations under the joint stock companies' act of 1862.' 'I think that contracts for objects and purposes foreign to, or in-
by
judicial
'
construction,
to
be
ulti-a
vires,
memorandum
seems to
of
ultra vires, as
And
to
it
me
far
Co.
more accurate
tracts rests
of such companies to
make such
con-
on an original limitation and circumscription of their powers by the law, and for the purposes of their incorporation, than that it depends upon some express or implied prohibition, making acts unlawful which otherwise they would have had a legal capacity to do.
all
is
an
it
taken to be prohibited
and,
Company, created by
for
act of parliament
This being
so, it
necessarily
me
to
have
railway,
purpose
'
;'
although
he also
agreed
any
ratification
and may reasonably and properly be done under the main purpose, though
to,
difference
when
they
481.
may
it,
poration
its
is
App. Cas.
corjiorate name, upon a contract under the common seal. No agreement of shareholders can make that a contract of the corporation, which the law says cannot and shall not be so.' L. R. 7 H. L. 693-695. " In the very recent case of Attorney General v. Great Eastern Ry., 5 App. Cas. 473, 478, in which the contract
in question
nificant,
Ry.
when a
was held
to
be expressly
&
S. 588,
610
Taylor
v.
Chi-
this doc-
Riche
V.
fairly
be re-
"The same
have been
169
137.J
political
CONTRACTS.
[chap. vii.
On
powers under the Constitution of the United States. may be taken that the
with the railroads, and thereby diverted
their capital from the objects contem-
clearly and positively enunciated in two unanimous judgments of the supreme court of the United States.
"In Pearce
How. 441, two
tinct,
r.
Madison,
etc. Ry., 21
to perils for
corporations, created
by
sanction.
Now
though connecting, lines of railroad in that state, were consolidated by agreement, and conducted the business of both lines under a common board of management, which gave notes in the name of the consolidated company in payment for a steamboat, which was to be employed on the Ohio river to run in connection with the
railroads.
upon
their authority
by the
powers
act of in-
corporation.
Their
are
con-
to receive
and
intelligent
the public have an interest that neither the managers nor stockholders of the
corporation shall transcend their authority.'
between the corporations was legally dissolved. It was held, that an action brought by an indorsee against the two corporations upon the notes could not be mainboat, this relation
Eastern Counties
v.
Eastern
v,
Dover,
:
'
It
tained.
" Mr. Justice Campbell, in delivering judgment, said The rights, duties, and obligations of the defendants are
: '
and has been converted to their use, they are responsible. It is enough to
say, in reply to this, that the plaintiff
was not the owner of the boat, nor does he claim under an assignment of the
owner's interest.
His suit
is
to
instituted
;
on the notes, as an indorsee and the only question is. Had the corporation
the capacity to
make
the contract, in
between the cities which are named in the acts of incorporation. There was no authority of law to consolidate these corporations, and to place both under the same management, or to subject the capital of the one to answer for the liabilities of the other and so the courts of Indiana have determined. But, in addition to that act of illegality, the managers
ration a railroad
;
The opinion of the court is, was a departure from the business of the corporation, and that their
cuted
?
that
it
officers
the defendants.
be observed that in that case there was nouggestion that the plaintiff took the notes sued on without
notice of the illegality in the original
consideration,
of
these
corporations
established
Butler,
14 Wall. 282;
Macon
v.
170
CHAP.
VII.]
CORPORATIONS.
[ 137.
grant of a franchise, or of a political prerogative, is to be construed as giving only the powers the words themselves convey.
Shores, 97 U. S. 272
V.
Monument Bank
S.
Globe "Works, 101 Mass. 57. "In Thomas v. Railroad Co., 101 U. 71, a railroad corporation, without
its
remains that the charter measure of its powers, and that the enumeration of these powers implies the exclusion of
expressed,
it
of a corporation is the
sums
The court, then, after some of the English cases above cited, and particularly to the decision of the House of Lords in Ashbury Railway Carriage & Iron Co. v.
all
others.'
referring to
during the term, reserving the right at any time to terminate the contract and
retake possession of the road, paying
Riche, as establishing
'
such damages
for
made
valid by
by arbitration.
At the end of
five
years
nor can it by any partial performance become the foundation of a right of action,' expressed the opinion
holders
;
It
'
is
unexpired term. The opinion was delivered by Mr. Justice Miller. "It was argued by counsel for the
plaintiflfs
based upon sound principle.' " The court further said There
is
in
that case,
that though
not
mak-
a corporate
coming exactly within the doctrine of ultra vires as we have just discussed it,
body may (as at common law) do any act which is not either expressly or impliedly prohibited by its charter although where the act is unauthorized by the charter, a stockholder may enjoin
its
shows very clearly that the railroad company was without the power to make such a contract. That principle is that, where a corporation, like a railroad company, has granted to it by
charter a franchise intended in large measure to be exercised for the public
good, the due performance
of
execution
and the
forfeit
: '
state
may,
the charter.'
proposition.
to
those
doctrine
be in this country,
public grant, any contract which disables the corporation from performing
functions,
though there may be exceptional cases and some authorities to the contrary, that the powers of corporations organized under legislative statutes are such, and such only, as those statutes confer. Conceding the rule applicable
to all statutes, that
those
which
undertakes,
without
and powers
what
is
fairly imis
imposes,
plied
is
as
much
granted as what
with the
and
is
void as against
171
137.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VII.
On the other side, the equally extreme position is taken, that a grant of a franchise, or of a political prerogative, involves a
public
i)olicy.'
This proposition
See Richardson
;
is
sup-
1839. Spauld-
many
others.
v.
Sibley,
Locks and Canals r. Nashua, etc. R. Middlesex Railroad Co., 104 Mass. 1
;
" As was observed in Morville v. American Tract Society, 123 Mass. 129, The power to make all such con136, tracts as are necessary and usual in
'
V.
But that the decision was not intended to be put exclusively upon this ground, is manifest from the terms in which it was introduced, as well as from those in which the general doctrine has been already laid down, and from the concluding sentence of the opinion.
created, is always
is
no positive
re-
Thus a
cor-
may
let or
it
lawfully held by
business.
"The judgments
courts,
of
the
English
Brown
;
v.
Supreme Court of the United States, to which we have referred, do but affii-m and apply principles long ago declared by this court.
and
of the
Winnisimmet
dee
pose
glass'
V.
Hen-
A
pur-
corporation established
of
for the
"More than
corporations
is
fifty
may
The power
of
ware from a
its
keep up
they are created. In this commonwealth the source and origin of such
and supply its customers while its works are being put in repair. Lyndeborough Glass Co. v. Massachustock
setts Glass Co., Ill Mass. 315.
own
cor-
power
cept
is
no authority ex-
what
is
dams, and to hold real estate, may, when the water power has been
tion of
No
its
lands,
large
and
to the subjects
on which
it is
intended
Dupee
v.
Boston
Water Power
port as a
Co.,
of the corporators.'
Salem Milldam
r.
railroad corporation
Ropes, 6 Pick. 23, 32. And the importance, for the security of the rights
of each stockholder, of
common
its
V.
a steady ad'
own
line.
Hill
Manu-
corpora-
facturing Co.
can only exercise their powers over their respective members for the accomplishment of limited and welldefined objects,'
Mass. 122
Railway Co.
McCarthy,
96 U. S. 258.
its liability for
And
it
cannot dispute
172
CHAP. VII.]
CORPORATIONS.
[ 137.
grant of whatever powers *the grantee may find it expedient to invoke to utilize such franchise or prerogative. An inter-
and towards
the one side,
this
it is
On
and use under a on the ground that the lease is void. McCluer v. Manchester, etc. Ry., 13 Gray, 124." In Davis v. R. R. above cited, the action was brought upon the following
in actual possession
lease,
sengers over
are
its
road.
That parties
bound
Lewiston Savings
Inst.,
68 Me. 43.
"Where
the
sum
of
Organ Company in the sum of $5000, and by other corporations, partnerships, and individuals in various sums, amounting in all to more than $200,000. "Boston, January 23, 1872. We, the undersigned subscribers, hereby
agree, each with the
good
value,
faith, before
may
or
was
:
exceeded
position in
other, that
we
this defendant
any
deficiency
debts to
its
to incur
to issue
may
arise
towards defraying the expenses of the World's Peace Jubilee and International Musical Festival, to be held in
tiff,
suit,
may
recover
upon
it
although in
this
Boston,
of
such
proportions
as
the
prescribed by
its articles
of association.
amounts
affixed to
Stoney
635
;
v.
Am.
two hundred thousand dollars, and that no expenditure be incurred except under the authority of the executive committee, which committee shall represent the subscribers, and consist of ten or more persons, who may be chosen by the first six subscribers hereto." It was held that this contract, so far as concerns the Old Colony Railroad Company, was neither a necessary nor appropriate means of carrying on its business, and was ultra vires, and could not bind it by reason of benefit to be
scribed shall reach the
of
sum
111. 48 Globe Works, 101 Mass. 57 Bissell v. Mich. Sou., Lexington etc., R. Co., 22 N. Y. 289
Mclntire
Preston, 10
v.
V.
14 Wall. 282 Moran v. Aug. & Miami Co., 2 Black, 722 Ames Corp, (10th ed,) 268 Field on Corp. 303 Green's Brice's Ultra Vires, Although in such a 273-74, 729.
Butler,
;
;
its
would be hence
in
sense
ultra vires,
the result."
173
138.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. VII.
absurd to say that the grantee of S, franchise or power cannot perform acts without which the grant would be inoperative.
On
the other side, it would be equally absurd to say that a grant for a special purpose conveys to the grantee unlimited power to do whatever he chooses in working the grant. The
proper view
sary to
its
is, that a grant conveys all powers which in the ordinary acceptation of the particular line of business are neces-
due
exercise.^
But
is
may, how-
exercise, it
is
otherwise
when
is
to be exercised.
Such a specification
^x-
though a charter requires that the contracts of a corporation should be executed by it in a particular form, the corporation is bound by contracts executed by it in another form, in all cases in which it has enjoyed the benefit of such contracts, and when no exception was taken at the time by the parties
interested.*
138.
Corpora-
corporation
is
is
entitled to
it
this
ueccssary to enable
w^^^
moneyapd
Issue
negotiable paper.
cludes the riffht to ffive written acknowledgments o of debt.' If a Corporation is restricted by its char*
no
v.
re,
L. R.
2 '
10 Eq. 312
Partridge
At. Gen. v.
;
Fay
v.
Noble, 12 Cash. 1
Infra,
674
Ashbury R. R.
;
v.
Badger, 25 Barb.
;
Riche, L. R, 7 H. L. 653
L. R. 5 Q. B. D. 488.
Clark
v.
v.
146 Nelson
v. Pit-
R. v. Reed,
Eaton, 26 N. Y. 410
;
Lucas
354;
Bank
Ohio,
of Chillicothe
Davis
r.
Chillicothe, 7
Bulkley f. Fishing Co., 2 Conn. 252; Bank of Northern Liberties v. Cresson, 12 S. & R. 306.
Raleigh, 75 N. C. 267;
R. R., 77 N. C. 289;
Spradley, 46 Ala. 98
Alabama
Ins.
174
CHAP. VII.]
ter
CORPORATIONS.
[ 138.
from issuing paper beyond a certain limit, it is not bound, unless by way of estoppel, for its issues beyond
such limit.^
But
Such a limitation does not preclude the corporation from borrowing money to carry on the ordinary business of the corporation.^ The right to borrow includes, unless there be a restriction, the right to mortgage.^ In England the right to
issue negotiable paper is limited
to those
corporations to
whose business the issue of such paper is an ordinary incident ;* and has been denied to mining com.panies,^ to gas companies, to cemetery companies,^ to waterworks companies,^ and to railway companies.^ According to Mr. Pollock, a corporation may be bound by negotiable paper issued by it in the following cases: 1. When the issuing of such paper is one of the objects for which the corporation is charis the case not only with banks, but with " financial companies generally."^'' 2. '' "When the instrument is accepted or made by an agent for the corporation whom its constitution empowers to accept bills, etc., on its behalf, either by express words or by necessary implication."^^ In this country it has been laid down that a power to borrow money implies a power
tered, as
money borrowed
111.
;'^
Co.
V.
V.
Bradley
Paddock, 80
aid,
cited,
263
;
Ballard, 55
ability of
Grat.
215
Morawetz on Corp.
document, see infra, 797. 1 Worcester Com. Exch. Co. in re, 3 De G. M. & G. 180. * German Mining Co. in re, 4 De G.
See
Bateman
v.
R. R., L. R. 1 C.
P. 499.
^
M. & G. 19 Cork, etc. R. R. in re, L. R. 4 Ch. 748 Norwich Yarn Co. in re, 22 Beav. 143. 3 Jones V. Guaranty Co., 101 U. S. 622; Pierce v. Emery, 32 N. H. 503; Richards v. R. R., 44 N. H. 127 CurNelson v. tis V. Leavitt, 15 N. Y. 9 Patent File Co. Eaton, 26 N. Y. 410
;
963.
'
& W.
831.
Broughton
v.
Waterworks, 3 B.
&
Aid. 1.
9
Bateman
v.
R. R., L. R. 1 C. P.
499.
'"
J.,
;
Shears
v.
Jacob, L. R. 1 C. P. 512
ex parte, L. R. 3 Ch. 758.
City
Bank
in re, L.
R. 6 Ch. 83
Shears
v.
Jacob,
L. R. 1 C. P.
513; Watt's App., 78 Penn. St. 370; Susquehanna Bridge Burt v. Co. V. Ins. Co., 3 Md. 305
;
560.
Aurora Soc.
o.
175
138.]
CONTRACTS.
rule
is
[chap. VII.
all
that corporations, in
is
cases in
which
promotive of the objects of their charter, may be held liable on such paper, either as maker, as drawer, or as endorser.^ Unless the corporation is precluded from exercising such a power, the execution, when undertaken, will be presumed to be regular.^ When a private corporation has 'prima facie power, either express or implied, to issue negotiable securities, such securities possess the ordithe issue of negotiable paper
nary incidents of negotiable paper; and the holder, acquiring good faith before maturity and for value, may recover even though in the particular case the power of the corporation was irregularly exercised.^ Manufacturing companies in
title in
1
Railroad Co.
;
v.
Howard, 7 Wall.
Magee
v.
Canal
said
392
State
;
C. 431 Patten
v.
Farmer's
Bk.
er's
V.
Bk.
Supreme Court
corporation or
Minnesota,
" the
its officers
exceeded the
its
chanic's Ass.
V.
White Lead
Co.,
35
contract
N. Y. 505
St. 59
;
Strauss
v.
v. Ins. Co., 5
Ohio
111.
would
Hardy
Merriweather, 14 Ind.
v.
203;
Goodrich
v.
Reynolds, 31
Co., 51
490; Preston
Mo. Lead
Mo.
43
Bacon v. Ins. Co., 31 Miss. 116. * London, etc., R. R. v. Fairclough, 2 Man. & G. 674 Lexington v. Butler, Great West. Tel. Co. 14 Wall. 282 Atlantic Bk. v. Merin re, 5 Bis. 363
; ; ; ;
true,
a corporation
is
a being
MonumenI.
Bank
;
v.
57;
Clarke
School Dist., 3 R.
no authority but such as is conferred upon it, expressly or by implication, by the law of its creation yet it may become legally bound to observe and perform contracts which it had not authority to enter into. The ends of
;
199
Brown
Ox-
justice
may
its
that the
Whether a municipal
ceeded
Mayor
v.
by
its
own
Ray, 19 Wall. 468. Field, Corp. 303 Green's Brice's Moran v. Miami Ultra Vires, 273-4 Co., 2 Black, 722; Lexington v. Butler, 14 Wal. 282 Narragansett Bk. v. Silk
; ; ;
fence of
its
they were
principle of estoppel
not to enlarge
;
the powers of
nor
does
it
282 Monument. Nat. Bk. r. Globe Works, 101 Mass. 57; Moss V. Averill, 10 N. Y. 449 Bissell V. Mich. South. R. R., 22 N. Y. 289 Mclntire v. Preston, 10 111. 48 Smith v.
Co., 3 Met. Mass.
;
disregard or violate
which have been expressly imposed upon it, or which exist in the absence of power conferred. Bradley v. Ballard, 55 111. 413 R. R. Co. v. McCar;
176
CHAP. VII.]
CORPORATIONS.
it is
[ 138.
power
;^
panies.^
" In one
J.,
thy, 96 U. S. 258.
profits.
defence sought to be
is,
made
to the note
it
that in giving
it
amount
lated.
appropriated
and in one only, does the plan proposed resemble a loan, and that is in the result to be attained. They are both expedients for raising money, but the method of accomplishing this result is of the essence of the power of the corporation. If its employment has
not explicit legal sanction,
it
which was the consideration of the note, and, having authority to issue
negotiable paper,
it
cannot be
made
available.
If
amply
and promise
It
of
all
creator
had endowed
it
sum named.
justice,
has come
as plain
with a right to make a lease, it could not accept such relief. Thomas v.
hands
and simple
And, although
it
has powei*
corporation
its
is,
had
It
note.
it
estopped."
merely
and thereby
Auerbach
1
v.
Mill Co., S. C.
Minn. 1881,
Authority to raise
does not imply
13 Rep. 51.
money by borrowing
v. v.
;
Monument. Bank
Mott
v.
;
101 Mass. 57
513
35
2
Banking Ass.
White Lead
N. Y. 505;
Railroad Co.
;
Oxford
v.
Iron Co.
however well adapted to be. Even in the prospectus issued by the president of the
of raising
it,
the end
it
may
defendant (Exhibit
I)
the
proposed
is
Howard, 7 Wall.
;
issue of
'
deferred bonds'
not in
as a loan,
and the
correctly stated to be
new
in
on Corp.
178.
v.
In McCalmont
Ct. Phil. 1881, 10
it
R. R., U. S. Cir.
Notes, 338,
in a charter
Weekly
borrow money does not include the power to issue irredeemable bonds ento
with great benefit to the companies and But we know that in to subscribers. Great Britain this system' is expressly authorized by statute, and hence it may be assumed that such legislation
'
to legalize a re-
VOL.
I.
12
merely to a contin-
Is
177
139.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VII.
139. The stockholders of a corporation may enjoin it from entering into operations foreign to the object for which it was
inference that, although
it
has been
is
plain.
Such corpo-
proved
Britain,
to
new' in this country behas been regarded as without necessary legislative authorization?" In Thomas v. R. R., ut supra, Miller, J., said: "We take the general doctrine to be in this country, though
it is
cause
it
ing of
money and
germane
to the
cessary
effect.'
to
carry
such
objects
into
there
some authorities
be exceptional cases and to the contrary, that the powers of corporations organized
may
' There being no objection, therefore, on the ground of want of power, is there anything in the form of the transaction
under legislative statutes are such, and such only, as those statutes confer. Conceding the rule applicable to all statutes, that what is fairly implied is as much granted as what is expressed,
it
We learn from
poration
these
all
company failed and passed into the hands of receivers that at the time of such failure it had a floating or unfunded debt of upward of $10,000,000 that a large amount of property, mainly stocks and bonds of great value, had been pledged to secure said debt and that said stocks and bonds were sub;
The question
Reading bonds came before the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, in March, 1882, and by a majority of four to three it was held that the corporation had power
to execute the bonds.
sales
at
a great
that the
of the majority of
holders
tracted
:^
are in no doubt as to the power
"
We
for which they proposed them $34,300,000 of deferred income bonds on which interest is to
such purpose,
to give
of the Philadelphia
road
Company
to issue the
deferred
income bonds' described in this bill. So far as the mere borrowing of money
is
and
up
to 6 per cent.,
and then
to
rank pari
concerned,
it is
common
company
It
'
for
exists
"
It will
by necessary implication.
As a gene-
holder
who advances
bond for $50, which is irredeemable, and which is not entitled to interest
until after 6 per cent, has been paid
by
stock.
"The
made
to
objections
this
that
have
been
may
be conceded.
scheme
are
twofold
178
CHAP. VII.]
chartered;^
CORPORATIONS.
[ 139.
Parties in-
and
it
is
at
corporation
and, second,
is
not a borrowing
money, but the issuing of a deferred which is beyond the power of the company. " It is sufficient to say in regard to
stock,
"It
is
urged, however,
is
that
this
transaction
not a borrowing of
money
pany
'
the
first
'
on the
is
pay-
actions involves
an obligation
to return
able only
the
sum
This
It is
is
Non
constat
narrow view
true
we
word
in the sense of
thing to this
class
of
bondholders.
The contingency which will entitle them to interest may never arise, and
is
Among
the definitions
:
given by
First,
'
There
is,
To
no contract for the payment It is of more than legal interest. settled law that where the promise to pay a sum above legal interest depends upon a contingency and not upon the happening of a certain event, the loan
therefore,
is
for,'
and, sec-
to take
;
own use
source
;
to
to
assume.'
not usurious.
;
Spain
v.
Hamilton, 1
We need
Wall. 604 Lloyd v. Scott, 4 Peters, 205. This point does not need elaboration.
with which the learned lexicographer adorns his text. While tlie borrowing of money is usually accompanied with
a contract for the return of the princi-
"The
second objection
is
equally
without merit.
or substance.
The bonds
in question
it is
not always
nor necessarily
so.
They
are certificates of
seal of
indebtedness
under the
the
company, with a
irredeemable
to
;
recital that
they are
that they are entitled no interest until after the common stock has received 6 per cent., and after that to come in pari passu with said common stock. They more nearly resemble a perpetual loan, with the
Interest indefinitely postponed.
which
for
is
paid
for
the use of
it.
$1000
one year,
it is
a borrowing of
The
1059
money. It is equally so if I contract at the same rate for the use of it for ten years. Is it any the less so when the contract is perpetual and the loan ir331
ii.
Thomas
;
v.
R. R., 101 U. S. 71
Salomons
v.
v.
Colman
R. R.,
Beman
v. Ruflford, 1
Sim.
CoUes V. City Directory Co., 18 N. Y. Sup. Ct. 397 Oil Creek Co. v. Trans. Co., 83 Penn. St. 160.
179
139.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VII.
of,
may
'^'***-
enjoin
objected to
its
inguUrT
Consummation.^
compelled to abandon acts which it has no right to do, but it may be compelled to do acts its charter requires.'* These functions it cannot surrender.^ When, also, funds are contributed by stockholders to a corporation, they have a right to insist that these funds shall not be diverted to an And even the unanimous consent of object utterly distinct.
the shareholders for the time being will not validate, as against
subsequent stockholders without notice, transactions utterly foreign to the object for which the company was chartered.*
But
it
it is
enough
if
be implied.'
And
If the application,
a stockholder,
is
no bar to
Company
are irredeemable.
demandable.
stockholders
any more than individuals are restricted in their moneyed transactions to the narrow meaning of the word borrow.' In its broader sense it implies a contract for the use of money. The terms of the contract are within
tions
'
Company may
unable
to see
not accept
money from
I it
its
as a perpetual loan,
am
how
it
could accept
as a gift."
officers
power
to issue
such paper,
re,
no legal objection
5 Biss.
Such contract implies the voluntary advance of a sum of money, repayment of which is not to be demanded, presumably for some benefit or advantage to the lender. Such transactions are common in England, and are not unknown in this
for
a perpetual loan.
L. R. 7 H. L.
653.
125.
71
Middlesex,
*
R. R.
r.
Boston R. R.,
referred
v.
to
in
Antillo,
4W.
&
S.
556,
and
;
in
Zoological Society,
38 Legal
Intelli-
116.
8 Pollock, tU supra, 107 Robson v. Dodds, L. R. 8 Eq. 301 Forrest v. R.
; ;
gencer, 403
and
am
informed that
180
CHAP.
VII.]
CORPORATIONS.
[ 139.
may have
is
acting on the suggestions of strangers or enemies to the company, or even has acquired his interest for the purpose of
instituting the suit."^
A court
ultra
and as to which no bona fide third party is interested,^ or which conflicts with limitations of the charter f but on application of a stockholder, or any other party interested, such a court will enjoin further proceeding on such a contract.^
R.,
R., 54
'
v.
R.
institute
and control a
suit in
which
Bloxam
In Pickering
own
is
" The special Wickens, V. C, said powers given either to the directors or to a majority by the statutes or other constituent documents of the association, however absolute in terms, are always to be construed as subject to a paramount and inherent restriction,
that they are to be exercised in subjection to the special purposes of the
equally
affair
This
is
a very different
managing
di-
holders,
has an interest.
tion,
original
bond
V.
of association."
Thomas
V.
v.
R. R., 101 U. S. 71
78 N. Y. 159
Philpot, 53 Ga.
through
its
managing
agents, in
Hitchcock
Galveston, 96 U. S. 341
Co.,
v.
Kent
625
Mining
it
is
re-
Mich. 99.
New
Schuyler, 34
acter,
and calling
extraordinary
N. Y. 34.
*
Whitney Arms
;
v.
Barlow, 63
;
powers of a court of equity. It is, therefore, always a question of equitable jurisprudence, and as such has, within
the last forty years, received the re-
Humph. 403. In Hawes V. Water Works Co., Sup. Ct. U. S. 1882, we have the following from
V.
Bridge Co., 8
consideration
of
the highest
2
courts of
England and
v.
v.
of this country.
Foss
Harbottle,
Hare Ch.
488; Mozley
;
Gray
v.
1035.
"But perhaps
are
181
140.]
CONTRACTS.
140. It has been held in
[chap. vir.
When
coi[]t'r3.ct is
England, as well as
either party to con-
executed,
in this
country, that,
when
same learned
Dougall
says,
'
V.
Gardiner, in 1875, L. R. 1
'I
is the proper party to bring the suit, they limit this right to cases where the
am
of opinion,' he
think
all
it is
of the utmost
breach of trust, or are proceeding ultra See March v. Eastern R. R. Co., vires.
importance in
this court
these controversies
is
well
known
in
v.
Copper Minsupra,
and
its
v.
Har bottle,
;
See, also,
Hersey
case
of
v.
Veazie, 24 Me. 9
should always be adhered to that is to say, that nothing connected with internal disputes between shareholders
is to be made the subject of a bill by some one shareholder on behalf of himself and others, unless there be some-
Samuel
v.
"The
supra,
is,
Dodge
v.
Woolsey,
And we
it is
thing
illegal, oppressive, or
fraudulent
ultra vires
we
unless
there
is
something
have mentioned.
well considered,
It
was manifestly
on the part of the company qua company, or on the part of the majority of
the company, so that they are not
fit
and the opinion is unusually long, discussing the jwint now under consideration, with a full
reference to the decisions then
persons to determine
litigation
it,
made
.
in
Because there
may
be a great
of
us
in-
it
tended
on this
be claims against
officers,
there
subject diflferent in
from that found in the cases in the English and in other American courts,
company may
legislation of con-
it
right to
it
make
is
no reason for any expansion of the rule in that case beyond its fair interpretation. We
has to determine whether it will make anything that is a wrong to the com-
pany a subject-matter
whether
it
of litigation, or
own name,
and
in
In this
itself is
country the cases outside of the federal courts are not numerous, and while
the appropriate
there
182
CHAP. VII.]
CORPORATIONS.
[ 140.
party benecaiiiK)t'^^*
he cannot afterwards, supposing there was no fraud, or notice to the other side, and supposing
tract,
the corporation which
is
^^P^ach
it.
beyond the
on their part, and this must be made apparent to the court. If time permits or has permitted, he must show, if he fails with the directors, that he has made an honest effort to obtain action
managers, in
connection
with
some
by the stockholders
as a body, in the
other party, or
among
themselves, or
And
the interests of
;
holders
tors, or
or
their
own
manner
itself,
de-
or of
;
he must show a case, if this is not done, where it could not be done, or it was not reasonable to require it. The efforts to induce such action as complainant desires on the part of the directors, and of the shareholders when that is necessary, and the cause of
failure in these efforts, should be stated
of shareholders
ille-
name
of
is
in violation
he complains, or that his shares have devolved on him since by operation of law, and that the suit is not a collusive one to confer on a court of the
United States jurisdiction in a case of
may arise
in which, to pre-
which
it
would be
but
should be verified by
as
affidavit.
which The
the foregoing
may
to
be neces-
He merely
except in case of
fire
or other
own name
litigation
and conduct a
great necessity,
to
which usually belongs to the he should show to the satisfaction of the court that he has exhausted all the means within his
corporation,
which the matter was formally laid no attempt to before them for action
He
must make an
effort,
earnest, not a simulated with the managing body of the corporation, to induce remedial action
but within
five
183
140.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VII.
the case to have been one 'prima fade within the corporate range, set up as a defence that the contract was ultra vires. In
all
cases in
is
must, before availing themselves of its benefits, attempt by injunction or similar immediate action, to prevent it from being carried into effect.^ Parties who could thus dispute its exercise candoubtful, parties desiring to contest
have received any substantial benefit it may have worked to them, dispute their liability to pay the consideration.^ Hence it has been ruled by the Supreme Court of the United States that, " where a corporation is incompetent by its charter to take a title to real estate, a conveyance to it is not void, but only voidable, and the sovereign
not, after they
And
it
made
with a corporation claiming to own the land, has received the full benefit of the contract, cannot set up that the contract was ultra vires.* What has here been declared with regard to executed contracts for the sale of real estate applies to all other executed contracts. When a corporation has received the benefit of an executed contract, it cannot throw up such contract unless it can put the other party in statu quo ; nor
filed.
There
is
no allegation of fraud
Ct.
554
Oil
Creek R. R. Co.
;
v.
Penns.
v.
v. Citi-
Darst
136
State Board
;
any kind.
Conceding appellant's
Miner's
465-8.
Ditch Co.
8
V.
which
it
forbids the
city in
the
manner
1.
has
Colman
v.
R. R., 10 Beav.
Matthews, 98 U. S. 621 Gold Min. Co. v. Bank, 96 U. S. 640; Cowell v. Springs Co., 100 U. S, 55 Christian Union v. Yount, 101 U.
; ;
Fountaine v. R. R., L. R. 5 Eq. 31(5; Royal Bank v. Turquand, 5 El. & B. 248 6 El. & B. 327 Taylor v.
2
; ;
S.
352
v.
Davey, 16
v.
Arms
;
Co. v. Bar-
Canney, 54 N. H. 295 Bradstreet v. Witte v. Fishing Co., 2 Conn. 260 Le Coutenex v, Buffalo, 33 N. Y. 333; Whitney Co. v. Barlow, reversing S. C. 38 Sup. 63 N. Y. 62
;
Weare, 27 Oh.
St.
v.
Bush-
nell, 11
Neb. 192.
184
CHAP. VII.]
COKPORATIONS.
[140.
there have been any laches on its part, ask for rescisHence a railway corporation is liable on its contract to carry passeng^ers on connecting lines, though the contract is
can
it, if
sion.^
On
when
a corporation
has performed
its
Thus, in a New York case, a company incorporated for the purpose of manufacturing fire-arms entered into a contract to
the locks,
manufacture railroad locks. As against the party receiving it was held that the corporation was entitled to
recover their price.
J.,
whether interposed for or against a corporation, when it would not advance justice, but, on the contrary, would accomplish a legal wrong."*
On
on a contract techni-
when
other party."
Infra,
285-6;
;
Zabriskle
v.
R.
Whitney Arms
McCarthy, 96 U.
V.
Co.
v.
Barlow, 63
R., 23
effect,
S.
258
Railway Rutland
124;
Bissell v. R. R., 22
N. Y. 258
R. R.
Chapman v. R. R., 6 Oh. St. 137 Newburg Co. v. Weare, 27 Oh. St. 343
Bradley
HI. 453
v.
Glass Co.
Bullard,
55
v,
111.
413
Chester 29 Vt. 96 Davey, 16 Mass. 94 Oil Creek R. R. v. Penn. Trans. Co., 83 Penn. St. 160 and other cases cited,
Proctor,
V.
;
;
Crowell, 65
Morawetz on Corp.
infra, 142.
5
103,
and
also
St.
Louis
v.
Gas-Light Co., 70
v.
Mo. 69
Ga. 54
2
Humphrey
;
Patron's Ass.,
v.
Green's Brice's
;
50 Iowa, 607
;
Hazlehurst
v,
R. R., 43
Jones, Rail-
Argenti
San Francisco, 16
road Securities,
78 Penn. St.
356
Cal. 255.
Galveston, 96 U. S. 341
;
Wh. on
370
Oil
Creek Co.
St.
v.
L. R. 3 Ex. 9
South Wales R. R.
;
v.
160; 330;
v.
St.
Redmond, 10
V.
C. B. N. S. 675
Wilby
V.
Gale, 83
111.
136
Thompson
;
R. R., 2 H. & N. 703; Bartle v. Wheeler, 49 N. H. 9 Burroughs v. R. R. 100 Mass. 26 Burtis v. R. R., 24 N. Y. 269 Root v. R. R., 55 N. Y.
; ; ;
Cozart
The
;
authorities
636
Buflfett v. R. R.,
40 N. Y. 168.
463
386.
found further noticed in arti9 Cent. L. J. L. Rev. 272 and particularly in 12 Cent. L. J.
Am.
Infra, 142.
185
141.J
141.
Corporation
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VII.
We
third
parties.
Wherever a natural person would be estopped by his prior action in assuming a particular character, or on permitting his agents to assume
persons.
such a character, a corporation would under similar circumstances be estopped from asserting a claim of which
the other contracting party had no notice.^
for
The argument
an estoppel
is
tion has
made
would be a gross
if
a corporation,
ing the proceeds of a contract, should be permitted, when called upon to pay the consideration for what it has enjoyed,
to set up a technical bar of ultra vires.^
tract
And
although a conit
may
way
without notice,
may bind
the corporation.*
statute, of
When,
all
is
it
is
and and not as to a matter of form, then parties making contracts with the corporation do so at their own risk.' But when the deviation
which
parties are required to take notice,
when the
deviation
as to a matter of substance,
Infra,
796
Wh. on
;
Ev. 1151
Pollock, 3d
Webb
;
v.
Heme
;
Bay,
1 L.
R.
Barwick v. Eng. Joint St. Co., L. R. 2 Exch. 259 Crook v. Seaford, L. R. 6 Ch. 551 Bank U. S. v.
5 Q. B. 642
;
motive Works, 103 U. S. 523 Jasper V. Ballon, 103 U. S. 745, see Big. on Est. 3d ed. 467 infra, 796.
; ;
'
infra,
796.
* Merchant Bank v. State Bank, 10 Wall. 604; Badger v. Bank, 26 Me. 428; Witte v. Fishing Co., 2 Conn. 260; Reynolds v. Kenyon, 43 Barb.
i'.
Episcopal Church, 1
Daggott, 97 Mass.
v.
Bird
57
v.
494
Monument. Bk.
; ;
Globe Works,
Stoddard v. Foundry Co., 34 Conn. 542 Bissell v. R. R., 22 N. Y. 258 Grape Sugar Co. i'. Small,
101 Mass.
;
585
Bank
of
Kentucky
111.
v.
;
Schuylkill
40 Md. 395
111.
SchaeflFer v.
Bonhara, 95
Bank
*
Paddock, 80 v. Johnson,
Davis
V.
Coldw. 88.
368
Home
v.
Ins. Co. v.
Sherwood,
R. R.
72 Mo. 461.
2
Hackett
Ottawa,
99 U. S. 86
186
CHAP. VII.]
is
CORPORATIONS.
[ 142.
which third
parties are
bound
to tuke notice, or
involves a mistaken subsumption of facts under law,^ then the corporation is bound notwithstandit
when
But this
its
is
not to be so extended as to
it
is
make
expressly
prohibited by
which are
undertaking them.^
however, as to
same
class,
So
The burden
is
on the party
a statute pre-
When, however,
A distinction, also,
, .
to be observed
between
is
.
suits
When
.
a corpo,
Digtin^tion
is
between
suits
attempt is to drag it into a sphere in against and which it cannot legally exist. When a corporation corpora-^ seeks to enforce a contract on which it has already **o"performed its part, it may go out of its sphere, but this is
ultra vires, the
'
Infra, 199.
Merchants' Bk.
v. v.
State Bk., 10
Ins. Co.,
Wall. 604;
Paige, 635
;
Stoney
11
Genesee Bk. v. Patchin Bk., 3 Kern. 309 Farmers' Bk. v. Butchers' Bk., 16 N. Y. 125 Bradley
; ;
V. V.
Ballard,
55
III.
413;
Thompson
Pollock, ut supra; Foster v. Essex Bank, 17 Mass. 479; Austin . Daniels, 4 Denio, 299 First Nat. Bk. v. Ocean Nat. Bk., 60 N. Y. 278; Ogdensburg R. R. V. Vt. R. R., 6 Thomp & C.488 4 Ilun, 268 see Brown v. Donnell, 49 Me. 421 Hood r. R. R., 22 Conn.
; ;
;
Parsons Hagerstown Bk. v. London Soc, 3 Grant (Penn.) 135. 5 Wh. on Ev. 1310 Grady's case, Express Co. v. 1 De G. J. & S. 488 Muzzey v. White, R. R., 99 U. S. 199 3 Greene, 290 Copp v. Lamb, 12 Me. 312; Hathaway v. Addison, 48 Me. 440 Cobleigh v. Young, 15 N. H.493 Bassett v. Porter, 10 Cush. 418 McFarlan v. Ins. Co., 4 Denio, 392 Yates Endres V. Van De Bogert, 56 N. Y. 526 Dana v. Bank, 4 V. Lloyd, 56 Ga. 547 Minn. 385 see Morris R. R. v. Sussex
of
Ky.
V.
Schuylkill Bk., 1
Sel.
Cas.
180
502.
*
Clark
V.
Badger
r.
Bank
187
142.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. vir.
for the purpose of turning into that sphere the fruits of its
own
action.
sued on by corporations have been sustained on the ground that the profits go to the lawful uses of the corporation, when, were the purpose to apply the funds of the corporation
to a purely extraneous object, the action of the corporation
would be held
'
ultra vires.^
instance,
v.
National
;
Bank
v.
S. 621
Old Colony R. R.
;
Matthews, 98 U. v. Evans, 6
v.
Evans, 6
Gray, 25
National
Bank
Porter, 125
Gray, 25, the defendant, being under contract to haul a large quantity of
gravel on to lauds bolonging to the
'
The cases on this point are thus examined by Gray, C. J., in Davis
Mass. 333.
V.
city of Boston,
made an agreement
plaintiflF
in
R. R., ut supra.
V.
"In Chester
94,
Glass
corporation,
Co.
tiflF,
Dewey, 16 Mass.
the plain-
by which
it
of land in Quincy,
and he agreed to
it
purpose of manufacturing glass, kept a shop near its factory, for the accommodation of its workmen, containing a
general assortment of such goods as
are usually kept in country stores
own
to
cars
road
toll
;
Boston, paying
the plaintiff
and the defendant was a carpenter, would purchase another tract for the living near, who made boxes and did same purpose, he would pay the cost other carpenter's work for the corpora- of the first tract and both tracts were tion. In an action for the price of purchased by the plaintiff. The objecgoods sold and delivered to him from tion that the corporation had no right the shop, the defendant objected that to trade in gravel or land was raised the plaintiff was not authorized by law by the defendant by way of defence to to keep such a shop and to sell goods a bill in equity by the corporation for in this manner and it was held that specific performance of his second agreethis objection could not avail him. ment, by accepting a deed of and payThe leading reason assigned was, The ing for the first tract. There can be
: ; '
deci-
overruling the
objection.
The
corporation,
by
all
its
ultra vires.
quired a
sibly, the
title to
This reason being decisive of the case, the further suggestion in the opinion,
*
good against
commonwealth
payment on
lature
ground
but the
be
legis-
may
by
revoked,
shall determine that it has been abused,' was, as has been since observed by the court, wholly obiter dictum. Whittenton Mills v. Upton, 10
when they
might be defeasible by the commonwealth. Banks v. Poitiaux, 3 Rand. 136 Leazure v. Hillegas, 7 S. & R. 313 Goundie v. Northampton Water Co., 7 Penn. St. 233 Silver Lake Bank Smith V. North, 4 Johns. Ch. 370, 383
the
title
; ; ;
;
Gray, 599.
V.
Sheeley,
188
CHAP. VII.]
CORPORATIONS.
[142
cannot be properly interposed when a corporation lends money loan,^ or when it sells goods and seeks
Wilder, 127 Mass.
1, 6.
Al-
" In
National Pemberton
Bank
v.
though it was said in the opinion, that the purchase of the land seemed to have been made as a mode of promoting
the purposes of the plaintifTs incorporation, the increasing of its business in
transportation
upon
its
railroad,
and
powers by purchasing a promissory note from an indorsee thereon did not prevent it from maintaining an action upon the note against the*
ceeded
its
chase and
sell
maker for the reasons, that the action was not brought upon the contract of purchase, or against any party to that contract, and that it was not necessary in this commonwealth that the plain;
The only authority referred to by the court was the treatise of Angell
Corporations, sees. 10, 11,
tiff
in
& Ames on
should have any title or interest in it. See also Attleborough National Bank
V.
151, 153, of
which the
is
section
most
directly applicable
section 153, in
v.
Matthews, 98
which
it
is
clearly laid
down
that a
charter, but
bank might purchase and hold real estate for certain enumerated purposes only, of which to secure money lent at the time of taking a mortgage, was not one, was held by
that a national
a majority of the court, in accordance with the opinion of Chancellor Kent,
in Silver
cited, not
The
obvious.
In the
Lake Bank
to
v.
North, above
agreement
to
make
void a mortgage
so lent, nor to
is
compel
In the
the application of
its
funds to a pur-
money
like decision
v.
and pay
for
Bank
the surest
and most
its
effectual
means
of replacing
"
corporation
may,
be
bound to refund
it
to a person,
from
whom
its
had
v.
a purpose unauthorized by
the value of that which
received
;
charter,
misapplied.
Rutland,
etc.
R. Co.
for,
378
Steam Nav. Co. v. Wead, 17 Barb. see Hays v. Gallon Co., 29 Oh. St. 330 Darst v. Gale, 83 111. 141 though see contra, Grand Lodge v. Waddill, 36
'
; ; ;
Ala. 313.
That
v.
with
usurious
contracts,
see Philadelphia
;
Loan Co.
Perkins
v.
Watkyns, 58 Tenn.
189
143.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VII.
On the other hand, when it is sued on a purely executory contract, in which no bona fide third party intervenes, and on which there is no estoppel, it is free to show
that the contract
was
ultra vires.
Municipal
charters
143. Municipal corporations occupy, so far as concerns the now before us, a distinctive position. questions '
They are not chartered to do business in the sense that a bank or a railroad is chartered to do business, stricter limitation. Their object is municipal government, and what this means is to be learned, not from business usage, but from the legislation of the state. Hence there is a tendency to limit the contracts of municipal corporations much more strictly than the contracts of banks, and of railroad and insurance corporations.^ But when a municipal corporation is authorized to perform certain business duties
it
e.
,,,
g.^
to issue bonds
of
officers in
is
otherwise
recited.*
when
is
mis-
And
bind
as to
it
range,
which
it
it
ton, 68
v.
R. R., 40
illegal contract.
White
;
N. H. 230.
Whitney
can Tract Society, 123 Mass. 129, 137 Cork, etc. Railway in re, L. R. 4 Ch.
63 N. Y. 62.
v.
Barlow, 63
But when the corporation has money or property, it cannot be held liable upon an agreement to share in, or to guaranty the pi'ofits of, an enterprise which is wholly without the scope of its corporate powers, upon the mere ground that conjectural or speculative benefits were believed by its officers as likely to result from the making of the agreement, and that the other party
748.
349
3
Thomas Mayer
;
v. v.
Gelpcke
v. v. v.
Dubuque,
Schenck,
1 5
Wall. 175
Wall. 784
296
Nat-
Supervisors
Lexington
Butler, 14 Wall.
;
Coloma
chez
"
V.
Eaves, 92 U. S. 484
V.
and
190
CHAP. VII.]
contract
is
CORPORATIONS.
technically ultra vires}
[ 143.
So
question of the due execution of a power, the rule is thus authoritatively stated " Where legislative authority has been
:
given to a municipality, or to
its oflScers,
payment, but only on some precedent condition, such as a popular vote favoring the subscription, and where it may be gathered from the legislative enactment that the officers of the municipality were invested with power to decide whether the condition precedent has been complied with, their recital that it has been, made in the bonds issued by them and held by a bona fide purchaser, is conclusive of the fact, and binding upon the municipality for the recital is itself a decision of the fact by the appointed tribunal. "^ And, as we have seen,' a corporation w'xW be estopped by its recitals of due execution.^
;
Ibid.
supra, 141
S.
Hitchcock
;
v.
city,
Galveston, 96 U.
341
East
St.
Louis
V.
Gas
Co.,
98
111.
415; and
The consideration paid was $10,000 of the bonds of the city. A bill was filed
to enforce the vendor's lien
for
on the land accumulated interest, which 2 Strong, J., Coloma v. Eaves, 92. amounted to about $5000, and also to U. S. 484 and see Commissioners v. fix the liability of the city of Eufaula BoUes, 94 U. S. 104 Rock Creek r. for principal and interest of the bonds. Strong, 96 U. S. 271 Davies v. Huide- The chancellor made the decree prayed 467
;
12 Cent. L.
J. 390.
the
koper, 98 U. S. 98
99 U. S. 86.
* Supra, 141.
*
Hackett
v.
Ottawa,
for,
for its
and ordered the sale of the lands payment, and the city appealed
In Eufaula
v,
McNab, Sup.
Ct. of
from this decree. It was held by the Supreme Court, that, as the land in question was not
purchased
for
" Sec.
24.
Be
it
may
"
if
power and authority to purand provide for the payment of the same, all such real estate and perhave
full
chased
chase,
sonal property as
may
the
use,
convenience, and
corporate
section,
ment
The council
under
the
above
the corporate
unauthorized
to
uses
not
shown
satisfactorily
have
been
191
143.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VII.
purchase.
mutually intended at the time of the 2 Dillon on Mun. Corp. 444; Weismer v. Douglass, 64 N. Y. 91. But the terms of the charter are imperative that such property must be required for the use, convenience, and improvement of the city.' Collateral advantages incidentally resulting in the promotion of the city's commercial
*
and
such as
may
powers into
suffi-
property shall be
germane to the governmental purpose for which such corporations may be organized. City Council v. Road Co., Mayor v. Yuille, 3 lb. 137 31 Ala. 76 Ins. Co. 1 Dillon on Mun. Corp. 55
; ;
V.
Ely, 5
Conn. 560.
All contracts,
laudable
ever useful
Loan
660
which are unaiithorized by these principles are ultra vires, and impose no legal liability upon the corporations which purport to be bound by them. This is conceded to be a most salutary principle, and one of
therefore,
cases
the right to
limited
by the right
no
must be and if in
tax
lawfully be
pay the
posed
for
legit-
make
it.'
it
is
"grows out of the nature of such instiand rests upon solid and reasonable grounds. The inhabitants are
the corporators
;
on Mun. Corp. 55 381, note 2. To such an extent is this true, that the law rather favors the application of
;
vires to
munici-
the
officers
are but
and counties which are invested with civil, police, and political functions and in case of any ambiguity
;
The
duties
and powers
of the officers
doubt arising out of terms used in the charter, they are strictly instructed against the existence of such doubtful
or
persons
may
panied with such abuse that it would soon end in the ruin of municipalities, These or be legislatively overthrown. considerations vindicate both the reasonableness and necessity of the rule
Mayor
Ray, 19 Wall. 468; Minturn v. Larue, 23 How. 435 1 Dillon on Mun. Corp. 55, note 1 2 Kent Com. 51,
;
;
bound only when its agents or officers, by whom it alone can act if it acts at all, keep
that the corporation
is
v.
Kempton, 13 Mass.
v.
In Buffalo R. R.
Falconer, 103 U.
within the
limits
of
the
chartered
1 Dillon
of EUicott,
381.
Muniobvious, can
the tax-
192
CHAP. VII.]
ally, the
CORPORATIONS.
[143.
upon the
and the purposes for which they might be applied. But the power to do this being but an incident of the principal power to make and issue the bonds, and being only intended to enable the
commissioners to prescribe the
time
would make the condition was complied with. This contract was held to be ultra vires, and without force and
structed, that they
subscription
when the
and manner of their issue and the uses to which they should be applied, would not properly arise, and could not be
effectively exercised, until the princi-
effect as
"We
Bradley,
missioners
J., "that the agreement made by the commissioners with the railroad company in June, 1872, was ultra vires.
the pre-
neither
nor
the
tax-
and making and issuing the bonds in payment thereof, when and as the petition of the taxing for the stock
make
payers directed
that
the
is,
was completed through Jamestown. By the act of 1870 they might also
stipulate
as
to
instalments
in
bonds company. They were not charged with any such duty they were not invested with any such power."
to the railroad
;
VOL.
1.^13
193
144.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VIII.
CHAPTER
Consent obtained by duress
tive, 144.
is
VIII.
DURESS.
inopera-
Nor
and "void-
151.
able," 145.
And
relations, 151a.
real
Must be causal relation between the duress and the consent, 152.
Person from
whom
immaterial, 153.
144.
Consent obtainedby
fnoperative
The
son
absolute or compulsive.
.
lorcccl
18
cooperating.
such cases
(korapulsive Gewalt)
is
is
speak of duress as either Absolute is where the per1^ purely passivc, his Will in no sense A contract apparently accepted in null and void.' Compulsive duress
.
where the
is
made
in strict
which case the obligation is law valid, though open to he impeached ope exceptionis.
is
counter obligation ex aequitate^ by which the contract may be assailed (1) by the actio quod metus causa, (2) by the exceptio
doli, (3)
by the
restitutio in
integrum.
But
this distinction ia
stoutly
by other jurists of the naturalistic school, it being argued by them that what is willed under compulsion is not to be regarded as willed.'
III.
II.
109.
ambagibus
si
mes
arbitrio liberari
De
jure belli
;
ac pacis,
cap.
XII. 7
'
nat. et gent.
cap.
c.
6,
10.
Thus Boehmer,
L.
cap. 1, 13, p.
his
ipsi praestarepossit."
779, writes:
194
CHAP. VIII.]
DURESS.
[ 144.
The German
fully
more
noticed, rejects
distinction, prescribing
that ex-
which a party is forced by phj'sicial whether the consent be given physical power are enumeillustrations of such or not. As rated the withdrawal of food, the application of torture, and such threats of bodily violence as are likely to overcome in the particular case a resisting will.^ In our own law the same position has been recognized, and it has been frequently ruled Striking that consent obtained by duress is inoperative.
power, have no binding
eflect^
and
if
rape, in
which
it is
threats of
In suits
that
agreed to by
him under
oit.
A. L. R. L. 4, 32, see L. 3, 1, D. quod metus causa, and other citations given by Koch, 75.
75
Wh.
Gundling, de efficientia metus tum in promissionihus liberarum gentium, tum etiam hominum privato114
;
850.
1
1 Bl.
Com. 131
;
Paxton
liams
Popham,
9 East, 421
Wil-
V.
Bayley, L. R. 1 H. L. 218;
;
Baker v. Morton, 12 Wal. 150 French WhiteV. Shoemaker, 14 Wal. ,314 field V. Longfellow, 13 Me. 146 Wat;
;
kins
V.
Lewis
v.
i\ v.
McMahon
,
Mcv.
rum, auxiliis contra metum Boehmer, de exceptione metus injusti Rudolph, de efi'ectu metus in paotis et contractibus Lennep, de eo quod metus causa gestum Tiennes, de eo quod metus causa gestum erit jure Romano. That a money consideration does not by itself cure a sale by duress, see Foshay v. Ferguson, 5 Hill, 154 Belote?;. Henderson, That duress must be spe5 Cold. 471.
; ; ;
Stouffer
v.
Latshaw,
ler,
Watts, 167
St.
Miller
Milv.
C.
to
68 Penn.
486;
;
Reynolds
Seiber
v. Price,
Davis
Gist
also,
v.
Frazier, 2 Litt.
Luster, 64 Mo. 43
Moore
v.
v.
Davis v. Rush, 30
111.
;
Money,
Gates
v.
Bane
v.
Detrick, 52
maybe
seq.;
730
et
Thurman
v.
Burt, 53 HI.
;
129
Hudson, 6 Exch. 340; Motz V. Mitchell, 91 Penn. St. 114; Schulz V. Culbertson, 49 Wis. 122.
Bosley
V.
Diller
On
Roman
literature
very
full.
Olivari v. Johnson, 37 Tex, 47 Menger, 39 Tex. 76. That the doctrines of equity and of law are in this respect the same, see Story, Eq. Jur.
195
145.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. VIII.
all
And
there
conif
tracts
any good ground to suspect oppression or imposition in such cases, they will set the contract aside.^ Circumstances, also, of extreme necessity and distress, though not accompanied by any direct restraint or duress, may, in like manner, so entirely overcome free agency as to justify the court in setting aside a contract made by a party, "on account
of "Some oppression, or fraudulent advantage, or imposition,
attendant upon
it."*
It is true
used by another to
may
be held back
from doing something he is about to do. Action thus forced a contract thus compelled is void. is without legal effect The great majority of the cases of duress, however, are those in which one man's will is influenced by fear to execute another man's purpose. Mere fear, it is true, will not have this Multitudinous contracts, induced by fear, have been effect. held valid; it is only when the fear is brought about by the threats of the party benefiting by the contract that invalidity may result.' Duress and freedom, as is justly remarked by
;
The
sj^eculative questions
12th ed.
239
;
Miller v. Miller, 62
r.
Windscheit, Pandekt.
Roin.
80.
Penn.
129.
St.
486
Harshaw
v.
Dobson, 64
III.
Recht,
iii.
114.
Savig-
N. C. 384; Thurman
Story,
Burt, 53
ny's
'
doctrine,
that
contracts
made
to be
regarded as
citing
Roy
r.
willed,"
and
and not
NichoUs
ton
V.
HinFalkner v.
;
much
acuteness by subsequent
critics.
See
German
von
320),
Schliemann,
;
Lehre
O'Brien, 2 B.
Spratley,
1
&
B. 214
Griffith
v.
v.
Zwange, 1861
Jahr. XIII.
1.
Czylark in Ihering's
Brinz (Pandkt.
Cox, 383;
;
Underbill
Horwood, 10 Ves. 219 Attorney Gen. V. Gothon, 2 Vern.497. Tosame effect, see Smith v. Monteith, 13 M. & W. Soule i'. Bonney 37 Me. 128 427 Tilley c. Damon, 11 Cush. 247.
; ,
;
essential to the
If in
See
infra, 169.
validity of a transaction.
such
196
CHAP. VIII.]
DURESS.
[ 145.
life;
in jurisprudence, in
such cases, to
we have
of
as
much
as if
he chose one of
contract.
*''
is
This view
in another^
accepted by the
is
Tamen
coactus volui"
we
the term applied in one striking passage; and are told, " Si patre cogente ducit uxorem, quam
.
. .
non duceret,
selves.
but at the same time they are assailable on grounds of public policy. For one man by coercion to wring a bargain from another is a wrong for
They
redress.
The party
injured
is
entitled
ground a suit brought on the contract thus extorted, or to recover back the thing extorted from him in a distinct suit. In our own law the same distinction is
either to defend on this
maintained.
man
whose hand is taken by another and placed by force on a paper no more assents to what the paper contains, than an idiot assents to a paper to which he attaches his mark. There can be no ratification because there is nothing to ratify. On the other hand, an assent not under physical, but under moral
compulsion, constitutes a contract prima facie valid. Xh,6 contract, it is true, may be repudiated by showing duress.*
But
until repudiated
it
for
andae influence
mains invalid.
But it cannot be claimed that in the determination of causa the will does not act. If it does
no matter under what compulsion, then the thing done is willed. It is
act,
was
'
consent
llaenced or coerced,
L. 21, 22, de vitu nupt. xxiii. 2.
tion.
1.97.
147.]
CONTRACTS.
is
[chap. VIII.
when the
146.
Party or
privies
may
all
contest
parties
may taking with notice are infected with the same disdefend on ability.* An indorser, who has indorsed a note in this ground
Bona fide
good faith, without knowledge that it was obtained indorsees. by duress, may set up the duress of the maker to a defence against the holder, who was participant in the duress.'
As
is
to be restricted to
the party on
whom
is no without notice.' 147. Fear, to be a defence, must be real and sincere: it must be metus non vanus sed Justus.^ This is the The danger case, so the Roman jurists declare, when danger to must be real and life, health, liberty, or honor is threatened.' Hence imminent from stand- the maxim: Excusat career, status, mors, verbera, point of party stuprum.* But it is not necessary that the danger threatened. should be real. It is enough if it honestly exist in
the estimation of the party yielding to the threat.' We must put ourselves in his place in order to determine whether the
threat was likely to have been operative
it is
;
and
admissible to
was known
Infra, 154.
Bowman
r. Hiller,
Huscombe
;
;
v.
189
McClintock
Fisher
v. v.
Cummins, 3 McL.
L. 6, D. iv. 2. L. 5, D. eod. L. 3, 1, in
f.
;
158
L. 4,
Spaulding
161.
8, eod. L. 4,
*
and 7
C. eod.
Griffith V.
To same
eftect see
Baker
v.
v.
Morton,
St.
Lowell, 49
Huscombe
;
v.
Standing, Cro.
.Jac.
Me. 429
486.
Miller
v.
Miller, 68
Penn.
187 Manlett v. Gibbs, 1 Brownl. 64 McClintock v. Cummins, 3 McL. 158 Robinson v. Gould, 11 Cush. 55
That
when
fear of
violence
set
up
as a defence to a
Thompson
;
v. Lockwood, 15 John. 256 Steuben Bk. Co. v. Matthewson, 5 Hill, 249 Bac. Ab. tit. Duress, A.
Wh.
Cr.
198
CHAP. VIII.]
ence.
DURESS.
[ 148.
to
from that of his own standpoint, and not from that of an ideal average.^ In the Roman law we have several rulings to the effect that in determining whether consent was extorted by fear, we are to take into consideration the physical condition, the sex, the mental and nervous condition, the education, and the peculiar social and
such influence
to be determined
"
Metus autem
Sed non
tinction
148.
suflicit
quolibet terrore
est."^
abductum
In our
own law
maintained.*
ened.
But there must be actual physical violence threatdeed, for instance, which is executed in ,, ,^ Must be
' '
^ ^
dread of purely imaginary dangers may be contested on the ground of insanity, but not on the
violence
ground of duress.* It must be " Metus non illatus, quem nullae minae praecessirint."^ In the Roman standards this view is repeatedly aflirmed. Thus it has been held no ground to invalidate a contract that it was induced by a desire to propitiate a party to whom a wrong had been done '^ nor by a desire to evade a prosecution for crime, the contract being fair, and there being no knowledge on the other side that this was the motive, and no attempt at extortion f nor, if there be no unfair influence exerted to extort an unjust bargain, will a contract be held invalid because the party sub-
sequently assailing
it
1
'^
Wh.
s
^
l. 14, 3
L. 9, 1, D. eod.
L. 3, D.
Koch,
ii.
107.
See Seymour
v.
(iv. 6).
3
Tapley
v.
Tap-
Brun-
ley, 10
i
Minn. 448.
No. 60.
t.
neraan, ad L.
58,
^
C. h.
Leyser, spec.
cap. 39
;
Williams
;
v. v.
8 9
l. 10, C. h.
Donellus, ut supra.
Bayley, L. R. 1 H. L. 218
Neilson
;
See L.
7,
pr. D.
McDonald, 6 Johns. Cas. 210 McCaudless V. Engle, 51 Penn. St. 309 Louden V. Blythe, 16 Penn. St. 532.
;
Leyser, L.
cap.
ii.
c.
m. 2
Boehraer, L. C.
8, p. 788.
199
148.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VIII.
same line may be cited numerous cases in our own courts in which it has been held that the mere fact that a promisee has obtained an ascendency over the promisor is in itself no ground for setting aside a promise.^ Nor do specific forebodings of disaster, not otherwise to be averted, have their effect, when such influence does not emanate from the promThus it has been held in New Jersey to be no defence isee. at common law to an action against a married woman on a note signed by her that she was led to sign it by her husband's saying that if she did not sign, he would commit suicide.^ Nor do threats of disaster even by the promisee necessarily Thus the fact that a sheriff was induced to give a avoid. special bond, not legally obligatory on him, by threats of the board of supervisors, that, unless he did, his oflice would be declared vacant, does not by itself avoid the bond.' In an
Infra, 158.
Wright
State
V.
V.
Remmington, 41 N.
J.
what is essential to constitute a defence upon the ground of duress to the facts
in this case,
it
L. 48.
Harney, 57 Miss. 863. In Wright v. Remmington, 41 N. J. " The common L. 53, Reed, J., said
they do not
rule laid
There was no
woman
by a rule which
much higher
imprisonment of the of imprisonment. There was no threatened injury to her person. The influence was that her
or
to injure her,
is
kill
himself.
It
true that
The de-
made by
fluence.
party must be subjected, as a ground for avoiding his contract, must rise to
"
It
may
what the law recognized as duress, the note or and the statement of tlie grounds of take the lift)
such avoidance appears in the earliest books of authority. Bac. Abr, Duress. "These grounds were stated in the
case
329,
of Sooy ads. State, 9 Vroom, and repetition of them here would The language in the be profitless.
under the influence of the terror exby such threats, it would have avoided the contract. But here the threats were made by the husband against his own life. The maker and the object of the threats were the same. Their execution was within his own power of volition. The wife knew that no h'lrm could come to him except by
cited
his
own
act.
is
200
CHAP. VIII.]
DURESS.
[ 148.
was
set
home
in
Maine, with arrest, the note being for a debt due by the maker's son. There was no menace of violence proved, however, and no pretence that process authorizing an arrest had been procured, nor was there any officer of the law in attendance. It was held that the note was not avoided on ground of duress.^ Nor do threats of a mere trespass amount to duress.^ It used to be held that a threat of burning a house would not avoid a contract it produced f but, as Mr. Chitty well observes, " it may be doubted whether a threat to commit so serious an injury would not be considered sufficient duress to avoid a contract obtained by means thereof."* When, however, imprisonment or great violence to the person is threatened, no matter what such violence may be, this avoids a contract obtained by such threat;' and even where imprisonment is lawful, duress may be constituted by the application of undue force, or by unjustifiable pressure, such as withholding of food.^ But the fact that a contract was made by a party in prison does not by itself avoid it unless undue force or improper influence was used to extort it.^
even in a public prison, constitutes duress, if the imprisonment be unlawful, see Smith v. Monteith, 13 M. & W. Soule v. Bonney, 37 Me. 128 427
;
" There
Tilley
v.
Damon,
;
11 Cush. 247.
self will
or conversely,
6 2 Inst. 482 Smith v. Monteith, 13 M. & W. 427, 438, 442 Williams v. Brown, 3 B. & P. 69 R. v. Southerton,
; ;
6 East,
140
Pole
v.
Harrobin, 9 East,
417.
7
Seymour
R.
V.
r.
69 Me. 376.
6
Znfra, lliO
Southerton,
Sessions, 6
East,
140
Am.
Eliz.
ed. 270
Bingham
< *
647
269
Crowell
v.
v.
Ch. on Cont. 11th Am. ed. 272. Taylor v. Jacques, Infra, 150
1
;
Bowker
hard
fer v.
v.
ShepStouf-
That imprisonment,
201
149.] 149.
Daress of goods does not invalidate promise.
CONTRACTS,
[chap. VIII.
Mere detention
pensated for
the goods.^
of goods,
it
where
made in order to release But whatever may be held to be the efficacy of a promise made under duress of goods, a party may recover back money paid under such duress.^ Hence, excessive charges made by a railroad or express company, and paid
as will invalidate a promise in order to obtain goods or avoid expulsion
from carriage,
unlaw-
may
be recovered back
;^
and
is
so generally
may money
fully detained.*
The
refusal, therefore,
of the charterer of a
made him,
duress,
As
a general rule,
Infra,
737-8;
;
Atlee
v.
Hill,
154; Briggs
289
Baldwin
r.
3 M.
& W.
;
642
Skeet
v.
v.
Stover
V.
v. St. Co.,
&
E. 983
Neilson
McDonald,
"In
Miller
v.
Ch. 201
James
v.
Roberts, 18 Ohio,
Miller,
548; Elston v. Chicago, 40 111. 514; Spaids V. Barrett, 57 111. 289; Macloon V. Smith, 49 Wis. 200 Hunt v. Bass, 2 Dev. Eq. 292 Collins v. Westbury, 2 Bay, 211 Lehman v. Shackel:
is
ford, 50 Ala.
437
;
Bingham
v.
Sessions,
him
Sm- & M. 13 see contra, Sasportas v. Jennings, 1 Bay, 470; Collins v. West6
over
it
to
may
Gates
French
U. S.
tu
V.
v.
Chase
tortion
V. Hudson, 6 Exch. 348 Shoemaker, 14 Wall. 314 Huckabee, 16 Wall. 414 Dwinel, 7 Greenl. 134 and
;
be in the nature of the common-law duress per minas, and enable the party
threatened with this pernicious control
to avoid a
As
to ex-
The
constraint
that
takes
by
away
Infra, 738
;
Garton
v.
R. R., 28
v. v.
i-.
L. J. Exch. 169
R. R.,
R. R.,
WainBing-
agency and destroys the power of withholding assent to a contract must be one that is imminent, and without immediate means of protection, and such as would operate on
free
wright, 2 Q. B. 837
Harmony
;
v.
the
mind
of a person of reasonable
Sterrett, J.
St.
ham, 12 N. Y.
*
99.
firmness."
chell, 91
Motz
v.
Mit-
742 et seq. Astley v. ReyWakefield v. Newnolds, 2 Str. 915 Chandler v. Sanger, ton, 6 Q. B. 676 114 Mass. 364; Foshay v. Ferguson, 5
Infra,
; ;
Penn.
117.
See on this
topic notes in 21
Am. Law
v.
Reg. 115.
;
McPherson
v.
Cox, 86 N. Y. 472
citing
Harmony
Bingham, 12 N. Y.
202
CHAP.
also,
VIII.]
DURESS.
[ 149.
a party
may
money
illegally extorted
Scholey
v.
Mumford, 60 N. Y. 98
64 N. Y. 121.
"The
master of the
was
as. coer-
do not find his evidence contradicted, that after the vessel was laden
I
and
an actual seizure or imprisonment would have been, and under the construction given
cive
difficult to resist as
and
applied to
him
and the agreement, that the captain resisted upon the ground that the
should be first allowed, as required at the port of delivery, hut the plaintiflf, as the captain testifies, said he would not clear the ship from
tare, etc.,
'
Williams, 87
111.
purchaser of
my
business, or al-
having contracted to sell the land to E., who demanded to see A.'s deed therefor, was compelled to pay
the original vendor more than was due
to get a deed to satisfy and the payment was made under protest. It was held to be a question of fact for the jury, whether the payment was made under a moral duress and if so, the excess above the real sum due might be recovered back in assumpsit under the common counts. See generally to same effect Miller v.
low
me
him, in order
E.,
'
compelled to sign
them.'
The
plaintifi'
and consignor of the goods. He, and no other person, could get clearance
for
S.
sive
4200), and that exclupower and the refusal to exercise it was constraint. To make the contract unlawful, it was not necessary
Rev. Stat.
Miller,
68 Penn.
111.
;
St.
;
Barrett, 57
289
47 Ind. 264
594
13.
;
Crawford
v.
Cato, 22 Ga.
have been arrested, or his goods or It is enough vessel seized or libelled. that the contracts which he then entered into were made to procure the liberation of the vessel, and their execution might well be imputed to illegal restraint. The learned court should, therefore, have charged as requested by the defendant's counsel, that if
'
Bingham
v.
Sessions, 6
Sm.
& M.
In Atlee
Backhouse, 3 M.
& W.
and a sum
for
money
is
paid,
simply
all,
if
by the captain, as to the circumstances under which the bill was executed, and that there was no way for him to
leave the port with the vessel or cargo
money
plaintiiF,
the
not on the can be recovered back ground of duress, because I think that the law is clear, although there is one case in Viner's Abridgment to the
refusal of the plaintiff to allow the vessel to leave the port until the bill
was The
1 Roll.
by reason
203
149.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VIII.
such contribution.^
officer
may
in this
Money illegally obtained by a public Way be recovered back, when paid under
;^
and
so of
money extorted
ille-
gally as toll f and so where illegal commissions are extorted by a refusal otherwise to surrender securities.* On the same
principle goods illegally exacted
by a
on summary
ciple
"
Nor is
the prinit
applies
equally well
when money
is
any other
when
of duress,
down
;
in
Shepherd's Touchstone
Collins V. Westbury, 2 Bay, 211 Harvey V. Olney, 42 111. 336; Alston v. Durant, 2 Strobh. 257. That threats
;
but the ground is that it is not a voluntary payment. If my goods have been wrongfully detained, and I pay money simply to obtain them again, that, being paid under a species
(p. 61)
of destruction
of goods
may
avoid a
v.
Fer-
Dew
V.
Parsons, 2 B.
&
Aid. 562
;
be recovered back but if, while my goods are in possession of another person, I make a binding agreement to pay a
of duress or constraint,
;
may
Ogden V. Maxwell, 3 Blatch. 319 Cunningham V. Munroe, 15 Gray, 471 Harmony v. Bingham, 12 N. Y. 99;
St.
St.
421 142
certain
sum
of
money, and
to receive
American St. Co. v. Young, 89 Penn. St. 186 Deal v. Martin, 1 Phila. 500 Tenbrook v. Phila.. 7 Phila. 105 Els; ;
one
Duress of goods also exists "where is compelled to submit to an illegal exaction in order to obtain them from
ton
V.
V.
Chicago, 40
III.
514
;
Sasportas
j;.
Quinnett
one who has them in possession, but refuses to surrender them unless the
exaction
is
ment
*
submitted to."
Cooley, J.,
;
Chase
to
Hackley
v.
see
Scholey
As
5
737.
Irving
liott V.
riott
v.
Horton, 28
Maxwell v, Griswold, 10 How, U. S. and cases cited infra, 738. That taxes paid under protest may thus be
242
;
Vt. 370
Wilcox
v.
v.
Howland, 23 Pick.
167; Cobb
204
CHAP. VIII.]
till
DURESS.
[ 149.
is submitted to;' or a creditor withholds his from a bankrupt.^ And the mere threat to employ colorable legal authority to compel payment of an unfounded claim is such duress as will support an action to recover back what is paid under it.^ But where the party threatens nothing which he has not a legal right to perform, there is no
the exaction
certificate
duress.*
When,
therefore, a
judgment
creditor threatens to
the levy the debtor executes and delivers a note for the
amount, with
But
it is
from the custody of the law f unless the execution or attachment be one which the plaintiff knows is without cause of action.^ l!^or is it duress of goods where a creditor accepts a less sum than his just demand, when due, being at the time
financially
straitened,
the
to avert
immediate insolvency; the fact that the debtor knew of his. creditor's circumstances, and availed himself of them by refusing to pay at all except at the reduced amount, not constituting duress of goods.* Where, also, 0., on selling a
house, before delivery of possession claimed the right to re-
move
certain fixtures,
chaser,
and on
O.'s
S.,
who was
the owner of
having executed charter parties of them to the United States, at a fixed monthly price, as long as they were kept in service, was informed, after they had been used for some time, that he must execute a new contract, at a reBates
238.
V.
Ins.
Cited
ley,
by Cooley,
supra,
J.,
Hackley
r.
Head-
ut
45 Mich. 569, 21
Am.
Smith V. Bromley, Doug. 670. 8 Beckwith v. Frisbie, 32 Vt. 559 Adams v. Reeves, 68 N. C. 134 Briggs Grim v. School ,v. Lewiston, 29 Me. 472 District, 57 Penn. St. 433 First Nat. Bank v. Watkins, 21 Mich. 483. * Skeate v. Beale, 11 Ad. & E. 983
2
;
Law
^
Mr. Elwell.
Liverpool Marine Co.
v.
Hunter, 1
L. R. 3 Ch. 479.
r
Chandler
v.
289.
Hackley
v.
Headley,
ut supra.
Preston
6
v.
Heysham
v.
Dettre, 89
Penn
St.
Wilcox
Rowland 23
Pick. 167.
506.
205
150.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VIII.
duced price. This S. declined to do, and demanded the barges, which was refused. He was informed that it was the intention of the quartermaster-general to retain possession without compensation, upon which he executed the new contract, stating that he did so under protest, compelled by financial necessity. The subsequent payments due him on the new contracts were received by him without protest. It was held by the supreme court of the United States that the new contract could not be regarded as void from duress, and that he could not, therefore, recover from the United States the difference between the price allowed under the old contract and that allowed and paid under the new contract.^ 150. It is no defence to a suit upon a contract that it was executed by the defendant for the i)urpose of com , Norfear of i legal propromising a civil suit threatened or impending, proce ure. ^y^^^ though he was at the time under arrest.^ A party who has a just claim against another has a right to
....,.,
threaten
ment of such claim, and to withdraw such proceedings on obtaining satisfaction; and if no unfair advantage be taken,
and no
matter
illegal pressure applied, the use of
such process, no
how
So speak the
Roman standards,' and we have numerous authorities in our own law to the same effect.* " Should the party choose to
Silliman
v.
U.
S.,
101 U. S. 465.
1 Roll.
v.
Hobby,
1 Bl.
Com.
;
16 Pet. 269
Eddy
v.
v.
Herrin, 17 Me.
;
131
Biffin v. Bignell, 7
V.
H.
&
;
;
N. 877
338
Smith
V.
Bates
der
V.
V.
Pierce, 10 N. H.
;
494
AlexanRobinson
v.
Gould, 11 Cush. 55
;
Stouffer
Lat-
hill,
111.
Bowker V. Lowell, 49 Me. 429 Watkins v. Baird, 6 Mass. 511 Wilcox v. Howland, 23 Pick. 167 Shephard v. WatCrowell
Gleason, 1 Fairf. 325
; ; ;
rous,
Caines,
1
166
Harmony
Miller
v.
r.
Plummer v. People, 16 111. 358; Mayhew r. Ins. Co., 23 Mich. Landa v. Obert, 45 Tex. 539. 105
93;
;
Bingham,
ler,
Duer, 229
St.
Milv.
i'.
68 Penn.
486
425
Waterman
;
Barratt,
4 4
Harring.
Gill,
;
311
LeflFerman,
533.
Meek
v.
Atkinson,
L.
7,
pr. D.
1,
2); L.
13,
Bailey, 84
;
Smith
v.
402
13
;
Bingham
Holmes
V.
v.
Sessions, 6
10.
Hill,
Supra,
148
infra,
532
et seq,
Felton
206
CHAP.
VIII.]
DURESS.
[ 151.
instead of pursuing his rights (at all events when nothing to prevent him from so doing), he cannot afterwards turn round and complain that the terms were forced on him."^ "If a man, supposing that he has cause of action against another, by lawful process cause him to be arrested and imprisoned (in a civil suit), and the defendant
make terms
there
is
fact,
the
had no cause of action."^ On the other hand, if the suit on which the arrest was made was without cause of action, and was fraudulently designed to extort, or was without lawful authority, a promise obtained by the pressure thus applied is invalid.' This was held to be the case when a bond for the maintenance of a bastard child was given under the pressure of a procedure not authorized by law.* And if an unjust claim be collected under stress of an arrest, the money
can be afterwards recovered back.'
arrest or
And
a threat of illegal
is duress.^ Thus where a married woman, owned by her from seizure on an execution issued against her husband, paid money to the officer levying the execution, it was held that she could recover back from the officer the money paid.'
attachment
to save property
151.
and
in the
Roman law
this abuse
was stigmatized
as concussion,
'
see
v.
Bane
v.
Detrick, 52
111.
19
Seiber
man
2
tit
U.
S.,
101 U. S. 468.
J.,
Parsons, C.
Watkins
r.
v,
Baird,
Story on
v.
u.
supra.
;
And
see Soule
v.
Me. 128
402.
Smith
Longfellow,
13
Me. 146;
Fisher
v.
3 Baker v. Morton, 12 Wall. 150; Richardson v. Duncan, 3 N. H. 508 dimming v. luce, 11 Q. B. 112 Kava;
In Norton Danvers, 7 T. R. 376, Lord Kenyon held that, if a person was held to bail
v.
nagh
V.
Os-
born u. Robbins, 36N. Y. 365 Stouflfer V. Latshaw, 2 Watts, 165; Phelps v. Zuschlag, 34 Tex. 371. Fisher v. Shattuck, 17 Pick 252
;
Taylor
v. v.
Coady
207
151a.]
CONTRACTS.
compelled.^
[chap. VIIT.
which
it
Such
is
own
law.''
On
the other hand, the mere fact that a contract was made,
by a defendant under criminal prosecution with the prosecutor, does not avoid the contract.' E., employed as a gold refiner, on being accused of embezzling gold given to him by his employers to refine, agreed, when under arrest, to pay back the amount taken, by means of a mortgage. There was no bargain not to prosecute him, nor any agreement shown to the effect that his punishment would be less heavy should he refund. It was held that the mortgage was valid.* The difference between civil and criminal process in this respect is this that the former can be used expressly to
The
distinction
is
this:
But
to
compound
and a
a criminal prosecution
contract to
is
in itself
an indictable
is
offence,
commit
a criminal offence
voidable as against
law.**
Hence
it is
money ,^
or to use
any other criminal process to extort money.'' 151a. Promises extorted under the threat of the criminal
So of criminal prose-
cutions of near
Thus
it is
on a mortacasre or other obligation that it was exerelatives. cuted by a wife to save her husband from prosecution for false pretences ;^ or for embezzlement f or for any court of equity, also, while it other indictable offence.'"
L.
;
2,
D. de
concussione
(xlvii.
Infra,
483
et seq.
;
13)
(iii.
L. 8, L. 1, 3, D. de calumniator
6)
;
Schulz
Infra,
V.
L. 2, pr., L. 4,
2,
D. de
S. C.
7
49 Wis. 122.
483
Heckman
See,
v.
Swartz,
Richardson
Osborn
der
V.
50 Wis. 267.
as
to
pleading,
Holbrook
8 9
v.
SnySchulz v.
;
McMahon
Riddle
;
v.
Hall,
v.
and cases
1881
634.
">
Singer Co.
483
et seq.
et seq.
Robinson
208
CHAP.
VIII.]
DURESS.
151a.
that she executed it to relieve her husband from arrest, will not compel the performance of a contract so induced.^ It has
name had
been forged by his son was induced by threats of the son's prosecution to promise to pay the debt, the promise was void And in Massachusetts, as made under illegal compulsion.^ in 1881, a mortgage executed by a father to save his son from a threatened prosecution for forgery was held void.' In Con-
Smith
v:
3
;
Harris
v.
51.
J.,
Compton V. Bank, 96 111. 301. In Whitmore v. Farley, 45 L. T. (N. S.) 99 (Ct. of App. May, 1881), C. was arrested at the Instance of P. on
the charge of having committed the
offence of larceny
"The
question,"
this
"whether
exception extends to
by a
bailee.
C.
was
brought up before a magistrate and remanded. C.'s wife then induced P. to withdraw from the prosecution on C.'s wife agreeing to charge her separate real estate with the
have been expressly But we find many dicta of judges and statements of authors entitled to great respect, which show
not appear to
adjudicated.
it
has been
amount taken.
the exception.
275, 276
The magistrate,
ing, being
s. c.
4-6
laid
and
of
reg. 18.
P. brought
an action
C.'s wife
and
Abridgment, and by Mr. Dane, and by Mr. Justice McLean. Bacon Abr. Duress, B. Dane
author of Bacon's
;
up
to her.
It
was held
.J.,
(affirm-
Abr. 166,
the
375;
McClintick
v.
Cumof
43 L. T.
See, also,
J.,
remarks of Wylde,
and
was illegal and could not be enforced, and that the defendant was entitled to the
charge
the
separate
property
Twisden, J., iu Wayne v. Sands, 1 Freem. 351. This case is too imperfectly reported to
be of great weight,
Bayley, 1 H. L. 200
B. 308
;
Keir
v.
;
Leeman,
v.
6 Q.
9 Q. B.
371
Davis
Holding, 1 M.
& W.
159.
same
;
effect,
Shenk
v.
Ap. 612 Schultz v. Culbertson, 46 Wis. 313; Coffman v. Bk., 5 Lea, 232 but see Seymour v. Prescott, 69 Me. 376, cited supra, 148.
Phelps, 6
;
VOL.
I.
14
and the remarks attributed to Twisden, J., would exclude the case of husband and wife in opposition to all the authorities. See the same case under the name Warn v. Sandown, 3 Keb. 238. We are not referred to any modern authorities, opposed to the views of the learned judges and au-. thors whom w have cited. The exception in f^vor of husband and wife is not ba&ed solely upon the Ipgal Aq-..
^09
151.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. VIII.
necticut, in 1879, we have a ruling still further extending the protection. D., a town treasurer in that state, having
become a defaulter, a selectman of the town visited D.'s aged maiden aunt and informed her that.D. had subjected himself to conviction of a state's prison oftence. He then left her, and a short time afterwards returned with a lawyer with a draft of a mortgage to the town of certain real estate she owned, which mortgage she signed in great distress of mind, without taking any advice from her friends, in the belief that this was the only means of averting the prosecution. It was held that the mortgage was under the circumstances invalid.* Under the same head fall agreements to compound felonies wherever the agreement is extracted from one party by a threat of the other to prosecute for a crime.^ At the same time the settlement of a private civil suit is not precluded by
tion that they are in
law one person, but rather upon the nearness" and ten-
The substan-
under the Debtor Act, 1869, could and were about to be brought against the bankrupt, C, who was the son of one defendant and nephew of the other.
husband and wife. No more powerful and constraining force can be brought to bear upon a man, to overcome his will, and extort from him an obligation, than threats Both of great injury to his child. upon reason and the weight of the
child as to that of a
authorities,
The defendants, induced by this threat, gave certain notes to the plaintiff. The defendants swore on the trial that they
we
had believed these representations to be true, and would not have given the promissory notes had they not so believed. In an action by the trustee against the defendants as makers of the promissory notes, it was held, after
a verdict
for the plaintiff, that
for
parent
may
judg-
duress to his
this point See, to
and, therefore,
the defend-
ants on the ground that they had been induced to enter into the contract by
effect,
Na-
tional
Bank
It
is
and Kiewert
481.
V.
v.
Rindskopf, 46 Wis.
cited,
and court
In Secar
45 L. T. N.
agents,
S.
made
and threats of criminal proand that it was not necessary that any particular charge under the Debtor Act should have been specified, or that any ground for such charge should have existed in fact. The court relied on "Williams v. Bayley, L. R. 1 H. L. 200 Hamilton v. Johnson, L. R. 5 Q. B. D. 263. Sharon v. Gager, 46 Conn. 189.
duress,
ceedings
defendants
that
criminal
charges,
See infra,
483.
210
CHAP. Vlir.]
DURESS.
[ 154.
the fact
act for
tliat
a criminal prosecution
may
which the suit is brought.^ There must be shown, in order to make out this defence, to have been a causal connection between the duress and the consent. The mere fact that a causal reman la under duress does not avoid all promises t^yge^the made by him it must be shown, to produce this duress aud
152.
;
*'
caused
the
the consent
promise.'
is produced by tlie duress, then, under the limitation above stated, the duress avoids the promise. 153. If a promise is extorted by duress, it makes no matter whether the duress was applied by the promisee, person " In hac actione non quseritur, from whom or by a third party. duress proutrum is, qui convenitur, an alius raetum fecit; ceedsim-
promise
enim hoc docere, metum sibi illatum, vel Hence duress by a stranger at the suggestion of the party benefited avoids a contract thus extorted.' But the duress must have been used by the party applying it to procure the promise, and the promisee must knowingly avail himself of this means of extortion. It is no defence, theresufficit
vim,
etc."*
fore, so it
Roman
made
in consideration of rescue
in
no sense responsible.^
is
when
it is
any authori-
have already seen^ that whether a promise exis absolutely void, and incapable of a ratification, or whether it is merely voidable, and tracts may hence open to ratification, depends upon whether consent was given. If there was no consent {e. g., when the
,
We
Infra, 486.
L. 14,
3,
D. eod. L.
9,
8,
D.
Westphal, metus turn tantum vitiat, si ab altero ideo incussus, ut contrahatur, Koch, ii. 105. Silliman v. U. S.,
2
eod.
^ ^
Keilw. 154 a.
l. 9, 1, in
f.
D. h.
5
;
t.
L. 34, 1,
101 U. 338
3
S.
465
;
Shephard
3 Caines, 166
;
Heaps
v.
Eddy v. Dunham,
D. de donet. xxxix.
Lib. v. T. 11,
^
6.
95
III.
583.
Fulton
Supra,
v.
Hood, 34 Penn.
St. 365.
Fulton
V.
Loftus, 63 N. C. 393.
145.
211
154.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. VIII.
force
when
his
hand was by
is
a nullity.
made to But
where there is consent, this consent holds until avoided, which must be, in the Roman law, ope excepiionis} Hence, by this law, such consent is capable of ratification, which ratification relates back to the original promise. In those systems in which such promises are ipso jure null and void, they are incapable of ratification.^ Our own law follows in
this respect the
Roman, holding that while a paper signed under physical compulsion is a nullity, a promise made under duress To avoid its effect it must be repudiated \b prima facie valid.
by the promisor and annulled by the proper tribunal. And repudiation may be precluded by ratification at a time when the duress is removed. This ratification may be by accepting the fruits of the bargain as well as by express assumption of
its
burdens.^
L. 2
and 4
C. h.
t.
Hassler
v.
v.
Bitting,
40
Koch, op.
cit. ii.
113.
;
Penn.
St. 68
Veach
Thompson, 15
That
facts,
Shepp. Touch. 61, 288 Parsons on i. 437 Matthews v. Baxter, L. R. 8 Ex. 132 Worcester v. Eaton, 13
'
Iowa, 380.
Cont.
undue
ratification is to
Mass. 377
Montgomery
v.
Pickering,
see supra, 58
212
CHAP.
IX.j
[ 157.
CHAPTER
IX.
IMPOSITION.
voluntary donation
is
under influence
of
When
is
set
up,
burden
Otherwise
is
when
position of superiority
be refused,
167.
166.
Party's representatives
may
contest^
159.
ratified, 168.
160.
may
con-
antlio-
Extortionate contracts
to revision
when
established presumed
by repeal
usury laws,
to continue, 162.
170.
163.
157.
We have
Roman law
metus
reverentialis^ or reverential
That the
promisor is under the
influence of the
a contract
instance,
made under
1
may use his influence over a son to induce f his estate in trust make a settlement of a brother may use his influence over a dependent and weak-minded sister to induce her to make stable
the latter to
11
promisee
in"vaiidate
promise.
when
Even
gifts
from
when
and suitable to the circumstances of the parties. "This court," so it was said in an English case of this class, "does not interfere to prevent an act even of bounty between parent and child, but it will take care (under
these gifts are free,
Supra, 145
et seq. 2
As
213
158.]
'
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. IX.
the circumstances in which the parent and cliild are placed before the emancipation of the child), that such child is placed
in such a position as will enable him to form an entirely and unfettered judgment, independent altogether of any
free sort
of control."^ And reasonable dispositions of property, conducive to fair family settlements, will be upheld as between parent and child.^ But the excuse of familj' convenience will not justify a conveyance by which a son improvidently gives
up, without consideration, a valuable estate to his father,^ or
a conveyance in fraud of creditors.* 158. Should mental disparity between the parties avoid
Nor does
great men-
orityof
and fcw men of great business capacity that would be Capable of doing busincss. Whenever a man of
t^^is class
j.^,.g
ovepn>misor. it
should
^ases of bargains
would be the duty of the courts to set it aside; and the men most capable of advancing the interests of the community by their far-sightedness and their sagacity would be under an interdict. But such a restraint on superior intelligence would be not onl}' unwise but impracticable and the courts, supposing there be no fraud, and no abuse of authority or of trust, have refused to set aside bargains merely because one party, by means of superior intelligence, obtained an advantage over the other.* The converse also is true, that the men;
'
Archer
r.
v.
see
Stiner
v.
v.
Stiner, 58 Barb.
Jenkins
lican,
Graham Aiman
v. v. v.
Pancoast, 30 Penn.
89; Nace
;
v.
24 Tex. 426. 2 Jenner v. Jenner, 2 Giflf. 232. 2 De G. F. & J. 359 Hartopp v. Hartopp, 21 Beav. 259 Williams v_. Williams, L. R. 2 Ch. 294. 3 Savery v. King, 5 H. L. C. 627,
; ;
79
Hyer
Little,
C. E. Green,
443
Losear
Eq. 594
Eq. 723
Ind.
342
Bever-
Higgins, 57
111.
247
;
Infra,
seq.
ley
;
v.
230
;
Osmond
v.
v.
v.
Latimer, 3 Yerg.
Hadley Rippy v.
v.
Fitzroy, 3 P.
Wms.
;
129
Mann
v.
Bet-
Paine
r.
Ro-
Allen ex parte, 15
Dewitt, 2
N. C. 451
Thomas
36
;
Shepv.
Mass. 58
Hallenbeck
KilHan
214
CHAP. IX.]
[ 159.
tal inferiority of a
by
itself
no ground for
Were
it
business whatsoever;^
or
At the same time, when there is fraud undue influence exerted by a party obtaining a contract in
is
imbecility
influence.^
Whenotherwise
ascendancy on the one side, and mental when posiof inferiority and subjection on the other, promises in tion superiority
which
it
unfair ad-
is
used to advan-
extort un-
may
be, exercised so as to
fair
*^^'
cessions
will be a
from the person controlled to the person controlling ground for equitable relief.^ "The acts and contracts
;
Biglow
to
v.
Leabo,
in
147.
As
liniitation
22 Penn. St. 245 Brady's Appeal, 66 Penn. St. 277; Highberger v. Stiffler,
;
et seq.
21
r.
Garman, 4Houst.
Leigh,
Gratz
v. v.
v.
Cohen,
2
3
119
Samuel
Tracey
v.
v. v.
v.
Marshall, 3
11
How. U.
88
;
S.
19
Howe
v.
Howe, 99
Dewitt,
567
Mass.
Hallenbeck
;
Warteraberg
Norris
Johns. 404
Mason
Williams,
Taylor, 49
17
Talbott
v.
Russell v. Russell, 4 Dana, Smith v. Beatty, 2 Ired. Eq. 456 Lindsey v. Lindsey, 50 III. 79 Darnell V. Rowland, 30 Ind, 342; Galpin v. Wilson, 40 Iowa, 90. * Supra, 103 infra, 232 et seq.
Mnnf. 126
;
40
Hooser, 12 Bush, 408 Rippy v. Grant, 4 Ired. Eq. 443 Buffalow v. Buflalow, 2 Dev. & Bat. 241 Powell v. Cobb, 3
; ;
Rumph
v.
Abercrombie,
Bispham's Eq.
Prince,
231
Nottidge
v.
v.
is
not barred
353.
That
is
2
6
Giflf.
246;
Boyse
;
Ross-
undue
influence
horough,
see supra,
Wheat. 103 Selden v. Myers, 20 How. 506 Allore v. Jewell, 94 IT. S. 511 Whelan v. Whelan, 3 Cow. 537 Dunn v. Chambers, 4 Barb. Hutchinson v. Tindall, 2 Green 376 Ch. 357 Haydock v. Haydock, 33 N.
Harding,
11
; ;
104.Mr.
Dew
V.
Parsons, 2 B.
&
"the question
J.
Eq. 494
34 N.
J.
;
Eq. 570
Hunt
v.
"is whether the party was a free and voluntary agent." This, however, is a mistake. A person under influence of one kind is as much,
be decided"
in the eye of the law,
Davidson v.
Little,
"a
free
and
215
159.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. IX.
of persons
as given
who are of weak understanding," to adopt the rule by Judge Story ,^ " and who are thereby liable to
if
the nature
has not exercised a deliberate judgment, but that he has been imposed upon, circumvented, or overcome, by cunning, or And this is eminently the case artifice, or undue influence."
when such
superior intellect.^
voluntary agent," as is a person under influence of another kind. Unless his
capacity of choice
sanity,
or
is
destroyed by in-
Proof
of a
V.
he is by physical force constrained to do or not to do a particular act, he is free, as Savigny shows in a passage already quoted,
unless
either to
tradesman who
;
fered
succumb
to or to resist the
et seq.
' Infra,
245
Sug. V.
&
P. 8th
Am.
ed. 275;
;
Cow. 535 That age itself does not afford a presumption of undue influence, seel Wh. & St. Med. Jur. 90 Cowee v. Cornell,
;
in which dominion may be by one person over another. He cited Hatch v. Hatch, 9 Ves. Jr. 292, and Bridgeman v. Greene, 2 Ves. Sr. 627, in which there was much evidence that the person was perfectly aware of what he was doing, and re-
exercised
peatedly confirmed
that
it.
Upon
that Lord
is
it
only tends to
show more
after
clearly the
75 N. Y. 91
Shaw
v.
v.
Lord Eldon,
In Cherbonnier
Evitts,
Md.
Ct. of
App. 1881, we have the following from Ritchie, J.: "The law is jealous to
defeat a fraudulent use of the
afforded
applying
means
by intimacy
of
association.
And
it is
which the grantor was a widow in the prime of life, said The question is not whether she knew what she was doing, had done,
case before him, in
:
'
ercise
of
undue
influence or artifice
how the
inten-
was ex-
was produced whether all that care and prudence was placed around
tion
;
edge of
tion
ley,
its
contents.
The following
v.
her as against those who advised her, which from their situation and relation
Bose-
14 Ves. Jr. 275, before Lord Chaneellor Eldon, in which the deed was
impeached on the ground of undue influence and the confidential relation and existing between the grantor grantee, Sir Samuel Romilly argued
with respect to her they were bound In the case to exert in her behalf.' of Dent V. Bennett, Lord Cottenham quoted Sir Samuel Romilly's language,
uttered thirty years before, and incor-
porated
it
in his opinion as
216
CHAP.
IX.]
[ 161.
undue enrichcoyrtgof
equity take
coo:nizance
it,
breaches of
*'""^'^'
and will be set appear that this influence was used to extort from a dependant an unjust bargain.* In such cases, where undue influence, based " on the circumstances and conditions of the
influence, be overhauled in equity,
parties,"
is
exercised,
proving
from contrary evidence, to have been, in point of fact, fair, just, and reakind
is
sonable."^
given whenever posihave been used to obtain unrighteous advantages and under this head may be classed undue influence uncouscientiously and prejudicially exercised by parent over child ;^ by
161. Relief of this
277.
fre-
&
J.
285
Carberry
v.
Tannehill, 1 lb.
it is
said
'
In
224; Highberger v. Stiffler, 21 Md. 352 Todd v. Grove, 33 lb. 194 and Eakle v. Reynolds, decided April Term,
;
;
1880
as
also
Stumpf
v.
Stumpf, of
We
and
mind
of the grantor
ex-
paired,
and that
its
party
is
so situated as to exercise a
controlling
influence
over the
of
will,
conduct,
and
v,
interests
another.'
is
Aylesford
;
v.
Harvey
'
the
:
case of a will.
Where a person
so sick,
who
evident such
ought
not
to
be permitted to
stand.'
We
:
land decisions
tenor, viz.
490 O'Rorke v. Bolingbroke, L. R. 2 Ap. Ca. 814. ' Lord Selborne, Ch. in Aylesford v. Morris, L. R. 8 Ch. 490, adopted in Anson on Contracts, 157. 3 Hoghton V. Hoghton, 15 Beav. 278 Baker v. Bradley, 7 De G. M. & G. Wright v. Vanderplank, 8 De 597 G. M. & G. 137 Bainbrigge v. Brown,
Morris, L. R.
8 Ch.
,
Taylor
v.
Taylor,
217
161.]
CONTRACTS.
in loco parentis over a niece
;^
[chap. IX.
au uncle standing
ber of a family
by any mem-
who
by a
over another
8
;2
by a
How.
157
;
TJ.
S.
183
r.
426.
faith
must be
Bergen
v,
Udell, 31 Barb. 9
shown
esley
239.
Berkmeyer As to
infra, 168.
1
litigation
v.
client to counsel.
;
Walmv.
v.
ratification see
remarks of
Bate, cited
Booth, 2 Atk. 25
;
Savery
Turner, L.
J., in
Rhodes
r.
King, 5 H. L. C. 627
Whitehead
Archer
v.
v.
Kempson
Graham
v. Little,
Kennedy, 69 N. Y. 462; Merritt v. Lambert, 10 Paige, 352; Smith v. Brotherline, 62 Penn. St. 461. That business transactions between client and counsel will be jealously watched, and that counsel cannot purchase
client's
full
and
free
426.
Wood,
S.
Dunn
Mills
r.
Mills, 26
twenty-two,
estate.
The complainant Conn. 213 St. Leger's App., 34 Conn. when a young man of 450 Hawley v. Cramer, 4 Cow. 717 was largely indebted, Berrien v. McLane, 1 HoflF. N. Y. 421
;
Barry
V.
v.
Ford
v.
v.
He wrote
to his
great-uncle,
to
Harrington, 16 N. Y. 285
St.
;
Boyd
who
Boyd, 66 Penn.
Mali, 42
283;
Roman
v.
Wil-
Md. 513
148
v.
;
Jennings
v.
McCon7 Mich.
;
nell, 17 111.
111.
Zeigler
v.
Hughes, 55
which the mines under the whole tract were worth 20,000. Without communicating this to the complainant, he purchased the complainant's interest for 7000. The sale was set aside by Wood, V. C, and this was affirmed by Lord Chelmsford, on the ground that there was a relation of confidence in the case which
by a surveyor, according
to
288; Gray
;
Emmons,
Dev.
533
241.
Riddell
V.
Buffalow
BuflTalow, 2
&
B. Eq.
"It
is
and
the client
is
therefore,
required a disclosure of
all
the facts.
As
an attorney may not bring his own personal interest in any way into conflict with that which his duty requires
256
a.
him
426
;
to do, or
make
Infra,
Bispham's Eq.
;
236
in
Agency, 574 Tyrell v. Bank Holmau of London, 10 H. L. Cas. 26 V. Loynes, 4 DeG. M. & G. 270; Greenfield's Est., 14 Penn. St. 489 S. C. 24
; ;
Wh. on
Penn.
St. 232,
and cases
cited infra,
with or arising out of the relation of attorney and client, beyond the amount of a j list and fair professional remuner-
218
CHAP. IX.]
[ 161.
;^
director or promoter of a
by a
all
to his exclusive benefit being forbidden f by a trustee over cestui que trust f by any person using influence over another to
whom he occupies confidential relations ;* by an executor or administrator over the parties whose interests it is his duty
Kerr ation, to which he is entitled. on Frauds, page 163. Yet the law does not go so far as to prohibit an attorney from purchasing from his client. That is, he is no't incapacitated by virtue of his relation as an attorney to purchase. If, however, he purchases a client's property during the continuance of the
relation of attorneyship,
influence,
or not,
is
if
removed, there
no incapacity on
and
to
be
gift
which
will
which
is
the
such relationship, the burden of proof lies on him to show that the transaction has been perfectly fair, and he must be able to show that a just and ^equate price has been
subject-matter
of
42}.
R. 6 H. L. 189
R.
Eq. 116
V.
Co.
Erlanger, L. R. 5 C. D. 73.
Infra,
given."
Horton,
C.
J.,
Yeaman
v,
255a.
2
James, Sup. Ct. Kan. 1882. In Holmes' Est., 3 Giflf. Ch. Rep. 345,
Russell
V.
" The John Stuart, V. C, said law of this court as to gifts by a client
Sir
:
lin,
Hopkins
v.
v. DevWatt, 13
HI. 298
3
King
V.
v.
is
perfectly
Coles
Trecothick, 9
established.
relation of
The principle is, that the Hunt V. Moore, 2 Barr, 105 solicitor and client is one of Brubaker, 52 Penn. St. 498
App., 65 Penn.
L. R. 7 Ch. 104
St.
;
Diller
v.
Parchell's
224
Ellis v.
v.
Barker,
Nicker-
considered
Thomson
;
Eastwood,
v.
the
Parker
Spencer's App., 80
378.
Penn.
St.
332.
[nfra,
Thus
cestui
gift
can previtiates
a sale by the
v.
other trustee.
Davoue
;
Fanning, 2
Mo. 541
Miles
v.
infra, 378.
As
to the
duty
of a per-
and
client.
That relation
intro-
all effect of
the
219
161.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. IX.
;^ by a guardian over a ward f by a child over a dependent parent;' by an agent, occupying a fiduciary relation, over a principal ;* by a husband over a wife ;' by a medical
to protect
1 Michoud V. Girod, 4 How. 503; Casey v. Casey, 14 111. 112 Head v. Howe, 39 Iowa, 553 Statham v. Ferguson, 25 Grat. 28 Scott v. Umbarger, 41 Cal. 410 Osborne v. Graham, 30 Ark. 66.
; ;
; ;
on the value of the property and if he is acting on independent advice, and his mind is entirely free from any control of the trustees, and the trans;
it
Dawson
v.
v.
Massey,
1 B.
&
B. 226
Bispham's Eq.
237
citing
Gallatian
Perry on Trusts,
*
195.
See Redgrave
v. Eberts, 55 Penn. St. 119 Hunter v. Lawrence, 11 Grat. Ill Blackmore v. Shelby, 8 Humph. 439 Womack v. Austin, 1 S. C. 421 Malone V. Kelly, 54 Ala. 532 Garvin v. Williams, 50 Mo. 206 Meek v. Perry, 36 Miss. 190. " Settlements made soon
Eberts
Hurd, L. R. 20 Ch. D. 1.Infra, 378 Wh. on Agency, Lowther v. Lowther, 13 Ves. 231, 523 103 Reed v. Norris, 2 Myl. & Cr. 361
;
Dunne
Kimber Morgan
Provost
v.
v. v.
after the
ward comes
of age,
and espe-
V.
Wheat. 481
;
Jack-
he la in possession of his viewed by the courts with a watchful and even jealous eye. To sustain such settlements it must appear that the ward had sufficient time and opportunity to examine the guarcially before
estate, are
V. Ludeling, 21 Wall. 617 Smith Townsend, 109 Mass. 500 Claflin v. Bank, 25 N. Y. 293 Bain v. Brown, 56 N. Y. 285 Chorpenning's App., 32 Penn. St. 315 Gaines v. Allen, 58 Mo. 541. * The statutes in most of our states
son
V.
dian's accounts
requiring that to
of
make
a wife's release
himself competent to
make
the exami-
v.
Hylton, 2
Somes
v.
v.
v.
Skinner, 16
Mass. 348
Kirby
Taylor, 6 Johns.
Ch. 248
Elliott
Elliott, 5
Binn. 8
Stanley's
Say
V.
Barnes, 4 S.
St.
;
&
R. 112
;
App., 8 Penn.
Ala. 400
431
Cowan's App.,
v.
dower valid she should be examined separately from her husband, illustrate the jealousy with which the wife's independence in this respect is guarded. When the wife agrees to convey her separate estate, she having power to do so, to her husband, and he afterwards asks the aid of the law to enforce the bargain, the burden is on him to
prove the fairness of the transaction.
See Boyd
i-.
Andrews
Jones, 10
Meek
v.
De
la Montagnie, 73 N. Y.
to
Hoppin v. Tobey, 9 R. I. 42 Greenawalt ex parte, 2 Clark, 1. ' Whelan v. Whelan, 3 Cow. 537 Highberger v. Stiffler, 21 Md. 338;
see
and
498.
comRe-
v.
148.
Simpler
v.
On
the
v.
Brock,
other hand,
if
the
lat-
Page v. Home, 11 Beav. 227, as showing that there is a fiduciary relation in persons engaged to
20 Beav. 524
;
be married
tend
220
CHAP.
IX.]
[ 161.
man
mer
ail
v.
That by
of patient
and
medical
man between
of her
Est., 64
395.
As
to disabilities of
marseg.
ried
women,
see supra,
76
et
That agreements between husband and wife are at common law void, see supra, 91. 1 Dent My, & Cr. V. Bennett, 4
269
;
where after that relationship had come to an end, and any effect produced by it had been removed, she intentionally abode by what she had done, it was held that the gift was not void but voidable and as she must be taken upon the facts to have known that it was voidable and not to have avoided it, the defendant was entitled to judgment. Mitchell V. Hornfrey, 45 L. T. N. S. 694, L. R. 8 Q. B. D. 587. As
;
"Re-
peated
L.
J.,
decisions,"
said
Baggallay,
Billage
v.
v.
"have
is
settled
Hogan, Dru. 310 GreenCrispell field's Est., 14 Penn. St. 489 Cadwallader V. Dubois, 4 Barb. 393 V. West, 40 Mo. 483 though see
Ahearne
tion
of
a medical
man
towards his
Therefore the
patient
gift
confidential.
Blackie
V.
v.
her medical man, and without any independent advice, was originally
to
Barker,
Sim.
1,
showing that
intelligently
such
gifts
either void or voidable. But then the jury have found that the relation of medical man and patient ceased when Jane Geldard went to Barnard Castle
with his patient a contract in any way depending on the length of the
patient's
life
is
bound not
to
keep
to
may have
and that after that relation had ceased, and any eflFect produced by it had ceased, she intentionally abode by what she had done. That
in 1872,
gets
rid of
in
acquired,
forming his
own
opinion, or
.
whether by by con-
a second
v.
principle
laid
down
Rhodes
the probable
Popham
v.
Brooke,
re-
Ap. 257), that, where a confidential relation has once existed, the court will presume its continuance unless
Russ.
8.
some positive act or some complete case of abandonment is shown. Here the
jury find that the confidential relation
Dog-
had ceased
before Mrs.
for
And
Geldard's death.
Then
intentionally abode
judgment
of Stephen, J.),
where
it
appeared that alter a gift by a lady to her medical adviser, not made under
doubt we have to take that finding with the admission that Mrs. Geldard had no independent addone.'
vice at
Now no
undue
any time.
of
the
intention-
221
161.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. IX.
a parishioner or penitent applying to him for counsel ;^ and, generally, by a person of authority, applied to for advice, over
the person to
whom
the advice
is gi ven.^
And, as a general
rule,
a person occupying a position of trust and confidence will not be permitted to use that position to make money out of those whom it is his duty to protect.^ " I take it to be a wellThat must be taken to mean knew what she had done, that she approved of what she had done, and that she determined to abide by it. It was an adoption of what she
ally.'
that she
by undue
heirs,
influences,
and he was
or-
had done, after the confidential tion had ceased for three years,
cient to take
gifts
it
relasuffi-
notwithstanding he declared in answer that the conveyance was made without his knowledge or solicihis
tation.
*
"
It is
have been invalidated on the ground of confidential relationship coupled with absence of independent
advice."
'
Smith
Kay, 7 H. L, C. 750, as
" the relation of solicitor and client, or and cestui que tnisi, which conThe
principle applies to
is is
Hugenin
v.
24 Penn.
St.
cases.
Welsh
V.
in
re,
Redf. 238.
In
acquired and
reposed and
Home, L. R. 6 Eq. 655, a gift of 24,000 by a woman of seventy-five years to a spiritualistic director was set aside. As to religious advisers, see further; Huguenin r. Bazely, 14 Ves. 273; 2 Lead. Cas. Eq. 556: Turner v. Collins, L. R. 7 Ch. 329 Hoghton t;.
;
Lyon
See also
Brown
v. v.
v,
Kennedy, 33 Beav,
R. 7
R. 10
133
61;
Tate
Williamson, L. R. 2 Ch
Collins, L.
Turner
329;
881
;
L. R. 8
L.
Ch Ch Ch
Eq
Hoghtou, 15
Taylor, 8
Everitt
;
v.
389
Everitt, L. R. 10
Taylor
v.
405
Smith
v.
V.
Marshall, 2
How. U. Wash.
S.
183
Slocum
;
v.
Selden
C. C. 397
St. Lev. v.
Slocum
397
;
Marshall, 2
Wash.
C.
ger's App., 34
Graham
Davis
Nottidge
Persch
Jones
Eq.
52
v.
w.
Hetrict's
App.,
App.,
58 80
Spencer's
Penn. Penn.
;
St. St.
477
317;
246,
of
Todd
r.
p.
I'.
McCormick
Rockafellow
;
woman who
English clergyman,
institution called
who had
up an
Newcomb, 57
6
III.
185
Bayliss
v.
Agapemone, or Free
Williams,
Under
other
respects)
she
conveyed
large
440; Deaton r. Turner v. Munroe, 4 Jones Eq. 39 Turner, 44 Mo. 535. As to the duty of full disclosure under such circumCold.
;
amounts
of property to
et seq.
Agapemone where
378; Tyrrell
;
v.
Bank
of
v.
she died.
It
London, 10 H. L. C. 26
Poillon
222
CHAP.
IX.]
[ 162.
to hold benefits which those others may have conferred upon them, unless they can show to the satisfaction of the court that the persons by whom the benefits have been conferred had competent and independent advice in conferring them.
This, in
my
opinion,
is
in-
fluence"
is
influence of well-considered
relatives or friends to
affection.
whom
he
is
162. It
is
"^
...
,1
to continue
nor
is
a father's
his trust,
emancipation.
trustee, also,
upon throwing up
once a
fiduciarj'^
may
that,
When
or advisory
will be so far
presumed to continue,
is
when
a bargain
made
party in
hira to
whom
the confidence
on
see Tate v. Williamson, L. R. 1 Eq. 528, 2 Ch. 55 Baker v. Loader, L. R. 16 Eq. 49.
;
gift of
own name,
Turner, L.
Supra,
J.,
Rhodes
Eakle
v,
v.
Bate, L.
159
v.
Reynolds,
54 Md. 305
Wise
v.
Swartzwelder, 54
Md. 292.
In Taylor
219,
girl,
where
it
nearly of age, was living with a married female cousin, to whom on her death-bed she made an absolute
was a person of strong will and independent character that others of her and relatives had free access to her that she had had the advice of an old friend of her father's with regard to pecuniary matters it was held that no sixch fiduciary relationship existed as would invalidate the gift. ^ PoUock, 3d ed. 570 Dent v. BenSmith v. Kay, nett, 4 My. & Cr. 277
; ; ; ; ;
223
163.]
CONTRACTS.
to operate,
[chap. IX.
an intelligent ratification
163.
Question one of burden of
proof.
not to
between a person imposing and a person accepting confidence. There is no such presumption recognized in law; and, as a matter of fact, by far the greater part of the dealings between persons imposing and persons accepting confidence are fair. Among persons who have been for a time intimately connected there is no business done without confidence imposed and accepted
;
whom
that,
the confidence
reposed.
is,
when
on him to show
intelligently
and
without undue pressure.^ In other words, if suit be brought on such a contract, the party suing must prove that the contract was made freely and intelligently.* ' If a gift or contract
is
made
in favor of
position of influence
of the transaction
is
is
Indian Evidence
525
;
Act,
Pollock,
ratt,
1
28 Beav. 659.
Erlanger
v.
New Sombrero
Phos-
Infra, 168.
See
Wh. on
As
s
Gibson v. Jayes, 6 Ves. 266. * " Where there is a question as to the good faith of a transaction between parties, one of whom stands to the
3
less, L.
v.
Law-
Kempson
;
v.
Ashbee (30 L. T.
Ch. 15),
Rep. N. S. 749
'
L. R. 10
tlie
good faith
'
224
CHAP.
IX.]
[ 164.
claimed by a person holding a fiduciary or authoritative relation to another to have been made to him by the person thus under
where a donation
'
is
up
party setproVe^it^to*^
its fairness.
Such a transto
may
be
fair,
and suitable
the circum-
be
fair.
But
this, it is held,
must be shown by
the party by
whom
it is
accepted.^
deed could therefore not be set aside as
against the mortgagees.
without indev.
6. P.
Rhodes
Bate,
v.
Brown, 44 L. T. N.
Lord Romilly in Cooke v, Lamotte, Hoghton v. Hoghton, 15 Beav. 278; S. P. Lord Hatherley in
1
15 Beav. 234
two,
and resident under their father's roof, and not emancipated from his control, executed a deed by which
they made themselves liable
interest
for
he "has reason
"carried to
know
the
in practice,"
and
that,
would make an
irrevocable
gift
almost impossible."
charged
reversionary interests
ment
under their parents' marriage settlefor that purpose, and gave the mortgagees a power of sale over such
reversionary interests.
But the question, so far as concerns the burden of proof, depends upon the way in which the issue is presented.
If
In considera-
of
such a
its
gift,
the burden
is
on him to
the donor
payable
prove
fairness.
But
if
under the deed, the mortgagees agreed to reduce the rate of interest payable The children on their mortgages. brought an action to set aside the deed as against their father and his mortgagees, on the ground of undue influence exercised by their father. It was held by Fry, L. J. (May, 1881), that, as against the father, the burden of proof lay on him, and that, as he had not discharged it, the deed must be
set aside as against
thing given, he ought to prove something more than a prior fiduciary relation between himself
The
and coolness which he ought to rebut by showing that he was at the time not fully advised of his act, and that the act was performed under undue
influence.
That, as
a matter of law,
him
but that, as
against the mortgagees, the burden of proof lay on the plaintiffs, that they
it,
VOL.
I.
15
225
165.]
CONTRACTS.
is
[CHAP. TX.
no ground for setting vendor may conscientiously Gross inadequacy own property, and to say that he his depreciate sideration shall not Sell at the price he himself fixes is to say He may be desirous, also, inference of he shall not Sell at all. fraud. ^. i)enefiting a friend or relative by giving him a property at a low price, the object being not to create a feeling of absolute dependence, but to aid, and at the same time to require exertion of some kind in return; and when such an intention is shown, the conveyance is one which, so far as this question is concerned, should not be set aside. Value, also,
165. Inadequacy of price
aside a contract.
in itself
is
uncertain in
its
limits;
make
it
a condition of the
validity of a conveyance.* "The value of a thing," says Judge Story, " is what it will produce; and it admits of no
precise standard. will
It must be in its nature fluctuating, and depend upon ten thousand different circumstances. One man, in the disposal of his property, may sell it for less than another would. He may sell it under a pressure of circumstances, which may induce him to part with it at a particular time. If courts of equity were to unravel all these transactions, they would throw everything into confusion, and set afloat the contracts of mankind. Such a consequence would,
of
itself,
be sufficient to
impracti-
adopting the doctrine that mere inadequacy of consideration should form a distinct ground for relief. "^ But when there is such gross inadequacy as to lead to the inference that one party either acted in ignorance of what he was doing, or was unduly influenced by
cability, if not the
injustice, of
'
29
Davidson
w.
v.
Robinson
2 Hare, 440
Harrison
v.
Guest, 6 D.
;
ing Griffith
M. G. 424
8 H, L. C. 481
v.
v.
Harrison
v.
Guest, 8 H.
481
Potter, 15
Warner v. Daniels, 1 Wood. & M. 110 Hamet v. Dundass, 4 Barr, 178. That
the suffiicency of consideration will not
ordinarily be determined by the courts,
see infra, 517.
14 Ind. 552
Schnell
r.
Nell, 17 Ind.
CHAP.
IX.]
[ 166.
the other party, then a court of equity will interfere.^ There must, however, be " such unconscionableness or inadequacy" " made out as would (to use an expressive phrase) shock the
conscience, and
amount
in itself to conclusive
and decisive
evidence of fraud.
And when
And when
there
was any mental weakness on the part of the party conveying and he was not independently advised, the conveyance, as
against
him or
strong element in the proof of imposition mitted to stand.^ in such cases is the needy circumstances of the vendor, exposing
him
peculiarily to the
party to
whom
he
may apply
for aid.*
it has been held, can take advantage of inadequacy of price.' 166. The cases we have been considering are those in which the party seeking the aid of the court asks to In such have an unconscientious bargain rescinded. In such cases spe-
cific
per-
formance
Another
issue
is
presented
is on him to prove it. will be refused. when the agreement has and when the vendee applies for its specific
performance.
In such case the court will refuse its aid to it should appear that the defendant entered into it intelligently and freely. In the former
'
Infra,
;
518
Rice
v.
v.
Gordon, 11
4 Des.
*
S. C.
;
651
Mitchell
v.
Jones,
5ft
Beav. 2G5
103
;
Cockell
Taylor, 15 Beav.
Mo. 438
et seq.
&
Tennent v. Tennent, L. R. 2 So. Parmelee v. Cameron, 41 N. Y. 392; Clark v. Depew, 25 Penn. St.
D. 6
;
Supra,
seq.;
;
CockeH
v.,
Boyse
;
v. Ross.-
509.
245, citing
;
borough, 6 H. L. C. 2 HajiHijng v.. Handy, 11 Wheat. 113 AUore t>, Jewell, 94 U. S. 511 Brady's App., 66
;
Coles
hill V.
V.
Horwood, 10 Ves. 219 Evans, 16 Ves. 512 Howard v. Edgell, 17 Vt. 9; Osgood v. Franklin, 2 Johns. Ch. 1, 23 14 Johns. 527
;
;
UnderPeacock
Penn. St. 277 Hough i>. Hunt, 2 Ohio, 495 Bnffalow v. Buffalow, 2Dev. & B.
;
;
Eq. 241
445.
*
Lester
i>,
Mahon, 25
3
Ala..
Wood
r, Alw;?y,
i?.
Mayo
V.
V.
Carrington, 19 Grat. 74
111.
Weld
Davidson
liittle,
St..
Rees, 48
428
Butler
v.
Haskell,
245.
227
167.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. IX.
made
ing to rescind
in
where the
mit
itself to
But
bare inadequacy of price, without such gross disproportionateness as " to shock the conscience," will not be ground to
refuse the aid of the court.''
It is otherwise, however,
when
the price
sense
is
preposterously inadequate.^
price
amounting
and so has a price amounting to one-half of the value.* 167. Not merely the party imposed on himself, but his representatives, can contest an engag-ement which ^ ? Party's representahe has been induced to make improvidently by the undue influence of others.^ And the property thus contest!^^
;*
.
'
f.
St.
Day
v.
v.
Newman,
Griffiths,
Grat.
v. v.
v.
Markwood, 13 McGannon, 29
Worthington, 2
1
Haygarth
Byers
v.
Wearing, L.
v.
Grat. 511
Steele
Summers
Ohio, 182
White
Sarter
v.
Thompson,
Dev.
Surget, 19
How.
&
B. 493
v.
U.
Eastman v. Plumer, 46 N. S. 313 Hamet v. Dundass, 4 Barr, H. 464 178 Graham v. Pancoast, 30 Penn. St. Nace v. Boyer, 30 Penn. St. 99 89
; ;
121.
'
Bispham's Eq.
Callaghan
;
V.
V.
Callaghan, 8 CI.
Edgell, 17 Vt. 9
&
;
;
F. 374
Howard
Frank;
Osgood
v.
Madison Co. v. People, 58 111. 456; Gasque v. Small, 2 Str. Eq. 72 Morris Mitchell v. V. Philliber, 30 Mo. 145 Jones, 50 Mo. 439. For an analysis of
;
;
lin,
2 Johns. Ch. 23
14 Johns. 527
V.
v.
Wald's ed. 543. Bispham's Eq. 219 Harrison Guest, 6 DeG. M. & G. 424 8 H. L.
; ; ;
v.
182.
5
C,
Seymour
;
v.
481
Cathcart
v.
Erwin
Bedel
222
6
Supra, 146
Hunter
v.
v.
Loomis, 11 N. H. 9
259
;
Park Powers
;
v.
v.
M.
461
&
;
K. 113
;
Coutts
v.
v. Atkens, 3 Acworth, L. R.
8 Eq. 588
Ford
v.
Olden, L. R. 3 Eq.
Lee
v.
v.
Kirby, 104
Holman
Loynes, 4 D. M. G.
420
Osgood
;
Franklin,
v.
Johns. Ch. 1
Seymour
v.
Delancy, 3
Cow. 445
Weber
;
Weitling, 3 C. E.
270; Allore v. Jewell, 94 U. S. 506; 16 N. Y. 185; V. Harrington, Yard v. Yard, 27 N. J. Eq. 114 Haw-
Ford
Green, 441
Tracey
228
CHAP. IX.]
[ 168.
obtained
notice.^
may
The
all
assignees with
by
under duress,* by the party imposed upon, after the disturbing influence has been removed and this tracts may may be either by continuance in possession of the fruits of the contract,' or by express approval and confirmation. But to work such ratification it must appear that the mind of the party imposed on was not only relieved from the undue influence under which he was placed, but was enlightened as to his true position and the nature of the particular
168. Contracts of this class, like contracts
ratified
can be
transaction.'
Rutnph
Bate (L. Rep. 1 Ch. App. 252),
it
V.
Sacket, 1 Oh.
St.
54
;
v.
V.
Cadwalader
though
laying
any
other,
is
down
292.
impropriety in the
Metcalfe's Trusts, 2
;
De G.
J.
&
S.
St.
;
122
245
3
*
5
Davidson
v.
Little,
22 Penn.
cited
if
there
is
a deliberate intention to
Infra, 235.
and any
effect pro-
See supra,
154.
Wright
Youst
v.
V.
Vanderplank, 8 D. M.
v.
duced by the relationship has been entirely removed. There is not much
authority to assist us in arriving at
G. 133; Turner
Collins, L. R. 7 Ch.
329
v.
Martin, 3 S.
&
R. 423
St.
is
in favor of not
;
Hassler
Bitting,
40 Penn.
68.
et
As
6
to proof in
The
case of Dent
v.
seq.,
154.
Myl.
V.
&
C. 269)
Gaby, 2 D. M. G. 623 Morse v. Royal, 12 Ves. 355. ' Snpra, 154 Moxon v. Payne, L. R. 8 Ch. 881 Kempson v. Ashbee, L. R. 10 Ch. 15 Montgomery v. Pickering, 116 Mass. 227 Price's App., 54 Penn. St. 472; Thompson v. Lee, 31 Ala. 292. That knowledge of law is not
;
Stump
gift
was
set aside
but
There (Cottenham) at p. 275 an absence of all evidence of the testator having at anytime recognized, or in any manner given any proof of
cellor
is
:
'
In Mitchell
S. 694, cited
Homfrey, 45 L. T. N.
existence.'
supra, 161,
we have the
:
following from
least
Lord Selborne
229
169.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. IX.
169. If
we
money on any
terms, no matter
In the case of
Wright
V.
Vanderplank (8 De G. M. &
J.,
Q. 133) Turner, L.
who
v.
delivered
that
act
it
It has been argued at the bar has not for that some positive
;
Bate (L.
Rep.
*
to
make
it
so,
and
act has
been done.
am
unimpeachable.
is
required
This
may
by other cirhave no doubt that there was a fixed, deliberate, and unbiassed determination on the part of
been allowed
cumstances.
Here
'
When
the pa-
No doubt
the fact
disproved, or that
who was
sistent
It is
stated on the
daughter had
Applying
present
these
case,
considerations
it is difficult
to
the
to
cir-
been informed by some of her friends before her marriage that a fraud had been practised on her by the defendant. Now she was plainly a woman of strong understanding and capable of
transacting business, and
sible to
it is
impos-
would be deits
upholding
it.
And
was in full force, and there was no independent advice given to the
daughter.
pletion
suppose this, the facts of the case exclude the supposition.' Therefore, it must be taken that in that case the donor knew as a fact
to
were possible
The
transaction, therefore,
that the transaction was impeachable. At the same time, that case is very
was impeachable at and after its com- near this one, if we may treat this case and the only question is, whe- as if there had been a finding of the ther it has become unimpeachable by jury that the donor was indifi'ereut
;
230
CHAP. IX.]
[ 169.
Necessity
how
onerous, and a
satisfy
money
lender,
who
has
money
such greed, cunning enough to hold pectant the borrower whom he once entangles in his toils, SS to"unand rapacity enough to extort exorbitant interest, due influ-
enough to
we have
undue influence
this
Money
;
lenders of
kind occupy positions of authority in reference to an unfortunate client. They are few in number when once they are applied to, they occupy a position of power from which it Hence unconscientious bargains by is diflScult to eject them. persons of this class will be set aside.^ heirs expectant with The rule includes remainder-men f and it has been extended to younger sons, with no settled estate in remainder, on the expectation that their friends will pay to avert bankruptcy or exposure.' But under this head do not fall bargains for the purchase of vested interests due at a fixed future period.* And in England it having been found that the court of chancery had pushed the rule to such an extent as to make it
unsafe to purchase reversions unless at public auction,' an act
in 1867,
^
by which
it
was enacted
or unfair
any reversionary interest, shall be opened or set The act, however, aside merely on ground of undervalue. " limited carefully to Mr. Pollock, is its special object of says putting an end to the arbitrary rule of equity, which was an impediment to fair and reasonable as well as to unconscionable
whether she could set aside the gift or not, so that whether she knew or not would be immaterial." S. C. 8Q. B. D.
587.
Parmelee
;
v.
v.
392
495.
'
Cribbins
Aldborough
v.
r.
Trye, 7 CI.
& F. 436
Foster
v.
Nesbit
v. Jeflf-
Aylesford
see
Lord
kins, 35 Beav.
after
sale
;
was
St.
set aside
nineteen
years
Beynon
v.
Harding, 27 Beav. 11
after forty years.
O'Rorke
Salter
v.
26 Beav. 161.
Snelling, L. R. 15 Ch. D.
31 Vict.
c. 4.
679.
231
170.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. IX.
bargains.
cases in
And
it
it is not the sole equitable ground for relief."^ has been settled that when the transaction is fair, the
which
naked
possibility or
expectancy of an heir in an ancestor's estate, will be sustained in equity after the ancestor's death ,^ though the burden is on the party who thus dealt with an heir expectant to show the
The equity is one induced to make an improvident bargain, and it is not lost to him by the fact that his father, after whose death he was to inherit the estate assigned away, consented to the bargain.* And a party seeking relief of this class is bound to restore that which he received.* 170. "Where there is no statue forbidding usury, courts
good faith and
fairness of the transaction.^
who
is
of equity feel
Extortionate contracts more open to revision since repeal
it
peculiarly incumbent on
them
to revise contracts
"
One great
effect of
of usury laws.
branch of the jurisdiction of this court which existed long before; that principle of the court
which
prevail-
614,
cited
Bispham's
ford
V.
O'Rorke
Eq.
220.
2 Story Eq.
;
1040
V. & 426 Shelly v. Nash, 3 Mad. 232 Lord V. Jeflfkins, 35 Beav. 7 Nevill v. Snelling, L. R. 15 Ch. D. 679.
Jur. 852
:
1 Sug.
* Sugden V. & P. 11th ed. 316 Bispham's Eq. 220 Aylesford v. Morris, L. R. 8 Ch. 491, modifying King V. Hamlet, 2 My. & K. 456. That such a transaction is in fraud of the
;
ancestor see
Heap
v.
v.
Morris, L. R. 2 Q.
460 O'Rorke V. Bolingbroke, L. R. 2 App. Cas. 814 Savery v. King, 5 H. L. C. 627 Edwards V. Burt, 2 D. M. & G. 55 Jenkins V. Pye, 12 Pet. 241 Poor v. Hazleton, 15 N. H. 564 Boynton v. Hubbard, 7 Mass. 112 Fitch v. Fitch, 8 Pick. 480 Powers' Appeal, 63 Penn.
V.
Cook
Field, 15 Q. B.
B. D. 630.
5
Wharton
v. V.
May,
Evans
ton
V.
BoynHubbard, 7 Mass. 112 Williams Man. Co., 1 Md. Ch. 306, 3 Md. Ch.
Peacock, 16 Ves. 512
;
420.
In Pennsylvania, in ejectment
it
seems
81
a previous tender
Seylar
v.
V.
is
not
necessary.
St.
; ;
St.
443
;
Carson,
69 Penn.
S. 128
St. 457.
179
Bacon
Bonham, 33 N.
J.
Eq.
Smull
Jones, 1
W. &
Hall
r.
Vanness, 49 Penn.
232
CHAP. IX.]
[ 170.
ing against him the moment the usury laws were repealed, and the lender of money became entitled to exact anything he pleased in the name of interest, from that moment that jurisdiction of the court, which prevailed independently of the usury laws, was likely to be called into active operation."^
1
Stuart, V.
C,
;
Barrett
v.
v.
Hartley,
669
cited
As
to
L. R. 2 Eq. 795
Miller
v.
Cook, L. R.
461
10 Eq. 641
Tyler
Yates, L. R. 6 Ch.
233
CONTRACTS.
fCHAP. X.
CHAPTER
X.
General Principles.
171.
And
acter of property,
as to quality, 189.
Conscious Error.
to
If
may
Promises
Error
known
be in jest do not
to
bargain
and sue
for
hold damages,
bind, 175.
191.
when
may
scission
and action
be corrected pro
tanto, 192.
193.
not essential,
194.
In
Roman law
177.
unconscious essential
196.
re-
In our
178.
own law
this
view obtains,
198.
199.
Special knowledge
not presumed
in
And
No
non-specialist, 200.
181.
title
Error of law,
passes
when
acted on fraudu-
when only
bare charge
is
given, 182.
title
No
183.
Contract must be
suing, 184.
Party
is
Error in time
234
CHAP. X.]
[ 171.
V. Rectification.
Bilateral error
208.
maybe
corrected," 205.
for rectifica-
209.
Obvious mistake
context, 210.
may
be corrected by
mistake
rectification
on proof
of bilateral, 207.
I.
GENERAL PRINCIPLES.
it is sometimes with peculiar difficulties. A line ^^ icone has to be taken in such a way as to avoid two ex- of peculiar difficulty. T p tremes, either ot which would be latal to business. If every error in the mind of either party as to a proposed contract prevents its completion, then there could be no contract completed. No valid marriage could be solemnized, since there is no marriage in which at least one party is not in some slight error as to the other's qualifications no valid sale of goods could be eft'ected, since there is no sale in which either vendor or purchaser has a perfect idea of the thing sold no contract of agency could be instituted, since neither principal nor agent can be absolutely free from error as to each other's capacity. On the other hand, consequences equally disastrous would follow from the position that no error, no matter how essential, prevents a contract from being perfected, and from embracing within its operation any property to which it might apparently relate. A bargain which A. supposes he is making with B. would give C. a title to A.'s property, if C. should at the time of the bargain succeed in palming himself oft' to A. as B. A. might hand a diamond to B., by mistake for a glass bead, and B. would take a title which would be unassailable. A. and B., by a transposition of documents, might sign an agreement in which a thousand
171.
The
called) is beset
-.
bank stock are to be sold by A. to B., instead of a was intended, and, if no error prevents a contract from being entered into, title to the bank stock would
shares of
barrel of flour, as
thereby vest in B.
title
On
if
we adopt the
if
from attaching, no
we adopt
172.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. X.
no ownership would be secure. We must therefore conclude mere fact of error in the mind of one of the parties does not prevent a contract from being perfected, there To determine what are some errors that have this effect. these errors are will be the object of the present chapter. In a
that, while the
how
far a party, who, by mistake, leads another to make a void bargain, is liable for the loss to which the other party is
thereby subjected.^
error is much embarrassed by the ambiguity of the terms used. In cases where there ^^ evidently no contract, there having been no confassed'^by ambiguity ggjjj of miuds (as where A. proposes to B., supposing B. to be C, that B. should take command of a ship, B. being a tailor who had never been at sea or where A., as
172.
The question of
diamond
to B., sup-
posing
it
to be a glass bead),
make
a contract
yet
we
are
sometimes told that such " contracts" are " voidable" and sometimes that they are " void." " Void" and " voidable" are thus used as convertible terms, though there is this important difference between them, that a " void" contract is no contract at all, whereas a " voidable" contract conveys a title which the party conveying ma}' afterwards ratify, the ratification relating back to the date of the original transaction, a title which, even before ratification, may be absolute in the hands of a bona fide purchaser from the person holding the
" voidable" contract.^
We
hard to see how there can be a contract which is not a contract. In these pages an effort is made to speak of negotiations which do not ripen into contracts, because the parties do not consent to the same thing, simply as " negotiations" or " bargains ;" saying, as in the prior section, that in such cases want of consent prevented a contract from being "entered into" or "perfected." Yet, cautious as we may be, it is diflSeult always to avoid applying the terms " void" or " incomplete contracts" to such negotiations. They are so called
though
it is
Infia, 1043
et seq.
Supra, 28.
236
CHAP. X.]
in
[ 174.
and
in
many
of our text-
books; and, logically incorrect as is the expression "void contract," it is an expression which has now a definite meaning, being understood to be a negotiation which, though on its face a contract, has no binding force, is incapable of ratification unless with a new consideration, and is incapable of passing title even to bona fide purchasers.
173. Another difficulty is the confusion of classification that prevails. As has been pointed out by Savigny,
and
tion
illustrated
confusion
catimr'*^
of consent
their
A. Error not induced by misrepresentation or fraud: Conscious, e. g.^ where the transaction is in jest. h. Unconscious, in which case, when essential, no contract
a.
is
entered into.^
In this
head,
when the
error
is essential,
first
no contract is entered into. When the error is non-essential, but goes to quantity or quality, then the contract binds, but an action lies on the warranty, express or implied or an abatement is made in the price, when sued on or specific performance will be refused, unless the complainant will make the misrepresentations good or, in proper cases, there may be a rescission, saving the rights of the other side.^ In this case, if the error is C. Error induced by fraud. essential, then, as under prior heads, there is no contract. If
; ;
;
the error
fied
is
under head B, the injured party may have an action of on him.^ Much of the confusion observable in our decisions has arisen from the fact that the incidents belonging to one class of error are imputed to another class. To avoid this confusion, Savigny's classification, with some modifications, will be
deceit against the party imposing
1
'
Infra,
232
et seq.
282
et seq.
237
174.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. X.
adopted in the following pages, and the cases distinguished on this basis. 174. To a binding juridical act, we must remember, it is essential that not only should there be a will to do the act, but the will must be duly expressed. mere itsexpresthing ^^^^ *^ ^^ ^ has no force without the exprescoincide!'
sion.
The
and
invisible,
to be in a par-
conceive of as influencing
be the motives we may has no contractual force unless expressed. On the other hand, an expression of will may be robbed of force should it appear that it was unintended. The promises of a person talking wildly in his sleep do not bind him, nor is he bound by promises made by him under
it, it
was
so
may
be
shown by
Bat
so essential to society
words and deeds as the expression of thought, that the burden of proof is on a party who seeks to show that he acted, when thus apparently expressing his will, under error, or unconIn our own law, as will hereafter be seen, while a sciously.^ document is to be construed according to intention,2this intention is to be gathered from the words used by the parties and only when there is ambiguity, or when these words were meant to be supplemented by unwritten negotiations based on extrin-
sic facts,
put
In the
modern
Roman
supposed intent more completely than is the Recently, however, in view of the loosecase with ourselves. ness of construction to which this led, there has been a reacthe letter to
tion towards the position that
when words have been selected by the parties to express their views, these words alone are to decide. This is urged by an intelligent expositor:* (1) on the ground of practical necessity (2) on that of logic and (3)
; ; ^
134.
L.
Scheiff,
Divergenz
zwischen
'
"238
CHAP.
X.]
[ 174.
on that of positive law. As to the tirst, the chief example of those who hold that the letter alone is to control, is the case of a person who signs a paper without knowing what it contains, in which case, it is urged by Bahr, it is the letter alone that can determine, as there is no intention whatever. To this, Scheifi" adds, that in such cases there is an intention,
and that intention is to be bound by whatever shall be placed on the paper.' The same remark may be made as to the signing of a cheque with the amount in blank. It may be said that here there is no intention, and that the letter must necessarily exclusively control. But the answer is that the intention is to be bound by whatever the party entrusted with the cheque shall within a certain range enter in it. (2) The logical objection to the assigning absolute supremacy to the intention is, that, as intention is undefinable and unlimited, it cannot determine legal relations. The law, therefore, can deal with
intention
(3)
By
the
Roman
as inoperative as is
In our own
no question of it does not emerge. With us, however, the necessity of maintaining intact, for commercial purposes, the sanctity of written terms, is more strongly felt than it was in the old Roman system, in which business was conducted mainly by word of mouth, or than it is in Germany and France, where the traditions of the Roman law remain authoritative. The distinctive position taken by our courts
controversy has not been so radical, there
is
See infra,
185.
fiir
2
'
4 Kr. Viert.
Gesetz.
S. 160.
of
will,
in the
Infra, 655,
958.
Roman
the
in
same
error,
quality to persons
when
errantis est,"
dis-
much subtlety by Savigny. (Rom. Recht, III, 115.) There is, he admits, some plausibility in the posicussed with
tion that error
is
and
to the
same
eflFect
Savigny
may
like unconsciousness
states
uncon-
unconsciousness
in the
scious of
175.]
CONTRACTS.
CONSCIOUS ERROR.
[chap. X.
II.
175.
Promises
A promise
was
per
known
bind.
to
so uttered.
"
Verborum quoque
obligatio consi
be in jest do not
stat, si inter
jocum puta
ego
tibi
obligatio."'
mises
made
This is the case, as the context shows, with prodramatic performances, and as part of exercises
Analogous
cases, as
must be
taken in a very limited sense. It is the person acting who concedes to the His freeerror this controlling force.
dom
tives
no matter what may have been the advantages which the error might foreshadow to him, he could reject them. The right concepunlimited
;
possible
may have
;
distin-
itself
in the
;
mind
is
willing
fact
the will
which must
lie at
;
had another object in view and such case, the question arises whether the latter object may not be effected. The answer to this question depends upon, (1) Whether the expression of intention relied on can be
in
juridical relations
and
both arbi-
(2)
is
Whether
one which
which precede
it.
And
the con-
cited
from the
a ground
Two
interesting essays
Kohler,
on
mental
reservation
goes to matters of
Jahrb. for 1878, vol. 17, pp. 91-158; 325-356. Dr. Kohler takes the ground
that mental reservations are inoperative, because, (1)
even in those cases it does not relieve from liability when it is culpable. On L. 3, 2, de ob. et act. (44,7).
the
As
is
noticed
by Windscheid (Pand.
without
He
contests, with
much
condition of
When
it
"
will
mental reservation, and that mental reservation is a unilateral mental simulation. Kohler, on
240
CHAP. X.]
[ 176.
mentioned by Savignj,
tracts of mancipation,
may
be noticed in the
Roman
con-
and similar processes, in which words were used symbolically; and illustrations of the same kind may be found in our own bonds, in which cautionary penalties are inserted.^ The question is, what is the sense in which the promisor knew the promise was accepted by the promisee?^ If both parties knew that the promise was to be inoperative, it
does not bind.
176.
Error when
gxposes^to action of
deceit, and to rescind-
tentionally
benefit,
1
makes use of false statements to obtain a not only must submit to have any contract
t
thus induced rescinded at the election ot the defrauded party, but exposes himself, as will hereafter
be seen more fully, to an action for deceit.'
the contrary, argnes that simulation
<
^^'
trfct?^
has nothing in
servation.
back on them as a defence, (1) Because they are immoral, (2) Because to admit such defences would destroy
falling
business.
Divergence. Here a taken between "confusion" and "error" (" Verwirrung "
2.
intention.
The
to
actor,
for
instance,
Unintended
is
who promises on
hundred ducats
lates,
distinction
but
it
is
and "Irrthum")
conscious
actioo,
the
first
being unaction
is
whole
to
transaction
the
second,
latter,
under mistake.
error in
its
The
which
is
which a mental reservation is attached. The promise is in no way made inoperative by the mental reservation.
technical sense,
defined
of
as a "defective or
wrong impression
law
or
fact,"
et
including,
therefore,
error juris
facti.
The
distinctions
infra,
The
tention
and expression are thus divided by ScheiflF (following in this respect Windscheid) 1. Intended Divergence. Under this head fall jests, parables used for instruction, and simulation. According
:
supra, 144.
An
known
such a
to be erroneous, is asserted in
to Scheiff, the
mise
is
just as liable
when he ought
to
consideration.
know
by the other party to be in earnest, as if he actually knew this was the case. Mental reservations fall under this head and a party is precluded from
know
2 3
to be impossible, is a nullity, se
infra, 307.
Infra, 657.
VOL.
I.
16
241
177.
III.
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. X.
177.
In
A consent of
Roman
law unconscious
essential
two minds to one and the same thing being an essential incident of contract8,Mt follows that there can be no contract when the parties differ
essentially as to the thing they
i i
.
have in view,
ciudes'contract.
distinction
is
made by
between error and ignorance. Error consists in a judgment which, resting on incorrect information, is a perversion of the truth, while ignorance is a total want of information as to the particular topic
;
same legal effect as error, and may be, therefore, classed under the same head. Error is also, so far as regards the subject
matter, divided into error of
avoids, and error of law
effect.^
fact,
So
it
when
both.^
affects
when
affects
it
With
may
be either vincible (vincibilis), or invincible (invincibilis), under which head are classed, not errors which are absolutely unavoidable, for there are none such, but errors which could not be avoided unless by researches unusual with prudent men under similar circumstances.* Error, also, viewed in relation to the effect it has on the will, is regarded as either
essential (error essentialis
s.
it
touches the
when
no contract when there is an essential error by one of the parties is argued by Savigny to be a settled doctrine of
there
the
Roman
law.
"In omnibus
negotiis contrahendis,
is
error
acti
aliquis
sit."^
intervenit, ut aliud
sentiat
nihil
is
valet,
quod
an
essential error
cited
See supra,
by
*
'
See 198
As
Savigny as bearing on the question in the text " Cum non consentiant qui
errent.
602.
*
As
sensui est
quam
L.
tn/ra, 1043.
s
de juris. (2,1). " Error enim litigatorum non habet consunsum." L. 2, pr. de jud. (5, 1).
detegit?"
15,
242
CHAP.
X.]
[ 177.
by a party, there is no actual consent,^ is spoken of by Windecheid,* as "epoch-making" in the doctrine of error; and he is sustained in this by the great body of German jurists.' Windscheid, who occupies (1882) the highest rank as a commentator on the Roman law, adopts substantially the same position.* Error, according to his definition, is where a party has no consciousness that he does not really intend that which he professes to intend. " He believes either that what he says has a difterent meaning from what it really has^ or that he uses different language from what he really does." The promise of a party made under such an error, it is sometimes said, is a nullit}'^ on account of the error. According to Wiudschied, however, this is not accurate. The nullity
"Nulla enim voluntas errantis est." L. 20, de aqua pluv. (39, 3)." Non
videntur, qui errant, consentire."
116, 2 de R. J. (50,
L.
eri.
et
ii.
de
errore
in
contractibus
dem Irrthum
theit
;
in der
Rechts gelerhr;
17)." Cum
L.
8, c.
h.
Hankopf, de
emti
in contractu
errore
are not to
venditi
Goetz,
de
in
transact, etc.
Van Maanen, de
natura
;
igno;
rantise et erroris
et etfectibus
context,
Herr-
but by the whole doctrine of dolus wrought out with siach care and completeness by the
Roman
jurists.
There
to
would be no necessity
in
any case
error,
were any no matter how slight, there would be no contract to rescind. But
contract, since, if there
man, von den Wirkungen des Irrthums Kritz, de erroris facti Thibaut, iiber die Wirkung des Irrthums Valett, Versuche eine von der gewohnlichen abweichende und einfachere Theorie von dem Einflusse des error
; ;
;
facti
in the
Roman
is
own, fraud
tract
held in
many
cases as of
Richelmann, commentatio de
conventionibus.
is
good.
which would otherwise be held The party injured can in such cases hold to the contract and sue for
damages, or
facti errore in
In addi-
tion,
the topic
discussed at large in
may
and
it
is
iii.
135-9.
Wachter,
ii.
102
i.
Vangerow,
193;
ii.
iii.
604;
Sintenis,
89.
p.
298;
by foreign jurists. The following treatises on error are noticed by Koch II. 129. Feltz, diss.
of copious discussion
:
Unger,
Pandekt. 3d ed.
76.
243
177.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. X.
of the promise does not arise from the error, but from the fact
that the promise and the intention do not correspond.
The
great merit of Savigny, according to Windscheid, is that he brought into prominence the distinction between error in
which the intention and the expression coincide, and error in which they are at variance. In'the latter case the transaction
(supposing the error to be essential)
intention, as
is
was another
words
cannot be the basis of an obligation since intention without From is as inoperative as words without intention.
According to Windscheid, howit was made under an error it is necessary that the thing promised either in its entirety (as where a party signs a wrong document), or
cases negligence
it is
may
estop.^
ever,
in one of
its
essential constituents,
As
essential constituents
1.
Windscheid enumerates
N'ullity, is made. 2. however, under this head, is predicated only when the promisee not when he is mistaken by the promisor for another person has the very person in mind whom his language indicates, and when his mistake is in assigning to such person unreal Of the latter class of mistakes the following stages qualities. promise is made to a party who gives an erroneare noticed
;
:
ous Christian name; to a party who gives an erroneous family name to a party who gives the name of another person of whose existence the person promising is not aware; to a party
;
to the promisor, or
last case,
The
If this object
is
defined
'
244
CHAP. X
[ 177.
is
error
that avoids.^
So far as concerns the incidents of the obligation, a distinction is to be taken between such as according to existing business standards constitute the essence of the object, and such as do not. If the promisor erroneously assigns to the
4.
lating to something
which
is
a nullity.
An
class,
error,
he on the other
An error, for instance, as to the metal of which composed, brass being mistaken for gold, is essential, and avoids the bargain, the particular kind of metal being here material ; whereas, an error as to the particular kind of
a vase
for a bucket is not essene. g.^ pine or hemlock and does not avoid, unless the contract be for some reason dependent on the kind of wood used. The question whether, when the object of a promise has been injured, its essential properties are changed, depends, therefore, in default of a special bargain, on the particular case.' The supremacy of Savigny's doctrine is, however, by no means unchallenged. By eminent recent critics* not only is the accuracy of Savigny's commentary on the authorities
tial,
wood used
is
declared
et seq.
clarant has in
person
the
liarities of
be
hereafter
discussed,
Withrean addi-
argued by Windscheid that a variance only avoids where the inteution falls behind the expression, not where it exceeds it. Thus a party, ac' It is
when one
has said.
also, it is
cording to the
Roman
standards,
who
sential, there is
makes a bargain for a pledge on a bronze vessel, which turns out to be gold, he supposing it to be gold, is bound by his bargain. (L. 1, 2, D. de pign. act. 13, 7.) As unessential
points, according to Windscheid, are to
if the mistake is esno consent. Put here, not the error that avoids, but
Here,
Hence,
when
the
no avoidance.
eine
und
Rechtsgechaft,
psycholo-
245
177.]
to be subject to ao
tory.
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. X.
many
These exceptions are: (1) Negotiable paper, bills of lading, etc., are governed, as to third parties, by their words,
irrespective of the question of error.
(2)
make
it
steam-tug is sent to him with a pilot, but he rejects the proffered aid, and arrives safely in port. In the mean time another ship, from this cause losing the services of the pilot and tug, runs ashore. The "foreign captain"^ would be liable under the port laws for the expenses of the pilot and tug, notwithstanding he acted under an essential mistake. And this is undoubtedly true, though not necessarily on the ground of contract, since the captain in such case would be liable for negligently making signal. (3) Registrator X., to take another case,^ likes " Manzipan" (a kind of German cake), and dislikes macaroons (Makronen). In order to be sure he himself writes the order to the confectioner, but is surprised at finding a macaroon-tart on the table. It is sent back, but the confectioner produces the order, " Makronentorte," signed by Mr. X. !N"ow Mr. X.'s " error in essence" would be no defence to a suit against him on this order. Another case is as follows: "G. Eicken," during the French-German war, receives an order to buy, in Posen, a large amount of oats at any price. He executes the contract, but, as he is about to forward the oats, he finds that the order was meant not for him, but for "F. Eicken." The party sending the order refuses to accept the oats, which in the mean time have greatly fallen. In another case a house is offered for rent, according to the written terms, at 1800 marks, payable quarterly, at end of term. As the lessee is about to move in his furniture, the lessor refuses admission on the ground that he did not mean what the writing said, and that it contained two clerical errors " 1800" for " 2800,"
given by him.
and
1
"
postnum"
for
is
"praenum."
Now, in such
*
cases, it
would
This illustration
given by Bekker
fiir
Ibid.
in Kritische Vierteljahrsclirift
Ge-
246
CHAP.
X.]
[ 177.
not be pretended that the party from ceeds is not bound by the writing.
the writing proThis was substantially ruled in Germany in a famous case,^ in which a telegraphic message had in it " buy" instead of " sell." It is maintained that the common sense view of such transactions is that a party is to be bound by what he writes. It is urged, also, that the whole doctrine of consent, as taught by Savigny, rests on the erroneous hypothesis that it is intention and not expression that constitutes a legal act. This is admitted to be the case with wills, in which the voluntas testatoris is to and, in contracts, prevail. It is otherwise with contracts
whom
This
is
what
is
relied
on by the promisee
to be given
him The
it
is
insisted,
is,
that, while
allows
him
to invade
his
if
then
all
business security
An
without
was not made under a mistake, and to these inquiries there might be no end or indemnity might be exacted, which would add greatly to the burinquiry to see whether or no
;
The reply to this, that a party -making mistake in written order is liable for culpa in contrahendo^ a a and in this way he is made to pay the losses incurred by the other side through his conduct, is anticipated by Bekker, who makes in answer the following points: (1) the remedy on the contract is more simple and eftective; (2) to have recourse to culjpa in contrahendo is to unnecessarily introduce penal remedies into civil jurisprudence. This is undoubtedly ingenious; but it should not cause us to overlook the fact that, when the parties do not agree as to the object of their bargain, there can be no contract. If I should intend, for
dens of the transaction.
Oppenheim
v.
Weiller.
Infra,
1043.
247
177.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. X.
buy a
ship, there is
and the other party should intend to no agreement between him and me. This,
however, does not preclude my liability to him for culpa in contrahendo in case he is damaged by my inaccuracy of expression.^ In our own law, it is also to be observed, the doctrine of estoppel comes in to impose a liability in such cases on a party who, although not bound by force of a specific contract, is precluded by his conduct from denying his liability to a party whom he has induced to assume certain obligations, The distinction between essential and non-essential error
is
also discussed
by
Scheift" in
In bilateral obligations, error, according to Scheiff, precludes consent in two cases: (I) where with either party there is
and
when
not
do
go to the
in
same
thing.
Savigny's
in
is
contested
Pfersche.'
work
published,
it
Error in substance,
argued,
simply
ark
and does not involve a variance between intention and expression. The party bargaining under this error intends what he says and if the other party says the same thing, then there is a concurrence of the two This is sustained by a copious examination of minds. Roman standards, which, however, are often subjected, the in order to support the author's argument, to forced and unnatural constructions; and while there is no doubt much truth in the position taken by him that error in substantia does not necessarily involve a variance between intention and expression, yet it does in most instances involve a variance between the intentions of the two contracting parties.
error of judgment,
;
He
declaration, "
will,
always errors in motive. The I buy this thing," is a normal expression of no matter what may have been the mistake of the party
'
See in/ra,
1043.
stantia
'
Divergenz
Zwischen
Wille
und
suchuug
benzky.
Erklarung, 1879, cited supra, 174. ' Zur Lehre vom. sog. error in sub-
248
CHAP.
X.]
[ 177.
Romans
this
But
but from
considerations.
logical necessity,
but an arbitrary
order to obtain
In such through the condictio pretii, the vendor was indemnified from loss, and as between the two theories the only difterence was, whether the purchase-money was to be obtained by the condictio or by the actio emti, the question was merely processuel, having no practical consequence, and hence is not discussed on principle by the classical jurists. The rule they
for the purchaser a safeguard, the condictio pretii.
cases, as,
laid
down was
which was deficient in material properties he believed on good grounds and without negligence to belong to it. The old doctrine of nullity in case of essential misapprehension was only thrown out speculatively was of no practical consequence; and should have no place, as in itself
of an article
;
unreasonable, so
that law, justice
it is is
argued, in the
lays
Roman common
law.
By
The
fully
down
(Gewahrleistung).
vendor
is
knew
or ought to have
known
is
German
In an article by Brandis,^ an authoritative contemporaneous jurist, the prevailing doctrine in Germany is stated
to be, that error as to the juridical nature of a transaction always essential, but that error as to a person is only essential when the intention was directed specifically to such person, and error as to properties of a thing (Eigenschaften) is only essential when the contract was made on account of such properties. This view is reiterated by Windscheid, in an edition of his commentary published in 1880, and by Ihering, in an essay published in 1881.^ ^Notwithstanding,
is
1
now
Kritische
Vierteljahrschrift,
etc.,
Infra, 1043
et seq.
249
177.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. X.
and plausible criticisms to which it has been subjected, the doctrine that essential error by either of the parties precludes a contract still holds its supremacy in
therefore, the ingenious
German
Whatever apparent failures of justice from maintaining this view are compensated for by the application of estoppel in cases where a party inequitably attempts to repudiate an engagement into which he negligently led another, and by making him independently liable in such cases, in n suit for negligence.^
jurisprudence.
may
arise
'
Ibid.
According to Windscheid,
al-
two kinds
first,
that
is
which
exists
when
substantial error.
He
secondly,
bound for
all
when
was intended, but the eflfect is diflFerent from that which was intended. Under the first head falls the use of unintended
words, or the doing of unintended acts
;
he knew, or ought to have known, that the purchaser supposed the thing to
possess.
falls
the doing
though in
the court
may
was supposed, as is the case where a wrong document is signed by mistake, or where one person is erroneously addressed supposing
person.
authorities,
tract as
an alternative
for
abatement
of the price.
He
him
to be another
in error as
deny that the second of these cases falls under the head of error,
insisting
that
the
is
only
error
that
avoids a contract
XX. 1).
no other way
and the expression of intention when the " Erklarungshandel nicht gewollt
;
sei."
On
A party,
the pre-
any addi-
and
if
argument.
By
Dr. Zitelmann,
in a treatise containing
600 pages of
1879),
is
exposition
(Leipsig,
the
prescience
to
thing
is
contingentthat ac-
applied to
to the
happen.
true,
250
CHAP.
X.]
[ 179.
re-
178. In our
coojnized.^
n-
own law, the same rule is now generally Undoubtedly there are many cases o^
,
apparent conflict as to details. Jiut on the general law the question, there is almost an unbroken line of au- obtaluT^ thority, to the etiect that there is no contract when party the parties have in mind essentially different things.^
-I
-r.
,1
In our
own
may
what he
said
be the case, and this is only so when it should be so estopped, he is not contractually bound to something essentially different from what he had in mind. ^^ 179. Cases of error are to be distinguished from disUu-**"
cases of impossibility ^ J of
after discussed.'
sibility arises
performance, ' c
to
be here-
It
is
from a fact
time
auce.
timmte
if
Absicht,
and
when such an
is
perfected
the
word gene-
intention.
But
it is
is
an indefinite intention. The doctrine that there can be no effect except in accordance with intention, he argues, is without recognition in practical
by Hartmann is, that nullity on the ground of essential error is to be practically limited to cases of ambiguous utterance in which the rule " clarius
loqui debuisset" bears equally on both
parties,
jurisprudence.
After discussing
made
own
inter-
he goes on
when
a particular
word
business, that
ordinary
in the text,
no
whether
this
truthfulness
for
and
good
faith.
party,
instance,
an engagement essentially different from what he intended, but that he may be estopped as to bona fide parties by an ambiguous utterance. Further citations on this topic will
be found
*
who
uses
in a guarantee (Biirgschaftschein)
the
term
is
"Mark"
instead of
infra,
1044
et seq.
bound to the party dealing with him in good faith for the Thaler. By F. Mommsen, an adherent
" Thaler,"
ed.
;
400
it is
conceded
Smidt
v.
Tidon, L. R.
i?ifra,
that in
many
and bailments, words are to be taken in the sense in which the promisee
accepted them.
180, 186.
Supra, 4
infra,
et seq.
180
et seq.
And
it is
also conceded
Lifra,
296
by
Windscheid, that
party
who
251
180.]
CONTRACTS.
{e.
[CHAP. X.
of the bargain
for,
g.
something
common.^
;
But
is
a party
may
this does not make imperformance any the less a defence for him, though he may have made himself liable in an action for deceit.^ The question in such case is not one of consent to a contract it lies in a different domain, that of performance of a contract.^ 180. When there is an esential error as to parties to a
impossibility of
performance, yet
possibility of
negotiation,
Essential error as to
chide^s^^'^^
,
it
cannot bccome a binding contract.* A., for instance, marries B. under the impression that B. is C. There
j-j^^g
contract.
hQQn a
falsc pcrsonation, or
an accidental transit
way
In such cases
valid
could
not be maintained
that
there
was a
tween A. and B.
essential error
{i. e.
The
between error that goes to identity, and is here well illustrated. A. marries B., under the impression that A. is rich, and A. turns out to be a pauper; but in this case, as the error is not to
error that goes to mere accident)
identity
but
to
accident, there is
a letter
'
is
is
Hitchcock
party,
by
non-existent condition,
self
may
estop him-
AUan
2
V.
Hammond,
pr. L.
L.
6,
de Contr, emt.
III.
such condition.
(18.1).
s
304.
183.
* Jnfra,
265.
is
An
apparent excep-
recognized in states
the c?!7fercn<i
objective
it is
the non-
which it is held that for a woman with child by another person to conceal this fact from a man whom she
in
Infra,
265.
To the same
Koch,
eflfect is
the
Roman
At the same
time, a
law.
ut supra, 141.
252
CHAP. X.]
[ 180.
who
Here there
is
no contract, though
it
whom
If an author, also, conwith a publisher to write a book, the contract is personal with the publisher, and cannot be assigned by- him to a third party .2 Or, indentures are executed by which an appren-
tracts
tice is
bound
to a particular master, in
no
master to a stranger.^ Or, certain discretionary power is given to a particular broker, in which case such power cannot, without the principal's assent, be transferred to another broker.^ Or, A., intending to buy from B., against whom he has a setoif,
C,
in
assent.'
owner
he supposes, to an experienced farmer, and an impostor takes the farmer's name, and enters on possession in this case no title passes, though it would have been otherwise had an intended lessee taken the land under a mistake by the owner as to his qualifications.^ Even in those systems of jurisprudence in which error in other reas
;
spects
is
making
of a con-
imputed to error
person with
sell to
whom
An agreement to
See Chapin
Longwortli, 31 Oh.
St. 421.
Stevens
V.
v.
Benning,
K.
&
J.
168;
* Henderson v. Barnwall, 1 Y. & J. 387 Cochran v. Irlam, 2 M. & S. 301 Locke's App., 72 Penn. St. 491.
;
Hale
'
Cooper
V.
Benj. on Sales, 3d
v.
Am.
ed. 58
Mitchell
Davis
3 S.
Com.
v.
v.
Boulton
6
v.
Jones, 2 H.
v.
&
N. 567
Bos-
Vanlear,
R. 248
Com.
Jones,
&
;
R. 158
Biggs
v.
v.
Harris, 64 N.
cit.
;
Walters, L. R.
C. 413
Spears
Snell, 74 N. C. 210.
is
Otherwise
vision.
when
there
v.
statutory pro-
Hunsucker
v.
Elmore, 54 Ind.
pham's Eq.
190
209
see Johnson
Dodd, 56 N. Y. 76.
253
180.]
CONTRACTS.
sell
[chap. X.
composed ;^ nor can one partner introduce an assignee into the firm without his co-partners' consent ;^ nor can an agent introduce a subagent, in matters involving discretion, without the principal's assent ;^ and as a general rule, when the authority conveyed in a mandate of age!)cy is one which requires peculiar aptitude in, and conveys peculiar discretion to the agent, the
not sustain a contract to
to a firm differently
and authority to a
fore,
substitute.^
An
attorney-at-law, there-
assent,
So
that
pushed in our common law, has been held that in all cases involving personal indebtedness, a creditor cannot be compelled to accept satisfar has this principle been
it
from his immediate debtor.^ On the other hand, when by the mistake as to person no injury is wrought, " In the common it is not a ground to set aside the contract. case of a trader who sells for cash, it can make.no possible
faction
except
Mitchell
Pollock,
i.
V.
Wald's
on Part.
3 *
717.
Wh.
on Agency,
28.
Roman rulings If I receive a loan from Sejus, which I suppose comes from Gains, this imposes no obligation on my part to Sejus " non quia pecuing
: ;
Wh.
;
niam
de
tibi credidi,
fieri
on Agency, 28, 579, 645, 709, 756 2 Kent, Com. 633: Miles v. Bough, 3 Ad. & El. (N. S.) 845 Henderson v. Cochran v. Barnwall, 1 Y. & J. 387 Irlam, 2 M. & Sel. 301 Warner v. MarEmerson v. Hat Co., tin, 11 How. 209 Lyon v. Jerome, 26 12 Mass. 241 Wend. 485 Evans v. Wain, 71 Penn.
;
;
consentientes
rel.
non potest."
L. 32
cred.
(12.1).
If I
prefer to
to Titius, a man of means, do not personally know, and another person comes to me in his name, and obtains from me the money, this gives the latter no title, and he becomes criminally responsible for the
loan
money
I
whom
St. 69
false personation.
Adams
5
Paddock
Colby,
18
;
Vt. 485
Pollard
v.
Bleakley
in re, 5
Paige, 311
;
v,
Cun-
Coles
V.
4defurtis (42.2). ' James v. Isaacs, 12 C. B. 791 Lucas V. Wilkinson, 1 H. & N. 420 Robinson Mullen V. Davidson, L. R. 6 Ex. 269 V. Eno, 14 N. Y. 597, cited Wald's Pollock, 410. See infra, 184, 506-7;
; ; ;
Stone
V. State,
12 Mo. 400.
cites
As
to false
and see
852.
also,
Savigny,
the follow-
as to novation, infra,
254
CHAP.
X.]
[ 181.
him whether the buyer be Smith or Jones, and a mistake of identity would not prevent the formation of the contract."^ The dealing is wnth a generic person, not a speand if there be no essential failure as to the solcific person vency of the person dealt with, there is no avoiding error. And when a purchaser, after being put on his guard as to to a mistake of identity, persists in dealing with the vendor, he candifterence to
;
not set up his mistake as a defence.^ 181. An essential error as to the subject matter of a bargain may prevent the inception of a contract in the ,, ^ And so as following cases to error as 1. When a party undertakes to alienate that which n'Jauer^'^*
.
is
unalienable.
2.
When
it
to belong to another.^
3.
When he gives
own though
;
of his
tity
is
not as to iden-
but as to
if
title,
the contract
is
in
'
damages
Beiij.
Leek
v. v.
Mudge
Leake,
1
10
S.
&
R. 176
;
Allen
v. Cowley, McMasters, 3
2d
ed.
341
Bingham
;
v. v.
492
Horbach
Gray, 8 Watts,
;
v.
Bingham,
Cochrane
Huss
sell's
it is
V.
Rusis
Willis, L. R. 1 Ch. 58
ford, L. R. 3
Jones
v. Clif-
A pp.,
Though
as
Infra,
S.
;
Ch. D. 779.
"
stipulais
otherwise
when
the mistake
tion to
'
much
as
198
Good
v.
v.
Herr, 7
W. &
St.
if
478
253 Mc;
Wald's ed. 127. Cases of agreements held void on the ground that the parties were mistaken in holding that the estate of one of them was materially burdened in a way in which it was not burdened, will be found in
Cooper
V.
Gross
this
V.
In Peters
paying
Phibbs, L. R. 2 H. L. 149
own lia-
Broughton v. Hutt, 3 De G. & J. 501. To the same effect Mr. Wald (Wald's Pollock, 428) cites Jordan v. Stevens, 51 Me. 78 Martin v. McCormick, 8 N. Y. 331. In Pennsylvania conveyances in mistake of rights have in like man;
bility
though
this case
may be gravely
ut supra, citing
;
questioned.
*
Infra,
230
Koch,
;
L. 10, C. eod.
(41, 1).
L. 35,
D. de acqui.
rer.
dom.
255
181.]
4.
CONTRACTS.
;
[CHAP. X.
When
case,
he pays money under a mistake of fact in which by both the Roman and our own law, the money paid
be recovered back.^
may
5.
When
title
;
has no
he buys personal property to which the vendor in which case, by our own law, the vendee may
And
bailment,
"
may
be available
title, if
a party receives as a gift what the other party meant as a sale, he not being informed that the article was
6.
When
bought by him, and honestly and non-neglito be a gift.* " If A. sends a case of wine to B., intending to sell it, but fails to communicate his intention, and B., honestly believing it to be a gift, consumes it, there is no ground for holding B. to be responsible for the price either in law or equity, if he be blameless for the mistake."^ 7. Where a party sells under a non-negligent essential mistake as to the character of the thing sold.^ This is eminently the case when the party selling has been imposed upon, either intentionally or unintentionally, by others.'^ Thus equity will give relief in cases where aged and infirm persons are induced by erroneous information to sell property at a price far below
sent to
to be
him
gently believing
it
its value.^
Bell V. Gardiner, 4
V. Solari, 9
Man. & G. 11
;
Emigrant
v.
Co.,
47 Iowa, 91
Burkham
M. & W. 54 Waite Wheaden v. V. Leggett, 8 Cow. 195 Olds, 20 Wend. 174 Mayor of N. Y. v. Erben, 38 N. Y. 305; infra, 186, 520, 742 et seq. * Infra, 230 Story on Contracts, Alien v. Hammond, 11 Peters, 533 63 Bradeen v. Brooks, 22 Me. 463. ' Leake, 2d ed. 341, citing Bingham
Kelly
; ; ; ;
and
cases cited
infra, 191.
*
Infra, 199.
Benj. on Sales, 2d Am. ed. 373, adopted in Pollock, Wald's ed. 407.
The question
for relief, is
of error in law, as
ground
independently discussed in
V.
Sr.
126
Clare
i'.
Supra, 161
infra, 214.
;
P. 334
Hart
v.
Supra, 165
;
Mason
v.
v. Pelletier,
Swaine, L. R. 7 C. D. 42.
general
See to same
Co. V.
82 N. C. 40
419.
Dalton
Dalton, 14 Nev.
Montgomery
Am.
256
CHAP. X.]
182.
[ 183.
is
When
given by
^otitig
passes
the bailee,
1
same
T disposition
i>
XT
Hence,
when
changed to a party who takes them avowedly for this purpose, but afterwards appropriates them, no title passes.^ " A parting with the property of the goods could only be effected by a contract, which required the assent of two minds; but in this case there was not the assent of the mind either of the prosecutor or of the prisoner, the prosecutor only meaning to part with his notes on the faith of having the gold in return, and
the prisoner never meaning to barter but to steal."^
183. If A., falsely
C,
C. intending
them
no
passes in
C, no
title
to the goods
goaatfoT
A. There is no consent of minds to one and the same thing; the property remains in C* This rule
applies to all cases of false personation.'
And
it
has been
ruled in the
title even to an innocent vendee.^ however, when the mistake is as to the merits or solvency of a particular person. It is on this distinction that the legislation and consequent adjudications on the sub-
"
Wh.
et seq.
See
to
Infra, 291
Hardman
v.
;
v.
Booth, 1
X..
infra,
292, 730
793.
As
H.
&
C. 803
Smith
Wheatcroft,
v.
R. 9 Ch. D. 223
Cundy
; ;
Lind&ay,
v.
q".
Wh.
Lindsay
s, c,
],
B,
'Wood, B., R. V. Oliver, cited 4 Taunt. 274 R. v. Williams, 6 C. & P. 390 R. V. Gumble, L. R. 2 C. C. 1 Hildebrand v. People, 56 N. Y. 394
; ; ;
D. 348
757
v.
;
Hollins
v.
R.
Gillings, 1 F.
Hench, R.
St.
&
; ;
and see
Penn.
291-2.
5
427
tinctions.
obtained
may
Cundy
;
hands, see
infra, 734.
That there
is
459
^ ?
no market overt in
tn/ra, 734.
Hollius,u. fowler, L. R. 7
H. L. 757.
Wh.,Qp Agency,
731.
VOL.
I. 17
25,7
184.]
CONTRACTS.
it
[CHAP. X.
does pass
when
there
is
no such personation, notwithstanding the solvency of the party buying may have been falsely represented by him. And it is to meet the latter classes of cases that the statutes of The general rule is that where false pretences were enacted.^ there is an essential error as to the identity of parties, this precludes contract, though it is otherwise as to matters relating to solvency or other qualifications.^
A. cannot, by merely sending goods to B., establish with B. a contractual relation.^ A contract requires asscut of two miuds to onc thing; and the mere on contract ^^^ it is necesffoods by B., and even their consumpreception of ^ ^ ^ sarythat , tion, he not understanding the transaction was the conmeant for a sale, and not negligently misleading should have been j^ ^^gg ^-^^^ make him liable for their ^ price.* This made with the party rule has been pushed to its extreme limit in the The defendants sent an order for following; case goods to B., who in the mean time had sold out to C, the plaintiff. C. forwarded the goods to the defendants without notifying them of the change, and then sent on a bill in his own name. This the defendants refused to pay, on the ground that they had never contracted with the plaintiff, and that by this transfer they might be cut out from a setIt was held off they might otherwise have had against B.
184.
.
"^
'
And
it
is
principal
who
Wh.
et seq.
and comments
Benj. on Sales,
Sujyra,
That a fraudulent
As
to rulings in questions of
agency, see
Wh.
on Agency, 447,
;
291
3 *
title
cannot
and authori-
pass
title,
Supra, 22.
Wh. on
; ;
22,
and
infra,
723, 741
506-7.
5
311
V.
Humble
Boulton
Jones, 2 H.
Mitchell
&
v.
N. 564
Warner
Leeds
v.
v.
McKay,
M.
& W,
;
595
see to
same
eflfect,
;
Lapage,
v.
v.
Ins. Co., 6
Holt N. P. 253
Millikin; 57 Me. 63
258
CHAP. X.]
[ 185.
has a right to elect what parties he will deal with ;"* and if third parties come in as principals in a contract in which they had not been previously known, they must do so subject to any set-off or cross-claims against the party actually con-
man
tracted with.
And,
for the
same
own name
equities.*
185. Signatures may be put unintentionally to documents under the following circumstances Signature to wrong 1. A party who cannot read has a document ^ " document falsely read to him, which he signs, believing it to does not be entirely different from what it is. In this case he is not in any way bound by his signature. There is no contract, for there is no consent to a common thing. And if the party reading to him is one in whom he could without negligence confide, he cannot be made liable by way of estoppel on his signature.^ 2. A party who can read has a document shown to him, and its purport falsely stated to him by a person in whom he is entitled to confide. In this case, also, it is argued that
:
.....
Kingsley
v.
Lock's App., 72
Penu.
^
St.
491.
C.
J.,
;
is
sup-
Chapman,
Winchester
infra,
v.
ported by
Dig. Fait
many
J.,
authorities
;
see
Com.
507,
Ibid.
infra, 1021.
by Bayley,
Thoroughgood's case, 2 Co. Rep. 9 b; Swan v. Land Co., 2 H. & C. 175 Kennedy v. Green, 3 M. & K. 717
and a
Trambley
v.
Rieard,
blank
left
Hallenbeck v. Dewitt, 2 Johns. 404 Bauer v. Roth, 4 Rawle, 83 Briggs v. Evart, 51 Mo. 249 "Wright v. Macpike, 70 Mo. 175. How far a party is liable
; ;
up
the
done without
it is
grantor's
negligence),
not
Swan
v.
Land
&
for
22
infra,
As
to
undue
influence, see
In Foster
P. 704, the
induced to sign by false represenof legal eflfect, the party defrauded may elect to rescind. Infra,
If
tations
201.
infra,
adopted by Mr. Pollock (3d ed. 429), " The position that, if a grantor says
:
264, to
substition avoids.
259
185.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
there
is
is
no consent
;'
though a
may
with bona fids third parties the binding effect of his signature f and to sign negotiable paper in blank works ordinarily such an estoppel.^ Whether a document under such circumstances There is void, or only voidable, has been much discussed. are high authorities to the effect that a deed executed by mistake, in reliance on a solicitor, is absolutely void when it is in conflict with the real intentions of the party executing.^ But, as is pointed out by Mr. Pollock, this is inconsistent with Thorough good's case, and with a recent ruling of the court of appeal in chancery, in which it was said by Mellish, L. J., that '* when a man knows that he is conveying or doing something with his estate, but does not ask what is the precise efl'ect of the deed, because he is told that it is a mere form, and has such confidence in his solicitor as to execute the deed in ignorance, then a deed so executed, although it may be voidable on the ground of fraud, is not a void deed."^ And on principle we may hold that, when the filling up of a blank is by an agent, the document, though invalid as between agent and principal, may bind the latter as to third parties to whom he had recognized the agency, and ma be subsequently ratified by him so as to validate the original transaction. But whether mere negligence can estop a party from showing that a deed is not actually his own has been doubted.^ Of course, when a party intentionally signs a blank cheque or a blank note, he binds himself as to bona fide third
Sug. V.
&
P. 173
Foster
v.
Mac-
Vorley
V.
v.
Cooke, 1
Gifi".
Gifi^.
230; Ogil-
kiniion, L. R. 4 C. P. 704,
cited infra, 264
;
and cases
v.
vie
Jeaffreson, 2
353; Empson's
De Camp
Hamme,
29 Oh.
St.
As
to
undue
and
Greenfield Bk. v. Crafts, 4 Allen, 447; Greenfield's Est., 14 Penn. St. Garrett v. Gonter, 42 Penn. St. 489 De Camp v. Hamme, 29 Oh. St. 143
; ;
174. 6 Forsyth
473
Abbott
V.
Chap-
man
cited
Rose, 66 N. Y. 137;
infra, 204.
Me. 176 4 Allen, 447 Garrett v. Gonter, 42 Penn. St. 143; Union Bk. i\ Middletown, 33 Conn. 95 Livings r. Wiler, 32 111. 387. T Hunter v. Walters, L. R. 7 Ch. 75 Halifax Union v. Wheelwright, L. R. 10 Eij. 192 see infra, 1043.
;
Day,
46
Greenfield Bk.
r.
Crafts,
260
CHAP.
X.]
f 186.
even though the blank be filled differently from what he intended.^ And there is high authority to the effect that this is a doctrine of the law merchant, aside from the question of estoppel.* 3. Between the parties an unauthorized filling of a blank, not only does not bind, but amounts to a forgery. It has, in fact, been expressly ruled that where an agent has authority to till with a particular sum a blank in a paper signed by his principal, it is forgery to fill the blank with a larger sum.* And it has also been held to be forgery to fill without authority a cheque already signed.* In cases where a forgery can impose no legal obligation, it would follow that there could be no suit between parties or privies upon a document so filled up. But a party by negligently permitting his signature to be so used may estop himself from disputing it.' 4. Where a person signs a document as part}-- and not as attesting witness, as he intends, this is a mistake which equity will correct, although a negligent signature even of this class may impose liability as to bona fide third parties. 5. mistake made by a scrivener in engrossing a document will be so rectified by a chancellor as to make the document conform to the actual intention of the parties.'' 186. An essential error as to the identity of a thing which is the subject of a negotiation (error in corpore), on Essential
parties,
^^entityof
Bank
96,
of
Pittsburgh
v.
Neal,
22
How.
697
*
cited
Wald's
Pollock, 403
e< seq.,
as to filling blanks.
v.
Foster
Mackinnon,
704; London
Bank
v.
4 C. P. Wentworth, L.
L. R.
< Flower v. Shaw, 2 C. & K. 703 Wright's Case, 1 Lew. C. C. 135. Bigelow on Est. 3d ed. 484, 485, 599 Wh. on Ev. 1143 Bisphara's Eq. 282 Forsyth v. Day, 46 Me.
; ;
;
R. 5 Ex. D. 96. R.
V.
C.
&
;
P. 652
R.
v.
Wilson, 2 C.
;
&
K.
Den. C. C. 284; State v. Flanders, 38 N. H. 324 Wilson V. Commis., 70 111. 46 State V. Maxwell, 47 Iowa, 454 as to filling
1
; ;
;
527
2 Cox C. C. 426
176; Stevens v. Dennett, 51 N. H. 324 Greenfield Bk. v. Crafts, 4 Allen, 447 Zuchtmann v. Roberts, 109 Mass. Barnard v. Campbell, 55 N. Y. 53 456. That a forged signature may be
;
ratified, see
Bramwell,
H.
^
&
N. 768
et seq.
Infra,
Canedy
v.
261
186.]
thing precontract.
CONTRACTS.
[chap. X.
is
coming a
the
contract.
law.^
This
an established rule of
sell
is
Roman
to B. one of
two
and another in B.'s mind, there is no contract between A. and B., since A. and B. had diti'erent things in mind. Or, if A. agrees to lease to B. a particular suite of rooms, but the rooms B. has in his mind are essentially difterent from those A. has in his mind, there is no lease, for they have not the same object in view f and so where one
in A.'s
at the time,
mind
party has in
mind a house in a particular street, in a particular town, and another party another house in another street of the same name, in the same town ;' and where there is a material mistake as to the location of a piece of laud.* The same rule is applicable where one party agrees to purchase an unopened cask containing, as is alleged, a designated article, and the cask has an utterly difterent article in it;* and where one party has in mind cotton to leave Bombay in October, while the other party has in mind cotton to leave Bombay in December, the In fine, "where through difference of time being material,
some mistake of fact each was assenting to a different contract, there is no real valid agreement, notwithstanding the apparent mutual assent."^ Of errors in identity Savigny gives
by name, he intending
altogether inOperaHenderson,
15
Supra, 4, 171
et seq.
L. 9 pr.
Conner
Raffles
Mass.
D. decont. emt. (18, 1), L. 32, 83, 1; L. 137, 1, D. de verb, oblig. (45.1), L. 34, pr. D. de acquir. vel
1,
319.
6
1
Wichelhaus, 2 H.
&
C.
906.
1
Benj. on Sales, 3d
Am.
ed. 50,
134 a,
v.
citing
Thornton
Keele
v.
v.
Kempster, 5 Taunt.
144
Milligan
786 210
Calverly
V.
Sales, 600-2.
8
Kyle
see Barfield
<
Dwight Man. Co., 2 Cush. 80 Gardner v. Lane, 9 Allen, 499, s. c. 12 Allen, 44 Kyle v. Cavanagh, 103 Mass. 356 Harvey v. Harris, 112 Mass.
Rice
V.
; ;
Spurr
V.
32; Sheldon
v.
Capron, 3 R.
I.
171;
262
CHAP. X.]
tive.^
[ 186.
when making
a bargain,
have totally different chattels in mind, and in this case, there can be no sale and the same principle applies to bargains for hiring and other bargains for transfer of goods.^ Even tradition, according to 8avigny, requires concurring wills, and is rendered invalid by a raisunderstg,nding as to the identity of the thing to be transferred; and by an illusive tradition of this kind neither property nor usucapion can be acquired.^
>
is in
and
the
substantial point, so
jar af-
fecting
i'.
See to same
effect, Raffles
Wichv.
that
it
may
purchaser might
all, in
v.
such
BistoUi, 2 B.
&
C. 511
Leake, 2d ed.
and
state
316
1.
purchaser
is
clause of compensation.
Under such a
mistake of this
Freeman, 2 Keen,
;
was
25
Colyer
v.
Jones
V. Clifford, L.
Holmes' R. 3 Ch. D. 779 App. 77 Penn. St. 50 Miles v. Stevens, Bruck v. Tucker, 42 Cal. 3 Barr, 21
;
;
II.
470, says
"
would seem
to be
346.
C.
In Flight
Tindal,
v.
Booth, 1 Bing. N.
J.
376,
C.
said:
"With
respect to misstatements
clear of fraud,
it
which stand
of
the consideration, or as
is
impossible to re;
would destroy
its
member
laying
it
all
the cases
some
them
validity."
down
that no misstatements,
but shall form the subject of compensation only Duke of Norfolk v. Worthy,
;
party
who
to
assented
not
absolutely,
but
Gib-
Camp, 340
Wright
v.
Wilson, 1
on
by the
Whart.
event.
down
Fitch, 5
will
v,
Jones
gart, Ry.
Edney, 3 Camp, 285 Waring v. Hog& M. 39, and Stewart v. Alliston, 1 Mer. 26. In this state of discrepancy between the decided cases, we think it is, at all events, a safe rule
to adopt,
263
187.] 187.
CONTRACTS.
[chap. X.
An
And
so as to error as
character of property
gained for in like manner prevents the inception of a Contract, when the object the purchaser has in vicw will be absolutely defeated if the error be not jnadc an cxcusc for non-performancc. The intention*
is
for instance,
gelding
is
offered
and accepted.
kind {e. g., gold) is bargained for, material greatly inferior? and of an utterly different character {e. g.^ copper) is substiIn these cases there is no contract, for there is no tuted. consent as to one and the same thing.^ Hence, when a gold
into
of
mean "material"
was meant
is
cause,
i.
e., if
what
the parties of a
that
is
not really
ment as to him is of no force because he did not give his assent to what is agreed upon absolutely, but upon such knd such conditions; which are not verified by the event." Am. ed. of 1825, II. 122. This is no doubt the passage referred to with approval by Gibson, C.
;
for
which
is
it
;
ment
void
no
differ-
Savigny.
be read to
to
mean "motive
is vital,
the diflference
J., in
Prevail
r.
Landsdowne
v,
Landsis
downe.
Savigny's chapter on error,
questionably,
as
far
unis
as
Germany
So
far,
Savigny (and this view is now accepted on all sides), error in motive is no ground for avoiding a contract. This, however, the context shows was not meant by Mr. Powell, and that what he intended to say was that there is no contract when there is a misconception as to an essential incident of the agreement. It is interesting to
which was
vehement
the doctrine
is
put
controversy in Germany,
in terms even
to be
those used
by Savigny,
;
in a text-book
pleteness
and
delicacy.
No doubt
Powell meant virtually the same thing as is meant by Savigny. But the expression,
"
if
Chandelor v. Lopus, v. Gray, 4 Camp. 144 Bridge v. Wain, 1 Stark. 410 Morrill v. Wallace, 9 N. H. 113 Gard
Supra, 2
;
Cro. Jac. 4
;
Gardiner
ner
V.
i-.
would
If
"cause"
264
CHAP. X.]
coin
is
[ 187.
is
passed
away
it
no
title to
or in any
party taking
gives a
priates
cabman a sovereign
it,
And where A.
shilling,
and the
larceny.^
Specific
when
is
it
was
in fact in an-
other county.^
error
as to incidents
which
may
tract
or
may
thing, such error does not prevent a binding confrom being made. The parties agree as to the thing That the words in which to be done or the thing to be sold. this agreement is expressed should not exactly apply, is a necessity of all negotiations, since there are no words as to whose meaning, fully carried out, any two minds can absolutely agree. It is, in fact, an understood condition of all contracts, that while there is to be one and the same thing intended, so far as identity and substance are concerned, there is a wide margin in the way of opinion of attributes as to which parties are allowed to differ, and that each party may pursue his independent investigations as to such attributes,
of the
But an
error as
may
operate,
when
which
it is
The same rule applies, mutatis mutandis^ to all Hence, where a party supposed he was leasing " a free public house," but that which the lessor tendered was a public house which was required to take all its beer from a particular brewery, it was held that they had distinct objects
such an error.
bargains.
in mind.'^
Chapman
;
v. Cole,
12 Gray, 141.
Nichol
verly
v.
v.
Cal-
R. V. Middleton, L. R. 2 C. C. R.
Williams,
v.
38
3
Wh.
Best
Kennedy
580
229.
t
;
Panama
v.
Co., L. R. 2 Q. B.
see
Cutts
Guild,
N. Y.
5
6
Jones
v.
Pepperall, L. R. 5 Eq. 1
265
188.]
CONTEACTS.
[CHAP. X.
in sub-
ii.^-
The
'
by the
does not
necessarily
(1) \ /
; }
have this
effect.
utensils (2) \ /
of lead or
bought in mistake for silver; (4) a female is (3) vinegar is bought in mistake for wine bought in mistake for a male slave. In all these cases the sale is held to be void, there being no consent, and hence no In the first three cases, argues Savigny, the error contract. concerns the stuff (Stoff), and this was at one time designated as substantia; though as convertible with substantia was used, and more frequently, materia} But there is nothing that
Other inferior metal are
;
material, preclude
making
the error.
concrete case.
will be observed
that there
is
however,
is
it is
not essential
difference of value
may
it
be great.
Had
might have been different, but with no legal standard, the difference between a higher and a lower quality of gold was not regarded as essential. The true reason why, when the intention was to buy gold or silver, there was no consensus when the article taken was brass or lead, is in the peculiar character assigned to gold and silver. They were, as they continue to be, noble and precious metals, and no matter how much the shape in which they were moulded became marred or superannuated, their intrinsic value remained. Articles made from the inferior metals, on the other hand, depend for their value on their workmanship ; when this loses its- value, the value
of the article
is
virtually gone.
But the
rule
we thus
reach
>
Op.
cit.
137.
266
CHAP. X.]
is
[ 188.
There
may
part,
and
in
site delicacy
which it is the workmanship that, from its exquiand elaborateness, gives the value. Carving by
Benvenuto Cellini, for instance, does not derive its distinctive value from the metal employed the metal may be of no conquence, and the value of a brass vase, carved by that great On artist, would be almost as great as that of a gold vase.
;
made
of silver or gold,
With
and a case of spurious metal is essential, although the watch itself (i.e., its works) is known never to be made of gold, while the difference between gold and inferior metal in a chronometer he holds to be non-essential, since the distinctive value of the chronometer consists in the perfection of its works. But between pure metal and base metal, plated or
case
gilt,
is
essential, since of
is
when
the form
is
silver being so
buy a gold is no
But an
error as to infeis
when bargained
not essential,
may
be difi'erences of
it is the shape and workmanship that give the type to such articles, the value of the material occupying a
subordinate place.
metals
decisive,
So far as concerns metals, therefore, although the difference between the precious and the inferior
is it is
when
stance," does not here afford a decisive test. Between wine and vinegar, which the jurists speak of as essentially different, there is an unquestionable difference of stuff. But is fhere necessarily a difference as to value ? There are some qualities of vinegar which are more costly than some qualities of wine.
Here, then,
it is
267
188.]
similarity of the
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. X.
two things, that makes the error essential. regard to male and female slaves, also, the distinction, Savigny proceeds to argue, does not consist in the difference
With
of
money
such cases could " stuff" or " mano Roman jurist has treated the difference of sex as a difference of substantia or materia. The test is the object of the use. The male slaves were usually
in
Nor
in field labor, and as mechanics; the females in household labor and in domestic duties. The sexes, therefore, had distinct objects, and therefore an error as to sex was essential. But sex cannot be regarded as always an essential test. Among animals, the ordinary use is independent of sex, and an error as to the sex of animals e. g.^ horses to be pur-
employed
chased,
thing
is
not essential.
From
draws the following conclusion; An error as to the quality of a is essential, when the quality eiToneously assigned to the thing
would, according
to the
it
in a
is
different class to
which
really belongs.
Difference in stuff
is
not neces-
wine, does not fix his mind on a mere fluid contained in a cask, but on wine specifically and he who buys a gold vessel, fixes his mind not on the vessel, but on the gold as the material of the vessel. According to Roman phraseology, a species is bought, but with the tacit understanding that it belongs to a genus. And the same remark applies, when under the cover of the cask vinegar instead of wine is bought. Viewed in this light, the difference between genuine and spurious jewels is essential. This and it is also is unquestionably the case with unset jewels the case when the object of the setting is only properly to show forth the stone. It is otherwise, however, when the stone is used merely to adorn a precious vase, and is only accessory to the vase, though it may be of greater value than the vase.^ With regard to animals, it is not value but kind that decides, and so between different kinds of coarse metal,
;
He who buys
and
different
kinds of grain.
>
test
268
CHAP.
X.]
[ 188.
be readily applied. When I buy, for instance, a tract of land on which I suppose a house to be standing, but it turns out before the purchase is consummated that the house is
may
burned down, the material basis of the sale remains the same, but in a merchantable sense its conditions are essentially
altered, if
my
Roman law to be on the other hand, held that there is in this relation no essential difference between good and bad wine between good and bad gold between utensils of difterent inferior metals between old and new clothes.^ The same conclusion was reached on a bargain for the sale of
Such a contract
inoperative.^
is
The Roman
wooden
furniture,
when a mistake was made as to the wood was built. Now, as Savigny proceeds
not here be the
test, for
the prices of
such articles vary with the wood of which they are made; it is a question of species, and it cannot be doubted that here
is subordinate, since by veneering no kind of wood that cannot be imitated. It is true that high authorities have ruled otherwise, misled in part by the abstract idea of dissimilarity of stuff, in part by the analogy with the precious metals, which analogy, however, fails in application from the fact that with furniture form is everything, and if the form is destroyed, the furniture is useless, while with the precious metals the form has little to do with the value, the silver or the gold retaining its merchantable character when melted down. But the following ruling Savigny appeals to as decisive " Quamvis supra diximus, cum in corpore consentiamus, de qualitate autem dissentiamus, emtionem, esse, tamen venditor; teneri debet, quanti interest (emtoris se) non esse deceptum, etsi venditor quoque nesciet; veluti si mensas quasi citreas emat, quee non sunt."^ In other words, a table is bought under the erroneous impression that it is of citron-wood, a material highly esteemed. This
wood
is
L. 11,
1,
269
189.J
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. X.
impression
valid,
of the vendor.
we judge from the context is based on The contract, notwithstanding but the vendor is bound to make up the
is
the assurance
the error,
is
difference in
In
in
unessential, so
for the
The contract
was
valid,
has already been stated, there are here two opposite axioms, between which, in each case, an intermediate
line
is
the wood.
As
to be drawn.
On
if
there
is
an entire
differfor,
no assent of parties
and
would be
knowlif
property could
be alienated without
owner's
title
On
can be no
made by
can be in no case an absolutely true descripwe will see more fully in the next section, is that error as to generic character prevents a contract from being matured, but not error as to quality or bulk not going to generic character, unless the incidents,a8 to which
tion.
The
true meaning, as
its
intended object.'
we may
Nor does
error as to
unless the quality goes to the avoid a contract, ' generic character of the thing which is the subject.
matter of the contract, or unless it was the specific the thing is to be applied.^ In an English which object to ase, in 1870,^ the judgment of the court, after stating " that
1 1
qua
y.
See Gardner
Scott
V.
v.
ground that
In
this
and
2
Littledale, 8 E.
&
B. 815
Sutton
V.
Temple, 12 M.
& W. 64;
; ;
Bull
Robinson, 10 Exch. 342 Gossler v. see Sugar Refinery, 103 Mass. 331
infra, 933.
Cox v. Prentice, 3 M. & S. 344, there was mutual material error as to quality of silver, and the sale was set
aside on that ground.
'
In Smith
v.
Hughes, L.
Kennedy
v.
Panama Mail
Co., L.
was
be-
R. 2 Q. B. 589.
oats, and,
on the
270
CHAP. X.]
if
[ 189.
no contract, but if it be only a difference in some quality or accident, even though the niisapprehension may have been the actuating motive to the purchaser, yet the contract remains binding," adds, " we apprehend the principle of our law is the same as that of the civil law and the difficulty in every case is to determine whether the mistake or misapprehension," goes, " as it were, to the root of the matter, or only to some point, even though a material point, an error as to which does not affect the substance of the whole consideration."
there
;
It
must be
may
be
sifying
'''genus"
or "substance."
if if
thing
of clas-
of one
quesfit
genus or substance
genus or substance
tion
is,
The
Was
it
it
Hence
it
is
"Riga Rhine Hemp," and the other party had in mind "St. Petersburg Clean Hemp," there was no bargain, as the vendor's kind of hemp was unfit for the purchaser's avowed purpose.^ And
even though there be a warranty, and no fraud, it has been held that when one party takes a view of the differentia of an
article sold
utterly different
there
is
no consent of minds.^
is
On
of the contract, but the intention of the parties was to transfer the property in the specific chattel at all events. Whether a particular affirmation as to the quality of a specific thing sold be only a warranty, or the sale be conditional, and
'
to be null
if
the affirmation
is
should
E.
to
&
r.
Bryant
r.
C.P.431.
Mr.
Wald (Wald's
v.
Pollock,
Isburgh, 13 Gray, 607 (a horse case). 3 Pollock, 3d ed. 452 citing Wight;
effect,
among Wynne, 12
20
man,-
J.,
in
Gurney
v.
Womersley, 4
Wheat. 183
Lyon
v.
Bertram,
271
190.] at the
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. X.
same time be remembered that a mistake of one party, may be ground for setting aside a contract in eases where such mistake was known at the time of the conas to quality,
tract to the other party.^
190.
Error as to
quantity or price only
By
i'^^^
the
Roman
tanto invalidates.
contract,
good for
n-
pro
tanto
If, tor
and the other accepts 30, the contract binds for more complex rule is applied. When the error is as to the price, no contract is effected when less is promised than is demanded, since here there was no union of wills.^ But where more, under mistake, is promised than was offered, then the contract is good for the lesser sum, since as to that sum there was really an agreement of minds.^ When the error relates to the thing, then there is to be a distinction between a particular thing whose quantity is designated, and the designated quantity by
only
30.'
itself.
much
is
an
acre,
when,
the contract
may
And
How. 149 Day v. Pool, 52 N. Y. 416 Freeman v. Knecht, 78 Penn. St. 141 to which may be added Scranton v.
;
New York
St. 298.
Tel. Co. v.
Dryburgh, 35
;
Peun.
^
et seq.
;
Tarbell
r.
Trading Co., 37 Conn. 130 Voorhees Vanleer v. Earle, V. Earl, 2 Hill, 288
;
26
Penn.
St.
277.
In Freeman
v.
34 N.
v.
:
J.
Eq. 245.
Knecht,
ut supra (a
if
horse case),
it
was
Melick
says
Dayton, 34 N.
Eq. 249,
held that,
dee might rescind. 1 Leake, 2d ed. 176, 318. That a promise is to be construed in the sense in which the promisor knew it was
"
the
If
number of acres to be greater than the actual number conveyed, and thereby induces the vendee to give more for the tract than he otherwise would, the vendee is entitled to an abatement. " Abatement will also be made where
there
is
taken by the promisee, see infra, 657. * L. 1, 4, 5 D. de verb. ob. 45, 1. ' See Greene v. Bateman, 2 Wood. &
M.
*
362.
Infra, 601, 898
;
a gross mistake.
Gross mistake
L. 52, D. locate
;
(19, 2)
on Cont.
W.
85
Brown on
540
;
where the difference between the actual and the estimated quantity of land
is
represented
is
so great
as to clearly
272
CHAP. X.]
[ 190.
it
when a
contains
defi-
fifty acres,
the contract
if
ciency in quantity,
must be accounted
ticular measure
is
for by reduction of price.^ When a parpromised, the error can only take place in
the delivery.
The
actual
amount contracted
for
must be de;
and
if
an excess
is
own
practice,
reformation
But when a thing is sold in the mass, and the statement as to quantity is a mere conjectural opinion? then there can be no recovery of damages for the deficiency.*
Hence, a contract for the
a general estimate of the
sale of land,
even though
is
it
contains
amount of
little less
than
and
known
the truth.
by
the vendor.
Gr. Ch. 212 Gr.
;
See Clark
;
v.
Carpenter,
Boyles, 3
way
to the more certain and material, and the mention of a number of acres
4 C. E. Gr. 328
;
Couse
v.
by metes and bounds, monuments or possession, is but matter of description, and not of the essence of the contract, and the purchaser takes the risk of quantity, where there is no fraud nor
gross mistake.
1 Story's
Eq. Jur.
;
141
Mann
v.
Pearson, 2 Johns. 37
Koch, op.
Ibid,
cit.
"
If
many
acres,
falls
more or
is
less,'
190
Rand
v.
short or overruns a
no com-
pensation
where there is not proof of fraud. "Mere enumeration of quantity of land at the end of a particular description of premises by courses, distances, boundaries, and monuments, is matter of description only, and is subject to
the controlling parts of the description,
M.
129
& W.
; ;
84
and cases
et seq.
McLay
v.
Perry, 44 L. T. N. S. 152,
McKenzie
v.
As
to liability
and
if
260.
VOL.
I.
18
273
190.]
CONTRACTS.
;^
[chap. X.
unimportant
quantity
is
though
it is
otherwise, as
we have
seen,
when
object of purchase.''
When
by auction, by mistake contained a much greater area than was intended by the vendor, who was guilty of no negligence, it was held that specific performance would not be compelled as to the excess thus included by mistake;^ and in such case the vendee must submit to take the lesser amount or to have the contract annulled.* As will be hereafter more fully seen, the words " about," and " more or less," indicate that the parties are not bound by the precise figures stated Where a wrong price is inin measurement or valuation.^ serted in a lumping ofifer for purchase or sale, specific perform-
ance will be refused,^ when there is a material mistake in this res{)ect, there being no contract, since the minds of the But in parties did not agree as to one and the same thing.^ respect to both quantity and price, it must appear that the
Infra,
;
Mason, 414
231
;
take."
Mann
V.
v.
Pearson, 2 Johns. 37
Morris Canal
v.
Emmett,
9 Paige, 168
;
Smith
son
V. V.
see John;
Pollock, 3d ed. 445 and see McKenzie v. Hesketh, L. R. 7 Ch. D. 675 Coles V. Browne, 10 Paige, 526. "A contract of sale of an estate may be void by reason of a mistake of both
; ;
Johnson, 3 Bos.
&
P. 170
;
Ladd
Story's Eq.
Supra,
187
v.
Eq. Jur.
B. 575
v.
144; Farrar
;
Nightingale, 2 Esp.
639
E. 1
;
Levy
E. 969
;
r.
Green, 8 E.
v.
&
&
Milligan
Cooke, 16 Ves.
Clowes
V.
v.
Higginson, 1 Ves.
North, 2 Y.
&
B.
524; Price
v.
&
; ;
C. 620;
Hart
Mills, 5
M.
&
G. 85
Okill
v.
Rhoads, 37 L. J. C. 830 Price v. North, 2 Y. & C. 620; Aberaman Works v. Wickens, L. R. 4 Ch. 101. When a vendor by mistake sells in a specified lot a larger number of acres than the lot was estimated at the time to contain,
Whittaker, 2 Phillips, 338 Denny Hancock, L. R. 6 Ch. 1 Arnold Arnold, L. R. 14 Ch. D. 270 Irick
;
v. v. v.
at so
and when the price is adjusted much per acre, he can recover
;
Calverly
;
210
from the vendee the deficit of price. Jenks V. Fritz, 7 W. & S. 201 Fly v. Brooks, 64 Ind. 50.
s
Infra, 902.
&G.
1. v.
Leake, 2d ed.
;
316
Webster
R. R.
v.
v.
Harris
Pepperell, L. R. 5 Eq. 1.
Cecil, 30 Beav. 62
Wycombe
" The converse case occurred in Bloomer V. Spittle, L. R. 13 Eq. 427, where a reservation was introduced by mis-
274
CHAP. X.]
[ 192.
party mistaking was not negligent in falling into the mistake.^ Otherwise there is, if not an estoppel, an independent
liability for negligence.''
191. The cases that have just been stated, are those in which the error was one of mistake not induced by If ^^^^ there be
*'
in such case,
when
the thing
-1
the
cannot be said that the parties have differOn the contrary, each has the unreal thing in his mind the first innocently, the second by a fictitious conception of his own. In such a state of things, not only are we not at liberty to say that there was no common contemplation of the same thing, but we must hold that the party fraudulently exhibiting the unreal thing to the other party, becomes liable for his deception to the other
party.
latter,
the former
may
be compelled to
make
redress either
in
deficiency, or in an action for deceit. between the parties, is not void, but voidable at the purchaser's option.* On the other hand, when purchasers fraudulently obtain goods from a vendor, on an agreement which is on its face a nullity, there being no agreement of minds as to the same thing, the contract is not even
an action, to
make up the
sale, as
voidable, so as to give title, even to bona fide third parties. It is true that the party defrauded may elect to hold the
is
was a voidable contract, but because the party defrauding is estopped by his own conduct from disputing the truth of his
assertion.*
192.
A settlement
>
/n/ro, 196.
Infra, 1043.
(Wald's
ed.), 421.
et seq.
6
See
infra,
232
/yv^
234
et seq.
275
193.J
Error in
CONTRACTS.
Corrected
'pro tanto ;'
[chap. X.
and as
reeled
to'
though, a8 has just been seen, when a lumping price jg offered for a thing, this can7 7 taking it as a mass,
.->
""
which it influences from becomError in ^ j mi t motive not ing a valid contract.* ihe Koraan law recognizes . essential. !_ i ^ an exception in cases m which a party executes a paper under the mistaken idea that he is compelled to do so though this exception does not extend to cases in which the mistake is one of law.* In our own law, mistake in motive does not usually avoid. " Care must be taken not to confound a common mistake as to the subject-matter of the sale, or the price, or the terms, which prevent the sale from ever coming into existence by reason of tlie absence of a consensus ad idem^ with a mistake made by one of the parties as to a collateral If the fact, or what may be termed a mistake in motive. buyer purchases the very article at the very price and on the very terms intended by him and by the vendor, the sale is complete by mutual assent, even though it may be liable to be avoided for fraud, illegality, or other cause or even though the buj'er or seller may be totally mistaken in the motive which induced the assent."
Trevent a bargain
j.
'
Stuart
V.
V.
Sears,
Thibaut, op.
143.
cit.
103
Koch,
L. R.
ut supra,
Russell
9
;
Monnin
In Jefferys
r.
Fairs,
4 C. D.
Bee
2
Wh.
on Ev. 926
v. v. Cecil,
Harris
him
to search for
and
Webster
190-1.
3
30 Beav. 62
supra,
Biapham's Eq. 191 Story's Eq. Jur. 150 see discussion, supra,
;
177.
<
L.
5,
1,
He to be found under the surface. was held bound on his lease, though it turned out there was no such coal. There was no misrepresentation
charged to the lessor.
cases, see infra,
s
L. 3,
4)
For analogous
et seq.
212
14)
L. 31, D. pec.
const.
(13,
5)
Benj. on Sales, 3d
Am.
ed. 54.
276
CHAP.
X.]
[ 194.
unessential so long
-^^j.^^.
no error as to the thing to which such matters are collateral. As an illustration of this
given, in
^^ ^^ collateral
18
which
^^ future
it
was
matters not
agreed that to a farm, to be rented or sold, should be added a span of horses, among a number on the farm, but no specification was given by which the horses could be designated.
By what
rule
to be
made?
According to Labeo, the intention of the vendor is in such case to prevail,^ and the validity of the contract is in no way aftected by the mistake of the purchaser as to the horses he was to receive. In our system, mistake as to matters collateral which are not necessary and essential conditions
Thus, where specific machines, ordered from the manufacturers, did not possess the qualities which the purchasers supposed they did, though without entire failure of
not avoid.^
adaj'tation, there being
no misrepresentation or warranty by was held that this mistake of the purchasers was no ground for setting aside the contract.^ And it has been stated, as a general rule, that " where each party is equally innocent, and there is no concealment of facts which the other party has a right to know, and no surprise or imthe vendor,
it
whether mutual or no foundation for equitable interference."* Even supposing the error be fraudulently promoted by the other side, this does not avoid the contract
position exists, the mistake or ignorance,
unilateral, is treated as laying
L. 34, pr. D. de cont. emt. (18, 1). Bispham's Eq. 191 Kerr on Fraud and Mistake, 408 Chanter v.
1
ter."
nedy
580.
Panama Mail
v.
v.
Co., L. R. 2 Q. B.
Hopkins, 4 M.
V. f.
& W.
399
Bumiett, 1 C. B. N. S. 613
Taylor, 3 Crancli, 281
;
Prideaux v. McFerran
;
Chanter
;
399 613
Ollivant
v.
Henderson
Prideaux
;
Bunnett, 1 C. B. N.
v.
S.
see Scott
Littledale, 8 E.
&
B.
of fraud, a fraudulent
on
Sales,
3d
representation of
any
fact material to
;
Am.
*
ed. 57.
ing Okill
Whittaker,
v.
De
Gr.
&
S.
83
McAninch
Laughlin, 13 Penn.
St. 371.
277
196.]
CONTRACTS.
is
[CHAP. X.
;^
when
the error
a matter of opinion.^
or when it is The mistake must be as to the present, must be as to something immediate, not
something remote.^ 195. In the Roman law the same distinction is applicable to contracts of exchange, an essential error makina; cd o Contracts of bailment in such cases the bargain a nullity.* According to
^
subject to
ruier^
Savigny, this obtains also in contracts of hiring; a contract, for instance, for hiring silver plate being a nullity should it turn out that the plate was of infe-
rior metal.
In cases of
is
gifts,
a similar distinction
is
made.
valid, as the
If,
donor suffers no damage on the other hand, the owner of a away under the impression that it is
is
whether the donee knew the quality of the metal.' So as to pawning. If the lender receives in pawn a gilt vessel, which the owner holds to be gold, the lender has a lien on the vessel for his advance.^ This follows from the nature of unilateral contracts, as in this case the inferior security is better than no
security at
196.
ce Negligent error does not excuse.
.
all.
jurists
make
essen-
,.
of fact an avoidance is that such error is sometimes inevitable; " cum facti interpretatio ple> n -n rumque etiam prudentissimos laliat. ' Jiut to give
.
r.
must be no
serious laches.
It
is
true that
perfect diligence
is
diligence
were required. Culpa levissima, therefore, will not preclude a party from the protection of courts of equity in cases of this kind.^ It is otherwise, however, where he is chargeable with
1
Infra, 246.
Infra, 569
et seg.
Cited Savigny,
III. 333.
;
Southwick
V.
Bank, 84 N. Y. 421
infra, 257.
Bispham's Eq. 191 Bell r. GarTownsend v. diner, 4 M. & U. 11 Crowdy, 8 C. B. (N. S.) 477; Union Nat. Bk. v. Sixth Nat. Bk., 43 N. Y.
278
CHAP. X.]
culpa lata^
i.
[ 196.
prudent business
the lack of that diligence and care which a man of the same class is accustomed to show
Thus, a party
it
who
neglects to
turns out to contain provisions contrary to his intentions f and, as a general rule, " where there has been no misrepresentation,
is
formance of
mistake."^
by the simple statement that he has made a Hence, where A. made an offer to B. to take a
B.'s agent accepted the offer
farm by name, stating the farm to contain 250 without examining the particulars, it was held that it was no defence to a proceeding to enforce the contract that B.'s agent intended to lease only 200 acres.* But where a proposal evidently contains a mistake, an acceptor, by snapping at it, will not be permitted to take advantage of the mistake.' So far as conlease of a specific
acres,
and where
452
Pardee
v.
v.
Fish, 60 N.
;
Y. 271
and
cf.
infra,
Mayer
r. Ives,
N. Y., 63 N. Y. 455
See
Snyder
245,
245-572.
Wh. on Ev. 1245 Kerr on Fraud and Mistake, 407 Glenn v. Statler, 42 Iowa, 110 Sanger v. Dun, 47 Wis. 615
;
; ;
42 Iowa, 162.
is
irifra,
572, 753.
'
This
settled
:
by many rulings
; ;
in
the
2,
Roman law
quod
;
L. 3, 1
L. 6, L. 9,
Goetter
185.
v.
supra,
falso (27, 6)
L. 11, 11, de
See infra,
572, as to reading
inter. (11, 1)
conditions on contracts
3
and
tickets.
de contr. emt. (18, 1) L. 14, 10, L. 55, de sedil. ed. (21, 1). Our own law is to the same effect Bispham's Eq. 191 Bilbie v. Lumley,
6)
;
L. 15,
1,
Tamplin
McKenzie
v.
James, L, R. 15 Ch. D.
L. J.
215 Baggallay,
*
v.
Hesketh, L. R, 7 Ch.
D. 675.
2 East, 469
C. 671
;
Milnes
v.
v.
Duncan,
6 B.
&
F.
;
Beaufort
v.
Neeld, 12 CI.
&
248
Lenty
v. v.
Hillas, 2
1
Ferson
Sanger,
Webster v. Cecil, 30 Beav. 62. That is presumed to have read a document signed by him, see Andros5
a party
coggin Bk.
V.
Diman
V.
r.
130
Lee
V. Ins. Co., 3
Gray, 583
;
Ryan
v.
Ins. Co., 41
Conn. 168
r.
Van
71
;
Iderstone, 28 N. J.
v.
Eq. 306
Woodward
Fosv.
Theilbar, 86
111.
;
18 Grat. 200
Adams Ex.
;
Co. v. King, 3
Ap. 316 Lamb v. Harris, 8 Ga. 546 Lewis V. Lewis, 5 Oregon, 169. See
infra,
Gray, 80
111.
28.
This
is
applied to
cases of signature
by mark
in
Doran
v.
572.
Mullen, 78
932.
111.
342; see
Wh. on
to a
Er,
That a signature
wrong
279
198.]
CONTRACTS.
it
[chap. X.
may
be stated that
a mis-
money under
take of
fact, is
no defence to a suit
to recover
when
It is
may
be estopped, as to
real
meaning.^
197.
Moneypaid
under misbe recov-
As
^^^^ "^^^J ^ recovered back f though this rule does jjot apply, as we will see, to money paid in compro-
As
and as
will hereafter be
more
fully seen,
mere
negli-
gence does not in such case preclude a party from recovery.^ It is otherwise as to money paid in mistake of law.^
198. Error in the
not avoid
contract.
concerning
vent the parties from coming ~ to a common mind ^ it. All persons are presumed to know
_ ^
the law, and when this presumption relates to the public law of the land, the presumption is irrebuttabW Judge
supra,
U.
;
S. V.
6 ^
852
Kingston Bk.
v.
Ellinge,
40 N. Y.
see
112
391; Pardee
Fish, 60 N. Y. 271;
;
Wh.
Mayer
t.Pr.
-
v.
New
V.
York, 63 N. Y. 455
Witthaus
310.
Stewart
Stokes
v.
Stewart, 6 CI.
&
F. 966
;
Infra, 752.
V.
Salomons, 9 Hare, 79
Kelly
r.
;
Clare
Lamb,
M.
L. R. 10 C. P. 334; Powell v.
;
infra,
202
a,
1043
et seq.
;
Smith, L. R. 14 Eq. 85
9
v. Solari,
and see also Bell v. Gardiner, 4 M. & infra, 520 JCJ. .11.', Lucas V. Worswick, 1 Mood. & Pearson v. Lord, 6 Mass. 84 B.. 293 Laz6U n. Miller, 15 Mass. 208 Waite Burr v. Veeder, 4L*jggett, S Cow. 195
Infra,
752
et seq.
& W.
54
Eaglesfield
Londoni-.
derry, L. R.
4 Ch. D. 693
;
Rogers
;
Ingham, L. R. 3 Ch. D. 351 Hunt t'. Rousmanier, 1 Peters, 1 8 Wheat. 174 Bank U. S. v. Daniel, 12 Pet. 32 Snell V. Ins. Co., 98 U. S, 85 Freeman
; ; ;
.3
of N. Y.
v.
Erben,
v.
V.
Curtis,
51 Me.
;
140;
Pinkham
v.
v.
38 N. Y. 305
dnfra, 752.
Merchants' Bk.
Mc-
Gear, 3 N. H. 163
son, 25 Vt. 603
9
;
Mellish
v.
Robert-
Wheaton
Wheaton,
Murray,
1
Conn. 96;
Shotwell
v.
280
CHAP. X.]
[ 198.
maxim
is is
no saying to what extent the excuse of ignorance might be carried;"^ and he adds that, " if, upon the mere ground of ignorance of the law, men were admitted to overhaul or extinguish their most solemn contracts, and especially those which have been executed by a complete performance, there would be much embarrassing litigation in all judicial tribunals, and no small danger of injustice from the nature and In corroboration of this difficulty of the proper proofs."^ cited striking remark of Pascal, that, if view may be the ignorance of law excuses, then the more ignorant a man becomes the more immunities he would possess and that perfect brutishness, if a man could arrive at it, would invest him with perfect privilege. The only wise man, he argues, would be on this hypothesis the obstinately ignorant the only knowledge that it would be desirable to obtain in perfection would be the knowledge not to know.* By Mr. Aus" that, if ignortin, the reason of the rule is found in the fact ance of law were admitted as ground for exemption, the courts would be involved in questions which it would be scarcely possible to solve, and which would render the adminBut whatever istration of justice next to impracticable."*
; ;
Storrs
v.
Barker, 6
v.
Champlin
Clarke
v.
Laytin,
18 Wend. 407
r.
Butcher, 9
Dougal, 2 Cal. 586 Gammage v. Moore, 42 Tex. 170. That an action for money had and received does not lie in such
cases, see infra, 5 754. to
Cow. 674
501
109
;
Hall
See generally
Hampton
427
;
v.
same
effect, Elliott v.
;
Swartwout, 10
Greeia,
;
Ege
v.
Koonts, 3 Barr,
Menges
.
V.
Oyster, 4
W. &
S. 20
45
Good
inch
Herr, 7
W. &
S.
353; McAnSt.
;
Laughlin, 13 Penn.
v.
371;
Marden, 15 Me. Clark v. Butcher, 9 Cow. 674; Abell v. BougRobinson r. Charleslass, 4 Benio, 305
Pet. 137
;
Norton
v.
Hill
v.
Carpentex
V.
Jones, 44
Statler,
111.
Stuart, 2
2 *
Leigh, 76
33 Mo.
377.;
;
McMurray v. Hubbard
Jooies v.
Martin,
Ch. 51.
*
Yerg. 498
81
;
Bill
v.
V.
Gwynn
Lyon
V.
V.
in
Wh.
on Neg.
413.
i.
498.
As
it
Bailey
v.
exceptional
may
be mentioned
Smith
Mc-
Jones
v.
281
198.1
CONTRACTS.
[chap. X.
our
may be the reasons of the maxim, it is a settled principle in own as well as in all other jurisprudences. Hence money-
law or equity ;* though it is otherwise as to money paid under Mistake, also, as to the legal a mistake of foreign law.^ meaning of a document is no defence to an action for its
enforcement.'
The fact, therefore, that the legal import of a written document was differently understood by the parties, one of whom eventually turned out to have given it a wrong
construction, does not avoid
tracts could be made.^
it,
since, if it did,
And
if
was held that ignorance, based on a Supreme Court, afterwards overruled, was a defence Harney v. Charles, 45 Mo. 157, where the plaintiflF was held not to be affected by ignorance that a statute was unconstitutional which was ultimately decided to be so. Between error in fact and error in law, Savigny notices this distinction, that error in fact must be shown as a substantive fact, while
;
Eaglesfield
Londonderry, L. R. 4
C
;
D. 693
32
Freeman
v.
Pinkv.
ham
V.
Gear, 3 N. H. 163
;
Haven
19 Conn. 548; Cow. 674 Ege v. Koontz, 3 Barr, 102 Real Est. Inst, v, Linder, 74 Penn. St.
;
371.
Haven
v.
Wh.
113
85
on Ev.
8
288.
Story's Eq.
v.
Jur.
12th ed.
of
facts
etc.)
Stockley
Stockley, 1 Ves.
&
B. 23
g.,
opinions
it
of
counsel,
Powell
V.
v.
Smith, L. R.
14 Eq.
was not the result of negligence. The two classes of error, therefore, while governed by the same
substantive principle, are subject to
different rules in respect to the
showing that
Mildmay
Shotwell
Lyon
Storrs
V. V.
burden
of
Savigny goes still further, maintaining that with errors in law, not merely the innocence but
proof.
And
Lanning Garwood
Carpenter, 48 N. Y. 408
Eldridge, 1 Green Ch. 145
Moorman
Martin
v.
v.
Collier,
v.
32
Iowa,
138
Montgomery
to fraud in
than
is
the case
with errors of fact. 1 Bispham's Eq. 189 Story's Eq. Kerr oii Fraud Jur. 12th ed. 112 and Mistake, 40 Gibbons v. Caunt, 4
; ;
;
Hamlin, 18 Mich. 354. As misstatement of legal meaning of document, see infra, 259. That a party is presumed to know what he
signs, see supra, 196.
*
Ves. 849
St.
Naylor
Stevens
v.
v.
555
;
v.
Sawyer
V.
Powell
v.
38
Perrott
v.
Gallant, 62 N. Y. 256
Strohecker
v.
Stewart
Stewart, 6 CI.
&
F. 966;
See as to
Rogers
v.
Ingham,
L. R. 3 Ch. D. 351
282
CHAP. X.]
[ 198.
them communicating to the other his distinctive construction, each is bound by the construction ultimately imposed upon it by the courts although equity may relieve in cases where there was a bona fide non-negligent mistake of rights under an ambiguous document.^ And a comessence, neither of
;
no fraud, will not it turn out subsequently comthat the right surrendered by the party
is
plaining
valid,
and
is
whom
The
made.^
mere
one of the parties has misapprehended his legal rights will not by itself shake such a compromise,^ though it is otherwise with a gratuitous surrender of unquestionable rights under a mistaken view of the application of the law to a parfact that
1
Ibid.
In
Hunt
V.
Rousmaniere,
Wheat.
(Eq.
174, as stated
by
.Judge Story
Jur.
12th ed.
114),
"upon the
be given, the
294.
2
with a power
to
sell
the
property
Infra,
533
mortgage upon the upon the mistake of law that the security by the former
money, instead
property
of a
Stewart, 6 CI.
&
F. 911
Rogers
;
r.
itself,
The
was brought
by the
give
creditor
him a
priority
by way
of lien on
The court
finally, after
upon the ground that the agreement was for a particular security selected by the parties, and and that not for security generally
cause, denied relief
;
Ingham, L. R. 3 Ch. D. 351 Clifton v. Cockburn, 3 My. & K. 76 Freeman v. Curtis, 51 Me. 140 Holcomb v. Stimpson, 8 Vt. 141 Good v. Herr, 7 W. & Cumberland Co. v. Sherman S. 253 20 Md. 117 Stover v. Mitchell, 45 111 213; Trigg v. Reed, 5 Humph. 529 Brandon v. Medley, 1 Jones's Eq. 313 Durham v. Wadlington, 2 Strob. Eq, 258; Morris v. Munroe, 30 Ga. 630 Haden v. Ware, 15 Ala. 149 Bell v. Laurence, 51 Ala. 160 Beall v. McGehee, 57 Ala. 438. That forbearance is a good consideration, see infra, ? 532 and so of compromise of doubtful claims, and so of giving up litiinfra, 533 gated document. Infra, 534. * Union Bank v. Geary, 5 Pet. 99
;
;
the
court were
asked
to
substitute
infra, 533.
283
199.]
ticular state of facts.^
this basis.
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. X.
rests on good of society that litigated questions should be amicably settled by reciprocal surrenders It is greatly for the
from a burden of litigation under which they would be crushed. Yet there are few compromises in which one of the parties at least cannot maintain that he acted in ignorance of the law. A point he considered doubtful had to be decided one way or the other; but at the time of the compromise he was ignorant of what the decision would be. If this ignorance would set aside a compromise, there is scarcely a compromise that would not be set aside.*
199. It has been already noticed that error on the questiou, whether a particular case is subject to a parErrorin suhsumpticular law, is, in this relation, a question of fact,
one of
tion of facts fact
not of law.
The subsumption,
by the
as the process of
jurists,
classification is called
Roman
may
sometimes be so simple that it may be difficult to see how it could be induced by error. On the other hand, cases constantly occur which are so complicated that counsel of eminence and skill may widely differ as to the particular rule of law under which they fall. It would, so argues Savigny, be great injustice to charge those experts, whose opinion in such cases is ultimately disapproved, not only with mistake, but with He cites to this effect a remarkable ruling in nefflisrence. the Roman law, in a case^ in which eminent jurists, through various subsuraptions of the facts (concerning which there was no dispute), took opposing views. Are we to hold the view which is finally discarded to be imputable to negligence? The Roman jurists did not so hold, and in the case before us,
1
Saxon
;
Life Ass.
t;.
12th ed.
131
& H. 408 McCarthy Decaix, 2 Rus. & M. 614 Naylor Winch, 1 Sim. & St. 555 Dunnage
Soc. tn re, 2 J.
; ;
;
v. v.
Cann v. Cann, 1 P. Wil. 727 Naylor v. Winch, 1 Sim. & St. 555
citing
Pickering
*
v.
Pickering, 2 Beav. 31
White, 1 Swanst. 137 Whelen's App., Jones v. Munroe, 70 Penn. St. 410 32 Ga. 181.
;
284
CHAP.
X.]
[ 199.
of law
is
maintains that it may be a defence when it goes to the question whether, in a doubtful case, a complicated system of facts In our own practice, this disfalls under a particular rule.^
tinction,
nized.
When
may
This distinction applies to the construction of documents;^ and when an. agreement is so framed as not to correctly express the intention of the parties, equity will not be precluded from relieving by the fact that the mistake was one of law.* Judge Story* gives as an illustration of the exception just
1
Savigny, op.
cit.
340.
V.
Ledyard
v.
v.
Phillips,
32 Mich.
;
13;
Fitzgerald
Jones
v.
L. R. 3 C. D. 779
Kelly
Solari, 9
M. &
85
;
W.
54
Cooper
;
v.
Phibbs,
L. R. 2 H. L. C. 170
Snell
r.
Ins. Co.,
98 U.
S.
Oliver
v.
C. C. 277
Freeman
v.
v.
v.
Curtis, 51
Me.
Peck, 4 Litt. 125 Underwood v. Brockman, 4 Dana, 309 Gratz v. Redd, 4 B. Monr. 178 Mason v. Pelletier, 82 N. Garner v. Garner, 1 Dessaus. C. 40 437 Lowndes v. Chisolm, 2 McCord. Ch. 455 Hopkins v. Mazyck, 1 Hill,
;
; ;
140; Howard
Puffer, 23
Vt. 365;
;
Wyche
v. Stiles,
v.
Greene, 16
;
Bank, 29 Vt. 230 Warder V. Tucker, 7 Mass. 449 Canedy v. Marcy, 13 Gray, 373 Molony v. Rourke,
McDaniels
;
Ga. 49
Newell
21 Ga. 118
;
Haden
V.
Larkins
v.
Dailey
Jes-
v.
State
v.
v.
Paup, 8 Eng.
Atchison, 19
Hudson
rop
V. V.
NorthBlake;
(Ark.) 129
Tex. 303
;
Moreland
v.
Harrell
De Normandie, 26
;
Blakeman, 39 Conn. 320 Bank Emerson, 10 Paige, 359 Champlain v. Laytin, 18 Wend. 467 Mayor of N. Y. v. Erben, 38 N. Y. 305; McMillan v. Fish, 29 N. J. Eq. 610 Logan v. Matthews, 6 Barr, 417 Gross V. Leber, 47 Penn. St. 520 Huss V. Morris, 63 Penn. St. 367 Russell's App., 75 Penn. St. 269 Gebb v. Rose, 40 Md. 387 Bigelow v. Barr, 4 Ohio, 358 Williams v. Champion, 6 Ohio,
of Rochester v.
; ; ;
man
Tex. 120.
3 Kennard v. George, 44 N. H. 440 Molony v. Rourke, 100 Mass. 190 Clayton V. Freet, 10 Oh. St. 544. See, how;
198,
Oliver
;
v.
277
Hudson
v.
Iron Co.,
290;
;
McKay
Simpson,
s
Eq. 452
infra, 205.
169
McNaughton
Clayton
V.
v.
v.
Partridge, 11 Ohio,
ch. 2, p.
223
Golbia
Leonard
v.
Leonard, 2 B.
&
B.
285
199.]
stated, the case of
CONTRACTS.
[chap. X.
is
heir-at-law
This agree-
Judge Story argues that the case (supposing that there was no fraud or imposition) " would exhibit such a gross mistake of rights, as would lead to the
ment,
it is
held,
would be
void.
might
fairly entitle
him
Indeed,
when
title at all to
the
seems
to
involve in
that
A
or
of the fact of ownership^ arising from a mistake of law. party can hardly be said to intend to part with a right
is,
title, of whose existence he is wholly ignorant; and if he does not so intend, a court of equity will, in ordinary cases, relieve him from the legal effects of instruments which surrender such unsuspected right or title." This is virtually the position of the Roman law, that the question of the subsumption of a fact under a law is question not of law but of fact.^
'
To the same
196,
citing
effect
is
2 Pow. on
v.
principle or authority,"
and he prothat
Cent.
Lansdown
;
Lans-
down, Mosley, 364 2 Jac. & W. 205. This is approved by Gibson, C. J., in Frewall v. Fitch, 5 Whart. 331, cited In Lansdown v. Lansdown, ut infra. supra, the plaintiff, who was the heirat-law to his grandfather's estate, as
eldest son to the eldest son, having
differed
Lord
Chancellor
King,
the
maxim
cases.
Wheat.
Rousmaniere, 8 is sought to be distinguished on the ground that the plaintiff did not know he was the
In
214, 215, the case or that he was imposed upon. This meets the view of the text,
Hunt
eldest son,
to a neigh-
who was
a schoolmaster,
title
who
re-
all, it
was
in the uncle.
The nephew, on
quently done.
younger
brother.
In other
were "obtained by mistake and misrepresentation of the law." Judge Story thinks " there is great difficulty in
sustaining
it
may have
regarded
re-
head
of the family,
which may be
fact.
garded as a question of
But
286
CHAP. X.]
[ 199.
One of the learned editors of Judge Story's work on Equity Jurisprudence, argues that " the idea of there existing in this
{e. g.^ cases of mistake in the application of the law to a particular group of facts) a mistake of fact, as well as of law, might perhaps apply to all cases of mistake of law. The mistake of one's title, when that depends upon a pure question of law, is a mistake of law, and nothing else." But what litigated case is there as to which we can say in advance that it depends upon a pure question of law ? After the facts are settled, and the testimony in the case closed, this may be said in cases where the facts are not proved in ambiguous terms but before the settling of the facts and the closing of the case there are always contingencies possible that may take a case out of one category of law and place it in another. Even in the case already cited, where a supposed grandson compromised a litigation with an uncle, on the supposition that the uncle, a younger brother of the grandson's
class of cases
father,
was
tell,
Who
some
tell
could
which the
plaintiff claimed,
Who
can
v.
Lansdown, so
far as con-
injustice,
Stewart
Crosier
lor
Stewart, 6 CI.
&
F. 966.
In
And Judge
after
"If this
cases
where a party
acts or agrees in
ignorance of any
other,
title
in him, or
upon
an-
title in
is
a doubt
litigation
between
whatever by the mistake, and where the parties can be restored substantially to the same situation in which they were at the time the mistake hap-
some
sort
under a mistake
of fact as
well as of law."
287
199.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. X.
whether there might not be a conveyance from the plaintiff which, by its own force, might raise at least a shadow of a title in some other person?* Who can say in reference to any particular litigated case, no matter how clearly it may appear to fall under some established principle, that some extraordinary casualty may not occur which will bring the
case out of the range of such principle?
And
if so,
a mis-
take as to whether a particular case falls within a particular rule is a mistake, which, if common to the parties, will justify
intervention of a court of equity decreeing rectification.^ Mr. Pollock declares it to be " the true rule, afiirraed
the
for the
Roman law
form
for English
by Savigny, and in a slightly different law by Lord Westbury,"^ " that ignorance
ig-
norance of a right depending on questions of mixed law and fact, or on the true construction of a particular instrument."* Mr. Pollock further says :' " A. and B. make an agreement,
and instruct
C. to put
it
C. does this so as
famous ejectment case, in " Ten Thousand a Year," in which a deed of confirmation unexpectedly turns up, and that deed is as unexpectedly excluded on proof of an
this in the report of the
364 in which a deed executed on the mistaken advice of a school-master, in regard to a point of law, was set aside and the party ordered to convey. This
;
principle
is
for
interlineation.
*
*
'
Where the
officers
of a public
and under an innocent mistake of the law, in which the other contracting
party equally participated with equal
of knowledge, neither party at the time looking to personal
clusive jurisdiction."
It
opportunities
was consequently held that where a non-negotiable note was purchased on a misrepresentation of the vendor, however innocent, as to the legal liability
of the vendor, the vendor
liable
to
liability,
the
officers
is
are not in
any
lia-
would be
received.
the corporation
;
adopted
In
an action
Humphrey
:
v.
Cooper
;
V.
Phibbs, L. R. 2 H. L. p.
v.
Freval v. Fitch, 5 Whart. 332, Ch. J. Gibson said " It is insisted, however, that a bargain can be set aside only for a misconception of fact, and not of law
170
followed by
Winn,
L. R. 6 H. L. 223
with which every one is bound to be acquainted. That position is disproved by Lansdown v. Lansdown, Mosley,
That this is so as to construction of document, see Wh. on Ev. 1241 Kostenbader v. Spotts, 80 Penn. St. 430
; ;
Brent
s
v.
State,
43 Ala. 297.
288
CHAP. X.]
[ 199.
not to express the real intention, either by misapprehension of the instructions or by ignorance of law. It is obvious that
relief
In neither
is
there any
reason for holding the parties to a contract they did not really
make."
But
cannot.be substituted. In other words, it may be shown that the document is not one the parties intended to execute, and the meaning of ambiguous terms may be cleared but unam;
biguous terms cannot be stricken out and others substituted by parol.^ According to Mr. Leake,'' "where the parties are under a common mistake of law as to the application of their contract, it can be applied only according to their intention, and not otherwise."^ Hence we may hold that a promise to pay, based on a mistaken belief that certain facts fall under an
acknowledged
the contract,
fact, is to
is
not binding.*
As a
is
rule, it
may be asserted
that
be treated as ignorance of a
The
facts.
Prussian
text.
It declares that
Wh. on
Ev. 920
et seq.
infra,
taken suhsumption of
And
so in
205, 662.
2 3
2d ed. 347.
Citing
McCarthy v. Decaix, 2 Rus. & M. 614, which, was the case of a foreigner, who
v.
Roden
Denmark from
L. J. Q. B. 213.
May
V.
V.
Coffin,
who
it
death renounced, in
der
V.
Molony v, Rourke, 100 Mass. 190 and see Stoddard v. Hart, 23 N. Y. 556 Lanning v. Carpenter, 48 N. Y. 408 Pitcher v. Hennessy, 48 N. Y. 415 Zollman v. Moore, 21 Grat. 313 Rochester v. Bank, 13 Wis. 432. In Kelly v. Solari, 9 M. & W. 54, a life insurance policy having lapsed in consequence of nonpayment of premium, and the officers of the company
Foster, 9 Pick. 112
;
in
England
Bingham
; ;
126
501
149
v. Bingham, 1 Ves. Sr. Broughton v. Ilutt, 3 DeG. & J. Cooper v. Phibbs, L. R. 2 H. L. Hurd v. Hall, 12 Wis. 112. In
Fane
v.
made
by the
ties
life,
and the
fact,
it
for portions
money so paid could be recovered back by the company. Here there was a misVOL.
father to release.
was
set
was within the power of the The resettlement aside, as founded on mistake.
I. 19
289
200.]
CONTRACTS.
a published law shall be no defence
[CHAP. X.
;
ignorance of
facts
but
it
is
It
is
which
g., errors
The
French
Error in motive,
which goes
worth and usefulness of an article bought or hired, falls under the general head of lesion^ and is not, to a person capax negotii^ a defence, though when induced by fraud is ground for rescinding or for daniages. Error of law In is in all cases put on the same footing as error of fact. conclusion, we must remember that if there can be no relief for
to the
is
no mis-
is
not involved.
mistake as to identity of a person, for instance, involves a mistake of law as to his legal relations a mistake as to the substance of a thing would be of no moment did it not involve a mistake as to the thing's legal incidents.'^ The term "law," in the rule that mistake of law is no excuse, is to be restricted to juridical law as a rule of action, and is not to be extended There are therefore to law as a compound of law and fact. two extremes, in this vexed issue, to be avoided. On the one side, when we say that mistake of law does not give ground for relief, we must restrict ourselves to such mistake of law On the other side, when as does not involve a mistake of fact. we say that mistake of fact gives ground for relief, we must remember that such mistake must go to some past or existing
;
thing,
and not
relate to
When
it
ground
'
mistake of law.
of fact are to be
Einl. 12.
' 3 * s
L. 4, 7582.
though involving
title
and
(3) errors
This
is
exhibited with
much
clear-
1879),
pp.
433-602.
He
290
CHAP. X.]
[ 201.
specialist
with a
client, will
knowledge
gumed^^in
"j^^r^^^'
while the client would be chargeable with no such and a skilful engineer, contracting with special knowledge a person ignorant of engineering, would be chargeable with a knowledge of the law bearing on engineering when no such
;
So when
is
liable
duty to know, his liability for not knowing what is measured by his duty. If he claimed to be a specialist, he should have known what a specialist of that class ought to
was
his
know
if
sary for
him only
is
specialists.^
When
this distinction
of peculiar importance.^
201.
one party avails himself ^^^^^ ^^ of another's ignorance of law to impose upon him, law when acted on p the hitter may invoke the aid oi a court or equity ivauduient^^oJ^^sfor his protection.^ This has been held to be the case ^^ with respect to fraudulent representations by a specialist as to
tinctions, it is plain that if
,
/>
And
there
is
strong authority
to the effect that in such case not only will a contract thus
induced be rescinded by a court of equity, but that a court of law will refuse to sustain a suit on such a contract.'
414,
510,
520
Injra, 1043.
579 Dagas v. Donaldsonville, 33 La. An. 671. " Edwards v. Brown, 1 C. & J. 312 Hirschfield v. R. R., L. R. 2Q. B. D. 1
; ;
V.
Smith, 9 How. 55
;
Jordou
v.
v.
Ste-
Story on Cont.
526
2 Evans's
;
vena, 51 Me. 78
51 Me. 140;
Co., 31
Freeman
;
Curtis,
v.
May
v.
Woodbury Bank
;
Ins.
v.
Foster, 9
Penn.
134;
Conn. 517 Whelen's App. 70 425 Tyson v. Tyson, 31 Md. Met. Bank v. Godfrey, 23 HI.
St.
Pick. 112.
As
to signatures fraudu-
291
202.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. X.
IV.
ERROR OF EXPRESSION.
is
unessential
to.
Error of
when
This
there
is
expreesion unesseutial
is
Roman
law;^ and
-i
is
In our
own
jurisprudence
cases in
we have
numerous
eft'ect,
which parol
evidence
parties
is
mean
is
to be carried into
use.^
evidence
dence, also,
is
may be proved by parol.^ designation of property may, also, when the obscuritj^ is latent, and the error one only of expression, be corrected by parol.^ The name is mutable and immaterial; it is the thing intended alone that is immutable and
material,
when the
operation of a contract
475
is
to be considered.^
Altschul
;
32,
Cal. 171
174.
*
;
Cr. L. 942.
<
infra,
L. 14, pr. D. de in
diem addict.
et
(18, 2)
661-2.
6
Supra,
;
174
;
seq.
infra,
6 7 8
etseq.
205
660-1
Wh. on
v.
;
Ev. 992
etseq.,
Infra, 679.
942
CI.
Atty. Gen.
F. 295
1 Dr.
Brazenose 353
Coll., 2
&
V.
Atty. Gen. r.
;
Drum-
mond,
Co.
& W.
Stockbridge
Hudson Co., 102 Mass. 48; Chester Emery Co. v. Lucas, 112 Mass.
424; Fitz
Atkinson v. v. Hulbert, 102 Mass. 34; Bartlett i;. Gas Co., 117 Mass. 533; Gump's Appeal, 65 Penn, St. 476 Groff v. Rohrer, 35
942
;
Cummins,
How. 479
Glass
Comey, 118 Mass. 100; Drew V. Swift, 46 N. Y. 204 Huss v. Morris, 63 Penn. St. 372; Elliott v. Harton, 28 Grat. 766; Edwards v.
v.
;
Md. 327 Keith v. Ins. Co., 52 111. 518 Edwards r. Tipton, 77 N. C. 222 McHathaPike V. AUman, 53 Mo. 551
;
;
way
8
V.
see supra,
Tipton, 77 N. C. 222
Rigstee
r.
v.
Trees,
174.
21 Ind. 227;
Talley
v.
Courtney, 1
Supra, 174.
Infra, 803-4.
L.
Heisk, 715
Russell
Mixer, 42 Cal.
4, pr.
de
leg. 1
(30 un.).
292
CHAP. X.]
[ 202.
can be corrected
b}'
parol, so
person
And
parol evidence
is
admissible to
show that a grantor executed a deed by other name -^ that persons named as beneficiaries were
seller in a
;^
;^ that the real buyer or were not those which the memoranda indicated
that an
undisclosed principal
is
the real
party in a
;'
transaction in
is
though parol
one admis-
and that as
to third parties,
is
was
Parol evidence
is
sible to
partly oral
and partly written f to prove an oral extension of a contract ;' to show that a conveyance in fee is in trust, or is a mortgage,*" or is subject to a resulting trust ;'* and to explain or modify
> Wh. on Infra, 601, 661, 803-4 Agency, 291, 296 Wh. on Ev. Mich. State Bk, v. Peck, 28 949, 953 Vt. 200 Scanlan v. Wright, 13 Pick. 523 Peabody v. Brown, 10 Gray, 45 Henderson v. Hackney, 23 Ga. 383 Tuggle V. McMath, 38 Ga. 648 Westholz V. Retaud, 18 La. An. 285 Dun; ;
;
the
sum
said
of 500/., paid
by the said M.
to the
sum
of 500/
And we do
to the said M., as secur-
ham
Chatham, 21 Tex. 231. Nixon V. Cobleigh, 52 111. 387 Aultman v. Richardson, 7 Neb. 1.
V.
hereby assign
;
Atty. Gen.
v.
Drummond,
v.
Dr.
ity for the said advance of 500/., the machines and tools As witness our hands, this 5th day of
& W.
367
;
Langlois
Crawford, 59
June, 1878,
rectors
;
C,
di-
and cases cited infra, 803. Wh. on Agency, 719 et seq. Newell V. Radford, L. R. 3 C. P. 52 and infra, 802-3 et seq. Garrett v. Handley, 4 B. & C. 664 Higgins V. Senior, 8 M. & W. 834 Fowlepv. Hollins, L. B. 7 Q. B. 616 Button V. Bullock, L. R. 9 Q. B, 572
Mo. 456
Nat. Ins. Co.
v.
M."
tools
Coleman
Bank, 53 N. Y. 393 Oelrichs V. Ford, 21 Md. 489 Anderton v. Shoup, 17 Oh. St. 128 Ohio R. R. v. Middleton, 20 111. 629 and other cases cited infra, 803 Wh. on Ev. 951. In McCollin V. Gilpin, 44 L. T. 914 (1881),
v.
; ;
;
mentioned were the property of the company. In an action by M. against A., B., and C, to recover the 500/., it was held, that parol evidence was admissible to show whether it was intended that the defendants should be personally liable upon the above agreement. 6 Wh. on Ev, 951.
'
9
10
lb. 1016.
lb. g2
1031-2.
"
lb. I 1035.
293
202
a.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. X.
also, will be
Omitted words,
mistakes of scriveners,'
202
Party
a.
^^ ^" V^^^Y alone, it must be borne in mind that the general rule of law is, that whatever a man's
real intention
were
^^^^'
cor-
upon
it
he manifests an intention to another party, so as to induce the latter to act in making a contract, he will be estopped from denybe, it
i-.-
may
'
In other words, supposing that there is no fraud or imposition, a party is estopped from denying his expressions were correct.
cannot be
up by him as a ground
der
by the other party in its made by the proposer is obvious, an acceptor will not be permitted, by catching it up, to take an unfair advantage.
for instance, sent a written
when his language was accepted natui-al sense.'. But when the blun-
The defendant,
memorandum, offer-
ing to sell certain property for 1100^., he meaning to have written 1200^., as appeared by a hurried calculation of items made by him on a separate piece of paper which he retained. On receiving the acceptance, he at once saw the error, and notified the other f)arty,
who knew
was
erty.
Specific performance
is
sub-
lb. ? 1044.
man
re,
v.
Doe
Toll
v.
Oliver,
Daniel's Trusts in
;
L, R. 1 Ch.
2 Smith's L. C. 671
ton,
Cornish
v.
v.
AbingR. R.,
;
D. 375 Bird's Trusts in re, L. R. 3 Ch. D. 214 Greenwood v. Greenwood, L. R. 5 Ch. D. 954; Redfern v. Bryning, L. R. 6 Ch. D. 133; see infra, ^
;
4 H. & R. 549
;
Van
12 C. B. N. S. 75
Bigelow on Est.,
s
629
et seq.,
634.
Am.
ed.
3 Infra,
205
Nowlin
v.
Pyne, 47
1022-23
Wh. on
v.
Ev.
1085-7
Iowa, 293.
As
to ciphers
;
and abbrevi-
Zuchtmann
That
as to terms of
false
representations
may be
Benj. on Sales, 3d
Am.
ed. 56,
Webster
v. Cecil,
30 Beav. 62.
Wensleydale in Free-
294
CHAP. X.]
[ 203.
snapped at an offer which he must have perfectly well known to be made by mistake."^ 203. It may be, and often is, that time is inserted in a contract, not for the purpose of binding the parties to j^j + ^
.
it
arbitrarily
in order to fix a
theexpres-
date.
In such cases
may
be
actually intended.^
is
And
even
^o''''*'*^*^'^-
re-
But
it is
practicable
if it is
make time
intentionally so fixed,
its
obliga-
As
will be hereafter
is
to be
may make
himself
terras
day fixed
;^
cannot exact a forfeiture for lapse of time, 'and a nominal date is presumed to be right until the contrary is proved.^"
1
Taraplin
v.
James, L. R. 15 Ch. D.
Wh.
3d ed. 450.
And
infra,
'
Infra,
;
882
v.
Seton
v.
Slade, 7 Ves.
265
Lennon
v.
cessarily estop.
As
to
fraudulent estop-
684; Parkin
r.
Taylor
Longworth, 14
Lee, 97 Mass. 92
;
Pet.
late
Barnard
v.
Rechtsnorm,
speaking of the
words,
says
882
et
and
undesigned " It is as it
of
in fairy tales.
Only he
Infra, 887
;
Seton
v.
Slade, 7 "Ves.
;
who knows
the spirit.
265
^ ^
^ ^
Parkin
v.
v.
Thorold, 16 Beav. 59
the spirit
is
to
be evoked,
Taylor
But
Infra, 882.
appears to one
who
may
bind myself
detriment.
do
is
if I
utter words
by
^
i
which another
Infra, 893.
295
205.] 204.
Patenterror cannot be corrected by extrinsic
CONTRACTS.
[chap. X.
As
may
^6 regarded as subjective,
writer's
e.,
an ambiguity
in the
own mind
proof, unless
while a latent ambiguity is objective, i. e., an ambiguity in the thing described, there being several
things answering to the description.
So far as concerns the patent ambiguity, obvious mistakes will be corrected by the context.^ Blanks may be filled in from the context,^ and other formal mistakes made good.* A seal,
mietake be
proved.
mutual
also, erroneously
way be
cancelled.*
attached to a partnership note, may in this But when the " words of a document are
ambiguous as to be unmeaning, no evidence show what the author of the document given to be can intended to say,"^ unless it should be proved, as will next be seen, that the words in question were used by a mistake common to both sides, and that by strong and clear proof the real meaning intended by both can be brought out.'
so defective or
V. RECTIFICATION.
205. It
Bilateral error as to
is
may^be coreeted.
from that intended. Hence, when a was intenaed, it is admissible, as between tlie Parties to show, in the Roman law, that the words used were meant merely to express a loan, though
loan
,,..,..,,
With
on their
us
deeds in fee
zer,
Wh.
on Ev.
957.
5 Barr,
216
Wilson V. Wilson, 5 H. L. C. 40 De la Touche in re, L. R. 10 Eq. 599 Marion v. Faxon, 20 Conn. 486. See
2
Lynam
v.
Califer,
See infra, 634, 661 et seg. 6 Steph. Ev. art. 91 (citing Shore
Wilson, 9 C.
&
F. 365)
Wh.
;
Langdon
v.
Goole, 3 Lev. 21
;
Young
1006
V.
on Ev. Saunder;
Burnside v. Wayman, 49 Mo. 356; Exch. Bk. i-. Russell, 50 Mo. 531. As to signing blank paper, see supra, 185 as to fillV.
son
7
and
Infra, 205.
Savigny, op.
cit.
136, citing L. 3,
ing blanks, see infra, 697-700. * Infra, 210, 634 et seq. ; Brown
v.
See Hill
v.
Mitchell
t;.
Kint-
296
CHAP. X.]
[ 205.
have been merely conveyances in trust, and that even negotiable paper may be shown to be merely accommodation paper, on which a party indorsing may not be liable to an indorsee with notice.^ And generally, while an essential bilateral error
as to the nature of a transaction avoids a contract based on
it,^
But
to give an error as to
it,
common
to both parties.
It
is
not want of
when the
Here the parties do not differ. They agree, but they agree to something different from what the written document expresses. And courts of equity, as between the parties, will refuse to permit a document to be enforced
when
direct
there
it, if
is
this
common mistake
of expression, or will
And
a mistake of
relief.*
fact, in
1
may
v.
v.
be ground for
See
Wh.
V.
oases.
monee Burke
well
V.
Cox
V.
Prentice, 3
M. &
S.
;
344
supra,
Langworthy, 18 Wis. 444; Anderson, 40 Ga. 535 BidBrown, 48 Ga. 179; Hall v.
;
Miles
177.
Stevens,
3 Barr, 21
Glover
v.
v.
McGilvray,
63 Ala. 508
Miss. 421
;
Leggett
v.
Buckhalter, 30
Sug. V. & P. 8th Am. ed. 262 Leake, 2d ed. 322; Kerr, Fraud and
Wood
t- .
Steamboat, 19 Mo.
;
529
Hook
Mistake, 423
Co., 62
Stephens
v.
Ins. Co., L.
v.
R. 8 C. P. 18; Traders'
Bank
Ins.
Barry v. Harris, 49 Vt. 392; Paige v. Sherman, 6 Gray, 511 Bryce v. Ins. Co., 55 N. Y. 240; Kilmer v. Smith, 77 N. Y. 226 Wheeler
Me. 519
;
; ;
40 Mo. 33 Exchange Bank v. Russell, 50 Mo. 531 Conaway V. Gore, 24 Kan. 389 Gararaage v.
Tesson
v. Ins.
; ;
Moore, 42
Tex. 170.
That a court
on the above
it
V.
Kirtland, 23 N. J. Eq. 13
Co.,
Doniol
v.
v.
Ins.
34 N.
J.
Eq. 30
;
Gower
v.
Sterner, 2
Whart. 75
410
Huss
Morris,
Penn.
St.
4 Rudge i-. Bowman, L. R. 3 Q. B. 689, it was held that where a contract was made for the supply of goods according to a sample, which
principles, see Boulton in re, L. R.
In
known
was
to
to
the
parties,
the
contract
76
III.
;
362; Keith
v.
v.
v.
518
Wilson
v.
Hoecker, 85
349 199
Jaynes, 87
Schoonover
Trammel
Larsen
i'.
Dusen
v.
Chipman, 74 Ind. 474 Burke, 39 Iowa, 703 Van Parley, 40 Iowa, 70 Menov.
;
Wright
supra, 185.
297
206.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. X.
206.
Concurrent
error
Hence
it
is
settled
may
be
ground
for
rectifica-
tion of contract.
induced or fraudulently taken advantage of by the other or the fraud may be made the basis of an action for deceit; a contract based on mistake of
;
both parties
may
And
a construction, adopted
worked into
its
provisions,
may
be proved by parol, and a definite explanation thus given to ambiguous terras.^ Hence, rectification will be decreed on parol proof that the words used by the scrivener did not express the intention of the parties;^ and when, through a mistake even of law,* the contract as executed
rectly the terms to
fails to recite cor-
which the
parties
had agreed.'
Whether
after
the mistake be of
it
of fact to law, if
Even
an
Van Donge
321
;
v.
v.
Van Donge,
23 Mich.
seq.;
Bispham's Eq.
;
191
Whart. on
v. Ins.
Kilmer
V,
Smith, 77 N. Y. 226
Stephens
;
Huss
* s
Drniflf r.
v.
Parker,
Supra, 199.
L. R. 5 Eq. 131
Cliff.
Hearn
Ins. Co.,
v.
4
17
Oliver
;
v.
C.
C.
;
192;
Lyman
U.
S.,
277
Nevius v. Dunlap, 33 N. Baker v. Massey, 50 Iowa, Y. 676 399; Michel v. Tinsley, 69 Mo. 442;
Johns. 377
;
and
Wh.
on Ev.
L. R. 2 Sc.
&
;
D. 214
9 Wall. 50; Atlantic R. R. v. Bank, 19 Wall. 548 Reed v. Ins. Co., 95 U. S. 23 Fenderson v. Owen, 54 Me. 374
;
Stone
V.
V.
Von
Keller
v. v.
v.
R. R.,
80 Penn.
St.
;
363;
Fryer
Co.
Adams v. Stevens, 49 198 Jordan r. Stevens, 51 Me. 78 Brown v. Lamphear, 35 Vt. 252 Bruce Woodbury V. Bonney, 12 Gray, 107 Savings Bank v. Ins. Co., 31 Conn. 517; Hartford Ore Co. w. Miller, 41 Conn. 112 McKelway v. Armour, 2 Stock. Ch. 115; Gross v. Leber, 47 Penn. St. 520 Delaware Ins. Co. v. Gillett, 54 Md. 219 Irick v. Fulton, 3
'
Supra,
;
Me. 362
Patrick, 42
Schier, 55
Md. 516
III. III.
Am. Ex.
Grat. 193
Miller
v.
v.
Morse, 23 Mich.
140; West. R. R.
v.
365
Gelpoke
Smith,
cited
75
496
Wh. on
Jack f. Naber, 15 Iowa, 450 Loomis v. Hudson, 18 Iowa, 416 Wilder v. Lee, 64
;
Canedy
v.
N. C. 50
Lynam v. Califer,
64 N. C. 572.
298
CHAP. X.]
[ 207.
The
case for
when
it
is
made
to appear that
the party against whom the relief is asked, after agreeing to the omitted terms, was cognizant of their subsequent omission from the document as engrossed, and was also cognizant of the
fact that the other party
The
which
it
which the
were omitted
in the policy.^
So far as concerns the character of proof required, rescission and reformation are to be carefully dis- ^ Rescission tinguished. Rescission will be granted on proof of granted on proof of mi unilateral mistake.* 1 hough it is open to a party unilateral ""^^^^^^ in cases of bilateral mistake going to the essence for rectifi. .
of the bargain to apply for rescission, yet to sustain a decree for a rescission,
it is
cation mis-
the party complaining was bona fide and non-negligently mistaken on a matter so essential that the two parties
in
said to have
Blackburn
Welles
V. v.
v.
Randolph, 33 Ark.
agreed upon.
artificial to
And
.
.
119.
Yates, 44 N. Y. 525.
Ins.
agreement."
192;
"In the
latter
Hearn Brugger v.
s
Co.,
Cliff.
Ins. Co., 5
Saw. 304;
;
Hay
both parties."
V. Ins. Co.,
Ins.
that
tion,
Dean v. Co., 4 Cliff. 575." It may happen there does exist a common inten77 N, Y. 235
see
400.
In England, since the recent judicature act, "the parties to any proceedings in the courts thereby established, are entitled to the administra
which, however, is founded on an assumption made by both parties, as to some matter of fact essential to the agreement. In this case the common
tion
of equitable
relief;
and
all
the
divisions
and judges
must stand or fall with the assumption on which it is founded. If that assumption is wrong, the intention of the parties is from the outset incapable of taking effect. But for
intention
their
common
error
it
been formed, and it is treated as nonexistent. Here there is in some sense an agreement but it is nullified in its
;
See infra,
282.
299
207.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. X.
There can be no rectification, liowever, unless proved that both parties were mistaken in the use of the terms to be corrected, and that both parties agreed to the contract sought to be substituted for that to be set -aside. In each term of the contract to be thus set up, it must be proved
thing in mind.
it is
To
a contract,^ concurrence of
and no substitution of an amended contract can be made without showing that the parties concurred in the amended contract. This is what is meant by the expres-
minds
is
essential,
On proof of mistake by one party, rescission may be decreed. But rectification will not be decreed without proving that both
parties
had
and that
"The
common
intended.
to all."^
To the same
;
Supra,
4.
operate
as
effect, see
V.
Leake, 2d ed. 315, 326, citing Sells Bentley v. Sells, 1 Dr. & S. 42
; ;
Empson's
Sala;
mau
V.
BurCf.
lonides
v. Ins.
chell V. Clark,- L. R. 2 C. P. D. 88
Co. L. R. 6 Q. B. 674.
In the latter
Smith
1
V.
V.
Iliflfe,
L. R. 20 Eq. 666
;
White &
T. L. C. 3d ed. 36
;
them as if on board another ship of the same name, there being no specific It was identification of the goods. held that the insurer was not bound in
respect to the goods intended to be in-
had they been otherwise sufficiently individualized, a misnomer of the ship would have been immaterial. In Mackenzie
V,
Hovey, 3 Allen, 331 13 Gray, 373 Nevius v. Dunlap, 33 N. Y. 676 Bryce v. Ins. Co., 55 N. Y. 240 Schettinger v. Hopple, 3 Grant Ca. 54 Renshaw v. Lefferman, 51 Md. 277 Hunter v. Bilyea, 30 111. 228 Shay v. Pettes, 35 111. 360 Nelson v. Davis, 40 Ind. 366. That
Marcy,
; ; ; ; ; ; ;
Sawyer Canedy v.
rectification
was
also refused of
an a mere
cannot be granted on a mistake of only one party, see Alvanley V. Kinnaird, 2 Mac. & G. 1 Swaisland V. Dearsley, 29 Beav. 430 Bast v. Bank, 101 U. S. 93 Tilley v. Cook, 103 U. S. 155 Brown v. Lamphear, 35
rectification
; ; ; ;
In
Boulter
the court,
L. R.
Vt. 252 10
;
Andrews
;
v.
Ins. Co., 3
v.
Stockbridge Co.
Hudson
Co.,
Mason, 102
memorandum
of
Nevius v. Dunlap, 33 N. Y. Durant v. Bacot, 13 N. J. Eq. 201 McMillan v. Fish, 29 N. J. Eq. 610;
Mass. 48
676
;
Ramsey
v.
300
CHAP. X.]
208.
(in
[ 208.
To
plain,
When
chosen and business would be exposed to great peril if these terms could be set aside and the tenor of the document varied
by any but
held that
clear
and strong
proof.
In England
it
has been
when
of mutual mistake, tbe reshould be no decree of rectification unless the plaintiff's allegation is supported, at least in 'part,
by written proof ;^ and although in this country this rigid test is not applied,- yet we have numerous cases in which it is held that rectification will not be decreed unless mutual mistake be shown beyond reasonable doubt. "To substitute a new agreement for one which the parties have deliberately subscribed, ought only to be permitted upon evidence of a different intenDulany v. Rogers, 50 Md. 524 Renshaw V. Lefferman, 51 Md. 277 Roun; ;
In draw-
savell
V.
James
v.
Bank, 17 Ala.
11
In 2 Ch. on Cont.,
On
Am.
be that
"a
was no ground
V.
Renshaw
"
If
parties in
making
is
it
;"
and
to this sev-
a conof
But
upon proof
while this
correct so far as
it
concerns
cannot be
terms or legal
effect,
the injustice
declared to be
what both
parties did
would be done
of imposing
to
not intend,
it
no contract
if
never assented."
Morton,
J.,
German
v.
And specific performance will be refused if the parties did not intend the same thing in essence. Supra, 4 Higginson v. Clowes, 15 Ves. 516 Baxendale v. Seale, 19 Beav. 601 Spurr V. Benedict, 99 Mass. 463 Kyle
thing.
;
;
Fitton, 2 Dr.
Shortall, 2
Davies Mortimer
;
v.
but see
v.
for
Murray
Parker,
Canedy
v.
v.
V.
Kavanagh, 103 Mass. 356. V., a married woman, entered into an agreement with P. to sell to him certain
McMillan
and
cases cited
Wh. on
301
208.J
tion, of the clearest
CONTRACTS.
[chap. X.
and most satisfactory description. It is who seeks to rectify a deed upon the ground of mistake, must be required to establish, in the clearest and most satisfactory manner, that the alleged intention to which he desires it to be made conformable continued concurrently in the minds of all parties down to the time of its execution, and must be able to show exactly and precisely the form tp which the deed ought to be brought."^ This is the settled English rule f and such also is the rule in the United States.^ Lord Thnrlow's dictum,* that the evidence must be "strong, irrefragable," is thus justly criticized by
clear
that a person
'
Fowler
V.
v.
Pollock,
J. 250.
Shel-
buriie
Townshend
'
Stangroom,
6 Ves. 332.
Graves
v. Ins. Co.,
2 Cranch, 442;
;
Fowler v. Adams, 13 Wis. 458 Webster, 50 Wis. 53 Lavassar V. Washburne, 50 Wis. 200 Yocum v. Foreman, 14 Bijsh, 494; Ferguson v. Haas, 64 N. C. 772 Wyche v. Green,
355
;
Scott
V.
11 Ga. 159
Hamilton
v.
v.
Conyers, 28
Ga. 276
Alston
v.
Wingfield, 53 Ga.
V. Holyoke, 53 Me. 9 Cutler v. Smith, 43 Vt. 577 Sawyer v. Hovey, 3 Allen, 331 Glass v. Hulbert, 102 Mass. 24
;
; ;
18; Muller
Clopton
V.
Russell
V.
Blake;
Murray
man
Bynum,
55
Cal.
459
;
Remillard
v.
Prescott, 8 Oregon, 37
v.
Bispham's
1019
Eq.
v.
et seq.
Farrington, 76 N. Y. 452
Co., 77 N. Y. 235
;
Hay
v. Ins.
In
De Jarnatt
:
v.
30 N. Penn.
618
St.
;
J.
put as follows
St.
Ford
v.
Joyce, 78 N. Y.
438
gage, deed, or other instrument of writing, on the ground of mistake, there can be, at this day, no question. Quivey V. Baker, 37 Cal. 465. But to authorize the exercise of such jurisdiction,
462; Kearney
McDonnell v. Weidenbusch
;
Sarcer, 37
v.
Hartenstein,
12
W.
;
Va. 760 Chapman v. Kurd, 67 111. 234 Wilson V. Hoecker, 85 111. 349 Peck v. Archart, 95 111. 113 Nelson v. Davis, 40 Ind. 3.66 Cain v. Hunt, 41 Ind. 466 New V. Wamback, 42 Ind. 456 Heavenridge v. Mondy, 49 Ind. 434 Rogers
;
; ; ; ; ;
be reformed, or else mistake on one part and fraud upon the other. Whit-
temore
Paine
V.
*
V. v.
Farrington, 76 N. Y. 452
V.
Van Dusen
v.
v.
Parley, 40 Iowa, 70
Strayer
Stone,
Siielburne
v.
347.
302
CHAP. X.]
[ 210.
meant
but
if
clear of all
;
he meant that
it
should be in
is
refutation, so as to be
The proper
test
is,
that
of
t
mode
1
requiring
distiuct
cannot, in denance or the statute, be proved, on the mode of pretext of amending a contract not requiring such not"be^inr
solemnities, in a
way
An
serted.
which
need not be in writing, cannot, by rectification, be turned into a valid unwritten contract to sell goods on time, when by statute the latter kind of contract is forbidden.* This, however, does not prohibit the solving ambiguities in documents solemnized in conformity with the statute of frauds, or rectifying, under the statute, such documents in case mutual mistake
of parties be clearly proved.'
obvious on the face of the document, will be rectified by construction by the court o^yioug
210.
A mistake
that
is
before
whom
the document
is
adduced.
It
is
not
mistake
tifledby
necessary
157.
v.
Sitwell, 1
Wh. Wh.
re,
Y.
&
C. 583.
17.
' Story, M<SM/)ra, citing Tucker Madden,44Me. 206;Shattuckr,Gay,45Vt. 87; Stockbridge Co. r. Hudson Co., 107 Mass. 290 Edmund's App., 59 Penn. St. 220 Coale v. Merryman, 35 Md. 382; Hileman v. Wright, 9 Ind. 126; Miner v. Hess, 47 111. 170. Whether a
; ;
formance of a
161.
4 C. D. 241. Leake, 2d ed. 328; Wh. on Ev. 933, 1030; Manleverer v. Hawxby, 2 Wens. Saund. 78; Avery v. White, 1 Ld. Ray. 38 Way v. Hearne, 13 C. B. N. S. 292 Bird's Trusts in re, L. R. 3 C. D. 214; Loss v. Obry, 22 N. J. Eq. 52 Wheeler v. Kirtland, 23 N. J. Eq. 13 Barthell v. Roderick, 34 Iowa, 517; Exch. Bk. v. Russell, 50 Mo. 531 Moore v. Wingate, 53 Mo. 398.
L. R.
>>
303
211.]
to
fill
CONTRACTS.
[chap. X.
when
plies the
data
The
jurisdiction of
rectification, as stated
in the
tion not
granted as
to bona Jide
purchasers.
immediately preceding sections, is exercised only as to the parties to the agreement to be rectified. He who puts his name incautiously to a document which does not express his views, while he may
title
of bona jide
purchasers whom his laches have misled. And even supposing no laches are imputable to him, their equity, as innocent purchasers, is equal to his.^ But voluntary assignees and grantees or purchasers with notice stand in the same position as the party under whom they claim.*
Supra, 204,
209
Langdon
v. v.
v.
Fonbl. Eq. B.
1,
Goole, 3 Lev.
L.
21
Young
Smith,
Ch. 1-87.
*
WayRus-
lb., citing
Warrick
v.
v.
Warrick, 3
Exch. Bk.
v.
Ath. 293;
Adams
Stevens, 49 Me.
;
Brown
ardson
v.
Rich-
White v. Wilson, 6 Blackf. 448 Burke v. Anderson, 40 Ga. 535 Stone Young v. Cason, V. Hale, 17 Ala. 564 and cases cited infra, 48 Mo. 259
362
; ; ;
;
r.
291.
Infra,
Story, Eq.
304
CHAP.
XI.]
[ 212.
CHAPTER XL
REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTY.
Representations to
212.
be
distinguished
warranties,
warranty,
220.
Supplying
contract,
for particular
Selling
meat
for
human
fitness, 222.
Selling
hension
may
be rescinded, though
ibility,
no action
for deceit
may
be main-
that he
made the
goods, 223.
tained, 214.
ranted against,
Selling
224.
Misrepresentations
material,
tlie
may
be an estoppel,
injury, 216.
amounting 217.
;
to distortion of truth,
minds
rence,
warranty assumes
bat gives damages
tioncurfor mis-
Sale
"with
all faults"
excludes war-
ranty, 229.
statement,
218.
in
Warranty
any particu230.
Warranties and conditions involve representations, may be representations which are neither Rgpreseuconditions nor warranties. " With respect to state- tationsto
212.
but there
ments
of
it,
/.
matter
be distinguished
auimis^and
warranties.
if
such descripis
tive statement
was intended
contract,
it is
to say, a
VOL.
I. i-O
CHAP. XI.]
CONTRACTS.
[ 212.
condition on the failure or non-performance of which the other party nitty, if he is so minded, repudiate the contract in
toto,
it,
pro-
vided
has not been partially executed in his favor. If, indeed, he has received the whole or any substantial part of
the consideration for the promise on his part, the warranty loses the character of a condition, or, to speak perhaps more
properly, ceases to be available as a condition, and becomes a
warranty in the narrower sense of the word, viz., a stipulation by way of agreement, for the breach of which a compensation must be sought in damages."^ A representation is therefore, distinguishable from a condition in this, that while all con-
may
be representations
in
which
And
while
is
all
warranties involve
it
a warranty unless
'
Williams,
J.,
Belin
v.
Anson, 133.
That warranty
may
be
B.
*
&
S.
751.
infra,
910.
infra,
559.
Behn
v.
Burness, 1
B.
&
S.
877
3B. &
S. 751,
above cited,
provided,
In Winsor v. Lombard, 18 Pick. 60, a warranty was held to be implied in the words "sold 2000 gallons prime qualIn this case Shaw, ity winter oil." " It is now held that, C. J., said
:
" then in the port of Amsterdam," sail from thence to Newport, and there be loaded by the defendant with coal for a voyage to the East Indies. It turned out, however, that
should
the ship did not arrive at Amsterdam
until Oct. 23d.
It
without express warranty or actual fraud, every person who sells goods of a certain denomination or description
undertakes,
as
and
is,
that
To the same
seq.,
effect,
;
et
the vessel
Oct. 23d
being
at
Amsterdam on
909, 912
notes to Chandelor
v.
was a condition precedent and that on this condition not being satisfied, the defendant was not bound
to load the cargo.
Am.
;
ed.
seq.
v.
May on
Ins.
Henshaw
V.
Robins, 9 Met. 87
181^ Lamb
v.
Crafts,
12 Met. 353;
Hawkins
;
cussed
Pemberton, 51 N. Y. 204
Wolcott v
306
CHAP.
XI.]
[ 214.
213.
As
will be hereafter
more
it
will be
It
is
no ground
for setit
tween the
was
representation, no matter
how
contract, to
avoid a contract, since there is other motives do not contribute beside that caused by misreIt is enough if the representapresentation of the other side.
setcontract
judgment which might otherwise have been in equilibrium.' "It must be a representation of something as a fact upon which the purchaser relies, and by which he is induced, to some extent, to make the purchase,
tion
was such
as to turn a
or
is
How
that
be hereafter dis-
lessness or accident
specific performance,
may
even
might not have been misled."^ But a party who neglects to examine a title, cannot, on the mere ground of misrepresentation by the vendor, set aside an executed conveyance.^ 214. Misrepresentation is distinguishable from fraud in
the fact that a misrepresentation
-.11
may
be innocently
to
Contract induced by
Mount, 7 Vroom, 262; Borrekins v. Bevan, 3 Rawle, 25 Osgood v. Lewis, 2 Har. & G. 49 Foos v. Sabiu, 84 111.
; ;
v. Haynes, 14 Wend. 546; Thomas v. People, 34 N. Y. 351. * McCormick v. Kelly, Sup. Ct. Minn.
564.
188, 24 Alb. L.
Infra, 242.
Seethe question of causal relations discussed in Wh. Cr. Law, 8th ed.
'
.1. 213, citing Oneida Lawrence, 4 Cow. 440; Adams v. Johnson, 15 111. 345 Lindsey v. Lindsey, 34 Miss. 432 Blytlie v. Speake, 23 Tex. 429.
Co.
v.
^
^
See infra,
245.
v.
153, 1176.
of the text
v.
Hew-
Dears. 315
;
R.
v.
v.
English, 12 Coc.
C. C. 171
Com.
McCulloch
v.
Gregory, 1 K.
&
J.
286.
307
214.]
honest misrepieseutation may be
CONTRACTS.
consequently, while
.
[chap. xr.
it
,
may
,.
delicto ;
whereas,
though^io
action for deceit may
be main-
but
is
delicto^
is is
i.
e.,
the action
for deceit.^
Misrepresentation
also to be distin-
As
elsewhere shown,
misstatement of a matter of which he had no knowledge, as he would be for a deliberate statement which he knew to be false.^ But the misrepresentMions now before us are neither fraudulent nor reckless, but are honest misstatements, which
the party
making
believed to be true.
him, therefore, to an contract to which they led.* On this topic, therefore, we may contract assented to by hold to the following position one party on the faith of material misrepresentations by the
action for deceit,^
:
other party, will be rescinded at the option of the party injured, although
made
neither
But the
Eq.
See infra,
See infra,
Collins
V. V. Bell,
282.
214
Leake on Cont.
241.
Evans,
5 Q. B.
;
lings
1 C. B. 951
RawOrmrod v.
820
;
Polhill
r.
Huth, 14 M.
tie,
&W.
;
651
Cabot
v.
Chris-
Denny
Taylor
v.
42 Vt. 126 Fisher v. Mellon, 103 Taylor v. Leith, 26 Oh. St. 428 Botsford v. Wilson, 75 111. 132 Brooks V. Hamilton, 15 Minn. 26 Kerr
Mass. 503
;
Pulsford
v.
Richards,
17 Beav.
94
Ashton, 11 M.
V.
& W.
Story,
401
733
Doggatt
Emerson, 3
Daniels, 1
Warner
Smith
Collins
V.
v.
on Fraud and Mist. 54. And see to same eflfect Tucker v. White, 125 Mass.
344;
V.
Farv.
Weed
v.
Case,
55 Barb.
;
534;
nam
v.
Fisher
Marsh v. Falker, 40 N. Y. 562 Ken- Mellen, 103 Mass. 503 Rosevelt v. Fulnedy V. McKay, 43 N. J. L. 288; ton, 2 Cow. 139 Marsh v. Falker, 40 Wheeler v. Randall, 48 111. 182 Wharf N. Y. 562 Best v. Stow, 2 Sandf. Ch. 111. 426; Dwight v. 298 Kenney v. Hoffman, 31 Grat. 442; V. Roberts, 88
; ;
;
Chase, 3
111.
Ap. 67
McKown
v.
Fer-
Lockridge
len
V.
v.
Al-
Hart, 72
104; Allen
v.
v.
Yeater,
232 a, 282.
17
282,
W.
Va. 128
;
Converse
Blumrich,
Infra,
Infra,
232a, 282.
279,
14 Mich. 109
559
;
Thomas
v.
McCann, 4
Covenants of
Title,
573
Rawle, Bispham's
;
308
OHAP. Xr.]
[ 214.
A concurrence
admissible,
gave his assent, by tlie misrepresentations of the other party, and. that what he assented to was, therefore, something difVan
Arsdale
v.
v.
In Smith
v.
Munroe
st'y V.
Lindv.
complainant's
tract for the
was
to rescind a con-
Parham
;
Randolph, 4 How. Miss. 435 Buford v. Caldwell, 3 Mo. 477. If a vendee, for instance, is led by the vendor's representations, no matter how honest, to believe that he is buying Black-acre, when in fact he is buying White-acre, then there is no sale, since there is no concurrence of minds as to the thing sold.
And whenever
then there
is
the misrepresentation
The ground for resciswas misrepresentation by the vendor. The contract was rescinded, the court saying "the party selling property must be presumed to know whether the representation he makes of it is true or false, and that it is immaterial to the purchaser whether the misrepresentation proceeded from mistake or
leged gold mine.
sion
no
sale.
;
Flight
v.
Booth,
fraud."
I
1 Bing. N. C. 370
Jones
v.
Edny, 3 M.
In King v.
Camp.
358,
285.
v.
In Cornfoot
Fowke,
& W.
not
J.,
said
a vendee
may
chequer held
tion of
an agent. But this case has not been subsequently followed, and can only be sustained on the ground that the plea averred fraud, which
could not be supported
to
for
by proof
See
is
of
same
honest misrepresentation.
269-79.
infra,
Cornfoot
v.
Fowke
elabo-
Am.
it
damages for deceit in the sale of goods." But this position can no longer be maintained. See notes to Chandler v. Lopus,
1
to regard
cites to
Am.
ed. 299.
He
v.
In
Grim
v.
this
Drew, 2
of
Lord Camp-
Wheelton v. Hardisty, 8 E. & B. 270 and of Willes, J., in Barwick V. Bank, L. R. 2 Ex. 259. To the same
;
made untrue
It
material state-
eflFect is
See fur-
was held that the contract was to be rescinded; even though B. may have made the misstatements
ments.
honestly.
809
214.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XI.
its
face indicates.
competent for a party to show by parol that no contract was made. It is a petitio principii to say that a contract, which parol cannot vary, exists between the parties, when whether a contract exists is the very question at issue.* While, therefore, an action for deceit cannot be sustained
But
it is
proof
is
tract, or to
As was
well said by
Judge Story,
in a case
acted
basely
and
falsely,
where a suit was brought ground of niisreprenot whether he (the defendant) but whether the plaintiff pur-
was at one time thouglit in Engrland that a court of equity would not set aside an executed conveyance on the ground of misrepresentation or concealment unless there be fraud ;* and it is clear that, if fraud be alleged as a ground for setting aside a transaction, fraud must be proved." But the prevalent opinion in England now is that misrepresentation without fraud will be sufficient ground to set aside a contract induced by the misrepresentation f and this rule was applied in a case where copyhold had been sold, apparently in good faith, as freehold.^ At the same time " there may be a want of
It
before completion,
set aside
him of the right of rescinding the contract would preclude him from having the sale after conveyance."^ The principles above stated
were reaffirmed by the English Court of Appeals in December, 1881, on the following state of facts An advertisement was
: *
Wh.
on Ev. .927
Jones
v.
Edney,
Haygath
v.
Wearing, L. R. 12 Eq.
Camp. 285.
*
320; which was the case of an executed conveyance "set aside on simple
misrepresentation."
519.
in
Infra, 241.
'
Doggett
V.
Pollock,
3d ed.
Lord Campbell
;
Wilde
i;.
Gibson,
1 H. L. C. 632
infra, 282.
S. C. 1
H. L. C. 605.
286
see infra,
245.
310
CHAP. XI.]
[ 214.
Law Times by Mr. Redgrave, the plaintiff', a with a practice of 200^. a 3'ear, stating that he was elderly, and " of moderate practice," contemplated retiring, had no successor, and would take a partner *' who would not object to purchase advertiser's suburban residence, value 1600/." It was added " no premium required for business and introduction. A large field is here open for an efficient man." Mr. Hurd, the defendant, another solicitor, attracted by the advertisement, entered into negotiations with the plaintiff', who stated that his business was worth 300^. a year, and that he had a large connection. On the defendant's request for details, the plaintiff" allowed him to inspect a bundle of papers which showed a gross business of 200/. a year for the last three years. The plaintiff' added, in answer to other inquiries, that there was other business not entered on the papers submitted, and off'ered a second bundle of papers
inserted in the
solicitor
(wJiich
bl.
or
Ql.
who
which the defendant agreed to purchase the house for 1600/., and took possession of the house and entered on the business, which was not referred to in the written agreement. The defendant having afterwards given up possession and refused
plaintiff",
on appeal (reversing the decision of Fry, J.), that the defendant did not act exclusively on the faith of the representation of the 300/. value, but that he did not give up his reliance on it that, having seen the first bundle of papers, he also relied on the plaintiff''s statement as to the difference between 200/. and 300/. a year being shown by the second bundle; and that his njere negligence to inquire (even if he had the materials before him) was not sufficient to disentitle him from being relieved from the contract. No fraud was alleged in the case; the issue being misrepresentation. "According to the decisions of courts of equity," said Jessel, M. li., ^ it was not necessary, in order to set aside the contract, to prove that the person who obtained the contract, and who sought to keep it, if he obtained it by material false representation, knew at the time
;
311
214.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XI.
It
was put
suflScient to
made that such representation was two ways, either of which was to be allow a court of equity to rescind. It was said:
in
*A man is not to be allowed to get a benefit from a false statement which he now admits to be false. He is not to be allowed
to say for the purpose of civil jurisdiction that he did not
know
he ought to have found that out before it to be false he made the representation.' That is one way of putting it, and the other way of putting it was this: 'Even assuming that you want moral fraud (this was the doctrine of common law) in order to set aside a contract, you have it where a man, having obtained a beneficial contract by a statement which he now knows to be false, insists upon keeping that contract.' no man ought to That, of course, is a moral delinquency seek to take advantage of his own falsity. It does not matter which way it is put, but that was the rule in equity. As regards the rule of common law, there is no doubt it was not There were cases in which, even at common quite so wide. law, you could rescind a contract, although you could not show that the man knew the statement or the representation The cases are variously stated, but I think, to be false. according to the later decisions, the statement must have been made recklessly and without care whether it was true or false, and not, of course, at the time with the belief that it was
; ;
I think the doctrine in equity was really setbeyond controversy, and, if it were necessary to refer to the authorities, I should content myself with referring to the judgment of Lord Cairns, when Lord Justice, in the case of Re Reese River Silver Mining Company, Smith's case,' in which he states the doctrine of equity in the way in which I have stated it.'"^ But though a contract may be rescinded on the ground that it was made by one party under a mistake of facts caused by the other's misrepresentations, no action of deceit can be maintained on such misrepresentations if the
actually true.
tled
>
16 L. T. Rep, N. S.
549; L. R.
S.
485; L. R. 20 Ch. D.
1.
245
cf.
Smith
Redgrave
r.
Hard, 45 L. T. N.
r.
312
CHAP. XI.]
[ 215.
But
otherwise
if
gent.
In such case an action "might be sustained upon an that the representation was false, although the party making it did not know at the time he made it that it was so."^ As we will hereafter see,^ though a contract may be rescinded on account of an agent's misrepresentations, no action of deceit can be maintained against the principal unless
allegation
From
There
more
opinion.
intelligent persons
11-
may
1- M-'
opiuion
notrepre^*^^'^
communicated
''
make
his
own
'
"The
470
131
V.
Howell
v.
Biddlecom, 62 Barb.
;
not in
'
all cases
turpitude."
Lord Abinger, Moens v. Heyworth, ut supra; Reese Silver Co. v. Smitli, 4 Eng. A p. 64. As to rescission in general, see infra, 282 et seq. In Childers V. Wooler, 2 E. & E. 287, it was held that, to support an action for
'
63 N. Y. 427 Boyd Browne, 6 Barr, 210 Dilworth v. Merwin Bradner, 85 Penn. St. 238 St. Louis R. V. Arbuckle, 81 111. 501 Bondurant v. R. V. Rice, 85 111. 406 Kimbell v. Crawford, 22 Iowa, 40 Moreland, 55 Ga. 164. That reckless misstatements are to be regarded as fraudulent, see infra, 241. That an action for negligence can be main;
Stilt V. Little,
'
must not only have been false in fact, but must also have been made fraudulently." See to same effect, Evans v, Collins, 5 Q. B. 804 Western Bank
;
Infra, 1043.
[nfra, 279.
Infra, 259-263.
V.
That
on God-
honest belief
Sales,
a defence to an action
see, further, Benj.
Learning
v.
Snaith,
16
Q. B. 275
based on fraud,
3d Am.
ed.
429
Lord
;
v.
Taufton,
15
Me. 225
;
McDonald Hanson v.
v.
Watts V. Cummins, 59 Penn. St. 84 Reed v. Sidener, 32 Ind. 373 Drake v. Latham, 50 111. 270; Clark v. Ralls, 50 Iowa, 275 McClanahan v. McKin;
;
Edgerley, 29 N. H. 343
Pike
v.
Fay,
ley,
134
Cooper
Lovering,
386
et
for
seq.;
In
McLay
v.
Perry, 44 L. T. N.
313
216.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XI.
An
If a
warranty
And a statement by a vendor, is notified he will be held.^ during the negotiation for the sale of a mill and water-power, that " the stream would furnish water to run the mill day and night, eight months of the year," has been held, when it turned out to be erroneous, no fraud being shown, not to entitle the vendee to damages.^
216.
The
test laid
down
as to fraudulent misrepresenta-
sentations
must be material, applies equally to honest misrepresentations.* There is this distinctions, that they
having been
inJ., and Lindley, J., that the words "about 150 tons," were merely words of estimate and expectation, and there was no warranty as to quantity, and therefore the defendants were not
Grove,
formed by
S.,
("about
wrought scrap and burnt iron, for our American house, and understand from Mr. S. that you have for sale about 150 tons. We can offer you 80s.
'
'
bound
to deliver
150 tons
that the
per
ton."
There
were
intermediate
150 tons of iron, but the iron which S. had seen in the defendant's yard. That a mere representation, of quality by seller, without fraud or warranty, will not sustain a suit, see Oymood v.
and expense
offers of
of carting,
Huth, 14 M.
D.
1.
& W.
664
Dickson
;
v.
Tel.
defendants wrote,
"We
Co., L. R. 2 C. P. D. 62
L. R. 3 C. P.
Infra, 259-263.
is
That a
false
We delivering
opinion
infra, 259.
As
;
to error in quantity,
infra, 898.
Please let us
can send a man here to see it weighed, and also inform us where to send it." Before S saw the plaintiffs he had seen a heap of iron in the yard of defendants, who were builders, and said,
Infra,
264
50
111.
270
ment by a non-expert
of a document.
264,
" You seem to have about 150 tons The reply was, "Yes, or more." The defendants only delivered
there."
forty-four tons, that being the quantity
and Smither
V.
Calvert, 44 Ind.
242
2
Todd
Clark
V. Ralls,
and the plaintiffs recovered 501. damages in an action for short delivery. It was held by
of the
heap
in the yard,
r.
V.
3U
CHAP. XI.]
tion,
[ 216.
however, to be repeated, that no action for must have been matedeceit lies against a person making an honest non- rial, and negligent misrepresentation, no matter how material, produced
. .
though such misrepresentation is ground to rescind ^^^ m^ry. a contract based on it whereas when the misrepresentation is
;
fraudulent
it
an action for
The
injury, also,
the misrepresentation.^ And hold that an immaterial misrepresentation, honest or not honest, if not contractual, does not bind the party making
it,
unless
by way of
estoppel.
If
it
did,
stand, since there are few contracts that do not contain sur-
which from the imperfection of language, may not be exactly correct. But, as we have just seen, when one
plusage,
which these misrepresentations were made, while a defence to an action for deceit, are not a defence to an action to rescind the contract. And when it is a party's duty to know the truth of a particular fact, he cannot, on the ground of ignorance, defend himself on an action based on his misstatement.^ JSTor can a vendor hold a purchaser to a sale brought about by a material though honest
tion of facts, the honesty with
Some
to "
conflict of opinion
bound
made by him
in business dealings.^
him
to the assistance of
See supra,
;
213
infra,
242
et
seq,
and
et
299
a.
seq.;
;
May on
Ins. 184;
Barb. 222.
*
supra, 186
1 Story,
See Hammersley
;
v. Biel,
12 CI.
;
&
F.
v.
facts a contracting
45
Prole
v.
Soady, 2
;
Giif. 1
Loffus
v.
Maw,
3 Giff. 592
Coverdale
;
Eastv.
Supra, 214
V.
iifra,
241
;
Bur-
Dashwood
rowes
V.
Babcock
315
216.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XI.
as
But
correcting in this respect the views taken in his second edition, these expressions were used in reference to a contract, and are based on an unquestionable contractual relation. Such was the opinion of the case expressed by Lord St. Leonards, who treated the decision as one upon a contract.^ The same criticism is applicable to the rule laid down by Bacon, V. C, in 1879.^ " If a man makes a representation, on the faith of which another man alters his position, enters into a deed, incurs an obligation, the man making it is bound to perform that representation, no matter what it is, whether it is for present payment, or for the continuance of the payment of an annuity, or to make a provision by will. That in the eye of a court of equity is a contract^ an engagement which the man mxiking it is bound to perform.'^ Here the passage italicized shows that it was only as an ingredient in a contract that the representation was held to be the basis of an action. And in 1880, we have an express decision by Stephen, J., that a representation, if not a term in a contract, or not operating: as an estoppel, cannot form the basis of a suit.* Mr. Pollock, rightfully, as has
ble either to
damages
or to a decree that
Maunsell
v.
Hedges White, 4 H. L.
Jerwyn, L. R, 12 Ch.
C. 1039,
3
to the representation.
Secondly,
Dashwood
v.
it
may operate
as
an estoppel, prevent-
D. 776. * Alderson v. Maddison, L. R. 5 Ex. D. 293. This was a suit on a promise It was to make a provision by will. held by Stephen, J., that if the representation was not a term in a contract, " It seems to it amounted to nothing. me," he said, "that every representation, false
denying its truth as against persons whose conduct has been influenced by it. Thirdly, it may amount
to a criminal offence."
The ruling
in
Alderson
v.
to Mr. Pollock's statement (Pollock, 3d ed. 497), " reversed in C. A. April 13,
when made
or falsified
by
1881 <29
W.
R. 556
L. R. 7 Q. B. D.
ways,
if it is to
sequences.
contract, in
First, it
may be
a term in a
on the ground that there was no part performance sufficient to take the case
out of the statute of frauds.
which case
Thus the
is,
or nothing
if
lia-
316
CHAP. XI.]
[ 217.
expressed by him.
case,
" The true question," he says,' " what were the terms of the contract. But
is
in every
this state-
ment
what kind of statements deemed part of the contract; and in one or two cases
make it an essential term not merely that the information given shall be true, but that all
this rule is extended so as to
The
in fact,
an independent proposition and my objection to Mr. Pollock's statement, is that he narrows to certain specified cases; e. g.,
insurance, suretyship, sales of land, and
partnership
is
that
a general rule.
The
,
difficulties
1
'
criminal
^
practice.
J.'
It
Ti.
is
said,
'J
amounting
to distortion of
are
these cases,
made the basis of a conviction.^ Yet, when we analyze we find that they are all of them not mere absten-
A
in
sion, as
is wrecked but this is not.a mere omiswould be the case if a stranger was charged with the neglect, but it is undertaking to do a particular thing and doing it wrongfully. The same distinction is applicable to
consequence a train
whose care they have assumed, by parties municipal corporations) assuming the care of highways
highways
in order.
to keep such
There
act.
is,
in fact, no indict-
>
3d ed. 497.
See discussion in
et seq.
ed. 125
Infra, 249-50.
317
217.]
CONTRACTS.
;
[CHAP. XI.
an act, because omitting a legal duty involves the doing a wrong. The same rule may be laid down with regard to the suppression of truth. No man can be made liable for a mere suppression of any truth he may know, no matter how interesting or important such truth may be. Were it otherwise, life would be occupied in the delivery of interminable orations, which would leave no time even for the full acquisition of the truth which it would become the duty of each speaker to tell on the first impression. Nor is the test a mere sense of responsibility, unless the suppression amounts to a distortion of the truth. By applying this solution, we find that what are called exceptions are in fact consistent with the rule. It is said, for instance, that insurance, suretyship, sales of land, and
partnership, are exceptions to the rule that suppression
in itself actionable, no matter
is
not
and
way
man
is
suppres-
they are none of them cases of abstention from telling, amounting to mere non-action, but that they are all of them cases of
perversion of telling, amounting to distortion of truth.
case
is
The
analogous to that of a man employed on a railroad to signalize the approach of a train. He stands at his place of
observation, and
is
to
make
danger.
He
make
not omission or suppression, but perversion of truth. So it with what are called the excepted cases, in which a supposed bare suppression becomes the foundation of a contractual suit.^
is
See Pollock, 3d ed. 500 et seq. That withholding a fact when such withholding makes the attitude of the party holding amount to a negation,
1
is
v.
" Not removing that deluwhich the negotiations showed the purchaser was under), might be taken as equivalent to an express representation." For
C. J., said
:
sion
(a material mistake
See
318
CHAP.
XI.]
[ 217.
in-
signs, as
if
to
tell
not telling
regard to suretyship.
me, and
insurer;
also, the
class,
my
attitude to
him
is
non-disclosure of
my
Of family negotiations,
same remarks may be made; in negotiations of this candor and fulness of explanation are so far required that an omission by a brother, for instance, to state a fact to a brother that the former knows to be important, and knows would be considered important by the latter, is equivalent to a statement that the fact does not exist f and the same observation may be made as to partnership.^ So far as concerns sales of land, the position taken by Mr. Pollock hardly authorizes transactions of this class to be regarded, at least in this
He
tells
us* that
title,
"a
misdescription, materially
make
and
on
i
generally Attwood
;
Small, 6 CI.
&
F.
256.
Edmonds, 13 C. B. 777 232 Horstall v. Thomas, 1 H. & C. 90 Prentiss v. Russ, 16 Me. 30 Paddock Matthews v. V. Strobridge, 29 Vt. 470 Bliss, 22 Pick. 48 Otis v. Raymond, 3
Evans
v.
; ;
answer a
v.
Paul,
91
St. 520.
v.
Kniseley, 89
111.
Infra,
;
256 a; Gordon
v,
Gordon,
v.
Howard,
5 Ala.
3 Sw. 400
698.
*
Fane
v.
Fane, L. R. 20 Eq.
596; Herring. 17. Skaggs, 62 Ala. 180. That a man by paying addresses to a
Pollock,
woman
Bennett
affirms that
he
is
unmarried,
53 Vt. 507
;
579.
What
Beam, 42 Mich. 346. "The silence of the party must amount to a direct affirmation, and must be deemed
equivalent to it"
255),
moters of companies
{infra,
Ludlow,
J.,
aS'.
in
To
v.
Bing. N. C. 370.
819
218.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XI.
of his
own
its
value: the
seller, for
example,
is
But (1) the cases of avoidance of sales cited by Mr. Pollock are cases of actual misrepresentatioris and (2) even supposing the rule to be good in England, where the title to land is not a matter of record, in this country the rule does not apply for the reason that the title is a matter of Even in record, to be determined by an official search.* England it was decided, in the House of Lords,^ that a vendor's silence as to a right of way over land sold by him, of which right of way he was not shown to have been aware, is no cause This decision is undoubtedly sefor setting aside the sale. verely criticized by Lord St. Leotiards,^ and by Mr. Pollock,* who says that " it seems an extraordinary, not to say dangerous doctrine, to say that a vendor is not bound to know his own title, so far, at least, as with ordinary diligence he niay know it." But however this may be in England, the position is not apf)licable to this country, where a record title is all that is sold and all that is bought.'
;
218.
A condition
shall
precedent in
.
its
technical sense, as
we
-,.
condi-
tionnegacurrence of
have occasion to see more fully,^ precludes such P a concurrence ot minds as constitutes an immedi1
It
.
is,
"
if
a certain state of
we
thing shall
i
bed^ne."^
,.
.
The thing
.
Condition
18
Satisfied.
^i
a^irfor
n?isstate-
ment.
hand, implies a concurrence of minds as to an immediate effect. It is this: " Such a thing is to be done, but if a statement made be not correct, the
='
'
That withholding
of facts
which
is
not
reversing
nom, Gibson
D'Este,
249.
2 Y.
*
&
C. 542.
Infra, 545
et seq.
Sag.
Law
Supra, 5.
320
CHAP.
XI.]
[ 218.
to recover
In a larger sense, however, a warranty has been detined to be "a condition the breach of which might have discharged the contract had
it
that pur-
pose,
though
it
may
Bannerman
v.
White^
on the
dis-
The
suit in
that case was brought on a contract for the purchase of a crop of hops
;
and
it
had
not.
It
appeared that sulphur, employed as a fertilizer, but reduces their market value.
to purchase the crop on the supposition
it
sul-
phur had been used, for the purpose of trying a new machine, in five acres, the whole crop covering 300 acres, but that the produce of the entire crop had been mixed together. The defendant's statement appeared to have been inadvertently made, he having forgotten the use of the sulphur, or having
regarded
it
as so trivial as to be unimportant.
The jury
found the representation not to have been wilfully false, but that it "was intended by the parties to be part of the contract and a warranty by the plaintiff." The court held that
the non-use of sulphur was a condition, the non-existence of
which vitiated the sale. " We avoid," said Erie, C. J., "the term warranty because it is used in two senses, and the term condition becg-use the question is, whether that term is applicable; then, the effect is that the defendants required, and that the plaintiff' gave his undertaking that no sulphur had been used. This undertaking was a preliminary stipulation and, if it had not been given, the defendants would not have gone on with the treaty which resulted in the sale. In this sense it was the condition upon which the defendants contracted and it would be contrary to the intention expressed by this
; ; 1
Auson,
135
see
May on
Ins.
* 8
10 C. B. N. S. 844.
184.
Benj. 3d
Am.
ed. (i04
Anson^ 136.
VOL.
I. 21
321
219.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XI.
had been used. The intention of the making and in the construction of all
ties so intend, the sale
;
If the par-
null if the superadded or the sale warranty is broken. And, upon this statement of facts, we think that the intention appears that the contract should be and upon this ground we agree null if sulphur had been used that the rule should be discharged."^ 219. No particular words are essential to constitute a
;
a warranty
rrant
Warranty.^
of a sale
is
Any
representation
if it
made
at the time
need not be
particular
a warrant}^
parties to be such.'
words.
warranties
;*
As
1
more
v.
an
article sold
which
See, to
effect,
;
Baglehole
v.
Jones, N. C. 419
Carter
v.
v.
Black, 46
111.
Brown
;
Edgv.
v.
Harding, 85
III.
;
2 M.
&
G. 290;
S. 149
Josling
Kingsford, 13 C. B. N. S. 447
Lyon
125
Jack
v.
see infra,
Robson
v.
Miller, 12
Benj. on Sales, 3d
;
Am.
;
ed. 613
et seq.
infra,
;
ed.
404
;
Pasley
v.
57
Medina
;
statement constitutes
often a diflScult one.
a warranty is
It
may depend
593
Stucley
v.
r.
Bailey, 1 H.
&
C. 405
;
Morrill
Wallace, 9 N. H. Ill
;
Henv.
known
shaw
V.
Robins, 9 Met. 88
Warren
:
Blythe
v.
may
Speake, 23 Tex.
430;
gard to the real understanding of the parties. It is a questipn for the jury
consti
under a proper instruction." Adams, Ch. J., McDonald Man. Co. v. Thomas,
53
v.
Iowa,
561, citing
Tewkesbury v.
Randall
v.
V.
v.
Me. 226; Bond v. Clark, 35 Vt. 577; Chapman v. Murch, 19 John. 290 Roberts v. Morgan, 2 Cow. 438 Whitney V. Sutton, 10 Wend. 412 Hawkins Weimer V. Pemberton, 51 N. Y. 198 Horn v. V. Clement, 37 Penn. St. 147
; ; ; ;
Reed
son
*
Hastings, 61
Harvey, 82
v.
111.
58.
Infra, 260.
Infra,
259, 263;
see notes to
Chandeler
Cas. 7th
Am.
Henson
v.
King, 3
322
CHAP. XI.J
[ 220."
vendor
order
is
may
may be returned,^ or the be sued on the warranty f an article supplied to warranted to answer the order ;^ when the vendor is
is
on implied warranty of fitness ;* though it is otherwise when the purchaser buys on his own judgment.'* It will be also seen that warranty may be implied from usage ;* that warranty does not cover depreciation in transit / that conditions imposed by local law must be complied with f that on sales by sample, the article sold must conform to sample;' that the purchaser may reject articles that do not correspond to sample ;^" that average correspondence with sample is sufficient," and that warranty may be added to sample.^^ specification of a warranty on one point may ex 220. clude the implication of warranty on other points.^^ Warranty Thus a contract to deliver Centre County iron, for a on one point full market price, is satisfied if Centre County iron, excludes general believed at the time to be good, is delivered." On implied the sale of a fertilizer the following statement was warranty. given " It is guaranteed to me, as to its ett'ect on crops, only as to the analysis of the state inspector, as evidenced by his brand on each and every article." It was held in Georgia, in
specially trusted, he
liable
Infra, 903.
" Kirk
right"
is
V.
Whe"all
6 6
7
a warranty In Power
is
a question of
v. Brown, 4 Barham, 7 G.
Tuttle
v.
Gray, 457.
Infra, 910.
Infra, 911.
&
P. 356, 6 N.
476, Lord
8 9
">
was a warranty.
infra, 249.
See
more
fully,
" Infra,
915
et seq.
An
Infra, 918.
Infra, 909
;
"
Benj. on Sales, 3d
gentle
Am.
Budd v. Fainnaner, 8 Parkinson v. Lee, 2 East, 314 Dickson v. Ziziuia, 10 C. B. 602 Willard v. Stevens, 24. N. H. 271 Deming v. Foster, 42 N. H. 165 Baldwin V. Van Deusen, 37 N. Y. 487 Gill
ed. 666
; ;
Bing. 51
;
no fraud) that a mare is kind and is not a warranty. Jackson v, Wetherill, 7 S. & R. 480 McFarland XI. Newman, 9 Watts, 55. Nor is an opinion as to value. Infra, 250 Wetherill v. Neilson, 20 Penn. St. 448 Whitaker v. Eastwick, 75 Penn. St.
;
229.
V.
323
221.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XI.
1880, that the purchaser could claim on no other warranty than that as to the genuineness of the inspector's brand.* 221. Supplying for a particular purpose implies fitness
Supplying
for particuIdr purpose
where
special confidence
if
In point of law,
a per-
implies
fitness.
with knowledge at the time of sale that it was to be applied to that purpose, he must be understood to warrant that the commodity so sold should be reasonably fit and proper
for the purpose for
which
it
was
sold.*
Even a
rule.
latent defect,
unknown
to the vendor,
is
within this
is
carriage
who
ranting
its
soundness, and
is
is
which he
causes
But selling for a particular purpose is not to be understood as warranting that the thing sold will be adapted to any peculiar conditions in which it may be placed. General adaptation is I^or is a warranty of fitness implied in all that is implied.' the sale by a peddler of a patented article.^ In connection with the above rulings may be noticed a case before the Eng-
'
Jackson
Infra,
r.
248,
263
et
seq.
As
to
warranty,
to order,
.
905.
As
;
to articles
made
645
et
903
v.
Rodgers v. Niles, 11 Oh. St. 48 Byers v. Chapin, 28 Oh. St. 300; Brenton r. Davis, 8 Blackf. 317; Leopold V. Van Kirk, 27 Wis. 1 52 Rob21
;
Benj. on Sales, 3d
seq.
;
Am.
ed.
Brown
Sutton
Jones
v.
Edgington, 2 M.
279 64;
v.
Temple, 12 M.
Bright,
5
& G. & W.
Jones
v.
v.
Byrne i-. Jansen, 50 Cal. 624. That an article made to order must answer order, see
son
V. Miller,
12 S. C. 586
v.
Bing. 533;
;
injra, 905.
3
OUivant
V. Just,
Bayley, 5 Q. B. 288
11
v. Close,
L. R. 3 Q. B. 202;
Marrable,
M.
& W.
;
Smith Lomi
i-.
D.
&
R. 200.
v.
Randall
Newson, L. R. 2 Q. B.
v.
Tucker, 4 C.
ter,
&
P. 15
;
Deming
v.
Fos-
Lopus,
et
42 N. H. 165
;
Doggett
v.
Emerson,
seq.;
3 Story, 700
Beals
Olmstead, 24 Vt.
114; Emerson v. Brigham, 10 Mass. 197 Winsor v. Lombard, 18 Pick. 60 Mansfield r, Tregg, 113 Mass. 354;
;
'Iron Works i". Newhall, 34 Conn. 67 Van Bracklin v. Fonda, 12 Gallagher r. Waring, 9 Johns. 468 Wend. 20 Bounce v. Dow, 57 N. Y.
Pacific
Chanter v. Hopkins, 4 M. & W. Port Carbon Iron Co. v. Groves, 68 Penn. St. 149. 6 Matthews v. Hartson, 3 Pitts. 86. That when the vendor is specially
399
;
trusted
his
representations
Infra, 905.
bind
is
herealter seen.
324
CHAP. XL]
lish
[ 221.
Court of Appeals
1881.
The
plaintiff'
agreed to take
from Hull to
the Brazils, paying and providing for the crew, and furnishing
The defendants agreed to pay for After the starting, the boilers.and engines of the steam-tug in question turned out to be considerably out of repair, and in consequence the voyage Qccupied sixty days more than it would otherwise have done. The fact of the engines being out of repair was not known to
all
either party at
the
Judgment was
This, however,
was reversed in the Court of Appeals, on the ground that there was no implied warranty by the defendants that the tug
should be reasonably efficient for the purposes of the voyage.^
1
Robertson
r.
;
Amazon Tug
Co., 45
Suppose the
to
Villa Bella,
fulfil
undoubtedly
danger
to
L. T. N. S. 317
7 Q. B. D. 598.
reversed, S. C. L. R.
incompetent to
her,
life,
and with
terrible
carried
L.
J.,
is
be
considered
still
in
" The plaintiflf," said Lord Coleridge, the court below, " iindertakes to
fleet across
conduct the
that
is.
the Atlantic,
not
the engines
sail-
to
Para.
do the work on which she was to be engaged. The plaintiff was entitled to say I had an instrument supplied
:
and he would be met with the statement, You took the risk and must abide by it,' so that nothing could he recover for the valuable time spent by him, and for losses incurred by making good the defects, and paying for expenses brought about by the protracted voyage. If tbe plaintiff' at an earlier stage had made himself acquainted with the state of this steamer, and had refused to perform the duties imposed on him on the ground of the impossibility of carrying out the contract, it was said in argument that he would be held Now, either liable for such refusal. the grounds of his refusal would be no answer the impossibility being short
'
of a physical
by the defendants to do this work, and such instrument ought to have been reasonably fit to do it.' The contrary contention seems full of difficulties, insuperable difficulties to my mind.
or they an action at the This suit of the defendant company. shows that there was an implied con tract on the part of the defendants that the Villa Bella should be fit for the
impossibility
to
would be an answer
325
221.]
CONTRACTS.
sale
[chap. XI.
The
his
own
by him.
Thus,
purposes of the voyage, and therefore an undert^ing on the part of the defendants that the Villa Bella should be
person
reasonably
tiflF
fit
for
to supply it is supply a thing reasonably fit for the purpose for which it is made. Therefore it seems to me that the judg-
who undertakes
bound
to
argu:
ment
come
tives
of
to
my
believe,
of
we have the
following
Lord
The Villa Bella was a vessel with damaged engines at the time the conit was that vessel tract was made
;
seems
to
me
that he holds
bound
to
with these engines, such as they were, that the plaintiff undertook to conduct
across the Atlantic.
supply this large tug in a condition reasonably fit for the purpose for
Now I
think there
would be an implied contract on the part of the defendants that they would not, by want of reasonable care, allow that vessel with its damaged engines to get more out of repair at the time the voyage was to commence than it was at the time that the contract was made. I think they were bound by an
implied contract to take
all
which the contract was made, and the breach upon which he relies really is that it was not so fit, whereas it seems to me that there was no such implied contract. I wish to put my view as plainly as I can. If there had been
evidence in this case that, after the
reasonable
was made, the machinery, from want of reasonable care by the defendants, had become in a worse condition than it was at the time of the contract, I should have thought
contract
the time of the contract, if it is to be said that they were bound to hand it
over to the plaintiff in a state reason-
ably
fit
for
it
which the defendants would have been liable. But I find no such evidence. The only misfortune about the tug was that the machinery at the time the contract was made was in such a condition that the vessel was
of contract, for
was
lord,
to do.
tract
Now, as I understand my he would not imply such a conas that, but if he would, I must
not reasonably
fit
for the
purpose of
Atlantic.
taking
barges
across
the
say that, with all deference, I cannot agree to it. When there is a specific thing, there is no implied contract that it shall be reasonably fit for the
pened was the result of a risk which was run by the plaintifi", and of which he cannot complain, and consequently he has no cause of action as regards
the Villa Bella."
1
purpose
for
which
it
is
hired or
is to
be used. That is the great distinction between a contract to supply a thing which is to be made, and which is not specific, and a contract with regard to a specific thing. In the one case you
Johnson
V.
v.
Raylton, L. R. 7 Q. B.
555 and comNov. 26, 1881,
;
D. 438.
ing Co.
J.
326
CHAP.
XI.J
[ 221.
plaintiffs,
who
2000 tons of iron ship plates, the iron to be of the quality known as " Crown," to pass on Lloyd's survey, to be delivered at the defendants'
plates,
ship-yard.
contract
was headed,
quality
known
At
the
Crown," passed
at Lloyd's.
who
contracted to
manufactured by some one else. This evidence was rejected, and judgment was entered for the plaintiffs. It was held (Bramwell, L. J.,
could not
fulfil
dissentiente) that
ajits,
who
contracted to
sell
could
fulfil
by some one
In the
of the plaintiffs
is
goods
my
opinion,
it is
not material
with reference to the question now under consideration that the plaintiff's in fact pro[)oaed to supply plates as good as those manufactured by themselves, though this would be material on the question of damages if the defendants were suing the
plaintiffs for breach of their contract.
The
plaintifis relied
on two recent decisions of the Court of Session, which no doubt are in their favor.^ But, although we ought to pay respect to the opinion on a point of law common to both England and Scotland expressed by that court, their decisions cannot be considered binding here, and the authority of these cases is much diminished by the fact that Lord Young dissented from the opinions of the majority of the court. I think the view of Lord Young more correct than that of the major^
As
327
222.]
ity,
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XI.
and I am of opinion that when a purchaser orders goods from a firm which is a manufacturer only of such goods, not a dealer in them, then, unless it is shown that in the particular trade, or as regards the particular goods, there is a practice
makers, the purchaser must be assumed to have contracted with the particular manufacturers in reliance on the general
excellence of the
work of
their firm,
and
is
entitled, in the
performance of the contract, goods of the manufacturers' own make. It is said that the clause as to strikes shows on this contract a contrarj"^ intention. But this is not, I think, the necessary or fair construction of this clause. I think the clause rather assumes that stoppage of the manufacturers' works would probably prevent them from performing their contract, though notwithstanding the stoppage of the works the manufacturers might have plates of their own make which they would supply. The result, in my opinion, is that judgment should be entered for the defendants for it would be for the plaintifl^s to show that the custom of the trade enabled them to supply ship plates of other makers, and, as the plaintifits objected to the evidence tendered by the defendants to show the usage of the trade, we ought, I think, to assume that the plaintitts could not adduce such evidence as, in my
;
opinion,
222,
is
There has been much discussion on the question whether there is an implied warranty of wholeSellmg meat for someness in sales of provisions. We have the high authority of Blackstone^ to this effect; and in Chitty food im^*" ^" Contracts the same position is broadly aflirmed.^ ncM^ We have numerous authorities in this country tending in the same direction, so far as concerns articles sold for domestic use;' and this view is strengthened by the rulings in
'^
'
Com.
Op.
iii.
p. 166.
cit.
912; see citations in Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 671, including Winsor v. Lombard, 18 Pick. 57;
* InJ'ra,
Emerson, 110 Mass. 321 Van Hart v. Fonda, 12 John. 468 u. Wright, 17 Wend. 267; Goldrich v. Ryan, 3 E. D. Smith, 324 Moses v.
ard
v.
;
Bracklin
Mead,
2 H.
v.
Lewis,
How
&
Gill,
498
Humphreys
v.
Com-
328
CHAP.
XI.]
[ 222.
for human food articles known to be unfit for such food.' In England, however, it is now held that there is no general implied warranty on sales of food, except in cases of "victuallers, butchers, and other common dealers in victuals, under the statute 51 Henry III. ;"2 and Mr. Benjamin asserts that " the
unwholesom.e food, does not arise out of any conis a responsibility imposed by
their sale of
line, 8 Blackf.
unwholesome
516
;
Davis
v.
Murphy,
14 Ind. 158
V.
to
Chandeler
mill,
Am.
ed.
299.
See
holding that
is
not
common
law.
,
noted
V.
249.
Burnby
Op.
cit.
v. Bollett,
16 M.
& W.
v.
644.
The bran was not manufactured for F. upon any contract with him, but was simply sold out of a quantity then on hand belonging to L., and could have been inspected by F. at the time of purchase if he had desired. It was held by the supreme court, after a
or
careful analysis of the authorities, that
in the absence of express warranty, F.
672;
Emmerton
Mat-
thews, 7 H.
a butcher, bought of a general dealer (the plaintiff not buying for domestic
human
say
it is
food,
Brewer,
went on
is
to
for
the
"Now
an expert in such matters, bought on his own inspection. It was held there was no implied warranty. In Burnby v. Bollett, 16 M. & W. 644, it was held there was no implied warranty, on the ground that the vendor was not a dealer in meat. See infra, 912. In Lukens v. Freiund, Sup. Ct. Kan.
plaintiff,
denied
exception rests
consumption by
man
No
but only
for
use
authorities
have
We
it
are
left,
there-
determine
ciples.
Obviously
it
is
329
223.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XI.
223. Celling
by a merchant
is,
it
affected
but
preservation of
deems
it
certainly
is
and know their fitness for such use, and be liable for a lack of such knowledge. One may not place poison where it is likely to be taken by one ignorant
of
which the mill is worked. It- is that which is left after the flour has been manufactured. It is no uncommon
thing in manufacturing establishments,
after the principal product is
tured,
that
is
there
manufacremains a refuse
is
Regard for human life no more may he sell food unfit to be eaten to a man who he knows is buying it to eat. The same
its
qualities.
;
which
fuse,
of
compels this
Now
life
to this refuse.
It
common
special attention
of
inferior
;
and
care,
it is
always
parties
value.
This
all
the preservation of
be, as
human
it
is,
life
understand
and health
we think
the
it
and to hold that the manufacturer warrants the quality of this refuse
would seem burden upon
'
to
its
cast
an
et
unnecessary
seq.
which humau life and health are in no wise endangered. Now the claim of
the plaintiff
loss,
disposal."
;
Infra,
905, 919
;
Leake,
2d ed. 407
6
Benj. on Sales, 3d
;
Am.
ed.
Laing
v. v.
v.
Fidgeon,
ished,
action.
is
his cause of
Taunt. 108
Josling
;
Kingsford, 13
Just, L. R. 3
similar to that
C. B. N. S. 447
Jones
v.
which he would have sustained if he had purchased from a wagon-maker a defective wheel, and thereby his wagon had broken down. No matter of life or
health of himself or family
is
Q. B. 197
;
Parkinson, 7 H. & N. 955 Thrall v. Newell, 19 Vt. 202 Henshaw v. Robins, 9 Met. 87 Uay;
Bigge
lord
Man. Co.
v.
v.
Allen, 53 N. Y. 515
;
involved.
We
think, therefore, that no recovery can be had under the principles of this
third exception.
may
Bevan, 3 Rawle, 23 Edwards I". Hathaway, 1 Phila. 547 Batturs V. Sellers, 6 Har. & J. 249 Hyatt V. Boyle, 5 Gill & J. 110 Rodgers v. Niles, 11 Oh. St. 48 McClung v. Kelly, 21 Iowa, 508 Mann v, Evason, 32 Ind.
Borrekins
; ; ; ;
description given
nesses of
it
as
witoffal
355
Merriam v. Field, 24 Wis. 640 Hanks t;. McKee, 2 Litt. 227 Howie t;.
; ;
330
CHAP. XI.]
[ 223.
If the subject''
Selling:
matter be merely the commerciar article or commodity, the undertaking is, that the thing offered or delivered shall answer that description, that is to
say, shall be that article or
able.
^ by merchant
l^erchant*^''**y-
must answer that description, that is to say, it must be that article or commodity, and reasonably fit for the particular purpose."' But as will be hereafter seen more fully, when an article is ordered as such from a manufacturer, "if the known, defined, and described thing be actually supplied, there is no warranty that it shall answer the particular purpose intended by the buyer. "^ It has just been stated that not only is it a
what they
ranty, in eases
where there
is
sale
has a right to expect a salable article, answering the description in the contract. Without any particular warranty, this
is
an implied term
in every
such contract.
Whitney
erill
v.
Lopus,
Smith's L. C. 7th
Am.
1
ed. 299
et seq.
Neilson,
20
Penn.
St.
448.
v.
Newson, L.
Sugar Re-
Am.
ed.
2d ed. 408.
v.
Benj. on Sales, 3d
Am.
ed. 657,
citing
Chanter
v.
Hopkins, 4 M.
v.
& W.
sugar" to
article
refiners,
would sustain a
and see
1
notes to Chandeler
L, C. 7th
^
Lopus,
et seq.
Smith's
Am.
ed. 299
purities
than
is
^g
iq
conditions
precedent, see
that class.
And
infra, 560.
*
erally in cases
Gardiner
v.
not affected,
;
Am.
ed.
See Swett
v.
331
223.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XT.
He bannot, without a warranty, insist any particular quality or fineness, but the intention of both parties must be taken to be that it shall be salable in the market under the denomination mentioned in the contract between them." In 1868, after a series of intermediate approvals, this rule was finally reaffirmed by the Queen's Bench, where the following distinctions Were taken i^ First, where there is an opportunity of inspection by the purchaser, and no fraud, there is no implied warranty, even though the defects are latent and the goods not merchantable ;^ second, nor is there an implied warranty as to an article even when specifically described, " the actual condition of which is capable of being ascertained by either party;"* thirdly, there is no implied warranty as to an article ordered from a manuIt has facturer, and delivered as described by the purchaser.*^ been already seen, that a warranty need not be in any particuemptor does not apply. ^
that
it
shall be of
lar words.'
'
On
this point
Judge Bennett
v.
refers,
Boorman
v.
Jenkins, 12
id.
Wend.
Oneida Man. Co. r. Lawrence, 4 Cow. 444 Waring v. Mason, 18 Wend. 425 Salisbury IK Stamer, 19 id. 159 as to canned fruit or vegetables, to Boyd v. Wilson,
566
;
Beebe
Robert,
413
those manufactured
by himself,
for
in per-
83 Penn.
St.
319
S. P.,
Whitaker
v.
formance of a contract
tled to refuse them.
the sale of
McCormick,
Jones
V.
Just, L. R. 3 Q. B. 197.
Emmerton
Matthews, 7 H.
&
N.
586.
fore, a conflict on this point between the Scotch and the English courts,
Barr v. Gibson, 3 M. & W. 390. Chanter v. Hopkins, 4 M. & W. 399 OlUvant v. Bayley, 5 Q. B. 288,
< 8
:
which
will be remitted
to.
the house of
is
The question
reprinted
for
Jurisprudence,
in
the
Supra,
tion
infra,
may
219.
May, 1882
226; that
-a
sale
"with
irtfra,
all
;
229
of title
is
implied
(vol. X. p. 641). It is to be observed, however, that the Scotch judges were not unanimous in the decision they reached, and that those holding that
We have already
v.
Raylton, L. R. 7
Q. B. D. 438,
was held by a majority of the court of appeal (see more fully supra,
it
when he has a peculiar make or brand in the market, or when it can be supposed that there is anypretiam afftcthat,
332
CHAP. XI.]
224.
,
[ 224.
Defects
01)611 to in-
An
implied warranty
,
.
.
is
not to be extended
p
J 1 1
to goods Open to the inspection ot the buyer, supposing he has both opportunity and capacity adequately to judge,*he buying on this inspection.^Uonis,
spection
"*** ^'^'*"
ra II tied
airaiiist.
his
he is bound to supply goods of sales S. own make, even if there be no 378 and
;
;
P.,
Moses
v.
Mead,
v.
Denio,
Pennsylvania.
Borrekins
Bevan, 3
"Where
Rawle, 23
Lopus,
299
1
et seq.
commences," says the Journal of Jurisprudence, '"is where none of these elements are present, where the article sold has no special repute, or name, or otlier distinction, but is such that one maker's make is as good as another's." 1 Infra, 227, 245, and 907 Benj. Jones v. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 657
; ;
Minnesota, McCormick
v.
at the time of
Just, L. R. 3 Q. B. 197
Gardiner
v.
v.
Demiiig
Foster,
proposition,
42 N. H. 165
65 Barb. 556
St.
;
88
namely, that for representations in the terms or form of a warranty of personal property no action will lie on account
of defects actually
Thompv.
v.
son, 85
111.
111.
;
16
Cogel
K^iiseley, 89
stood
by the purchaser
Dyer
v.
598
the bargain.
Margetson
Wright, 7
Gammell
In
Bing. 603
Jr.
Hyatt
v.
506
;
&
J. 110,
the warranty in
Randall
v.
Newson,
above
earlier
v. Harding, 85 111. 264 Williams v. Ingram, 21 Tex. 300; Marshall v. Drawhorn, 27 Ga. 275 Shewalter v. Ford, 34 Miss. 417 Brown
;
202
Kenner
V.
Story on
beyond the
is
Contr. 830
Am.
ed.)
no oppor-
has been the prevalent rule United States. Stevens v. Smith, 21 Vt. 90 Mixer v. Coburn, 11 Met. 561 Lamb v. Crafts, 12 Met, 353
latter
in the
;
The
Hart
V.
V.
Hart, 18
warranty for the breach of tlie condition of which an action ex contractu for damages can be maintained, must be a legal contract, and not a mere naked agreement. It must be a representation of something as a fact, upon which the purchaser relies and by which he is induced, to some extent,
to
Stainer, 19
Wend.
159
Hoe
v.
Saiiv.
make
the purchase, or
is
influenced
born, 21 N. Y. 552;
Allen,
69 N. Y. 61. v. Hoey, 23 Wend. 350, Bronson, C. J., argues that a warranty of merchantability is to be implied in all executory
Manuf. Society v. Lawrence, 4 Cow. 440 Lindsey v. Lindsey, 34 Miss. 432 Blythe v. Speake, 23 Tex. 429 Adams Ender v. Scott, V. Johnson, 15 111. 345
;
333
225.]
CONTRACTS.
there
is
[CIIAP. XI.
But where
bound
to
is
not
He
has a right,
when
these
some time
must be
latent {vitium
Roman
chaser
is
an expert,
it is
enough that
morbus sit, qui omnibus potuit apparere."* The purchaser ia bound to exercise the care of a good business man of his class. " Ignorantia emtori prod est, quae non in supinum hominem cadit,"* " non dissolutam ignorantiam eratoris excusari oportebit."^ A party cannot recover for a loss which his own negligence provokes and as negligence of this class will be
;
regarded an omission to look at obvious conditions in an artiIf a physical defect is skilfully cle tendered for inspection. covered up by the vendor, the latter becomes liable in an action for deceit. If it is not covered up, then either the purchaser's negligence is to be chargeable with the loss, or he is to be regarded as having agreed to take the article as
it is.^
225.
sampif implies corre-
As we
will hereafter
spondence
with sam-
may
^'
11 *, 35
Hawkins
Berry, 5 Gilm.
'
L. 1, 6
t.
36
D. h.
*
ed.)."
And
; ;
see Pinney
v.
Andrews,
L.
10,
14,
D. h.
t.
Koch,
II.
471.
s
D. h.
t.
Infra,
Am.
3
ed. 618
;
citing
Tye
v. v.
Fynmore,
Robins, 9
In Nichols
v.
Godts,
Camp. 462
;
Heushaw
10 Ex. 191, a seller was held responsible for adulteration of rape oil, sold as
oil, even though the bulk corresponded with the sample.
Met. 83
227.
*
rape
Dooley
v.
Gallagher, 3 Hughes, C.
C. 214.
334
CHAP.
XI.]
[ 227.
on all matters within its range ;^ but not as to matters outside such range, nor as to matters not discoverable by the sample, in which cases the warranty of merchantability may be implied,^ In both description and quality the bulk of the goods must correspond with the sample f but this, when a great mass of goods is sold, will be satisfied by an average correspondence, As will hereif the sample fairly represents the aggregate.* after be seen more fully, showing sample is not necessarily sale by sample;^ the purchaser may reject if the goods do not correspond with sample, but an average correspondence with sample is sufficient.^ false representation may be an estoppel;^ Represen 226. tation may and so may be a warranty when made with intent be an estoppel. that it should be acted on.^ 227. When a buyer shows that he relies on his own judgment, and takes no express warranty, and invites no opinion from the seller, then a warranty will not be ranty'when implied,'** It is otherwise when reliance is placed on ^J^^^go^ the seller's statements, if he be an expert in reference hie own judgment. to the thing sold." J3ut generally a warranty is
Infra,
;
916-18
Leake, 2d ed.
^
r
Infra,
914
et seq.
408
Benj. on Sales, 3d
V.
Am.
ed. 667
Infra, 917.
Infra, 234.
Mody
2
Gregson, L.
v.
R. 4 Ex. 49
8
;
Dickson
Fraley
^ v.
Zizinia, 10 C. B. 602.
V.
9
'"
;
Infra, 237.
Mody
Infra,
Gregson, L. R. 4 Ex. 49
St. 320.
Supra,
Bispham, 10 Penn.
Chanter
v.
v.
914
L. R. 2 C. P. 677
9 Met. 86
;
Bounce
224 infra, 245, 907 Hopkins, 4 M, & W. 402 Dow, 64 N. Y. 411 Lord v.
; ;
Grow, 39 Penn.
ley, 89 111.
St. 88
;
Cogel
v.
Knise-
Brower v. Lewis, 19 Barb. 574; Moses v. Mead, 1 Denio, 378; Hargons v. Stone, 5 N. Y. 73 Borrekins V. Bevan, 3 Rawle, 37 Boyd v. Wilson, 83 Penn. St. 319, where, however, it was held that a sale by sample does not warrant quality, but merely similarity with sample, and merchant;
;
598
see Hight
infra,
v.
Bacon,
907.
As
"
rill,
Bragg
v.
Mor-
49 Vt. 45
;
Hoe
v.
Sanborn, 21 N.
ability.
Leonard v. Fowler, 44 N. Y. 289. That in sample sales there should be
Y. 552 Bartlett v. Hoppart, 34 N. Y. 118. See Chandeler v. Lopus, 1 Smith's L. C. 7th Am. ed. 299 et seq. ; Nye v.
Alcohol Works, 51 Iowa, 129.
> Infra, 907 supra, Hargrave, 10 Ves. 505
;
infra,
v.
v.
Wright,
M.
&
P. 606
Bing. 603.
Infra, 915.
335
229.J
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XI.
and examined by him,* though it is otherwise as to matters which the buyer is incapable, from ignorance or infirmity, of distinguishing; or which escaped his notice;'^ or as to Nor is a buyer bound to investigate which he is misled.^ that which is warranted. He is entitled to take the seller's warranty as relieving him, unless in cases of patent and glaring defect, from examination.^ But it is otherwise w^hen the false statement is an appeal to investigation, and not a warranty of a
228.
Vendor
fact.''
article so negligently
may
be
no warranty, a person selling an made by him as to do injury,^ or of whose dangerous properties he, as seller, ought
is
liable for
negligence.
though there is no such liability on the part of a vendor, even though he be the manufacturer, to a party injured by the thing sold, where there is no contractual relation between the plaintift' and the defendant, or the plaintiff was not within the defendant's contemplation as the person to
use the thing sold.^
229.
sale of
an article "with
all faults"
excludes the
Cockrell, L. R. 5 Q. B. 184
Farrant
;
v.
245
Story on Cont.
r.
Barnes, 11 C. B. N.
11 Allen, 519
S.
553
Hayes
v.
1057
*
citing Butterfield
Burroughs,
v.
Nichols,
1 Salk. 211.
Infra, 245.
Benj. on Sales, 3d
v.
v.
Am.
ed. 618;
Shepherd
Kain, 5 B.
&
Aid. 240;
;
Henshaw
V.
Robins, 9 Met. 89
;
Mead
Pren111.
Cattle v; Stockton
;
Water Works,
v. Litchfield,
Bunn, 32 N. Y. 273
83
;
Thorne
v.
L. R. 10 Q. B. 453
Loop
v.
tiss,
III.
99
Ruff
v. Jarrett,
94
;
42 N. Y. 351
494.
Losee
Clute, 51 N. Y.
and cases cited supra, 224 infra, 245. 5 Supra, 224 infra, 245. 6 Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 431, 904; George v. Skivington, L. R. 5 See note to Chandeler v. Exch. 1.
475
;
See comments in
Wh. on
Neg.
91, 92, 440, 441, 443, 774, 857. That none but a party can sue on a contract, see infra, 784. In Langridge r. Levy,
the representation of soundness (the case being that of a gun which burst)
Am.
seq.
ed.
Infra,
;
241
Benj. on Sales,
v.
431, 668
Langridge
Levy, 2 M.
;
&
v.
W.
519
4 M.
& W. 336
337
Francis
was made to the plaintiff's father, but it was understood at the time thai the gun was for the plaintiff's use. See distinction put in Coughtry v. Globe Woollen Co., 56 N. Y. 124.
CHAP. XI.]
[ 230.
want of adaptation
And
it
the House of Lords, that a sale " with all faults" not ISllnl^ excludes only covers secret faults, such as might be consistent warranty. with the article being merchantable, but protects the seller in case of a sale of animals which turn out to be
unfit for the
market
in
The
must be preserved.^
United States
in
is,
230.
in the
that
there
sales,
is
when
them while
^Ym"*^
implied in
own,
even though there be no affirmation of title.^ "It is also," says Mr. Benjamin," " universally conceded, that in the sale of an ascertained specific chattel, an affirmation by
the vendor that the chattel
is
his
is
equivalent to a warranty
of title; and that this affirmation may be implied from his conduct, as well as from his words, and may also result from
the nature and circumstances of the sale.
But
it
has been
is
Benj. on Sales, 3d
;
Am.
ed. 447,
rler,
49 N. H. 310
;
Sherman
v.
v.
Trans.
602, 671
Schneider
v.
v.
Heath, 3 Camp.
5
Cooli'dge
v.
Brigham,
506 154
2
Baglehole
Walters, 3 Camp.
551
;
Shattuck
Green, 104
Taylor
V.
v.
BuUen,
Ex. 779.
Mass. 42
;
Ward
C. 3 Q. B. D. 150
Kain, 5 B.
&
Aid. 240.
Hoe v. Sanborn, 21 N. Y. 552 McCoy v. Archer, 3 Barb. 323 Burt v. Dewey, 40 N. Y. 283 McKnight
; ;
v.
Devlin,
52 N. Y. 399
1 S.
;
Dorsey
v.
v.
Jackman,
2 Dall. 91
S.
&
R. 42
Boyd
Bopst,
ranty must be proved as a matter of contract, and that a contract of warranty was excluded by the statement that there was to be no warranty. See
supra, 222.
'
Whitney
v.
247.
Benj. on Sales, 3d
;
Am.
1062
ed. 627,
;
630
V.
Story on Cont.
Thurston
v.
Sargent
Cur-
McCabe v. Morehead, 1 W. Charnley v. Dulles, 8 W. & S. 353 Darst v. Brockway, 11 Ohio, 462 Eagan v. Call, 34 Penn. St. 236 Whitaker v. Eastwick, 75 Penn. St. 229 Rice v. Forsyth, 41 Md. 389 Byrnside v. Burdett, 15 W. Va. 702 Williamson v. Simmons, 34 Ala. 691 Storm v. Smith, 43 Miss. 497; Marshall V. Duke, 51 Ind. 62 Morris v. Thompson, 85 111. 16; Chancellor v. Wiggins, 4 B. Mon. 201. ^ gales, 3d Am. ed. 627.
&
513
;
VOL.
I. 22
337
230.]
sale of a chattel, does not
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XI.
warrant his title and ability to sell; though all again admit, fourthly, that if in such case the vendor knew he had no title, and concealed that fact from the buyer, he would be liable on the ground oi fraud. '^ On the other hand, no such warrant}' is held to exist when the thing sold is not in the possession of the vendor or of his agent.^
1
Kent's Com.
ii.
p. 278
;
V.
no fraud
vendor.
or
This doctrine
McCoy
v.
v.
Artclier,
Edick
v.
Crim, 10 Barb.
;
447
Scranton
v.
Clark, 39 N. Y. 220
ley
V.
Dulles, 8
W. &
S. 353).
Andres
V. Ells,
Lee, 1 Dev.
&
"Shares
of stock in a corporation
Fletcher
v.
Stephens
Hickiug-
65 Mo. 456
Long
v.
The
certificate is
the evidence of
however,
ley
V.
is
repudiated in Eichholz
v.
Banister, 17 C. B. N. S. 708,
and Mor-
Cont.
1062,
where
it
is v.
Hammond
; ;
such ownership, and there can be no doubt that if the certificate is forged, or the holder is not such bona Jide, so that he has no claim on the corporation, the vendor would be liable to his vendee on the implied warranty of title.
His possession of the certificate would be as to his vendee possession of the
stock, just as possession of a
Sumn. 394
11 Pet. 71
Smith
V.
bond or
ham,
Met. 551
Defreeze
v. v. v.
v.
Trumper,
20
note
is
1 Johns.
Johns.
Colgate,
Summers, 3
Peters, 12 S.
has been a
fraudulent
overissue of
stock, evidenced
by
is
certificate
under
differ-
& R. 177 Mockbee v. Gardner, 2 Har. & G. 177 Payne v. Rodden, 4 Bibb,
; ;
somewhat
304.
v.
Lopus,
1 Smith's L. C. 7th
In People's
corporation
was
own
own
intrusted by
them
to their officers or
he does not warrant that the stock agents. It is unnecessary in this case was not part of a fraudulent overissue. to consider whether they are bound to " It may now," said Sharswood, C. J., permit a transfer on their books, and be regarded as well settled, that a to deliver a new certificate to the bona party selling as his own, personal prop- Jide vendee. It may be that where the erty of which he is in possession, war- overissue is in excess of the amount rants the title to the thing sold and authorized by the charter, they would
title,
' '
;
that
if
by reason
of a defect of title
not be.
But
it
seems
to
be established,
may
re-
338
CHAP. XI.]
[ 230.
"The one
"
is
fraudulent
would have a
seal of
We
are of opinion
and that his measure of damages would that the implied warranty of title exhe the market value of his stock at the tended no further, and that there was time the transfer was demanded (Willis no breach." That on a sale of bonds by telegraph V. Philada. & Darby R. R. Co., 6 W. N. C. 461, and cases cited ih the opin- there is a warranty of genuineness, The vendor of see Donaldson v. Newman, 9 Mo. Ap. ion of Judge Hare). such a certificate has then a title which 235. That on a sale of accounts there he can transfer, and a remedy against is an implied warranty that they are the corporation. Suppose the shares due, see Gilchrist v. Hilliard, .53 Vt. in the case before us had been trans- 592. "In this state," said Ray, J., in a ferred by an original subscriber, his vendee would have been in the same case before the Supreme Court of Missouri in 1881, "the principle is well position as the assignee of shares subsequently issued in excess of the charter.
settled,
to
He would have had a clear right demand a transfer and new certifi-
bond
for
such a con-
Such certificate, however, would have been worth to him only the value of the stock in the market at the time. If his transfer had been refused, he would be entitled to the same remedy and the same measure of damages. The vendor of shares of stock certainly does not warrant the solvency of the
cate.
veyance, and
the
against the payment of the purchasemoney, on the mere ground of defect of title there being no fraud or false representations as to the title, and no eviction. In all such cases he cannot
;
corporation.
Corporations
are espe-
resist
cially liable to
be made insolvent by
It
money, without
possession, thus
acquired by him, to
v.
matters
not
the vendor.
Mitchell
v.
McMullen, 59
;
Mo. 252
nor
V.
Harvey
v.
Wheeler
Con-
Eddy, 25
72
Smith
v.
Busby,
depreciated.
It
15 lb. 393.
It is
such fraud or robbery was before or after the sale of the stock, the bona fide
tion,
who has paid for land may, where the parain this state, that a purchaser
vendor cannot, under the rule in quesbe held responsible for the depreciation in value. It is one of the risks
mount
all
dealers in
It is
agreed in the
and regular on their and were issued by the duly constituted officers of the company, and
in the usual form
face,
title is outstanding, maintain an action against his vendor for a breach of his covenant of warranty, without an actual eviction That is, an actual dispossession, by process of law, consequent upon a judgment, is not necessary, in order that a covenantee may maintain an action for breach of the covenant of warranty.
: '
339-
230.]
CONTRACTS.
sale, asserts
[chap. XI.
that he
is
The negative
is
78
V.
tary dispossession, or
ouster in pais,"
Hoe
where there has been no judgment, the burden of proof is upon the covenantee
to establish
mount title to which he has yielded and the possession should only be surrendered after claim or demand made therefor.' Morgan r. R. R. Co., 63 Mo. Such also seems 129, and cases cited.
to be the
Graham, 5 Hump. 484 Inge v. Bond, 3 Hawks, 101; Colcock v. Goode, 3 McCord, 513; Cozzins r Whitaker, 3 St. & P. 32E Williamson v. Sammena, 34 Ala. 691. But even where the ven.
;
dor
is
controversies,
states, in like
goods
vendees
Wend. 131 Marvin, 8 Barb. 1 Estabrook v. Smith, 6 Gray, 572 Greenvault v. Davis, 4
; ;
were held adversely and known to be so by the purchaser. Smith v. Fairbanks, 7 Fost. 521. In Morley v. Attenborough, Parke, " From the authorities in our B., said
:
Hill,
643
Fowler
v.
Poling, 6 Barb.
law, to which
may
Hamilton v. Cutts, 4 Mass. 349. It may be remarked, however, that the implied warranty of title, upon the sale of personal property, has been held by the authorities to be analogous to a covenant for quiet enjoyment, in the sale of lands and it would seem,
165
;
from these authorities, that the courts do not maintain a different rule in actions based on a breach of warranty
of title,
erty,
Ormrod v. Huth, 14 M, & W. 664, it would seem that there is no implied warranty of title on sale of goods, and that if there be no fraud, a vendor is not liable for a bad title, unless there is an express warranty, or an equivalent to it by declaration or conduct and the question, in each case where there is no warranty in express terms, will be, whether there are such circumstances as to be equivalent to such a
v.
warranty.
Usage of trade,
if
proved,
Baird, 62 N. Y. 331
1
Bardewell
v.
Colie,
Sweetman
;
Prince,
26 N. Y. 232, 233; Striugham v. Ins. Matheny v. Co., 40 N. Y. 285, 286 Mason, 12 Rep. 627."
such an
engagement
and, without
may
be enough to lead to
to
to
on must be understood
engage
Wad-
372; Huntington v. Hall, 36 Me. 501; Dorr v. Fisher, 1 Cush. 273 Bennett v. Bartlett, 6 Cush.
3
Fairf.
;
which he buys as against all persons." '* We do not suppose that there would be any doubt, if the articles are bought in a shop professedly carried on for the sale of goods, that the shopkeeper must
be considered as warranting that those
225:,
Vibbard
v.
Johnson, 19 Johns.
who purchase
will
have a good
title to
340
CHAP. XI.]
[ 230.
law on
repute.^
rule,^
'if
the vendor
relied
them
as his own.'
on by the learned authors mentioned in the note is the elaborate opinion giveti by Parke, B., in the case of Morley v. Attenborough,^ where the dicta of that eminent judge certainly sustain the proposition, although the point was not involved nor decided in the case. It is, however, the fact,"
Benjamin (1881), "that no direct decision has ever been given in England to the effect, that where a man sells a
says Mr.
chattel he does not thereby warrant the title."
He
adds that
on this point, and that dissatisfaction with them has been more than once suggested. This conclusion he sustains by a critical examination of the English cases.^ The question is virtually one of burden of proof. Where chattels are sold, it is maintained on the one side that a warranty of title is implied, unless it be shown from the facts of the case that this never was intended; while it is maintained, on the other side, that no warranty is implied, unless it is shown to have been intended
But keep the goods purchased in the case now under consideration,
the defendant can be
eo nomine."
'
made
responsible
had expressly stipulated that ifshould be borne by the former. No warranty of quality or title was consequently
implied from the sale either of personal
or real estate."
1
Broom's
Leake on Cont.
;
7th
Am.
:
Rowland
v.
198
BuUen &
102 a,
Doyle, 5 R.
said
33,
6 Co. Lit.
" There
is
2 Bl.
628.
any more than of quality, implied from the mere fact of the sale of a chattel,
the rule of caveat emptor applying to
3 Ex. 500.
As
is
said
both."
editors
add
editors of Smith's
,
307,
"
It is
chattels
ley
"The policy of the com- rise to a contrary presumption, as mon law seems to have been to limit the where the vendor merely sells such
overruled."
eflFect
if
not
of property
to the pur-
chaser,
and
341
230.]
CONTRACTS.
facts of the case.
[CHAP. XI.
from the
sale of chattels in
Now it is hard to conceive of any which there does not transpire some fact
title.
The
question, therefore,
sale.
But
that the mere fact that goods sold by a party are not at the
time of the
principle.
for a full
mation of
title is implied.'
is
And
it
is
sides
in-
excluded
is
in all cases in
which
it is
When
that attitude
is the rule.^ Hence, there is no warranty of title by a pawnbroker;^ nor by an officer selling under an execution ;* nor in sales in bankruptcy.* But there is a warranty of title in an exchange of articles actually
and a contract of sale will be set when there is no title to sell.^ A covenant to convey lands binds to give a good title.* The Roman law on this topic is thus succinctly stated by Windscheid, one of the most authoritative of recent German commentators.^ The vendor is liable in case of the purchaser's
there be a failure of
aside on ground of mistake
'
Fore
v.
r.
Mc-
Hensley
Baker,
10 Mo. 157.
*
above
272
;
cited.
See, also, 11
Law
Rep.
12
Am.
;
Jur. 311
Benjamin on
v.
Leake, 2d ed. 402. Purvis V. Kayer, 9 Price, 488; MeCoy V. Archer, 3 Barb. 323 Rodrigues
Sales, 628
;
Hoch, 3 Barr, 230. Pelton, 48 Vt; 182 Hunt Sackett, 31 Mich. 18 Byrnside v.
v.
Moser
Patee
v.
Burdett, 15
W. Va.
641.
3d Am. ed.
'
V.
778, 779;
Graham
v.
Oliver, 3 Beav.
Eichholz
708.
<
Banister, 17 C. B. N. S.
Speller, 14 Q. B. 621
;
124.
8
Hill v. Hobart,
Chapman
v.
Little v. Peddleford, 13
v.
N.
Bagueley v. Hawley, L. R. 2 C. P. 625 Baker v. Arnot, 67 N. Y, 448 Bashore Hicks v. Skinr. Wister, 3 Watts, 490 Mech. Sav. Inst. v. ner, 71 N. C. 539
; ;
Carter
391.
Alexander, 71 Mo.
Pand.
342
CHAP.
XI.]
[ 231*
to say,
he
is
chaser in case the latter loses the goods from the vendor's
detective
title.
The vendor
is
chaser not only momentary but permanent possession tare emtori rem habere licere.
1.
praes-
on account of de-
he loses it on other grounds, e. g.^ by its destruction, or its seizure by the state, or by a third person through violence. When the eviction is by judicial process, then the claim against the vendor is complete,
fective title.
enough
though the vendor may subsequently contest it by showing that the judgment was wrongful and collusive, or had been
entered in consequence of the purchaser's negligence.^
On
the
other side,
it is
not necessary
tliat
if
from the vetidor by proving that the claim against him was one which he could not resist. The proper course for the purchaser, in case his title
is
judicially contested,
is
to notify the
vendor litem denuntiare who then is entitled to interplead ; but a neglect to give this notice does not deprive the purchaser of his right to indemnity should it appear that the
vendor's intervention would have led to a different result.
The defect of title must be imputable to the vendor.^ The goods must be actually taken from the purchaser, or he must have been obliged to have made some sacrifice to retain them; " vel damnatus est litis aestimatione." It makes no matter what shape the adverse process takes, whether it
2. 3.
lien,
provided the
whole or in part. 231. (modifying In our own law in this respect the ^ Roman rule), the preponderance of authority is that ,j,^ sustain to sustain a suit on a warranty of title, there should suit there be an eviction of the vendee.' When, however, eviction.
'
L.
1,
C. de
where are
Penn.
107
;
cited,
;
62 Barb. 256
;
L.
1,
L. 11,
St.
426
v.
Porter, 31
111.
pr. D. de evict.
Gross
As
v.
Benj. on Sales, 3d
Am.
ed. 627,
to
rule in Kentucky,
Payne
343
231.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XI.
is a fraudulent misstatement of title on the part of the vendor, eviction need not be a condition precedent to suit.^ In Massachusetts, eviction is not a condition precedent to a
there
title
a bankrupt assignee.^
v. v. *
Grose
v.
v.
Perkins
3
S.
Triplett,
Mete.
see
(Ky.)
Tennessee,
Wood
24
v.
as to 570 Cavin, 1
;
P. Dryden
Fogg
v.
Willcut,
Cush. 300
Gay
Heed, 506.
1
v. V.
v.
Case
Hall,
Wend. 102;
Sweetman
344
CHAP. XII.]
FRAUD.
CHAPTER
FRAUD.
Fraud
is
Xll.
an intentional distortion
of
Fraud may be
in conduct as well as
the truth,
232.
in words, 248.
Party defrauded
for
may
232
a.
rescind or sue
When
non-disclosure of qualification
this
is
damages,
Contracts
may
be divisible in respect
to fraud, 233.
False representations
234.
may be
estoppels,
business
sagacity
would
discover
250.
liable,
When When
both
there
are involved in
fraudulent misrepre-
no de-
Neither party
is
bound
to correct the
False representation
injured,
Nor
is
when
253.
237.
lucri causa,
When
a fiduciary relation,
238.
255.
239.
So of promotor of company,
material facts,
256.
255 a.
And
so of falsity, 240.
Must be causal relation between fraud and injury, 242. Fraud need not be the sole motive,
242 a. Injury must be actually sustained,
243.
256
a.
may
be a false
244.
And
And must
245.
Misrepresentations to be distinguished
of testing
contributory negligence,
from
puflfs,
261.
246.
And
General statement
law
does
not
345
232.]
avoid
;
CONTRACTS.
otherwise as to specific opin-
[chap. XII.
within range of
273.
Statement must be
authority,
ion, 264.
272.
Marriage voidable
as to person, 265.
General agent
may make
contractual
may may
.admissions^ 274.
Employment
be a fraud,
of puffer at auction
267.
Vendor may
268.
deceit,
277.
binds principal,
binds, 270.
269.
nor in deceit
for agents'
independent
is a distortion of the truth with intent to on another pecuniary damage.^ It makes no Fraud is an matter whether the fraud is expressed in words or in intentional
232.
Fraud
inflict
distortion of truth.
conduct
;^
is it
necessary
stamped on them. If the intention is to defraud, and is consummated, the party defrauding is responsible, no matter how ambiguous or equivocal may have been the words he used.^ In an oft quoted passage in the
this intention
1 L. 1,
D.
h.
t.
L. 1, 2; L.
;
7,
t.
whether
it
is
3, 8
L. 8, L. 9, 2
V.
L. 37, D. h.
intention that
should be acted on by
Bright
croft V.
Eynon,
v.
1 Burr.
390
Fox193;
See
Devonshire, 1
W.
Bl.
Mallary
L. C. 7th
ducing him to act upon it." Anson, 145. " Fraud generally includes misrepresentation.
Its specific
notes to Chandeler
Lopus, Smith's
mark
is
the pre-
Smith v. Richards, 13 Pet. 36. Fraud in the Roman law is subjected to the same test as duress contracts induced by it are not
ed. 299
:
Am.
but
may be
invalidated
ope exceptionis.
2
Supra^
145.
him by whom the representamade. In this case we have a mistake of one party caused by a representation of the other, which representation is made by deliberate words
part of
tion
is
Infra, 248.
Lee
V.
Jones, 17 C. B. N. S. 482
S.
14 C. B. N.
fact,
386
infra,
242
et
seq.
by procuring consent to the contract, and without a belief in its truth." Pollock, 3d ed. 524.
of
its
falsehood,
reckless
disregard
346
CHAP. Xir.]
Di2:e8t,^
FRAUD.
the following definitions:
[ 232.
we have
quidam
"Dolum malum
alterius
Servius
ita detinit,
machinationem qnandam
decipiendi causa,
cum
Labeo
Itaque ipse
sic definiit,
omnera calliditatem, fallaciam, niendum, fallenduin, decipiendum alterum adhibitam. Labeonis definitio vera est."^ Judge Story tells us,^ that "it is
not easy to give a definition of fraud in the extensive signification in which that term is used in courts of equity ; and it has been said," he adds, " that these courts have, very wisely,
wicke says:
And he quotes a letter in which Lord Hard"As to relief against fraud, no invariable rules
Fraud
is
can be established.
equity once to lay
further,
in
infinite;
down
rules,
how
far they
extending their relief against it, or to define evidence of it, the jurisdiction would
by
fraud as follows
from
tion
;
facts
2.
by precise bound
artifice,
some
new
not
presumed from the circumstances and condition of the parties contracting 4. Fraud affecting third
;
Fraud
L. L. 2, D. IV. 3.
He
general
(fraud)
kind
for
*
*
of artifice
any
a
satis-
of
it
in
single
847
232 a.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XII.
is
taken of another." This substantially agrees with the position above taken, that fraud is a distortion of the truth with intent to To make such fraud inflict on another pecuniary damage. the basis, however, of a civil suit, some pecuniary injury must be actually inflicted ;^ though this is not necessary to sustain a criminal prosecution for an attempt.^ party induced by another's fraud to make a bar 232 a.
gain,
frauded^
may
may
''
an action
rescission
in the
is
nature of deceit.
_
The remedy of
So far
proper in the
first
lies
may
be rescinded.*
To
damages caused by another's frauduand fraud must be proved,' and there must be a causal relation between the fraud and the injury
sustain an action for
sustained.*
The distinguishing
it is
sufficient
damages when he can show that he innocently suffered material injury from an intentional distortion of truth by the defendant or his agents,*
to say that a plaintiff is entitled to
now
and, as we will hereafter see, a reckless misstatement of a matter of which the party speaking is ignorant imposes lia
Infra, 242.
Infra,
282
et seq.
Fraud
effect
is
it
definable
much more by
than by the
Supra, 214.
Infra, 239, 240.
Infra, 242.
the
produces
it
* *
i
features
which
exhibits, varying as
When, by
et seq.
misrepresentation of
one party, the mind of the other is 80 perverted that there is no meeting of intentions on one and the same
then the party by whom the wrong is attempted will not be perobject,
gge cases cited infra, 236 et seq.; Teague v. Irwin, 127 Mass. 217 Spence
^
;
v. v.
Crosland
Mechanics'
it
by means
execute,
Boone, 5
111.
Ap. 109
;
Wynne
v.
Watson
to
348
CHAP. XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 233.
bility as much as does a fraudulent misrepresentation.^ Such an action lies on oral fraudulent representations to induce a purchaser to buy property which the statute of frauds requires to be conveyed in writing.^ The fraud must be causally related to the injury.^ If after opportunity of inspection the purchase is made, there being no fraud to divert attention, this bars the remedy.* contract may be divisible so that while one part 283. of it may be infected by fraud {dolus iiicidens), the remainder may be valid and binding; and, in such maybe case, by the Roman law, the exceptio doli applies only respect to
is
fraudulent.
law.'
The same
rule
is
^'^'^*^-
adopted in our
apply
own
when
tract {dolus
causam dans),
And where
a party agrees in
sell
two
with
may
be rescinded
But, as
a general rule, as
is
who
Brad5
Cotzhausen
v.
v.
Miner
v.
v.
ley,
Clark
Baker,
Lamm
v.
Met. 452
Morse
v.
v.
Brackett, 98 Mass,
233.
205
Infra, 242.
Bartlett
v.
In Poland
it
nell.
Browwas held
v.
State
v.
Koch, op.
cit.
;
Herbert
v.
an
and business, the plaintiff must prove that he was induced to buy the stock of goods and a share of the business in question by the fraudulent misrepresentation or concealment by the defendant of material facts, and that he suffered damage therefrom.
Garland v. Spencer, 46 Me. 528 Rand v. Webber, 64 Me. Lynde v. McGregor, 13 Allen, 191 172; Masson v. Bovet, 1 Denio, 69; Grant v. Law, 29 Wis. 99 Brown v. North, 21 Mo. 528. ^ Bradway's Est., 1 Ash. 212 see
Ford, 29 Me. 546
;
;
;
infra, 338.
8
Infra, 245.
"
Rand
v.
v.
Webber, 64 Me.
191.
See
Lord
349
235.]
CONTRACTS.
toto.
[chap. XII.
He
cannot appro-
and get
or his agent,
presenta-
may
^*
estoppef
of
secondary evidence to be produced till the sources of .primary evidence have been exhausted ; for the estoppel professes not
to supply the absence of the necessary instruments of evidence, but to supersede the necessity of any evidence by showing that the fact is already admitted; and so, too, has it been held that an admission, which is of the same nature as an estoppel, though not so high in degree, may be allowed to establish facts which, were it not for the admission, must have been proved by certain steps appropriated by law to that purpose."^ Hence, a party making a statement which induces another to contract with him is bound by such statement whether true or false.* On the other hand, a non-contractual admission, if made under mistake, may be explained or repudiated.'
235.
When
a transaction
is
When
Roman
law, can
parties are
involved in
fraud, neither can
recover.
that
the contract
it
is
when
executed,
may
convey rights to innocent third parties; all that is declared is that the courts cannot be used by a party implicated to enforce for his benefit a contract fraudulently concocted
;
this
courts,^
den
and generally,
1043
et seq.
;
Monej, 5 H. of L. C. 185 Salem Gloucester Bank, 17 Mass. 1 Wh. on Ev. 145. 6 See Wh. on Ev. 1088, for authoriV.
;
Bank
v.
2 Sm. L. C. 693
Wh.
&
on Ev.
ties.
6
1075-8.
L. 36 D. h.
t.,
Koch,
76.
Cave
V.
Mills, 7 H.
N. 913
Jor-
'
Infra, 340.
350
CHAP.
XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 236.
"No
one
is
may
sought to be
its
"
A court of
have been entered into by both the contracting parties for the is illegal and where such a contract has been executed by one of the parties by conveying real estate, a court of equity will not, in general, interfere, but will leave the title to the property where the parties have placed it."^ The rule, however, does not preclude a dupe or victim from obtaining redress for a wrong sustained, though he was nominally party to the wrong. ^ fraudulent conveyance to defeat creditors, while bad as against the creditors may bind the parties.^ 236. When false representations are knowingly made, and are operative in inducing the party imposed when there to a contract, it is no defence that | frauduupon to agree f a lent misexpress purpose of doing that which
;
'
representation,
by good motives.^ W ere it otherwise, there could motives are defence. in no case be any liability for fraudulent representation, since there are no fraudulent representations whose
1
-ITT
11
good
Jones
v.
V.
Yates, 9
B.
& &
C.
532
3 St.
Louis, etc. R. R.
v.
Mathers, 71
III
Deady
inson
111.
592;
Compton
v.
Bank, 96
v.
McDonnell, 2 B.
Aid. 134
367.
Clay V. Ray, 17 C. B. (N. S.) 188 Randall v. Howard, 2 Black, 585 Ayer Taylor v. Weld, V. Hewett, 19 Me. 281 5 Mass. 116 Nellis v. Clark, 20 Wend. 124; Kisterbock's App., 51 Penn. St.
; ; ;
Infra, 353.
483
Bixler
v.
349 396
Bessey v. Windham, 6 Q. B. Robinson v. McDonnell, 2 B. & 134 Dyer v. Homer, 22 Pick. Reichart v. Castator, 5 Binn. Jackson v. Garnsey, 16 John. Sherk v. Endress, 3 W. & S.
;
166
Aid
253
109
189
255 102
;
Gondy
v.
Gebhart,
v.
Oh.
262;
;
Bradford
Byers,
17 Oh.
Ired.
L.
Ala. 192
and
McQuade
Boston
2
v.
Cli.
on Cont. 11th
V.
Hoover
Rosen-
V. Pierce,
27 Miss. 13.
J.,
Wh.
Cr.
Boynton, C.
McQuade
v.
L. 8th ed.
119.
851
237.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XII.
making the maker does not excuse to himself by some meriBut " it is fraud in law if a party makes torious pretext. representations which he knows to be false and injury ensues,
although the motives from wiiich the representations proparty is liable to ceeded may not have been bad."* an action for deceit, therefore, if by an intentional misstatement he leads another party to contract with him, no matter how firmly he ma}' have believed the matter would ultimately be made right.^ And the cooperation of other motives constiThe same rule applies to fraudulent repretutes no excuse.^ sentations whereby assent to a contract is obtained. If a party making a false representation is aware of its falsity, if he
... A
knows that the other party assented to his proposal because he gave it this particular shape, and would not have assented
to
had it not been for this false representatron, it is no defence him to show that in some remote day the transaction would be profitable to the party assenting.*
237.
The
whom
the defrauding
pai'ty
been wfth^
intent to
be acted on by party
injure
.
manufacturer who sends out into the market goods with false brands, is not liable to the vendees of his ven^^ dces, howcvcr liable he might be to indictment lor
intended to atiect by his fraud.'
i
r-
^j^^ special
If
how
remote,
who made
every person
every person
who
stage of transformation.
But fraud
Tindal, C.
J.,
Foster
v.
Charles, 7
see
V. C, Gibson
a 8
v.
d'Este, 2 Y.
&
C. 572.
616
Polhill V. Walter, 3 B.
&
Ad. 114.
Collins
Evans, 5 Q. B. 820
;
Reynell
V.
v.
Sprye, 1 D. M. G. 708
;
Hough
v. v.
Case
r.
Bough-
Matthews V. Bliss, 22 Pick. 48 Turnbull V. Gadsden, 2 Strobh. Eq. 14; Smith V. Mitchell, 6 Ga. 458.
Wend.
106
infra, 237.
352
CHAP. XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 237.
seeking redress.
a
Hence it has been held that the directors of company who would have been liable to original allottees of
V.
C.,'
"Every man," so the limitation is stated by Wood, " must be held liable for the consequences of a false
representation
made by him
to another, upon
which a third
person acts, and so acting is injured or damnified, provided it appear that such false representation was made with the intent that it should be acted upon by such third person in the manner that occasions the injury or loss."
of
The
furthest extension
which
Hence the vendor of a gun, who sold it for the use of the plaintiff and his sons, falsely representing it to be "good, safe, and secure," and of a particular make, is liable, in an action of deceit, brought by one of the sons who was injured
by the gun's explosion.* And it may be laid down as a genincumbent on a party claiming that he has suftered by another's false statements, to prove that these false statements were made by the party charged with the intention that he should act upon them.* At the same time it is
eral rule that it is
It is
enough
that
if
the party
to
it is
V. Winterbotham, L. R. 8 Q. Cazeaux v. Mall, 25 Barb. 583. 2 Peck V. Gurney, L. R. 6 H. L. C. 377; see Wells v. Cook, 16 Oh. St. Mr. 67, cited Wald's Pollock, 505. PoUock cites Way v. Hearn, 13 C. B. N. S. 292, as sustaining Peck v, Gurney, which case expressly overrules Bedford v. Bagshaw, 4 H. & N. 538 Bagshaw v. Seymour, 18 C. B. 903. 3 Barry v. Croskey, 2 J. & H. 1, adopted in Anson, 152. * Langridge v. Levy, 2 M. & W. 519
1
Swift
;
not adopted to
;
B. 244
full
see
New
78
;
Y.
&
N. H. R. R.
r.
v.
Schuyler, 34
N. Y. 30; Phelps
Bruff
v.
Wait, 30 N. Y.
;
Mali, 36 N. Y. 200
8 Barb. 358
;
Suy-
damw. Moore,
^
supra, 228.
Pasley
v.
v.
Freeman, 3 T. R. 51
Tapp
cases
Lee, 3 B.
&
;
P. 367
Foster
v.
7 Bing. 105,
and
in
Bigelow's
Lead. Cas.
v.
Torts, 1
see Fitzsimmons
Joslin, 21
v.
Levy, 2 M.
& W.
^
519, 4 M.
& W.
v.
v.
336,
is criticized,
ibid.;
Barden
Keverberg, 2 M.
5
&
But the
limitation of
Peck
v.
Gurney,
W.
63
Pilraore
Hood,
Bing. N.
VOL.
I. 23
353
239.] 238. It
Fraud need
notheiucri
,
CONTRACTS.
is
[chap. XII.
by
it,
that
it
made
It is
enough
if it
be uttered for the purpose of defrauding the party injured.^ Hence that it should include an intention to benefit the
party making the representation
liability.'
is
239.
Fraudulent
intention to be inductively
^^^"^^
'
When
^^^^'
is
mate-
man who
is to be proved inductively. No about to cheat proclaims his intention, and even if he did this would not close the matter, as an avowal of an intention to cheat would in most
^^^^ intention
is
The
inten-
tion
all
the circumstances of
Crocker
V.
v.
Lewis,
3
;
Sumn.
Bruff
Mali, 36 N. Y. 200
Bartholo-
mew
In
V.
Bank
Montreal
v.
Thayer, 2
upon which an action could be maintained by the purchaser. See notes to Chandeler v. Lopus, 1 Smith L. C. 7th Am. ed. 299
et seq.;
McCrary, 1, the receiver of a railroad executed and placed upon the market certain certificates payable to A. or
bearer,
781
et
seq.
1
their
642
Pasley
v.
v.
Foster
V.
Stiles
tended to deceive whoever might purchase the same. It was held that a bona Jide purchaser, before maturity
and without
notice, relying
upon such
White, 11 Met. 356 Collins v. Denison, 12 Met. 549 Benton v. Pratt, 2 Wend. 385 Allen v. Addington, 7 Wend. 9 Hubbell v. Meigs, 50 N. Y.
; ;
;
fraudulent representations, might recover in an action for damages, although such receiver had no purpose to defraud and deceive such specific purchaser when he executed the said It was further ruled that certificates. the fact that the payee A. participated in the fraud would not relieve the
480 ; Young v. Hall, 4 Ga. 95. See, however, contra, Wilkin v. Tharp, 55
Iowa, 609.
2
Foster
;
v.
Bing. 105
605.
Wilde
Gibson, 1 H. L. C.
injury to the
243.
That the
test is
That a
377 a
maker from
liability,
nor
render
it
money
Levick
149.
necessary that such payee should be joined in the action as a party defendant. It was also held that the representations contained in such
certifi-
Brotherline,
74 Penn. St.
354
CHAP.
XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 239.
prove the hypothesis of fraud are relevant on such an issue.^ Hence collateral frauds may be proved when part of a system with that under investigation.^ But system must be first proved to make such evidence admissible.^ It is not neces-
when
alleged in a civil
issue,
should be
proved beyond reasonable doubt, even though involving an indictable oftence. It will be enough if it is established by The burden, however, is on the preponderance of proof.*
1
Wh. on
Ev. 33
;
Foster
v.
;
Charles,
6 Bing.
396
7 Bing. 105
;
Tapp
v.
ingford
Lee, 3 B.
&
;
P. 367
;
Conant
v.
v.
Jackson,
16 Vt.
335
Collins
Denison, 12
Met. 549
528
on Ev. 28 et seq. HuntMassey, 1 F. & F. 690 Lincoln V. Claflin, 7 Wall. 132 Cragin v. Tarr, 32 Me. 55 Knight v. Heath, 23 N. H. 410 Pierce v. HoflFmann, 24 Vt.
Wh.
v.
Cary
v.
Hall
v.
Erwin, QQ N. Y. 649
50 N. Y. 480
;
Hubbell
v.
v.
Meigs,
Livermore
;
McNair,
524 Tyson v. Booth, 100 Mass. 258 Haskins v. Warren, 115 Mass. 514 Waters Co. v. Smith, 120 Mass. 144 Horton v. Weiner, 124 Mass. 92
;
34 N.
J.
Eq. 478
;
Watts, 56
;
Boyd
v.
Suell
r.
V.
Moses, 1 Johns. 96
Benham
v.
Gary, 11
Wend.
;
83
Cary
v.
Hotail-
Lowry v. Coulter, 9 Barr, 349 310 Garrigues v. Harris, 17 Penn. St. 344; Brown v. Shock, 77 Penn. St. 471; Battles V. Laudenslager, 84 Penn. St.
446
Hall
Y. 649
St.
Woods
;
v.
136
Stewart
v.
St.
177; McAleer
;
Horsey, 35 Md.
85
111.
v. v.
Snodgrass, 17
W.
Va.
439
Stone
v.
Wood,
603
O'Donnell v. Segar, 25 Mich. 367; White v. Stone V. Wood, 85 111. 603 White, 89 111. 460 Brink v. Black, 77
;
N. C. 59 Blackwell v. Cummings, 68 N. C. 121 Thorpe v. Thorpe, 12 S. C. 154 Southern Life Ins. Co. v. Wilkinson, 53 Ga. 535 Nelson v. Wood, 62 Ala. 175 Smalley v. Hale, 37 Mo. 102 King v. Moon, 42 Mo. 551 Hop; ;
Hunter v. Hunter, 10 W. Va. 321; Brink v. Black, 77 N. C. 59; King i;. Moon, 42 Mo. 551. ' Jordan v. Osgood, 109 Mass. 457 Edwards v. Warner, 35 Conn. 517 Booth V. Powers, 56 N. Y. 22, and cases cited Wh. on Ev. 27 City Nat. Bk.
; ;
V.
Hamilton, 34 N.
V.
<
J.
Eq. 158
j.
Liver-
more
see
McNair, 34 N.
338
;
Eq. 478.
Infra,
Wh.
on Ev.
1245
kins
V. Sievert,
58 Mo. 201
;
State
v.
v.
Strong
Hines,
St.
St.
413 257
35 Miss. 201
9 Tex. 536
95.
;
see
supra, 165.
inadequacy of price, see That the question is for the jury, see McMichael v. McDermott, 17 Penn. St. 353 Vallance v. Ins. Co., 42 Penn. St. 441 Ehrisman v. Roberts,
to
;
As
Creditors,
56
Cal.
600.
That Kain
Bentz
V.
355
241.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XII.
is fair
made,
it
If a contract
with the statement alleged to be false, approximating as nearly as possible to an exhaustive exclusion. Thus, in order to prove that a particular bank-note is bad, it is enough to show that the bank issuing it is broken it is not necessary to show that none of the stockholders of the bank, and none of its officers, could on any future contingency be made liable.^ Knowledge of the falsity, also, on the part of the party taking advantage of it, must be shown in order to sustain an action for deceit.* But guilty knowledge in
foislty'
;
this, as in all
is
to be proved,
is
to
be inferred from
241.
Reckless
misstate-
A party
who
which he
al-
though he had no actual knowledge at the time of sponsibility the falsity of the statement.^ Hence, if the directors of a bank " put forth in their reports statements of importance
poses re
ment im-
Shoemaker
v.
Kunkle, 5 Watts,
107;
Com. V. R. R., 74 Penn. St. 94. 2 Grove v. Hodges, 55 Penn. St. 504
Creveling
v. Fritts,
34 N.
J.
Eq. 134.
;
R.
V.
Spencer, 3 C.
&
;
P. 420 8
R.
C.
v.
40 N. Y. 562. That it is a fraud to aver that a party owns property to a specified amount, suppressing the fact that it is encumbered, see Corbett v. Brown, 8 Bing. 33 1 Moore & S. 85 see notes to Chandeler v. Lopus, 1
; ;
Cox
C.
;
Smith's L. C. 7th
6
Am.
ed. 299
;
et seq.
257
8
R.
V.
Cox
C. C. 370
;
R.
v.
Byrne, 10 Cox
Anson on Cont. 131 Bispham's Eq. 214 Leake on Cont. 188 Moens
; ;
C. C. 369
Com.
v.
V.
Hayworth, 10 M.
& W. 147
; ;
Pulsford
4 Evans v. Collins, 5 Q. B. 805 Ormrod v. Huth, 14 M. & W. 651 Weir V. Bell, L. R. 3 Ex. D. 243
V.
Richards, 17 Beav. 87
R.
pion, L. R. 7 C. D. 344
R.
Russ. on Cr. 1
v.
Petrie, 1 Leach,
Dickson
R.
v.
Tel. Co., L. R. 3 C. P.
;
D. 1
329
R.
V.
V.
Schlesinger, 10 Q. B. 670
;
R. r. V. Philpotts, 1 C. & K. 112 Henderson, 2 Mood. C. C. 192; State Merwin V. Blauvelt, 38 N. J. L. 306
;
Smith
V.
Richards, 13 Pet. 26
Bennett
V.
Arbuckle, 81
5
111.
501.
Wli. on Ev.
tion of
2 Barr, 105 Allen v. Hart, 72 111. 104 Convtrse v. Blumrich, 14 Mich. 109.
;
356
CHAP. XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 241.
bank, false in themselves, and which they did not believe, or had no reasonable ground to believe to be true, that would be a misrepresentation and deceit."^ And. it has been ruled by Lord Cairns, that parties who recklessly make statements of facts, concerning which they are ignorant, and thereby obtain the confidence of others, are as responsible as they would be if they asserted that which they knew to be And a statement made " with a reckless ignorance untrue.'' whether it was true or untrue," to adopt the words of Williams,
J.,'
making
it
may, therefore, hold that when a party reckless!}' makes statements he does not know to be true, knowledge of their non-truth is to be regarded as notice of their falsity.^ " The
principle applies not merely to cases
We
where the statements by those who made them, but to cases false in fact were made by persons who believed them to be true, if in the due discharge of their duty they ought to have known, or if they had formerly known and ought to have remembered, the fact which negatived the representation made."* Hence, a rash statement by a party, who once knew the contrary, is a false representation on
false
'
&
D.
145.
Leake, 2d ed. 371 Reese River Mining Co. v. Smith, L. R, 4 H. L, 64 see Smith v. Richards, 13 Pet. 26.
;
Indian. R. R. v. Tyng, 63 N. 138 Sharp r. Mayor, 40 Barb. Y. 653 2A6 Taymon v. Mitchell, 1 Md. Ch.
;
Stone v. Covell, 29 Mich. 359 498 Beebe v. Knapp, 28 Mich. 53 Wilcox Frewzel v. University, 32 Iowa, 367 Miner r. Medbury, v. Miller, 37 Ind. 1
; ; ; ;
6 Wis. 295
Turnbull
;
v.
Gadsden, 2
9 Ga.
Taylor
R.
V.
Ashton, 11 M.
1
& W.
; ;
401
v.
v.
Strob. Eq. 14
Reese
v.
Wyman,
; ;
Petrie,
Leach,
327
Hine Evans
439
v.
Elder
v.
Allison, 45 Ga. 13
Read
v.
Thompson
v.
Glasscock
Miner,
;
Ebney. L. R.
H. L. 102
Mason Smith
V.
Crosby, 1 Wood.
& M.
;
352
V.
Richards, 13 Pet. 26
Cabot
v. Ir-
Christie,
42 Vt. 121
;
Hazard
lu
York v. Gregg, 9 Tex. 85 Bank, 10 Bush, 23 Bankhead V. Alloway, 6 Cold. 56 though see Merwin v. Arbuckle, 81 111. 501 Wilcox v. University, 32 Iowa, 367,
11 Mo. 655
;
Graves
v.
win, 18 Pick. 95
Met. 193; Fisher
Lobdell
v.
Baker,
Cotzhausen
*
r.
503
Litchfield
;
v. v.
Hutchinson,
117
Rich-
Mass. 95
Bennett
Judson, 21 N. Y.
357
241.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XII.
which he is liable, althouujh at the time of making it he had forgotten it was untrue.^ " The affirmation," says Judge Story " of what one does not know or believe to be true, ia
,'*
and law, as unjustifiable as the affirmation Hence, the honesty of a misrepresentation, though it may be (there being no recklessness) a defence to an action for deceit, is no defence to a proceeding for rescission.* As we have already seen,' it is not
equally, in morals
of
what
is
known
person
who
obtained
even made
1
it
by material false representation knew was made that it was false, or recklessly and without care.^
it
Burrowes
V.
v.
J., in
Slim
Croucher, 2
6
37
Foster
v.
Charles,
Bing. 396;
7 Bing.
105;
Taylor
v.
Ashton, 11 M.
effect see
v.
& W.
401.
To
way which has not been quesand which has been frequently followed. I may mention especially the late case of Hart v. Swaine (L. R.
a
tioned,
7 Ch. D. 142), before Fry, J., a decision
the same
J.,
remarks of Wells,
;
in Fisher
which, as
read
it,
and
121
Bridge,
42 Vt. 68 Cabot v. Christie, 42 Vt. Savage v. Stevens, 126 Mass. 207 Gunby v. Sluter, 44 Md. 237 Parmlee ^tna Ins. Co. V. Adolph, 28 Oh. St. 10 Smith v. MitV. Reed, 33 Oh. St. 283 chell, 6 Ga. 458. See notes to Chandeler
; ;
;
At law,
take
clear that a
if
a fact
cannot say,
a material
it.
V.
It
is
193.
known was
into his
mind
it
whether he
It is
re-
members
cient to
or not.
quite
suffi-
Supra, 214..
Supra, 214.
know
6
.
ought
to
6
;
Redgrave
v.
Hurd, L. R. 20 Ch. D.
it
untruly,
As will be seen {infra, 1043), 245. an action for negligence can be maintained by a party injured by a negligent erroneous assertion. In Mathias V. Yetts, 46 L. T. N. S. 503 (1882), '' The term legal Jessel, M. R., said fraud has a much wider signification. It was defined in the case of Evans v. Edmonds (13 C. B. 777, 786), by Maule,
:
he must take the consequences. But the case I have referred to goes further. It says that, if a man takes upon himself to
make
a material misstatement
That
is
Evans
v.
Edmonds.
In Equity has gone much further. equity it never was necessary that
there should be
what
358
CHAP.
XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 242.
242.
and the
Of
is,
that
the party injured should have sustained the injury causal reiain consequence of his reliance on the other's fraud u- *^een^ lent misstatement; in other words, this fraudulent fraud and
injury.
misstatement should have contributed to induce him to assent to the proposal from which the transaction injurious to him sprang. This need not have been the sole motive;' but it must have been a contributory motive, and must have
been of such a character that, had its falsity been known, the fraudulent repredecision would have been the other way.
it
was operative
an action for deceit or to a prosecution for obtaining goods under false pretences.'* In an English case where this
to
a
to
or moral fraud.
made
tract,
to
ture, induce
be true,
We
;
have had that over and over again and it is hardly necessary to refer to the numerous cases from The Reese River Silver Mining Co. v. Smith (L. R. 4 H. of L., 64) downwards, which have established that proposition. It
it."
1
Infra,
242 a
R.
v.
R.
v.
Hewsgill,
Dears. 315
C. 171
;
English, 12 Cox C.
v. Bliss,
Matthews
v.
22 Pick. 48
Rogers
Saflford
Mov. v.
Aleer
v.
laid
in a
Higgins,
57
111.
244;
;
Rutherford
v.
that
it is
Williams, 42 Mo. 18
Winter
v.
Bandel,
last case of
Brownlie
v.
Campbell,
30 Ark. 362
481
2
;
Com.
v.
laid
down
is
there also.
That being
so,
Thomas
People, 34 N. Y. 351.
there
It
Attwood V. Small, 6 CI. & F. 232 Horsfall v. Thomas, 1 H. & C. 90 R. V. Gardner, 7 Cox C. C. 136 Collins v.
; ;
have been induced to act upon it. As it was sometimes said, it must be mainducing of the contract, but it need not be the only inducement. If it is a part of the inducement it will do. We had to consider the matter in the appeal court only recently
terial to the
Cave, 6 H.
&
v.
N. 131
v.
&
P. 352
;
Smith
775
Traill
V.
Doggett
son
V.
V.
Richards, 13 Pet. 26
;
Hough
v.
v.
v.
Rich-
Wells
in Redgrave
S.
if
v.
Hurd
(45 L. T. Rep. N.
James
WaterHodsden,
I
485
a
There we
said,
47 Vt. 127 33
;
Com.
v.
Davidson,
Cush.
man
Story
i;.
359
242.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XII.
the plaintiff to the defendant, which cannon, it was alleged, was worthless, on account of a defect which the plaintiff had
endeavored to conceal by the insertion of a metal plug in the weak spot of the cannon. It was proved that the defendant never examined the cannon, and that therefore the plaintiff's conduct in covering up the defect could not have influenced him. The court held that, the deceit, not having been an inducement of the transfer, did not avoid the sale. " If the plug," said Bramwell, B., "which it was said was put in to conceal the defect, had never been there, his position would have been the same for, as he did not examine the gun or
;
form any opinion as to whether it was sound, its condition did not affect him." It will be observed that the single issue here was whether the bargain was avoided by this particular deceit and as the bargain was not induced by the deceit, the deceit did not avoid it.^ Where fraud which induces a pur;
ler
V.
Guest, 58 N. Y. 262
Allen, 11
Morris Canal
;
guson, 66 N. Y. 482
66 N. Y. 558
;
Miller
v.
v.
Barber,
J.
Addingv.
v.
Marsh
v. v.
Cook, 32 N.
ton
V.
Wend. 374
;
People
Eq. 262
St.
Clark
Everhardt, 63 Penn.
Sluter,
;
Miller, 2 Park. C.
R. 197; Bruce
State
v.
Burr, 67 N. Y. 237
;
Tomlin, 5
Phipps v. Buckman, 30 Dutch. 14 Penn. St. 401 Burkholder v. Beetens, 65 Penn. St. 496 Weist v. Grant, 71 Penn. St. 95 Ely v. Stewart, 2 Md.
; ;
408
286
Central
;
Bank
v.
v.
Copeland, 18
Md. 305
;
Percival
v.
Harger, 40 Iowa,
;
4 Ga. 95 Bryan V. Osborne, 61 Ga. 51 Todd v. FamDuncan v. Hogue, 24 bro, 62 Ga. 664
Hall,
; ;
Young
44 Md. 237 Hale V. Philbrick, 47 Iowa, 217 Noel v. Horton, 50 Iowa, 687 Bond v. Ramsey, 89 111. 29 Schwabacker v. Riddle, 99 111. 343 TurnbuU v. Gadsden, 2 Strobh. Eq. 14; Tobin v. Bell, 61 Ala. 125; Winter v. Bandel, 30 Ark. 362 Dunn V. Remington, 9 Neb. 82 and see Poland V. Brownell, cited supra, 232.
347
;
Gunby
v.
Bowman
Carithers, 40 Ind. 90
;
Miss. 671
Morrison
r.
v.
r.
Lods, 39 Cal.
That the fraud must have preceded damage, see supra, 239.
To the
effect
of litigation, should succeed in defraudv. Wilkinson, Small v. Attwood, 1 Young, 407 6 CI. & F. 232 Teague Irwin, 127 Mass. 217 Vandewalker v. Osmer, 65 Barb. 556 Bacon v. BronDufiany v. Ferson, 7 Johns. Ch. 201
t-
Thomas, 1 H. & C. 90 Anson, 152). * See remarks of Cockburn, C. .J., in Smith V. Hughes, L. R. 6 Q. B. 605. That the party injured must have been deceived by the false statement, see further Bispham's Eq. 215 Hough V. Richardson, 3 Story, 659 Veasey v.
1
Horsfall
v.
(see criticism in
Connersville
v.
Wadleigh,
Blackf.
102;
Tuck
860
CHAP.
XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 243.
chase
acre,
is
upon a sale of land at a specific price by the and warrants the quantity at a specific figure, and the deed is made out with such a covenant, and the covenant is then fraudulently erased by the grantor, and the deed is then
orally agrees
who
is
242
a.
resentations
made by J
Fraud need
not be sole
'Eo body of
no single representation that has not in it some element of truth. " Where a party has induced another to act on the faith of several representations made to him, any one of which he has made fraudulently, he cannot set up the transaction by showing that every other "It is not representation was truly and honestly made."^ sufficient for him to show that there were other representations or inducements in operation, without further proving that the agreement was due to them only, to the entire excluand, in
fact, there is
also,
in
is,
cases of this
therefore,
class,
injury must be
actually sustained.
it
is
enough
71
;
Attwood
v.
v.
Small,
Cas. 750
R.
v.
&
S.
F. 232
;
Traill
Baring, 4
R.
V.
V.
State
D.
Iowa, 286
M. 443; Clopton v. Cozart, 13 Sm. & M. 363. ^ Metcalf V. Putnam, 9 Allen, 97;
Story's Eq. Jur. 12th ed.
Mills, 17 Me. 211 State v. Dunlap, 24 Me. 77 Com. v. Coe, 115 Mass. 481 People V. Haynes, 14 Wend. 546 Thomas v. People, 34 N. Y. 351 Mor;
;
;
gan
V.
Skiddy, 62 N. Y. 319
Shaw
v.
113, 120,
Reynell
;
Stines, 8
Bosw. 157
L. 445.
State
v.
Thatcher,
138
*
et seq.
35 N.
J.,
J.
Cranworth, L.
in
v.
Sprye, 1
'
De G. M. & G. 656
Wh.
Cr.
Hemingway
115
;
v.
Hamilton, 4 M.
&
&
J.
see to
same
effect
;
Clarke
v.
v.
Venner, 120 Mass. 424; see Bradley v. Fuller, 118 Mass. 239 Abbey v. Dewey, 25 Penn. St. 413 Servis v. Cooper, 4 Vroom, 68.
v.
;
W.
Freeman
B. N. S. 453
Smith
Kay, 7 H. L.
361
244.]
if
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XII.
appre-
law
is
is
and injury
established.^
A fortiori^ a
is
false
statement not
ex-
made
making
it
to liability.'*
Inducing a party, therefore, by arts not in themselves criminal to pay a debt justly due by him is not actionable.^ 244. Hence, as a general rule, applicable to all cases of false representation, it may be added, that where The losing party must to the false statement is not believed by the party r j believe the , false statewhom it IS made, or even if believed, is not the con. ,
making
it
is
illus-
tration from a recent German writer,^ announced some years ago "Washington's nurse" as a show, and the part was personated by an old negress named Joyce Heath. She was not really Washington's nurse, and if the statement had been believed, there was no concurrence of minds as to the thing the visitor paid to see. But the statement was not believed or, if it was believed, it was not the consideration of going to
;
Hubbard
Kerr,
F.
Co.,
V.
v,
Briggs, 31 N. Y. 518.
&
M. 73
Reese River
Mining Hallows
L. R. 3 Ch.
App. 611
Nowlan
V.
V.
v.
Countryman, 30 N. Y. 655
Keen, 89
8
Smith Melendy
;
111.
395.
;
Bigelove
12 Pet. 178
Morgan
v.
v. Bliss,
2 Mass.
;
112
Fuller
v.
Hutchins
Hutchins,
104;
Dung
V.
Parker, 52 N. Y. 494
;
Ely
v.
Marr's App., 78
v. Alston, 1 Dev. Smock, 61 Mo. 213. < State v. Church, 43 Conn. 471 State v. Vanderbilt, 3 Dutch. 328 State v. Tomlin, 5 Dutch. 14 Fulton v. Lofts, 63 N. C. 393. 6 Wells, J., Fisher v.Mellen, 103 Mass. 505 and see Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 429, citing Hanson v. EdgerMilliken v. Thornly, 29 N. H. 354 Phipps v. Buckdike, 106 Mass. 385 man, 30 Penn. St. 402; Bartlett v. Blaine, 83 HI. 25 see supra, 238 notes to Chandeler v. Lopus, 1 Smith's
;
Hayw. 44
69
;
Farrar
Bailey
v.
Penn. St. 69 Meyer v. Yesser, 32 Ind. Smith v. Brittenham, 98 111. 188 Missouri Valley Co. v. Bushnell, 11 Neb. 193; Cunningham v. Shields, 4
294
;
L. C. 7th
6
'
212
Howell
v.
Biddle-
Merkel, Abhandlungen,
etc.
362
CHAP. XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 245.
the show.
for
amusement,
In other words, there must be a causal relation, as has been already stated, between the false statement and the loss.^ But when fraudulent statements are shown to have been made by one party, to have been acted on by the other party, the burden will be on the former to show that those statements were not believed by the latter.^ On the other hand, when the statement is one which the party to whom it is made has at hand the immediate means of testing, he cannot, if he does not obtain an express warranty as a substitute for inspection, recover, if he neglects to use such means. In such case the false pretence must be looked upon as an appeal rather than a statement.^ This rule applies to sales of real as well as to sales of personal
Where, for instance, in a New York case in 1880, a purchaser under an oral agreement to convey was entitled to a deed with covenants of warranty, but after paying the price of the land, and demanding and being refused a warranty deed, accepted a deed without a warranty, holding after inquiries of his own that the title was good, it was held that in the absence of proof of fraud, he was not entitled to
property.
on account of a subsequently discovered incumbrance.* 245. It has been said that a false representation, to impose liability on its maker, must have been calcu- j^^^ ^^^^ lated to impose on a person of ordinary sascacity. ^^ without immediate .j^ But tins limitation cannot be sustained, as persons means of
relief
.
./o./
;
1 *
Miller,
Dickinson
v.
Hammatt
v.
Holbrook
see
Taylor
v.
v.
Guest, 58 N. Y. 262
;
Taylor
Hunt
v.
107 Mass. 367 N. Y. 426 Fulton v. Hood, 34 Penn. St. 365 Ely v. Stewart, 2 Md. 408
;
; ;
Boyd
v.
Browne,
F.
Wright
v.
v.
Clod-
felter v. Hulett,
72 Ind. 137
Bibb,
Vigers
v.
Pike, 8 CI.
&
650
149
L.
Hattermann, 2 Ired. 32
2
3 Jones,
Turbeville,
Bird,
R.
;
602 N. C. 222
;
S.
C. L. R. 5 Ex. 485
v.
Gerson,
Warner
Hoitt
V,
V.
v.
Daniels, 1
Young, 76 N. C. 258. * Whittemore v. Farrington, 76 N. Y. 452 see Lynch v. Rinaldo, 58 How. N. Y. Pr. 133.
;
863
245.]
testins::
CONTRACTS.
of less than ordinary sagacity are as
[chap. XII.
much
entitled to
torynegiigence.
shrewdness.^ Hence,if a party is really imposed upon, and has not in fact negligently exposed himself to imposition, he can obtain redress if damaged by fraudulent representations whose unreality a person of greater intelligence would have promptly discovered.^ But when the facilities of testing the truth of an opinion {_e.g.^ as to coal on land) are equally open to both parties, then, though a misstatement of opinion may preclude the party making it from enforcing the contract,^ yet the contract will not be rescinded on application of the party to whom the misstatement was made.* And this is the case with regard to the misrepresentation of the legal effect of a deed when the other party has the same opportunit}'^ of inspecting the deed as the party making the statement,* and with regard to other misrepresentations whose accuracy the party imposed on has ample means at the time of testing.^
undue
v.
'
As
to
32.
inferiority of the
157
*
et seq.
person acted on
to be
taken into
Trower
V.
FenE. 34 Brown, 14 Ves. 144 R. v. Woolley, 1 Den. C. C. 559 R. v. English, 12 Cox C. C. 171 Upton v. Engleliart, 3 Dill. 496 Slaughter v. Gerson, 13 Wall. 379; Mead v. Bunn, 32 N. Y. 275 Sherwood v. Salmon, 2 Day, 128 Com. V. Henry, 22 Penn. St. 255 Smither v. Calvert, 44 Ind. 242 MatR.
ton
V.
tract, see
130
Grant v. Phelps, 11 Pick. 304 Thompson, 4 Conn. 204 ; Rice v. and see supra, Peel, 15 Johns. 303
Seaver
V.
;
i..-
159, 196
3
The
Distilled
Spirits,
11
Wall.
V. Todd, 19 Ind. 130 Swimm v. Bush, 123 Mich. 99 Starkweather v. Benjamin, 32 Mich. 305 Walsh v. Hall, 66 N. C. 233 Roseman v. CanoJuzan v. Toulmin, van, 43 Cal. Ill
lock
356; Brown v. Leach, 107 Mass. 364; Fisher v. Worrall, 5 W. & S. 478
Rockafellow
319.
*
v.
Baker, 41 Penn.
St.
Infra,
282
Ala. 662;
;
Miss. 340
478.
Oswald Wannell
title
v.
v.
Penn.
6
St. 349.
V.
That the
Upton
v.
statement of
could be shown by
Smither
see
examining the record does not protect the party making it, see David v.
Park, 103 Mass. 501
;
Upsham
v.
v.
De-
Attwood
v,
V.
Small, 6 C.
1
Bailey
v.
Mason
Vigers
Ditchbourne,
Pike, 8 CI.
v.
&
F. 650
Warner
364
CHAP. XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 245.
But where
which was the subject of negotiation, and pointed out to the purchaser, as an inducement to purchase, certain improvements which the vendor knew did not go with the property, he cannot, so it was held in Iowa in 1880, defend himself, when the question of the validity of the sale comes up, on the ground that the purchaser should have made inquiries on his own account.' And where the plaintiif was induced to buy an estate in another state by representations from the defendant as to the situation of the estate and the character of the improvements on it, the defendant, before execution of the deeds, saying that he had never seen the estate, it was held in Massachusetts in 1880 that the plaintiff was not precluded from recovery, on a suit for deceit, by the fact that he did not visit the estate until after the papers were executed.^ But if
it
should appear that the party injured assented to the barfalsely represented,
matter
was influenced,
in
coming to a conclusion,
not.
own
or
when
his
I'.
Wood. & M. 90
Tuthill
;
V.
V.
Babcock, 2 Wood.
& M.
;
298
Hoitt
Holcomb, 32 N. H. 202
;
posed, and plaintiff relied on his own judgment and that of a friend. See Gordon v. Parmelee, 2 Allen, 212
Pike
v.
See to
v.
same general
Riddle, 99
'
Schwabacker
111.
343.
v.
Bibb, 602
Saunders
v.
Hatterman, 2
Carmichael
Vandebur, 50 Iowa,
651.
In Poland v. Brownell, Sup. Ct. Mass. 1881, it was held that a purchaser cannot maintain an action for
deceit in the sale of goods
Savage v. Stevens, 126 Mass. 207. Dyer v. Hargrave, 10 Ves. 505 Attwood v. Small, 6 CI. & F. 232;
* ^
;
to to
Slaughter
v.
Gerson,
13 Wall. 379
;
Mead
v.
Bunn, 32 N. Y. 275
St.
Clark
;
v.
v.
Everhardt, 63 Penn.
347
Halls
statement of the seller concerning the value of the thing Sold. Brown v.
Castles, 11 Cush. 350
ler,
;
Thompson,
261
*
infra,
et seq.,
Mooney
v.
v.
Mil-
Central R. R.
;
Kisch, L. R. 2 H.
Parker
Moulton,
L. 99
Warner
; ;
v.
Daniels, 1
Wood. &
114
And
this rule
was applied
in a case
365
245.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XII.
inquiries have been rendered abortive by extrinsic influences, and have been followed by a repetition of the prior fraudulent
misrepresentations.^
348
When
;
a false representation
;
is
proved
and
Mead
Watson v. Atwood, 25 Conn. 313 Biggs v. v. Bunn, 32 N. Y. 275 Wilder v. De Perkins, 75 N. C. 397
; ;
delay deprived a
man
of his right,
Cow, 18 Minn. 470 Phelps v. Quinn, 1 Bush, 375; Gant v. Shelton, 3 B. Robertson v. Clarkson, 9 Mon. 423 B. Mon. 507 Bailey v. Smock, 61 Mo.
;
;
213.
'
David
V.
V.
Park, 103
Mass.
501
Risch
see
Van
Lillienthal, 34
Wis. 250
by
the defendant
that
is,
252
et seq.,
286.
v.
rescission on the
ground
of deceit
Kurd, L. R. 20 Ch. D. 1, where to an action for specific performance the defendant set up negligence on the part of the plaintiflf in examining the papers submitted to
In Redgrave
most
times,
familiar
instances
in
after case,
ported,
this
Men
issue a prospectus
him
M.
containing
false
statements
false
R., said:
"There
I
is
made
before
ance,
which
think
it is
with great deference to the very learned judge in matters of specific performance from whom
to state, because,
me
tracts themselves
the
office
of
the solicitors.
has
ac-
who
this
appeal comes,
If
think
it
is
not
ment.
man
is
induced to enter
false representa-
into a contract
by a
though
answer to If you had used due him to say diligence you would have found out that the report was untrue. You had the means afforded you of discovering its falsity, which you did not choose
tion, it is not a sufficient
:
'
they were told the contracts were in writing and might be inspected if they
asked to see them. Another instance with which we are familiar is a false
statement as to the contents of a lease
;
take
it, it is
regards specific performance, but also as regards rescission, that that is not
to
the
when
is
it is
made a
statutory answer on
That, of course,
such a case as a man saying that there was no covenant or provision in the lease to prevent the carrying on, in the house to be sold, the trade which the purchaser was known by the vendor to be desirous of carrying on therein. Although the lease itself might be produced at the sale, or might have been open to the inspection of the purchaser
long previously to the sale,
it
There
was held
366
CHAP. XII.]
to have been
FRAUD.
[ 245.
burden
made under circumstances likely to impose, the on the party making the representation to show not only that the other party had independent information, but that he relied on such information, and was not misis
led
by the
false representation.^
And where
the owner of a
time of
sailing,
the insurance based on this representation was held void, though the underwriter could have obtained correct informalist, since the underwriter was supposed to have reason, until the contrary was proved, to rely on the owner's statement.^ Even to patent defects warranties may be framed to extend,^ and when there is nothing in the condition of things glaringly inconsistent with a statement made, a vendee has a right to rely on such statement ;* and so where the purchaser, relying on the vendor's statements, waives an examination he might have made. Where, also, the vendor
Those are
think, inac-
entitled to give
by word
is
of
mouth
or in writing.'
It
.not
man
and, what is more, I think they are not borne out by the case to which the learned judge referred."
It is
has had the opportunity of investigating the real state of the case, but has
authority of
Attwood
v.
Small
was
weakened by the
1
Bates
v.
&
F. 232,
is
Hewitt, L. R. 2 Q. B. 595
and
see
flicts
He
it it
says
to a
the defendant
inquired into
if
he did
care-
Supra, 227
Kerr, F.
J.
;
et seq.
;
and As
own
v.
in the case of
Attwood
company who made ineffectual inquiry into the business which was to be sold to the company were nevertheless held, by their investigation, to have bound
the company, so here,
fendant,
I
R. 2 H. L. 99 Rawlings v. Wickham, 3 De G. & J. 319 Smith's case, L. R. 2 Ch. Ap. 614 Bean v. Herrick, 12 Me.
S. C. L.
;
De G.
Kisch
v.
R. R-,
262
V.
Mead
v.
v.
Thorne
s
Prentiss, 83
who made
a cursory investi-
Tuthill
;
V.
Babcock, 2 Wood.
v.
& M.
;
299
Mooney
v.
V.
Savage
Stevens,
126
Mass.
;
207
Long
Warren, 68 N. Y. 426
Nowlin
367
246.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XII.
if
the mis-
A false statement
,
ment
as to
ing into the merits of a contract, does not subiect * , the party makmg it to an action for deceit; nor does
.
it invalidate a contract which it ought not, 8U|> posing the other party to have acted with ordinary
making
ought not to have determined.^ The question of materiality is to be determined by the tests heretofore given.^ It must be recollected that materiality is always relative. What may be material in one case may be immaterial in another. The question is, adaptability to the purposes of the contract, and whatever touches this adaptability may be said to be material. The standard of discrimination must be that which business men of the same class are accustomed to exercise under similar
circumstances.
It does not follow that because a
party
is
swayed by whims,
exposes the party
rescission.
whims
making
way
as to leave it
open to
sequence of his acts; and in addition to this consideration, if we should hold that contracts are vitiated where either party
uses untrue expressions of flattery or ingratiation, few contracts
would stand.
We
As
have, therefore, to
it
fall
back on the
test of materiality.
to this,
on a party making false statements in the course of a negotiation, to prove that they did not exercise a preponderating influence on the other party, so as to rationally induce
den
is
V.
High
v.
Kist-
ner, 44 Iowa, 79
Estell v. Myers, 54
v.
Am.
ed.
Jones
V.
Rimmer,
L. R. 14 Ch. D.
588.
v. Wilkinson, 1 Bro. Ch. 546 Attwood v. Small, 6 CI. & F. 232 Geddes v. Pennington, 5 Dow. 159; Vane v. Cobbold, 1 Exch. 798 Vernon 4 Taunt. 488 V. Keys, 12 East, 632 a case, however, questioned by Mr. Pollock (Wald's ed. 496).
Neville
Stipra,
180-186
et seq.
368
CHAP. XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 247.
him
But
Per-
may
use
many modes
of recom;
mendation, the truth of which would not bear scrutiny yet the fact that such expressions were used, no matter how false they may have been, would not expose the parties making them to an action for deceit, or invalidate contracts in which the expressions were used. It is otherwise, however, as we
have seen, when the representations go to the merits of the contract. If so, it is no answer that other motives contributed to induce the party imposed upon to agree to the contract.^ And in any view the question of materiality is one of fact, to be determined by all the circumstances of the particular case,^ subject to the general principle that an immaterial misrepresentation neither avoids a contract nor sustains an action for And that which ought, under all the circumstances deceit.^ of the case, to have made no difference in the result, cannot be deemed material.' 247. l!^or is a contracting party bound by the misstatements of a third person, unless agency or confederacy be proved.^
'
ter V. Gerson,
13 Wall. 379
Morris
n.
Canal Co.
v.
Emmett,
9 Paige,
;
168
Sprye, 1 D. M.
G. 708
Hough
r.
v.
Richardson, 3 Story,
659; Cabot
Christie,
42 Vt. 121;
;
Matthews
V.
v. Bliss,
22 Pick. 48
Camp
effect
;
To same
Bowman
Nat.
V.
v.
Caruthers, 40 Ind. 90
v.
First
;
Bank
Noel
McAleer v. Horsey, 35 Md. 439 Hall V. Johnson, 41 Mich. 286 Bowman v. Caruthers, 40 Ind. 96 Winston v. Gwathmay, 8 B. Mon. 19. 6 McAleer v. Horsey, 35 Md. 439 Winston v. Gwathmay, 8 B. Mon. 19. 6 Pollock, 3d ed. 542, citing Sturge V. Starr, 2 My. & K. 195 Wharton on Agency, 160 Leake, 2d ed. 386-7
;
Elliot v. Boaz,
Fairlie
v.
Hastings,
10
Ves.
126
778
;
9 Ala. 772.
'
Thomas
v.
v.
V.
Roberts, 16 M.
& W.
;
Westbury
; ;
Aberdein, 2 M.
v.
267
659
Lindenan
Desborough,
& W. 8 B. &
Chicago
V.
Ins. Co.
C. 586
;
Hough
V.
v.
Richardson, 3 Story,
Horsey, 35 Md. 439
McAleer
v.
Printup
*
Story's Eq.
v,
12th ed.
190
Geddes
Winch
Foster
V. v.
Mahone, 21 Wall. 152 Goodman v. Eastman, 4 N. H. 458 Root v. French, 13 Wend. 572 Kingsland v. Pryor, 33 Oh. St. 19 Compton v. Bank, 96 111. 301 Campbell v. Murray, 62 Ga. 86 Lindsay v. Veasy, 62 Ala. 421 and other cases cited Wh. on Ev. 1175..
; ; ;
voL.
I.
24
869
248.]
CONTRACTS.
effecting a life insurance
[CHAP. XII.
Thus a party
is
on the
life
of another
bound by
dent
be established,
imposed by the policy.^ ty's m^-' is no case in which a fraud intended by "There oi^frauds*^ one man shall overturn a fair and bona Jide conbank, to take another illustract between two others."^
or such liability
specially
tration,
which discounts
notes,
is
between the parties to such notes f nor is an assignee in trust affected by a fraud between one of the trustees and a stranger.* On the same reasoning the representations of an agent outside of the range of his office, do not bind his principal.' And, as a general rule, a false representation, to be imputable, must have been made with intent to be acted on by the party claiming redress.^
248.
as effectually
by conduct
by
as he could
basis of being in a particular profession, may, t r j adopting the dress or other distinctive marks of
>
or
seeks credit on
it
as emphatically
by making the claim in words.^ Silence, also, may be a contractual admission as effectually as speech, when stateit involves assent to another person's statements.'
ment of
quality, also,
is
ticular price.
1
Wheelton
BuUer,
Irvine
J.,
v.
&
B.
&
G. 387
Lobdell
'v.
v.
Baker, 1 Met.
56 Penn. St.
St. 250.
232.
2
193;
McCall
Croyle
y.
Davis,
Master
v.
Miller, 4 T. R.
435
8
v.
Moses, 90 Penn.
337.
3
6 6
R.
;
Giles, L.
v.
&
C. 502
10 Cox C.
;
v.
Bank, 2 W. &
v.
S. 190.
C. 44
R.
McGuire
R.
v.
v.
Cooper, L. R. 2 Q. B. D. 510
R.
Infra, 270.
Story, R.
&
;
R. 81
R.
v.
R.
v.
Barnard, 7
Supra, 237
Chande-
C.
&
;
P. 784
Bull, 13
Cox
;
C.
Am.
law,
608
Wh.
Wh.
Supra, 217.
In the
Roman
;
2 Wheat. 178
Mizner
v.
Kussell, 29
L. 66, 1
1.
Mich. 229
^
Chisolra
v.
Gadsden,
So in
Strobh. 220.
our
-S.
r.
Jones, 17 C. B. N.
Wh. on
Ev.
1136.
See as to
et seq.
482
Crawshay
v.
Thompson, 4 M.
.3.70
CHAP.
XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 249.
is
makes the
in
of
gold as distinctly as
if
he said, "this
gold."^
man,
also,
who
that-
courts a
woman
states
party, he is an unmarried man capable of marrying.^ also, procuring the endorsement of another in order to negotiate a bill, is understood to affirm that the person so endorsing is competent to endorse.' And when an article is sold for a specific purpose, the suppression by the vendor of a fact that makes it unfit for such purpose may be an actionable deceit.*
is
must be
avoided
when
no implied warranty against latent defects,^ yet a chattel must answer the general object for which it is sold.^ In fine, " misrepresentations may be as well by deeds or acts as by words by
in a sale of chattels
;
artifices to
249. It
may happen
may
be true,
yet from the suppression of important qualifica- whennontions, the effect is to leave a false impression. In "^i^*^^*^)^!;^ ^
'
,
of qualiflcations
mount
to a false statement."
statement
Randall
v.
Newson, L. R. 2 Q. B.
v.
D. 102.
5
Hill
Ward
v.
Ibid.
Emmerton
;
Matthews, 7
H.
507
cited
'
&
N. 586
supra, 224.
;
Pollock
v.
V.
Sullivan, 53 Vt.
;
Supra, 221
Bennett
citing
Shepherd
v.
supra, 217.
240.
8
"
It
Supra, 217
Pidcock
v.
v.
Bishop, 3
v.
is
repeated in Dezell
justice."
Danforth,
N. Y. 344.
V.
J.,
Andrews
v,
Gurney, L. R. 6 H. L. 392; Clermont v. Tasburgh, 1 Jac. & W. 112 Mallory v. Leach, 35 Vt. 156 Moore v. Cains, 116 Mass. 396 Livingston v. Peru Co., 2 Paige, 390; Smith V. Ins. Co., 49 N. Y. 211 KintB.
C. 605
;
&
Peek
;
Ins. Co., 85
8
*
zing
V.
V.
McElrath,
5 Barr,
;
467
Pearce
v.
Lobdell
Blackwell, 12 Ired. 49
Rhode
v.
Al-
See supra,
221
infra,
254
et
ley, 27 Tex.
443
Belden
Henriquez,
seq.
5
8 Cal. 87.
Emmerton
v.
Matthews, 7 H.
&
N.
371
249.]
untrue,this
represen^ta*'-
CONTRACTS.
another, also, without setting
[chap. XII.
him
right, to proceed
on a
false
;^ and the where there is an intentional non-correction of an error into which the other party fell from misapprehension of a statement which was originally made without
same
rule applies
eminently the case when facts have occurred which have made a former statement, true when originally made, false at the time of a subsequent conversation, when the intermediate occurrence of these facts It has been held in Massachusetts,* where is suppressed.^ a father, in a letter, recommended his minor son as deserving
the intention to deceive.*
This
is
of credit, but concealed the fact of the son's infancy, that if this concealment was with the view of getting credit for the
knowing that if the fact of infancy had been disclosed no credit would have been given, this would be a fraud which would impose liability. And it has been ruled in England, that where a lessor of a mine did not disclose the fact that a material portion of the mine was under ground between high and low-water mark, and the lessee had no means of knowing this defect, this was ground for setting aside the lease.^
son,
As
paying
there
1
a fraud which avoids a contract.^ But a suppression of the purchaser's insolvency is not such a fraud. Supposing
is
an intention to
;
pa}^,
Supra, 217
;
Spurger,
32 Mo. 462;
See notes
Patterson
and
7th
3
V.
V.
to Chandeler
Lopus, 1 Smith's L. C.
Am.
V.
ed. 299.
v.
Bodine
r.
v.
r. Kil-
Traill
Baring, 33 L. J. C. 521
1 Stark. 352.
Chapman
Rase,
Hill
*
Gray,
v.
56 N. Y. 137
Beaupland
McKeen,
28 Penn.
2
St. 124.
v.
5
;
Kidney Mostyn
Reynell
Sprye, 1 D. M. G. 709
citing Davies
;
L. R. 1 C. P. D. 145.
eral effect
v.
Ch. D. 475
Petti-
308
6
2 Swanst. 287
grew
V.
Chellis, 41 N.
v.
Infra, 258.
372
CHAP.
XII.]
FRAUD.
is
[ 249.
questionable,
he
is
It is otherwise,
is one however, if
is any active misleading of the vendor;^ and for B. to induce A. to accept in B.'s place C, an insolvent tenant, B. knowing and concealing C.'s insolvency, is an actionable deceit
there
The
suppression, also,
by a vendor of hay,
him
any damage to the vendee's cattle.* It has been held in England that a non-disclosure of incumbrances, when the purchaser has no other means of determining the existence of
such incumbrances than by the vendor, avoids a contract of
sale
is
And
this
when
Thus, where
it
as in the occupation
of a tenant, without stating that it was under lease to a brewer for a term of eight years to come, specific performance was refused as against a purchaser who had no notice of the But in letting a house, the proposed tenant need not lease. be instructed as to the condition of the repairs; this he must statement, however, as to repairs, subfind out himself.^
jects the
maker
to liability.^
it
Where,
of incumbrances, which
is
upon to give in
Litchfield
v.
v.
Irving
V.
Motley,
Bing.
543;
Whittaker ex
Biggs
ton
V.
V.
parte, L. R. 10
;
Ch. 446
195
Farrel
Redingv.
Morrill
v.
Black-
As
suppression of facts
food, see
going to
supra,
v.
Marice,
wholesomeness of
222, 229.
^
Torrence
v.
v.
Drysdale
Shirley
6
Mace, 2 Sm.
v.
&
G. 225
Penn.
111.
*
St.
232
Talcott
v. v.
Henderson,
v.
Patton
Campbell, 70
Tracy,
Caballero
;
Henty, L. R. 9 Ch.
447
251
Bell
Schweizer
v. Ellis,
v.
76
345
33 Cal. 620
;
Bryant v. Booth, 30 Ala. 311 Holland V. Anderson, 38 Mo. 55. See, as further
sustaining the distinction in the text,
Keates
Lamare
v.
Smith's L. C. 7th
Am.
ed. 299
and
373
250.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XII^
on their title. It is enough for them to refer either expressly or by implication to the recorded title. But even the fact that an incumbrance is recorded, so that a prudent inquirer would be notified of its existence, does not protect the party suppressing the fact of its existence from an action of deceit, or from the rescinding of the contract induced by the suppression, if the suppression involved in any way an active
negation of the existence of the incumbrance.^
250. Fraud, as a basis fgr avoiding a bargain (as distin-
from fraud as a basis for a suit for deceit), i^ivolves an 'error of the party on whom the facts^whicii business imposition was effected. There was no consent of sagacity two minds to the same thing, therefore, there was would disHence it follows that when there is no contract. noTavoM^ contract. ^q distortion of truth, there can be no claim that a contract is void on account of fraud. Mere suppression of information a party may have, no matter how greatly such information might affect the price of the article in which he is dealing, does not affect the validity of a contract he may make concerning it, provided there is no misstatement by him, either express or implied, of facts calculated to mislead the other party.* Persons dealing in stocks, for instance, may secure, by peculiar activity and large outlay (as was the case with the Rothschilds during the close of the wars of NapoNon-dis-
guislied
leon
I.),
have a great
effect on the market; but their non-disclosure of such information will not invalidate any purchase or sale they may make. If all that a vendor of railway stock knows
about the stock was to be published before he effected a valid sale, the process of selling by intelligent operators would be so
protracted that there would be few sales of railway stock
except by persons
who keep
arrangements
(in re-
for themselves)
Attwood
which mate&
F. 232
>
Infra, 251.
v.
Small, 6 CI.
supra, 246.
374
CHAP. XII.]
rially affect the prices of
FRAUD.
[ 250.
commodities, he is not bound to vendor at the time of his purchase;^ but, at least in a leo;al and equitable sense, he may innocently be silent. For there is no pretence to say that upon such matters men repose confidence in each other, any more than they do in regard to other matters affecting the rise and fall of markets."^ A party doing business is expected to inform himself of whatever ordinary business sagacity could advise him as to such business and the other party is under no duty to communicate such facts to him.' Chancellor Kent* states the law as follows: "When the means of information relative to facts and circumstances affecting the value of the commodity are
disclose the fact to the
them does or
says anything tending to impose upon the other, the disclosure of any superior knowledge, which one party
requisite to the validity of a contract.
may have
is
not
no breach of any implied confidence that one party will not profit by his superior knowledge as to facts and circumstances open to the observation of both parties, or equally within the reach of
is
There
their ordinary diligence; because neither party reposes in any such confidence, unless it be specially tendered or required.
.
it does not go to the romantic length of giving indemnity against the consequences
of indolence and folly, or a careless indifference to the ordinary and accessible means of information."' Cicero takes a very high view of the duties, in this respect, of contracting
parties,
cial
arguing that each party is bound to disclose any speinformation he may have as to the bargain which the
251.
''
Com.
This
12th ed.
149
s
;
ch. 2
3
Abbott
v. V.
v.
Carter
Bochm,
W.
;
Bl.
;
593
Pimm
V.
Lewis, 2 F.
&
F. 778
Haley
v.
To same gen 198. Hanson v. Edgerly, 29 N. H. 343 Howard v. Gould, 28 Vt. Paddock v. Strobridge, 29 Vt. 523
Eq. Jur. 12th ed.
erai effect, see
; ;
Herring
v.
Boggs
Ins. Co.,
470 467
^
Kintzing
Harris
v.
v.
McElrath,
5
St.
Barr,
Tyson, 24 Penn.
v.
347
30 Mo. 63 138
;
Lanier
v.
v.
Auld,
Murph.
347.
Westmoreland
Maney
Porter, 3
Humph.
De
Off. Lib. 3,
375
250.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XII.
other party
not possess. " But this statement," so comments Judge Story ,^ " is not borne out by the acknowledged
may
variety of cases.
to another with
his interests, yet
However
correct Cicero's
whom
it is
he
is
dealing,
by no means true that courts of justice generally, or at least in England and America, undertake the exercise of such a wide and diflicult jurisdiction. Thus it has been held by Lord Thurlow (and the case falls precisely within the definition of Cicero of undue concealment), that if A., knowing there to be a mine in the land of B,, of which he knows B. to be ignorant, should, concealing the fact, enter into a contract to purchase the estate of B. for a price which the estate would be worth without considering the mine, the contract would be good because A., as the buyer, is not obliged, from the nature of the contract, to make the di^^covery. In such cases the question is not, whether an advantage has been taken, which, in point of morals, is wrong, or which a man of delicacy would not have taken. But it is essentially
;
make
the discovery."^
The right view is thus forcibly stated by President Way land "And, in the first place, I would remark that the moral precept respecting veracity
tive precept.
It does not
is
command
;
it forbids us whenever we do speak, to utter anything except the simple verity. Hence, our duty, in respect to what we shall promulgate, saving only that we must not promulgate falsehood, is entirely unaffected by this command. It will indeed be seen, upon the slightest reflection, that this is the only precept that could have been given on this subject. The mere fact that anything is true is no reason whatever why we should promulgate it. Were
when
or what
we
shall speak
but
'
205.
;
Wh. &
Tu. Eq. L. C.
4tli
Am.
ed.
Fox
V.
188.
376
CHAP. XII.]
it
FRAUD.
[ 250.
man would be under obligations to tell he saw, every thing that he knew. Everything, whether bad or good, must be made a matter of universal publicity. The confidence of the most intimate friendships must be violated as a matter of religious duty. The domestic fireside would cease to be a sanctuary. The tortures of such a situation would be bej'ond endurance. Every man would flee to solitude as a refuge from society, which had thus become an intolerable nuisance. It being evident, then, that the fact that a thing is true is no reason for promulgating it, we naturally inquire what additional element must be combined, in order to render the promulgation of it obligatory. We answer, if the fact that a thing is true impose no obligation, the obligation must be derived from the general will of God, either expressed in revelation, or inferred from a consideration of the general consequences belonging to each particular case."' What has been said applies equally to an action for deceit. If an illusory agreement has been produced by a designedly false material statement, or by a suppression of material truth amounting to a falsification, then an action of deceit lies against the party stating the falsehood or supotherwise, every
every one
whom
suppressed, in order to
found such an action, must be something the party suppressing was bound to state, and the negation of which his words or his conduct actively implied.^ An English case finally
decided in 1880^
the text.
may
The defendant,
c.
& 33
market a collection of pigs which, to his knowledge, were infected with a contagious disease and the pigs were bought by the plaintiff, in whose hands some
Vict.
78, sent to
;
sibility,
The Limitations of Human Kesponby Francis Wayland, Boston, 1838; a work as remarkable for strong
1
mond,
Co., 13
3 Conn. 413;
Hadley
Caples
v.
v.
i'.
Imp.
Oh.
St.
111.
;
502; Mitchell
Mc-
Dougall, 62
498
Steel, 7
Oregon, 491
5 Ala. 596.
a
Van
Arsdale
v.
Howard,
Ibid.
;
597 403
Ward
;
v.
Hobbs, L. R. 3 Q. B. D.
S.
150 reversing
C,
L. R. 2 Q. B. D. 33
Hanson
Foster
V.
v.
v.
Edgerly,
29 N.
H. 343
;
and
aff.
in H. of L., L. R.
;
Fisher
v.
Birdlong, 10 R.
525
Otis
Ray-
son, 146.
377
251.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XII.
them died, while other pigs belonging to the plaintiff were infected by the disease. The court of queen's bench held that the sending the pigs to the market involved a negation of their being subject to a contagious disease such as that prohibited by the statute. This was reversed by the court of appeal, on the ground that there was no suppression amounting to a negation of a truth, and the judgment of the court of appeal was affirmed in the house of lords.^ In an Illinois case in 1880, the evidence was that V. sold to P. one engine from a building which had been damaged by fire. The bed of the engine, which, subsequent to the fire, bad been repaired, contained several cracks of which V. was cognizant, but which he did not point out to P., who could have discovered them by inspection. The engine was sold to P. as second-hand. P. employed an engineer to examine it, who did not observe the cracks. It was held that it was not incumbent on V. to inform P. either that the engine had been damaged by fire, or that it was cracked, as there was nothing said by him that involved a negation of these facts.^ mere suppression, therefore, must not only be of a 251. material matter, which the other party had no means Party suppressing of discovering, but must relate to a fact which is must, to be negatived by the active misconduct of the suppressliable, activelj' neing party. To impose liability on him he must gative the fact supwrongfully do something to imply the contrary of pressed. the fact he suppressed.^ By the tenor of his conduct, such conduct being fraudulently moulded for this purpose, the
of
Carter,
Wend. 185
;
ment
of a fact not
speaking.
Sess. 1145.
3
Spratt
Ross, 16 Ct.
of
Cogel
V.
Kniseley, 89
111.
598.
text,
As
see,
sustaining
generally
the
Ward
and
Keats
V.
V.
Price
V.
V.
Neal,
3 Burr.
Holbeck,
Doug.
655
;
supra, 250.
*
Freeman,
3 T.
R. 51
Henshaw Welsh
v.
i'.
Smith
878
CHAP. XII.]
252.
FRAUD.
is
[ 252.
Nor
a party
bound
which
v.
Han-
Edgerly, 29 N. H. 343
Fisher
Budlong, 10 R. I. 527: Smith v. Countryman, 30 N. Y. 655 Taylor v. McMichael v. KilFleet, 4 Barb. 95 mer, 76 N. Y. 36 Donnelly v. State,
;
;
St. 347; McShane v. Hazlehurst, 50 Md. 107; Hadley v. Imp. Co., 13 Oh. St.
502
Frenzel
V.
Mitchell
Morris
V.
v.
Thompson, 85
111.
16; Cogel
v.
offer had been accepted by Q.), called upon defendants, who also owned stock in the same company (the stock owned by defendants and those represented by I, constituting a majority of the stock), and entered into an agreement with defendants, whereby it was agreed that I. might sell a majority of the stock of the company to Q., with whom negotiations for sale had been had by him, which should include all stock represented by him and owned by deThe fendants, at a specified price.
Kniseley, 89
598;
Williams
As illustrations
Leake (2d
agreement further provided that there should be no separate sale of any of the stock by any of the parties. Of
the fact of the prior offer to and ac-
&
of
ceptance
mahogany, turned it so as to conceal a hole, and Schneider i\ Heath, 3 Camp. 506, where a person sold a vessel with all faults, and before the sale had taken her from the ways on which she lay, and placed her afloat in a dock for the purpose of. preventing an examination
of the
knowledge, them.
On
defendants notified
of their stock.
gether with what they owned, constituted a majority of the stock, without that represented
bottom.
where a governess had been engaged by a writing in which she was described as a "spinster," it was held that the agreement was not annulled by the fact that she had been married and divorced. "There is no allegation," said the court, "of fraud; and short
of that, the concealment of a material
fact,
by
I.
In .January
they sold
all of their
In Havemeyer
Court of
1875,
Krall,
r,
as follows
I.,
having obtained a majority of the stock, refused to purchase more, and thus the stock represented by I. was greatly diminished in value, and had but little salable value. In an action by plaintiffs against defendants for a violation of the agreement, it was ruled that the concealment from the defendants of the offer of I. to Q., and its acceptance by Q., was a suflScient defence to the action. The court cited Hichens V. CoBgreve, 4 Russell, 562; Blake's
case, 34 Beav. 639
;
who
Foss
v.
v.
Harbottle, 2
Hare, 461
G.
Rawlins
;
Wickham,
;
3 D.
work
in his in-
defendants, which
Bond, 36 N. Y. 428 Getty v. Devlin, 54 id. 403 Getty Place v. MinV. Donnelly, 9 Hun, 603
J.
&
304
Conkey
v.
379
252
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XII.
Neither party is
did nothing to promote, and which the other party did not state during the negotiations. V., who has land to
sell, for
instance,
may
bound
to
expressed misconceptions.
V.,
is
who
remove it.^ P. could readily, if he chose, put questions to v., which would either bring out the truth, or, in case of
But he does not choose and V. has a right to suppose that P., in thus proceeding without inquiry, has his own information, which may be after all better than that of V.'' And, beside this, negotiations would be interminable, if each party was obliged to search for and rectify thfe other's latent impressions.* Of course, if P. says: "The land has certain qualities," etc., and V. assents, this, if the statement is false, is a false representation by V. But unless V. either creates or assents to the misconception, it is not imputable to him.* And as a general rule, a purchaser of goods is not bound to communicate to his vendor intelligence of facts which may increase the price of the goods, but which were in the range of business sagacity
misstatement, get rid of his bargain.
tills
;
to do
to discover.*
N. Y. 102. As a case of active concealment see Dameron v. Jamison, 4
ster, 65
Mo. Ap. 299, and see Stephens' App., 87 Penn. St. 202.
See
Law
v.
v.
Rawle
r.
Co.,
27 N. Y. 282;
Morrison
' *
Ins. Co., 18
Mo. 262
Keith
V. Ins. Co.,
52
V.
111.
518.
See supra,
250.
Smith
;
Hughes, L. R. 6 Q. B.
Kintzing
v.
McElrath,
5 Barr,
467 Mr.
Hughes, L. R. 6 Q. B. 597), which he thus states " The contract was a sale On the morning of the sale of tobacco. tlie buyers knew, but the sellers did not know, that peace had been concluded between the United States and England. The sellers asked if there was any news affecting the market price. The buyers gave no answer, and the sellers did not insist on having one, and it was held that the silence of the buyers was not a fraudulent concealment. And, notwithstanding that this decision has been criticized," con:
Eq. Jur.
149,
for
with approval the ruling of the U. S. supreme court in Laidlaw v. Organ, 2 Wheat. 178 (declaring it to be
cites
It
is
not
our business to
tell
you
;'
which, in-
almost
v.
380
CHAP. XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 253.
253. It has just been noticed that a party is not bound to contradict another's unexpressed misconceptions. It may be
may be presumed to know L. R. 4 C. D. 448 and see, as to error The real question in such a in motive, supra, 193. In Lungren i;. Pennell, Sup. Ct. case is, whether there was nothing beyond mere silence. If there is evidence Penn. 1881 (10 Weekly Notes, 297), it of any departure from the attitude of was held that vendors, unless occupypassive acquiescence, to that extent ing a fiduciary relation, are not bound and per- to disclose to their vendees the prices there is evidence of fraud haps it is not too much to say that the at which they obtained the property "The principles which control court should be astute to find it." sold.
other party
already.
;
;
And
such a case," said Green, J., giving the opinion of the court, " are not difficult of
above given,
tract Act:
in effect
adopted as an
statement or application.
Our
Dens-
own
case of
Densmore
St.
Oil Co.
v.
"A. and
upon a
would
that
any man
or
number
any kind
men, who
willingness to pro-
of property,
contract.
A.
is
not
may
form a partner-
bound
to
lation, a
That when there is no fiduciary revendor is not obliged to disclose any facts, not specially called for, which may affect the market value, but which do not conflict with any allegations implied in the conditions of
sale, see
V.
any price which may be agreed upon between them, no matter what it may originally have cost, provided there be
no fraudulent misrepresentation made
Co.
DensDensmore, 64 Penn. St. 43. That a purchaser, aware of the existence of a mine on land, is not
Erlanger, L. R. 5 Ch. Div. 73
Oil Co. V.
more
by the vendors to their associates. They are not bound to disclose the profit which they may realize by the transaction. They were in no sense
agents or trustees in the original purchase,
and
it
is
no
bound
dor,
sentation, see
;
he being concerned in no misrepreFox v. Mackreth, 2 Bro. Harris v. Tyson, 24 Penn. C. C. 400 St. 347 Smith v. Beatty, 2 Ired. Eq. 756 Williams v. Spurr, 24 Mich. 335 Caples V. Steel, 7 Oregon, 491 though see Williams v, Beazley, 3 J. J. Marsh. In Turner v. Harvey, Jac. 169 577. Lord Thurlow said that a purchaser knowing of a mine on land, was not
; ; ; ;
It is like
which affects them with any trust. any other case of vendor and
vendee.
They deal
at
arm's length.
than strangers.
their
That a lessee, taking a lease under a mistaken belief that there was coal in the land, is bound, see Jefferys v. Fairs,
henny, who represented himself as the owner of the land, but in fact was not, agreed with Boyd and others that if they could sell it for $40,000 they should share the profits with him over
881
253.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XII.
added, that even when a misconception is expressed, a party hearing it is not necessarily bound to correct it. It Nor is a
P^'"*y
bound ^ by
hissiieuce on a matter as to which
may he
"^
.
which the party's attitude does not t require him to speak, as where a congregation listens
in rcspect to
,
.
caiiedupon
to speak.
examination.'
A party's mental
is
account
when he
made
in his presence.^
Nor
is
a party bound to
make
re-
is
is
bound
in law to disclose.'
$12,000.
Boyd and others formed a company to which the land was sold at $40,000. The profits were divided with McElhenny, and the company filed a bill
against his administrators to recover
the
money paid
to
him out
of the trea-
money.
to
were alleged and proved have been made, and it was also shown that McElhenny never was the owner of the land, though it was oscost of the land
might sell it at a profit most assuredly. No subsequent purchasers from his vendees would have any right to call upon him to account for the profit at which he sold to them." Where, however, the misunderstanding was promoted by a prior statement of the party, which statement, though true at the time, subsequently, by a change of circumstances, becomes false, this amounts to fraud. Traill v. Baring,
33 L.
J. C.
54
;
Reynell
Trinity
v.
Sprye, 1 D.
M.
1
&
G. 660
and
v.
Johnson
See
Church,
11
Allen, 123.
who
in turn sold
it
to the
company.
speak'
Wh.
on Ev. 1138
et seq. for
J., in
:
other exceptions.
*
It
no-
Ibid.
Williams
Proudfoot
;
v.
Beazley, 3 J. J. Marsh.
Montefiore, L. R. 2 Q.
v.
577.
*
V.
Boyd &
and
others,
al-
B. 511
Harrower
;
Hutchinson, L. R.
though he bought it to sell again, no doubt. He had a perfect right, therefore, to deal with them at arm's length, as it seems he did;' and again, 'If the property was not purchased by McElhenny for the use, and as agent of the company, but for his own use (and this is the proof in the case), he
584 Pidcock v. Bishop, 3 B. & Junkins v. Simpson, 14 Me. C. 605 364; Grove v. Hodges, 55 Penn. St.
5 Q. B.
;
504;
Mitchell
r. v.
McDougall, 62
111.
498
McAdams
would be an error," said Lord HathHomfray, L. R. 6 Ch. 779, " to say generally that you
erley, in Phillips v.
382
CHAP.
XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 254.
Whenever there is a fiduciary relation between parengaged in a business transaction, then, as has been intimated, the party occupying towards the JfaMmS-^ other a Dosition of trust, is bound to disclose what- ary reia 254.
ties
'
ever facts would be necessary to enable his cestui que In such cases, a contract trust to act intelligently.^
will be avoided
111.
tion,
then
disclosure
necessary.
by the concealment of material facts which between parties dealing on equal footing it would not
be necessary to disclose.^
act as the other's agent,
And
and
a fiduciary relation
is
implied
that,
on which whenever
confidence
confidence
may
whom
or trust
is
him, the court will not allow any transaction between the parties to stand, unless there has been the fullest and fairest explanation and communication of every particular."* But a
cannot enforce a contract in the court
nail V. Carlton, L, R. 6 C. D.
;
371
when
knows more
It
of the
happens
knows a
perfectly
v.
Conant v. Jackson, 16 Vt. 335 Maynard v. Maynard, 49 Vt. 297 Gallatian V. Cunningham, 8 Cow. 361 Brown v. Montgomery, 20 N, Y. 287 Clodfelter
;
;
V.
Hulett,
7
72 Ind.
Blackf.
111.
;
137;
178 Yoste
v.
;
Shaeffer v.
yet See
the
bargain
to
is
Sleade,
Emmons
v.
v.
good."
299
notes
Chandeler
Moore, 85
304
Am.
ed.
49 Mo. 594
McClure
and
see
mer, 76 N. Y. 36.
debtor
is
314
3
Story,
V.
Eq. Jur.
209
sale to
Pilling
Armitage, 12 Ves. 78
and
see
*
L,
Grim v. Byrd, 32 Grat. 293. Wood, V. C, in Tate v. Williamson, R. 1 Eq. 536 2 Ch. 55 see Hay; ;
Schwickerath
^
v.
garth
S. P.
V.
Wearing,
v.
L. R. 12 Eq. 320
Bagnall
Carlton, L. R. 6 C. D.
906.
2
1 Story,
New
Atwood v. Chapman, 68 Me. Otis V. Raymond, 3 Conn. 413 38 Matthews v. Bliss, 22 Pick. 48 Leavitt
371
; ;
;
V.
see infra,
906.
Erlanger, L. R. 5 Ch. D. 73
Bag-
383
254.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XII.
guarantee does not involve such fiduciary relationship as requires, in those inducing it, a fuller disclosure than in other ordinary contracts. It is *' not a correct proposition, that the
same
known
to the
insured
concealment."^
'pressing
is
when the
party supre-
from the party with whom he negotiates. In such cases there are two extremes to be avoided. On the one side, it is not to be maintained that any one who chooses to say to me, "I put peculiar confidence in you," should make it necessary i^or me, in any negotiation I may have with him, to disclose all that I know about the object of our negotiation. The subject may be very intricate, and may have numerous ramifications, as is the case, for instance, with that of the market value of most railroad securities and for a well-informed specialist in this line to tell all that he may have learned on the subject after, it may be, a familiarity of years, would take an amount of time and trouble incompatiAnd even were ble with the prompt discharge of business. the narration undertaken, it could not be faithfully comThere is no object so clearly defined as to be susceppleted. tible of absolutely accurate description there are no words that can be used in which some ambiguity does not lurk.^ It is absurd, therefore, to say that the mere fact of a party appealing to me to tell him everything, or the mere fact that he puts special trust in me, makes it necessary that I should tell him everything. And it is equally absurd to say, that a party is to be invested with the responsibilities of a trustee, unless he assumes those responsibilities. On the other hand, if I hold myself out as specially versed in a particular topic, and if I invite confidence in myself as so versed, and assume a confidential attitude to persons coming to me to deal with me, then, though I am not required to make a statement of all I
ceives peculiar confidence
; ;
Blackburn,
;
B. N. S. 506
109
Smith
v.
Bank,
Dow.
272,
See
419
Hamilton
Watson, 12
CI.
&
F.
See
Wh.
on Ev. chapter
I.
384
CHAP.
XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 255.
know when
yet I
me
a burden
am bound
this basis
'
and advantages which the prospectus holds out as inducement But if this be the law, parties appealing to
treatises
on the
subject involved, or to conveniently limit their knowledge. If they could omit in their statements " no fact within their
knowledge" which in any way bore on the question, they would have to take care not to know too much, and igno1
Fox
V.
mons
v.
Moore, 85
111.
;
304
Yoste
w.
v.
t;.
Wh. &
Eq.
Am.
Hastings
ed.
v. Wearing, L. R. Laidlaw v. Organ, 2 Wheat. 178; Martin r. Jordan, 60 Me. Fitzsimmons v. Joslin, 21 Vt. 531 129 Bank of Republic v. Baxter, 31 Vt. 101 Harris v. Tyson, 24 Penn. St. 347 Watts v. Cummins, 59 Penn. St. 84 Lungren v. Pennell, supra, 252
188; Haygarth
12
320;
extended
a party
liability is
is
253.
Kindersley, V.
178
Em-
VOL.
I. 25
256.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XII.
The better
rule
was subse-
quently stated by Lord Cairns, that non-disclosure will not vitiate a contract of this class unless it work a perversion of facts.^
But when
it
there
is
exposes the parties concerned to liability.' And this rule has been applied to misleading statements as to the amount of shares
subscribed to a companj^^ or as to the value of
255
a.
its
property.*
England that there is " a fiduciary relation between a promoter and the company in its ^ So of proCorporate capacity, which imposes on the promoter meters of company, ^j^^ duty of fuU and fair disclosure in any transaction with the company, or even with persons provisionally representing the inchoate company before it is formed."' And by statute adopted in 1867, it is made the duty of the promoters of a company to disclose in the prospectus any previous conin default tract entered into by the company or the promoters of which, the prospectus is to be deemed fraudulent in respect to any one taking shares on faith of the prospectus.^ 256. Ordinarily, parties who enter on business negotia^^^^^ ^^ 80 at their own risk, so far as concerns inAopiicants forinsurformation on the subject with which they deal, the QTjpA arc bound to reason being that the one has as great an opportunity of acquaintance with the facts as the other. We material facts. have seen, however, that a party who takes upon himself the duty of notifying to another a particular condition of things is as much liable for an omission which makes
It is ruled in
. , ,
Venezuela R. R. Co.
v.
Kisch, L. R. 2
Phosphate
Bagnell
Co., L. R. 3
H, L. 113, 1 Peek V. Gurney, L. R. 6 H. L. 403, Ibid. Henderson v. Lacon, L. R. 5 Eq. 263 Oakes v. Turquand, L. R. 2
; ;
v.
523
Ch.
H, L. 325. Wright's
D, 182; Twycross
case,
v.
Grant, L, R, 2 C.
r.
L.
R, 7 Ch. 55
P. D. 469
Sullivan
Mitcalfe, L. R. 5
C. P. D, 455.
if
H. L. 64
6
aff. S.
C,
L. R. 2 Ch. 604.
;
own
profit,
be paid
for his
3d ed. 522 citing New Sombrero Phosphate Co. v. Erlanger, L. R. 5 Ch. D. 73 afi", H, L, under
Pollock,
;
pany
after
it
Hereford
Waggon
L, R. 2 Ch.
name
(Of
Erlanger
n.
New
rSombrero
D. 621.
CHAP. XII.]
his
FRAUD.
[ 256.
communication in the main false, as he is ment that involves entire falsification and
;
for a misstate-
that, in
fact,
an omission under such circumstances to state a qualifying fact is a negation of that qualifying fact.^ We have also seen that this is the case with proposers of business enterprises and promoters of companies and we will see in the next section that it is so with parties taking part in family negotiations. In this section we have to notice the most conspicuous illus;
that
who
which
called
arises in
insurance applications.
fact, is
An
upon to
it
own knowledge.
Hence
has
been held that " the law as to a contract of insurance dift'ers from that as to other contracts, and that a concealment of a material fact, though made without any fraudulent intention,
vitiates the policy."^
terial fact
The suppression, therefore, of any maby a party seeking an insurance prevents the insurance from attaching.' An insurer is entitled to hear from the applicant all facts within the applicant's distinctive knowledge which are material to the application and the withholding of such facts vitiates the policy.^ The facts, however, must be either known to the applicant, or of such a character that they ought to be known to him.' Whether the concealed fact is one which the applicant knew or ought to have known is for the jury.^ The fact also must be material, and
;
Kerr on
v. v.
Fraud and
Mist.
119
Blackburn,
J.,
;
lonides
v.
v.
Pender,
Ins. Co.,
;
Wheelton
Carter
v.
Hardisty, 8 E.
&
B. 232;
;
L. R. 9 Q, B. 537
Lewis
Lin;
Ins. Co., 8
denau
Bufe
v.
Desborough, 8 B.
&
C. 586
;
Ins. Co., 20
Me. 125
;
Fletcher
v. Ins.
V.
Clark
Horn
v.
V. Ins. Co., 8
How. 235
New
Y. Bow-
Barb. 81
Evans
v.
64 Kneeland, 9 Ala.
v, Ins. Co.,
v.
359
Oh.
3
St.
452
42
5
Walden
May on
Ins.
2d ed.
200
Sprott
v.
New
York
17
W.
v.
Ross v. Bradshaw, 1 312 (4 Big. Ins. Ca. 574) Hall Ins. Co., 6 Gray, 185 Mutual Ins.
;
Bl.
a right to
Co. v. Robertson, 59
6
111.
125.
May on
Ins.
May on
Ins.
2d ed.
202
Lindenau
387
256.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XTI.
must be of a character which the applicant knew or ought to have known to have been material.^ As material facts in fire insurance have been held to be the fact that attempts had been made to set fire to the building to be insured,'' and in life insurance that the applicant had been insane twenty years before,^ and that he had not sufficient means to support himPregnancy in a woman may be material.* But facts self.* of which the insurer ought himself, in the due pursuit of his
business, to
Where
the
engagement to answer all questions put must be answered fully and fairly, and put, the question any failure in this respect avoids the policy.^ But the entire omission to answer a question, the insurer waiving the right
applicant
makes a
V.
DesboroTigli, 3
Ingalls, 14
Boggs
v.
Ins. Co.,
V.
30 Mo. 63.
7
Ins. Co., 6
May on
v.
;
Ins.
2d ed.
206, citing
McDonald
328
Ins. Co., L. R. 9 Q.
N. S. 65 Clark V. Ins. Co., 8 How. U. S. 235 Dennison v. Ins. Co., 20 Me. 125 Campbell v. Ins. Co., 98 Mass. 381; Mallory v. Ins. Co., 47 N. Y. 52; Mutual Ins. Co. v. Wise, 34 Md. 582
1
Jones
V.
Ins. Co., 3 C. B.
22 Wall. 47
;
Hardy
4 Allen, 217
Shaw-
mut
Chaffee
v. Ins. Co., 18 N. Y. 376 Columbia Ins. Co. v. Cooper, 50 Penn St. 331 North Am. Ins. Co. v. Throop,
;
2 Big. Ins. Cas. 43 Satterthwaite v. Keith v. Ins. Co., 14 Penn. St. 393 Price v. Ins. Co., Ins. Co., 52 111. 518
; ;
22 Mich. 146.
tions, see
et seq.
As
to equivocal ques-
17 Minn. 497
is
476
8
ut
2d ed. 210 That an agent's concealment imputable to principal, see May, supra, 213. That evasive answers
Ins.
May on
188; Gates
10 Pick. 535
Cazenove
;
v. Ins. v.
Conn. 51
v.
New
Ins.
437
;
Perrins
Ins.
York Bowery
Co.,
Co.
;
N. Y. Ins.
v.
Co., 2 E.
&
E. 317
;
Smith
v.
v. Ins. Co.,
17
Wend, 359
v.
Walden
49 N. Y. 211
Hartman
Ins. Co., 21
Mallory
Ins. Co., 47
N. Y.
52.
Valton
V.
but see City Ins. Co. v. Carrugi, 41 Ga. 660 Delahay v. Ins. Co., 8 Humph. 684. 6 Lefavom v. Ins. Co., 1 Phila. 558.
;
concealment by an applicant for life insurance of the fact that his proposal for insurance in other oflELces had been declined, he having been questioned on this point, is mateSt. 466.
rial,
Penn.
contract.
London
Supra,
1
217,
250;
Carter
v.
Ass.
Boehme,
Lewis,
F.
Tabor, 2 F.
W. Bl. 593; Pimm v. & F. 778; Foley v. & F. 663; Haley v. Ins. 388
41 L. T. N. S. 225.
8
v.
Penn.
CHAP. XII.]
FRAUD.
257
may be made
as to the parties to
family negotiations.^
Members of a
famil}^ in negoparties to
all
and
if
ing the truth is bound to correct such misapprehension. Under such circumstances the non-correction of the misap-
prehension
plete
is
equivalent to
its
indorsement.
is what Without full disclosure, honest intention is not sufficient,"^ and although, as Mr. Pollock well remarks in commenting on this point, this does not make the
communication of
all
material circumstances
"
communication of mere gossip essential, yet it does make essential the communication of whatever a good business man would deem of importance under the circumstances.^ It is otherwise, however, when the parties are not on good terms, and are dealing at arm's length.* The rule before us applies to all negotiations in view of marriage.' Hence all marriage
may
be avoided.^
But
is
which
full disclosure
required.
Hence
it
When
avoided by the fact that one of them makes a promise to do some ^ particular ^ thing (such thing not being a condition precedent
in view, the contract is not
^
i?"^/,
false state-
meat.
the provision
to
'
and property
reasonable
the
it
of each.
is
If
* '
Gordon
Poll.
manifestly un-
and disproportionate
of the intended
means
husband,
raises
a presumption of intended
wood, 2 De G.
*
J.
&
S. 28.
Irvine
v.
burden
tion."
of
Brent, 10
Mercur,
St, 266.
Bierer's Est., 92
Ch. 84.
v.
Penn.
Kline, 57 Penn. St. 120;
Kline
"There
Stine
v.
v.
Sherk, 1
W. &
S.
195;
must
a
Cummins
165
;
full disclosure of
the circumstances
389
257.J
to the act),
false
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XII.
do.
The
tracted for as
otherwise
it
concurrence of minds on one thing which ing feature of a contract, nor does
it
it
the distinguish-
on
But a
false
statement
made
may
be a
avoid the contract he may make on the basis of such a statement, or may expose him to an action of deceit. There is no concurrence of minds, and hence there can be no fraud that
may
contract.
And
if
thing
is
making the statement afterwards changes his intention, he is bound to communicate this fact at the earliest period to the party to whom the representation was made, and is liable for any loss the other party may incur through his change of attitude.
A contract made on
it
mate-
A party,
should be added,
who
agrees as considera-
is
85
v.
State
v.
Ryan
Feret
15 C. B. 207
St.
Grove
see
v,
State
v.
Prather,
Hodges, 55 Penn.
supra, 177
2
519
fully
et seq.
187.
5
44 Ind. 287 Keller v. State, 51 Ind. Ill Gage v. Lewis, 68 111. 604; Haz;
Jorden
v.
v.
Money,
H. L. Cas. 185
;
lett v.
v.
see Fisher
;
Vernon
L.
Burrell
v.
N. Y. Com. PL, 18
v.
Lee,
wick
&
;
C. 309
C. C. 179;
146
Band, 84 N. Y. 421 Morrison v. Kock, 32 Wis. 254. 3 Traill v. Baring, 4 D. J. S. 318; Slim v. Croncher, 1 D. F. J. 518 see
;
Pedrick
V.
v.
supra, 149
*
et seq.
Mooney
v.
v.
Mil-
ler,
Coil v. College,
40
Lamare
Smith
Penn.
5
445 280
;
Dillingham
Colly
v.
State,
see notes to
Chandelor
v.
Lopus, 1
et seq.
Oh.
State, 55 Ala.
L. C. 7th
Am.
ed. 299
390
CHAP.
XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 258.
is
to be
j^^
gathered from
all
is
a fraud
not to pay
false pre^
*"''-
which
ceit.^
entitles the
But the
intention
If
it
be not to
pay at a time designated, but to pay ultimately, the misrepresentation, unless time be of the essence of the contract, does not avoid it.'^ Even a knowledge by a purchaser that at the
1 Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 440; Wilson V. Finch-Hatton, L. R.2 Eq. D. 336 Ferguson v. Carrington, 9 B. & Noble v. Adams, 7 Taunt. 59 C. 59 Load V. Green, 15 M. & W. 216 Hammersley v. DeBiel, 12 CI. & F. 45 Clough V. R. R., L. R. 7 Exch. 26; Conyers v. Ennis, 2 Mason, 236 Parker v. Byrnes, 1 Lowell, 539 Don; ;
;
some artifice
to
when
St.
property.
Smith
324
v.
Smith, 21 Penn.
v.
367
Backentoss
;
Speicher, 31
Penn.
aldson
V.
V.
Farwell, 93 U. S. 631
;
Stewart
v. Hecksher, but see Hoffman v. Strohecket, 7 Watts, 86. And a mere promise without a definitive intention as to paying is not a fraud which
St.
Pottinger
2 Grant,
309
avoids.
Buffington
;
v.
Garrish,
15
Mass. 158
613.
Griffin v.
Chubb,
7 Tex.
3 Allen, 181
Allen, 540
;
Kimball
v.
v.
Min&
Co., 9
In Whitaker ex parte, L. R. 10
Wiggin
v.
Day, 9 Gray,
97
Jordan
V.
on
Ash
Putnam,
;
he was then under proceedings in the bankrupt court, having committed an It was held that act of bankruptcy. Rogers v. Salmon, 8 Paige, 559 this by itself did not avoid the pur1 Mackinley v. Macgregor, 3 Whart. 369 chase, and that the goods vested in the Rodman v. Thalheimer, 75 Penn. St. bankrupt assignee. It was, however, 232; Powell v. Bradlee, 9 Gill & J. further said that the buyer "must 220: Peters v. Hilles, 48 Md. 506; be taken to have made an implied Shipman v. Seymour, 40 Mich. 274; representation that he intended to pay for the goods, and if it were clearly see, however, contra. Smith v. Smith, 21 Penn. St. 367; Backentoss v. made out that at the time he did not Speicher, 31 Penn. St. 324 Bidault v. intend to pay for them, a case of Wales, 19 Mo. 36 Bidault v. Wales, fraudulent misrepresentation would be 20 Mo. 546 Bell v. Ellis, 33 Cal. 620. shown." Leake, 2d ed. 354; see That a concealment of an intention supra, 249. As sustaining the text, see not to pay is a fraud, see Stewart v.- further Stewart v. Emerson, 52 N. H. Emerson, 52 N. H. 301. Kline v. Baker, 99 Mass. 253 301 a Mitchell Stubbs V. Johnson, 127 Mass. 219; v. Worden, 20 Barb. 253; Bidault V. Wales, 20 Mo. 546. It is Thompson v. Rose, 16 Conn. 71 Barsaid in Pennsylvania that mere inten- nard V. Campbell, 65 Barb. 286 Del; ; ; ;
;
391
259.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XII.
time he was insolvent, without any reasonable expectation of paying^, does not, by itself, avoid the contract or expose the purchaser to an action for deceit.^ It is for the jury to determine" whether the representations (of an insolvent purchaser) were intended and understood as statements of facts, or mere expressions of opinion or judgment."^ 259. The fraud must go to a specific fact, as distinguished from a " general opinion.' It is not a fraudulent rais^ False opinion of a Statement, therefore, which avoids a contract, to say fraud that* uutruly that a particular article is a very good one avoids. Q^ ||.g dags; though it is a misstatement to say that
the article belongs to a class
when
it
does not.
To
is
say un-
he
a good
a sale of the horse; but it would be otherwise if the horse was declared to be a particular horse, well known in the market, which he is not.* To say of a flock, "this is a first-rate flock," cannot, no matter how false, be regarded as a fraudulent false statement, though it would be otherwise if certain
lone
V. Hull, 47 Md. 112; Talcott v. Henderson, 31 Oh. St. 162. That sup'
Supra, 215
Citizens'
Bank i\ Bank
of
New
Orleans, L. R. 6 H. L. 352;
is
249.
Supra, 249
Sales,
infra,
;
262
;
Benj.
v.
on
3d Am. ed.
7
441
Irving
Motley,
Bing.
543
Whitaker
Biggs
v.
ex
parte, L. R. 10
Ch. 446
Barry,
2 Curt. 259
Rep. 359
Vt. 504
;
;
Hale
v. Ins. Co.,
v.
12 Fed.
Power V. Barham, 4 Ad. & E. 476 Jendwine v. Slade, 2 Esp. 573 Evans V. Collins, 5 Q. B. 805 Sawyer v. Prickett, 19 Wal. 146; Stebbins v. Eddy, 4 Mason, 414 Foster v. CaldHazard v. Irwin, 18 well, 18 Vt. 176 Pick. 105 Watts v. Cummins, 59 Penn.
; ; ; ; ;
Hodgeden
Hubbard, 18
St.
84
;
Clark
v.
v.
Reddington v. .Roberts, 25 Vt. 686 Rowley v. Bigelow, 12 Pick. 307 Morrill v. Blackman, 42 Conn. 324 Andrew v. Dieterick, 14 Wend. 31 Hennequin v. Naylor, 24 N. Y. 139 Rodman v. Thalheimer, 75 Penn. St. 232 Powell v. Bradlee, 9 Gill & J. 220 Talcott V. Henderson, 31 Oh. St. 162 Patton V. Campbell, 70 111. 72 Shipman I'. Seymour, 40 Mich. 274 Garbutt I'. Bank, 22 Wis. 384. 2 Morton, J., Morse v. Shaw, 124 Mass. 59 see notes to Chandelor v. Lopus, 1
; ; ; ;
347
Savage
V.
Boseman, 29 Ala. 397 Longshore V. Jack, 30 Iowa, 298 Barlow v. Wiley, 3 A. K. Marsh. 457 Townsend Herring v. V. Cowles, 31 Ala. 428; Skaggs, 62 Ala. 180; Broughton v. Winn, 60 Ga. 486 Reel v. Ewing, 4 Mo. Ap. 569. This topic is discussed in
; ;
Stow
its
criminal relations in
et seq.,
Wh.
Cr. L. 8th
;"
ed. 1154
*
and see
supra, 215.
State
v.
r.
Mills,
17 Me.
211
;
see
Harvey
king
Young,
1 Yelv. 21
Sieve-
V. Litzler,
31 Ind. 17.
Smith's L. C. 7th
Am.
ed. 299.
392
CHAP, xil]
fraud.
[ 259.
So
is
sheep in the flock were falsely declared to be free from disease.^ to say untruly that a rope, oii'ered for sale, is good, and
is
it
particular test, or is of a particular quality.^ And an untrue statement of a fact as merely " probable," is not a false representation, when probability is not the question at issue.'
has a particular legal meaning, is a matter of opinion, open to both sides to express (neither pretending to be an expert), the expression of which opinion does not ordinarily impose liability on a person not a
it
To
specialist
;*
though
it
so material that
and the same thing, then any deliberate false statement as to such fact, though in the shape of an opinion, avoids the contract, and renders the party making such false statement This is the case with regard to liable in an action for deceit.* a false statement concerning quantity, when this is material;^ though, as will hereafter be seen, a party who receives a less
' People u. Crissie, 4 Denio, 525 see Lindsay Petroleum Co. v. Hurd, L. R. 5 P. C. 221 Moens v. Heyworth, 10 M. 6 W. 147 supra, 215 et seq. 2 Bispham's Eq. 207, citing Sieveking V. Litzler, 31 Ind. 17 Coon v. Atwell, 46 N. H. 510 Reid v. Flippen, 47 Ga. 273 Allin v. Millison, 72 111.
; ; ;
;
means
of information."
Story's Eq.
Ind. 202
137,
Clodfelter
v.
Hulett, 72 Ind.
and cases
Supra,
199,
201
;
Edwards
v.
201
supra, 215
et seq.
Halls
443.
Brown, 1 C.
&
v.
Supra,
v.
190
infra,
601, 898
;
215
Person
i'.
San-
Irving
Whitv.
ger, 1
ney
v.
Clark
v.
Baird, 9 N. Y. 183
Wiswall
Hall, 3
Judge Story, "matters of opinion between parties dealing upon equal terms, though falsely stated, are not relieved against because they are not presumed to mislead, or influence the
;
124
v.
Kelly
v.
Foley
v.
v.
Cox Cow-
gill, 5
ShaefFer
Sleade, 7
Blackf. 178.
other
party,
393
259.]
CONTRACTS.
for can claim
is
[CHAP. XII.
an abatement pro
tanto
price.^
A vendor
statements as to the capacity of a mill/ as to the foundation of a building,^ as to the amount of crops raised on a farm,*
and as to the age and essential characteristics of a horse.' be matter of opinion when spoken by a nonspecialist, may be a matter of fact when spoken by a specialist.' A vague statement of the value of a picture, for instance, by a mere dealer, would not bind but it would be otherwise with regard to a statement by one professing to be a connoisseur, giving an official valuation.' Hence, statements made by the
What would
buy
con-
all
bills
and that its stock was not for sale, and could not be bought anywhere but of him, are to be regarded as representations of fact, and not as expressions of opinion.^ As matters of opinion, under the present head, are to be classed statements as to the utility of particular inventions for which
tracted,
It is otherwise as to state-
ments by vendors as to the practical characteristics of patent rights.^" Unless there be a fiduciary relation between vendor and purchaser, or unless the party speaking speaks, as we have seen, as a specialist, opinions of value," no matter how exaggerated, do not impose liability, so long as these opinions consist of estimates, and do not involve warranties or represenations of specific facts.^^ Liability, however, attaches, when
Wakeman
v.
Dalley,
Sieveking
v.
v.
Litzler, 31
51 N. Y. 27.
t- .
See
260
for
other cases.
;
Faribault
3
Ibid.
see
v.
league Irwin, 127 Mass. 217 Grim v. Byrd, 32 Qrat. 293, and see
Hunter
Bigler
;
Martin
1-.
Coon
v.
>
Atwell, 46 N. H. 510
Mooney
;
v. v.
aiiller,
V.
R.
Keighley, D.
&
B. 145
Reid
279
320
1
Rose v. Hurley, 39 Ind. 77. Supra, 254. ^ See note to Chandelor v. Lopus, 1
Am.
;
ed. 299
et
;
Shaeffer
v.
Lomi
v.
i'.
Tucker, 4 C.
&
v.
P. 15
Hill
Willard
r.
V.
Martin
v.
Jor-
Randall, 65 Me. 81
Manning
Albee,
394
CHAP. XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 260.
the statement of opinion is by a person occupying a fiduciary position, or by one appealed to as an umpire, or by one under-
taking to
specialist.^
make
260. We have noticed in the last section, the limitations under which opinions as to value may bind the party giving them, it may be said, in addition, conjectural that a value given conjecturally, or as an estimate, or an expression of opinion, by a party negotiating a sale, is
making it
made by him,
11 Allen, 622
;
Cooper
v.
v.
Mass. 79
Homer
V.
Barham, supra, Lord Denman said "It may be true that, in the case of
very old pictures, a person can only express an opinion as to their genuine-
431
Wolcott
Mount, 38 N.
L.
496
1
Fisher
v.
Budlong, 10 R.
9
;
;
I.
525
Harris
V.
Picard
v.
and that is laid down by Lord Kenyon in the case referred to (Jendwine i\ Slade). But the case here is,
ness
;
Kost
see
;
Power Payne
v.
Four
v.
cases cited
In Power
476, 6 N.
v.
El.
it
& M.
7 C.
&
P. 356,
of
bill
sale
"Four
words like these must derive from the ordinary way in which such matters are transacted. It was, therefore, for the jury to say, under all these circumstances, what was the effect of the words, and whether they implied a warranty of genuineness or conveyed only a descriptheir explanation
tion or expression of opinion."
2
Now,
was
for
Sug. V.
&
P. 543
Bramley
v.
Alt,
3 Ves. 624
were by Canaletti (see supra, 220). In Jendwine v. Slade, 2 Esp. 573 (Story on Cont. 639), Lord Kenyon said: "It was impossible to make this the case of a warranty the pictures were the work of artists some centuries back, and there being no way of tracing the picture itself, it could only be matter of opinion whether the picture in ques;
Smith
V.
V.
Christie, 1
Cowp. 395
;
Bexwell Holbrook v,
;
Morrill
v.
N. H. Ill
;
Medbury
v. WalWatson
6 Met. 246 Davis v. Meeker, 5 Johns 354 People v. Crissie, 4 Denio, 525 Sandford v. Handy, 23 Wend. 260 Sankey v. Bank, 78 Penn. St. 48 Bristol V. Braidwood, 28 Mich. 191
;
tion
of the artist
whose
v.
Noetling
V.
name
bore, or not."
In Power
111.
;
390
Tuck
v.
Walker
395
261.]
CONTRACTS.
is
[chap. XII.
And
a misrepresenta-
which property
imposes
liability.*
And when
party accepting a proposal accepts it on this basis, then an intentionally false statement of value avoids the contract and
exposes the party
Misrepresentations to be distinguished
"puflfs."
making
it
to
an action for
is
deceit.*
from a puff. Fcw articles are sold in the market without preliminary puffs, express or implied; but these puffs are regarded on all sides as mere
Anderson
v. v.
...
^61.
;
misrepresentation
to be distinguished
i-.
Hill,
12
V.
Stevens, 3 B.
Foggart
Ricks
Blackweller,
Stevens, 2 C.
& C. & P.
;
623
337;
;
Bowring Lawton
v.
v.
Ired. 238;
;
Dillahunty, 8
Kittredge, 30 N. H. 500
Hammatt
v.
Port. 134 Graffenstein v. Eppstein, 23 Kan. 443. That an affirmation of value is not a warranty, see supra, 219 et seq. ; and see to same effect, Wetherill v. Neilson, 20 Penn. St.
Bacon
v.
v Frisbie.
Van Epps
Harrison, 5
448
147
Weimer
v.
Whitaker
Eastwick, 75 Penn.
St. 229.
McAleer v. Horsey, 35 Md. Morehead v. Eades, 3 Bush, 121 Kost V. Bender, 25 Mich. 525 Nowlin V. Snow, 40 Mich, 699 though see Tuck V. Downing, 76 111. 71. As sustaining text, see Lindsay Co. v. Hurd,
439
; ;
1 Story,
Pilmore
Hill
v.
L. R. 5 P. C. 221
Morison
;
V.
Hood,
Bing. N. C. 97;
;
son, L. R. 9 Q. B. 480
v. ThompMedbury v.
Mich. 68
;
Kost
v.
Watson,
*
6 Met. 259.
v.
Dimmock
;
Hallett, L.
R. 2 Ch.
21
6
McClellan
v. Scott,
Long
V.
Woodman, 58 Me.
;
52
Bishop V. Small, 63 Me. ]2; Holbrook V. Conner, 60 Me. 578 Medbury v. Watson, 6 Met. 246 Hammer v. Manning v. Cooper, 8 Allen, 334 Albee, 11 Allen, 520 Cooper v. Lovering, 106 Mass. 79 Noetling v. Wright,
;
; ; ;
Haygarth v. Simar v. Canady, 53 N. Y. 298 Stover V. Wood, 11 C. E. Green, 417 Neil V. Cummings, 75 111. 170 Davis v. Jackson, 22 Ind. 233 Bryan v. Hitchcock, 43 Mo. 527; GiflFord v. Carvill,
327
; ; ;
;
29 Cal. 589
Cruess
v.
Fessler, 39 Cal.
;
72
*
111.
390.
on Fraud, 18 and see further to same eflfect, Sandford v. Handy, 23 Wend. 269 Kenner v.
336, cited Bigelow
;
Harding, 85
111.
264.
Elkins
Tresham,
Lev. 102
Dobell
396
CHAP.
XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 262.
Commendatory
are usual
in
when they
refer to
all sides,
phraseology in
which
commendation or
is
praise,
no matter
how
extravagant,
is
not
A false representation
it
of another's solvency,
when
pj^jg^j.^
it
made as to secure credit, exposes the party making it to an action for deceit, and opens any
so
resenta-
contract based on
to rescission
on application of
said of aver-
solvency
^^'^'
But
fact.
Liability
is
at
issue.^
But although
false
it
statement of his
own
solvency
him
but
1
is
ground
which
it
induces.^
R.
V. V.
Ridgway, 3 F.
Estes, 46 Me. 150
;
&
;
F. 838
^
;
R.
v.
v.
?;.
Cooper, L. R. 2 Q. B, D, 510
State
People
v.
Com.
v.
Burdick, 2
Barr,
163
see
E.
Green, 279
French v. Hunter
Griffin,
v.
Weeks
Mc-
Foxworth
v.
Dimmock
it
v.
Hallett, L. R. 2 Ch.
Gainsford
v.
v.
Blatchford,
7 Price,
90.
was held that "fertile and improvable" was a mere opinion) Trower v. Newcombe, 3 Mer. 704 Tuck V. Downing, Barlow v. 76 111. 71 Wiley, 3 A. K. Mar. 459; Schramm?;. O'Conner, 98 111. 539. As to value, see
27 (where
; ;
549; Glover
^
Townsend, 30 Ga.
see
son, Car.
&
Marsh. 328
;
R.
v.
Bull, 13
supra, 260
as to descriptive terms.
Stewart
v.
v.
Emerson,
Com.
Drew, 19 Pick.
Bispham's Eq. 215; Irving v. Thomas, 18 Me. 418 Savage v. Jackson, 19 Ga. 305 Halls v. Thompson, 1 Sm. & M. 443. * Pasley v. Freeman, 3 T. R. 51 R. v. Henderson, Car. & Marsh. 328 People
3
;
179; Kidney
v.
Dow
son
v.
Thompv.
v.
v.
People
Kendall, 25
Wend. 399
302
;
Ash
v.
Put-
nam,
Hill,
State
Simmons,
58 Ind. 98.
V.
Kendall, 25
Wend.
399.
397
264.]
CONTRACTS.
fCHAP. XII.
we
have already seen, a false pretence which will avoid a sale.^ But mere insolvency is not a fact which a party, even if he is conscious of it, is bound to state, unless it is accompanied with an intention not to pay.^ 263. The distinctions above stated apply, a fortiori^ to false warranties. A warranty is distinsfuished from
And
80
.
false
warran
y.
a statement in this, that a lalse statement can only ^^ gucd on in an actiou for deceit, while a false warit
r.
In such
case,
however,
not a warIf there
is
On
is
remedy
amounting to a warranty of
sale, or
law does
contract
;
as^to^'^^
epecific
opinion by
specialist,
to an action for even though there be grounds to infer that he knew at the time the statement was untrue.' party, for instance, may have strong grounds to bcUeve that certain bonds would be held, if the
it
deceit,
>
Infra, 282,
;
904
Hennequin
Patton
v.
v.
Nay
406
lor,
24 N. Y. 139
111.
Campbell,
70
72
258.
& Ad. 456 Gompertz v. Denton, 1 C. & M. 207 Murray v. Mann, 2 Ex. 538. See notes to Chandelor v. Lopus, 1 Smith's L. G.
Street
v.
Blay, 2 B.
r.
7th
Am.
ed. 299.
v.
Upton
Tribilcx)ck, 91
U.
S. 45,
Chadsey
v.
&
F.
McGrew
;
v.
248;
613
352.
;
31
Iowa,
et
179
see
fully
219
seq.;
infra,
904
198-9.
398
CHAP.
'
XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 264.
were legal would not open matter in respect avoid the contract, since this is an to which each party must depend upon his own inquiries. It would be difl'erent, however, if a party should falsely say, " there has been a decision of the supreme court validating these bonds." Again, a non-specialist is not expected to know the law, and his statement of the law, therefore, is regarded specialist, on the as merely conjectural, not binding him. fraudulently makes false statement of title, who a hand, other And so a general exposes himself to an action for deceit.
ment of
false
representation, though
would be otherwise
if
a certain per-
claiming to be married) is averred to have g., these prerogatives. In other words, a general misstatement of the law is not a false pretence, since law, in this sense, it is the duty of all persons to know.^ Hence a contract will not
son
[e.
woman
be rescinded in consequence of an erroneous construction of a document given by the party claiming to enforce it, unless it
should appear that the party giving the construction gave it as a specialist, and that the object of the misstatement was to
defraud, or that the terms construed belonged to a foreign
Supra, 198-9
;
and Mistake, 90
212; Cooper
;'
v.
Phibbs, L. R. 2 H. L. 170
R.
v.
v.
SimFord,
Cox
C. C. 277
;
R.
Davis,
11
Cox
C. C. 181
;
Rashdall
v. v,
L. R. 2 Eq. 750
Hirschfield
;
R. R.,
S. v.
L. R. 2 Q. B. D. 1
Bank U.
v.
v. Cowles, 31 Ala. 428 Cowles v. Townsend, 37 Ala. 77 Martin v. Wharton, 38 Ala. 637; Beall w. McGehee, 57 Ala. 438 People v. San Francisco, 27 Cal. 655. That knowledge of the applicatory home law (though not of foreign law) is always presumed, see Wh. on Ev. 1241
; ;
.
send
Daniel, 12 Pet. 32
cock, 91 U. S. 45
;
Upton
v.
Trebil-
supra, 198-9.
2
Lewis
v. v.
o.
v.
Jones, 4 B.
&
C.
506
22 How. 380
573
;
Grant
v.
Grant, 56 Me.
Rashdall
v.
Pinkham
v.
Gear, 3 N. H. 163
;
Hunter
Russell
Walters, L. R. 7 Ch. 75
Starr
Com.
v.
Branham,
Blackf. 277
;
Henry, 22 Penn. St. 253 JEtna Ins. V. Reed, 33 Oh. St. 283 Clem v. R. R., 9 Ind. 488; Parker v. Thomas,
Co.
;
Smither
v.
Craig
Bacon
v.
v.
Mark-
ley,
Clodfelter v. Hulett,
19 Ind. 213
Rogers
v.
Place, 29 Ind.
72 Ind. 137
Cal. 558
;
Hawkins
577
Fish
v.
v.
Cleland,
111.
33
111.
238
Am.
Hawkins, 50 4 Mo.
Drake
Latham, 50
270;
Town-
Ap. 571.
399
265.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XII.
And where
to
an agent claims authority by virtue of his oflSce do certain acts, the extent of his power being a matter of general law within the knowledge of the party whom he addresses, the former is not liable for an opinion as to his power given to the latter.^ But when a person, claiming
either to be a specialist or to represent the opinions of a
specialist, misrepresents the law for the purposes of fraud, then he becomes responsible in an action for deceit, if the other party does not rescind.^ This rule has been held to apply
which an old resident, professing to be familiar with land titles, imposed upon an immigrant, just arrived, by
in a case in
And
claiming to have special knowledge of the meaning of words used in it, is liable for fraud in misrepresenting them
tract,
who was
The same
liability is
by a party occupying a special position of trust ;^ and when a document is surreptitiously substituted for that which the party signing intended to sign, provided no negligence is
imputable to him.
Marriage
is
wheu^made ^ fundamental institution whose modification is under mis- ^ot within the powcr of individuals, nor, inter' ^
take as to
person.
, ,
marriage, to
>
Seattle
v.
7 H. L. 102.
2
931
Foster
;'
v.
Hirschfield v. R. R., L. R. 2 Q. B.
;
C. P. 704
Haigh
v.
v.
Kaye, L. R.
Ch.
;
D. 1
Montrion
v. Jeflferys,
2 C.
&
P.
;
469
Chapman
V.
Rose, 56 N. Y. 137
113
Byers
v.
Miller
Christ
Diffenbach, 1 S.
&
R. 464
;
Fulton
Brown
V.
v.
Townsend
v.
Green
110
St.
;
Jones
Aus-
Hood, 34 Penn. St. 365 North Buffalo, 56 Penn. St. Wharton v. Douglass, 76 Penn.
V.
v.
;
tin,
273
Gibbs
v.
v.
Linabury, 22 Mich.
Moreland
Calkins
Story,
v.
v.
479;
Terry
V.
State, 13
Wis. 389.
;
Kellogg
v.
V.
Nance
Overcited
Eq.
130
Shaeffer
State
v.
v.
Shirts
v.
Hol-
john,
305
and cases
loway, 8 Blackf. 45
6 Ind. 183
;
Peter
Wright,
supra, 185.
As
to signature to
wrong
342;
303
supra, 254.
185.
400
CHAP. XII.]
FRAUD.
life
;
[ 265.
and a
sexual union dissoluble at will, or for a term of years, no matter what may be the terms applied to it by the parties, is not a
marriage.
Nor does
marriages should be dissolved by agreement, nor that one party to a marriage should be permitted to recover damages
from the other for breach of the marriage contract.^ By the law of nations, also, based, in this respect, on the necessities of society, mistakes of one party as to the qualifications of another are no ground for dissolving marriages of competent parties when such mistakes do not go to identity. ^o matter how grossly one party (with this limitation) may
deceive the other
by
false
representations of property
or
the
woman
as a pauper
under
was declared
void.^
The
on the part even of the woman is no ground for either declaring the marriage null, or for granting a divorce." In Maryland, divorce is by statute authorized when the woman has before marriage been guilty of illicit intercourse with another
man
1
f and in Virginia, when the woman was a prostitute In Massachusetts, under a special statute
Con. of L.
;
Wh.
Ibid.
;
126.^
Barnes
v.
Wyeth, 28 Vt.
;
41.
Swift
i'.
Kelly,
SKnapp,
v.
2r)7,
i.
293
205,
355
v.
Clark
Field, 13
;
Graves v. Graves, 3 Curt. Ec. 237; 7 Eng. Ec. 425 Best v.. Best, 1 Add. Ecc. 411 2 Eng. Ec. 158 Reeves v.
^
;
Vt. 460
'
Scott
v.
Shufeldt, 5 Paige, 43
Reeves, 2
effect see
Phill.
125,
v.
127.
To
this
Robertson
Cole,
;
Supra, 180
Leavitt
Leavitt, 13 Mich.
v.
Dawson, 13
31 Iowa,
27.
&
Dormer
;
Williams, 1
Wier
v.
Still,
Clowes
v.
Clowes, 3 Cur-
307
Goodwin, 4 Q. B. 361. The question, however, is one regulated by local statute, Bishop, Mar. and Div. 6th ed. 167.
;
185
Lane
VOL.
I. 26
401
266.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XII.
man was fraudulently induced marry a pregnant woman much older than himself.^ And we may regard it as settled law that, where a woman with child by another man marries without notice of this fact a man supposing her to be chaste, this is a fraud which entitles the party imposed upon to have the marriage decreed null,^ though this does not hold good in cases where the man had sexual intercourse with the woman prior to mardecreed in a case where a young
to
riage.^
is
was induced by false representations, it is otherwise when there is an entire mistake as to the person. If A. should marry B. supposing B. to be C, the marriage would be void there is no consent by A. to a marriage with B., and therefore no marriage between A. and
not invalidated by the fact that
;
B.^
An
action of deceit
may
be maintained by a
woman
against a
man who
him a void
Fraudulent marriage
settlement may be set
aside.
marriage.'
make
way
as to
withdraw it from the control of the other party. But a woman's settlement of her property,
is
invalid, if the
such cases,
Reynolds
eflfect
from the husband.' Fraud, in as in most other cases, need not be expressly shown;
Reynolds, 3 Allen, 605.
v.
Moss
180.
*
i;.
See supra,
To the
cumstances may avoid, see Montgomery RitV. Montgomery, 3 Barb. Ch. 132
;
Swift
V.
Knapp, 257.
6
*"
Blossom
Barrett, 37 N. Y. 434.
Wald's Pollock, 494, citing Donovan V. Donovan, 9 Allen, 140 Carris Morris v. . Carris, 24 N. J. Eq. 516 Morris, Wright, Oh. 630; Baker v.
2
; ;
and cases there cited. Goddard v. Snow, 1 Russ. Ch. 485 Wrigley v. Swainson, 3 De G. & S. 458
Infra, 399,
''
Strathmore.
See to this
eflfect
Bowes, 2 Cox, 28 S. C, 2 Brown C. C. 345 Duncan's App. 43 Penn. St. 67 Gregory v. Winston, 23
r.
;
Page on Div. 161 and cf. criticisms in Bishop, Mar. and Div. 6th ed. i. 167, ii, 291 contra, Long v. Long, 191, 291
;
Grat.
111.
102
;
Freeman
v.
v.
v.
Hartman, 45
57
;
Tisdale
358
Baker
v.
Jordan, 73 N. C. 145
77 N. C. 304.
Crehore
/v.
Jordan
Crehore, 197 Maes. 330
402
CHAP. XII.]
it is
FRAUD.
[ 267.
to be inferred from all the facts of the case.^ And a conveyance by the raan, on the eve of marria^^e, for the purpose of defrauding his intended wife of dower, may in like manner be voidable by her.^ 267. It is one of the incidents of sales by auction that the thing exposed should be sold to the highest bidder; and unless there is a condition stated at the time meift of"
that the vendor reserves a right to bid, or that a au^loa^ fixed price is limited, below which the thing will may be a
^
.
fraud.
it is
done,
is
it
the fact
it
Hence
fide
whom
the thing
is
bid up on the
owner's account, avoids the sale as to a bona fide purchaser at his election.^ Bids by the auctioneer, as the vendor's agent,
have the same effect.* The English equity courts at one time seemed to hold that a single bidder might be employed by the owner, without notice, to bid up the property to a fixed price and that the interposition of such a bidder, being an understood thing, did not avoid a sale, though the bidder so interposed took part in raising the price and in getting up a delusive appearance of competition. This view has been followed in several cases in this country, chiefly on the ground that the presence of an agent of the owner to bring the prop-
v.
Pugh,
Staines
v.
Hare, 608.
2
Walsh
Leach
v.
see
Darst?;.
v.
&
B. 327,
222;
;
McDowell
Thomas, Simms, 6
and
Woods
v.
v.
Hall, 1 Dev.
3 Kerr on Fraud and Mistake, 225 Bispham's Eq. 209 Story's Eq. 12th ed. 202 Green v. Baverstock, 14 C. B. N. S. 204; Wheeler v. Collier, M. & M. 123 Gilliat v. Gilliat, L. R. 9 Eq. 60 Veazie v. Williams, 8 How. 134 Towle V. Leavitt, 3 Foster, 360 Fau;
Eq. 411
Baham
Bank
J.
though
see
of the Metropolis v.
Sprague, 20 N.
529
Eq. 159.
Parfitt v. Jepson,
;
46 L.
J.
C.
P.
Veazie
v.
cett V. Currier,
115 Mass. 20
Trust
v.
v.
403
267.]
CONTRACTS.
is
[chap. XII.
an understood right.^
is
But the
to the effect
that the use of pretended bidders, in the guise of bona fide who are thus imposed upon
throw up the purchase,^ In the English courts the relaxation of the rule was not permanently accepted, even by the courts by whom it was at first approved ;^ and now, by aut of parliament, the common law rule is established in equity as
well as in law.
The
rule
is
Indian Contract Act: "If at a sale by auction the seller makes use of pretended biddings to raise the price, the sale is
If the vendor desires done by withdrawing the thing to be sold if a fixed price is not reached, not by employing fictitious bidders.' At the same time, when no harm has been done by the presence and interposition of a puffer, a
to be
The
rule applies,
it is
said, to judi-
an interposition of this kind discovered, the purchaser must act promptly, and return the
fact of
3d.
Am.
ed. 201
v.
Loomis,
ed. 474
Veazie
v.
Williams, 3 Story,
;
10 Paige, 431
Latham
v.
Morrow, 6 B.
b.
622 (overruled, 8 How. 134) Phippen Stickney, 3 Met. 387 Wolf v. Lyster, 1 Hall, 146; Steele v. Ellmaker,
V.
;
Men.
630.
See supra, 25
And
see
Pennock's App. 14 Penn. Moncrieff r. Goldsborougli, 4 St. 446 H. & McH. 282 Walsh r. Barton, 24 Oh. St. 28 Morehead i-. Hunt, 1 Dev. Eq. 35 Woods v. Hall, 1 Dev. Eq. 411
11 S.
; ; ; ;
& R. 86
Thornett v. Haines, 15 M. & W. 367 Veazie v. Williams, 3 Story, 611 8 How. 134 Nat. Fire Ins. Co. v. Loomis,
; ;
11
Paige,
St.
431
446.
Pennock's
App., 14
in
fratid
Penn.
tioneer
As
to liability of auc-
when
r.
participating
Lee
*
V.
Reynolds
v.
see Heatley
who
bid at a
Mortimer
;
v. r.
Bell, L. R. 1
12
Woodward
up the property
be-
5 *
tween them, could recover back his deposit with interest, though the ven-
v.
Hart, 1 Rus.
v.
& Ch.
(N.
S.) 15
Veazie
Williams, 3 Story,
Savage, 6 Ired. Eq.
Dimmock
;
v. v.
Hallett,
L. R. 2 Ch.
611
Tomlinson
v.
App. 21
*
Lee
v.
430; cited Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 470; and see Story's Eq. Jur. 12th
Veazie
V.
Stai.ies
Shore, 16 Penn.
200;
404
CHAP. XII.]
268.
FRAUD.
[ 269.
Fair competition being an essential ingredient of sale by auction, a sale will be set aside if by means vendor of false representations parties at the sale were de- i*y ^^^
terred trom bidding,
rificed.*
sac-
tionsaieif
As
wereTept
^^'^'^
An
principal as
much
as
They
statements
to call
Nor
is it
They may have been made contrary to his directions, yet he will be bound by them if they were made within the apparent range of the authority
authorized by the principal.
with which the agent was intrusted. As to parties without knowledge of such restrictions, the agent binds the principal.^
Backenstoss
251
;
v.
Stabler, 33
Penn.
St.
New York
; ;
278
R. R.
v.
V.
Schuyler, 34 N. Y. 30
Marsh
son
r.
Falker, 40 N. Y. 562
Ander-
Am.
>
R. R., 54 N. Y. 334;
;
Dean
;
v.
v.
Levi
Levi, 6 C.
&
P. 239
;
Fuller
Penns. R. R.
Abrahams, 3 B. & B. 116 Cocks v. Izard, 7 Wal. 559 and cases cited
V.
;
infra, 443.
2
i;.
Plank Road, 71 Penn. St. 350 Columbia Ins. Co. V. Masonheimer, 76 Penn. St. 138 Sturges v. Bank, 11 Oh. St.
;
153
v.
119
v.
Kasey, 25 Grat.
ger, 1
Rawle, 408
St.
;
Hayraan's App., 65
v.
268
265
Mut.
Ins. Co. v.
v. v.
Penn.
St.
433
v.
Cook
v.
Cook, 69 Penn.
111.
Wheeler
V.
443
Bethel
Sharp, 25
173
Chicago R. R.
Lee, 60
111.
;
501
Pin-
Grumley
3
Webb, 44 Mo.
444.
nix
w.
Infra, 443.
Supra,
;
132
v.
Hern
v.
Nichols, 1
Salk. 289
R.
v.
Hall, 8 C.
&
P. 358
Tex. 560.
Fountaine
Mortimer
v.
M'Callan, 6 M.
v.
& W.
58
5
Mechanics' Bk.
Bk. of Columb.,
Barwick v. Joint Stock Co., L. R. 2 Maddick v. Marshall, 17 C. B. (N. S.) 829 Howard v. Sheward, L.
5
Exc. 259
Wheat. 336
; ;
Cliquot's
Champagne,
R. 2 C. P. 148
Burnham
v.
R. R., 63
Baring
v.
Bird
v.
v.
Me. 298; LobdeU v. Baker, 1 Met. (Mass.) 193 Muudorff v. Wickersham, 61 Penn. St. 87. That corporations
;
Daggett,
97
Mass. 494;
Willard
130.
405
270.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XII.
270.
False state-
An
of his duties,
ment by
arent binds
principal
the statement was not authorized by the principal, and though the agent may not have been aware of the falsity.^
in
It is true that this
when made
in range of agent's authority.
in all cases
at the time
ing the duties of his agency, and where the false statement falls within his authority, is no longer doubted.^ The question then is. Was the statement within the rano;e of the asrent's authority? If so, the principal, whether a natural person or
a corporation,
is
ment, but
is
liable for
is
in
much entitled to rescind, when the false statements are thus made within the range of the agent's authority, as he would be had they been made directly by the principal himself.* And, in any view, a principal who adopts
contracting party
as
1
Wh. on
et seq.
708
Cornfoot
Fowke,
M. & W.
358,
Emerson, 27 Me. 308 Burnham v. R. R., 63 Me. 298 Presby v. Parker, 56 N. H. 409 Fitzsimmon v. Joslin, 21
; ; ;
discussed supra,
3
214.
Vt. 129
Fogg
V. Griffin,
2 Allen, 1
;
Am.
ed.
White
nett
V.
I'.
Fowke, Mr. Pollock tells us (3d ed. 543), " has been practically overruled by the remarks since made upon it;" citing Willes, J., in Barwick v. Englislr Joint Stock Bk., L. R. 2 Ex. 262. To same eflFect see Wh. on Agency, 168; Benj. on Sales, 462; Nat. Ex. Bk. v. Drew, 2 Macq. 103 Wheelton v. Hardisty, 8 E. & B. 270 Ludgater v. Love, 44 L. T. N. S. 694, infra; and criticisms supra, 214. * Wh. on Agency, 168 et seq.; Barwick v. English Joint Stock Bk., L. R. 2 Ex. 259 Mackay v. Comm. Bk.,
1070.
Cornfoot
v.
Haven, 25 N. Y. 595
;
Allerton
v.
Allerton, 50 N. Y. 670
Indianap. R.
;
R.
V.
Tyng, 63 N. Y. 653
Mundorff
r.
Wickersham, 61 Penn. St. 87; Tome r. R. R., 39 Md. 36 Lamm v. Port Deposit Co., 49 Md. 233; De Voss v. Richmond, 18 Grat. 338 Madison R.
; ;
R.
V.
ford,
Durant
v.
Rogers, 87
111.
III.
508
Reed
v.
Peterson, 91
288;
Law
r. v.
Grant,
State,
37 Wis. 548;
Scofield Co.
L. R. 5 P. C. 394
Swire
v.
Francis, L.
v.
Houldsworth
;
Bk.,
Ga. 635; Lawrence v. Hand, 23 Miss. 103; Henderson v. R. R., 17 Tex. 560; Morton v. Scull, 23 Ark.
54
289.
Brett
v.
dowv.
That Coddington
v.
Goddard, 16
R. 5 C. P. D. 376; Veazie
;
Person
;
v.
Sanv.
Gray, 436, does not practically dissent from the rule in the text, see Wh. on
Hammett
Agency,
170.
is.
406
CHAP.
XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 270.
which that bargain was produced.' It may also be A. makes a false statement to B. intending it communicated to C, whereby C. is induced to part with be to liable to C. for damages.' But in such money to A., A. is case authority from A. to B. must be shown.' An agent's
tions by
stated, that if
an agent
is
is
guilty of fraud in
business,
the principal
B.,
responsible"
(Parke,
;
"We were on
the
Murry
is
v.
the fraud of
contract
to justify a finding
defen-
truthful-
&
B. 260
;
212
this
Hern
V.
Att-
we think they
did, that
wood
Small, 6 CI.
&
F. 232.
And
We
and without his knowledge." Leake, 2d ed. 384, citing Udell v. Atherton, 7 H. & N. 172 Barwick v. Bank, L. R. 2 Ex. 259 Mackay v. Bank, L. R. 5 P. C. 394; Weir v. Barnett, L. R. 3 Ex. D. 32. 1 Sug. V. & P. 381 Perry on Trusts,
of the principal,
; ; ;
cussed as to
him by
211
Wh.
V.
on Ag. 158
et seq.
,-
Wil-
pay damages in an action These questions were to be determined, as it seemed to us, upon
the finding of fraud in the father without a finding of fraud in the son.
If
son
V.
Fuller, 3 Ad.
&
Irving
r.
Mason
Crosby, 1
*
Wood. & M.
V.
v.
342.
make the we
are of
Watson
In Ludgater
Love, 44 L. T. N. S. 694,
was express
or implied,
decided Jan. 1881 by the court of appeals, before Lord Sel borne,
by
reason of his
liable,
in the son.
We
{ithi
Fowke
were
all right.
The defendant
Several of
had fraudulently concealed from his son that the sheep had the rot, and
fraudulently gave the son authority to sell them for the best price, intending
that the son should represent that they
seemed
siderable dilficulty
sideration,
but,
upon conit is
we
were sound.
Supra,
247.
407
270.]
if
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XII.
may
Supra, 214.
sued
This
is
the doc-
Udell
V.
Atherton, 7 H.
&
N. 172;
much
clearness and
J. L. 288.
&
said: "
On
ject
N. 172, and their views on this subwere concurred in and the principle propounded by them adopted and
enforced by the house of lords in West-
made by fraud-doing
certainty
agents in behalf
of an innocent vendor.
Whatever un-
ern
Sc.
Bank
of Scotland v. Addie, L. R. 1
may
at
App. 146.
in certain
no longer
exists,
and the
rights,
under
the given circumstances, of both vendor and vendee, have been plainly defined, and, as
I
In the light
clear that
have been made on a sale of stock to the plaintiflFs by the director of such corporation as its. agents. Lord ChelmsThe ford, in giving his views, said
:
'
an
a
distinction to be
thorities,
efi'ecting
sale.
the
first
being a rescission
sound principle, appears to be this a person has been drawn into a contract to purchase shares belonging to a company, by fraudulent misrepre-
Where
and
suit
is
a suit
lie
the misrepresentations are imputable to the company, and the purchaser cannot be held to his contract because the
knowl-
edge by his agent. If the situation is such that the vendee can make complete restitution so as to put the vendor
company cannot retain any benefit which they have obtained through the
fraud of their agents.
But
if
the per-
son
to
purchase
time of the
sale,
to
shares by the fraud of the directors, instead of seeking to set aside the contract prefers to bring
the
effect, re-
money
received in
lie for such cannot be sustained against the commoney, but such refusal on the part of pany, but only against the directors the vendor will not make him a party personally.' Lord Cranworth, in hia to the original wrong so that he can be opinion, puts himself on the same
408
CHAP.
XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 271.
271.
ual or contractual.
made by
{Jg^^j^^"?*
In such cases,
it
is
put
dent with
it
same
party himself as to the nature of the transaction in question. To render admissible an agent's admissions of this class, the
agent must be either the principal's general representative, or must be specially delegated to speak as to the particular matter.^ When the statement is offered as contractual {i. e.,
made as one of the inducements to a contract), it must be shown to have been made during the negotiations. Otherwise,
as
it
ity.^
cannot be received as determining the principal's liabilThe same limitation excludes representations made to
contracting party,
negotiation.
when not made as part of the particular Even prior statements by a general agent are
shown
to
V.
Mcv.
the
subsequent
Comb
'
R. R., 70 N. C. 178.
of
of the parties
have
In Western Bk.
Scotland
to leave
for
Addie, L. R. 1 Sc.
&
D. 145, as stated
by Mr. Pollock, "the directors of the bank had made a series of flourishing,
but untrue reports on the condition of affairs, in which bad debts were counted as good assets. The shareholder who sought relief in the action,
its
Wh. onEv.
Hern
V.
v.
1177.
;
Fair-
lie V.
Kirkstall
;
Co.
V.
R. R., L. R. 9 Q. B. 468
R,, 8
Stiles
v.
v. v.
R.
Winchester,
Allen,
;
had taken additional shares on the he said, of these reports. But it was not shown that they were issued
faith, as
St.
339
;
McCracken
West, 17 Ohio, 16
V.
Chic. B.
&
Q.
v.
R. R.
Riddle, 60
111,
534
Bowen
;
bank who
of shares,
Williams
409
272.]
272.
Statement
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XII.
An
agent's statement
'^
made while
representing his
must be
ranire"of
principal in a business negotiation binds, as has ,. ^ been seen, his principal; and in torts his declara-
..,
i-i,
authority,
pal's
tions coincident with the act charged as tortious are imputable to the principal as defining the princiBut such statements, to be admissible against liability.^
made by
to
by
a special agent,
must be shown
range of such agent's authority, or as part of the res gestae, or to have been ratified by the principal.^ 273. This liability is not atfected by the fact that the
Reports bv agents to
principal
in-'
when
prmcjpa
the reports are published by the corporation as its u jf reports," so is the rule stated by Lord Q^yjjS Westbury, " are made to the shareholders of a company by
may
bind
.
their directors,
must undoubtedly be
ments made with the authority of the company, and therefore binding on the compan}-." And Lord St. Leonards says :* "I have certainly come to this conclusion, that, if representations are made by a company fraudulently, for the purpose of enhancing the value of their stock, and they induce a third
rized to use them for that purpose. Thus, the case rested only on the pur-
lows
some
effect
on
if
former time
and that was not such a direct connection between the false representation and the conduct induced by it as must be shown in order
;
such
representations
or frauds
;
had
misrepresentations
to rescind a contract."
See supra,
i\
237.
On
Eaton
Avery,
been committed by the principals but made, or frauds committed by agents in matters which do not fall within their authority, do
not affect their principal." Supra,
'
279.
269.
New Brunswick,
etc.
Co. v. Cony-
The
is
states.
beare, 9 H. L. C. 725.
* Nat. Ex. Co. of Glasgow Macq. 103.
ment
v.
Drew, 2
as fol-
410
CHAP.
XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 275..
made by them do bind the company. I consider representations of the directors of a company as representations by the company and, althoug^h they niay be representations made to the comperson to purchase stock, these representations so
;
pany,
it is
their
274.
A party
of his whole
ggj^e^ai
agents may bound by the admissions of his asrent, " make cou, as to the entire business committed to him; nor, tractuaiadwhen the agent is the principal's general and con- "^^^^''-
an
ao-ent, is
...
tinuous representative,
res gestoe^ or
is it
such declarations that they should either have been part of the
275.
necessarily
of its
a corporation can only act through agents, it bound by the contractual representations agents. While a contract obtained by false tionsare
As
representations can be rescinded as against a corporation, a corporation cannot obtain specific perform-
go^jj^oun^.^
its
and a corporation
Hence, "
if
is
which other
parties are
injured.^
That when
false
an agent ignorantly
falsity,
Supra, 130
et seq.
;
133
Green's
v.
v.
makes a
principal
Houldsworth
;
knows the
Chaples
bargain thus
Brunswic Benefit
;
Co., L. R. 5 C. P.
D.
;
induced, see
Wh.
on Agency,
167;
331 Nat. Ex. Co. f. Drew, 2 Macq. 103 Ranger v. R. R., 5 H. L. C. 72 Mackay Barwick v. v. Bank, L. R., 5 P. C. 394
;
;
171, 478.
citing Kirkstall
is
Swift
;
Co.
McGenness
177
;
v.
New
;
Y.
;
&
which can only act through agents. Dowdall V. R. R., 13 Blatch. 403 Morse V. R. R., 6 Gray, 450 McGenness v.
; ;
34 N. Y. 30 Y. 344
653
;
N. H. R. R. v. Schuyler, Anderson v. R. R. 54 N.
Gas
Co., 63
V. v.
Penn.
St.
381
Charles-
Indian. R. R. v. Tyng, 63 N. Y. Penn. R. R. v. Plank Road, 71 Penn. St. 350; Columbia Ins. Co. v. Masonheimer, 76 Penn. St. 138 Globe
,
ton R. R.
Oh.
St. 119.
Northrnp
Mo. 435.
411
277.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XII.
who have
276.
Shareholders may be released
A party
ture, is
bound
to
make no
cannot be substantially sustained; and while latitude is allowed in the statement of opinion, if there be
a material misrepresentation of facts shareholders
open market from one of the original stockholders, is not entitled to recover on such a prospectus, is settled in England f though in this country there are cases
in
in
which
277.
this limitation
is
not recognized.*
is
As
liable for
Corporation liable for assent's deceit, but not directors, unless personally interposing
misstatements of its agents as were made within the range of their authority, although such
such
misstatements were not specifically authorized by it.' director or manager of such corporation,
however,
is
tations, unless
he authorizes them
specifically, either
directly or by implication.^
officers
But the
who
Schuyler, 34 N. Y. 30
Bruflf v. Mali,
v.
4 Drew. 205 Ayre's case, 25 Beav. 513 New Brunswick, etc. R. R. V. Conybeare, 9 H. L. C. 711; Mackay v. Bank, L. R. 5 P. C. 394 Eaglesfield v. Londonderry, L. R. 4 Ch. D. 693 Swire v. Francis, L. R. 3 App. Cas. 106, and see cases cited
well's case,
; ;
36 N. Y. 200;
Suydam
v.
Moore,
Barb. 358
81
;
McClellan
Scott,
24 Wis.
Peek
;
f.
Gurney, L. R.
6 H. L. C.
377
supra, 237.
supra,
*
130
et seq.
133.
geridge, 1 Dr.
R.
R.
;
r,
Mug-
New Y. & N. H. R. R. v. Schuyler, 34 N. Y. 30 Bruff v. Mali, 36 N. Y. 200: Suydam v. Moore, 8 Barb. 358. See Eaton f. Avery, cited infra, 279.
;
363
Central R.
5 s
Supra,
Cargill
;
131.
v.
R. of Venezuela
C. 113
Kisch, L. R. 2 H. L.
Bower, L. R. 10 Ch. D.
Barnett, L. R. 3 Ex. D.
V.
502
Weir
aflF.
v.
32
3 Ex. D. 238,
Ball,
under name of
supra, 131.
Wier
V.
and cases
412
CHAP.
XII.]
FRAUD.
[ 279.
And
in
any view
its
comes
liable for
it.^
278. Agency cannot be established by the agent's own There must be proof aliunde of the declarations.
agency, in order to
admissible.^
make
1
the agent
Agency
declarations
must, be es-
by proof
^*'*"^-
shown
make
these representa-
A
'
principal
is
Thus, in a case before the English court of o appeal, in 1881, it appeared that a contract entered '111 o into by a local board, provided that payment tor the work executed thereVinder, i. e., the making of a reservoir, should be made by instalments upon the
ties,'
"* imbie
for collusive acts of
111
dependent
f'aud.
After several payments had been made, it was discovered that the reservoir would not hold water, and further payment was refused. The contractor
certificates of a certain engineer.
on this state of facts brought an action against the board for 1067^. Il5. 6<i., the balance due under the contract, which was stayed, however, on the board executing an agreement with
V.
Wh. on Agency, 540-1 Cherry Bank, L. R. 3 P. C. 24 Cullen v. Thomson, 4 Macq. 424 Eaglesfield v. Londonderry, L. R. 4 Ch. D. 693; Swift V. Winterbotham, L. R. 8 Q,. B. 244; 28 L. T. N. S. 339; Noyes v. Loring, 55 Me. 408 Bartlett v. Tucker,
1
; ; ; ;
63 N. Y. 101 Williams v. Davis, 69 Penn. St. 21; Grim v. Bonnall, 78 Penn. St. 152 Rosenstock v. Toomay, 32 Md. 169 Royal r. Sprinkle, IJones,
;
;
People
v.
Johnson, 12
v. Ferebee, 68 N. C. Edwards, 77 N. C. 271 Wilcoxen Co. v. Bohanan, 53 Ga. 219 Reynolds v. Ferree, 86 111. 570 Sypher
;
L. 505
Grandy
v.
356
Francis
Wh.
on Agency,
v.
478.
3
East Line R. R.
v.
Garrett, 52 Tex.
133,
Mussey
Ha-
413
279.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XII.
whom he had an account, and he was indebted to an amount exceeding 800^. Notice of the assignment was given by the bank to the board, and at the expiration of the six months the bank brought an action against the board to recover the amount secured by the agreement, when for the first time the board denied their liability on the ground that they had discovered that the contractor and the engineer had conspired together to give and that, therefore, the agreement was one false certificates
the contractor to a bank with
to
whom
fraud.
It
of appeal' that the defence that the agreement had been ob-
tained by the fraud and collusion of the contractor was a good answer to the action brought against the defendants. It was further ruled that there was no obligation on the part of the
we have
unauthorized independent fraudulent statements in eftecting But a party. who knowingly combines to defraud a sale.2 another by a false statement is liable to such other in an action for deceit, although it was not intended specifically to defraud the party injured, but only any one of a class on whom the fraud might operate.' It is no defence to such a
^
ton,
it
collusive settlements
void, see infra,
402.
2
594,
Udell
V.
Atherton, 7 H.
v.
&
N. 172;
West Bank
N.
of Scotland
;
Addie, L. R.
Kennedy
v.
McKay, 43
v.
was intended to defraud. The statement in question was communicated to V., being one of the class designed by F. to be affected by the false statement, and V., on faith of the statement, sold goods to the partnership. It was lield that V. could maintain an action for
deceit against F.
Supra, 232.
In Eaton
Avery,
to
83 N. Y. 31, F., a
ship,
false
to
member
of a partner-
be
That for mere expression of opinion an action for deceit cannot be maintained, see Randall v. Farnum, 52 Vt.
539.
mercantile agency.
was
That the
simplicity
plaintiff's
ignorance and
to ob-
may
be considered in deter-
414
CHAP. XII.]
suit that there
is
FRAUD.
[ 279.
be hekl
scious.
liable.^
Il^or is it
a warranty on which the defendant might a defence that the fraud operates
there
is
Wherever
may
sue the party injuring, no matter how numerous may have been the intermediate agencies through which the fraud
worked.''
mining the question of causal relation under such circumstances see supra,
245
;
Carter
v.
Glass,
Nolte
v.
Reichelm, 96
111.
425.
supra,
415
282.J
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XIII.
CHAPTER
Party deceived
perform,
XIII.
RESCISSION: RATIFICATION.
may
rescind contract,
is
unable
to
282.
may
be by conduct,
288.
Mere lapse
289.
Election
284.
must be
in reasonable time,
Election
290.
is final
and must be
single,
when by comis
Party without
title
cannot pass
title,
ex-
292.
posed
to loss, 286.
Rescission
may
be granted on failure
282.
ceived
may
col-
contract or
^
by
Supra, 232
V.
seq.; infra,
919
hardt,
Udell
Atherton, 7 H.
&
;
N. 181;
;
V.
Reed
v.
v.
Peterson, 91
111.
Bradley
V.
Luce, 99
Hough
v. v.
Rich-
Willcox
Jackson, 51
Iowa,
234 208
Doggett
Emer-
Wampler
Walker
v.
v.
Foreman v. Bigelow,
Day,
Foster
v.
v.
4 Cliflf. C. C. 508 Soper v. Stevens, 14 Me. 133; Wright v. Haskell, 45 Me. Farris v. Ware, 60 Me. 482 489 Skinner v. Brigham, 126 Mass. 132 Addington v. Allen, 11 Wend. 375
;
Cooper
Mcll-
Lindsey
v.
v.
421
96
;
Henrioid
Poston
v.
Pen-
reversing S.
C,
Wend.
Perkins
;
v.
darvis
Partridge, 30 N. J. Eq. 82
;
Young
v.
Hughes, 32 N. .J. Eq. 372 Crosland v. Bigler v. FlickHall, 33 N. J. Eq. 11 Babcock v. inger, 55 Penn. St. 279 Short v. StevCase, 61 Penn. St. 427 enson, 63 Penn. St. 95 Clark v. Ever;
; ; ;
Gray, 41 Tex. 326 West v. Waddill, 33 Ark. 575 Myton v. Thursee McShane v. low, 23 Kan. 212 Hazlehurst, 50 Md. 107. As to rescission for non-performance, see infra, 919 McLean v. Richardson, 127 Mass.
; ;
;
339.
416
CHAP. XIII.]
RESCISSION
RATIFICATION.
[ 282.
lusion with the other side, may be rescinded on may claim proof of these facts ;^ and so where a mother, over anso^' sixty years of age, was induced by her son to con- par^y fs*^^*^
vey to a third person, who afterwards conveyed to unable to the son, a ranch on an insufficient consideration f and so where a woman living a hundred miles from the place where she could obtain information as to the facts, was induced by her attorney, who was also the executor of a will under
;^ and so of an agreement between stockholders in a corporation to hold their stock in a common interest, which agreement' the defendant was induced to make by a fraudulent suppression of facts by the
plaintitf.*
vendor's false representations, al8o that the property sold was free from incumbrance with a specific exception,
it
was held
when
appeared that there were other incumbrances to a large amount which materially reduced the value of the property.* But when the representations complained of as false can be
made good by
there being
no wrong done,
performance
will
be
made
good by the complainant.^ But the actual defect, in such must be made good and when the falsity consists in a deficiency in the land to be conveyed, this cannot be cured by
;
the
ofl:er
may
On
A
;
buyer
may
;
refuse,
Young
V.
Hughes, 32 N.
J.
Eq.
Wickham,
V.
372.
2
see
see
3 De G. & J. 304 Conkey Bond, 36 N. Y. 428 Getty v. Devlin,. 54 id. 403 Getty v. Donelly, 9 Hun,
;
Biglow
3
*
603
Place
v.
v.
Minster, 65 N. Y. 102.
supra, 159.
Kenney
Reed
v.
111.
v. Havemeyer, N. Y. App. 1881, noticed supra, 251 Hichens v. Congreve, 4 Russ. 562
Havemeyer
Pulsford
v.
v.
Ct. of
see infra,
'
285.
Shaffer, 3 Ind. 331
Yost
Foss
v. v.
Bridge
v.
461
Rawlins
Batchelder,
Simons v^
VOL.
I. 27
417
282.]
if there
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XIII.
ground of
and on
returning them
may
is
And when-
unable to perform a substantial part of the may thus rescind. The remedy is not
The same rule applies to purchases of Thus, to adopt illustrations given by Mr. Pollock,^ "if the owner of an estate sells it as unincumbered, concealing from the purchaser the existence of incumbrances,
conditioned on fraud.*
real estate.
on him to perform his contract and redeem the incumbrances.' If, also, promoters of a partnership undertaking induce persons to take part in it by untruly representing that a certain amount of capital has been already subscribed for, they will themselves be put on the list of contributories for that amount."^ Rescission may be exercised as much by or against the personal representathe purchaser may,
if
he thinks
fit,
call
McElhenny's
formance,
see Miller
v.
Phillips,
31
App., 61 Penn.
St.
188
Rice's App., 79
Penn.
201
1
7 Grat. 52;
;
168
see Schilling
v.
Short, 15
W.
Va. 780.
Supra, 214;
ed. 436
;
;
Benj. on Sales, 3d
v.
North Am. Oil Co. r. Forsyth, 48 Penn. St. 291 Forsyth v. Oil Co., 53 Penn. St. 168. That where there is a warranty the warranty should be looked to if redress is sought on the ground of the falsity of the warPenn.
St.
218
Am.
148
;
Udell
v.
Atherton, 7 H.
&
E.
Freyman
v.
N. 181
Soper
Clarke
v.
Dickson, E. B.
&
Street
V.
Blay, 2 B.
&
;
Ad. 456
Farris
v. v.
That on a failure of part performance there may be rescission, see infra, 293, 580. That
Knecht, 78 Penn.
St.
141.
Manahan
v.
r.
Noyes,
Poor
Woodburn, 25
;
and that
if
this be
Gates
V.
Downer
may
be recissiou, see
869
et seq.
Bailey, 99 Mass. 61
Kinney
r.
Kier-
will not be
nan, 2 Lans. 492; Stickter v. Guldin, 30 Penn. St. 114; Hartje v. Collins, 46
rescission;
V.
supra,
258,
St.
262;
Smith
232.
2
Smith, 21 Penn.
v.
367
Penn, St. 268 Short v. Stevenson, 63 Hoopes v. Strasburger, Penn. St. 95 37 Md. 390 Pierce v. Wilson, 34 Ala. 596 Foster r. Gressett, 29 Ala. 393 Blen V. Bear River Co., 20 Cal. 602; see notes to Chandelor r. Lopus, 1 Smith, L. C. 7th Am. ed. 299. That rescission .may be on defective per; ; ;
;
Rodman
Thalheimer, 75 Penn.
St.
'
Pulsford
cf.
v.
v.
Richards, 17 Beav. 96
Ungley
Ungley, L. R.
*
Ch. D. 887.
la Torre's case, L. R.
Moore
& De
18 Eq. 661.
418
CHAP.
XIII.]
rescission: ratification.
[ 283.
chase money on a purchase he alleges to have been defrauded in making, may elect to aflBrm the sale, and may set off' his
damages
in
abatement of the
To sustain a decree of a
strong and plain. The case is in this respect to be distinguished from a suit for a specific performance. Proof that would preclude a decree for the plaintiff' in a suit for specific
performance will not necessarily be suflicient to sustain a decree for the plaintiff" in a suit for rescission. The burden is on the plaintiff' in the latter case to make out a case of fraud
or material
proved.^
As we
A
have already
seen,* a
contract induced by
honest misrepresentations
may
would
it
283.
is
to confirm or repudiate.
By
the
Roman
law, as
we
induced by
have seen, a party defrauded in a contract has the ^^oi^abfe option of holding .on to the contract, with special compensation for its defective consummation caused by the
fraud of the other side, or of rescinding the contract, and
recovering damages for his entire loss in the whole trans1 Load I'. Green, 15 M. & W. 216; Donaldson v. Farwell, 93 U. S. 601. ^ Supra, ^ 232a; Hill r, Buckley, 17 Ves. 394; Kelly r. Pember, 35 Vt. 183; Lord V. Brookfield, 8 Vroom, 552 Brewster v. Brewster, 9 Vroom, 119 Cravens v. Kiser, 4 Ind. 512 Cox v. Reynolds, 7 Ind. 257 Earl v. Bryan, Phill. Eq. (N. C.) 278 CuUum v. Bank, 4 Ala. 21. The remedies given by equity, under form of decrees for
; ; ; ;
paid
may
be
Edmunds' Appeal,
;
59 Penn.
St.
220;
88
St.
Cummins
165
; ;
v.
Hurlbutt,
92 Penn.
53
;
349
Scott
v.
Webster, 50 Wis.
Washburne, 50 Wis. 200 Fitz v. Bynum, 55 Cal. 459 see Smith v. Richards, 13 Pet. 26, where it was
Lavassar
;
rescission
and decrees
of specific per-
fraud
239.
<
supra, 214.
is
That preponder-
Roman law by
That on
re-
ance of proof
198.
419
283.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XIII.
And such is the rule in our own law.^ It was at one time argued in Pennsylvania that a contract induced by fraud is absolutely void, and hence not susceptible of confirniaaction.^
1
L.
62,
1,
D. de contrah.
emt.
of this principle
is
xviii.,
1Voet,
Com.
L. iv. T. 3, 7.
high price
made under
influence
are,
have been already stated. The alternatives, so far as concerns the question now immediately before us, he states as follows The transaction might be regarded as
error
Supra, 177.
vessel,
for
such
then
the
purchaser
be entitled to impeach
cess
;
it
by legal pro-
By the when fraud precludes assent. Numerous rulings are cited to this etfect, among which may be
want
a nullity.
Roman law
is
the case
noticed L.
.
.
9, 2,
"in
ceteris
autem nullam
esse
venditionem puto, quotiens in materia erratur." In L. 11, pr. eod., the existence of a consensus in such cases is negatived.
It is
might wish to treat the contract as binding, and to claim the difference of price ex contractu ; but this he cannot do, since there was no contract, even in cases where the vendor was in dolo. But fraud in such cases has independent consequences. The vendor would be liable in an action of deceit, and would be required to pay damages to indemnify the purchaser for his loss, even though the contract itself was a nullity. The vendor is obliged to put the purchaser in tlie position he would have been in had there been no such
transaction.
The nullity
was
may be
of
This, however, was wanting. complicated by the introduction There may, for other conditions.
Roman
jurisprudence
it is
one of the
that jurisprudence in
its
more perfect
development.
the doctrine,
an express warranty
the warranty
of
some subordi-
may
be sued either on
in so
See
The only cases, so Savigny holds, which errors of this class are held
Oakes v. Turquant, L. R. 2 H. L. Clough i-. R. R., L. R. 7 Ex. 26 Foreman v. Bigelow, 4 Cliff. C. C. 508
346
tung) of purchased goods, as where he buys a vessel of brass or lead for a vessel of gold or silver, or where he
Cooper
Newman, 45 N. H.
Lindsley
tions.
v.
misrepresentations
supra,
may
to
rescind,
see
buys vinegar
for
wine.
The
result in
214.
As
the distinction
such cases is the same whether the vendor was or was not participant in
the purchaser's error.
The main
efi"ect
420
CHAP.
tion,^
XIII.]
RESCISSION
it
is
RATIFICATION.
it is
[ 283.
though
otherwi^, so
declared,
when
the
but in what is called constructive fraud, as where a trustee buys the cestui que trust's property, while in cases of constructive fraud the transaction, being merely voidable, may be confirmed.^ But this exception no longer is maintained in PennIf adopted sylvania,^ and cannot on principle be supported.
it
would paralyze
business.
Few
;
statements
made during
in which each party does not seek to make a good bargain, and does not use language in which a severe critic might not discover at least omissions of facts the statement of which might have caused hesitancy on the other side. If all sales in which false pretences of any kind have been used are so void as to be incapable of subsequent confirmation, it is hard to see what titles would be secure. Fraud is easily charged, and depends, as a matter of fact, upon the opinion of a jury based upon the case that may happen to be presente 1 at trial. To say that all sales in which fraud enters are void would
expose the
title,
contingencies which
no
against*
At
no
title
passes, and,
action
Chess
;
is
V.
&
Watts,
v.
In Moor-
32
St.
St.
Jackson
359
321;
;
Summerville, 13 Penn.
v. Graff,
house
it
Woolfe, 46 L. T. N. S. 374,
McCaskey
23 Penn.
McHugh
391
;
;
v.
Schuylkill Co., 67
v.
Penn.
St.
Seylor
Carson, 69
was held that where a party acting money-lender offers by public advertisement to lend on easy terms, and
as
Penn.
*
St. 81
PearsoU
r.
v.
Negley
v.
St. St.
then exacts from a borrower peculiarly hard terms, the burden will be on the
lender to prove that the terms of the
217.
effect,
loan were
borrower.
s
made
fully
known
5
to the
Foster
Supra,
183; infra;
291
Cundy
;
Stacy
v.
v.
Ross, 27 Tex.
3.
v.
Hardv.
Shisler
Vandike, 92 Penn.
St.
man
v.
Booth, 1 H.
&
;
C. 803
;
Hollins
288.
;
Fowler, L. R. 7 H. L. 757
Moody
v.
Myton
Barker
Dins-
421
284.]
CONTRACTS.
title
CHAP. xiir.
though the party obtaining the goods is exposed to a prosecution for false pretences, and to an action of deceit, as well
as to a rescission of the contract.^
only applies to
tract
title.
parties concerned
in
This distinction, however, So far as involves the relations of the the bargain, the mere fact that the conits
may
intermediate efficiency.^
284.
who
must
must be
in
able time.
By
dormant
after
tfmT.^^^^
when
For a party imposed upon to delay unnecessarily his repudiation of the contract by which he was defrauded is evidence from which a ratification may be inferred ;* though mere length of time does not by itself give ground for this inference, without proof of suThere must have been knowledge of pine acquiescence.^ the fraud to make lapse of time by itself a bar.^ And knowlmore, 72 Penn.
Pollock, 409
supra, 183
1
;
liamson
Kollock
v.
V,
Knowlton,
Weekly
Notes,
infra. 291.
Supra, 183
tinction
Leaming v. Wise, 73 Penn. St. 173 Morgan v. McKee, 77 Penn. St. 228: Hunt v. Stuart, 53 Md. 225;
514
; ;
infra, 291.
Heald
V.
v.
Wright, 75
;
111.
17
Gatling
v.
Infra, 288.
Watson Coal
v.
Co.
Infra,
289
Central R. R.
;
v.
Kish, R. R.,
Ful-
L. R. 2 H. L. 99
L. R. 7 Eq. 154;
Heymann
v.
lerton, 69
448; Barfield
v.
Price,
40 Cal. 535
V.
Memphis,
etc.
;
R.
R.
Neighbors, 51
Miss. 412
Crutch-
v.
v. v.
field V. Stanfield,
Ins.
8 Ex. 203;
Trebilcock,
91
U. S. 45
Upton Pence
Bright
r.
Legerton, 2 D. F.
.J.
Langdon, 99 U.. S. 578; Weeks v. Robie, 42 N. H. 316; Manahan i\ Noyes, 52 N. H, 232 Mattesou r. Holt, 45 Vt. 336 Whitcomb v. Demo, 52 Vt. 382 Bassett v. Brown, 105 Mass. 551
;
Charter
r.
Trevelyan, 11 CI.
&
F.
714.
Degraw
r.
mond
V.
Ham;
Lindsay Petrol. Co. Infra, 289 Hnrd, L. R. 5 P. C. 221 Wright v. Vanderplank, 8 D. M. G. 133 Campbell V. Fleming, 1 Ad. & El. 40:
6
;
V.
Wil-
Veazie
v.
Williams,
How.
134
422
CHAP. XIII.]
RESCISSION: RATIFICATION.
[ 285.
edge of facts of which the party was bound to take notice But "acquiescence and waiver are always will be inferred.^ questions of fact. There can be neither without knowledge." Nor can the wrong done in such cases exact perfect vigilance on the part of the other contracting party. Ordinary business
sagacity
is
all
that
is
required .^
The question of
reasonable
one of mixed law and fact.^ party seeking to rescind must, as an ordinary pre 285. requisite to recover, otier to return before trial what- party reever he may have obtained from the contract he thus ^J,t^^f applies to repudiate ;* and in cases of conveyance of equity. land, must tender a reconveyance.'' The party from whom time
is
the relief
is
is
possible, in the
of.
position he
was
in before
Gryines
teson
V.
v.
Sanders, 93 U.
;
S.
55
Mat
Upton V. Trebilcock, 91 U. S. 45 Whitney v. Allaire, 4 Denio, 554 Baker v. Lever, 67 N. Y. 304. 2 Pence v. Langdon, 99 U. S. 581 and see De Bussclie v see infra, 289
1
;
102 U. S. 79 Cushman v. Marshall, 21 Emerson v. McNamara, 41 Me. 122 Me. 565; Cook v. Oilman, 34 N. H. 556 Poor v. Woodburn, 25 Vt. 234 Coolidge V. Brigham, 1 Met. 547 Esta;
Rowe, 44 Vt. 389 Williams V. Powell, 101 Mass. 467 Hedges V. R. R., 49 N. Y. 223 Morgan v. McKee, " What is a reason77 Penn. St. 228.
Rothschild
V.
v.
Pratt
able time or
facts are
undue
delay,
is
when
the
not disputed,
a question of
St. 228.
law
to
Morgan
McKee, 77 Penn.
Burton V. Stewart, 3 Wend. 236 Cobb v. Hatfield, 46 N. Y. 533 Parkinson v. Sherman, 74 N. Y. 72 Turnpike Co. v. Com., 2 Watts, 433; Roth v. Crissy, 30 Penn. St. 145 Babcock v. Case, 61 Penn. St. 427 Beetem v. Burkholder, 69 Penn. St. 249 Morrow v. Rees, 69 Penn. St. 368 Jennings v. Gage, 13 111. 610 Williams v. Ketchum, 21 Wis. 432. 5 Kimball v. Cunningham, 4 Mass. 502 Nicholson v. Halsey, 1 John. Ch. 417 Pearsoll v. Chapin, 44 Penn. St. 9 Wilbur v. Flood, 16 Mich. 40 Parks
brook
V.
When
and
tions
if
V.
Bla-
ney
reasonable
time or
undue
may
secure
them by
J.,
Trunkey,
Penn. 1882,
Weekly
r.
Notes, 367.
;
Infra, 919
Bwlch-y-Plwm Lead
;
Hanks, 14 Iowa, 400 Mitchell V, Moore, 24 Iowa, 394. 5 Bigelow on Fraud, ch. xi. 5 Bellamy v. Sabine, 2Phill. 425; Savery v. King, 5 H. L. C. 627 Neblett Ayers v. V. Macfarland, 92 U. S. 101 Hewett, 19 Me. 281 Farris v. Ware, 60 Me. 482 Potter v. Titcomb, 22 Me.
;
Co.
V.
Clough
v.
300
Sumner
v.
R. R., L. R. 7 Ex. 26
Gay
Alter,
Wllloughby
V.
423
285.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XIII.
mean
may have reThat absolute restitution is impossible, is no bar when fraud is shown ;^ but a tender of performance is not necessary in cases where the defendant has admitted his inability to perform.' Nor is a tender of reconveyance necessary when
can restore, and surrender any advantages he
ceived.^
is
no interest to reconvey,* or when the thing in question In any view, however, possession of a thing bought, when such thing is of value, must be surrendered or
there
is
worthless.*
Rowley
ley
r.
v.
Perr.
grove
V.
Himmelrich, 54 Penn.
St. 203.
Thayer
v.
Dailey
Green,
Buffington
;
QuanRenshaw v.
v.
v.
See mpra, 312, 603, 716-747. It is otherwise when there is no such admission as shows the performance of
the contract on the defendant's part
is
LeflFerman, 51
Md. 277
188
;
Smith
v.
Brit-
impossible.
St. 24.
V.
Irvin
v.
Bleekley, 67
tenhara, 98
9 Ind. 572
;
111.
Galling
r.
Newell,
Penn.
Hyslip
v.
French, 52 Wis.
Bates
v.
513
Johnson
Jones, 13 Sm.
& M.
Perley
V.
McCabe
580; Pilcher r. Smith, 2 Head, 208; First Nat. Bank v. Yocum, 11 Neb.
328.
Burns, 66 Penn.
356
77 Penn.
That the identical currency received need not be tendered, see Michietc.
That rescission of a written be by parol, see Laner v. Lee, 42 Penn. St. 165; though it is
St. 309.
contract
may
gan,
128.
R. R.
V.
Dunham, 30 Mich.
That a party seeking to recover back consideration paid on forged instrument, must offer to return it to defendant before suit brought, see Roth
V.
provement.
Barr, 259.
s
Cravender
And
so
to rescind a
pur-
Babcock v. Case, 61 Penn. St. 427; Beetem v. Burkholder, 69 Penn. St. Morrow v. Rees, 69 Penn. St. 249
;
368.
>
Thurston v. Blanchard, 22 Pick. Duval v. Mowry, 6 R. I. 479 18 Frost V. Lowry, 15 Ohio, 200 but see Cook V. Gilman, 34 N. H. 556. If the thing, however, can be made use of as an advantage in any way, or if its loss would be a disadvantage to the party by whom it was sold, tender should be made. Morse v. Brackett, 98 Mass. 205 104 Mass. 494 Bassett v. Brown,
; ; ;
; ;
Downer
Roberts,
v.
Smith, 32 Vt. 1
Martin
v.
105 Mass.
551.
That tender
is
not
V.
Cush. 126
;
Masson
v.
Bovet, 1 Denio, 69
Gatling
Newall,
Clarke
R. 1 Sc.
v.
Dickson, E. B.
D. 169
&
v.
E. 148;
9 Ind. 572.
2
Western Bank
v.
of Scotland v. Addie, L.
;
Ibid
Myrick
&
Bacon
Brown, 4
Cross-
Bibb, 91.
424
CHAP. XIII.]
RESCISSION: RATIFICATION.
[ 285.
is
tender will not be insisted on as a condition precedent.^ Nor is a party defrauded compelled to keep perishable property in
good condition as a prerequisite to a bill for rescission.^ A tender of purchase money, also, is not requisite when, in the
transaction complained of as fraudulent, the party charged
A tender at
previously made.*
And
it
who, by
his
trial,
trial opens.^
As
necessary
when
the judg-
ment asked
Vigers
v.
v.
Pike, 8 CI.
F. 562
;
V.
Martindale
v.
Norton
ing
V,
Infra, 312,
Perley
v.
Balch,
Allerton
v.
v.
Allerton, 50 N. Y. 670
23 Pick. 286
Ladd
v.
v.
Moore, 3 Sandf.
Harris
See
It
589; Gould
Smith V. Webster, 2 Watts, 478; Jackson v. McGinnis, 14 Penn. St. 331 Stewart i-. Keith, 12 Penn. St. 238; Haase v. Mitchell, 58 Ind. 213 War;
when
the
fraud on
purchaser's
part,
the
vendor
is
ren
V.
Tyler, 81
111.
15.
As
to tender
money
V.
received by
him
;
as
a prere-
Weeden
Smith V. Smith, 30 Vt. 139 Chandler V. Simmons, 97 Mass. 508; Bartlett v. Drake, 100 Mass. 174; Masson v.
Infra, 661-995.
Neblett
v.
Macfarland, 92 U. S. 101.
989.
et
;
Hawes, 10 Conn. 50 Sands v. Codwise, 4 Johns. 536 McCaskey v. Graff, 23 Penn. St. 321 Seylor v. Carson, 69 Penn. St. 81 Forniquet v. Forstall, 34 Miss. 87. This, however, is based on the assumption that a sale induced by fraud
;
227.
6
is
is else-
998
seq.;
Kiefer
v.
v.
as a
Rogers, 19 Minn. 32
Martin
7
Martin,
35 Ala. 560.
And
it is
hard
to see
how
Hammond
Baney
v.
v.
Killmer, 1 Barr, 30
Frost
hands.
425
286.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XIII.
part, cannot,
demand a rescission and what he has already paid.^ The vendee of stock
return of
in
a cor-
poration,
who
is
rescinds on the
ground of fraud
his contract
of purchase,
for
left
on deposit
Where
money paid on
^q^q q^ ]q{\ undone things " on the basis of the contract which would expose him to irreparable ant's ladies ^ mi loss II the contract 18 rescinded.* ihus an insurance other parvoidable on the ground of fraudupolicy may be be exp^o'sed toioss. \qi^i concealment by the insured; but the insurer who knows of this concealment, and apparently acquiesces in it, cannot, when the insured would thereby lose the opportunity of insurance, rescind it.' " Or the interest taken under the contract by the party misled may have been so dealt with (with his assent) that he cannot give back the same thing he received. On this principle, a shareholder cannot repudiate his shares if the character and constitution of the company have in the mean time been altered." In such cases it has been held too late to repudiate the shares, the only remedy being an action
when by complain,
.
-i
<
ments.'
And
made
v.
v.
a party
who makes
it is
otherwise
when such
resti-
is
whom
v.
the original
Ex.
Pierce
Morrison
Ins. Co., L. R. 8
2 '
Pence
Langdon, 99 U.
;
S. 578.
206.
6
5 Barr, 279
Feay
v.
Reel,
15 S.
Clarke
?
Dickson, E. B.
&
E. 148.
R, 227.
Ibid.
Clarke
v.
Dickson, 6 C. B.
< Clough V. R. R., L. R. 7 Ex. 26; Baker v. Lever, 67 N. Y. 304 Bond v. Ramsey, 89 111. 29 Bulkley v. Morgan, 46 Conn. 393; Mecke v. Ins. Co., 8 Phila. 6 see Knight v. Houghtalling,
;
Addie, L. R. 1 Sc.
8
Vigers
v. v.
Pike, 8 CI.
&
F. 562
Nickel Co.
Unwin,
v.
L. R. 2 Q. B. D.
;
214
McCrillis
85 N. C. 17.
iiifra,
426
CHAP. XIIL]
RESCISSION: RATIFICATION.
[ 287.
fraud
is
imputable.^
The same
Roman
and is affirmed in the Scotch law. " It can only be had where the party seeking it is able to put those against whom it is asked in the same situation in which thej- stood when the contract was entered into. This is necessarily to be inferred from the expression restitutio in integrum ; and the same doctrine is well understood and constantly acted on in England."^ But the mere possession of property taken under a contract of sale does not preclude the purchaser from contesting the sale on ground of fraud. In decreeing rescission, the court can give compensation by an account of rents and profits.^ " So long as he has made no election, he retains the right to determine it either
in respect to the restitutio in integrum,
law
way;
is
so
deliberating, an innocent third party has acquired an interest, or if in consequence of his delay, the position even of the
him from exercising and lapse of time without rescinding will furnish evidence that he has determined to affirm the
wrong-doer
is
contract."*
tain relief
A party, also, implicated in a fraud, cannot obfrom a contract the fraud induced,' unless he was
>
Hammond
v.
Pennock, 61 N. Y.
6 ^
Supra, 235
Infra, 353.
infra, 340.
145.
Lord Cranworth, in Western Bk. of V. Addie, L. R. 1 Sc. & D. 164. 3 Lindsay Petroleum Co. v. Kurd, L. R. 5 P. C. 240 King v. King, 1 M. & K. 442 Met. R. R. Co. v. Defries, L. R. 2 Q. B. D. 189. * Per cur. in Ciough v. R. R., L. R. 7 Ex. 35 adopted by the court in Mor2
Herrin
r.
v.
Scotland
son
Bovet,
Denio, 69
;
Morrow
v.
Moral School
ciough
v. v.
see
166.
Dawes
rison
v.
v.
Smith, L. R. 4
427
288.]
CONTRACTS.
"[chap. XIII.
But the
notice
must not
another
sale to
and the second purchaser will be protected against the first, when the first purchase was fraudulent.' As the plea of fraud imports an avoidance of the contract, it is necessary, to support it, to show some act of avoidance, as the return of the goods, or other circumstances showing the repudiation of the contract.* Hence, in an action by a company against a shareholder on calls, a plea alleging that he was induced by fraud to take shares is not sufficient; repudiation as
party
is
notice,
A
"^
contract
may
be ratified
maybe by conduct.
Clough
v.
by the party injured, after a knowledsje of the fraud. * ^1 ^. ^ -^ accepting ot any benefit under it f or by in any way acting upon it after such ktiowledge of the fraud ;"
, '
,
V.
Morrison
Blackburn
Schooley
v.
Ashley's case, L;
263;
Scholefield
Templer, 4 De G.
&
J.
MayIn
is
429
nard
v.
Nevada a
V.
not
Oakes v. Turquand, L. R. 2 H. L. 346 Selway v. Fogg, 5 M. & W. 83 Ogilvie V. Ins. Co., 22 How. 380 Mas; : ;
Pence
381.
son
V.
Bovet, 1 Denio, 69
.Joselyn v.
Langdon, 99 U.
S. 598.
111.
Whitney
v.
Roberts, 22
to be delivered
was taken by tlie purchaser on trial, and found not to correspond to the warranty, it was
held sufficient rescission of the contract to give notice of the non-accep-
Cowee, 52 N. Y. 90; Seal v. Dutfy, 4 Barr, 274; Mecke v. Ins. Co., 8 Philada. 6 Filby v. Miller, 25 Penn. St. 264 Crane v. Kildorf, 91 111. 567 Jackson v. .Jackson, 47 Ga. 99 Davis Evans v. ForeV. Evans, 62 Ala. 401 man, 60 Mo. 449. That successors are barred by their predecessors' laches, see Skottowe v. Williams, 3 D. F. G. 535. As to ratification in other cases
;
; ; ; ;
see 58
"I
et seq.
Starr
i:
Torrey, 2 Zab.
v.
Ayscough, 6 E.
&
V.
Campbell r. Fleming, 1 A. & E. 40 Gray v. Fowler, L. R. 8 Ex. 249 Sharpley v. R. R., L. R. 2 Ch. D. 663 Clough V. R. R., 7 Ex. 34; Selway r. Fogg, 5 M. & W. 83 Blydeuburgh r. Welsh, Baldw. 331 Northrop r. Bush;
; ; ;
Harness, L. R. 10 C. P. 166.
*
nell, 38
Conn. 498
People
v.
r.
Stephens,
7
v.
Ayscough, 6 E.
71 N. Y. 527;
Paige, 124;
Moffat
v.
Winslow,
&
B. 761.
Mecke
428
CHAP.
XIII.]
RESCISSION: RATIFICATION.
aft'ect
;^
[ 288.
or by laches which
the contested
title
money on a
enset-
work and
was known
;*
or, generally,
In any view, a party is not estopped by an affirmance before discovery of the fraud.'' As has been already
noticed,^
it
was
Pennsylvania that a
This,
fraudulent contract
however, except as to frauds which involve a crime, is now " Where the fraud is of such a character as to overruled.^" involve a crime, the ratification of the act from which it sprung is opposed to public policy, and, hence, cannot be permitted but where the transaction is contrary only to good faith and fair dealing, where it affects individual interests and nothing else, ratification is allowable.""
;
Rogers
v.
Higgins,
Lea,
57
111.
244
577;
v.
Duncan
;
v.
Knuckolls
V.
10
Humph.
;
Thweatt
V.
v.
Bobb
;
Woodward, 50 Mo,
Badger v. Badger, 2 Wal. 87 Willoughby V. Moulton, 47 N. H. 208; Weaver i\ Carpenter, 42 Iowa, 343. ' Ferguson v. Carrington, 9 B. & C. 59 Gray v. Fowler, L. R. 8 Ex. 249
;
Dibblee
v.
McCullough, 4 S. & R. 483 Adams f. Shelley, 10 Ala. 478 People v. Stephens, 71 N. Y. 527. Matteson v. Holt, 45 Vt. 336 Yeates f. Pryor, 6 Eng. (Ark.) 58. ^ Doggett v. Emerson, 3 Story, 740 Pratt v. Phillbrook, 41 Me. 132; Mackinley v. McGregor, 3 Whart. R. 369 Pierce r. Wilson, 34 Ala. 596 and
;
;
Bank
Coleman v. Oil Co., 51 Penn. St. 77 Reed v. McGrew, 5 Ohio, 375 Wald's
;
Supra, 283.
Pollock, 507.
McHugh
391.
v.
Schuylkill, 67 Penn.
Vigers
r.
v.
Pike,
CI.
&
F. 562;
St.
Hough
*
Saratoga R. R.
Row, 24 Wend.
28.
74.
6
447.
'
Vigers
Pike, 8 CI.
&
F. 562
Dingley
Ibid. 449,
Gordon,
4:^9
J.
289.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XIII.
289
Mere lapse
of time
estop.*^
When
^
fraud
i
is
successfully concealed,
no length of
n
,
time, no matter
i i
how
true state of facts.* Mere non-discovery of the facts, however, will not prevent the running of the statute " unless the relation of the parties is such that it was the duty of the party complained of to make the disclosure."^ And
where there is a discovery of the fraud, the disaffirmance should be prompt.^ Reasonable time, however, will be allowed to a party, after discovery of a fraud, to assure himself
of
its reality.*
is
great,
it
be treated as conclusive evidence to show that he has so determined.'" " But in every case, if an argument against relief
which otherwise would be just is founded on mere delay, the validity of that defence must be tried upon principles substantially equitable.
Two
such cases are, the length of the delay, and the nature of the
done during the interval which might and cause a balance of justice or injustice
acts
either party,
taking the one course or the other, so far as relates to the remedy."^ Hence, where a shareholder applies to have his contract to take shares rescinded on account of fraud, while the application
in
it
is
difficult to lay
down any
;
infra,
603,
son
v.
Bovet, 1 Denio, 69
;
Fisher
v.
Ch. 55
F. 714
Michoud
r.
Girod, 4
How. 561
153;
v.
Williams v. Ketchum, 21 Wis. 432 Moore v. Holt, 3 Ten. Ch. 248 Noble v, Noble, 26 Ark.
Wilson, 18 Ind. 133
;
Nealou
Ralf
V.
Henry,
131
Mass.
;
317.
*
Cock
Partridge
v.
v.
Us borne,
Russ.
95
Van
Torrance
118
;
Bolton, L. R. 8 Ch.
v.
App.
Bisph. Eq.
ton,
Wal. 443
;
Doggett
Emerson, 3 Story R.
622.
740
s
Story on Cont.
q^xv,
3 Story R. 611
Hough
;
v. v. v.
Richardson,
pgr
3 Story R. 695
Callis
Waddy,
7 Ex. 35,
Munf. 511
Iowa, 556
Humphreys
Wilson
v.
Mattoon,43
Ivey, 32 Miss.
Hurd,
L. R. 5
233
8
Ibid.
Bulkley
v.
Venezuela R. R.
;
v.
Kisch, L. R. 2 H.
L. 99
Heyman
v.
430
CHAP.
XIII.]
RESCISSION
RATIFICATION.
[ 290.
the ground of repudiation of shares have been discovered in every case attention must be paid to circumstances."^ In any view a party will not be permitted, after notice, to remain quiet and wait until the question of success is determined. " Although it is the
character should be
made
undoubted duty of the court to relieve persons who have been it is equally the duty of the
anxiety to correct frauds,
it
who have
convert their speculations into certainties at the expense of those with whom they are joined. "'^ Unless the circumstances be such as properly to lead to an inference of
assent, acquiescence is not to be imputed.^
What
has been
An
final.
It is a question
which a party who claims to Hence it has been held that a party who sets up fraud in a sale of goods cannot,
play fast and loose.'
price of the goods
Aua'ianV* "^* ^^
before the expiration of the credit on the sale, sue for the
;
him
as fraudulent,
and
to sue in
trover.^
Nor can a
and disaffirmed in
*
part.^
But
it is
otherwise
when
a contract
Cairns, L. C. Ogilvie
v.
Currie, 37
L. J. C. 541,
*
ton, 5 D.
M.
&
Ferguson v. Carrington, 9 B. & C. Wald's Pollock, 507, citing Dellone v. Hull, 47 Md. 112, Kellogg v. Turpie, 2 Bradw. 55, concurring, and Wigand
^
59
2d
3
ed. 394.
v.
S. P.
Potter
Crillis v. Carlton,
V.
McEvans
;
581.
*
Infra, 919.
Clough V. R. R., L, R. 7 Ex. 26; see Bigelow on Fraud, 425 Ogilvie v. Currie, 37 L. J. C. 541 Selway v. Fogg, 5 M. & W. 83.
6
; ;
204;
Great Luxembourg R. R.
;
v.
Magnay, 25 Beav. 586 Farmers' Bk. v. Groves, 12 How, 51 Potter v. TitMiner v. Bradley, comb, 22 Me. 300
;
;
431
291.]
is divisible, in
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XIII.
which
may be singly repudiated.^ When, on the other hand, the contract consists of conditions reciprocally dependent, " it
tract
cannot be rescinded in part and stand good for the residue. If it cannot be rescinded in toto, it cannot be rescinded at all,
but the party complaining of the non performance, or the must resort to an .action for damages."^ A contract cannot be rescinded as to one party and remain effective as Affirmance merely precludes the right to to the other.'
fraud,
rescind.
suit for
damages
is
^'^^'^
^^^
then, if third
i
i
granted if rights of
parties intervene.
and
,
for a
t
good consideration
cannot be set aside by the party deEven assuming there was no neffliffence frauded. on his part, yet, between himself and innocent third parties, the loss should equitably fall on him in cases where his conduct led to the loss. This rule is applied in favor of a bo7ia fide purchaser of a chattel from a party who has fraudulently obtained the property
"It
v.
22 Pick. 457; Filby u. Miller, 25 Penn. Kellogg v. Turpie, 93 111. 265. St. 264 See, however, contra. Roth v. Palmer, 27 Barb. 652; Wigand v. Sichel, 3
;
Herrin
v.
Miller
v.
Barber,
Clement, 37
Eckart, 61
111.
v.
Keyes, 120,
'
318
Peck
v.
;
Brewer, 48
55.
Infra, 338
Bellamy
v.
Sabine, 2
Supra,
;
211
White
v.
Phillips, 425.
C. B. 919
Moyce
;
Garden, 10 Newington, L. R.
v.
v.
Per cur. in Nickel Co. v. Unwin, L. R. 2 Q. B. D. 214 citing Clarke v. Dickson, 1 E. B. & E. 148 see supra,
*
; ;
4 Q.
B. D. 32
;
Stevenson
Newnham,
13 C. B. 285
Load
v.
Green, 15 M.
&
W.
276
infra,
919
S. P.
;
Simpson, 14
Earl, 2 Hill,
Junkins Voorhees
Barry
r.
v.
Ditson r. Randall, 33 Me. 216 Titcomb v. Wood, 38 Me. 561 202 Cooper r. Newman, 45 N. H. 339 Row; ; ;
And
;
see Brinr.
ley
r.
Moody
v.
ley
V.
Tibbetts, 7 Greenl. 70
;
32 Barb. 490
;
N. C. 17.
V. v.
Coolidge
;
550
Bishop
N. Y. 371 Devoe v Brandt, 53 N. Y. 462; Barnard v. Campbell, 58 N. Y. Sinclair v. Healey, 40 Penn. St. 73 417 Hall f. Hinks, 21 Md. 406 Wil; ; ;
liams
v.
432
CHAP. XIII.]
is
rescission: ratification.
[ 291.
tel
when a vendee obtains possession of a chatwith the intention by the vendor to transfer both the property and the possession, although the vendor has committed a false and fraudulent misrepresentation in order to effect a
quite clear that
vendee until the vendor has done some act to disaffirm the and the legal consequence is, that, if before transaction the disaffirmance the fraudulent vendee has transferred over the whole or part of the chattel to an innocent transferee, the The title of such transferee is good against the vendor."^ reason is this On the one side all property would be destroyed
;
if
all
On
chattel
his
false representations
The
difficulty is
by which solved by
party
who
parts
with property as well as possession cannot pursue goods into the hands of bona fide vendees.^ But a party who receives property from a fraudulent vendee in payment of an antecedent debt takes it subject to the owner's rights ;^ and so, a fortiori, as to an assignee taking with notice of the fraud,* or taking without consideration.* Even when goods fraudulentl}'- obtained are levied on as the property of the person fraudulently
is
apply
v.
Dean
nings
son
V.
v.
V.
Jen-
In Oakes
Gage, 13
V.
111.
610
Chicago
;
v.
Dock Co.
r.
Foster, 48
111.
111.
507
;
Dicker-
Evans, 84
451
Hutchiman
;
Watkins, 19 Iowa, 475 Gregory v. Schoenell, 55 Ind. 101 Kern v. Thurher, 57 Ga. 172 Nicol v. Crittenden,
; ;
sales
of
shares
in companies
as
55 Ga. 497
Benj'.
'
r.
cited
433.
Merry, 11
of the
Mr. Leake (2d ed. 398) cites further to this point, Pease v. Gloahec,
Ex. 577.
L. R. 1 P. C. 219.
*
254;
;
Shewmake
v.
v.
Williams, 54 Ga.
Campbell, 58 N.
In Kingsford
r.
Merry,
H.
&
N.
re-
Crocker
Ibid,
v.
Crocker, 31 N. Y. 507.
was
VOL.
I. 28
433
292.]
CONTRACTS.
officer,
[chap. XIII.
hands of the
And,
as a
who
who
take with notice of the fraud, acquire no rights beyond those of their fraudulent assignor.^ !N^or can the fraudulent vendee by selling to an innocent third party, and then buying back
from him, obtain a good title against the true owner.^ Nor do purchasers without consideration take any better title than their assignors.* party, therefore, who takes no title to a chattel, 292. cannot ordinarily (excepting in cases of market Party withovert, which in this country does not exist),* or in out title cannot pass cases where the owner is estopped by negligence, title. pass title to an assignee. Tims A., who by falsely pretending to B. that he is sent by C. for goods bouglit by C. from B., obtains such goods from B., passes no title by selling such goods to D., though D. buys bona fide f and the same rule has been held to apply to cases where A. obtains goods by false personation f and by a bare fraud without any contract to transfer property, or any transfer of property.^ Hence, where goods were obtained on the pretence of the party ob-
Jordon
v.
Field
'
r.
Wiggin
r.
v.
v.
Day,
20
v. v.
342
757
Higgons HoUins
R.
V.
V.
r.
Burton, 26 L.
J.
Ex.
Fowler, L. R. 7 H. L.
9 Gray, 97
Whitman
Hitchcock
Merrill, 125
Covill,
;
Gillings, 1 F.
Mass. 127
Hench, R.
V.
&
R. 163
Wend. 167
Willsie, 79
23 Wend. 611
;
Devoe
Co.
say, L. R. 3
aflF.
Brandt, 53 N. Y. 462
111.
Am. Ex.
i'.
Cunday,
V.
L. R. 2 Q. B. D. 96
Lindsay Hard;
92.
;
man
Booth, 1 H.
&
;
C. 803
Moody
v.
r.
r.
Clough R. R., L. see Babcock v. Lawson, R. 7 Ex. 26 L. R. 4 Q. B. D. 394 Negley v. LindLepper i'. Nuttsay, 69 Penn, St. 217 man, 35 Ind. 384; Mendenhall v. Treedway, 44 Ind. 131.
Supra, 233
; ; ;
McDerDinsr.
&
R. 500
St.
Barker
;
more, 72 Penn.
427
;
Striker
r.
Mc-
Michael, 1 Phila. 89
thai, 5 Rich. 237
;
State
Linden-
State v. Brown, 25
Iowa, 561.
733.
As
to bona jide
;
purchasers
8
*
Schutt
V.
Sitpra,
;
211
Adams
v.
v.
Stevens,
49 Me. 362
619
;
Root
Bancroft, 8 Gray,
;
may
infra, 734.
Kingsford
Merry, 1 H.
ut supra
&
;
N. 503
Cunday
730-2.
9a
;
Lindsay,
infra,
V.
Infra, 734.
Foster
Mackinnon, L. R. 4 C. P.
t/a,. 733,
704.
s
793.
Ibid.
434
CHAP. XIII.]
RESCISSION
RATIFICATION.
[ 293.
taining being
known
goods could be recovered from a third party, to whom they had been bona fide sold.' This distinction is clearly put by Mr. Benjamin.^ The vendor " may sue in assumpsit for the price, and this affirms the contract, or he may sue in trover for the goods or their value, and this disaffirms it. But in the mean time, and until he elects, if his vendee transfer the goods in
whole or
a special property in
whether the transfer be of the general or of them, to an innocent third person for a valuable consideration, the rights of the original vendor will
in part,
if,
on
to
but merely to part with the possession of the goods, there is no sale,
and
he
who
to
in them
any
passed
to
The
test
is,
did the
how
is
practised
an intention by the vendor to pass the title, no matter how fraudulently false may have been the transferee's representation of his condition and means, the title passes.*
there
293.
tract
is
on him.^
And where
As
will be hereafter
more
fully seen,"
when a
con-
or deliveries, and
veries
,
when
these instalments
and
deli-
maybe
fau^re'^iu*''^
i,*",
deliveries
1
1/.-1
part, per-
formance.
promisee to rescind.
Cunday
v.
Lindsay, ut supra
;
and
''
Attenborough
v.
St.
Katherine's
infra,
3d Am. ed. 433. Clough V. R. R., L. R. 7 Ex. 26. That bona fide receivers for value of articles lost or stolen receive no title, see Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 6.
Sales,
Dock Co., L. R. 3 C. P. D. 450. See Babcock v. Lawson, L. R. 5 Q. B. D. 284 and cases cited supra, 182, 211, 291 infra, 347, 352. That there is no market overt in this country, see
; ;
infra, 734.
435
293.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XIIL
Notwithitself
may
the in-
and to invest
it,
manent
disqualifications
is
which, as
and proinsolvent
But an
implication throw up a contract of purchase by which bound, and this implication is held to exist where the insolvent, in notifying the vendor of his insolvency, says nothing of his desire to hold on to his bargain.^
may by
is
he
Morgan
v.
Bain, L. R. 10 C. P. 15
L. R. 5 Eq. 160.
1031
sion
et seq.
That there
may
be rescis-
by lapse
Tondeur ex parte,
see tn/ro, 661
;
On As
to rescission
et seq,
by
release, infra,
436
CHAP. XIV.]
IMPOSSIBILITY.
CHAPTER
XIV.
IMPOSSIBILITY.
Original impossibility
subjective or objective
porary or
when
the risk
is
one promisor took, 311. Party making performance of a contract impossible cannot complain,
tial or absolute,
296.
Subsequent impossibility
or
may be either
;
312.
temporary
permanent 297.
partial or absolute,
313.
And
posed
299.
316.
When
mised
300.
destroyed, contract
is
void,
purchaser,
317.
319.
know
of
no defence,
320.
302.
Otherwise,
ought
303.
to
or
and other guarantees reby casus or necessity, 321. Subsequent impossibility a defence to
Bail bonds lieved
Subjective incapacity no
323.
defence to
an engagement
325.
to
marry,
324.
by prom 307.
negligence no defence,
Work
to be paid for
though thing
is
Casus
is
308.
327.
still
When
there
is
an
alternative
437
297.]
CONTRACTS.
condition
is
[chap. XIV.
Impossibility
may
be
permanent or
temporary,
331.
the
first
being
may
be either objective or
may
be
done the second where the parties are incapable of or absolute. doing such thing. Original impossibility, also, may be either temporary or permanent and may be partial or absolute.^ As will be hereafter more fully seen, temporary necessity only temporarily suspends the remedy,^ and partial
;
With
question
is
im-
If there be
after seen,
no such imputability, the promisor, as will be hereSubsequent impossibility, is not liable.^ also, may be either temporary or permanent, partial
permanent;
partial or absolute.
or absolute.'
By
the
Roman
when
"Quod
nullius esse
fieret,
infra,
298
Mommsen,
in his treatise
et
seq.
Windscheid, Pandekt.
264,
on
Die Unmiiglichkeit
der
Leistung
where are
(1853) (pp. 420), to which numerous references will be made in this chapter.
Infra, 331.
107, it is
if
3
*
Infra, 330.
that
the act
itself
objectively
arises,
Infra, 308
Infra,
;
et seq.
;
impossible,
no obligation
is
but
330-1
Trest
v.
v.
Orono, 26
liable
when
either
Me. 217
see
;
Woodward
v.
Cowing, 13
the impossibility
is
purely subjective,
Mass. 216
dependent upon his own incapacity, or when he brings about by his own act an objective impossibility. The subject great fulness and is discussed with
139; Murray
Wharton
65.
6
v.
O'Hara, 2 Nott.
& McC.
438
CHAP. XIV.J
IMPOSSIBILITr.
[ 298.
When
the thing to be done is specifically limited, and this becomes impossible, an equivalent cannot be called for. The rule is tersely expressed by Celsus:^ " Impossibilium nulla
obligatio."
is clear,
rule, so argues
Mommsen,^
impossi-
if
thing.
away when
bility intervenes.
According
1.
Obligations which
parties. 2. Obligations which take their origin from an act of the parties, without being expressly designed. Under this head fall the obligations of an agent incidental to the assumption of the agency. 3. Obligations which originate
by the
With
regard to the
quiry
is,
knew
is
of the impossibility.
inoperative.*
was
298. Suppose the thing contracted for did not exist at the time of the agreement, are the parties bound ? If Noa-existthey were ignorant of such non-existence, not only ence of cannot specific performance be required, but a bind- time is a ing contract cannot be said to have been consum-
mated.
existed
;^
This
is the rule where the thing bargained for never and where, having existed, it was destroyed at the
time of the agreement.^ "The assent of the parties, being founded on a mutual mistake of fact, was really no assent."^ This has been held to be the case where A. sold B. a cargo of goods which, at the time of the bargain, had been lost at sea,
1
L. 185, D.
de R. J, (50, 17).
Op.
See
cit.
103.
Pandekten,
infra,
249.
;
v. Hammond. 11 Pet. 63, 71; Thompson v. Gould, 20 Pick. 139 Rice v. Dwight Man. Co., 2 Cush. 80,
Allen
301
and see an
illus-
86
Franklin
v.
v.
Long, 7 Gill
111.
&
4
J.
407
Walker
8
Tucker, 70
v.
527.
Price,
Hitchcock
;
Giddin^s,
Co.,
Infra, 303.
135
et seq.
Rice
i'.
v.
Man.
2 Cush. 80;
Supra, 181
Hills V.
Marvin
Sughone, 15 M.
& W. 253
Benj. on Sales, 3d
Am.
ed. 77.
Clifford V.
Watts, L. R. 5 C. P. 577
439
298.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XIV.
Bankrupty of a
cor-
by vendor and purchaser of certain of its shares, will be a defence to a suit on the contract of purchase ;* and so of an agreement to take shares in a company which has nO power to issue such shares f and of an agreement to sell a horse which (neither party knowing the fact) is, at the time of the bargain, dead.^ It has also been ruled that where a party holding an estate for another's life,
at the time
unknown
agrees to
other person
agreement
is
that an expired
insurers, of a
But a
is
perty leased turns out, without fault of the lessor, of far less
is
elsewhere seen,
is
the
improved land when the improvements and the same rule is applied to have been destroyed by fire when mines the mine turns out to be unworkable, of leases which, if there be a lease covenanting to pay a fixed rent, is no defence to the covenant.^ On the other hand, when rent is payable in the shape of a royalty on minerals in the soil, no
;''
Hastie
v.
lins, L.
R. 7 Q. B. 144
see supra,
Couturier
2
v.
Hastie, 5 H. L. C. 673;
181-8.
6
Pritchard
v.
Ins. Co., 3 C. B. N. S.
622.
Mr.
Wald (Wald's
effect.
Pollock, 427)
Pollock,
Wald's
J.
ed.
425,
citing
ex-
cites to
same
Mutual Insurance
Co.
V.
With
the cases
v.
in the text
may
be grouped Allen
it
of
Hindustan
;
v.
Alison, L. R.
Hammond,
ney
was
6 C. P. 54,
222
;
Alison ex parte, L. R.
;
15 Eq. 394
*
9 Ch. 1
;
Campbell ex
parte,
L. R. 16 Eq. 417
9 Ch. 1.
143
Pothier,
v.
it
turned out
Cont. de Vente,
4, cited
Couturier
Hastie, 5 H. L. C. 673.
6
Strickland
V. v.
v.
Hitchcock
Bute
;
Cochrane
Jones
V.
Willis, L. R. 1 Ch. 58
9 C. B. 1
;
see
487
W.
How,
Coates
v.
Col-
440
CHAP. XIV.]
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 298.
royalty
is
payable
when no minerals
are found.
And
a cove-
nant to work a mine cannot be enforced if it turn out that the mine is exhausted.^ Where an insurance was effected on certain goods on a particular ship, and there were no such
it
And when
absolutely
But
when
its full
reception
made
recovered back.*
sale, it
should
no defence when the party insures the production of the thing at the time of the delivery f and when the thing has " a potential existence, that is, things which are the natural product or expected increase of something already belonging to the vendor."^ Hence, a lessee may convey to a lessor all the crops which may be grown on the leased land during the term, and no delivery of the crops after they are harvested is necessary even against attaching creditors.'^ sale of a colt to be hereafter foaled from a certain mare is valid even against creditors of the owner.^
be remembered,
'
Ridgway
v.
v.
Sneyd,
111.
Kay,
527.
627
Hull
v.
is
v.
FonIn
Clifford V.
Watts, L. R. 5 C. P. 577
Tucker, 70
v.
ville v. Casey, 1
Murph. N.
C. 389.
Walker
*
Hull
Hammond
Allen, 2
Park on
1809.
"It
may
covery back, see generally infra, 742 et seq. ^ Leger v, Bonnaff^, 2 Barb. 475
;
infra,
*
742-4.
a cow may yield, or the future young born of an animal. 1 Pars, on Cont.
(5th ed.) 523, note
cited
;
Infra, 745.
k,
and
cases there
;
6 Infra,
5
311.
Hilliard on Sales, 18
186.
Story
Casey,
Benj. on Sales, 3d
Am.
ed. 78
on Sales,
In Fonville
v.
v. Macdonnall, 5 M. & S. Smith v, Atkins, 18 Vt. 461 Hodges V. Harris, 6 Pick. 360 Lewis V. Lyman, 22 Pick. 437 Lucas v. Birdsey, 41 Conn. 357 Capron v. Porter, 43 Conn. 389 Heald v. Ins. Co., Ill Mass. 38 Sanborn v. Benedict, 78 111. 309 Cotten v. Willoughby, 83
Robinson
;
228
vests
plaintiff,
N. C. 75.
'
upon the principle that there may be a valid sale where the title is not actually in the grantor, if it is in him
potentially, as being a thing accessory
Bellows
V.
441
300.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XIV.
alien-
And
so of
ation of a particular thins:; '^ ^ ^ ' is a contract to dispose of this thing valid? In the Roman law, where
these restrictions are not
is
uncommon,
this incapacity
the policy of the law, a thing cannot be cannot be sued for.^ The same position is illustrated by our own law in reference to champertous contracts,^ and to contracts for sale of smuggled goods and intoxicating liquors when such sale is prohibited.^ Mr. Pollock* places
tract.
When, by
it
alienated,
in the
in
the royal
When
to its
a thing sold
is
When
sential
may
be rescinded, or
es-
Sup-
ground of error in
contract void.
is
On
a similar principle
may
when
it is
do a particular thing, the sickness or death of that person, supposing that the duty be personal and not one to be done by a substitute, will be a defence to a suit on the promise.^ Objective destruction falls under the same
to
And
something which he actually has. in McCarty v. Blevins, 5 Yerg. 195, it was held that where A. agrees
foal of A.'s
gory
fall
is
forbidden by law.
plies as
And
to
much
to stipulations to
do imthings
mare
shall
possible things as
deliver
the latter
(For author115.)
mother takes place, though A. immediately after the colt was born, sold and delivered it to D."
In the
2 ' * *
360
et seq.
Roman
objectively
is
Savigny, System,
iii.
p. 283
supra,
not in
is
itself binding.
This principle
v.
Davison, L. R. 6 Ex.
Boast
v.
v.
Frith, L. R.
4 C. P.
323,
istent,
nor does
it
Stewart
other
For
613
never existed at any time, or they ceased to exist only after the contract
cases
Mommsen,
ut supra, 203.
was executed.
cate-
442
CHAP. XIV.]
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 300.
and when the material by which a contract is to be is destroyed by casus, then the contract falls.^ In this line may be considered an interesting case elsewhere noticed, where an agreement was made to let a music hall for a
head
;
executed
was held that the agreement was conditioned on the continued existence of the hall, and that the subsequent destruction of the hall by fire relieved the party agreeing to let it from liability. "The authorities," said the court, "established the principle that, where from the nature of the contract, it appears that the parties must from the beginning have known that it could not be fulfilled, unless when the time for the fulfilment of the contract arrived some particular thing continued to exist, so that when entering into the contract they must have contemplated such continued existence as the foundation of what was to be done then, in the absence of any express or implied warranty that
purpose, and where
it
;
is
not to be construed as a
'
Caldwell, 3 B.
1 Q. B. D.
&
S.
838
Taylor Howell
;
v.
of Quebec, to be piled
on a wharf dur-
v.
Coupland, L. R. 9 Q. B. 462
258
; ;
afif.
L. R.
according to contract
and
it
having
R. 2 C. P. 651
V.
Appleby
been destroyed by
timber.
fire, it
could not be
Lakeman v. Pollard, 43 Me. 463 Dexter v. Norton, 47 N. Y. 62 Spalding v, Rosa, 71 N. Y. 40. Taylor v. Caldwell, 3 B. & S. 838.
;
;
Rennie, L. R. 10 C. P. 271
Now this
major,
by
tractor),
from
Taylor
9 Q. B.
v.
quently in Howell
Coupland, L. R.
the party
by reason
of the non-execu-
258; infra, 314. In Russell v. Levy, 2 Low. Can, 457 (cited Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 570 a), the point at issue
aflF.
462;
L. R. 1 Q. B. D.
tion of the
contract."
That equity
is
thus stated by Sir J. Stuart, C. J. " The sale was not a sale of birch timber
Wh. &
;
ed. 1105
generally,
but of a
specific
determined
Henry
v.
v.
690
Harris
443
301.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XIV.
know
that
it
is
When
parties
both
know
the thinffisim-
know
knows
18
simply because the parties did not intend it Nor is a different conclusion ing. to be reached, should it appear that one of the parties did not know that the other party knew the thing to be impossible, making the agreement in order to overreach such
agreement
not bind-
other party. He cannot be permitted in such case to make anything out of his own fraud.^ Hence, specific performance
will not be enforced
when both
parties
know
title.^
And
an agreement which
both of the parties know is impossible, is void against either.* Under this head may be classed agreements to do things
is
which are
latently impossible,
terms are not fully examined. This illustrated by an old case in which the bargain was that
two grains of rye on the following Monday, four grains on the Monday after, and so on, doubling every succeeding Monday for a year. The defendant, to a suit on the contract, demurred, on the ground of impossibility. The court, however,
seemed to think that this was not such an impossibility as to make the contract void; but the suit being compromised there was no final judgment, nor could the intimations of the court
more rational conclusion was be practically carried out.'* reached in a case where the bargain was to pay as price of a
horse, barley, to be reckoned
first
two
third,
which came to 500 quarters of barley for 32 nails. The bargain was treated by the court as a nullity, and a verdict
1
See supra,
175.
Hall
C. 826
v.
Cazesupra,
V.
See supra, 202 et seq.; Faulkner Lowe, 2 Exch. 595 Stevens v. Coon,
;
Bing. 248
&
202.
Thornborough v. Whitacre, 2 L. Ray. 1164 6 Mod. 305.
;
Love
v.
V.
Gilmer
Gilmer, 42 Ala.
444
CHAP. XIV.]
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 302.
And
no fraud in such bargains (and if there be fraud this by itself vacates), each party is supposed to know that
which a
little
him
to
know and
;
the
known by both
to be either im-
party who knows or ought to know of the non 302. existence of a thing he contracts to deliver makes If promisor himself, however, liable to the other contracting knows or
ought to
of
Had
he,
made
impossibility, it is
no
what he needed
and
defence.
A party,
There
James
v.
Morgan,
Lev.
v.
Ill
it
Hardwicke,
692.
2
L.
C,
Chesterfield
Jans-
155
Leake, 2d ed.
See Francis
v.
Cockrell, L. R. 5 Q.
Sugh-
B. 503.
3
Hills
Suglirue, 15 M.
queries,
& W.
this
253.
Mr.
Pollock
"
if
case
belong cases
to
in
To which a
would now be so decided. It seems," he adds, " to fall within the rule in
Taylor
v.
party
who ought
take cognizance of
Caldwell,"
supra,
300.
But Hills V. Sughrue can be sustained on the ground that the party contracting to find guano ought to have known what he was about. I do not think
that either this case, or the citations
ready to reap
its
advantages
occur.
if
it
Thus a
Roman
"
is
unexpectedly
soft
and
treacherous.
;
extrinsic,
Dermott
kins
V.
v.
Jones, 2 Wall. 1
Tomp-
no excuse
for the
failure to
perform
Dudley, 25 N. Y. 272.
445
302.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XIV.
ground that there were some specifications in the contract which were impracticable, leading him in this way to incur fruitless expense. He should have acquainted himself with
the nature of the contract before signing it.^ And it is declared to be " a general proposition of law, that when one
article or thing, in consideration of a
engages with another to supply him with a particular pecuniary payment, he enters into an implied contract that the article or thing shall
fit
man
be reasonably
for the
it is
to be used,
and
The only recognized exception is in " the case of some defect which is unseen and unknown, and undiscoverable, not only unknown to the conto
which
it is
to be applied."
examination."^
According
to
Mommsen,
promisor did
know
is
was subjected
to by
by ordinary
care,
Quod
damnum
in
sentit,
non intelligitur
cases
damnum
promisor
The
is
liability
such
of
the
based on the assumption, that on entering on such a contract he was guilty of either fraud {dolus), or such negligence as a good business man under such circumstances
(Schuldner)
ought not
to exhibit
(culpa).
The promisor,
therefore,
is
only liable for damages in such cases when he knew at the time that performance was impossible, or when his ignorance
in this respect
Thorn v. Mayor of London, L. R. 9 Ex.163; 10 Ex. 112; aff. L. R. 1 App. and see infra, Cas. (H. of L.) 120
4 Q. B.
v.
To same
eflfect
is
Walden
That
Finch, 70 Penn.
for
St.
461.
selling
311.
*
v.
Cockrell,
v.
for
L. R. 5 Q. B. 503
citing
Readhead
particular purpose implies fitness such purpose, see supra, 221. L. 203, D. de R. J. (50, 17).
44t)
CHAP. XIV.]
303.
IMPOSSIBILITY.
fortiori^
[ 304.
to have known the thine; tract if he ought to have ,^ When probeen nonexistent, or the promise to be, for other misee grounds, nugatory. This is illustrated in a case in ought to which the plaintiff, a landlord, sued the defendant, I'mpog'gfbiii.
which he
ty, contract
18
undertook to dig from the leased premises not less than 1000 tons of clay annually, paying a specific royalty. It was held a defence that there never was as much as 1000 tons of clay on the land.^ This would have been the law even supposing both parties were innocently ignorant of the non-existence of the clay.
void.
But
was strengthened
by the fact that this non-existence was a circumstance of which the plaintiff, with due diligence, could have been aware.^ 304. " If a man is bound to another in 20^. on condition quod pluvia
debet jpluere cras^ there si pluvia non-pluit
.
^^^^ j^
bond, though there probability does not , was no default on his part, tor he knew not that it vacate ^si^^^ment. would not rain. In like manner, if a man is bound to me on condition that the Pope shall be here at Westminster to-
PIT
morrow, then, if the Pope comes not here, there is no default on defendant's part, and yet he has forfeited the obligation."^ It is true that if there are wagering contracts, they will not be enforced. But it is competent for one party to undertake to indemnify another, should a certain improbable contingency
occur.
effect.
But to conis
here
considered,
it is
no possible
way
if,
in
It is
enough
it
for
an
Clifford V.
Watts, L. R.
effect
C. P.
Walker
v.
Tucker,
577.
527.
See
to
same
Ridgway
v.
447
305.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XIV.
event occurring in London this morning to be known in Newthis afternoon ; now there are no business contracts that The term " imare not affected by intelligence so received.
York
it is
is not to be used in an absolute sense and enough to constitute impossibility that the event is so unlikely to occur that no business man could be influenced by
possible," therefore,
the possibility of its occurrence. " In matters of business a thing is said to be impossible when it is not practicable and a thing is impracticable when it can only be done at an ex;
to
have though
might be
it.
possible,
recover
So,
damage that
it
would
be totally
is
lost."^
But
still
an alternative
open.^
it is
To
also a
In a modern
with a covenant that only ornamental buildings should be erected by him on certain adjacent land he retained. This adjacent land, howet^er, was taken and used for a station by a railroad company, under a parliamentary power. It was held that this intervention of the legislature relieved the defendant from his obligation to keep the land free from any buildings that were not ornamental.* And to a suit on a recognizance alleged to be forfeited, it is a
defence.
Maule,
J.,
Moss
v.
Smith, 9 C.
Infra,
*
328, 629.
Griffith,
Wood
V.
Swanst. 55
v. Mayor, 9 C. B. N. S. 726 Anglesea v. Rugeley, 6 Q. B. 107 Wynn Davis V. Carey, 15 Q. B. 418 Ex. 420 Baily v. De CresV. R. R.,
;
.'^
Brown
Boston, 16 Pick. 357 Jones v. Judd, Presb. Ch. v. N. Y., 5 4 N. Y. 412 Cow. 538 Claney v. Overman, 1 Dev. & Bat. 402 Stone v. Dennis, 3 Porter, 231; Brown v. Dillahunty, 4 Sm. & M. 714. As to bail-bonds, see infra,
; ; ; ;
321.
5
Baily
v.
De Crespigny,
Mills
v.
L. R. 4 Q.
B.
180
see
East
London
pigny, L. R. 4 Q. B. 180
Fettyplace,
7
Baylies
;
v. v.
Union, L. R. 8 C. P. 79.
Mass.
325
Sears
448
CHAP. XIV.]
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 305.
whom
was intermediately taken out of the custody of the bail by legal process in the state to whose laws the recognizance was
subject.^
when
the arrest
is
in a foreign state.*
It may happen
might
by
Or, aside from the question of injunction, the thing doing of contracted may be made subsequently the to the contract illegal, as when during the pendency of a foreign war the furnishing of supplies of a particular kind is interdicted.^ Whenever, in any way, performance becomes illegal,
to the injunction.
then performance cannot be exacted.* In a suit against a carrier, it is a good defence that the goods were taken from
the carrier by legal process.'
An
extinguish the obligation f and so of a war between the countries of the obligor and of the obligee.^ And a party
who
is not relieved by the brought about by the action Subsequent legislation also does
Infra, 321.
v.
See more
R. 259
Ibid.
3
<
See
infra, 473.
V.
Hadley
v.
v.
Clarke, 8 T.
7
Jones
Judd, 4 N. Y. 412.
infra,
That
et
Baylies
Fettyplace,
Mass.
325
be enforced, see
3(j0
seq.
Jackson
v.
E. 394
Jnfra,
;
476
6 E.
Reid
B.
v.
Hoskins, 4 E.
;
Savannah,
etc.,
R. R.
v. is
Wilcox,
dispos-
&
B. 979
48 Ga. 432.
sessed
lessee
who
Bowden,
cited
E.
& &
B. 953
Esposito
;
v.
763
and cases
temporary
infra,
476.
Tliat
enemy's
released from
the
payment
during
Gates
Brown
311
v.
;
Ins. Co., 1 E.
&
E. 853
et seq.
infra,
VOL.
I. 29
449
306.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP, XIV.
not excuse
expensive.^
306. It
when
it
has been said that " the law which renders the performance impossible, and, therefore, excuses failure, must be a law operative in the state where the obliga88 to fortion was assumed, and obligatory in its effect upon bit^m'^^*' her authorities ;"^and for this reason it has been held that to a suit on a recognizance that an arrested party would appear to take his trial in a particular state, it is no defence that after the recognizance had been given he voluntarily went into another state, and was there arrested and delivered up on a requisition from a third state where he was convicted and sentenced, and thus taken out of the power of his bail.^
been also held that confiscation of goods at a foreign port is no defence to a suit for non-delivery of the goods, such confiscation not being in any way imputable to the
It has
was chartered
is
no defence to a
Where,
it
it
cargo of petro-
bill
freight
was
earned upon arrival ready for delivery, and that the shipper was not excused from taking the cargo and paying the freight
by reason of a prohibition at the port against landing such a cargo."* But where an unloading is to be by concurrent act of both parties, and it is forbidden by the port authorities on account of a threatened bombardment, neither can recover.^ " The delay having happened without default on either side, and neither having undertaken by contract, express or im1
Baker
V.
v.
Haskill
V. Sevier,
Spence
v.
v.
Chodwick, 10 Q. B. 517
Hodgson, 3 M.
Page, 3 B.
Splidt
way
2
Barker
v.
&
S. 267.
Seein/r, 321.
See Blight
v.
&
P.
295;
Taylor
Knowles
S.
C, 36 Conn. 242
;
State
v.
Horn, 70
;
Mo. 466
315
Wh.
Cr. PI.
v.
&
Pr. 28-33
The statement
^
taken
State, 25
Ark.
and
Ford
v.
Cotesworth, L. E. 4 Q. B.
321.
127.
450
CHAP. XIV.]
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 308.
loss
no delay, the
where
it falls."'
No doubt when
is
way
a contract
bound by the action of the authorities of state and no doubt the prevalent opinion now is state is called upon to give effect to another state's laws.^ But it is by no means clear that the principle
refuse to be
;
revenue
that the
no defence to a suit for nonperformance of a contract is not unduly extended when it is applied to contracts to be performed in such state. The better view is that in all that concerns the performance of a contract the law of the place of performance is to determine.^ And the cases here cited, so far as they conflict with this rule, may
prohibition of a foreign state
is
him the
risk.*
neglipofs'ibimy
gence,
is
no defence.
Thus a
company
which permits its power to purchase land to expire pomisor'7 by legislative limitation, cannot set up such loss of negligence r.iT-'^o defence in power as a defence to a suit for the price oi land it
-PI
Casus
is
its
contin-
gency would not be looked to by good business men in the particular specialty as something within the disaster* range of probability. As convertible with casus is ^j^^^en^e^ frequently used the term " act of God." As " acts could not H-Vcrt. of God" are understood such extraordinary disturbances as " could not have been prevented by any amount of foresight and pains and care reasonably to be expected" from the party setting up this disturbance as excusatory.^ " Inevitable accident" is a term also used to express the same idea;'' but there are cases {e. g.^ unexpected interference of strangers,
Ibid.
aflF.
484. 403,
S.
'
Wh.
Con. of Laws,
and cases
v.
Hawkes v. R. R.. 1 D. M. & G. 737 C, 3 De G. & S. 743. James, L. J., Nugent v. Smith, 1
;
there cited.
*
C. P. D. 423.
Infra, 311.
effect
Nichols
See
Wh. on
Neg.
553.
451
308.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XIV.
against which no reasonable prudence could guard) which might be called " inevitable accidents," but could not, in the
It should be
ordinary sense of the words, be spoken of as "acts of God." remembered, also, that the term " act of God" is
used in a popular, and not in either a theological or a scientific sense. By a theist all things are regarded as coming more or
from God. By those rejecting belief in a supreme being, the term would be discarded altogether. In a scientific sense, also, the distinction is absurd, since all that science can deal with is government by law and waiving the position that a government by law is far from excluding the idea of a supreme lawgiver, it cannot be supposed that there is any occurrence not explicable on the hypothesis of a system of order by which the equilibrium of the universe is maintained.
less directly
;
us more in the present issue is the fact " that the term act of God," as well as that of " inevitable accident," narrows with the gradual discovery of agencies by which catastrophies formerly supposed to be inevitable are now averted. One hundred years ago casus would be a good defence to an action against a carrier for a loss which, had the telegram existed in those days, could have been readily averted by summoning aid which it would be negligence in the carrier now not to summon. One hundred years hence the domains of casus will be still further restricted. The question of casus, therefore, depends upon the diligence shown at the period in litigation by the party setting it up as a
defence.^
See authorities cited in
;
Wh. on
in the
Neg. 114, 553 Carstairs v. Taylor, L. R. 6 Exch. 217 Street v. Holyoke, 105 Mass. 82; Gray f. Harris, 107 Mass. 492. " Accident," as a ground of equi;
cases of accident in
defined
proved by Mr. Bispham (Bisp. Eq. 174). To this, however, it may be objected that if "unforeseen" be taken
on Neg. 74 et seq.) In The Love Bird, 44 L. T. 650 (1881), it was held that under the English sailing rules of Sept. 1880, a loss which might have been prevented by the use of the mechanical fog-horn ordered by those rules, was imputable to the negligent ship.
Wh.
452
CHAP. XIV.]
309. It
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 309.
may happen, however, that a person who contracts do a particular thing, does it in such a way as to casusno encounter an obstacle which prevents the perform- defence when negliance. When two or more ways are open to him, he gently en"^"^^ ^^^ improvidently takes one in which the difficulty is encountered or he delays action so that he meets a risk he would otherwise have avoided. In such cases the casus is no defence. This is the rule in the Roman law,^ and in our own.2 If a ship, for instance, collides with another in port through the violence of a storm, no negligence being imputable, this is casus ; but if she is negligently moored or
to
,
.
is
to be charged to those
by
whom
left
exposed.'
men
it
But it is not enough, to overcome the defence of casus, to say that the casus might have possibly been avoided. Such excessive precautions as would make transportation impracticable a carrier is not required to adopt. This duty is satisfied if he take such precautions as are in the long run most conducive to the safe management of the business in which he is concerned. The
breach of the contract of carriage.*
'
L. 10,
1,
*
Bis'pham's
Darby, 6 Ves. 496 Hadley v. Clark, 8 T. R. 259 Davis v. Garrett, 6 Bing. 716 Parker r. James, 4 Camp. 112; Bailiffs of Romney Marsh V. Trinity House, L. R. 5 Exch. 208 Converse v. Brainard, 27 Conn. 607; Beebe v. Johnson, 19 Wend. 500 New Brunswick St. Co. v. Tiers, 4 Zab. 697
Caffray
v.
;
;
Eq. 175
Nugent v. Smith, L. R. 1 C. P. D. 423 Denny v. R. R., 13 Gray, 481 Hoadley v. N. Trans. Co., 115 Mass. 304; Hubbard v. Harnden's Ex. Co.,
;
10 R.
I.
244; Michaels
v.
v.
R. R., 30 N.
Y. 564; Austen
;
Steamboat
Hand
Davis
V.
v.
175
v.
Read
v.
Pruitt
V.
Helm
David,
See as to casus
Wilson, 4 Mo. 41
;
Vail
v.
R. R., 63
v.
generally,
Wh. on
v.
Mo. 230
109.
Nashville, etc. R. R.
;
Railroad Co.
;
v.
6 Heisk. 261
Seigel
r.
Eisen, 41 Cal.
176
Denny
v.
Morrison
453
310;]
CONTRACTS.
is
[chap. XIV.
rule before us
applicable to
it
Hence, a party
'certain time
is
who
which a party by unout of his power to perform a promise. agrees to have his life insured within a
all
eases in
not, if
relieved from his agreement by the fact that his health be-
came
was
uninsurable.^
however,
^
is
not required.
Were
it
required, business could not be efficiently conducted. , ^^ ' ./ i But perfect caution not It would be possible, for instance, for a railroad comr8QuirG(i
line
To
no railroad company could carry such a burden. It would be possible, also, to prevent wooden houses from being burned by keeping them perpetually drenched in water; but this would be equivalent to saying that no wood should be
tation, as
Hence
it is
not necessary
have been possibly averted. It is enough if it could not have been averted by the exercise of that diligence which is usual among prudent and competent persons charged with the [larticular duty whose non discharge is in the case in question excused by casus.^ Thus where a sudden frost closes the naviga
Arthur
v.
Wynne,
r.
L. R. 14 Ch. D.
for
their
Doubleday (L. R. 7 Q. B. D. 510), the plaintiff was shown to have forwarded to the defendant
603.
In Lilley
goods
for
housed. The contract between the parties was, that the goods should be deposited by the defendant at a store
at a specific place
;
"
If
to
instead of wliich he
him
in a
way
where, without any particular neglifire took place by which they were destroyed. The only point at issue was, whether the fact that the defendant had deposited the
of so doing, except
he takes upon himself the risks where the risk is independent of his acts, and inherent
bailor,
See comments
18, 1882.
;
to
deposit
on Neg. 116, 123 Idle i-. Tliomton, 3 Camp. 274; Nichols v. Marslaud, L. R. 10 Ex. 255 Railroad
;
Wh,
454
"*
CHAP. XIV.]
tion of a river a
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 311.
mouth
it is
might have delivered the goods had he started them two months earlier.^ So it is a defence that a rail has been broken by a cold snap utterly unprecedented in its severity and earliness; though it is possible to conceive of rails constructed of such a temper and encased with such care as to resist even the extremest cold.' On the other hand a collision, which might have been avoided had a proper chart been taken f an explosion of a boiler, which might have been avoided by a proper supply of water;* or a destruction by freezing, which might have been avoided by the packing prudent carriers under such circumstances are accustomed to give ;' cannot be imputed to casus.^ 311. If a party guarantees against an event, he cannot defeat a suit for damao^es for non-performance on the ground that the event happened.^ Thus, where fence when
a carrier, though
possible he
no defence to a suit for a breach of conhe was prevented by a storm which was within the ordinary range of anticipation at the time of his contract.* It is no defence, also, to a suit on a charter party requiring a ship to be loaded with usual dispatch, that a frost stopped transit through a canal by means of which the cargo would in the ordinary course of travel have been brought to the ship ;' nor is the burning of a house under construction any defence to a suit against the contractor for non-construction.^" 'Nov can the promisor defend himtime,
it is
Co.
r.
Denny
i?.
v.
Wing
v.
Morrison
Davis,
Wh. on
;
Neg.
559.
' See Leake, 2d ed. 697 Jones v. St. John's College, L. R. 6 Q. B. 115 School Dist. v. Dauchy, 25 Conn. 530
Bush,
191
189.
McEvers
v.
v.
Steamboat, 22 Mo.
12
Conn. 410; Bowman v. Teall, 23 Wend. 306 Swetland V. R. R., 102 Mass. 276.
'
Crosby
Fitch,
Tompkins v. Dudley, 25 N. Y. 272 Baker v. Johnson, 42 N. Y. 126 Clancy v. Overman, 1 Dev. & B. 402.
8
Thiis
v.
Byers, L. R. 1 Q. B. D.
McPadden
Williams
Siordet
v.
v.
R. R., 44 N. Y. 478.
244.
v.
Kearon
v.
v.
Pearson, 7 H.
&
N. 386.
M.
w Adams
&
P. 561.
455
311.]
self on the
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XIV.
ground that there was an accumulation of unforeseen difficulties in his way which either absolutely prevented his performance of his contract, or made its performance possible only at a ruinous sacrifice.^ And where a freighter undertakes specifically that he will not detain a ship beyond a designated period, he becomes liable for damages, although the delay may have been caused by events beyond his control and without any fault.^ And a contractor cannot set up as a defence to a suit on his contract to have a particular building ready at a particular time, that it was destro^^ed when near completion by lightning.^ " The act of God will excuse the not doing of a thing where the law had created the duty, but never where it is created by the positive and absolute contract of the party."* This is eminently the case in contracts where
there
is
surance cases f and in charter parties and contracts of carBullock V. Dominit, 6 T. R. 650 Atkinson v. Ritchie, 10 East, 530 Thorn v. City of London, L. R. 1 Ap. Ca. 120 Jones v. U. S., 96 U. S. 24 Dermott v. Jones, 2 Wall. 1 Gilpius V. Consequa, Pet. C. C. 86 Eddy i\ Clement, 38 Vt. 486 Adams v. Nichols,
Ohio, 412
Wood
r.
Brumby
V.
v.
Davis
v.
Duncan
Gib-
19 Pick. 275
Mill
;
Dam Foundry
v.
Wilson r. Knott, 3 Humph. 473 Peck v. Ledwidge, 25 111. 112; and see cases cited Wald's Poland infra, 321. lock, 356 2 Randall r. Lynch, 2 Camp. 352
son, 45 Mo. 352
; ;
;
Hovey, 21 Pick. 441 Bigelow v. Collamore, 5 Cush. 231 Lord v. Wheeler, 1 Gray, 282 Kramer v. Cook, 7 Gray, 550 Wareham Bk. v. Burt, 5 Allen, 113 Wells v. Calnan, 107 Mass. 514 Thomas v. Knowles, 128 Mass. 22 Beebe v. Johnson, 19 Wend. 500; Harmony v. Bingham, 2 Kern, 107; Tompkins v. Dudley, 25 N. Y. 275 Dexter v. Norton, 47 N. Y. 62 Booth V. Mill Co., 60 N. Y. 489 Kemp j;. Ice Wheeler r. Ins. Co., Co., 69 N. Y. 45 82 N. Y. 543 School Trustees v. BenAnspach v. Bast, nett, 3 Dutch. 515 52 Penn. St. 356; Lovering v. Coal Co., 54 Penn. St. 291; Peterson v. Edmonson, 5 Harring. 378 Kribs v. Jones, 44 Md. 396 Linn v, Ross, 10
; ;
12 East, 179
Q. B, D. 249 Q. B. D. 223.
'
Thiis
v.
Byers, L. R.
v.
Straker
Kidd, L. R. 3
530.
*
tions, infra,
6
314
et seq.
Castle
V.
Playford, L. R. 7 Ex. 98
Kitching, L. R. 7 Q. B.
Martineau
436.
6
v.
Brown
v.
v.
Ins. Co., 1 E.
Hill,
&
E. 853;
;
Medeiros
nell
v.
8 Bing. 231
Tuf-
Constable, 7 Ad.
v.
&
El. 798;
;
Adams
V.
Baker
v.
603; Brown
r.
Martin
Schoen-
W. &
S. 367.
As
to
guaran-
456
CHAP. XIV.]
riage;^
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 311.
and when the promisor by due diligence could have made himself acquainted with a defect in the materials which he was to use which made performance impossible, this im" Where a party has either expossibility is no defence.^
pressly or impliedly undertaken without any qualification to do anything, and does not do it, he must make compensation in damages, though the performance was rendered impracticable by some unforeseen cause over which he had no control."^ Another illustration of the principle before us may be found in a case decided in Michigan in 1880. S. agreed to locate and enter pine lands in the name of A. & P. to an amount not exceeding 10,000 acres, they to pay him expenses, and to convey to him an undivided fifth in the land located and entered. The panic of 1873 intervening, A. & P. were
Shubrick
v. v.
for
the non-performance, and this conis to be put upon an unqualiundertaking, where the event
Salmoiid,
Burr.
Pearson,
H.
L.
&
R.
struction
fied
v.
Adamson,
cases cited,
Wh.
v.
on Neg.
Ex. D. 60 550
and
infra,
317. * Dermott
Hills V.
which causes the impossibility was or might have been anticipated or guarded against in the contract, or where the
impossibility arises
.Jones,
2 Wall. 1
see
M. & W. 253. In Thorn v. Mayor of Loudon, L. R. 9 Ex. 163; L. R. 10 Ex. 112; L. R. 1 App. Cas. (H. of L.) 120, the
Sughrue,
15
But where
the event
it
is
have been
engineer of the city of London prepared certain specifications in a contract which the plaintiff undertook to
execute, but which,
contracting parties
when
the contract
was made, they will not be held bound by general words which, though large enough to include, were not used with
reference to the possibility of the particular contingency which afterwards happens." See, further. White v. Mann, 26 Me. 361 Lord v. Wheeler, 1
;
contain
impracticable
The contractor sued the city for the loss he had incurred in his attempt to fill what turned out to be an impossible undertaking, but it was held, both in the Exchequer Chamber and the House of Lords, that the risk was one which he himself assumed. In Bailey v. De Crespigny, L. R. 4
Q. B. 185, the court said:
v.
v.
Stevens,
12
Bingham, 2
Kernan, 106 Scully e. Kirkpatrick, 79 Penn. St. 324 Clark v. Franklin, 7 Leigh, 1 Brumby v. Smith, 3 Ala.
;
; ;
123.
* Per cur. Ford v. Cotesworth, L. R. 4 Q. B. 134; Leake, 2d ed. 693. To same effect is Harmony v. Bingham, 2
can be no doubt that absolute contract bind himself to perform things which subsequently become impossible, or to pay damages
Kernan, 106.
457
312.]
CONTRACTS.
It
[chap. XIV.
a risk they took, and was no defence to them when sued on their contract.^ Insanity of the insured, by which payment of premiums is dropped, does not prevent the forfeiture
It should also be
is
remembered, as we will
excuse
no
be performed by a substitute or
an attorney.^
312.
Party
A party
to a contract,
inter-
way
of the perform-
making
performance of a contract impossible cannot complain.
The claim damages for such non-performance. extent words, is excused to the promisor, in other in which performance is made impossible by the
promisee.*
The same
rule applies
its
and where an employer interferes so as to prevent the performance of his work by the contractor f and where an author is prevented from contributing to a periodical by the
abandonment of the periodical by the publisher.^ " clear principle of law that if by any act of one of the
the performance of a contract
is
It is a
parties
if
if
they choose, rescind the contract and it the contract cannot be performed in the
it
manner
1
stipulated,
though
may
McCreery v. Green, 38 Micli. 172. Wheeler v. Ins. Co., 82 N. Y. 547. Infra, 323; Wolf v.* Howes, 20
; ;
Hurd v. Gill, 45 N. Y. 341 116 Stewart v. Keteltas, 36 N. Y. 388; Tone V. Doelger, 6 Rob. (N. Y.) 251
; ;
N. Y. 197 Clark v. Gilbert, 26 N. Y. 279 Spalding v. Rosa, 71 N. Y. 40 Wheeler v. Ins. Co., 82 N. Y. 547.
*
Johnson
Kline
v.
v.
Somerville, 33 N. J. L. 152
Culter,
v,
34 N.
v.
J.
Eq.
7
329
Navigation Co.
Wilcox,
Jones L.
Wald's Pollock,
481
Tewskbury
v.
O'Connell, 21 Cal.
ut supra,
371,
and
60; Reynolds
Arthur
Roberts
5 C. P.
v.
v.
Wynne,
;
L. R. 14 Ch. D. 603;
L. R. 4 C. P. 755
;
Bury Com.,
181
Ellis
310 Giles v. Edward, 7 T. R. Holme v. Guppy, 3 M. & W. 387 V. Hamlen, 3 Taunt. 53; RayV.
Pindar
v.
v.
Upton, 44 N. H. 358
Neats, 8 C. B. N. S.
Tasker
831.
T
Thornhill
mond
Planche
r.
Colburn, 8 Bing. 14
458
CHAP. XIV.]
IMPOSSIBILITY.
diiFerent."^
[ 313.
And,
formance conditioned on an impossibility created by the other side cannot be compelled.^ 313. The rule casus non praestantur, according to Mommsen,^ is to
,
Unraoglicnkeit),
Casual impossibility
But
. .
j^rmanent
, ^ absolute.
Where
the impossibility
...
is
only partial,
it
The questions, what relieves from liability only pi^o tanto} abatement of price is to be made in cases of partial performance, and whether in such cases the contract can be rescinded,
are elsewhere distinctively discussed.' impossibility only abates pro tanto.^
bility in
As a To make
rule, fractional
casual impossi-
toto, it
must go
is
to
must
is
also be permanent.
It
true that
permanency
it
absolutely no prospect of
future removal.
But
if
the im-
pediment be of a continuous character, then, as has been already shown in reference to continuous impediments existing at the time of the contract, it vacates the contract; nor can such a contract be subsequently, at some remote period, called into activity by the removal of an impediment of an apparently permanent type. Whether, when the impediment is temporary, this vacates the contract, depends upon whether the performance of the contract falls within the time during which the impediment exists. If it does, the impediment is regarded in the same light as a permanent impossibility.^ But when the performance is not limited to be within this specified period, its efficacy is not affected hy the temporary
impediment.^
'
Mellish, L. J.,
Panama
Tel. Co. v.
cond.
indeb.
(12,
6)
L. 21, D. de
Infra, 330. L.
9,
Itifra,
547;
and
see
infra,
4,
(19, 2).
Op.
cit.
25, p. 286.
See
sujjra,
298
et seq.
Infra,
899
L. 40, 1, D. de
459
314.] 314.
CONTRACTS.
If
[CHAP. XIV.
itoTdeiiquentiy^fntervening
guarantee in a party contracting to deliver a thing, such thing has ceased to exist, the contract falls,
Tlius in a case already noticed, where the proprietor
let the plaintitf have the on certain days, it was held that the destruction of the hall by fire was a defence to a suit
for concerts
the delivery of
is
pro tanto
avoided by a failure of the crop, so that the specified quantity But, as we have seen, such impossibility is is not produced.^ no defence to a suit on a contract to do a specific thing, unless
all
made
impossible.^
Thus,
it
is
no
when
build-
ing was burned, though it would be otherwise if by casus or the building of all houses in that place was made impossible.^ Vangerow'' takes the following positions
I.
When
even recover back what he has paid. On the other hand, the debtor bears the loss (res debitoris periculo est, res debitor! perit) when in cases of casual impossibility he has guaranteed
the risk, or has in any
way provoked it. As we have the same distinction obtains in our own law. II. Various attempts have been made to reduce the
seen,
rules
sentit
By many of the older authorities the maxim casum dominus is invoked but this maxim, even in its widest acceptation, can be only understood to mean that a claimant loses his claim on the destruction of the thing from which it
;
Taylor
v.
Caldwell, 3 B.
& S.
826
70
25
111.
527.
See, also,
;
Lord
v.
Wheeler,
supra, 300.
2
1 Gray,
282
Oakley
v.
Morton, 1 Kern.
300.
Howell
;
V.
Conpland, L. R. 1 Q. B.
;
and
D. 258
supra, 290
infra, 330.
To
Supra, 313
infra, 330.
;
Adams
v.
on Cont. p. 362, cites Wells V. Calnan, 107 Mass. 514; School Dist. Dexter v. V. Dauchy, 25 Conn. 530 Norton, 47 N. Y. 62 Walker v. Tucker,
to Pollock
; ;
supra, 311.
*
Pandekt.
iii.
591.
Supra, 311.
460
CHAP. XIV.]
sprinors,
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 314.
and cannot be stretched so as to determine the in7'es debita has on an obligaIn fact, the champions of this maxim are obliged to tion. subject it to so many restrictions and exceptions that little of Wachter and others fall back upon the maxims it remains. impossibilium nulla obUgatio est,^ and casus a nullo 'praestantur ;^
fluence that the destruction of the
but, in reply,
it
may
be said
(1)
that these
maxims
are nega-
adapted to the decision of the quesand (2), that while they affirm the debtor's tion before us liberation in case of the casual destruction of the thing from which the obligation flows, they do not determine how far in such cases the creditor continues bound. Madai lays it down as a rule that the party to whom performance is possible must perform, but that the party whose performance becomes imtive, and, therefore, not
;
possible is freed
this principle
is
from
liability.
Yangerow
replies that
while
which
{e.
giving a universal
rule.
Fuchs, and others adopt, as decisive, the rule that when performance becomes impossible without the promisor's fault,
then the obligation
may by
no
many important bailments. Yangerow, therefore, holds that common rule for determining necessity in all cases can be
ticular class of obligations to
III.
found, but that each case depends upon the terms of the par-
which
it
belongs.
is
and, therefore,
L. 185, de R. J.
L. 23, fin. eod.
effect
He
cites to this
point L. 107, de
resolvitur
only applies in cases where a specific thing is the object of the obligation.
Verborum
obligatio
When the
genus,
description
is
by quantity or
not liberated
of the res
quum
is
promissoris
desiit."
in
Other passages
same
461
314.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XIV.
rV. With regard to bilateral obligations for the transfer of things, a party who without fault or guarantee is prevented from fulfilling his contract by the casual destruction of the goods, is entirely freed from the duty. Whether the other
party continues bound
(1.)
is
repeatedly given in
is
the
Roman
com-
when
(2.)
is
bound
The same
rule applies to
innominat-contracts.
for sale
technically called
that as contracts
bilateral
may
be
It rests, he argues, on a
sound reason.
tract
are fulfilled
is
on both
;
sides, then,
when
after delivery
is
the thing
fall
to
on the receiver and that which is right in cases of immediate delivery^ remains right in cases in which delivery is rightfully excused, the more so because from the time of the completion of the contract the promisee has the disposal of the thing. If, however, the delivery of the goods is negligently delayed, then the vendor has to take the risk. Y. The rules above stated are modified in cases in which a sale is conditional. If the condition has not taken effect, the transaction is still open, and a casual loss falls on the promisor. If the condition is complied with, the loss falls on the promisee.^
When,
pending, a distinction
is
to be
interitus,
and
'periculam deteriorationis.
If the res debita ceases to exist during the pendency of the condition, then the contract
is
on both
sides released.
If after
toris esse
periculum ajunt
rei
idem PomL.
8,
rit, si
quidem
de
nee stipulatio
quodsi
comm.
vend,
462
CHAP. XIV.]
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 315.
can never be perfect, since, when on its face it becomes operative, it has no object on which to act. 315. An agreement to deliver fungible articles, e. g. gold,
the loss of such articles by the not released bv ^ party so agreeing. No matter what calamity may
is
.
-^
But not of
fungible ""^^"
overtake
him,
or
how
completely he
may
be
Even when he
Roman
law,
is
the same.
if
him
as repreif
amount of mone^.
would be otherwise
is
An illustration
to
V. agreed in March to sell to P. 200 tons of potatoes, to be grown on certain designated land of V. In consequence of the potato blight, V. was able to deliver only 80 tons, that being the sole produce of the land in question. It was held that he was only bound to this amount, though it would have been otherwise had he agreed to deliver 200 tons of potatoes without this rebe found in a recent English case already cited.
striction.
" The
..." not
..." and
therefore
should be free
1
if
Mommsen,
op.
cit.,
Lloyd
v.
v.
which they
Guibert, L. R. 1 Q. B. 121
Youqua
v.
Gilpins
ConCoal
were based.
Lovering
v.
Penn. St. 291. * Howell V. Coupland, L. R. 9 Q, B. 462; aff. on app., 1 Q. B. D. 258; as cited and adopted in Pollock on Cont. Wald's ed. 364-5; supra, 314;
infra, 330.
it
1
I.
Barbosa,
ax.
14
or si res
Zoco,
was
tacitly under-
and that
Tom. I. disp. 15 Koch, Forder. 137,11.506. That the maxim cannot be maintained as a general rule is shown by Grotius, de jure belli ac pacis, Lib. II. cap. 16, 24, and more recently by Weber, Systematische Entwickelung der Lehre von der natiirlichen Verbindlichkeit, 90 and it is repu;
463
317.] 316.
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XIV.
is
When
undertaken
is
dependent on the power of the contracting party to If it has been without his fault goodsVde- deliver the article. fence. withdrawn from his control after the promise was made, this is a defence. This, in the Roman law, has been held to apply to the carrying off of goods by robbery, theft, and embezzlement.^ It applies, also, to cases where from some
unforeseen cause, amounting to casus, the specific article,
though there had been every reason to expect it, could not be obtained by the vendor at the time of the proposed delivery.' This rule, however, does not, as we have seen, apply to fungible articles. All the wheat a party may have on hand at the time of a contract to deliver a certain amount of wheat, may be destroyed by casus. This does not excuse him from his contract. Wheat can be procured elsewhere, and it must
be procured.^
After compietion of
faifs
IS
The .,-,,,
317.
rule of the
Roman
law, that
if
a sale
Completed, the
loss, in case
of destruction,
falls
on
oT
purchaser,
although there has been no delivery, has been much criticized, and various efforts made to reconcile it with the position that in contracts of hiring the lessee is excused pro The older jurists tanto by the destruction of the thing hired. held fast to the maxim casum sentit dominus, to which they regarded the Roman rule as to sale as an anomalous exception.
German antho-
either party
may rescind.
In this case
and codes. Koch, Ford, ut supra, According to Weber, the clause rebus
sic
stantibus is
only to be implied in
of the
cases
contract or
tract
Mommsen,
Howell
S.
v.
op.
cit.
30.
462;
;
thus stated
When
of circum-
464
CHAP. XIV.]
liberatur interitu rei}
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 317.
More
has been declared to be founded on reason, that governing The reason given is that only the leases being exceptional.* delivery, not the payment, becomes impossible, and that the
latter, therefore,
remains due.
ground that the obligadependent on the performance of the obligation of delivery. He explains, however, the distinctive Roman ruling as to sales on the ground that when a sale is complete, there is nothing in the way of immediate performpudiates the
tion of
first
payment
is
ance.
The
is not imputamisconduct of the vendor. This, ble to however, is not the case with incomplete sales and with hiring. An incomplete sale cannot be spoken of as so consummated that the property passes to the purchaser. When goods are hired out, also, it is for a continuous period in which the obligation of the lessee is from time to time renewed an instantaneous performance of the contract is impossible from the necessity of the case. It follows that the rule governing complete contracts of sale (that impossibility of delivery based on casus is equivalent to a performance of the contract.) cannot have the general appli-
it.
It
is,
But
it
that there
;
no incompleteness or condition in the obligation and (2), that there is nothing- in the transaction forbidding immediate delivery.
If either of these conditions fail, the fiction
fails,
of delivery also
and with
it fails
By Vangerow, as we have
based on the
it
when
delivery
prevented by
;
oauses for which the law does not hold the vendor responsible
and this view is strengthened by the fact that from the time when the sale is completed, though before delivery, the vendee has the disposal of the goods.* In our own law the same result is
^
Voet.
comm.
ad.
tit.
periculo,
cit.
M.
1,
Pothier,
Trait6 de la vente,
i.
307
cited
*
by Mommsen,
op.
346,
;
282.
Supra, 314.
VOL.
I.
30
465
317.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XIV.
when by
a constructive delivery.'
By our own
See
Wh.
Con. of L. 417.
Where
trial,
days
with the right to return in eight if not aatisfled, and the horse died on the tliird day without the fault of either party, it was held that tlie plaintiflF, being the vendor, could
not
recover
be an impossibility based on casus, no damages can be claimed from the vendor but, on the other hand, the purchaser also is freed from his obligation.
;
As
enumeas the
:
As long
If
Conditional sale.
is
the
price.
Elphick
v.
condition
risk
is
not
Barnes, L. R. 5 C. P. D. 321.
on the vendor.
performance
is
On
becomes, without the fault of the vendor, impossible before the condition
satisfied,
observations by
of study
:
In the
Mommsen Roman
is
are worthy
law,
if
de-
the contract
is
is
void,
and the
struction
by
purchaser
not bound.
L. 8, pr. D.
the vendor
de peric. et comm. (18, 6). The same rule is applied in cases of partial impossibility,
bility,
may recover
not only the price, but the expenses he had been at in relation to the thing after the sale. Cf. Mackenzie,
and
of
temporary impossithe
impossibility
to be
even when
It is
rests
Rom. Law,
slave,
221.
of a
delivered.
ruled
without fault of the vendor, may recover from the purchaser the price of
the burial of the slave. L. 13, 22, Mommsen D. de act. empti. (19, 1).
cites
of a depreciation of value
must take the risk which occurred without the vendor's fault, and that he must pay the entire purchasethat the purchaser
at the time of
it is
bound
to
pay the
price
when
had intermediately
suffered
is
not be delivered through causes for which the vendor is not to blame. It
a deterioration.
This, however,
to
is
be limited to cases in which the quality of the goods at the time of the obligation does not expressly enter into the
the sale
is
perfected,
the purchaser takes the risk (pericnlum) and that under such circumstances the purchaser can obtain no
;
contract.
There
is,
therefore, here
no
contradiction
with
the
rules
above
imperfect sale
tract.
imperfecten
it is
price.
is
unset-
Kaufconif
tled,
imperfect.
is
case
In this case,
true,
there
specifically
mentioned
that where
4SQ
CHAP. XIV.]
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 317.
law, the risk of casus, after a sale is completed, falls on " When the terras of the sale are agreed the purchaser.^
on and the bargain is struck, and everything that the seller has to do with the goods is complete, the contract of sale becomes absolute without payment or delivery, and the property and risk of accident to the goods vest in the buyer."^ "In an actual sale," so is the rule stated by Mr. Benjamin,^ " the property passes, and the risk of loss is in the purchaser, while in the agreement to sell, or executory contract, the risk remains in the vendor." " Generally," so it is said by Bayley,
the price
is
the
and has no
L. 35,
5, 6, D. de contr. emp. (18, 1). But the purchaser bears the risk of
wine is sold, out of a particular cask, the vendor takes the risk down to the time of the measurement of the wine. L. 35, 7, D. de contr. emp. (18, 1) L. 5, D. de periculo (18, 6). While the Romans, therefore, so comments
;
Mommsen
(op.
cit.
depreciation.
3.
Imperfect sale
reference
to
the
and therefore
obligatio
perfect,
goods.
Under
this
head,
Mommsen
:
generis to
In this case
belonged
therefore,
upon the thing coming into existence, on which event all the incidents of
perfect sales
adopted
to the
in
reference
to
conditional
are to be assigned.
It
when the
thing,
ment.
The
deterioration,
It is
otherwise
limited, as
however, must be of all that class. Thus, if two pipes of a wine in a particular cellar are sold, the purchaser does not bear the risk when only one or more of the casks of this wine are injured, so long as the injury does not extend
to other casks.
v.
when none
Adams
;
Lindsell,
v.
B.
&
Aid.
subsequently
681
*
Mactier
Frith, 6
Wend, 103
and
the question be
Kent's Com.
V.
Clarke,
on the purchaser.
rulings of the
eflFect
We have, however,
that
467
318.]
J.,*
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XIV.
nothing
said about
immediately^ so as to
is made for the purchase of goods, and payment or delivery, the 'property passes cast upon the purchaser all future risk, if
nothing remains to be done to the goods, although he cannot take them away without paying the price. "^ 318. Whether a covenant of a tenant is vacated by his ejection by a public enemy, will be hereafter conof tenant
sidcrcd.^
We have
'^^
who,
edby^coMw.
^^ ^^^^ ^ ^^^^
to bear
the burden? Land is leased with buildings on it on a covenant to pay rent. The buildings are burned, and the tenant loses the use. There is a hardship either way: either the landlord or the tenant must bear the burden. !N^ow on a lease of land, with an express covenant to pay rent, with no provision as to the party on whom the repairs are to fall, there can be little question that the tenant takes the risk of fire. In any view, he enjoys the land and if he has not insured, and has not taken such precautions as preclude fire, it is his misfortune, but the loss must fall on him.* " When the law creates a duty," so is the rule stated on high authority, " and the party is disabled to perfprm it without any default in him, and he has no remedy over, the law will excuse it, as in waste, if a house be destroyed by tempest or by enemies, the lessee is excused so in escape, if a prison be destroyed by tempest or enemies, the jailer is excused but when the party by his own contract creates a duty or charge upon himself.
;
Simmons
v.
Swift, 5 B.
&
C. 862,
V.
'
adopted in Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 315, citing Arnold v. Delano, 4 Cush.
33
V.
*
;
Jane, Aleyn, 26
;
Harmony
Bayly
v.
v.
Bing-
ham, 12 N. Y. 99
1 Bay, 499.
Lawrence,
202; Leeds v.
v.
Willis
v.
Willis, 6
Dana, 48
Park,
HaU
in
Loft
Dennis,
1
;
1 E.
&
v.
E. 478
;
Dixon V. Yates, 5 B. & Ad. 313, and numerous cases cited in Benj 3d Am. The risk attends the title. ed. 315. Rugg V. Minott, 11 East, 210 Thayer V. Lapham, 13 Allen, 26 Joyce v. Adams, 4 Seld. 296 Terry v. Wheeler, 25 N. Y. 520 Whitcomb v. Whitney, 24 Mich. 480 Willis v. Willis, 6 Dana,
.
;
;
Cheetham,
6 Mass. 63
Sim. 146
Hallett
v.
Fowler
Bott,
Wylie, 3 Johns
44
Gates
r. r.
Harmony
Calloway
Hamby,
532
;
65
N. C. 631
;
Dowdy
V.
V.
Ely
Ely, 80
and other
;
cases
cited,
Bisph.
49.
Eq. 175.
468
CHAP. XIV.]
IMPOSSIBILITY.
to
[ 318.
he
is
bound
make
it
it
good,
if
by his contract. And, therefore, if a lessee covenant to repair a house, though it be burnt by lightning, or thrown down by enemies, yet he is bound to repair it."^ Hence, when there is an express covenant to keep in repair, destruction of premises by casus is no defence to a suit on the covenant.^ Even a covenant to rebuild a bridge is not excused by destruction caused by extraordinary storms.^ It is no defence, also, to an action for rent that the premises had been destroyed by fire, and that the landlord had recovered the insurance money.* On the other hand, where simply a building is let on a short lease, the lessee having no right over the soil, and being subjected to no duty to repair, he is not bound for rent after the building is destroyed by a fire for which he is in no way responsible.* The reason is, that in the first contract the implication is that it is the land which the lessee takes, and of which he must bear the burdens as well as the benefits, while in the second, he takes only the building, and when that is gone, possesses nothing which is of any value to him. Special minor covenants, also, dependent on the continuance of the building may be defeated on the destruction of the
vided against
building.* Hence, a lessee of coal mines, covenanting to
work
by
Dyer
Buss-
them during a
stated period,
Saund,
is
relieved
Fisher
v.
from
his covenant
Williams, Serg., 2
69;
r.
adopted in
91.
Hoy
V.
v.
Wightman, 66 Penn.
v.
427
man
Bullock
;
;
Dommitt, 6 T. R. 650 Leeds v. Cheetham, 1 Sim. 146 Digby V. Atkinson, 4 Camp. 475 Darrell v.
;
Stockwell
(a lease of a cellar)
v.
Shawmut Bank
;
Graves
v.
Tibbetts, L. R. 5 Q. B. D, 560
V.
Phillips
v.
Hoy
Holt,
rooms)
Kerr
v.
Exchange
v.
Co., 3
Edw.
5
Moyer
532.
v.
Mitchell, 53
Md. 171
Ely
f.
Linn
v.
exchange)
room)
499
356.
6
;
Winton
v.
v.
Cornish,
V.
Ely, 80
111.
In Whitaker
and
store-
Hawley, 25 Kan. 674, it is doubted whether the common law on this point
is
Bayly McMillan
;
Lawrence, 1 Bay,
Solomon, 42
359.
Ala.
in force in Kansas.
Brecknock Co.
v.
Pritchard, 6 T.
Pollock, op.
cit.
R. 750.
*
Magaw
V.
469
318.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XIV.
period assigned.*
the tenant was relieved from the rent of the room, but not from the rent of the saw-mill.^ And in Kansas, where the existence of the common law rule as above stated is questioned, it is held that where real and personal property are leased in a gross amount in a single contract, and where both are destroyed by casus, the tenant is entitled to an apportionment of the rent.^ Unless the covenant to repair is express, the tenant is not bound to repair in case of destruction by casus ; and no such duty, it has been held, is imposed on the tenant by a mere covenant to restore to the lessor the property in the same condition as when taken.^
Walker
v.
Tucker, 70
111.
527
see
In Miller
:
v.
Clifford V.
"In
Nave
tion
V.
may
to
be a
As
nonse?
for,
Womack v. McQuarry, 28 Ind. 103. was said by the court "This exception applies only to cases where the demise is of part of an entire building, and it is as a cellar or upper room founded upon the idea that in such
2
was recognized and adopted between an obligation to repair and deliver up,' and one to deliver up.' That whilst the former binds the obligor to rebuild in case of loss by fire
' '
It
during the term, Phillips v. Stevens, 16 Mass. 238, the latter is construed to mean simply an obligation against holding over, and if the buildings are
cases
it
is
lease to grant
any
joyment
of the
burned or destroyed, without the fault of the lessee, he is not bound to rebuild or pay for the improvements so destroyed. In Maggort v. Hansbarger, 8 Leigh, 536, the covenant was to return
'
when
ble
its
appurte-
by the destruction
by
fire.
See article in demise can operate." 24 Alb. L. J. 364. Whitaker v. Hawley, 25 Kan. 674. * Warner v. Hutchins, 5 Barb. 666
Maggort
V, v.
Graham
Levey
V.
v.
Howeth
v.
Phillips
v.
v.
Stevens, 16 Mass.
6 T. R. 650
Miller
238
Bullock
Dommit,
470
CHAP. XIV.]
319.
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 319.
To
of
character,
in
which
is
in delivering
held in Jones
v.
the
that even
when
between lessor and assignee but this was where the assignment did not mention the personalty. If the plain; '
them
rule
In
tiff
recover,
is
it
is
Wainscott
is
served
and To
are Sutliff
v.
Atwood,
burned down during his tenancy, unless he has expressly covenanted or agreed to repair. That it is not sufficient to charge him that he agreed or
covenanted to surrender the premises
Farewell
v.
Dickenson,
the
6B. &C.
251.
"On
this
end
of his
Dyer, 56, where the lease being of sheep and land, and the sheep died,
the rent was apportioned,
clude
:
and con-
at the
In
War-
'
ner
V.
be no just reason
tionment, even
nant was
up the possession
to leases of real
were in at the date of the lease, natural wear and tear excepted. The building
personal
was destroyed by
fire.
In an elaborate
property in a single lease ought not to prevent the accepted rules concerning the hiring of each to be
applied whenever application
ble.'
is
possi-
"
24 Alb. L.
to
J. 364.
and
it
In the
Roman law
pay
is
when
the occu-
Mcintosh V. Lown, 49 Barb. 554." " The cases of leases of real and personal property are very rare. In Buss-
pation becomes
impossible in conse-
quence of acts in any way imputable to the owner. L. 55, 2, D. locati (19, 2.)
man
said,
V.
it is
If
the occupation
is
is
only par-
obiter
lease of
tial,
the lessee
not
bound
to
pay the
right,
entire rent.
Whether he has a
any
fault of
up the
affords
no
ground
f.
'
for
defence pro
tanio.'
In
Fay
it is
said
But mere trivial depreciations, though coming through casus, are not cause for abatement of rent; L. 27 pr. D. lo-
471
319.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XIV.
law recognizes an exception where the thing bargained for is in the possession of a public enemy. The reason
Exception
in case of
is
is
public war.
within the same jurisdiction.^ But under our present system bj' which the right of suit is only suspended during war, and revives on peace,^ the Roman rule in this respect must be viewed as modified. Impossibility canof international law,
not be predicated of an act which
may
be possible to-morrow.^
In
defence to an action for rent.* And it has been held in this country that an exception in a policy of insurance that no action shall be sustained unless begun within twelve months
after loss,
is
the contracting parties, so as to extend the right to sue the close of the war.'
estate, his lessor
But
a lessee
who was
expelled by the
military authorities, during the late civil war, from the leased
not liable for rent due for the period during which he was
dispossessed.^
It
common
enemy, or by a
side.
But
if
the ex-
cati (17, 2)
Semmes
Gates
V.
v. Ins.
Co., 13
Wall. 158.
S.
of contract.
so far as
it
Temporary impossibility,
excludes occupation,
to
is,
Goodloe, 101 U.
305.
612.
as
long as
it lasts,
be placed on the
in suspending re
Pollard
v.
same footing as absolute impossibility, and when the exclusion is for a material length of time, the contract
Dall. 210,
can
344.
be rescinded.
Mommsen,
op.
cit.
L. 72, 1.
1).
3
*
of premises by a public enemy excused from contract to deliver up in good repair. See this case distinguished from destruction by fire in Hoy V. Holt, 91 Penn. St. 91.
struction
Infra, 473.
Infra,
320, 329
;
Magellan Pi
Mommsen,
op.
cit.
16.
rates,
18 Jar. 18
25 Eng. L.
& Eq
Paradine v. Jane, Aleyne, 26. But see Harrison r. Meyer, 92 U. S. Ill Bayley r. Lawrence, 1 Bay, 499. That
trading with public
595
I.
Hubbard
;
v.
244
Lewis
v.
Weakley v.
ville, etc.
Nash
enemy
is
illegal
R. R.
v.
infra, 473.
Sugarman
State, 28
Ark. 142.
472
CHAP. XIV.]
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 321.
no defence.*
is
not regarded
as an insurer, but
by his own negligence or mistake and is not liable if he has shown the diligence usual with good business
men under
it
similar circumstances.^
warea.
houseman,
trade,
particular
But
is
this
custom must be
to the parties so as to
make
tract.
Ordinarily a warehouseman
produced by a lack of those precautions which are undertaken by prudent storers of goods under similar circumstances.^
And
even
have elsewhere seen that impossibility is no defence to an action on a contract in the nature of a guarantee.^ This is eminently the case with guar- and other antees that third parties should do a particular fJjfgvedTy
321. thing.^
It
is
We
otherwise
when the
third party
is
casMs or nGCGssitv
whom bail have entered into a recognizance has been convicted and imprisoned by a tribunal of the state
party for
is
thus prevented
Wh.
on Neg.
561
Ford
;
v.
Cotesv.
278
Scott
v.
worth, L. R. 4 Q. B. 127
Colt
Mcv.
and cases
'
cited
Mechen,
Reeves,
6 Johns. 160
Railroad Co.
;
10 Wall.
176
Holladay
;
v.
North
London
Ins.
Denny
i;.
v.
R.
Co., L. R. 5
*
Ch. D. 569.
et seq.
Morrison
Davis,
v.
Wh.
on Neg. 573
Jones, 179.
20 Penn.
St.
Williams
v.
Lloyd,
6
^
W.
Coggs
v.
Head
v.
Tattersall, L. R. 7 Ex. 7.
Giblin
See supra,
311.
;
Field
V.
V.
Foster
99 Mass. 605
see M'Neill v.
9 Bing. 68.
Reed, 2 Moore
&
S.
89
473
321.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XIV.
The death,
also, or
where a habeas corpus could be maintained to bring him into court f though a commitment by the proper local authorities to an insane asylum would be a defence.* That the principal has been convicted and imprisoned by a court of the same state having jurisdiction, has been repeatedly ruled to be a defence ;' though it is otherwise when the imprisonment is for a short duration, which is ground only for a continuance in a suit against the bail. Imprisonment of the principal in another state from that in which the bail is entered is no excuse, since the principal could, by going to another state, in this way relieve himself at his own will ]/ though such is not the case when he is surrendered by the state having jurisdiction of the bail bond.^
The
rule
is
is,
is
entitled to relief
when the
sur-
render
in the
made
nothing by the omission of any act which it is bail to perform the governing principle being that as the power of making the surrender is taken away by an act of the law, the obligation to surrender is thereby discharged by law as the surety cannot, by law, surrender his principal, he cannot, by law, be held answerable for not surrendering."" Hence, compliance with the bond cannot be said to be impossible when the principal could have
plaintift' loses
power of the
See supra,
305.
v.
Griffin,
3 Earring. 333
Caldwell's
People
V.
r.
i-.
Adams,
Ap. 215.
Tubbs, 37 N. Y. 586 Scully Kirkpatrick, 79 Penn. St. 324; V. Mather v. People, 12 111. 9 State v. Cone, 32 Ga. 331. ' Adler v. State, 35 Ark. 517. See
People
;
Head, 259
315
6
;
Belding
j;.
v.
State, 25 Ark.
Cooper
State, 5 Tex.
Com.
i
v.
Fuller
V.
Way
V.
Wright,
v.
Met.
(Mass.)
8 9
Humph.
258.
f.
380; People
Bartlett,
3 Hill, 570;
S.
Van
Mattix,
|
Wilhelm
v.
Caul, 2
W. &
26
Canby
38 N.
J. L. 247.
474
CHAP. XIV.]
IMPOSSIBILITY.
its
[ 321.
so.^
complied with
relieve the bail
army by the
any more than would any other voluntary Compulsory conscription of the
Escape,
before there
has been a formal surrender, does not discharge the bail,* though it is otherwise when there has been a formal surrender
fled
made and accepted.* When the principal, as from mob violence, this is no defence, so it
unless the
tion.
is
is
government is unavailingly appealed to for protecIn a case in Kentucky, in 1881, where this defence was interposed,* it was said by the court: "The evidence shows that at that time the county of Elliott, in which the proceedings were had, was overrun by a band of so-called regulators, that they had killed several persons and had shot and seriously wounded the accused, and had threatened to take his life whenever they might find him, and that by reason of these threats the accused was compelled to abscond. It is contended by counsel that as it is the duty of the Commonwealth to protect the lives of her citizens, it ought not to require the citizen to discharge any duty or to comply with any obligation when such protection is not extended, and that the bail should be exonerated as in case of sickness of the accused,
him to attend in This ought unquestionably to be true when the constituted authorities are unable or indisposed, when properly called upon, to protect the citizen in the diswhich renders
it
Ibid.
See State
v.
Merrihew, 47
may be
Iowa, 112.
ity
v.
People, 34
on
bail bond,
et seq.
;
Brandt on Suretyship,
v.
448.
428
Bailey
De Crespigny,
v.
Alford
State
v.
v. v.
New
Iowa, 474;
;
York,
Cow. 538
Ga. 213.
folk, 15
Lee
State, 51 Miss.
665
State
v.
Harrington
V.
r.
Dennis, 13 Mass. 93
;
Reany, 13 Md. 230 State v. Soott, 20 Iowa, 23 Shook v. People, 39 111. 443; Huggins v. People, 39 111.
State
;
Norment, 12 La. 511. ^ See Com. v. Coleman, 2 Met. (Ky.) 382; Askins v. Com., 1 Duvall, 275; and Smith v. Kitchens, 51 Ga. 158 cases cited, Brandt on Suretyship,
;
433.
241
Pr.
contra,
People
v.
Cook, 30 How.
Weddington
v.
Com., 3 Ky.
Law
110.
Rep. 441.
475
322.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XIV
charge of the duty, but in this ease appellants made no application for protection to the accused, and do not in any way
show that the authorities were either unable or unwilling to extend the protection necessary to enable the accused to appear. It does not come in the category of cases where the accused is prevented from appearing by the act of God."
On the same
making
his
when sued as surety.^ person, also, who undertakes to introduce another person into a partnership of which he is a member, guarantees the assent of the other
to the introduction.^
" I entirely
is
made
that
must be performed
322.
Subsequent
impossibilit}' of per-
With
bility
is not a defence, unless it meets every contingency in which the work promised could be perAn example of the generic obligation is formance a formed. defence to to be found, in the Roman law, in the promise of suit on contract operas^ when the day in which the operae are to be for work. performed is not designated, or the person who is to perform the operae is left undetermined.^ In the last case applies the maxim genus nonperit; impossibility cannot be a defence, since it cannot be said that obtaining a laborer of an indeterminate class is impossible. It may be, however, that a contract for work is made dependent upon some particular thing which has ceased to be.* Transport, for instance, is to be effected in a particular ship, which ship alone has contrivances adapted to the due conveyance of the particular kind of goods to be carried. The loss of this ship, without fault of
Boast
V.
Firth, L. R.
;
4 C. P.
1,
Bayley,
J.,
;
infra,
323, 613.
L. J. C. P.
6 B.
&
C. 680
v.
Humphreys,
;
supra, 311.
See Simeon
679
*
;
v.
Watson, 46
L. 54,
1,
D. de V. 0.
Mommsen,
Caden
v.
V.
M'Neill
ed. 698.
Leake,
2d
supra, 298.
476
CHAP. XIV.]
failure in carrying these
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 322.
Where,
in other
words, the sole agency of performing a contract for work is destroyed, without fault of either party, there is a cause of action to neither.^ Hence, a fatal contagious disease at a place
him
may
It is otherwise,
forming the work can be found, though at great additional cost to the promisor and, hence, the burning of a house under construction is, as is elsewhere seen, no defence to a suit against a contractor for non-performance of his contract to build the house.^ Hiring of labor {loeatio operarum) has a close
;
Moramsen
argues,'' to
hiring
of things.
It is of the essence of
performed.
in actu
The transaction
is
to be completed in fuiuro.
"Opera
quam si dies venit, quo praestanda est; quam admodum cum stipulamur, quod ex Arethusa natura erit." Nor is the likeness limited to this
consistit; nee ante in
rerum natura
est,
feature.
The
rarum corresponded with the several parts of the price paid in the same way as the several periods of the enjoyment of a thing hired correspond with the several parts of the price
paid for the hiring.
lessee of a thing.
the contract for labor, are divisible, as are the duties of the
After a
Mommsen
broken up by casus occurring without beyond those actually rendered; but that he can recover damages for his losses on the whole contract in all cases in which performance is arrested by the misconduct of the employer, or by the employer throwing up the contract unless under the stress of
further performance
is
'
Mommsen,
ut
'
*
'
Supra, 300
Appleby
;
v. v.
Meyers,
Smith, 3
Lakeman Adams v.
Op.
cit.
v.
Nichols, 19
Pick. 275
L. R. 2 C. P. 651
Brumby
Ala. 723.
353.
477
323.]
necessity.
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XIV.
other hand, the employee cannot recover whose performance became impossible without the employer's fault and, hence, when a laborer is employed to work for a series of days in a particular building, the burning of the building stops the employer's liability for wages. In such case wages can only be recovered for the work actually performed. Whether, however, when the price is fixed for the entire period, time is the sole standard of reduction, depends upon the peculiar terms of the contract and the circumfor services
;
On the
Frequently, in contracts of this a rising scale of prices, conditioned upon the assumed growing capacity of the employee. In such cases, the sum to be recovered by the employee, if the employer is held liable, may be larger than it would be if the contract price alone was followed. In case of the employee's temporary
class, there is
wages are so much for each day's work, he can only recover for the days he was working though, when the wages are not so adjusted, but a salary is fixed for a specific extended period of time, then the inference is that Whether the conshort sicknesses are not to be deducted. tract can be rescinded depends- upon whether the casus is such as to interfere with the future performance of the contract. The question in our own practice is hereafter distinctively
;
considered.^
323. Subsequent impossibility is a defence to a suit for a personal duty when the contracting party becomes,
incapacity
fault, incapable of
performing his
incapable of
toduty^not
exclusively
actually
he
may
which enables him to dispose of it. Under the last head fall eases in which the party contracting has not the absolute control of the
to the
1
Roman
thing he undertakes to alienate. This, according law, does not aft'ect the validity of the obliga;
and
25 Conn. 188
Wolfe
v.
v.
Howes, 20 N.
Y. 197; Alexander
;
Smith, 4 Dev.
;
744 Knight v. Bean, 22 Me. 531 Hubbard v. Belden, 27 Vt. 645 Fuller v. Brown, 11 Met. 440 Ryan v. Dayton,
;
; ;
364 Green v. Gilbert, 21 Wis. 395 and cases cited Benj. on Sales, 3d Am.
ed. 571.
478
CHAP. XIV.]
tion.
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 323.
habet
ering.
ipsi nocere,
non mihi."'
The damage
is
to fall on the
This principle has been applied to contracts of exSubsequent loss of debt, therefore, is no defence to a suit for the means to pay a debt subsequent sickness is no defence to a suit to do a particular thing in all cases where the thing could have been done by others than the promisor, and in which, therefore, it was not to be inferred from the contract that the agreement was only binding when capable of being performed by him personally.* Hence, " when the thing or work can be done by another person, then all accidents are at the risk of the promisor."* " Where a party contracts to do anything which does not absolutely require him to do it in person, sickness does not excuse for he ought to have provided for it in the
change,^ and of bailments generall}'.'
;
:
contract itself."^
It is otherwise, however, when the duty one that was to be exclusively performed by the promisor, and could only be performed by him.^ "Where, therefore, tlie services promised are such as can only be rendered by the person promising, his subsequent intervening incapacity, for which he is not responsible, is a defence to an action against him for breach of contract. This rule was ap-
imposed
is
L. 34, D, de V. 0. (45-1),
sim
3,
Robinson
;
v.
Davison, L. R. 6 Ex.
ilar ruling is
contained in L. 49,
D. de legat.
* 8
(2, 31).
2).
See to same
effect,
;
Wilkinson
v.
Lloyd, 7 Q. B. 27
and
supra, 311
;
White
V.
vency
Ins.
v.
Mo. 539
4 C. P. 1 Dickey v. Linscott, 20 Me. 453 Knight v. Bean, 22 Me. 531. ^ Miller, J., Wheeler v. Ins. Co., 82 N. Y. 550 citing Wolfe v. Howes, 20 N. Y. 197 Clark v. Gilbert, 26 N. Y. 279 Spalding v. Rosa, 71 N. Y. 40 S. P. Alexander v. Smith, 4 Dev. 364. ^ Per cur.. Smith v. Ins. Co., Sup. citing Ct. Peun. 1882 13 Rep. 607 Scully v, Kirkpatrick, 79 Penn. St. 324. ^ Dickey v. Linscott, 20 Me. 453 see
269
Boast
v.
Firth, L. R.
infra, 848.
479
323.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XIV.
dangerous illness.* And the same principle is applicable to an engagement by an actor of a particular type to play for the
line of parts.^
contract,
by R. with
S.,
number of performances, ceases to be obligatory on the supervening incapacity of the principal performer and chief
tain
attraction in R.'s company.^
This rule is a fortiori applicable in cases where the promisor in a personal contract dies.* Entire incapacity, also, of a party to receive services, e. g, tuition, coupled with the non-rendering of such services, is a defence to a suit for the price of such services.' And when the person thus exclusively qualified to perform a particular service fails from sickness or other incapacity in performing the service, the promisee can rescind the contract. " Where
and agent and master and servant, the death of either party puts an end to the relation ;"^ though it has been held by several courts that acts bona fide
executed for the principal, before notice of his death, bind his
A partnership, also,
ing that
by
its terras to
unexpired.'
Robinson
;
v.
Spiers, L. R. 1 Q. B. D.
V.
410
Knight
269
311
and
;
see Spalding
Rosa, 71 N.
infra, 919.
Y. 401
;
Farrow
;
v.
Wilson, L. R. 4 C. P.
v.
744
Blades
v.
Free, 9 B.
&
C. 167
;
469
*
Campanari
Corsetti,
Woodburn, 15
5
C. B. 400
De
;
264
see
&
Gr.
604
529.
Lumley v. Hamblin
;
4 Paige, Wagner, 1 D. M.
v.
Clarke
v.
Courtney,
Peters,
;
319
Gale
?;.
Dinneford, 2
Edw.
<
s
V.
V. Tappan, 12 N. H. 145 Marlett Salkman, 3 Allen, 287 Saltmarsh Smith, 32 Ala. 404 Ferris v. Irving,
; ;
28 Cal. 645.
8
Cassiday
Ish
v.
r.
M'Kenzie, 4
W. &
;
S.
Firth, L. R. 4 C. P.
;
282; Carriger
Whittington, 26 Mo.
13
infra,
613
;
Simeon
Stewart
Ins.
311
V.
;
Watsou, 46 L.
is
J. C. P. 679
Oh.
'
St.
Wh. on
party
6
Holme
Hammond,
Co., L. R. 10 C. P. 144
infra, 613.
;
infra, 848.
v.
Leake, 2d
ed.
705
Poussard
4bO
CHAP. XIV.]
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 323.
bound by a personal service of this class, which service is to be performed and paid for in instalments, that portion of the work
that has been completed before the incapacity intervened
is
to
his liability
on a contract
of apprenticeship f and a contract for the services of a farm bailifl", which by its terms is determinable by six months'
payment of
is
dissolved by the
wages.^
In the
Roman
a defence on a contract to
who
undertakes
hand by an
contract
Temporary incapacity, however, only vacates the it extends over the period within which the Of course, such personal incaservices are to be performed. pacity is not a defence when the work can be done by - substitute, and the appointment of a substitute is practicable. The circumstances, as is noticed by Mommsen,* from which it is to be determined whether a contract of service is distinctively personal are various. It is requisite to take into account, in such cases, the personal qualities of the parties, the custom in similar cases, the local usage under analogous circum-
when
stances.
The nature
is
is
to be first con-
de caducis tollendis
from the peculiar legal relaby which they are environed. Of these a marriage conis an illustration a hindrance in the way of one of the
;
Whincup
As
v.
Hughes, L. R. 6 C. P.
78.
V.
Putnam,
27 Vt. 759;
;
Clarke
v.
603.
3
Gilbert, 26 N. Y. 279
cited
Farrow
;
v.
Wilson, L. R. 4 C. P.'
744
*
infra, 848,
cit. 72.
Whincup
V.
Hughes, L. R. 6 C. P.
78.
Op.
VOL.
I. 31
481
323.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XIV.
from the nature of things allowed.^ Insanity, therefore, is a defence to such a contract.' Another illustration is to be found in cases where one party bears a peculiar personal rela-
patrons.^
The princiwork to
is
be done.
Some
pay a debt of B., or to buy an article for B. at a fixed price. The same may be generally said of mechanics. man agrees to do a particular piece of carpenter work. The fact that he is taken sick does not relieve him if he has the opportunity to provide a substitute, but neglects so to do. On the other hand, a commission that
where A. agrees
to
its
done by the specific employee, the substitution of another not being contemplated. Hence, when an author is employed to write a particular book for a publisher on a topic in which the author is an expert, or a specialist in surgery to perform a particular operation, sickness, producing incapacity, would be a defence to an action for non-performance, such sickness not being imputable
execution assumes that the
will be
work
to negligence.
work
are distin-
as
a sculptor
may
delegate
some
By Mommsen
is
more exclusively
the com-
mission to be regarded as personal. With regard to mechanics, we have the following :^ " Inter artifices longa diSferentia
est et ingenii, et naturae, et doctrinae, et institutionis.
Ideo
aeditiest,
fabricandam quis promiserit, vel insulam candam, fossamve faciendam, et hoc specialiter actum
si
navem a
se
ut
fodiens,
non consentiente
stipulatore,
*
non
liberavit
reum."'"
See
L.
infra, 324.
toll. (6, 51).
Op.
cit. 77.
L. un. 9, C. de cad.
9,
Ulp.
1,
D. de
operis
libert.
1, 7,
Disputal.
Mommsen, op.
cit. b'Z.
(38, 1).
482
CHAP. XIV.]
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 324.
In this passage the various gradations of skill in mechanical industries are expressly noticed but at the same time it is
;
another in his place exists unless otherwise expressly stipuAnd it is elsewhere directly stated that he who underlated.
takes an opw5, or a piece of job-work,
may employ others to Hence a workman engaged in such a task must, if personally hindered, find some one as a substitute nor, if such substitute can be found, can he set up his personal hindrance as a defence, no matter how inevitable was the
do
it
in his place.^
This, of course,
is
subject to the
when
high grade, being the object of special confidence from the employer, and with no power of delegation given
him
tract
As will
be hereafter
whether the assignee of an executory concan recover depends upon whether the duty is one which
person who, knowing himself to be incapable of 324. marriage by reason of a prior marriage on his part, incapacity
of which the
he is ene:as:ed was ^o^' i"^'nage a deignorant at the time ot the engagement, is liable to fence to an an action for damages for breach of promise,^ though mint to the more proper form of action would be an action ^'"^yfor deceit. As death of either engaging party is a bar to such a suit, the executor of a deceased party acquires no right, and is exposed to no liability even when the breach of promise was before death.* In such suits the defendant cannot object that performance of the engagement was not demanded from him by the other party .^ Whether a subsequently accruiug incapacity to marry is defence to an engagement to marry was mooted in England in a case in which the Queen's
to
,
,
.
woman
whom
L. 12,
;
6,
D. de iisu et habit,
2)
;
ward
*
v.
and
(7, 8)
Chamberlain
v.
Williamson, 2 M.
&
Harris, 7 C. B. 999
;
S. 408.
s
Wild
V.
Mill-
483
324.]
CONTRACTS.
[cHAP. XTV.
Bench was equally divided, and in which a majority of four Chamber held that bodily disease making a man unfit for marriage is not a defence to a suit for breach of promise.' It was not a condition, so it was ruled,
to the marriage contract that there should be a state of health " as makes it not improper to marry." The conclusion of the
first, that the defendant's majority rests on two positions bad health made marriage not impossible, but only imprudent ; secondly, that the social position incident to marriage,
:
is a primary object with a woman in marrying, and that a person promising to give this position to a woman would be
bound
to
qualifications.
make the promise good, though he failed in other As to the first position it may be observed
is
that, if
"imprudence"
promise of marriage, ^hen there are few suits of this class that could be maintained. But supposing it should appear, as a matter of fact, that the defendant was physically impotent, is the promise one he ought to perform, and for non-performance of which he should be compelled to pay damages ? On this point, Mr. Pollock^ justly observes, that "it cannot be maintained, except against the common understanding of mankind, and the general treatment of marriage by the law of England, that the acquisition of legal or social position by marriage is a principal or independent object of the contract. Unless it can be so considered, the reason cannot stand with
the principle affirmed in Geipal
part of a contract
cause,
it v.
must be treated
;
become impossible
alto-
gether.
of ultimate appeal
but
it is
so
much
it is
now
of
little
the point actually decided, which, for the obvious reasons indicated in some of the judgments,
recur."
is
not at
if
all
likely to
impotency is a ground for annulling a marriage, no engagement to marry should be held binding on a person who after the engagement
this, it
To
may
be added, that
>
Hall
V.
Wright, E. B.
cS:
E. 746
29
3d ed. 393.
L. R. 7 Q. B. 404.
L. J. Q. B. 43.
484
CHAP. XIV.]
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 325.
is such that marhave a physical action destructive of A icoman would not be bound by a promise to marry life. under such circumstances it is hard to see why a man should
would be
likely to
be held bound
life
if it
would be imperilled by sexual -cohabitation, or if sexual cohabitation was impossible to him. Of course, a party who entered into an engagement of marriage cognizant of such circumstances would be liable in an action of deceit.^
it is
no defence when induced by the misconduct of the party setting The same re- when^e^if-' it up as a ground of impossibility.^ mark may be made on the question of subjective Jf^f^efe^'ce
325. It is elsewhere observed that casus is
incapacity.
A party
who by
his misconduct
makes
is
damages
248.
Supra,
In Allen
v.
Baker,
if
a contract of marriage upon the ground that he was afflicted with a venereal disease which rendered him unfit for the married state. Held, that he would be answerable in damages if
fulfil
by the act of God and without fault on his own part, unfit for such a relation and incapable of performing the duties
incident thereto, then the law will ex-
the
main part
of
the contract
and he knew his infirmity was incurable but if it was contracted prior to the promise and he had reason to believe it was temporary only, he would be excusable. The court said " We cannot understand how one can
; :
The court disapproved Hall v. Wright, which, however, seems to be supported by Boast v. Firth, L. R. 4 C. P. 8, where Montagu Smith, J.,
be so."
says
:
"In
be liable
the
woman, and
of social
position,
so far
as
his
power, though he
fulfil all
may
it
be unable to
riage state
and
rests
with
the
as
it
woman
2
the gratification
rendered law;
Supra,
312
infra,
603, 716,
by the union
of the parties
and
747, 901.
485
326.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XIV.
Hence, where a business by instalments, dependent upon the amount of the profits, it was held an implied undertaking that the buj'er should carry on the business, and that by discontinuing it, so as to prevent an account, he became liable in damages
was
to be paid for
for the price.* The action in such case is not for specific performance, but for damages for non-performance ; and, in such
plaintiflt* to demand performsuch case can the party disabling himself set up a technical default on the other side.* 326. The fact that a thing on which work is expended, as
cases, it is
ance.'
ISTor in
Work
to be
3,
tbou^iT' thing
is
subse-
divisible contract of labor, has been destroyed without fault of either party, before the work is complete, is no defence to a suit for the payment of the work so far as done,^ nor can, a fortiori, the
of that furnished
' Wald's Pollock, ut supra, 371, citing Leake on Contracts, 351, 460 Newcomb
;
by
plaintiflFs.
They
were not
joiner
glazing.
to
V.
Buttrick
v.
v.
Harriss
;
Wil-
S. P.,
Beswick
Swindells, 3 A.
*
&
E. 883.
L. R. 8 Ch. 658
R.
8
*
Ch. 737.
work or any of the painting or They were to have the entire work done by them completed by October 1, 1878, and were to receive their pay, which was to be $580, after the completion of the work. The contract stipulated for $250 damages in case
either party failed to
comply therewith.
The complaint
;
alleged that
by reason
Infra,
714
;
Garretty
v.
Brazell,
46
Cook ?'. McCabe, 53 Wis. 250 HoUis Tliat subseV. Chapman, 36 Tex. 1. quent impossibility of performance is a
defence to a contract of work, see supra,
322,
In Cook
v,
McCabe,
ut
supra
builders, were to house for the defendant, and as their special share were to do all the mason work thereon, and such building work as defendant was not to do, and to furnish such material as defendant was not to furnish. Defendant was to furnish some of the material for the mason work, and to haul certain
plaintiffs,
who were
on the part of defendant to do his portion of the work, plaintiflFs were hindered, but that they had nearly completed the work they were to do on the 19th of October, 1878; that on the 20th of October, without fault on their part, the building was destroyed by fire. They asked to recover for the value of the work and The materials they had furnished.
of a neglect
assist in building a
performance of the contract. Judgment was given for plaintiflFs, from which
defendant appealed.
This was affirmed
by the supreme
court.
J.,
:
From the
opin-
ion of Cassaday,
486
CHAP. XIV.]
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 326.
quentiy de^"'^^^
money paid by
The
ques-
and the house was, before its completion, destroyed by fire without his fault, it was held that he was not
thereby discharged from his obligation
to fulfil his contract.'
ols,
"Lord Kenyon,
V.
in deciding Cutter
Adams
v.
Nich-
19 Pick. 275.
Laird,
25 L. J. Ex. 329.
Menetone
repairs,
In the
v.
another's house
it
already built,
Athawes
into his
and
282
repairs.
;
the
owner agreeing
Wells v. Calnan, 107 Mass. 517. But the case at bar is not one of an entire contract to complete an entire building. It is more like Brumby v. Smith, 3 Ala. 123, in which it was held that where a workman agrees to complete the carpenter's work on a house, and to receive a certain sum on the completion of the work, his employer furnishing the materials, and the house and materials were destroyed by fire,
*
pay a sum named for the use of the dock, and also for the repairs and it was held that the
'
;
value
of
repairs
may
be
recovered
house being in the possession of the employer, the workman could not recover a pro rata compensation for the
though the ship be burnt in dock.' "In Nibjo V. Binsse, 3 Abb. N. Y. App. Dec. 375 S. C, 1 Keyes, 476, it was held that if the owner of a building contracts for labor upon it, he is under an implied obligation to have the building ready and in a condition to receive the labor contracted for and if, before the work is completed, the building is destroyed by fire, without the fault of the contractor, the owner is in default, and the contractor can recover for all that was done up to the
; ' ;
"The
is
based
time of the
fire.'
upon Cutter ?;. Powell, 6 Durnf. & East, 320, and Menetone v. Athawes, 3 Burrows, 1592.
sailor
'
had
In Cutter
v.
Powell, the
be paid the sum named, provided he proceed, continue and do his duty on board for the voyage ;' and
was
to
been extended by the mutual assent of the parties to the contract. Schwartz V. Saunders, 46 111. 18, was a case
J.,
'
Wolfe
v.
Howes, 20 N. Y. 200,
:
is
that
by which the party, in consideration an unusually high rate of wages, undertook to insure his own life, and
'
where the plaintiff entered into a contract with the defendant to do the carpenter work and furnish the materials therefor upon a brick building the mason work was to be done by another and independent contractor. After the brick work was nearly completed and a part of the carpenter work done, the brick walls were blown down. Held,
'
;
work
fell
v.
Rennie, L. R. 10 C. P. 271.
cussed
745.
487
326.]
tion,
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XIV.
of the contract.
upon the defendant.'
and
if
a part of
(1)
Where
that
'
to erect
and
and
a positive contract to do a thing, not in itself unlawful, the contractor must perform it or pay damages for not doing it, although in conse-
deliver
it.'
" In Rawson
v.
Clark, 70
m.
656, the
contractors agreed to manufacture and put into a building, then in process of construction, certain iron work, but were prevented from completing their
quence of unforeseen accidents the performance of his contract has become unexpectedly burdensome or even impossible. (2) But this rule is only
applicable
positive
to
any
Where from
it
and without performing the balance of their contract. "Hollis V. Chapman, 36 Tex. 1, was
tanto,
appears that the parties must, from the beginning, have known that
tract
it
could not be
fulfilled, unless,
when
a case where the plaintiff, a carpenter, undertook to furnish materials and do the wood work necessary to finish the
defendant's brick building, and to turn
some particular
specified
when
over the building complete by a given day, for a specified gross sum.
When
have contemplated such continuing existence as the foundation of what was to be done then, in the absence of any express or implied warranty
;
work, the building was destroyed by fire, without his fault, and the court
held that the plaintiff was entitled to
recover for the materials furnished and
tract,
work done by him. Stress was there laid upon the fact that the contract was conditional that is, dependent upon the execution of another con-
(4)
tract
and hence
it
was held
to be ap-
portionable,
to a pro rata
entitled
mathe
"The facts
the
that
Cleveland, 15
owner, for
whom
was
all
constructed,
upon the
by the counsel
it is
ground
brick,
all
Brumby
v.
that, in our
judgment,
not sustained
by
principle or authority,
and should,
therefore, be disapproved.
Upon
prin-
de-
488
CHAP. XIV.]
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 326.
it remains incomplete in consequence of the occurrence of an event for which neither party is responsible, then there may be a recovery for the portion performed.^ When, however,
a contract is indivisible, the cessation of the existence of the object of the contract, if imputable to casus^ is " a misfortune equally aftecting both parties, excusing both from
further performance of the contract, but giving a cause of
the general principle above stated, agreed to serve for a year, hut was released by the termination of the war, was held entitled to the full amount to be paid, he having abandoned other employments and devoted himself to this.^ But if a pupil is
action to neither."-
On
who
a substitute soldier,
taken sick so as to be unable to attend a school in which he is an excuse for payment of the
fees, unless it should appear that the place was taken to the exclusion of some one else.* In the Roman law, contracts of labor {locatio operarum) by which a party
agrees to
work
for a
particular length
{locatio
or conin
to
work
at a
the
the
if
there
is
no performance.
Hence,
worked at is casually destroyed before its completion (as where a tailor undertakes to make a coat out of materials which are casually destroyed before the coat is
the thing to be
On
work
com-
work
is
things.
But
law,
And
in the
Roman
undertaken for a fi^xed price on materials furnished by the employee is treated as a sale.
is
contractor, tlie loss
work which
must
fall
upon the
Infra, 714.
same insured at the time for his benefit and such owner cannot require the
;
''
completion of the balance of the building without restoring the parts which
Leas
v.
Stewart
were so destroyed."
489
326.]
CONTRACTS.
the contract
is
[CHAP. XIV.
When
ticular
to
make
g.
kind of material
(e.
him
for
The employee,
It is
otherwise
when
specific material is
If this material {e. g. a particular piece of cloth selected by the employer) is destroyed without the fault of either party, the employee, on
is not bound to pay damages to the employer to indemnify the latter for his loss in the non-delivery of the article, while the employee cannot recover wages for the time spent by him on the article, supposing the work to be indivisible. But, according to Mpmmsen,^ when the work is completed, the risk passes to the employer, so that if then the finished article is destroyed without the fault of either party, he becomes liable on his contract to pay for the labor expended by the employee. This is assuming that the work is done in compliance with the employer's directions, otherwise the contract is not complete, nor the risk transferred. If acceptance is conditioned on approval, then the risk is on the employee until approval.^ From this rule are to be excepted cases in which the delay in approval is caused by the negligence of
his part,
the employer.
The conclusion
at
which Mommsen'
arrives,
are
made
\>j
Mommsen,
I.
p. 371: L. 36
1,
sua cura atqiie opera consecutus esset. "Si prius quam locatori opus pro-
'
D.
locati (19,
2) Florentin.
7 Instit.
baretur,
vi aliqua
consumptum
est,
L. 37 D. eodem Javolen.
8 ex Cassio.
detrimentum ad locatorem
si tale
ita pertinet,
" Opus, quod aversione locatum est, donee adprobetur, conductoris pericu-
opus
fuit,
ut probari deberet."
lum
est.
ut in
Quod vero
qua-
admensum non
sit
et in
si
utraque
per
eum
is taken between cases in which the work is assumed per arerswnem, so that it is to be delivered and submitted to approbation as a whole, and cases in which the work is to be delivered by the foot or measure. In both cases the employee
In the
first
case a distinction
quam
:
adpronisi si
when
measurement,
'
aliud actum
sit
P. 377.
490
CHAP. XIV.]
after an elaborate
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 327.
examination of the authorities, is that the employer, in cases in which the thing is destroyed b}' casus before completion, is not bound to pay the price of the labor,
though
it is
If the
as necessitated approval.
When delivery
measurement
to be in instalments
(m
may be
construed as an approval
from the time of measurement under his direction; so that, if after such measurement the thing measured is destroyed, he The is bound to pay a proportionate price to the employee.
employer, therefore, in case of non-culpable destruction of the
thing contracted
until the
for,
is
loss in-
work
is
contract.
emwhich the employer has given to the employee defective material, or has provided an unsuitable
Liability, however, from the employer to the
ployee, arises in cases in
place.
327. A common carrier, by our law, is an insurer of goods committed to him for carriage so far as to be re-
carrier
may
unless
./on
Neither groTnVof
sira^''"s,
but
lire.
uot of
ilar
den rocks of which the carrier might have taken notice, are held to be casus} That seizure by a public enemy is a defence
is
elsewhere seen.
'
"Wh. on Neg.
552
Forward Forward
v.
v.
Bailments,
528
De Rothschild
;
Pittard, 1 T. R, 27.
2
Wh. on
;
Neg.
;
554
v.
Pittard, 1 T. R. 27
5 T. R. 389
;
Hyde
v.
Trent. Co.,
Royal Mail, 7 Exch. 734 Amer. Steamship Co. v. Bryan, 83 Penn. St. 446. * Wh. on Neg. 555 Williams v.
;
HoUister
Nowden, 19
gee supra,
319
Wh.
on Neg.
560.
In Williams
v.
Vanderbilt, 28
372 368
Am.
Trans. Co.
Moore, 3 Mich.
;
Cox v. Peterson, 30 Ala. 608 Hibler v. McCartney, 31 Ala. 502. ' Wh. on Neg. 554 a Story on
;
N. Y. 217, the defendant undertook to carry the plaintiff from New York to
San Francisco, via Panama. The vessel that was to have carried the plain
491
329.] 328.
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XIV.
several
When there
is
any one of these is open.^ The alternamust be pursued,^ unless the possibility so remote alternative be as apparently not to have does not exist. been within the intention of the parties.^ The same rule applies to bonds with alternative conditions.* Where a lessee of coal mines covenanted to raise a certain amount of coal each year and pay a royalty, or to pay a fixed sum as rent whether the coal was produced or not, the rent was held due though the mine was worked out.' 329. As in our modern practice the condition of a bond
an
alter-
the bond itself is void. The obligation is dependent on the condition, and when the condition falls, the obligation falls.^ Hence, when the law of the place to which a recognizance of bail is subject, by imprisoning the principal, makes his delivery by the bail impossible, the recognizance ceases to be obligatory.'' And generally the bond is subject to the rules heretofore presented as controlling contracts to do things which subsequently become impossible. On the other hand,
on the Pacific side was burned, without any fault or negligence of the defendant or his servants. It was held
tiflf
Mill
Dam Foundry
V.
v.
Hovey, 21
Pick. 417.
6 6
Bute
Infra, 547,
suit,
Wms.
Saunders,
tained by
at
him through
his detention
Panama, since the defendant could have obtained, though it may have been with great difficulty, another ship. 1 Leake, 2d ed. 716 infra, 624 see The Teutonia, L. R. 4 P. C. 171 Jones V. Holm, L. R. 2 Ex. 335. * Barkworth v. Young, 4 Drew, 1 DaCosta v. Davis, 1 B. & P. 242 Williams r. Vanderbilt, 28 N. Y. 217, and
; ;
People
v.
v.
Bartlett,
570
Scully
Kirkpatrick, 79
v.
Penn.
St.
324
Mizell
If
Burnett, 4
Jones N. C. 249.
the non-possibility
it
cannot
v.
be set up as a defence.
Swindells, 3 A.
325.
Beswick
&
E. 881.
See supra,
Barkworth
v.
v.
See Erie R. R.
240.
Way
321.
v. Taintor, 16 Wail. 366 Wright, 5 Met. 380 Fuller r. Davis, 1 Gray, 612; see supra, 307,
^
Taylor
V.
492
CHAP. XIV.]
it is
IMPOSSIBILITY.
in the old
[ 330.
books that when the condition is on obligation is absolute.^ But supthen the its face impossible, posing both parties knew of the impossibility of the condition,
laid
down
re-
garded as operative.^ 330. So far as concerns even a non-culpable vendor, parHe has tial impossibility constitutes no defence.
contracted for a specific price to
sell
a particular
prethis
poLibiiity'
^^^^1^^^^
Events for which he is not responsible thing. v*nt him from selling more than a part of
thing.
complain
he
is
is
capa-
To
this
he
is
bound. It is otherwise with the purchaser. If he knew at the time of the contract that it could only be partially performed, then
obtain only
delivered.
we have a right to assume that he expected so much of the thing contracted for as could
to
be
It by no means wanted the whole, therefore he wanted a part. In many cases a part would be useless without the whole in no case can it be assumed to be the object of a contract when the whole is contracted for. At the same time there may be cases in which the part which it is impossible
;
to deliver
tract
is
is
so insignificant that
its
we may
delivery.'
In our
own
law,
206, 6
V.
hanc questionem multum quanta pai's domus incendio consumptae permaueat ut si quidem amplior domus pars exusta est, non compellatur emptor perficere emptionem sed etiam, quod forte solutum ab eo est, repetet. Sin vero vel dimidia
Neratius
ait,
interesse,
pars,
vel minor
quam
dimidia exusta
est
D. de contr. empt.
I. 5,
(18,
1),
fuerit,
tunc coartandus
emptor vendi-
Paulus
emi,
ad Plautium.
"
Domum
cum
ex pretio
libe-
bustam ignoraremus
eat;
Nerva, Sabinus,
1.
sciebat
domum
exustam, emptor
493
330.]
CONTRACTS.
a consideration
is is
[chap. XIV.
when
formance
autem
exusta
pars
ignorabat,
He has
stare, si tota
sit
:
it
up
or of con-
tionem
et
venditorem
emptori
interest restituere.
2. Simili
quod quoque
it. If he elects the former he can recover the part of the purchase-money he has paid nor can
;
modo ex
emptor
et
indemnified for
ever,
qui
dem
;
sciebat,
venditor
oportet,
autem iguorabat
et liic et
si
enim
omne pretiam
solvi
vel,
si
If, howhe elects to confirm the contract, then he is entitled to a proportionate abatement of the price. If half only, or less than half, is burned, then the
repeti.
et
3.
Quod,
si
contract
is
held to be in
emptor
et
venditor,
domum
esse
exustam totam, vel ex parte, nihil actum fuisse, dolo inter utramque partem compensando et judicio, quod ex bona fide descendit, dolo ex utraque parte veniente, stare non concedente." In this extract we have considered
:
him
so far as con-
mains
sate
the purchaser
is
entitled to
to
possession, with
damages
compen-
through the
to be
him
for
him.
the
presented
1.
The house
is
wholly consumed.
of
performance
area
is
remains
Nevertheone of entire
the purdi-
Had known it, he either would not have made the purchase, or would have made it at a less price. And at the same time the purchaser
concealed this partial burning.
has a right
fraud.
impossibility.
The
will of
to
chaser
area
is
supposed
have been
The contract, therefore, is invalid, not only where both parties were ignorant
of the fire, but
it,
the purchaser,
who
is
compellable to
price.
The
case,
it
but
fraudulently
is
but f>ar/mZ.
Here
by Mommsen
(a)
should be remembered, is that of a partial burning. The supposition in such case is that the purchaser, being aware at the time of the partial burning, had his eye fixed, for the purpose
of purchase,
Both parties are ignorant of the burning. If more than half is burned, then the purchaser cannot be com-
partially dilapidated.
is
on the building as thus And though it possible that he may have had other
494
CHAP. XIV.]
IMPOSSIBILITY.
It
is
[ 330.
otherwise
Thus a master of a
vessel
views, yet,
superficies.
it
of the parties,
But
when
partial burning.
down
cognizant of the fact, and the object was simply possession of the building, then the whole contract falls for want of consideration. And in any view
burned after the closing of the same rule is applied as in the former case of the burning of
or
contract, the
the house.
It
the vendor
partial
head, to deliver,
if
required, to the
be limited to the particular state A house partially burned may be rapidly restored. There may, however, be cases where a destruction
is
to
of facts.
of a fraction
may be
;
Both parties
knew
that
the
and
to
such cases
house was consumed. (L. 57, 3.) Here the contract is invalid through-
Even if each party concealed his knowledge of the fact from the other,
outa
his fraud cannot give
action.
by an old master
In such cases
it
partially burned.
him
a right of
This
conclusion,
however,
and
:
is
the
would be absurd to talk of measurement as a mode of determining whether the purchaser continues bound by the bargain the
;
true test
is
Another passage
L.
58,
is
as follows
D. de
Quaest,
is still
possible.
And, in ad-
(1-10).
vento
dejectis,
est,
it is
essential to deteMuine
what
dictum
emptionem
si
non
contemplasciente,
fundus
emptor
comparabatur
sciebat vel
liaec
sive
:
it
sive
autem
vel
in
may
ignorabat,
optinent,
When
uterque eorum,
superioribtis
quae
casibus
pro
aedibus
dicta
is
determined by
sunt."
This
nursery-garden
which the
trees
Infra,
Adlard
v.
Booth, 7 C.
&
P. 108
Lord
v.
Q. B. D. 258
supra, 313-4.
495
331.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XIV.
who
prevented by causes beyond his control from obtaining a complete cargo, can recover the freight earned by the cargo he carried.^ And in case of part performance of a divisible
contract of sale, the unperformed part of the contract having
is
work
as completed.^
may
impossibii-
itymaybe
or tempo^^^^'
^^"* ^hat cau ucvcr be removed, as where there is a contract to deliver a thing which never can exist,
On
may be
only
temporary, as where the contract is to sell a thing on which there is a temporary embargo.^ Gn this question subtle distinctions have been taken in the Roman law. In
the
first
parties, at
On this may on
formed
ance
;
may
be noticed.*
all
We
transactions
which, at the time of contracting, cannot possibly be peror we may, on the other side, hold that only those
transactions are null in which the impossibility of perform-
But the first of these hypotheses cannot is permanent. Even supposing that the parties were at the be accej^ted. time ignorant of the temporary hindrance in their way, we have no right to assume as a rule that the contract would not have been made by them had they been aware of the hindrance. The vendee, for instance, in a case of sale, may find it far better for him to obtain the article he desires, though later than he expected, than it would be to lose it altogether the vendor cannot complain if the delivery is not exacted from him until after the period first designated by him. Yet
relates to subordinate accessary articles,
^
gee Thornton
;
v.
Place, 1 Moo.
&
R.
then,
when
infra,
See supra,
319.
Mommsen,
496
CHAP. XIV.J
IMPOSSIBILITY.
[ 331.
pronounced until the impossibility is determined to be absolute and final, there are also serious objections. The question of the validity of many contracts will remain in abeyance until some often remote contingencies are settled. The intention of the parties usually
is
they are engaged shall be either at once consummated or at once abandoned, so that their hands should be free for other
engagements; but this intention would be defeated if they should be tied up by a suspended contract until some distant future event shall determine whether they are bound or free.
It is not
good, also, for the business community that negotiathe difiiculties inherent in both these opposing
To avoid
which
stip.
is
theories, the
Roman
jurists hit
expressed in the following passages: 2. L. de inut. "Idem juris (aeque inutilis) est (stipulatio), si (3,19).
.
vel liberum hominem, quera servum esse credebat, vel cujus commercium non
sit,
.
erit stipulatio
ex libero
rem suam dari quis stipuletur. Nee in pendenti ob id, quod publica res in privatum deduci, et servus fieri potest, et commercium adipisci stipulator
sed protinus
de V. O. (45, 1), Paul. I. 72 ad " Sacram, vel religiosam rem, vel usibus publicis in edict. perpetuum relictam, ut forum, aut basilicam, aut hominera liberum, inutiliter stipular quamvis sacra profana fieri, et usibus
inutilus est." L. 83, 5, D.
;
usus
reverti, et
potest."
From
these rulings
we may
infer,
on the one side the mere possibility of a future removal of an impediment does not validate an impossible contract, and on
the other side that the contract will not be a nullity
when the
merely transient. Thus it is expressly declared that the promise of a res publica is void only in those cases in which the thing promised is devoted " in perpetuum" to pub-
impediment
is
'
Op.
cit.
145.
VOL.
I. 32
497
331.]
lie use.
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XIV.
distinctly asserted in the
And
:
this
view
is still
more
following L. 35, 1, D. de V. 0. (45, 1) Paulus 1. 12 ad Sabin. " Item, quod leges fieri prohibent, si perpetuam causam serva-
turum
est,
cessat obligatio."
Savigny^ holds that permanent which the possibility of the event in question may be looked upon as something within the range of ordinary expectation. Mommsen^ holds, on the other hand, that to make impossibility of peropinion exist.
impossibility cannot be assumed in cases in
formance a ground of nullity, such impossibility must be of a mere temporary inhibipermanence which is continuous. tion of sale, therefore {e.g. an embargo), would not fall within this category ; though it would be otherwise with a permanent inhibition (e. g. in case of laws prohibiting the sale of intoxicating or poisonous liquors or drugs). When, also, an obligation depends upon the co-cperation of a particular person, his temporary sickness would not annul the contract, though it would be otherwise with his permanent insanity. What has been said applies only to those cases in which the contract contains no provisions as to its efficiency in case of the removal of an intervening impediment. It is competent for the parties to provide that certain things shall be done on the removal of an impediment which is on its face continuous, provided the contingency of such removal be not absolutely impossible, and provided that the contract is not against good morals, as is a contract to sell goods whose sale the state, on grounds of policy, prohibits.^
Op.
cit.
147.
effect of
See as to
war
in suspend-
498
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
CHAPTER XV.
ILLEGALITY.
I.
General Principles.
ille-
Executed contract cannot be overhauled on account of illegality, 352. Complicity does not bar dupes or victims,
Wliere a contract
illegal
is
susceptible of an
353.
and a
Illegal
stipulations
338.
may
be severed
an
illegal
purpose
from legal,
may
be recovered back,
355.
defence, 339.
Agent cannot hold back from principal on the ground that transaction was
illegal, 357.
on
So of
it,
340.
money contributed
to illegal
purII.
poses, 341.
Violation of Statpte.
is
contributed to
ille-
illegal,
342.
360.
loci
Mere knowledge that supply goes to illegal purpose does not preclude recovery,
In conflict lex
solutionis prevails,
343.
362.
may
be infe-
ance of proof,
344.
No distinction as
345.
to turpitude of oflfence,
364.
is
Otherwise
when
act
made unlawful,
365.
may
sue,
366.
parties without notice, 347. Landlord cannot recover rent of house to be illegally used, 348. Parnership in illegal enterprise will
can
it
be vali-
dated
by
subsequent
cannot
legislation,
and
be validated,
499
CONTRACTS.
III.
[chap. XV.
for
Immorality.
Agreements providing
void, 395.
separation
Partial limitations
may be valid,
contracts
397.
So as to agreements So as to agreements
tion, 373.
Marriage
brokerage
void,
398.
vency.
Agreement
legis-
And so of agreement to
tive, 403.
influence execu-
378.
Agreements
Agreements
ences void,
void, 405.
380.
And
some
states void,
so of
agreements
to bribe voters,
406.
So of sales of public
offices,
Sunday
382.
contracts in
407.
to
Agreement
So- of
to
384.
When
assignments of salary,
calling
Otherwise as to pensions,
412.
Indorsee without
386.
Parties
may be
dealing
bona Jide
protected,
invalid, 414.
387.
Exceptions to be liberally construed,
388.
Agreement
to obstruct
justice void,
415.
Sunday
389.
417.
j
Vlll.
Champerty
tions.
sharing of promts
of litigation, 421.
Agreements modifying marriage are void, and so are agreements for divorce, 394.
Agreement
to sell claims
on shares
fiot
invalid, 423.
500
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
Agreement
to
make
valid, 444.
may
bind
client's inte-
Intended invasion of home revenue laws does not vitiate contract when
this is not the consideration, 446.
Agreement
Barrister
for
X.
services,
can
recover
for
428.
Objection of maintenance cannot be set
And
is
so of wagers
on matters which
up by
stranger, 429.
Agreement
rights
is
to
surrender
inalienable
void, 430.
to
have acted on, 450. statute wagers are illegal, 451. In this country tendency is to hold all wagers illegal, 452. A contract to purchase stocks or other
By
do
may
it
ing
is
void, 453.
illegal,
No
is
unlimited as to time,
432.
is
Otherwise as
to
"corners,"
4535.
void,
Reasonableness of restraint
tion of law, 433.
a ques434.
gaming debts
may
454.
trust, 435.
By
may
436.
So of insurances of
life,
456.
And
each other, and bind himself to give his whole services to employer, 437. Agreements relieving from liability for
employee
may
XI. USUBY.
438.
Usury laws
construed,
local,
and
to be strictly
461.
Between
to labor except at a cer-
conflicting laws,
is to
that
462.
least
Agreement not
is
onerous
be applied,
Law
And
463. Mistake in
464.
avoid contract,
441.
Agreement
And
tation,
442 a.
by subsequent usurious
466.
receptions,
501
335.]
Statute cannot be evaded
Statutes do not apply to
CONTRACTS.
by disguising
any transac-
[chap. XV.
478.
Contracts for breach of neutrality void,
tions but loans, 468. Borrower in usurious contract cannot defend without doing equity, 469. Question one of exaction, not of payment, 470.
479.
Contracts to run foreign blockades not
illegal, 480.
Contracts to
compound
offences void,
Enemy
Bbeach of
483.
Distinction between felonies
Neutrality.
and mislegal-
common
law,
473.
to belligerent insur-
Rule applicable
gents, 474.
485.
suit not
Settlement of private
pre-
criminal
477.
used
I.
GENERAL PRINCIPLES.
335.
Uniawfui-
As
'^^J
is
many
nessand
immoral acts which are not indictable, and some mdictabili.^ ty are not indictable acts which are not immoral. We may also say that unlawfulness (meaning by unlawfulness exclusion from legal aid) and indictability are not convertible, since there are in this sense
many unlawful
;
acts
Cheats by false pretences, for instance, are not indictable at common law yet no one would pretend to say that a person cheating another by false pretences could recover at common law the fruits of his fraud. So fornication is not indictable at common law, yet at comindictable.
"
law
And
1
we
more
Wh.
L. R. 2 Ex. 236
ed. 250.
adopted Pollock, 3d
'
Milbourne,
502
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 338.
make an
its
imposed on
commission.^
336.
A void contract is to
,
from an illegal contract. Money paid in furtherance contract cannot be recovered back.^ of an illeo^al '^
tmguished
^^^
But
legal
it IS
il-
as
is
illegal contract may be repudiated by either though a court of equity may impose terms on a party seeking to set aside a contract on the ground of illegalBut as a rule, no case, either when presented by way of ity.^ suit, or of set-off, or of defence, can be sustained on an illegal
frauds.*
An
party
;'
agreement.^
supposed that the parties to Where a contract is a contract intend in making it to violate the law ' susceptible
337. It is not to be
.
is
capable of
two con-
and'a' le^ai
void,
-
it
-
is
,,.
one making " it valid and the other clear law that the first ought to be
construction, the
second is to be adopted.
adopted."^
338.
i"i
1 1
When
11
is
Illesralstip-
when
v.
;
uiations
'
Infra,
363.
olls,
2 C. B. 501
Begbie
Phosphate
Taylor
v.
against public
infra,
policy are
see
Co., L. R.
10 Q. B. 491
Tracy v. Talmage, 14 N. Y. 162; Hull v. Euggles, 56 N. Y. 424 Stropes v. Board, 72 Ind. 42,
394
et seq. ;
;
Chester, L. R. 4 Q. B. 314
cited infra, 340.
8
and cases
Infra, 655
V.
Wh.
on Ev.
1249
2
'
Lewis
;
Davison, 4 M.
& W.
6 C. B.
654
441
Fos-
Jessopp
;
v.
Lut-
Rosewarne r. 614 Billing, 15 C. B. N. S. 316. As to distinction between " void" and "voidawyche,
Ex.
ble," see supra, 28.
*
*
1022
Richards
v. u.
v.
Bluck,
Marsh
Kellogg
lard
McCrary, 395
;
ter r. Rockwell,
Pawle
V.
Gunn, 4 Bing. N.
C. 445.
V.
Cowan
Cork,
;
V.
Millbourn, L. R. 2 Ex.
R. R. in
340.
;
Harris, 63 N. C. 542.
Erie, J., Mayor of Norwich v. R. 4 E. & B. 397 Kenton Co. v. Bank Lick Co., 10 Bush, 529. See for other
'
230.
6
etc.
re,
L. R.
4 Ch.
v.
R.,
762
^
see
itifra,
Thomson
v.
Thomson,
470
Fivaiz
Nich-
503
338.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
maybe
severed
from
legal,
the Stipulations are divisible, and the consideration * i n ^ t In other words, "in cases is not as a whole illegal.^
i
is
tainted
by no
illegality,
but some
itself to or
contaminate
those which are good, except where, in consequence of some peculiarity in the contract, its parts are inseparable or de-
A fortiori,
when
a transaction
is
the other illegal, the legal agreement can be enforced, and the transaction pro tanio sustained.' It is otherwise where the
and illegal, are so interwoven that the legal cannot be sustained without sustaining the illegal.^ "The general rule is, that where you cannot sever the illegal from the legal part of a covenant, the contract is altogether void but where you can sever them, whether the illegality be
stipulations, legal
;
created by statute or by the common law, you may reject the bad part and retain the good."* So far as concerns the statute
>
Green
V.
v.
Price, 13
M.
& W.
;
695
As
to divisibility in
Price
Green, 16 M.
of Australasia v.
& W.
233
infra,
152; Mayfield
361
;
v.
Wadsley, 3 B,
;
&
C.
Smith's L. C. 7th
Am.
ed. 681.
5 D.
&
;
;
R. 228
Kerrison
v. v.
v.
Cole,
'
Odessa Co.
1
v.
Mendel, L. R. 8 Ch.
66, n. (4)
;
8 East, 231
Moore, 483
M'Allen Gelpke
;
Churchill, 11
D. 235.
Dubuque,
Wms. Saund.
S.
Goodwin v. Clark, 65 Me. 280 Carleton v. Woods, 28 N. H. 290 Van Dyek v. Van Beuren, 1 Johns.
Wallace, 175
; ;
Jones, 1 Scott, 59
Neuman
Gaskell
v.
Waite v. v. NeuKing, 11
man, 4 M. &
East, 165;
East, 87
;
66
Wigg
v. f.
v.
Shuttleworth, 13
362 Leavitt v. Palmer, 3 N. Y. 19 Saratoga Bank v. King, 44 N. Y. 87 Hook V. Gray, 6 Barb. 398 Tracy v. Talmage, 14 N. Y. 162: Leavitt v. Blatchford, 5 Barb. 9 Lange v. Werk,
; ; ;
Ladd
Dillingham, 34 Me.
316
Woodruff
Saratoga Bank r. King, 44 N. Y. 87 Rose V. Truax, 21 Barb. 361 Donallen V. Lenox, 6 Dana, 91 Langdon v. Gray,
;
2 Ohio
St.
519 Widoe v. Webb, 20 Ohio Hynds v. Hayes, 25 Ind. 31 Kembrough r. Lane, 11 Bush, 556 Newberry Bank r. Stegall, 41 Miss.
St.
;
;
431
52 How. N. Y. Pr. 387; Frazier v. Thompson, 2 Watts & S. 235 Tobey V. Robinson, 99 111. 222. That when
;
the consideration
is illegal
this vitiates
v.
R. R.,
See Mallan
and
see Carrigan
v.
2d ed. 781), citing Maleverer i. Redshaw, 1 Mod. 35 Collins v. Blantern, Gelpke v. Dubuque, 1 2 Wils. 351
;
504
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 338.
of frauds the same test is applied. When part of a contract is invalidated by that statute, and the contract is severable,
then the invalidation is only pro tanto ; though it is otherwise when the contract cannot be severed.^ Thus, where C, having contracted to do certain work for E., but the work being suspended on account of failure on E.'s part to pay, and T.
having asked C. to finish the work promising to pay him in full, it was held that C. could recover from T. for the work done after the promise, but not for that done before the promise.^ And general!}' the fact that a deed contains powers or conditions that are illegal, does not avoid the deed unless these powers or conditions qualify the whole conveyance. If they are independent, and can be severed without injuring the
contract, their illegality does not vitiate the other portions of
the deed.^
It
is
said by
unlawful,
This undoubtedly holds good in cases in which the unlawful consideration permeated the whole contract, as where, for instance, as in the case put in the next
void.
section, the consideration of a
is (1) illicit
promise (or a
series of promises)
cohabitation, and (2) the securing the services of a housekeeper. But it is otherwise where the illegal consideration does not permeate the whole contract.
instance,
Supposing, for
A. agrees to pay B. $100 for goods sold, part being sold on Sunday and part on a Monday. Now, for the Monday sale the vendee could have a decree of specific performance and if so, the fact that the transaction was turned into a common account with the Sunday sale, is no reason why the ven;
dor,
who would
Monday
sale
Mayfield
v.
Wadsley, 3 B.
R. 228;
S.
C,
D.
&
Roby
V.
Odell, 30 N. H. 540
Rand
;
v.
Mather, 11 Cush.
v.
V.
Roll, 7 Ohio, 76
;
Everhart
v.
Puckett,
R. R., L. R. 3 C. P. 235 Payne v. Brecon, 3 H. & N. 572 Greenwood v. Bp. of London, 5 Taunt.
Pickering
727.
<
73 Ind. 409
Iowa, 20
;
3d ed. 338.
Kan. 692.
505
338 a.
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
And
it
is
why
this
Monday sale should be affected by the vendor took for both transactions, embracing the Sunday sale and the Monday sale, a single note. Undoubtedly, part of the consideration is illegal but if the vendee, on the untainted part of the transaction, could sue the vendor, so can the vendor sue the vendee. And there is high authority to this effect. Thus, in Pennsylvania, no action, by statute, can be sustained upon a note given for a tavern reckoning exceeding twenty shillings but if a note beyond that amount covers other items of lawful indebtedness, there can be a recovery for the latter items.^ And when a note is founded on several considerations, each fixed by a separate
right to recover for the
; ;
is
And when
it is
payment of
an account,
no defence that part of the account was illegal, if the amount of the note is less than the amount of the legal part of the account.^ contract may be fraudulent or otherwise illegal as to the parties, yet bind as to third persons innocently taking title under it.* And a contract may be divisible so as to be bad as to the parties, but good as to strangers acting bona fide on it.^ 338 a. Whether an insurance policy, covering several objccts, One of which is illegal, is invalid, in toto, Illustrated
Yundt
V.
Roberts, 5 S.
&
R. 139
Warren
v.
v.
87.
it
Duchman
147)
2
;
v.
Hagerty,
v.
Watts, 65
1
In Carrigan
(overruling Ogden
Miller,
Bro.
of
Chase
v.
Burkholder, 18 Penn.
invalid, in a
St. 48.
Frazier
;
Thompson, 2
W. &
S.
of the
Hynds v. Hays, 25 Ind. 31 and see Warren v. Chapman, 105 Mass. See contra, Deering v. Chapman, 87. 22 Me. 488; Widoe r. Webb, 20 Oh.
235
S. P.
St.
colla-
431
overruling Doty
v.
Bank, 16
In Bixby
criticism of Mr.
not invalid
of
318.
it
the
Moor, 51 N. H. 402,
should be submitted to the jury, whether collateral to, or in aid of, a violation of law.
*
covery of wages
when
was
Supra, 291
infra, 352.
Brad way's
Est., 1
Ash. 212.
506
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEQALITT.
338
a.
depends upon the construction of the policy. If it in ^n^nr^<^6 poli/. f c appear irora the policy itseli, or irom extrinsic facts, cies. that the insurer took the risk as a whole, it not being adequately shown that he would have granted a policy for the objects separately, then the contract must fall as a whole. In such case fraud as to one item of the insurance covered by the policy avoids the whole contract,^ and so of material concealment as to one item,^ and so of any misrepresentation that goes to the whole contract.^ But a misrepresentation without
1
T>if>
The
ques-
ought
as perin-
make
the representation
made
as
an inducement for granting a policy on the other? If there be no fraud attempted, and if the objects insured are so independent of each other that a separate policy for each would probably have been granted if applied for, then it is hard to say why a misstatement as to one object should prevent a recovery for the others.'' So far as concerns avoidance by subsequent alienation, it may be held that where the premium is entire, and the objects insured are contiguous, subject to the same risks, an avoidance as to one of the objects avoids as to all though it is otherwise when the objects are separately assessed and are not reciprocally dependent.^ On a policy thus
Me. 472 47 Me. 403 Gottsman v. Ins. Co., 56 Penn. St. 210 Moore V. Ins. Co., 28 Grat. 508, 524. See Bowman v. Ins. Co., 40 Md. 620. To the same effect see Cashman v. Ins.
1
Lovejoy
V.
v.
Ins. Co., 45
man
May
v.
Ins. Co., 36
v.
Gould
Ins. Co.,
milsch
Ins.
Co.,
on Ins. 2d ed.
277,
and discus-
v.
Lawrence, 4
Met. Ky. 9
Sel.
Burrill
v. Ins. Co., 1 v.
Edm.
3
Co.,
Allen,
N. B. 246; Clement's
Ca. 233;
;
Rowley
v.
Ins.
Co.,
Keyes, 557
126.
Koortz
v. Ins. Co.,
411
Gore Ins. Co. v. Samo, 2 Can. Sup. Friesmuth v. Ins. Co., 10 Cush. 5l7 Smith j;. Ins. Co., 25 Barb. 497
2
; ;
But Gottsman
St.
Penn.
contra,
;
Lochner
v.
Ins. Co.,
19 Mo. 620.
v.
To
this
effect
40 Md. 620; Richardson V. Ins. Co., 46 Me. 394; Barnes v. Ins. Co., 51 Me. 110 Friesmuth V. Ins. Co., 10 Cush. 687 HinIns. Co.,
;
Bowman
42 Mo. 126; Daniel v. Robinson. Batty, 650; May on Ins. 189, 277 Wood on Ins. 328. Friesmuth v. Ins. Co., 10 Cash.
Ins. Co.,
;
507
338 a.]
divisible, it has
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
tion of the property insured, though in violation of a limitation of the policy, does not avoid
alienated.^
It is otherwise
when
dependent.' In New York, in 1878, where a policy covered $6000, divided in specific insurance on buildings and several articles of personal property, it being provided that if the
it
should be void,
v.
court
said
In
Fire
Ass.
Williamson, 26
"The
Penn.
St. 196,
of the defendants
was not
It
distinct
and
sum
was separate
and
In one of the houses gunpowder was subsequently stored. It was held that
this vitiated the
In other respects it was an entire contract. This is manifest from the fact
that the
"Al-
premium and
though," said Knox, J., "three buildings were insured, the contract was an
entirety,
and
was
identical,
it
erty covered by the policy on the separate sums insured in each. There is nothing in the application or policy from which it can be ascertained how
of
of the three
loss occurred
had
its
origin."
The
much
was made up
the real estate, and how much of that on the personal property. The consideration of the contract was regarded by the parties as an entirety, of which they did not contemplate a separation or apportionment. It was in consideration of the entire sum for which the deposit note was given, and the liability of the assured to assessment on that amount in case of losses, that the defendants assumed all the risks contained in the policy. They had the right to look to their lien on each and
all
through the explosion of the gunpowder thus improperly stored. But had the buildings been separate, this reasoning would not apply. And the true ground of the decision in such case should be not the indivisibility of the contract, but the fact that the loss
was attributable
from thus perverting the use of the building. As holding that the appropriation of one of several buildings to a
hazardous prohibited use vitiates as to the whole, see Lee v. Ins. Co., 3 Gray, 583 Kimball v. Ins. Co., 8 Gray, 33; Associated Firemen's Ins. Co. v. Assum, and cases cited May on Ins. 5 Md. 165
;
277; though
it
is
would be otherwise
if
Quarrier
;
v,
Ins. Co., 10
v.
Va. Spankneble,
508
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 339.
and where a mortgage was given covering the buildings, it was held that the contract was not entire, but was divisible and that the breach of the condition did not apply to the items not embraced in the mortgage.^ On the other hand, it has been held that a policy for " $1000, say $700 on books and $300 on music," with the clause that if the assured should thereafter make any other insurance on the property the policy
;
is
vitiated
throughout by a second insurance without notice as to any one of the items insured.^ 339. We have already seen that when fraudulent intention is proved, it is no defence that there were other concurmotives more or less innocent prompting to the same ^^nce of other conact.3 It IS no reply, also, to a plea that a contract siderations was illegal, that there were other considerations besides that which was illegal.* contract to indemnify for publishing a criminal libel, for instance, is not relieved from illegality by the concurrence of other venial motives on the part of the person indemnifying and a contract for illicit cohabitation is not made any the less inoperative by the fact that the person contracted with is also engaged to act as housekeeper.^ But, as we have already incidentally seen, where there are several concurrent promises which may be
.
A
',^
aflF.
10 Hun, 428
S.
;
P.
Holmes
v.
Dacey
v. Ins. Co.,
Ins. Co., 23
Minn.
Armstrong v. Toler, 11 Wheat. 258 4 Wash. C. C. 297 Ladd v. Dillingham, 34 Me. 316 Prescott v. Norris, 32 N. H. 101 Bixby v. Moore, 51 N. H. 402 Woodruff v. Hinman, 11 Vt. Dixie v. Abbott, 7 Cush. 610 592
; ; ; ; ; ;
separately
Perkins
v.
Raguet
v.
v. Roll,
Donellen
v.
win
*
V.
Lenox, 6 Dana, 91
Chandler
Assum,
Md. 165.
V. Ins.
To same
effect see
Kimball
Rosier, 2 Bing. N. C.
Supra, 236.
Scott V.
Gilmore,
226
912
infra, 373.
509
340.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XV.
theu the promises may be severed, and a suit sustained on the promise to which a good consideration is attached.^ party to an illegal agreement, subject to the dis 340. tinctions above stated and hereafter to be noticed. ^ ^ , Party to illegal cannot use such agreement as the basis of a suit.
'
cfnrToTsue
"The
^^^^
is
this
ex dolo malo
its
on
aid to a founds his cause of action upon an immoral or an illegal act. If from the plaintifi's own stating or otherwise^ the cause of action appears to arise ex turpi causa, or the
oritur actio.
It.
No
man who
It is
the court goes, not for the sake of the defendant, but because they will not lend their aid to such a plaintiff". So if the
plaintiff'
to
change
it
sides,
ant was to bring his action against the plaintiff, the latter
for
"The
policy
of the law
is
not as a protection to
the defendant, but as a disability to the plaintiff"."* And the " true test for determining whether or not the plaintiff' and the defendant were in pari
delicto is
the
plaintiff'
could
make out
the medium and by the aid of the illegal transaction to which he was himself a party." Hence money contributed to an
Leake, 2d ed. 780, Mather ex parte, 3 Ves. 373. See generally on the topic in the text,
1
Supra, 338
Ames,
Myers
J.,
Horton
v.
Buffinton, 105
citing
Mass. 400.
*
6
v.
Carleton
v.
"Woods, 28
N. H. 290
Chester, L.
Caldecott ex parte, L. R. 4
;
V.
is
admissible
v.
Blan;
679.
See
to
same
;
effect,
;
Fivaiz
v.
v.
Am.
ed. 667
Nicholls, 2 C. B. 501
stead, 9 Vt. 310
Dixon
01m11 S.
Reynell
Totten
3
v. V.
U.
Swan
v.
v. Scott,
&
R. 155
;
Hippie
v.
Wh. on 510
Ev.
935.
406
Foote
v.
Holman
v.
Buck
CHAP. XV.]
illegal act
ILLEGALITY.
[ 340.
cannot be recovered back;^ nor can money advanced Payment to an agent, in pursuance of an executed agreement, is to be in this respect regarded as payment to the principal.^ It makes no matter by which
to carry out a fraud.^
is
advanced.
By whomsoever
Neither party can claim the aid of the law to enforce an illegal contract.^
it
stops proceedings.
And
hence goods conveyed on a resulting trust in fraud of back by the grantor from the
"
The
rule
is
that, in
or
any
one acquiring an interest in the property affected by the contract sought to be enforced, may set up the illegality of the consideration in defence."^ " Where parties are concerned in
Meinrath, 101 Mass. 367
Buffinton, 105 Mass. 400;
;
Horton
v.
v.
115;
Bestor
v.
Wathen, 60
91
111.
111.
;
138;
Sampson
v.
;
Blackburn
V.
v. Bell,
434
;
Harvey
Tyler
v. v.
Roll
Raguet,
v.
Tama
Co., 53 Iowa,
;
228
7 Ohio,
;
76
Moore
Broughton
;
Adams, 8 Ohio, 372 Smart v. Cason, 50 111. 195; McLostey v. Gordon, 26 Miss. 260 Hoover v. Pierce, 27 Miss.
;
White
v.
Ellis V. Higgins,
13.
'
V.
Evans
v.
v.
Her-
Getzler
Saroni,
741.
8
18
6
111.
511.
v.
Leake,
B.
Boutelle
V.
2d ed.
775
Tenant
v.
Rosen-
Elliott, 1
<
&
v.
P. 4.
;
Buck
Ins.
"As a general rule, a contract or agreement cannot be made the subject of an action if it be impeachable on the
ground
of dishonesty, or as being op-
Co.,
Mass.
575
;
Perkins r. Savage, Burt v. Place, 6 Cow. 431 Cameron v. Peck, 37 Conn. 555 Hendricks v. Mount, 2 South. 738; Stewart v. Kearney, 6 Watts, 453 Scott V. Duflfy, 14 Penn. St. 18 Bredin's App., 92 Penn. St. 241 Lynch's App., 97 Penn. St. 349 Cushwa v. Cushwa, 5 Md. 44 Spurgeon v. McElwain, 6 Ohio, 442 Spalding v. Bank,
15
Wend. 412
;
posed to public policy, if it be either contra bonos mores, or forbidden by the law. In answer to an action founded
on such an agreement, the maxim may be urged Ex vialejicio non oritur actio, A contract cannot arise out of an act
:
radically vicious
and
illegal
those
who come
seek redress must come with clean hands, and must disclose a transaction
warranted by law
and
it is
quite clear
12 Ohio, 544
Ohio, 408
;
Barton
v.
v.
Morris, 15
McQuade
;
Rosencrans, 36
Oh.
511
341.]
illegal
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XV.
agreements or other transactions, whether 'they are mala prohibita or mala in se," so is the rule stated by Judge Story ,^ " courts of equity, following the rule of law as to participators
in a
common
relief; acting
conditio defendentis,
possidentis."^
And
between degrees of
wrong, the courts will not distinguish f though a party who a dupe or a victim is not precluded from redress.^ Ilor does the fact that the defendant was equally implicated with the plaintiff in the illegality preclude him from setting up the deHence, money deposited as a " margin" cannot be fence.' recovered back in case of a fall in the price of the goods, when the deposit was known by both vendor and purchaser to be part of a gambling contract though it would be otherwise, if the purchaser made the deposit in good faith, as part of a fair business transaction.^ It must, however, be remembered that money paid on a purely executory illegal agreement may be recovered back before overt act / and so of goods deposited for
is
;
illegal
341.
Money
recovered back
money coniUegaf
purpose.
contributed to violate the lex fori cannot be when the money has been so applied.^
But to bar such recovcry, as will presently be seen more fully, the money must be given for the specific
purpose. It is not enough that the party lending might have foreseen that the money would have been likely
1
298.
Gregory
v.
See
Harrington
;
v.
Bigelow,
11
Paige, 349
Jones
v.
v.
Gorman,
7 Ired.
Infra, 354.
Infra, 355.
Logan
V.
Infra,
741
Cannan
v.
Bryce, 3
Infra, 345.
Infra, 353.
Ibid.
;
&
Bayley
u.
v.
Mass.
v. Russell, 17 Mass. 258. Meinrath, 101 Mass. 367, where Wells, J., said: " In such cases
288
Wheeler
See Myers
Hamilton v. Grainger, 5 449) H. & N. 40 Pearce v. Brooks, L. R. 1 Ex. 213 U. S. v. Grossmayer, 9 Wall. 72; Sprott v. U. S., 20 Wall. 459; White v. Buss, 3 Cush. 448. Thus, a
infra,
; ;
il-
Smart
Casou, 50
III.
195.
512
CHAP. XV.]
to
ILLEGALITY.
[ 342.
have gone to an illegal object, or that the person borrowing was engaged in illegal enterprises.^ Nor will it be enough that there was an intention that the party borrowing should He must know that the borillegally appropriate the loan. rower is purposing the specific illegal use, and must be implicated as a confederate in the transaction.^
The
rule preclud-
money paid
for illegal
purposes applies to
by
the parties to be fraudulently sold f to money paid as the price of an illegal compromise of a prosecution, after the
prosecution had been
unless the plaintifl'
compounded
lost at illegal
gaming
or wagering,
is
a statutory
right given.^
cannot recover the price of goods sold by Thus a party cannot recover the price of beer sold by him for the pdce^of purpose of unlawful retailing f or the price of goods fr^butedTo to be unlawfully exported f or the price of drugs to megai purbe used in an unlawful manufacture;* or of goods
342.
A party
him
to be used in an insurrection. ^
But
it is
was
probable that the goods would be in future illegally used, for It is necessary that the if so, few sales of goods could stand."
goods should be contributed for the express purpose of promoting the illegal design, and that the party selling should
be implicated in this design.^*
Infra, 343
Wh.
Cr. L. Stlied.
154-5, 168.
Cowp. 197 Doug. 698, n Waymell v. Reed, 5 T. R. 599 Oxford Iron Co. V. Spradley, 46 Ala. 99 and Michael v. Bacon, 49 Mo. 474
2
Clarke
V.
v.
Shee,
Lightfoot
v.
Tenant, 1 B.
&
P. 55]
Smith
Bromley, 2
Bell ex parte, 1 M.
&
S. 751
;
Pearce
v.
r.
Craig
Mis-
4 Pet. 410
Briggs
1
8
Begbie
Goodall
v.
;
Phosphate Co., L. R.
infra, 744.
Tenant,
1 B.
&
P. 551.
Q. B. D. 679
*
9
;
Langton
V.
Lowndes, 6 Q. B. 464
v.
infra,
s
483
et seq.
"
Cracroft, 1
Infra, 343.
Thistlewood
M. &
S.
343
Wh.
180-1, 1905.
VOL.
I. 33
513
343.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
343. It has already been incidentally observed that mere knowledge of the illegality of the object to which
knowledge
goes tome^
money
It is true that an eminent English judge has declared it to be " settled does not^^ preclude law, that any person who contributes to the perrecovery. lormance ot an illegal act by supplying a thing with the knowledge that it is going to be used for that purpose, cannot recover the price of the thing so supplied."^ But this must be taken with some limitations. To furnish ammunition
n-ni
is
unques-
tionably illegal
when
;
the ammunition
is
directly forwarded to
but the mere fact that a manufacturer of firearms knows that his fire-arms are likelv to be used for belligerent purposes does not make it illegal for him to put them on the market.^ It may be, also, that an importer of alcohol knows that a large proportion of alcohol sold by him will be but this will not vitiate sales he may make illegally peddled To annul a contract which promotes to intermediate dealers. illegal object, not only must there be knowledge that the an object is illegal, but there must be complicity in the performance of an illegal act.^ It has been also said that " the agreement is void not merely if the unlawful use of the subjectthe belligerent
;
matter is part of the bargain, but if the intention of the one party so to use it is known to the other at the time of the agreement."* It may be that a knowledge of the intention of
the party supplied to use the supplies illegally is essential to put the party supplying in the position of a_paHfc^jos criminis.
But the mere knowledge of such intention will not by itself The unlawful intention must have suffice for this purpose.
Pollock,
C B^, Pearce
;
v.
Brooks, L.
R. 1 Ex. 213.
Infra, 479
WJu
Tex. 578.
*
154-5, 168.
8
Waugh
;
V.
Morris, L. R, 8 Q. B.
;
V.
&
Aid. 179
;
Cutler
v.
202 Feret v. Hill, 15 C. B. 207 Barnard V. Field, 46 Me. 526 Savage v. Mallory, 4 Allen, 492 Adams v. Couil; ;
Welsh, 43 N. H. 497 White v. Buss, 3 Cusli. 443 Ruckman v. Bryan, 3 Denio, 340 Critcher v. HoUoway, 64 N.
; ;
Frank
v.
.O'Neii,
C. 526,
and other
cases.
.514
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 343.
titur.^
been in some sense executed.^ Cogitationis poenam nemo paThere must be a union of purpose^ between the party supplying and the party supplied in order to infect the former
latter's criminality.
with the
whom
money
in
but this will not prohibit his recovery in a suit on the loan. capitalist may know that it is the intention of a foreign government with whom he is negotiating a loan to apply the money borrowed to belligerent purposes but this knowledge, if war has not yet broken out, does not infect the lender with complicity. The lender of money on a mortgage on a store is not precluded from recovering it by the fact that he knows the mortgagor intends to open gambling tables, or to store prohibited drugs on the premises. It is not enough, therefore, in order to establish such complicity as defeats a right to recover in such cases, that the party supplying the goods or
money knows
an
them
be a
for
illegal purpose.
them
It is
fortiori^ there
may
re-
covery
when the vendor did not know of the submitted with much deference that the later English cases are not so inconsistent with the earlier as is supposed by
illegal purpose.*
1
Infra, 354-5.
N. C. 294
C. 576
;
Wallace
v.
v.
Lark, 12
S.
2 3
McGavock
v.
v.
Puryear,
6 Cold.
Wh.
Cr. L. 225
et seq.;
;
V.
Holman Waymell v.
v.
34; 133
689
;
Henderson
Kottwitz
Reed, 5 T. R. 599
Pellecat
Angell,
v. v.
Lewis
v. is
2 C. M.
&R.
311
;
Armstrong
McBlair
;
Toler,
That a loan
11 Wheat. 279
Planters' Bk.
;
Union
v.
Gibbes,
v.
Spradley, 46 Ala. 99
Prescott
Brooks
2 Wall. 90
;
Hill v.
MarSpear, 50 N.
v.
Norris, 32 N. H. 101.
H. 253
Foster
tyre
V.
Aiken
v.
Where a contract,
is
not in
itself
immoral,
v.
Mcln-
prohibited
by
Lestapies V. Parks, 3 Met. 207 Thomas v. Ingraham, 5 Barr, 71 Brady, 10 Barr, 164 Powell v. Smith, 66 N. C. 401 Walker v. JefFeries, 45 Miss. 160 Brunswick v. Vallean, 50 Iowa, 120 Williams v. Carr, 80
; ; ; ;
party
may
so prohibited
any money paid under such a contract. Walan v. Kerby, 99 Mass. 1 Schermerhorn v. Talman, 4 Kern. 93.
;
515
343.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XV.
both Mr. Pollock and Mr. Benjamin.^ " The merely selling goods," said Sir J.* Mansfield, in 1813, adhering to the earlier rule, " knowing that the buyer will make an illegal use of them, is not sufficient to deprive the vendor of his just use of payment, but to effect that, it is necessary that the vendor should be a sharer in the illegal transaction.''^ So far as concerns the italicized condition, if "sharer" means "continuing partner," this But in spite of the breadth of expresis no longer the law.^ sion with which this point has been ruled in the later cases, it can hardly be supposed that it is intended to affix the
stigma of
the time of
knew
In the first place, knowlarticle purchased to an illegal use. edge of this kind is always a matter of inference and unless there be complicity in the illegal transaction, such knowledge,
;
in sales of articles partially prohibited, does not usually impress the party to
whom
it
may
occur.
If I
am
prohibited
;
from
if I
but
am
make me a party him for the purpose. Of course, combination may be inferred when his intention to break the law is known to me, and I give the article to him But knowledge that such an illegal use of for this purpose. is probable does not make me a confederate. The the article
illegality rests in
confederacy.^
fect,
If
mere knowledge,
also,
more or
less
imper-
sale, neither
powder, nor fire-arms, nor poison could be sold in bulk.' No doubt some part of the aggregate of a large sale will be illegally used and this will vitiate the whole. And a borrower could repudiate all loans whenever he could show that his
;
>
3d Am. ed. 507. Hodgson V. Semple, 5 Taunt. 181. Langton v. Hughes, 1 M. & S. 593
Sales,
v.
v.
Taylor
t-.
Chester, L. R. 4 Q, B. 309.
See Hill
r.
v.
Spear, 50 N. H. 283
Cannan
Bryce, 3 B.
& A. 179
Pearce
Gaylord
6
516
CHAP. XV.]
creditor
ILLEGALITY.
[ 344.
knew he would
money
buying liquor, or in other illicit indulgence.^ is not necessary, however, that complicity should It 344. be shown by proof of an express combination beComplicity tween the parties.'^ "When two persons, in corre- and illegality to be inspondence with each other, are apparently pursuing fereutially shown and the same object, in part by the same means, one per- ^ preponforming part of an act, the other completing it, for deranoe of ^^^'^ the attainment of the object, the inference of comBut the use of unlawful means to plicity may be drawn.^ an agreement does not necessarily stamp the agreecarry out
in illegally
"^
'^
"^
.by
See
McGavock
v.
v.
Puryear, 6 Cold.
34.
In Gaylord
an action for selling liquor in bulk in York, where the sale was legal, to be retailed in Vermont, where the
New
sale
would be illegal, Aldis, J., said: " Although mere knowledge of the unlawful intent of the vendee by the
vendorr will not bar
him from
enforcing
it is
if
he in any way aid the vendee in his unlawful design to violate our laws,
such participation in the illegal enterprise will disqualify him from maintaining an action on his
this
state.
contract in
sound between a case where a seller simply has knowledge of the illegal design no more and where he makes a sale with a view to such design, for the purpose of enabling the purchaser to effect it." In Green v. Collins, 3 Cliff. 494, Judge Clifford argues with great force that mere knowledge of future illegal use does not vitiate, unless it is an ingredient of the contract that the law should be violated, or the seller combines with the purchaser to violate the law citing to this effect Sortwell V. Hughes, 1 Curt. 245. To the same point the learned American editor of Benjamin on Sales, 511,
The
participation
by the
note
M,
cites
Harris
;
v.
Runnels, 12
v.
vendor must be active, to some extent he must do something, though indirectly, in furtherance of the vendee's
Godfrey, 28 N. H, 379; White v. Buss, 3 Cush. 443; Peck v. Briggs, 3 Denio, 107; Tracy v. Talmage, 14 N. Y. 173 Curtis
S. 79
;
How. U.
Smith
not enough
unlawful purpose,
Leavitt,
15
v.
v.
v.
however slight, are sufficient." See to same effect Green v. Collins, 3 Cliff. 494; Aiken v. Blaisdell, 41 Vt. G56
Tuttle
V.
De Ruyter, 39 Mich.
Honey, 34 Tex. 245.
2
Bishop
392
;
R.
V.
Parsons, 1
6
W.
;
Bl.
R.
v.
Hill v.
v.
:
Whitehouse,
Cox
C. C. 38
Aiken
v.
v.
Spear, 50 N.
H. 253. In Adams
not enough
if
Foster
Thurs-
"Clearly
violation
it
is
he has
55 N. Y. 566
Bloomer
v.
State, 48
7.
Md.
et
521
8
and
see
Wh. on
Ev.
Webster Thomas,
See
Wh.
seq.
J.,
"The
distinction
is
517
345.]
CONTRACTS.
illegality.^
[CHAP. XV.
ment with
It
is
illegal
either by statute or
may
be also shown
statute.^
illegal
by
It
is suflSicient if illegality is
established by a preponderance of
proof.
doubt.*
of proo^
is
up the
illegality of a transaction.*
345.
A distinction
tion^jf to'''
volving great moral turpitude," and other offences " ^^^ amounting to felony," and it is argued that
complicity in the latter does not preclude a party from suing on the transaction.^ But a conspiracy
is
turpitude
to
to
a conspiracy
to further the
The
question,
is
illegality.
is
The
It
is
no
test.
abandoned
in
many
and will soon be abandoned in all jurisdictions;'^ and many misdemeanors are more heinous than some felonies. "Nor is there any line of turpitude that can be drawn that can
be relied on as a satisfactory basis of distinction.
of this kind,
it
If, in
is
a suit
suing for
Fraser
411
*
Badgley
v.
Wh.
Am.
ed. 700.
Supra, 239;
;
Wh. on Ev.
1245,
and
Ware v. Jones,
61 Ala.
286;
Farrar
v.
r.
Wheeler
Russel,
17
Mass.
;
258
Bloss
249
Beetem v. Burkholder, 69 Penn. St. Wh. on Ev. 358. Wald's Pollock, 365, citing Tracy
; ;
Ibid.
Cannan
M'Kinnell
;
v.
Bryce, 3 B.
&
v.
Aid. 179
v.
Robinson, 3 M.
Sheets, 24 Ind. 1
Bickel
v.
v.
Bacon,
& W.
434
S.
How. U.
38
;
Steale
i'.
v.
Curie, 4 Dana,
Armfield
v.
Wend. 412
Staples
v.
Gould,
5 Sandf.
Hubbard
Infra, 484.
518
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 345.
may be
is
concerned.^
The
dis-
between statutory and common law offences in this respect is no longer maintained.^ Whatever may have been once thought, " there is no valid distinction in the application of the law upon the subject between mala prohibita and mala in se ; and if it were ever regarded, it has now been wholly laid aside in the decision of the later English cases."^
The only distinctions to be recognized are the following: (1) Of contracts which are not prohibited by law or immoral, there are some which it is against the policy of the law to enforce, and yet the fruits of which a person can obtain from
a party unjustly holding them. It may be against the policy of the law to specifically execute such contracts, yet it may not be against the policy of the law to treat them when executed In such cases " the circumstance that the as giving title. relief is asked by a party who is jparticeps criminis is not in equity material. The reason is, that the public interest requires that relief should be given and it is given to the public through the party.^ And in those cases, relief will be granted not only by setting aside the agreement or other transaction, but also, in many cases, by ordering a repayment of any money paid under it."' (2) Dupes and victims of an illegal transaction are not precluded from suing on it.^ They have this privilege, not because the illegality of the transaction is not of a heinous type, but because they are not personally tainted with the heinousness. (3) Mere knowledge of a contingent illegal application of supplies given, does
;
See Finch
;
v.
Mansfield, 97 Mass.
391.
;
St.
John
v.
v.
St.
89
2
Suit
V.
Cannan
Bryce, 3 B.
&
A. 179
and
Am.
Hatch Bromley, Doug. 696 Morris v. Macv. Hatch, 9 Ves. 292 CuUock, 2 Eden, 190; Reynell v. Smith
;
ed. 507
Sprye, 1
Spear, 50 N. H.
S. v.
DeG. M. & G.
v.
660.
12th ed.
298
253
109
Owens, 2
Reynell
"
Sprye, 1
De G. M. &
G. 660.
Infra, 353.
462
Supra,
343
infra, 346.
619
347.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
346.
Complicity
in collateral matter not to be imputed.
Even
^iioi^^y, illegal
impu-
signed by
nished.
him
is that of an accessory before an accessory before the fact is not responsible and the fact for crimes collateral to and not involved in the act which he
His position
specifically counsels.^
order to infect
to
The unlawful act, in other words, in him with complicity, must be part of a scheme which he designedly contributes. There must be " a unity
of design and purpose, such that the agreement" of sale or loan, " is really part and parcel of one entire unlawful scheme."^
Hence, a bill for an account of partnership profits cannot be barred by the fact that in some particular transaction in which these profits were augmented, there was collateral Nor is an actor, who, unaware that a theillegal conduct.^ atrical exhibition is unlicensed, contracts to perform with the managers of the exhibition, barred from recovery on the
contract.*
347.
iiieo-aiity
The
does not
attach in
^^^Y aff^cts the parties to the contract, not reaching, unless proceedings by way of confiscation are directed, to the thing
tract.
rem, or to parties
which
is
without
notice.
Hence, a party
who
them on a contract of
with
a third party
who was
purchaser, also, as a general rule, of personal property fraudulently obtained, is not, if he buys
for a
As
to
is collateral,
see Fisher
;
r.
R. 8 Q. B. 202
Bridges, 2 E.
642.
3 *
&
B. 118
3 E.
&
B.
Sewell
People yer
2
V.
856
;
V.
Saw-
see
supra, 343.
6
v. Elliott,
1 Bro.
&
P.
V.
Miltenberger
Bridges, 3 E.
v.
&
B. 642.
V.
see
Emery
r.
Armstrong
Toler,
11
Wheat.
258, 271.
620
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 349.
is
in the hands of a bona fide endorsee for value.^ hand, an assignee or endorsee is subject to
the other of
equities
which he has
348.
notice.^
cannot recover
Landlord cannot recover rent of house to be illegally
used.
to be used as a
On the same reasoning, rent cannot be recovered when the object Avas to establish what the lessor at the time of the lease knew would
house of
be an illegal nuisance, in whose profits he was to
share
;'
as
to sell intoxicating
Nor when
a building
is
any
covenant in the
illegal acts
But
it is
as probable that
would be done
few
impeachment.
The
lease, to
be thus
void,
and with the intention of sharing the illegal profits.^ Nor is a lease avoided by the lessee, subsequently to the execution of the lease, using the premises for an illegal purpose, even though he may have intended this at the time of the lease.^ 349. In accordance with the distinctions main- Partner"
an
terprise
compel an account of
profits
Enforced.
infra,
733.
;
As
market
421-434,
436.
2
V. Clarke, 13 M. & W. 155 Melbourn, L. R. 2 Ex. 230 Riley v. Jordan, 122 Mass. 231; Ralston V. Boady, 20 Ga. 449. As to dis6
Flight
V.
Cowan
Cottle
V.
and
Ritchie
v.
Murray
Heatley
N.
*
6 ib. 324.
v.
Supra, 343.
As
*
401
Feret
V.
v.
Hill,
15 C. B. 207
see
et seq.
Cowan
3,74.
10
See infra,
See infra,
357.
521
350.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
of such transactions.^
so
far as
concerns
all
applies
illegal.
when
technically
Hence, under a statute requiring the names of all pawnbrokers to be printed over the doors of their shops, it was ruled that an agreement for a pawnbroker partnership with dormant partners is illegal f and the same rule applies to a partnership as attorneys, by parties made by statute to be incompetent to act as such.* partner in an illegal transaction cannot enforce any executory action on the other
partners.*
one
partner cannot excuse himself from accounting to the other on the ground that one of the objects of the partnership was
illegal.^
"^350.
An
is
void
and the
Insurances
on illegal
voyages are void, and so of illegal
sales.
insured cannot recover in case of loss f nor can the underwriter recover the premium, which, if the
voyage was
illegal,
is
was without
consideration.^
But
the illegality
or insurer if caused by the act of the master alone, without their coa-uizauce or connivance.^ An insurance of
Knowles
V.
v.
De
Ewing
Osbaldistone, 2 M.
&
Cr. 53
Begnis
Sykes r. Beadon, L, R. 11 Ch. D. 170 but see Brooks v. Martin, 2 Wall. 70 and criticism in Wald's Pollock, 329 Dunham v. Presby, 120 Mass. 285 Anderson v. Powell, 44 Iowa, 20 McWilliams i'. Bryan, 21 La. An. 211 Seely v. Beck, 42 Mo. 143, 2 Story on Part. 7tli ed. 6 citing
; ;
Stewart
&
F. 107;
Watson
6
V.
Watts v. Brooks, 357 Sharp v. Taylor, 2 Phill. 801 Harvey v. Varney, 98 Mass. 118 Sampson v. Shaw, 101 Mass. 148 Snell King v. WinV. Dwight, 120 Mass. 9 Belcher v. Conner, ants, 71 N. C. 469
See infra,
;
3 Ves. 612
;
Gordon
v.
Howden, 12
CI.
&
F..237;
1 S. C. 88
Pfeiflfer v.
523.
That
illegal
may be
;
legal items in
V.
V.
Powell, 44 Iowa, 20
1
&
Brandon
v.
Nesbitt, 6 T. R.
23;
K. 45
274.
*
Armstrong
v.
v.
Lewis, 2 Cr.
& M.
Furtado
8 9
Rodgers, 3 B.
v.
&
P. 191.
Jenkins
Power,
Williams
Jones, 5 B.
&
C. 108
Dudgeon
;
v.
B. 581
see infra,
353.
522
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
illegal sale is invalid
[ 352.
when
the insurance
is
indebtedness, are, as between the parties, infected Subsequent -11 T f With the illegality of the original transaction.'' securities This is the case with bonds,^and with judgments as wiuiiuebetween the parties.* i^egotiable paper, however, ^aiity. so far as concerns bona fide holders without notice, is relieved from the taint of illegality, which operates between the immediate parties.' 352. Supposing that a contract is executed, it cannot be overhauled by either of the parties on proof of nor can a transfer of contract illegality of consideration property when once made be invalidated on the overhauled ground of illegality of the consideration.^ It is ofitwai-* otherwise, however, when a party defrauded seeks ity "or ^^^ either 1 1 party rerestoration and restitution on ground of fraud.'^ Between an unexecuted and an executed illegal agreement there is this wide difference, that property passed under the former is held as by a mere stakeholder, without consideration received, while property passed under the latter is transferred absolutely, on a consideration which, however illegal, was deemed by the parties adequate. And the rule is that when property so passes it cannot be recovered back.^ This has been held to be the case with regard to money paid to trustees for a woman on account of past illicit cohabita
'9
Carrigau
v. Ins. Co.,
v.
53 Vt. 418.
320
Ayerst
v. v.
Chapman
;
Black, 2 B.
&
Aid.
;
Howson
588
Wynne
v.
v.
Graeme
Geere
V.
8
v.
Mare, 2 H.
&
C. 339
Dewitt
B. 642
;
Brisbane, 16 N. Y. 508.
Worcester
v.
Eaton,
11
St.
Fox
v.
v.
Cash, 11 Penn.
St.
Fisher
v.
Bridges, 3 E.
E.
&
Gisaf
Neval, 81 Penn.
354
353.
(reversing
V.
S.C, 2
&
;
B. 118)
Geere
Mare, 2 H.
weather, 2 B,
112.
6
6
j;.
Mary-
infra,
Hutchinson
8 T. R.
575
;
East, 97
Taylor
Chester, L. R. 4 Q.
Supra, 347.
Infra, 377,
B. 314
Scarfe v. Morgan, 4
M. &
W.
281.
523
353.]
tion
;^
CONTRACTS.
to contracts with a public enem}'- f to insurance after the risk is determined f
[CHAP. XV.
illegal
paid on an illegal
title
by the Supreme Court of the United States obtains possession of goods by a contract with a public enemy, which is void by the lex fori., cannot, if such goods are taken from him without right by a third party, recover them from such third party." But the better view is that, when a party acquires property through an illegal contract, he can recover such property from a third person who has taken it from him without right.^ It is
It has been held
that a party
who
cannot pass
title.^
But
title resting
who
is
as-
It
may
accounts in which such a contract forms an item.^ 353. To the rule that parties implicated in an executed
Complicity
bar dupes or victims,
illegal
transaction
Other, an exception
ig
is
ence.^"
'
A
v.
who buys
is
spirituous liquors
is
Ayerst
;
merely
275
*
infra, 373.
Infra, 473.
Andre
V.
r.
Fletcher, 3 T. R. 266;
compelled to refund."
Allkins
375.
Tape, L. R. 2 C. P. D.
Tenant v. Elliott, 1 B. & P. 4. Montgomery v. U. S., 15 Wal. 395 Whitfield v. U. S., 92 U. S. 165; Desmore v. U. S., 73 U. S. 605. 6 Tenant v. Elliott, 1 B. & P. 3 Merritt v. Millard, 4 Keyes, 208 Robinson v. Ins. Co., 42 N. Y. 54; Clements V. Yturria, 81 N. Y. 285 Pfeuflfer
*
See Lovell
v.
v.
R. R., 23 Pick.
32
Sampson
As
supra, 345.
De Leon
v.
infra, 357.
> Smith Doug. 696 v. Bromley, Browning v. Morris, 2 Cowp. 790 Pres;
;
V.
Supra, 292.
See
Wh.
V.
In
cott v. Norris,
32 N. H. 101
;
Lowell
v.
v.
White
Franklin
Walan
v.
Kerby,
Sampson
Shaw, 101
524
CHAP. XV.]
illegally sold is not, if
ILLEGALITY.
[ 353.
money paid on the sale, or for false warranty.^ A debtor, also, who, when in great difficulty, in order to get the consent
of an unscrupulous creditor to a settlement, secretly pays such creditor a bonus in fraud of other creditors, can recover back
the
money
so paid
;^
rule applies
where a defen-
dant pays money to get rid of a criminal prosecution or a penal suit,^ to usurious contracts which the borrower has been compelled by the creditor's harshness to accept ;* and to cases where bankrupts pay money to buy off an opposing creditor.
Mass. 150
421
93;
;
Phalen Schermerhorn
;
v.
v.
relief.
It is
Deming
v.
v.
State,
23 Ind. 416;
money
it
Davidson
man
'
V.
HeckPoston v.
;
on a contract which
because
Norris, 32 N.
1.
H.lOl;
See infra,
Walan
354.
2
Kerby, 99 Mass.
v.
contract,
which
it,
is
Atkinson
Leuzberg's Policy
650
;
N. 934; L. R. 7 C. D.
&
on a
Bean
v.
Crossley
cases cited
Knowlton, 103 U.
11th
S.
49
Cont.
Am.
ed.
944.
737.
3
The case
r.
Unwin
Leaper, 1 M.
Hewitt,
1
&
G. 747 98;
infra, 737.
*
Vandyck
V.
V.
v.
East,
;
has himself executed the contract. There are cases which go further and
hold that money so paid or property so delivered can be recovered back, even
after the contract
Astley
Browninfra,
ing
469.
^
Morris, 2
Cowp. 792
Smith
v.
V.
cuted,
if
the plaintiff
is
Sievers
Boswell, 3 Man.
&
Gr. 524.
party or
not
in
pari
v.
with the
On
defendant.
Tracy
Talmage, 14 N.
As
to
gambling
Y. 162.
is
As
may
be
I.,
noticed Hackett
Chellerton, 13 R.
Can the
plaintiff recover
where
was ruled that an action does not lie by an infant on a contract of service forbidden by statute. The distinction is thus stated by Durfee, C. J. " The law, however, while it will give no remedy on the illegal contract, does
it
on the authority
Can he be
We think
not.
The
cases
which sup-
525
353.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
all
"
to a contract against
public policy or illegal are not in pari delicto (and they are not always so), and where public policy is considered as advanced by allowing either, or at least the most excusable of the two,
to sue for relief against the transaction, relief
is
given to him."^
distinction,
" may act under circumstances of oppression, imposition, hardship, undue influence, or great inequality of condition or age; so that his guilt may be far less in degree than that of his And besides, there may be, on the associate in the offence.
part of the court
itself,
many
be."^
cases,
however reprehensible
may
Knight Bruce, L.
i'.
J.,
opinion in
;
is di-
Reynell
borne
V.
Sprye, 1 D. M. G. 660
Os-
defendant.
See
That
is
Ford
ing
V.
hibition
BrownHatch v.
;
thing,
namely,
in
the
employment of
Lowell
v.
v.
R. R., 23
minors
ments.
Pinckston
Brown, 3 Jones's
Eq. 494.
2
'no minor,
shall be employed,'
which means not only that no manu- citing Woodhouse v. Meredith, 1 Jac. & facturer shall employ any minor, but W. 224 Morris v. MacCuUock, 2 Eden, also what it says that no minor shall 190. be employed, the employment itself In Smart v. White, 73 Me. (26 Alb. being interdicted. The plaintiff is L. J. 12), we have the following from " The principle that where therefore suing for compensation for Peters, J. having violated the statute, for having the offence is merely malum prohibitum done a forbidden thing, which is very and not in itself immoral, a person diflferent from suing for money or propmay recover back money paid under an erty paid or delivered on a contract, illegal contract to the party who is the execution of which does not involve wholly or principally the wrong-doer, the plaintiff in the violation of any runs through a long line of decisions statute,but only the defendant. Thomas which bear more or less analogy to the V. City of Richmond, 12 Wall. 349, present case. The case at bar is a 356." See as sustaining the text White stronger case for the application of the r. Bank, 22 Pick. 181 see also Tracy principle than most of them. In Smith's V. Talmage, 14 N. Y. 162 Ford v. Har- Cont. 204, it is said there is an exceprington, 16 N. Y. 285 Long v. Long, tion to the rule or maxim, in pari delicto, and cases cited Smith's L. potior est conditio defendentis, where the 9 Md. 348 C. 7th Am. ed. 699. illegality is created by some statute.
;
'
526
CHAP. XV.]
354. tion, it
ILLEGALITY.
[ 354.
to protect
one
men
Massachusetts, he was allowed to recover back the deposit upon the ground
that although both parties were culpable the defendants were the principal
And it is
tract
whom
it
cover
it,
to be protected
him
to
cacious.'
The English
cases quoted
by
Cufif,
many and various. In Smith v. 6 M. & Selw. 160, Lord Ellen: '
borough says
side
This
is
not a case of
it
can never be predicated as par delictum when one holds the rod and the other
The court there said that deny the action would be to secure to the defendants the fruits of an illegal transaction, and would operate as a temptation to all banks to take an advantage of the unwary and those who had no knowledge of the law or the illegality of such transaction. In Lowell V. Boston and Lowell R. Co., 23 Pick. 24, the same doctrine is restated and reaffirmed as applicable to another class of facts. In Atlas Bank v. Nahant Bank, 3 Mete. 581, 585, the same court, speaking of the decision in White v. Franklin Bank, says To have decided otherwise would have given effect to an
offenders.
to
: '
bows
to
it
situation
9, it
where a contract otherwise unobjectionable is prohibited by a statute which imposes a penalty upon
and would have operated as a reward for an offence which the statute was intended to prevent.' In Walan V. Kerby, 99 Mass. 1, in construing an
offender,
may
recover as
upon
an implied assumpsit, against the party upon whom the penalty is imposed, for any money or property which has been advanced upon such contract.' Other
New York
same
effect.
the court say The seller and buyer of intoxicating liquors sold in violation of law are not in pari delicto, because the latter is guilty of no offence. When the purchaser seeks to recover back the price he has paid, the illegality of the transaction of which he offers evidence is wholly on the part of the defendant, and he himself is not parliqiiors,
: '
Schermerhorn v. Talman, 4 Kern. 93, and Tracy v. Talmage, id. 162, are to the same point, and contain copious citations of analogous cases. Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 509, note c, and
cases cited.
ticeps crim in is .
" Other
doctrine
V. is
are found in
is
considered
"In White
Pick. 181,
ited
v.
Franklin Bank, 22
plaintiff had deposbank repayable at a
where a
in a
money
Cameron and elaborately discussed in New Hampshire in the caseg of Prescott v. Norris, 32 N. H.
in Connecticut in the case of
V.
;
627
354.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
tract
is still
Money
paid on executory
This has been held with money paid as consideration of illegal agreement void wagering contracts,^ and with money deposited may be recovered with a stakeholder to be paid over according to the back. event of an illegal or void wager.^ In all cases of this class, however, the plaintiff must act promptly and fairly, and give previous notice that he repudiated the agreement.* The
reasou
is
plaintift''s
claim
is
not to
an
illegal contract.
The
object of
the suit
is
money unlawfully
it
was held by the Supreme Court of the United States, in 1881, that where a New York corporation increased its capital stock
in contravention of the statutes of that state, a subscriber
who
101,
and Butler
See
v.
Northumberland,
id.
33, 39."
infra, 730,
as to prin-
467
Colton
V.
Thurland, 5 T. R. 405
infra,
et seq. ;
2 Addis.
449
et seq.
Con.
1412
;
Hasfelow
v.
v.
Jackson, 8 B.
Ibid.;
;
Hodson
v.
TerriU, 1 C.
& M.
&
C. 221
;
Bone
Eckless, 5 H.
&
925 Palyart v. Leckie, 6 M. & S. Aubert v. Walsh, 3 Taunt. 277 Tappenden v. Randall, 2 B. & P. 467 Busk V. Walsh, 4 Taunt. 290 Smith v. Bickmore, 4 Taunt. 474 Gatty v. Field, 9
;
; ; ; ;
N. 290
Q. B. D. 189 see infra, 726, 729. * Palyart v. Leckie, 6 M. & S. 290 Foote V. Emerson, 10 Vt. 338 Dixon v.
; ;
Q. B. 431 Taylor v. Bowers, L. R. 1 Q. B. D. 291 Thomas v. Richmond, 12 Wall. 355 White v. Bank, 22 Pick.
; ; ;
Utica Ins.
652.
S.
Bloodgood, 4
v.
Wend.
Spring Co
Knowlton, 103 U.
184
Co.
Utica
49.
Cow. 20
Adams Ex.
See, however,
J.,
In the opinion of the court, Woods, said: " The views of the text-wri-
v. Flemming, 66 N. C. 524 Durant, 2 Strobh. 257. In Kiewert v. Rindskopf, 46 Wis. 481, it was held tliat money extortion ately
Kingsbury
Alston
can.
few will
v.
Taylor
291,
was an action
under
in
defrauding creditors.
verdict was
528
CHAP. XV.]
also,
ILLEGALITY.
[ 354.
representative,
cannot hold back proceeds from another of whom he was on the ground that there was illegality in the
way of getting the money.^ But where the plaintift" and the defendant agreed to conduct an unlicensed theatre, the enterprise being illegal, and the plaintiff in pursuance of the agreement paid out certain money, with the expectation of large
gains if the enterprise was forced through,
rendered for plaintiff with leave to move
to enter a verdict for the defendant.
it
the
tion
plaintiflF
" In Thomas v. The City of Richmond, 12 Wall. 355, this court cites with approval the note of Mr. Frere to the case of Smith V. Bromley, 2 Doug. 696, to
the
effect
of his
own fraud
as for
when
is
not exeis
The defendant then appealed to the Court of Appeals, where the judgment was affirmed. Both courts agreed that an illegal contract partially performed might be repudiated and the money paid upon it recovered.
*'
cuted
locus
penitentice;
the delictum
is
incomplete,
the contract
party.
'
'
The
to
of Appeals, said
'
If
delicto,
action
tiff
parties
my
material.
We
wholly to an end.
istrators of the
stock which
the
put everybody in the same situation as they were before the illegal transaction was determined on and before the parties took any steps to carry it out. That, I apprehend, is
effect is to
C.
&
E. Springs, 14
see, contra, S.
v.
C, 57 N.
Y,
518
cf.
White
V.
Lowell
Co.
V.
Utica Ins.
;
money
illegal
is
Bloodgood, 4
Wend. 652
;
Curtis
v.
an
Leavitt, 15 N. Y. 9
Skinner
Hen-
so paid
the
money
or delivered the
goods
may
recover
them back
is
before
Infra,
357
;
Armstrong
Baehr
v.
v.
Toler,
11
Wheat. 258
470
;
Planters' Bk.
;
v.
Union
he waits
till
Wolf, 59
carried out, or
he seeks
;
to enforce
Douville
v.
688
Heckman
VOL.
I.
34
529
355.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
call upon the defendant to contribute.^ And, as a general rule, a party who goes into an illegal enterprise risks all he puts in it, and cannot, in case of his confederate proving untrue, or the adventure miscarrying, recover back his advances.^ It should be added that if there be an agreement to rescind an illegal contract, and to return the money advanced on one side, the contract not having become operative, a suit lies to recover such money back.^ 355. Goods deposited with a party for illegal purposes,
he could not
Goods
deposited
for
may
upon repudiating the bailment.* This has been held where goods are transferred under a be recovfictitious sale to an agent for the purpose of eluding ered back. the owner's creditors, in which case the owner, by repudiating the transaction, may recover them from the " The vendor who had agent, or his assignee with notice.
inchoate illegal purpose may
an
to be the case
who had
remitted to his original possession on learning the unlawful use of the property designed by the purchaser or lessee."^
And
illegal
if
or if the
it,
agreement was rescinded before any action was taken on then there may be a recovery, back.
De Begnis
v,
Armistead, 10 Bing.
Bowers,
L.
v.
R.
Q.
B.
9
D.
291;
107.
V.
Symes
Hughes, L. R.
v.
Eq. 475.
Aubert v. Maze, 2 B.
& P. 371
;
;
Booth
v.
In Taylor
Bowers, A. transferred
fictitious assign-
Hodgson, 6 T. R. 405
Cannan
goods to B. under a
Bryce, 3 B.
et seq.
&
Aid. 181
supra, 335
ment
to
B.
C, with
notice of the
It
Burnell v. Minst, 4 Moore, 340 ney v. Reynous, 4 Burr. 2069 V. Hannay, 3 T. R. 418. ' Lea V. Cassen, 61 Ala. 312
FaikPetrie
was held that A. might repudiate the transaction and recover the goods from
C.
6
^
infra,
355.
*
Leake,
2d
ed.
774
Taylor
v.
530
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 357.
356. When, however, the mere fact of supplying either money or goods to an unlawful enterprise is criminal
e. ^.,
able conspiracy
the mere
aTdme,^*^
|ait*y can-
recover
executed that the party supplying the goods or money cannot, by repudiating the contract, recover either
back.
He
loose.
He
chance in a criminal venture, and then, after it is advanced in part by his aid, back out and recover what he contributes. The cases where this right of repudiation exists are those of
was not of
between the principal and the agent the agent cannot retain, as "
.
conducted by him for his principal on the ground principal And if A. pays t^at the"*^ money to B. for the use of C, B. cannot sustain a transaction /-IT n T n ^^^ illegal. reiiisal to pay to by setting up the illegality of the agreement between A. and C.^ trustee, also, cannot account on ground that refuse to a particular in the trust involved a breach of the law.^ "Where, also, A., with B.'s
own
benefit in B.'s
name
for
A. having no insurable
v.
'
Tappenden
Randall, 2 B.
&
P.
421
467.
On
and are therefore not crimiand attempts which are substancrimes, see
et seq.
Lestapies
v.
Ingraham,
111.
Barr,
71
Baehr
V.
Wh.
;
Cr. L.
8th ed.
Wolf, 59
180
2
Merrick, 25
Agency, 242, 250, 573, 761 Farmer v. Russell, 1 B. & P. 296 Tenant v. Elliott,
Infra,
725
Wh. on
;
Bousfield
;
v.
Wilson, 16
Wis. 688; Heckman v. Wis. 267 De Leon v. Trevino, 49 Tex. 88 see West. Un. Tel. Co. V. Blanchard, 66 Ga. ' Tenant v. Elliott, 1 B. & P. 3
Swartz,
50
Johnson v. Lansley, 12 C. B. 468 Planters' Bk. v. Union Bk., 16 Wal. 483 Caldwell v. Harding, 1 Lowell, 326 Phalen v. Clark, 19 Conn.
; ;
Kinsman
Infra,
v.
Sheppard
;
v. v.
OxenBees-
ford, 1 K.
&
491
Beeston
531
360.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XV.
up
An
agent,
on a settlement of accounts, cannot set up against a principal an illegal taint attaching to a special item.* Even though the purpose for which money is given to an agent may be illegal, the principal may revoke the advance at any time before actual appropriation takes place, or may recover the money from the agent in case the money be paid over by the latter after notice not to pay over.^ But where the principal's title is based on tort, an agent may set up as against the principal the title of a third person from whom the goods were unlawfully taken, and who has given notice of suit for the goods.* And when the contract of agency is itself tainted with illegality, its enforcement will be refused f and this is eminently the case when the act constituting the agency is in l^or can such a suit be mainitself an indictable offence.^ tained when the object is to obtain a share in an illegal
speculation.^
II.
VIOLATION OF STATUTE.
contract whose object is to violate a statute will 360. not be enforced by the courts of the state by which the statute
is
enacted.^
Worthington
Infra, 725.
Whether a
v.
is
Curtis, L. R. 1 Ch.
D, 419.
Hastelow
;
v.
Jackson,
8 B.
&
C.
;
Bone v. Ekless, 5 H. & N. 925 Sampson v. Shaw, 101 Mass. 145 Bailey v. O'Mahony, 33 N. Y. Sup. Ct. and cases cited supra, 354 239
221
; ;
Wroughton, 11 Neuman, 4 M. & S. 66 Pellecat v. Angell, 2 C. M. & R. 311 Cope i-, Rowlands, 2 M. & W. 149 Bank U. S, v. Owens, 2 Pet. 527 Thomas v. Richmond, 12 Wall. 349 Durgin v. Dyer, 68 Me. 142 Spring;
Graeme
v.
Exch. 146
;
Neuman
v.
field
Bank
v.
v.
v.
et seq.; infra,
*
725.
;
Wheeler
ler
Milv.
Taylor 2 Story's Eq. Jnr. 317 V. Plumer^ 3 M. & S. 562. s Hastelow v. Jackson, 8 B. & C. 222; Browning v. Morris, 2 COwp.
792.
6
^
Post,
Allen,
;
434
Smith
v.
Prescott
;
Bat-
119
Mass.
I.
;
285
;
Chellertou, 13 R.
Barton
Hackett v. v. Plank
v.
Supra, 356.
Infra, 725.
Peck
v.
Burr, 10
Smith, 1 Binn.
v.
v. v. v. v.
110
4 Ball. 269
1 6
111.
Seidenbender
;
Hope, 8 D. M. & G. 731 Cork, etc. R. R. in re, L. R. 4 Ch. Ap. 748 Yorkshire Wagon Co. r. Maclure,
8
Hope
;
V.
Charles, 4 S.
Reitzel,
Sparks,
Foote, 4
Barr,
L. R. 19 Ch. D. 478
Grell
r.
Levy, 16 C.
532
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 360.
to be determined in part by the construction of the contract, in part by the construction of the statute. So far
as concerns the contract, if
it is
susceptible of
two
violate
probable constructions, one legal and the other ille- ii\eg"aL So far gal, that which is legal is to be preferred.^ as concerns statutes the English rule is " that they should be construed according to the intent of the parliament which passed the act ;" provided that the words be " sufficient to accomplish the manifest purpose of the act."^ In England "the effect of plain and unambiguous words is not to be limited by judicial construction, even though anomalous results should follow,"^
common
equity" would be void, are regarded " as warning rather than authority."* In this country questions of this class are deter-
mined by
But
here, also,
we
must fall back on the presumption of legality. If there are two probable constructions of a statute, one of which is constitutional, and the other of which is unconstitutional, the constitutional will be preferred.' And, generally, " before we can make out a contract is illegal under a statute we must
make out
be
80."
it
shall
27 Minn. 433
;
J.,
And
v.
LewenGotten v. Macthai, 57 Miss. 331 kenzie, 57 Miss. 418. As to simony statutes see Bishop of London v.
strong, 54 Ala. 150
;
Middleton, 8 D. M. G. 217 per Lord Blackburn, in River Wear Co. v. Adamson, 2 Ap. Cas. 764.
'
Fletcher
v.
v.
Son-
Argos, L. R. 5 P. C. 152.
*
Goldham
Edwards,
;
Lee
*
R. R., L. R. 6 C. P. 576.
Wh.
on Ev.
1250.
Smith's L. C. 7th
^
Am.
ed. 680.
Supra, 337
infra, 655.
4 Q. B. D. p. 224. That contracts to violate liquor laws are void, see Whart. Con. of L. 482Field, J., L. R.
497 Taylor
;
v.
Case, 11 CI.
&
533
362.]
361.
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XV.
When
then,
there
is
place of contract
UxTMiloiittionis pre-
when the
question
q ^j^g contract is illegal, the laws of the place of performance are to determine.^ Thus, a contract made abroad, if not champertous in the place of performance, will not be held champertous in the place of contract.' But when an agreement is immoral, or conflicts with national policy according to the lex fori, it will not be enforced by the judex fori.^ On the other hand, a vendor, contracting in a
place
resale
where a
is
sale is lawful,
to be in a state
where the
im-
The prohibition of a
nallv "^
by
held with regard to stipulations evading usury statutes,^ and with regard to assignments evading bankrupt laws.^ If aeontract conflicts with the general policy and spirit of a statute governing it, it will not be enforced, although there may be no
literal conflict.^
1
Wh.
v.
Baker, 52
federal
111.
241.
And
so
under
the
the
constitution,
before
Penn.
463.
2
St. 18.
As
v. v.
to
usury see
infra,
Com.
v.
v.
Aves, 18 Pick.
193.
Richardson
;
Rowland, 40 Conn.
Levy, 16 C. B. N.
1 Hoflf.
S.
De Begnis
;
Armistead, 10 Bing.
565
79
;
see Grell
v.
107
Booth
v.
v.
Berrien
McLane,
Ch. 421
Bank U.
S. v.
infra,
421
et seq.
;
man
Reitzel, 1
W. &
S. 181.
;
Wh.
V.
Santos
3 Cliflf. 494; Hill H. 253 Webber v. Donnelly, 33 Mich. 469. In Osborn v. Nicholson, 13 Wall. 656, it was argued
V.
Green
derson
r.
see
Spear, 50 N.
infra,
461
et
seq.
;
by Swayne,
J.,
7 Mackay ex parte, L. R. 8 Ch. 643 Williams ex parte, L. R. 7 Ch. D. 138 see Pierce v. Evans, 61 Penn. St. 415
;
infra, 379.
*
Steaines
v.
Wainwright,
8 Scott,
See Roundtree
280;
Craig
v.
534
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 364.
363. If a statute prohibits an act, it is not necessary, in order to invalidate a contract to do the act, that Notnecesthe statute should provide a penalty.^ The fact that ^ary that
a thing
,
is
prohibited,
if it
public wrong,
in
,.
makes
its
penalty should be
prescribed.
any view
364. It does not follow, on the other hand, because a statute imposes a penalty on a particular act, that such act
is illegal. it
may
penalty may be a mere police tax ; be equivalent to saying, " You are at liberty
if
aity^im-'^"
no^^^alte*
you
do,
an act
state."
When
thus in
penalty
is
imposed
is
not in
itself unlawful.^
When
statutory
made without observing these condino stigma of wrong is attached to the specific transacand if it appears that the condition was imposed for
e.
g.^
Bartle
V.
v. Coleman, 4 Pet. 184 Fuller Dame, 18 Pick. 472 White v. Bass, 3 Cush. 449 and other cases cited, 2 Ch. on Cont. 11th Am. ed. 1003.
; ; ;
Fletcher, 5 N. H. 257
;
Com.
r.
v.
Seidenbender
;
v.
&
R. 159
Keller
State,
11 Md. 525.
Forster
lor, 5
TayRowlands,
v.
R.
v.
v.
R. in
re,
L. R.
4 Ch. 748
Milburn, L. R.
Johnson v. HudGremare v. Valon, 2 Camp. 144 Smith v. Mawwood, 14 M. & W. 463 Brown v. Duncan, 10 B. &
'
C. 93
Bailey
v.
Pattee
v.
Greely,
Harris
13 Mete. 284; White v. Bass, 3 Cush. 449 Mitchell v. Smith, 1 Binn. 118
;
Lamed
and
261.
*
&
Andrews, 106 Mass. 435. Pollock, 262; Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 538. That it is otherwise
v
F. 148-9, cited
object of
the statute
is
to
Lamed
2 Hawk.
c. 25, s.
R.
v.
Davis,
Say. 163; R.
;
v.
Gregory, 2 N.
;
& M.
Philbrick, 7 N. H. 340
V.
478 5 B. & Ad. 555 Mayor of Norwich V. Norfolk R. R., 4 E. & B. 397; Harris v. Runnels, 12 How. U. S. 80
Andrews, 106 Mass. 435 Favor v. Schermerhorn Tolman, 4 Kern. 93 and cases cited
; ;
infra, 365.
635
365.]
CONTRACTS.
;^
[chap. XV.
nor because the sale was not duly licensed, thereby exposing himself to a penalty f nor because the agent was prohibited from acting as such ;' nor because certain formalities presented by law have not been complied with.^ 365. But when a statute imposes a penalty, not as a tax, but as a punishment, then a contract to do the thing Otherwise on which the penalty is imposed is ordinarily unwheu act is
broker or peddler
making the
made
unlawful.
lawful
;'
is
absolutely pro-
hibited.*
And when
a business are imposed in a statute for the maintenance of public order, or for the protection of parties, or on grounds of
public policy, then contracts by such persons, in violation of
Thus it has been held that where a pawn-broker lends money without complying with the statutory requisites, he cannot recover the loan ;^ nor can a foreign
the statute, are void.^
1
Bailey
v. v.
Harris, 12 Q. B. 905;
2 Sandf. 146
Seidenbender
;
v.
Charles,
v.
Wetterell
8
Jones, 3 B.
&
Ad. 221.
;
S.
&
R. 151
Morris
Run
Coal Co.
St.
Smith V. Linds, 4 C. B. N. S. 395 Johnson v. Hudson, 11 East, 180 Jones V. Barry, 33 N. H. 209; see Lewis V. "Welch, 14 N. H. 294. Ward V. Smith, 7 Wall. 447 Conn Griswold v. V. Penn, Pet. C. C. 523 Waddington, 16 Johns. R. 438 Chas;
;
173;
;
Woods
and
6
V.
see
Prescott
226
tain V.
Bowman,
Hill,
S.
C. 270;
Lyon
*
V.
Smith
;
452
655.
V. Mawwood, 14 M. & W. Aiken v. Blaisdell, 41 Vt. That a statute which does not
"A
contract
is
void
if
prohibited
see
yond
though the statute inflicts a penalty only, because such a penalty implies a prohibition." Cope v. Rowlands, 2 M. & W. 149 adopted in Pollock, 3d ed. 271. It would be better when such a penalty implies a to say
statute,
;
by a
'
'
Muir, L. R. 6 P. C. 134.
*
prohibition."
;
See
De Begnis
S.
Drury
v.
r.
v.
P.
v. ArmRoby v.
Bensley
Fennell
Elkins
V. V.
Bignold, 5 B.
Ridler, 5 B.
&
Al. 335
;
&
C, 406
;
see
Com. Smith v.
v.
514.
1
Taylor
v.
v.
Gas
v.
Co.,
10 Ex. 293
5 Bing.
Arnold, 106
Lamed
;
'Ritchie
8
Smith, 6 C. B. 462.
People v. Andrews, 106 Mass. 435 Albany, 11 Wend. 539 Bell v. Quin,
;
Fergusson
Norman,
N.
C. 76.
536
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEaALITT.
[ 367.
conditions.^
insurance company without complying with the statutory When a statute, also, makes a license from two
by
surveyors of highways, contracts without such license are Under the act of congress, also, mortgages given to invalid.^
national banks to secure future loans are void f though it is otherwise with loans by national banks to a particular customer in excess of one-tenth of the capital.* Where, also, a
is imposed on selling by the cord wood not measured by a wood measurer, the object being to prohibit all such sales, a sale of this kind is void, and the seller cannot recover the price ;' and so of a sale of shingles not of a size permitted by local statute.^ 366. It may happen that by special legislation a particu-
penalty
lar class
may
on its contracts. Such legislation has taken place tected^by' with regard to contracts for labor, and to contracts ^ay^g^e by sailors and under the same general head may be considered contracts by infants. The fact, however, that the liability of such parties is limited does not interfere with their right to sue on contracts which are for their own
;
benefit.'^
367. Statutes prohibiting the performance of contracts, impairing the obligation of such contracts, are inoper-
if
4?notbT
,f*|.^i"^'
subsequent
v.
Ins. Co., 80
Penn.
St. 15.
lor, 5
v.
Piggott, L. R. 10 Q. B.
86.
*
i;.
B. & Ad. 896 Coombs v. Emery, 14 Me. 404 Harris v. Runnels, 12 How. U. S. 80 Bancroft v. Dumas, 21
;
Vt. 456
Miller
v.
Bank, 77 Penn. St. 96 Mapes V. Bank, 80 Penn. St. 163. Pray v. Burbank, 10 N. H. 377. Wheeler v. Russell, 17 Mass. 258. That the imposition of a penalty on the act stamps the act, so far as conv.
White
v.
v.
v.
Prescott
;
Battersly,
Griffith
Seidenbender
;
v.
&
R. 159
;
Fowler
v.
Penn.
St.
15
cited
2 Ch. on Cont.
11th
Am.
ed.
with
illegality,
see Fergusson
v.
1004.
i
Norman,
Mills, 1
Scott,
794
;
M.
&
R. 325
Forster
Houston v. v. Tay-
Supra, 2, 353.
But
see Hackett
v.
537
367.]
legislation
CONTRACTS.
in chartering a corporation, the right to
[chap. XV.
amend
its
of judkfai
opinion.
charter
is
reserved
or
it
may
domain
or of other
Such a statute,
if constitutional, is as
it
much
;
a har to
would have been had it been enacted prior to the inception of the contract and this is also the case with lawful executive action, by which the performance of the contract is made impossible.^ But where a contract was originally legal, a subsequent statute making it
the performance of a contract as
illegal
tract
does not discharge an agent appointed under the confrom accounting to his principal.* And as a general rule, a contract valid under the laws of a state as expounded at the time it was made is not affected by a subsequent change
The
facit jus,
based on
titles settled
under
such construction.*
'
to operate, the
Supra, 305
V.
Pollock, 340
;
Atkinv.
son
Brown
v.
Barker
Esposito
&
S.
267
v.
HodgBow-
it has been sanctioned by a tribunal of superior jurisdiction, and subsequently treated as law in the actual business
den, 7 E.
2 3
&
B. 763.
v.
Newbold
1 Dill.
Sims, 2 S.
&
;
R. 317.
;
lieve, to
Munic. Corp. 146 Gelpke 1 Wall. 175 Olcott v. Supervisors, 16 Wall. 678; Elmwood V. Marcy, 92 U. S. 291 Venice v. Murdoch, 92 U. S. 494 Walker v. State, 12 S. C. 200.
V.
Dubuque,
The true rule, I beThat no error is entitled to be accepted as law by the courts until it has been declared to be law by a competent judicial decision and afteraffairs of
men.
be this
wards so
far
Broom's Maxims, 5th ed. 139 Wh. on Ev. 1242 Kostenbader v. Spotts, 80 Penn. St. 430.
;
;
"In O'Connell
373,
pursuit of truth
plain,
we
legal
maxim,
is
and has
by
seldom applied in the administration of justice, and never without the ut-
of a
doctrine
most caution.
it
The reason
is
obvious,
law in destruction
the case.
my
irreconcilable
with some
in
clear
legal
principle.'
De Vaynes
538
CHAP. XV.]
error
ILLEGALITY.
[ 370.
must not be " floating," but " must have been made the groundwork and substratum of practice."'^
368.
its
inception cannot
if it
And
statute
repeal of that
III.
IMMORALITY.
370. " Contracts to commit an immoral offence, or to give money or reward to another to commit an immoral j^j.^q_
offence, or to induce
ments
to
induce iramorality
void.
than the previous class (contracts to commit a crime), have always been held to be void."^ " Generaliter novimus, turpes stipulationes nullius esse momenti."^ "Cum
Noble, 2 Russ.
&
universal error
the
it.'
Blackburn says, in Jones v. Tapling, 12 C. B. (N. S.) 846 There are cases in which a decision originally erroneous has been so long acquiesced in and acted on, that a return to the proper principle would greatly affect
Justi(ie
:
"
'
them. In my opinion, no evidence whatever, in this case, that the error which the complainants insist shall have the force of law, has ever been recognized or applied by any authority competent to give it the force of law." Runyan, C, Ocean Beach Ass. v. Brinley, 34 N. J.
this time to alter
'
there
is
Eq. 448.
'
Isherwood
R.
V.
v.
Oldnow, 3 M.
&
S.
382;
Sussex, 2 B.
&
S.
680;
existing interests.
This
is
peculiarly
may
be applied.'
" The error approved in Morecock v. Dickins, Amb. 678, was one that had been sanctioned by a prior adjudication. So, too, in D'Arcy v. Blake, 2 Sell. & Lef. 387, the error approved by Lord Redesdale was one which prior
decisions
Phipps V. Ackers, 9 CI. & F. 598. 2 Milne v. Huber, 3 McL. 212 Robinson V. Barrows, 48 Me. 186 Ludlow V. Hardy, 38 Mich. 690; Anding v. Levy, 57 Miss. 51 Decell v. Lowenthal, 57 Miss. 331 see Mays v. Wil;
; ;
Jessel,
Co.
V.
He said had made law. 'The decisions to the full extent are so old, so strong, and so numerous, so adopted in every book on the subject, and so considered as settled law, that it would be very wrong to attempt at
Lowell
V.
R. R., 23 Pick. 32
St.
;
Bredine's
241
see
White
v.
v.
Belding
Pitkin,
State, 6
Forsythe
1).
v.
L. 26, de
V. 0. (45,
539
371.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XV.
A printer, in
cannot recover the price of work done on a libellous book f nor is a promise to indemnify the publisher of such a book binding.^ In such cases the court, on the immorality of the transaction appearing from the plaintiffs opening, will refuse to hear the suit. "The court will not listen to claims founded upon services rendered in
conformity with this
rule,
violation of
common
hire.
committed for
the punishment imposed upon him, the culprit should sue the
instigator of the crime for the promised reward
if we
may
not
moment
from
its
presence, whatever
defence.
nor indeed could it be by the defendant's waiver, if we may suppose that in such a matter it would be offered. What is so obvious in a case of such aggravated criminality as the one
is equally true in all cases where the services for which compensation is claimed are forbidden by law or condemned by public decency or morality."* It has consequently
supposed,
been held that an action cannot be maintained for a breach of a contract in renting rooms w^hich the owner refused to allow the lessee to use when it appeared that they were to be opened
for irreligious lectures.*
So of im-
371.
court.
Wherever an agreement amounts to an init is void when sued on in a civil this head may be enumerated conUnder
1 L. 6, I. 30, C. de pact. (2, 3). See Colburn v. Patmore, 1 C. M. & R. 73 Worcester v. Eaton, 11 Mass. 368. * Poplett V. Stockdale, Ry. & M. 337. ' Shackell v. Rosier, 2 Bing. N. C.
634.
covenant by a landowner to let all his cultivable land lie waste, or a clause
in a charter party prohibiting deviation
Field, J.,
Oscany
v.
Arms
Co., 103
"
It
540
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 372.
bauch ;^ to procure a fraudulent marriage or divorce ;2 to procure an abortion f and to interfere with the rights of sepulture.*
372.
Wherever a
libel
would be
indictable, then
its
the
pre- soasto
li^eis.
paration or publication
this
is
the consideration."
Under
head fall indecent and seditious publications, as well as on individuals.^ Mr. Pollock'' maintains " that for all practical purposes the civil law is determined by and coextensive with the criminal law in these matters the question in a given case is not simply whether the publication be immoral, but whether the criminal law would punish it as immoral." In view of the constitutional guarantees in this country of the freedom of the press, this position will be generally accepted in the United States. At the same time it does not follow
libels
It
may
be easy,
lishing a
document that
is
a libel at
common
is
law.
As
we
in such cases
Wh.
R.
R.
v.
v.
43
Resp.
v.
v.
Wakefield, 2 Town.
East, P. C. 460
112
v.
Cole
People, 84
6 Ala. 765.
v.
216
State
v.
R.
v.
Gray, 1
Mifflin
v.
Com., 5
W.
Murphy, Com.
"
&
S.
461
Anderson
v.
Wh.
stockdale
Onwhyn,
5 B.
173; Poplett
Stockdale, Ry.
& C. & M.
Wh.
337
^
^
Gale
v.
Wh.
Means, 2 Den. C. C. 79
423
;
Com.
v.
3d ed. 286.
Supra, 339.
641
n
373.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
373.
So as to agreement
cohabita*^'
An
agreement
illicit
is
void
when the
consideration
is
future
object
cohabitation,^ no matter
what other
considerations
may
unite, or
how
might be cloaked f nor is the agreement made valid by a seal.^ A promise of marriage on considerais
void.^
illicit
cohabitation
of consideration f though if made under seal it would bind f and this even though the cohabitation continues after execution of the deed.''
sideration of seduction
woman, cannot afterwards be impeached by either the pkrty making the settlement or his representatives or assignees.'
Leake, 2d ed. 761 Walker v. Per1 W. Bl. 517; 3 Burr. 1568; Gray v. Mathias, 5 Ves. 286 Benyon
;
;
stated
v.
Jen-
kins,
by
" Most
V. Nettlefold,
V.
2 Mac.
&
G. 94
;
Coolidge
v,
Trovinger
;
of contracts founded on
McBurney,
Douglass,
Cow. 253
111.
Denraan
v. v.
102
341;
Walker
Benyon
100.
1.
v. Nettlefold,
Their results
'
Walter
Perkins,
ut supra;
Friend
Bonds
V.
Harrison, 2 C.
*
&
P. 584,
Moore, 1 Sim.
&
S. 61), incestuous,
Beaumont
v.
v.
Reeve, 8 Q. B. 4S3
Steinfel v. Levy, 16
Abb. Pr. N.
S.
26
and not
equity.
if
Hanks
6
Beaumont
v.
V.
Reeve, 8 Q. B. 483
Such bonds
or covenants,
co-
Fisher
Bridges, 3 E.
&
B. 642
ker
V.
WalSee Shenk
;
Mingle, 13 S.
&
R. 29.
See contra,
Smith V. Richards, 29 Conn. 232. And in such case the law of the place of performance binds. Ligeois v. McCrackan,
Blatchford, J., 13 Rep. 298.
6
Relief
the illegal
illegal con-
Gray
v.
V.
Moore, 2 Sim.
&
St.
260
Knye Brown v.
;
the instrument.
4. If
an
Kinsey, 81 N. C. 245.
^
Brown
Ayerst
;
v.
Kinsey, 81 N. C. 245.
275
bill of
Gisaf
V.
and
Nettlefold, ut supra.
all)
5.
circumstances, when
is
The prevailing
the consideration
illegal,
542
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 374.
a contract for the benefit of the woman is on its face executed, bearing reference exclusively to past cohabitation,
When
and the
illicit
is
resumed,
of which the past cohabitation is the consideration, unless it should be proved that the averment in the contract that cohabitation was abandoned was put in as a fraud, and that the consideration was really in part future.^
father of illegitimate children to their
them
is
for
Nor can a party recover the price of goods supplied an immoral purpose.^ Thus, the price of goods So as to sold for the purpose of carrying on a house of ill" goods or houses furfame cannot be recovered,^ nor can the rent of a nished for house for the same purpose. In such cases, how- immoral purposes. ever, the scienter must be established, and it must be shown that the intention of the vendor or the lessor was to further the commission of the wrong, and that this was the object of the bargain.^ If these conditions exist, an assignor
374.
not appear on the face of the instru-
As
to
ment,
relief
may
be given to a particeps
525
criminis in
It
equity."
cohabitation
Thompson
3
v.
Infra, 525.
country
age
an
in-
& N
40
6
Pearce
v.
Supra, 348
v.
Girarday
v.
Ricliardson,
Esp.
13
Gray
Hall
V.
gle,
Appleton Jennings
251; U.
;
V. v.
Campbell, 2 C.
V.
&
P. 347
Brown
v.
Kinsey,
covenant, by parties
who have been living in illicit cohabitation, but who have separated, for an annuity to the woman with a proviso
that
it
Throgmorton, Ry. & M Gray, 2 Cranch C. C 675 Com. v. Harrington, 3 Pick. 26 Riley v. Jordan, 122 Mass. 231 Dyott V. Pendleton, 8 Cow. 727; Smith o. State, 6 Gill, 425 State v. Potter, 30
S.
;
Iowa, 587.
^
cease
upon the
is
parties living
;
Appleton
;
V.
Campbell, 2 C.
&
;
P.
together again,
proviso
is
valid
though the
void.
Naden
w parte, L. R.
9 Ch. 670.
2
347 Bowry v. Bennett, 1 Camp. 348 Lloyd V. Johnson, 1 B. & P. 340 Jennings V. Throgmorton, Ry. & M. 251
;
Smith
V.
State
V.
643
376.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
of a house habitually used as a house of ill-fame cannot recover upon the indemnity of the assignee against breaches of
376.
agreements to effect such a conspiracy are invalid.'^ This rule is applicable to conspiracies to mentrto defraud cheat by a mock auction ;^ to conspiracies to raise voidable. ,. ^ public funds by raise rumors ;* to conspiracies to issue bills in name of fictitious or illegal banks ;^ to conspira,
r.
<
cies to obtain
goods on
f to conspira-
cies to
make
conspiracies
spiracies to
drunk and then obtain his money f to to make money by false personation f to cona person
manufacture a spurious drug f to conspiracies to obtain money by coercion ;'" to contracts by a company to pay The party whom such -conspiracies unearned dividends." are designed to injure may, at his election, avoid any contract induced by such conspiracy." Under the same head
are to be included all contracts
1
whose object
is
to defraud
Smith
r.
Jordan,
113 Mass. 133; Bliss v. Matteson, 45 N. Y. 22 Com. v. McKisson, 8 S. & R. 420 State v. Buchanan, 5 Ear. & J.
; ;
See
;
Wh.
c<
317
seq.
Steinburg
325; Moore v. Martin v. Bolton, 75 Ind. 295; Harwood V. Knepper, 50 Mo. 456.
* 5
Byrd
man,
v.
v.
In-
Newman,
55 Ga. 262
R. R.
R.
V.
17.
De Berenger, 3 M. &
S. 67.
That fraudulent cooperation on part of vendee is essential, see Beurmann v. Van Buren, 44 Mich.
35 Mo. 409.
496.
'
Wh.
<>
State
V.
McKewan
;
Sanderson, L. R. 15
8 Q. B. L. R. 3
* 9
10
R.
V.
Robinson,
V.
V.
Eq. 229
D. 735
;
R.
R.
v.
Aspinall, L. R. 1 Q. B.
Com.
State
" Lockhart
Van
Alstyne, 14
v.
Am.
Q. B. D. 549
49
;
R.
v.
Jackson
;
Law
Reg. 180
Culver
Reno Real
Est., 91
Penn.
v.
St. 367.
616
State
v.
Bartlett,
30 Me. 132
:
^ Jackson
Willis
V. V.
Fuller
v.
v.
Wood,
Phosp. Co., L. R.
Q. B. D. 679.
544
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 376.
And
et
seq.;
to
fails
give
and
veyances in fraud of creditors are void, Huse t'. Preston, 51 Vt. 245 Slant v. Gabler, 77 N. Y. 461; Southard v.
;
unable
to
who
tracted, the
common
law,
Benner, 72 N. Y. 424
bier,
Miller
v.
Sauer-
30 N. J. Eq. 71 387
29 Penn. St.
stone,
Blystone
;
v.
BlyGrat.
51
V.
brough
580
;
Brocken31
be made
for
a valuable consideration.
McQuade
442
Appleton Bk.
Bertschey, 52
Wis. 438; Crapster v. Williams, 21 Kan. 109 Annis v. Bonar, 86 111. 128 Tobey v. Robinson, 99 111. 222 Harrison V. Bailey, 14 S. C. 334 Marshall
; ; ;
;
If it be made It must be also bona fide. with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, it is void as against them, although there may be in the
strictest sense
a valuable or even an
V.
Horn
v.
v.
Wiatt,
60 Ala. 297
Sattler
;
v.
Marino, 30 La.
Lewis, 69 Mo.
r.
is
An. Pt.
629.
I.
355
Fisher
1882,
In Blennerhasset
S.
it
Sherman,
said
Gragg r. Martin, 12 Allen, 498 Brady v. Briscoe, 2 J. J. Marsh. 212 Bozman v. Draughn, 3
J.
Kay &
99
Sup. Ct. U.
by
Stew. 243
11 Sme.
Farmers'
;
Woods,
J.
"
It is
not to be disputed
by the bankand
Penn.
Vt.
St.
387; Root
Reynolds, 32
Churchill,
8
139;
;
Kempner
Wall. 362
take, 200.
is
entitled to
by
his watch-
and attention
to his
own
inter-
Neither can
it
be denied that
it
aside for
" As long ago as the case of HungerV. Earle, 2 Vern. 261, it was held that a deed not at first fraudulent may afterwards become so by being concealed or not pursued, by which
ford
*
who means
creditors are
drawn
"
in to lend
have acquired no
specific lien
on the
their money.'
repeatedly
reaffirmed.
Kent in Hiklreth
Ch. 35
;
Sands, 2 Johns.
Scrivener,
Scrivener
purpose
of
giving
him a
fictitious
mortgage which covers the mortgagor's entire estate and withholds it from the record, and while so concealing it represents the mortgagor as having a large estate and unlimited credit, and by these
Mon. 374; Bank of the United States V. Housman, 6 Paige, 526)." 26 Alb.
L. J. 116.
2
Perry on
Trusts,
131
Lead.
see
Murphy
;
v.
Hubert,
;
16
VOL.
I.
35
545
377.]
377.
Conditions of voidabii^
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
The
is
work
Ihe lollowmg
:
r>
points,
how-
^'
ever,
may
be specifically noticed
1. Intent to defraud is the test of voidability. If the object of a sale be to defraud "creditors, no matter what consideration
was paid by the purchaser, the sale must be set aside.^ 2. Fraud is to be inferred from all the circumstances of the case? For this purpose other acts of fraud, forming part of the same system, are admissible.^ Want of consideration is an important ingredient of proof in such an issue. Supposing a party knows himself to be insolvent, the fact of his parting with
valuable property without consideration
is
naturally to be
imputed to a desire to withdraw such property from his creditors' grasp. Hence, as a rule, all voluntary conveyances with intent to hinder creditors are void and this is the rule prescribed by the statute of Elizabeth, with the proviso that bona fide transfers for a good consideration are not thereby to be avoided. But to bring a transfer under the proviso, it must not merely be for a good consideration it must also be in good faith.^ "Whenever an intention to defraud can be shown.
;
;
Twyne's
case, 1
Am.
ed. 33 et seg.,
8
*
Wh.
and
see
down
to
generally
inference of
fraud, F. 690
Chandler v. Van Reader, 24 S. 224 Kempner v. Churchill, 8 Wall. 362 Blennerhasset v. Sherman, Sup. Ct. U. S. 1882, 26 Alb. L. J. 116, cited supra, 377 Robinson v. Holt,
1872;
Huntingford
Lincoln
V.
Massey, 1 F.
&
;
How. U.
v. Claflin,
7 Wal. 132
;
Cragin
39 N. H. 557
Bridge
v.
Eggleston, 14
Mass. 245
Harrison
;
v.
Phillips Acad.,
v.
v.
12 Mass. 456
Allen, 498
;
Gragg
Martin, 12
Wadsworth
; ;
Williams,
100 Mass. 126 Levick v. Brotherline, 74 Penn. St. 149 Harrison v. Jaquess, 29
Ind. 208
;
Henry
v.
;
v.
Hinman, 25 Minn.
S. C. 154.
199
2
Thorpe
Thorpe, 12
see
Supra, 239
Wh.
;
on Ev.
v.
33,
and
Towne
Fiske,
Knight v. Heath, 23 N. H. 410 Pierce v. Hoffman, 24 Vt. 525 Cook v. Moore, 11 Cush. 216 Stockwell V. Silloway, 113 Mass. 384 Horton v. Weiner, 124 Mass. 92 Gary V. Hotailing, 1 Hill, 311 Booth v. Powers, 56 N. Y. 22 Brown v. Shock, 77 Penn. St. 471 Brinks v. Heise, 84 Penn. St. 246 Battles v. Laudenslager, 84 Penn. St. 446 McAleer v. Horsey, 35 Md. 439 Brink v. Black, 77 N. C. 59 Spivey v. Wilson, 31 La. An. 653 King V. Moon, 42 Mo. 551 Williams
Tarr, 32 Me. 55
; ; ;
Y. 461
Sandlin
477
Harman
V.
In
1881,
546
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
eft'ect
[ 377.
then
ail
agreement to
on creditors, the principle which is adopted in the Roman law, and which was part of the old English common law, was affirmed by the statutes of 50 Edward III. ch. 6, of 3 Henry VII. ch. 4, of 13 Elizabeth, ch. 5, and of 27 Elizabeth, ch. 4, by which gifts and conveyances for the purpose of defrauding creditors were pronounced void. These
So
" In Crawford v. Kirksey, speaking of sales upon a new consideration, and not in payment of a debt, we, after mature consideration, announced the following
Stone, J.
:
lent
and inoperative, if intended by an insolvent seller to delay, hinder, or defraud his creditors, and that intent be known to the purchaser, or if he be
in possession of information reasonably
proposition
'
If
and
to
or in failing circumstances,
and the
which,
if
followed up,
would lead
purchaser knows, or
is
in possession of
discovery of the
pui'pose.
seller's
fraudulent
rests are,
fol-
which
that
to
this
lowed up, would lead to the discovery that the purpose of the seller is to put his property beyond reach, or otherwise to delay, hinder, or defraud his creditors, then a purchase under these
circumstances, tliough full consideration
is
it is
and
to
it
make no
or to sell
otherwise than
debts.
if
paid,
is
he
sell it
itors.
But,
if
the purchase be
made
his creditors
either
he
him on
title,
even
if
sells for
In Covanhovan
and the purchaser, although paying full value, acquires no valid title against the vendor's creditors if he aid him in consummating the fraud. He
renders sufficient aid to invalidate his
'
If
a debtor, with
creditors,
the purpose to
cheat his
seller's
money
is
of
knowledge
naturally
of facts
and
circumstances
calculated to
and
justly
in the
a gross fraud.
the sale
is
making
assists
awaken suspicion
known
it,
to the purchaser,
mind
of a
man
of ordinary care
and
v. v.
and
and
is
in executing
worthless
cases of
Brown
may
and Browji
have paid a full price.' Hopkins v. Langton, 30 Wis. 379. It will be seen that under those authorities a sale, such &s we are considering, is fraudu-
Smith,
1
ib.
et seq.'
547
377.]
statutes, recapitulating as
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
Roman and
by the English
law.^
In this country,
when not
3.
as part of the
common
obligations,^
otherwise as to obligations founded on antecedent legal indebtedness ; and hence a party may waive
it is
though
him from
legal liability.^
A marriage
marriage,
is
is
made by a man on
unless the object
his intended wife, in consideration of good, although he was insolvent at the time,
was
But
this does
made by a
solvent party on
to prevent
when he
is
made
any probable contingent liability.** It is otherwise when the party making the settlement either knows or ought to know himself to be insolvent.^ But " mere indebtedness," says Judge Story, after noticing the divergency of views in the earlier cases, " would not jper se establish that a voluntary conveyance was void, even as to existing creditors, unless the
Hamilton v, Russell, 1 Cranch, Clements v. Moore, 6 Wall. 299 Clark V. Douglass, 62 Penn. St. 408 see notes to Twyne's case, 1 Sm. Lead 2 Kent's Com. 440 Cas. 7tli Am. ed. notes to Sexton v. Wheaton, 1 Am
t'.
6 Vt.
411
;
Sal-
309
mon
V.
Benedict
;
r.
513
Bump
on
1
Fraud.
49
Conv. 249.
*
Fraser
v.
Thompson,
GiflF.
Eeade v. Livingston, 3 Johns. Ch. 489 Tomlinson v. Matthews, 98 111. 178; see infra, 537, where this topic is
;
Montgomery, 7 W. & S. 238 Ammon's App., 63 Penn. St. 284; Williams v. Davis, 69 Penn. St. 21 Morris v. Ziegler, 71 Penn. St. 450 Monroe v. Smith, 79 Penn. St. 459; Frank r. Welch, 89 111. 38 Huston v. Cantril, 11 Leigh, 136 Duhme v. Young, 3 Bush, 343; Laird v. Scott, 5 Heisk. 314 Harrell v. Mitchell, 61 Ala. 270.
; ; ;
Townshend
;.
v.
Windham, 2
;
Ves.
;
discussed.
6
See
;
317
Ware
340
Sexton
v.
Wheaton, 8 Wheat.
Am.
Holloway v. Millard, 1 Mad. 414 Wickes V. Clarke, 8 Paige, 161 Kane V. Roberts, 40 Md. 590; Patten v. Power v. Alston, Casey, 57 Mo. 118 93 111. 587 "Wake v. Griffin, 9 Neb.
10
; ;
47.
548
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 377.
other circumstances of the case justly created a presumption (or more properly, to use Lord Mansfield's term, 'argument'
or
'
dition, state,
parties,
and the
direct tendency
of the conveyance to impair the rights of creditors."^ An important additional element of fraud in such cases is the
reservation of any secret benefit to the grantor.^
4.
to
As
known
to the
grantor, must be shown. party who^ believes himself to have the pecuniary ability to make a gift, can make such gift without the risk of its being subsequently impeached, sup-
is
The
intention
suspicion
of fraud on any settlements made with a view of protecting the grantor's property from the contingency of loss in such business, if such settlements were unsuitable to the circumstances of the party making them, and if they were concealed from parties trusting him on the faith of his supposed possession of the assigned estate.^
this fact
;
is or ought to be conscious of and if concealment or other modes of unfairness be shown then an intent to defraud may be inferred. The ques-
tion
"A
fair
voluntary con-
may
stance of a man being indebted, at the time of his making a voluntary conveyance, is an argument of fraud. The question
in every case, therefore,
*
is,
is
a bona
;
To
v.
Pope,
L.
R. 5 Ch. 538
8 M.
2
& W.
405.
v.
v.
Cherrill, L. R.
v.
4 Eq. 390.
Johnson, 70 Me. 258 69 Mo. 436 see Franklin v. Claflin, 49 Md. 24. Bispham's Eq. 245 Bump, Fraud.
Egery
Mackay
; ;
Douglass, L. R. 14 Eq.
Donovan
v.
Dunning,
Con. 291
Jenkyn
v.
v.
Vaughan,
3 Dr.
\vh. on Kv.
33.
425
Kent
649
377]
fide transaction, or
creditors."^
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP, XV.
whether a trick or contrivance to defeat According to Chancellor Kent, as followed by Judge Story ,2 " if the party is indebted at the time of the voluntary settlement, it is presumed to be fraudulent in respect to such debts (that is, those antecedently due), and no circumstances will permit those debts to be affected by the
settlement, or repel the legal presumption of fraud.
The
pre-
sumption of law in this case does not depend upon the amount of the debts, or the extent of the property in settlement, or
the circumstances of the party.
tinction set up or traced in
would be embarrassing, if not dangerous, to the rights of and might form an inlet to fraud. The law has, therefore, wisely disabled the debtor from making any voluncreditors,
tary settlement of his estate to stand in the way of existing debts." Adding to this, " debts about to be incurred in view
from a
the facts in the case, and not a presumption of law),3 the view thus expressed not only accords with that of
survey of
all
is
In England same rule. choses in action were held not within the statute of Elizabeth.^ This, however, is now corrected by statute f and in this country this distinction between choses in action and other species of property cannot be said ever to have existed.'^ Only credit6. Conveyances good against fraudulent grantor.
Choses in action are subject
to
ors, or
such conveyances.^
'
subsequent purchasers, can, as a general rule, set aside The grantor, as a party to the fraud, canJ.,
Lord Mansfield, C.
Cadogan
v.
106
S.
McLauglilan
;
v.
v.
Bank, 7 How. U.
Place, 5 Ben. 184
;
220
Sparkman
Reed
;
v.
500
8
See
Wh. on
v.
Ev.
1226
et
seq.
Cornwall in re, 9 Blatch. 116 Summers v. Hoovey, 42 Ind. 153. Story's Eq. Jur. 12th ed. 246.
6
f
1248.
*
Jenkyn
v.
;
Crossley
Ellworthy, L. R. 12 Eq.
v. Cowan, 29 Beav. 637. Bispham's Eq. 246. Bispham's Eq. 248-251 Story's
stokel
158 538
371
as to honajide
550
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 379.
not obtain the aid of the courts to get rid of the obligation of such a conveyance, though it could not be enforced against
him.^
Nor can
impeach such conveyances.^ 378. An agent is not allowed to make profit out of his agency, beyond his fixed salary or commissions, to his Contract of and hence any contracts by an a^ent to principal's detriment
;
an agent for purchase of principal's property or for investment of principal's assets enure to the principal's benefit, or
principal.
may
cerns the agent and parties with notice, at the principal's election, unless it
should appear that the purchase or investment principal's full approval, on a full knowl-
void as against
public policy.*
And,
would come
in collision.^
379.
The
object of the
among
;
Supra, 340
Petre
v.
Espinasse,
Y. 428
548
;
Fulton
V.
Whitney, 66 N. Y.
Chapin v. Pease, 10 Conn. 69; Hubbell v. Currier, 10 Allen, 333 Bonslough v. Bonslough, 68 Penn. St. 495.
2 My.
K. 496
; ;
&
Lorillard
v.
Clyde, 86 N. Y. 384
Condit
V.
Everhart
Curtiss
V.
water
159
Kruse
v.
v.
Eldridge
Jackson
Reichart
v. v.
60
111.
;
Har-
62
111.
76
;
WalBauman,
mon
V.
V,
Harmon, 63
512
Clemens
Firestone
v.
Firestone, 49
Gaines
161,
its
v.
Wh. on
V. V.
See supra,
fluence.
*
Lees
ther
V. V.
Nuttall, 2 Myl.
&
K. 819
;
Low-
examined in
Bowers
v.
relation to
Lowther, 13 Ves. 95
5 C. P.
;
Dunne
Mollett
;
Bowers, 26 Penn.
74
Robinson, L. R.
653
Pro-
Foil's Ap., 91
5
Penn.
St. 434.
vost
V. Gratz, 6 Wheat. 481 Marsh v. Whitmore, 21 Wall. 178; Ringo v. Binns, 10 Pet. 269; Baker v. Hum-
Aberdeen R. R.
;
v.
Blaikie, 1 Macq.
;
Mott
v.
v.
v.
Harring-
H. L. 461 Risley v. R. R., 62 N. Y. 240 Barnes v. Brower, 80 N. Y. 527 Gardner V. Butler, 30 N. J. Eq. 703. As to
;
Smith
Townsend,
Hart, 58 N.
Taussig
551
379.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
any agreement with any particular creditor, by which, in consideration of acts done by him, he is to obtain a Agreementsin
fraud of
covert
preference ^
.
is
void.^
bankrupt
aw
view of the
vol
.
ruptcy, will not be sustained f and so where the device used was the attornment of the debtor to his mortgagee at an excessive rent,'
has been held in England, also, that the assent of a majority of creditors to a composition, must, in order to bind the minority, be hona fide.^ And in this country a state court will not enforce an executory contract in violation of the federal
bankrupt law.^
Mare
v.
Sand-
Where
render the mortgage void concur, the Wilson v. device of concealing it until the two Prewett, 3 Woods, 631 Wilson v. Jor- months have elapsed cannot save it. dan, 3 Woods, 642 Sawyer in re, 14 It is, notwithstanding the lapse of N. Bank. Reg. 24 Whitney in re, 14 time, a fraud on the policy and objects That evasions of of the bankrupt law, and void as N. Bank. Reg. 3. bankrupt law invalidate, see supra, against its spirit." Woods, J., Blen* nerhasset v. Sherman, Sup. Ct. U. S. 362. "A mortgage executed by an insol- 1882. This was so under the United vent debtor, with intent to give a pre- States Bankrupt Act of 1867, Rev. Stat. ference to his creditor, who has rea- 5132.
;
ardson, L. R. 5 C. P. 744
;
him
to be
to be
Mackay
and knows
act,
it
made
the
'
in
fraud of the
provisions
of
725.
*
bankrtipt
and who,
for the
pur-
Gomersall
in
re,
L. R. 1 Ch.
D.
137.
6
Heymann
r. R,,
;
L. R. 8 Q. B. 102
12 Cox, C. C. 383
Dill. 407.
8
U. S.
v.
Bayer, 4
Cowen
Cobb ex
Linsex
Page
the mortgagor.
D. 323.
" If the mortgage had been executed within the period of two months next before the filing of the petition in bankruptcy,
it
Blaisdel
r.
v.
Austin
lin V.
Stillwell,
552
CHAP. XV.]
380.
ILLEGALITY.
[ 380.
The
law avoids a secret agreement with any particular Agreecreditor by which, in consideration of a release by ments in
him, he
is
Hence,
insolvency
for preferences to
securities given
are void.^
When
amount of
his
The
debtor, also,
is
Any
executing a composition deed, will be fraudulent, as to other creditors, so far as concerns any claim by the creditor to recover on ground of the indebtedness reserved f though one creditor may, with consent of the other creditors, exclude a
portion of his claim from the composition.
are not
1
bound by
V.
releases
Cockshott
r.
Bennett, 2 T. R. 763
;
Woods
V.
De
v.
Mattos, L. R. 1 Ex.
Hughes, 5 Bing. 466 MallaClark lieu V. Hodgson, 16 Q. B. 711 Huntington v. V. White, 12 Pet. 178 Clark, 39 Conn. 540 Bliss v. Matteson, 45 N. Y. 22 Bixby v. Carskaddon, 55
Britton
; ; ;
91.
^
Danglish
;
Tennent, L. R. 2 Q. B.
Richards, 22 L.
v.
49
Pulsford
;
v.
J.
Ch.
559
Partridge
Iowa, 533.
*
Mitchell,
Jackman
Leicester
v.
v.
"A composition agreement is an agreement as well between the creditors themselves as between the creditors
and
their debtor.
v.
Each
creditor agrees
Girling, 1
1
to receive the
sum
fixed
&'B. 447
;
Wood
v.
Barker, L. R.
ment
Eq. 139
B. 49
McKewan
;
v.
Sanderson, L. R.
of the
20 Eq. 65
;
Bissell v. Jones, L. R.
v.
4 Q.
J, L.
often an
to
Crossley
v.
Moore, 40 N.
1
unite in
If the
27
3
Baker
V.
Matlack,
Ashm.
68
payment
Way
Langley, 15 Oh.
v.
St. 392,
Howden
Haigh, 11 A.
&
E. 1033
see Sternburg v.
325.
<
agreement by which a friend of the debtor undertakes to pay to one of the creditors more than
his pro rata share,
to
induce him to
is
Higgins
V. Pitt,
;
Wald's
as
much
if
Pollock, 248
the
N. Y. 176.
6
Harrhy
v.
Wall, 1 B.
&
Aid. 103
It violates
see Britton
Harvey
upon
553
382.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
and an assignment fraudulently obtained does not preclude creditors releasing on accepting it from attacking it or proceeding otherwise against the debtor.^ -A.ny stipulation by an assignor by which the trustee or insolvent assignee is to secretly
reserve a benefit to the assignor in fraud of the creditors,
is
void
that
;*
nor
is it
made by an attorney
it
was kept secret from the debtor until after final settlement.' But unless in contemplation of bankruptcy, or of
may
another.*
v.
382.
By
the statute of 29 Car. II. c. 7, s. 1, it is enacted that " no tradesman, artificer, workman, laborer, or
contracts
states^void
work of
upon
is
based,
Bank
of
Commerce
r.
Hoebner, 14
Cent. L. J. 293.
4 Hopkins v. Beebe, 26 Penn. St. 85 York Bank v. Carter, 38 Penn. St. 446
,
who
in
is
to act in
ing and
Bentz
5
r.
Rockey, 69 Penn.
v.
St. 71.
Fennell
Ridler,
5 B.
&
C. 406
a transaction." Solinger v. Earle, 82 N. Y. 393, 396. As to cases of preferences under bankrupt law, see supra,
379. 1 Danglish
49.
v.
Tennent, L. R. 2 Q. B.
v.
See Cockshott
;
Bennett, 2 T. R.
763
Jackson
v.
Lomas, 4 T. R. 166.
Dobie, L. R. 1 C. P. D.
Simpson v. Nicholls, 3 M. & W. 240 5 M. & W. 704 R. v. Cleworth, 4 B. & That at common law there is S. 927. no such limitation, see Drury i*. Defontaine, 1 Taunt. 131 R. v. BrotherBloom r. Richards, 2 ton, Stra. 702 Oh. St. 387; Benj. on Sales, 3d Am.
;
Blacklock
;
v.
ed. 552.
Passmore v. Eldredge, 12 S. & R. 198 McClurg V. Lecky, 3 Pen. & W. 83 Connelly v. Walker, 45 Penn. St. 449.
Gurney, 37 Me. 149 State Com. r. Harrison, 11 Gray, 308 Specht r. Com., 8 Penn. St. 312; Schlict v. State, 31
6
State
r.
r.
Ind. 346
Foltz
v.
554
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 382.
even on Jews, and persons conscientiously holding that Saturday is the true Sabbath, the statutes are obligatory.^ In some states, however, it is provided that the statute shall not apply to persons conscientiously keeping the seventh day of the week as Sabbath, provided they do not disturb others.
And in Ohio it has been held that, a statute prohibiting "trading" on Sunday is void as to persons conscientiously holding the seventh day as the Sabbath.^ The statutes vary In some states the statute of 29 Car. 11. as in their terms. In above given, is reproduced without material change. other states every kind of secular labor on Sunday is for-
As
a general
however,
when
executory business transactions on Sunday, prohibited by statute, have been held void.^ Hence,
all
Langabier
State
r.
v. Fairburg, 64 111. 243 Anderson, 30 Ark. 131 State Amts, 20 Mo. 214 Bird ex parte, 19 V.
; ;
V.
Hamell, 2 Doug. (Mich.) 73; Reynolds Stevenson, 4 Ind. 619 Pike v. King,
; ;
16 Iowa, 50
Iowa, 112
;
Sayre
v.
Wheeler, 31
;
Cal. 130.
32 Iowa, 559
Murphy
;
v.
Com. V. Hyneman, 101 Mass. 30 Com. V. Has, 122 Mass. 40 Com. v. Wolf, 3 S. & R. 48 Specht v. Com., 8
1
; ; ;
Hussey
v.
Barr, 312;
Philips
v.
Gratz, 2 Pen.
Block
v. RoqueMcMurry,
&
Watts, 412.
'
Cincinnati
v. Rice,
15 Ohio, 225.
Sales,
3d Am. ed. 556 Story on Cont. 753 Bryant v. Biddeford, 39 Me. 193 Meader v. White, 66 Me. 90 Allen V. Deming, 14 N. H. 133 Varney V. French, 19 N. H. 233; George v. George, 47 N. H. 27 Smith v. Bean, 15 N. H. 577 Sumner v. Jones, 24 Vt. 317 McClary v. Lowell, 44 Vt. 116 Robeson v. French, 12 Met. 24 (modi; ;
Tucker v. West, 29 Ark. Under the New York statute, while contracts for work on Sunday are void Watts v. Van Ness, 1 Hill,
386.
. ;
76
Pattee
v.
v.
Greeley,
13 Met. 284
Dickinson
;
Richmond,
97 Mass. 45 Cranson v. Goss, 107 Mass. 441; Feital v. R. R., 109 Mass.
398
;
Boynton v. Page, 13 v. Mehrback, 55 N. Y. 682. The same distinction exists in Ohio, Bloom v. Richards, 2 Oh. St. 387 and in California, Moore v. Murdock, 26 Cal. 514. In New Hampshire by statute only acts done on Sunday to " the disturbance of others" are prohibited but under this statute it
fers of property.
;
Wend. 425
Eberle
Connolly
v.
v.
Boston,
7
117 Mass.
R.
I.
;
has been held that a pleading to be good, must aver the litigated act was done
to
64; Allen
Gardiner,
24;
Cin-
"the disturbance
of others."
And
Cameron
cinnati
V.
v.
V. Rice,
Sellers
v.
Adams
under "disturbance of others" is included whatever draws the attention of others from the appropriate duties
555
382.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
a bond made on Sunday has been held void ;^ this being the case with a replevin bond ;^ and so of notes made on Sunday.'
It
is
Sunday the
statute cannot be
facts.* suit, also, cannot be maintained on a contract made on Sunday to do professional business f and so of loans made on Sunday f and of promises
of the Sabbath,
Varney v. French, 19 N. H. 233; Clough v. Shepherd, 31 N. H. 490. In Rogers v. Tel. Co., S. Ct. Ind. Jan. 13, 1882, 25 A. L. J. 203, 14 Cent. L. J. 174, it was held that a contract on Sunday for the transmission of a telegraph message may be
void.
garded as a
Such a message cannot be rework of necessity,' within the meaning of the statute. The consender.
'
The message,
Law Journal
:
(vol.
must be
See
;
bring all."
is
Pattee
r.
more firmly settled than the one under mention, and we cannot now
depart from
it.
generally Lyon
t'.
a work of necessity.
There
are doubtless
many
cases
in
which the sending and delivering of a message would be a work of necessity, within the meaning of our statute. But we cannot judicially declare that
all contracts for
the transmission of
deemed
Whe-
must be determined,
Hussey v. Roquemore, 27 Ala. 281. Link V. Clemmens, 7 Blackf. 480. Towle V. Lai-rabee, 26 Me. 464 Pope V. Linn, 50 Me. 83; Tillock v. Webb, 56 Me. 100 Adams v. Gay, 19 Vt. 358 Goss v. Whitney, 27 Vt. 272 Pattee v. Greely, 13 Met. 284 Cranson Kepner r. KeeV. Goss, 107 Mass. 440 Johnston v. Com., fer, 6 Watts, 231 22 Penn. St. 102 Clough v. Goggins, 40 Iowa, 325 Raiuey v. Capps, 22 Ala.
V.
Tuthill,
13 Ala. 390;
288.
*
ticular case.
We
See
infra, 386.
Adams
v.
works
of necessity.
reads thus
Come up in the morning, bring all.' These words are to be taken in their ordinary meaning, for there is nothing
ascribing to
V.
tion
Benson
Peate
i-.
Dicken, 1 C. M.
&
R. 422.
the
Finn
v.
556
CHAP. XV.]
relied
ILLEGALITY.
[ 382.
on to take debts out of the statute of limitations.^ A and a and delivered on Sunday is void, though guarantee executed the document guaranteed is to be delivered on a subsequent secular day.^ But when an agreement of sale was made on Sunday, the articles to be weighed and delivered on Monday, which was done, it was held that the vendor could recover for goods sold and delivered, though not on the contract.* And a bond or note made on a Sunday, though on its face void, may be used as the admission of an antecedent debt.^ The fact that preliminary bargaining was done on Sunday does not invalidate a contract completed on a subsequent secular day.^ Hence, where a bargain for goods is made on Sunday,
valid contract, also, cannot be rescinded on Sunday,^
but
is
when
not within the statute f though when the contract was actually made on Sunday, it is not taken out
delivered, the case
Nor
till the next day, if the bargain was completed and delivery made on Sunday f but a deed, bond, or note signed on a Sunday is valid, when delivered on the
Dennis
see
Haydock v. Tracey, 3 W. & S. 507 v. Sherman, 31 Ga. 607 but contra, Thomas v. Hunter, 29 Md.
; ;
41 N. H. 72
Lyon
v.
Adams
406.
*
Benedict
v.
Batchelder, 24 Mich.
Stearns, 10 Cush. 257.
425.
Gay, 19 Vt. 358 Lovejoy v. Whipple, 18 Vt. 379 Mason v. Thompson, 18 Pick. 305 Winchell v. Carey, 115 Mass. 560; Cameron v. Peck, 37 Conn. 555 Sayles v. Wellman, 10 R. I.
v.
; ;
Merriam
Bradley
v.
r.
v.
465; Hening
Fritsch
v. v.
v.
v.
Rea, 14 Allen, 20
Tracy, 3
Ro507;
;
Lueb;
senblatt
fi
bering
Haydock
v. V.
W. &
S.
Gwinn
blatt
Rosen-
Lea
6
Stacy
Hopkins, 7 Penn. St. 492 see Kemp, 92 Mass, 166. Goss V. Nugent, 5 B. & Ad. 58, and
v.
Tillock
v.
Foster, 41 N. H, 215
Stackpole
Goss
V.
V.
Wh. on Ev. 1014 Symonds, 3 Post. 229; Whitney, 24 Vt. 187; Stacy
v.
;
man, 10 R.
Butler
v.
Lee,
See Plaisted v. Palmer, 63 Me. 576; Bradley v. Rea, 14 Allen, 20 Day v. McAllister, 15
I.
465.
11 Ala. 885
Bryant
v.
Booze, 55 Ga.
Gray, 433
438.
9
Bryant
v.
Booze, 55 Ga.
438
Peake v. Conlan, 43 Iowa, 297. 1 Benj. on Sales, 557; Smith v. Bean, 15 N. H. 577 Merrill v. Downs,
;
Allen
v.
r.
Deming, 14 N. H. 138;
Smith
Bea, 15 N. H. 577.
557
384.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
succeeding day.^
IN"
based on a Sunday sale or trade.^ 383. When a contract has been executed, neither party, as Statutes do general rule, can recover from the other what has
executed
contract.
way
it
The
overhauled on account of
when
money cannot be
and Iowa that
recovered back.*
384. It has been held in
New Hampshire
when goods
So as to Sunday
transfer of property.
in
an action of replevin
;'
and
it
1 Hilton V. Houghton, 35 Me. 143; Clough V. Davis, 9 N. H. 500 Lovejoy Hill v. DunV. Whipple, 18 Vt. 379
;
i'.
Shu-
ham,
Barr,
7 Gray, 543
Cora.
v.
v.
Kendig, 2
Roberts,
1
448
Sherman
Foreman v. Ahl, 55 Penn. St. 325; Chesnut v. HarKinney (. baugh, 78 Penn. St. 473 McDermot, 55 Iowa, 674 Beauchamp
man, 27 Penn.
St.
90
Love r. Wells, 25 Ind. Flanagan v. Meyer, 41 Ala. 132 Dohoney i". Dohoney, 7 Bush, 217. But see contra as to note of surety, Parker
Grant, 261;
V.
503
Supra,
352,
377
V. Pitts,
2
25 Ind. 598.
Benj. on Sales, 3d
v.
Am.
ed. 553;
;
Plaisted
V.
be a recovery on a quantum meruit for services rendered under a contract made on a Sunday, see Thomas v. Hatch, 53 Wis. 296.
6
In Smith
v.
Bean, 15 N. H. 577,
re-
6 Vt. 216
;
Hulet
v.
Stratton, 5 Cush.
made on
539 Robeson r. French, 12 Met. 24 Kinney v. McDermot, 55 Iowa, 674 Guuderson v. Richardson, 56 Iowa, 56 Finley v. Quirk, 9 Minn. 194. 8 Supra, 352, 377 Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 577 Greene v. Godfrey, 44 Me. 25 Allen y. Deming, 14 N. H. 133; Smith v. Bean, 15 N. H. 577; Hall V. Costello, 48 N. H. 176 Myers Horton v. V. Meinrath, 101 Mass. 368
; ;
Sunday,
being
it is
said:
"The
transaction
illegal,
ties to suffer
illegal acts.
The contract
is
attempted to be made the foundation of legal proceedings. The law will not interfere to assist the vendor
as
it is
The
contract
It will
is
not
Hall
v.
r.
Cor-
in the sale.
It
Finn
Dona-
The
principle
558
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 384.
Alabama and Arkansas that a vendee retaining goods after a Sunday purchase is liable in trover, after demand and refusal.* The prevalent opinion is that the fact that goods sold and delivered, but not paid for, on Sunday are retained by the
purchaser on
Monday
does not, without a fresh promise based an action by the vendor for the price
But a
an assumpsit.^
on
Monday
and while the vendor, without exposing himan action of replevin, cannot reclaim the property,^ yet, if after demand the purchaser admits the vendor's ownership, but refuses to return, he may be made liable in trover; or an admission of the vendor's ownership, with a request to retain the goods, may be the basis of a fresh assumpsit. But no mere ratification of the Sunday sale as such will give it efiect.^
2 Simpson v. Nichols, 3 M. & W. 240 5 M. & W. 702, overruling Williams v. Paul, 6 Bing. 653 Myers v. Meinrath,
;
;
shows that the law will not aid the vendor to recover possession of the property if he has parted with it. The vendee has the possession as of his own property by the assent of the vendor, and the law leaves the parties where it finds them. If the vendor should attempt to retake the property without
process, the law, finding that the ven-
v.
Goss, 107
Mass. 441
179
;
57 Ga. but see contra, Allen v. Deming, 14 N, H. 133 Boutelle v. Melandy, 19 N. H. 196 Tucker v. West, 29 Ark. 386.
;
Ellis v.
Hammond,
Adams
v.
v.
Sarv.
dee had a possession which could not be controverted, would give a remedy
for the violation of that possession."
geant
Butts, 21 Vt. 99
Sumner
See Harrison
;
v.
Iowa,
16
and see
ed. 558,
fully
Kinney v. McDermott, 55 Iowa, 674. To the same eflfect is 2 Parsons, 764 Header v. White, 66 Me. 90. As to distinctive rule in New York and
S. P.
;
Benj. on Sales, 3d
Am.
where
See supra,
352.
Infra, 389,
and
see in addition to
v.
Day
;
McAllister,
Dodson V. Harris, 10 Ala. 566 Tucker v. West, 29 Ark. 386. It has been held in Vermont that when goods are sold and are delivered on Sunday, the vendor may on the next day demand them, and in case their return is
'
Bradley v. Rea, 14 Allen, 20 103 Mass. 188 Finn v. Donahue, 35 Conn. 216 Reeves v. Butcher, 2
; ;
15 Gray, 433
Vt. 358.
Vroom, 224. In Moseley v. Vanhoozer, 6 Lea (Tenn.), 286, A. agreed to buy a yoke of oxen of B. The terms of the sale were agreed upon on Sunday, but A. was to see the condition of the oxen before he was absolutely bound. He
559
885.] 385.
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
The
Englisli statute, as has been seen, prohibits labor in the " ordinary calling" of the parties pro-
When
nary"
ing,
stat-
hibited.
vate contracts
Under this and cognate statutes isolated primade by parties outside of their ordinary calling are not invalidated.^ It was held in 1808 that a private sale of a horse on Sunday, when not
in the seller's ordinary calling, he not being a trades-
lateral contracts.
this has
man of that class, is not void by the now been virtually overruled.' And it
statute
;^
but
made on a Sunday between laborer is in conflict with the statute.* not and a farmer a coaches, so stage far as concerns their contracts Proprietors of with passengers, are not within the terms of the act.'
ther held that a contract of hiring
saw them the next day, and being
isfied
sat-
with them, removed them. It was held that the contract was not complete on Sunday, and if a contract made on
"
Is
renders this contract 2 Parsons on Contr. 757. the contract void by virtue of
of the state
?
any statute
1712
is
The
act of
Sunday
1
is
to
be held void,
it
must be
George
v.
v.
George, 47 N. H. 27;
;
laborers,
Hazard
V. 2
Bloom
Drury
See Bloxsome.
232.
'
Williams, 3 B.
&
C.
Smith
R.
V.
Sparrow, 4 Bing. 86
Fen-
nell V. Ridler, 5 B.
4
5
&
C. 406.
V. Whitnash, 7 B. & C. 596. Sandiman r. Breach, 7 B. & C. 96. Under the South Carolina statute, a mortgage which has been executed on a Sunday has been held to be valid.
in no
way
" The
1712.
first
was
very similar in
Hellams
v.
Abercrombie, 15
J.,
S. C. 110.
said:
" In
M' Combs, 2 Bay, 232, this exSunday is not a day pression is used in law dies dominicus et non dies juridiV.
:
Shaw
'
cus
consequently
void.'
made
all
temporal busiis
null
in-
and
But
this
was only an
cases
it
and contrary
;
to the
by the
facts.
Under these
is
ap-
560
CHAP. XV.J
S 386.
ILLEGALITY.
against, a bona fide endorsee the
1
i>
1
[ 388.
A8
1
maker
J
cannot set up as a deience that the note was made notice not bound. o J on Sunday.^ 387. Where the statute only prohibits business in a party's ordinary calling, a party cannot set up the statute
\
Endorsee without
in igno- deai/ug
p^t^cted.'^
nary calling. The mistake made by parties so dealing with him is a mistake not of law but of fact, and, if not negligent, it should not preclude such other parties from recovery. It is otherwise, however, with the party himself. He is barred from recovery, notwithstanding the fact that theother party was ignorant of his disability.^ 388. Several of the statutes except cases of "necessity'^ and " charity,'* or " mercy." The term " necessity" is
not restricted to cases in which the party is physi- to^Jg^iibercally required to do the act in question. " Necessity,"" a^y conin the sense of the statute,
a necessity
when
road
;*
a necessity
when otherwise
serious
ensue." On the other hand, it is not a necessity to visit a house to be moved into the next day for the purpose of determining whether it is in good order; nor is loading a steamboat with flour to avoid sudden closing of navigation f
of
Rex
V.
Inhab. of Whitnash, 7 B.
&
45 Iowa, 241
Iowa, 228.
Clinton
v.
Graves, 48
See, to
same
effect,
Blox;
some I'. Williams, supra, was reaffirmed, and a contract of hiring between a farmer and a laborer for a year, made on Sunday, was held valid. Such, in our
opinion,
is
some
V.
V.
Williams, 3 B.
&
C.
232
Beg-
&
;
J.
180; Saltmarsh
Supra, 385-6
Bloxsome
;
v.
Wil-
liams, 3 B.
&
C. 232
5 S.
&
;
R. 82
Fennell
V.
3
*
v.
Ridler, 5 B.
& C. 406
Smith
r.
Allen
iug,
State
;
DemBank v.
v.
Hooper
6 6
7
Edwards, 18 Ala. 280. Flagg V. Millbury, 4 Cush. 243. Smith V. R. R., 120 Mass. 490.
v.
Pate
V.
VOL.
I. 36
561
389.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
to visit a father
is
nor
is
shaving by a barber.^
For a son
an
act of mercy f and so is visiting a sick friend or relative ;' but not volunteering to assist a neighbor in cleaning out his
wheel-pit.^
A marriage
may
day."
is within the exception,^ though in Maine, it seems to be otherwise.^ It has been ruled in Vermont, that honest belief in necessity is not enough to place a party within the exception. There must be actual necessity.^ contract on the Lord's day by overseers of the poor for relief of a pauper, is not void ;" nor is a subscription to a church,'" 389. It has been held in several jurisdictions, that a contract invalid from having been executed on Sunday Sunday cannot, after its completion, be ratified on a subsecou tracts cannot be quent secular day, without some new consideration ratified. or modification giving it a fresh start." But though there may be no ratification, a new contract on a secular day may be implied, as we have seen, from the recognition of
public worship
4 CI. & F. 234. Logan V. Mathews, 6 Barr, 417 see McClary v. Lowell, 44 Vt. 116.
>
Phillips r. Innes,
Bing. 653
;
Meader
'
Gorman
V.
v.
Doyle
*
Est.,
14 Penn.
St.
417.
6
Com.
^
Tillock v.
Webb, 56 Me.
100.
;
Johnson
v.
Irasbiirgh, 47 Vt. 28
Wh.
Cr. L.
v.
Pope v. Linn, 50 Me. 83 White, 66 Me. 90 Sumner Day v. McAlister, V. Jones, 24 Vt. 317 15 Gray, 433 Tuckerman v. Hinkley, 9 Allen, 452; Cranson r. Goss, 107 Mass. 439 contra, Simpson v. Nicholls, 3 M. & W. 240 Finn v. Donahue, 35 Conn. 216 Reeves v. Butcher, 2 Vroom, 224; Ryno v. Darby, 20 N. J. Eq. 231 Tucker v. West, 29 Ark. 386 see Story on Cont. (Bigelow'snote), 756 Adams v. Gay, 19 Vt. 358 Shippey v. Eastwood, 9 Ala. 198. In Van Hoven V. Irish, U. S. Cir. Ct. Min. 1882, it was held that a sale invalid from being made on Sunday could be ratified on a
;
v.
week day,
Flagg
v.
following, in this
respect,
V.
Adams
V.
v.
Harrison
Bennett
1?.
Doyle
v.
Colton, 31 Iowa, 16
J.,
in order, quot-
R. R.,
Allen
Dnffie,
43 Mich. 1
Dale
v.
Knapp, 11
Weekly
V.
tised
and cannot be
Supra,
384
Williams
Paul, 6
enforced."
562
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 394.
And
it is difficult
to reconcile the
position that such contracts are absolutely null with the position that they bind innocent endorsees without notice.^
court will take judicial notice that a particular 390. date was Sunday.^ But when the statute pi^escribes that Sunday closes with sun-setting, there must be becor-
proof that the contract was in that part of the day in which it would have been illegal.* The date may
be contradicted by parol, and
it
^^
^^^^^^
may
be
a writing
is
Sunday.'
Sunday,
is
now
before us,
defined
by
'
statute.
Marriage being an institution which is superior to modify its character are void." Contracts are subordinated to the state, but i^f^S^i^f^ Hence no marriage the state is subordinated to marriage." are void, contracts by the parties to a marriage modifying its and so are essential characteristics are valid.'' This rule has for divorce. been applied to agreements by which one party to
894.
divorce proceedings
process.^
^
Supra, 382
Supra,
Hilton
V.
supra, 28.
3
Hill
v. v.
DunGoss,
Wh. on
5
335
;
Tutton
v.
v.
v.
ham,
541.
T
Cranson
v.
Darke,
ton,
H.
&
N. 649
;
Hoyle
v.
Corn-
Fox
Abel, 2 Conn.
Hanson
Sasscer
v.
Shackle-
Bank, 4
Wh.
Hope
Con. of L.
V.
126.
Goggins, 40 Iowa,
325
AUman v. Owen, 31 Ala. 167 Sprowl V. Lawrence, 33 Ala. 674 Rodgers v. State, 50 Ala. 102. * Nason v. Dinsmore, 34 Me. 391 see Killer v. English, 4 Strohh. 486. 6 R. V. Treharne, 1 Mood. C. C. 298 Com. V. Harrison, 11 Gray, 308 and
;
; ;
Hope, 8 D. M. G. 731 Sayles v. Sayles, 1 Fost. 312 Weeks I'. Hill, 38 N. H. 199 Kilborn v. Field, 78 Penn. St. 194 Stoutenburg v. Lybrand, 13 Oh. St. 228; Hamilton v.
8
; ; ;
Hamilton, 89
Puckett, 73
111.
349
Ind. 409;
513.
Everhardt Comstock
v.
v.
Adams, 23 Kan.
Wh.
563
395.]
incrs
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XV.
in a Missouri case in
same reason.
Thus
appeared that during the pending of a divorce suit the parties agreed in writing that if a divorce was granted without alimony, certain securities were to be delivered to the
1880,
was held that a suit could not be maintained on Where, during pendency of divorce procedure by the wife, she entered into an agreement with her husband by which she was to join in conveying certain real estate of his to a third party, she releasing her dower, and he was to settle certain property on her absolutely, it was held that as the consideration of divorce was one of the ingredients of the
wife's trustee,
it
the contract.^
agreement it could not be enforced.^ When a divorce, also, is wrongfully obtained, an agreement by the parties not to
disturb
it
husband and wife void,^ but limitations of providing property on either husband or wife in the event ot Separation are held, in England, against the policy tiou are^^' ^^^of the law.' But when there has been an actual separation between husband and wife, deeds of settlement between them and third persons, as trustees, will be sustained, such deeds providing for the wife's separate support, and for the husband's protection from the wife's indebtedness. And in this country, as well as in England, deeds of settlement in such cases, where their object is immediate, and they are based on a separation which has actually taken place, are held valid where they contain no provisions contravening public policy.^
Agreements
tion of
'
Speck V. Dansman, 7 Mo. Ap. 165. Hamilton v. Hamilton, 89 HI. 349. Comstock V. Adams, 23 Kan. 513.
;
tees,
Bispham's Eq. 115 Hill on TrusPerry on Trusts, 672 668 Hindley v. Westmeath, 6 B. & C. 200 St. John V. St. John, 11 Ves. 526 and
; ;
H. L. Ca. 40 Gibbs v. Harding Charlesworth v. Holt, L. R, 9 Ex. 38. That the covenants in such deeds will be enforced see Sanders v. Rodway, 16 Beav. 207 Wil538
;
L. R. 5 Ch. 336
liams
v.
note
Eq. 853.
J.
In
Hunt
10
v.
Hunt, 4 D. F.
Cartwright
v.
Cartwright, 3 D. M.
221
et seq.,
W.
&
J.
382;
ject is
V.
Waite,
;
Bing. N. C. 341
v.
Jones 4 M. & G.
;
1104
Wilson
Wilson, 1 H. L. Ca.
examined with great fulness by Lord Westbury. ^ Walker v. Walker, 9 Wall. 743 Barron v. Barron, 24 Vt. 375 Fox v. Davis, 113 Mass. 255 ;. Beach v. Beach,
;
564
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 596.
Nor
is
a trustee
enforced.'^
agreed upon by the parties, but refuses to act, and is carried into effect, the covenants will not be
A covenant
wise executed.'
reason
But a deed
for
And
the
immediate, is regarded as a fact which justifies a between the parties, to he guarded by proper covenants, marriage is an institution which is so far superior to local law as not to be susceptible of being modified in
which
is
pro{)er settlement
its
conditions by contract.'*
396.
The
jreneral restraints On marriage contracts imposino^ => " = covenant, therefore, to marry no one are void.*
but the covenantee, without engaging to marry her, marriage has been held inoperative ;^ and so of a covenant not ^"''^" to marry within a particular time;^ and so of a bond by a
260 Griffin v. Banks, 37 N. Hutton v. Hutton, 3 Barr, 100 Dillinger's App., 35 Penn. St. 357 Hitner's App., 54 Penn. St. 110;
Hill,
;
Carter
v.
Carter, 14 S.
Y.
023
cases cited
and
Smith
v.
Brown, 10 Ohio St. 250; Bettle V. Wilson, 14 Oh. 257 Button v. Button, 30 Ind. 455 though see, as to
v.
;
;
Thomas
Rodw ay, 16 Beav. 207 Flower i;. Flower, 20 W. R. 231; Wilson v. Wilson, 1 H. L. Cas. 538.
'
Sanders
Westmeath
g^g
v.
Salisbury, 5 Bli. N.
S. 339.
^
Rogers
V.
tj^g
;
cases given in
Wh.
W.,
Con. of
3 K.
L.
J.
126
;
and
see also H. v.
v.
&
382
People
v.
Mercein, 8 Paige, 47
7 Eq. 343.
;
Bindley
MuUoney,
;
Barron v. Barron, 24 Vt. 375 Smith V. Knowles, 2Gr. 413 Hutton v. Hutton, 3 Barr, 100 Garver v. Miller, 16 Oh. St. 527 and see, to same effect, Frampton v. Frampton, 4 Beav. 294 though see, contra, Carson v. Mur>
;
; ;
Hartley
v.
v.
Rice, 10 East, 22
Bellairs
Jones
v.
Jones, L. R, 1 Q. B. B. 279
v.
Williams Wil-
'
Bettle
v.
Wilson, 14
mot, 371.
Ohio, 257
v. Rice,
140
Watkins
Watkins,
7 Yergl 283
Sterling
565
397.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
widow
conditioned on her not marrying again.^ But a settlement of real estate while the party remains single may be sustained when the intention is not to discourage marriage, but
397.
Partial limitations
A
.
man or a second marriaore, is not in woman, in restraint a ^ itsclf void.^ And restrictions against marrying parlimitation of property, however, to a
of, .
-,
valid.
have been sustained as not amounting So far as concerns deeds of realty, conditions in general restraint of marriage will be held valid, although there is no gift over, when the object is to make a provision until marriage. But as to personalty such a condition, if there is no gift over, will be held not to defeat the estate.' And in England such is now the case as to personalty, even when there is a gift over. But a gift durante viduitate, with a limitation over, is valid, the object being to give support during widowhood.^ Such limitations may be applied to widowei-s as well as to widows.' But a limitation during widowhood and life, without any bequest over, has been held to give an interest which a second marriage does not defeat.^ To adopt Judge Story's summary " Conditions
m^^b"*^**
ticular persons
annexed to
J
gifts, legacies,
and
Baker
Jones
;
v. V.
St.
53; Waters
279
*
Holmes
356
;
v.
Newton
V.
V.
Marsden, 2
J.
& H.
Allen Jones
Jackson, L. R. 1 C. D. 399
Gough
6
V.
Field, 12
Jones, L. R. 1 Q. B. D. 279,
;
Bellairs
Bellairs, L. R. 18 Eq.
Arthur
v. Cole,
56
510.
7
Md.
*
100.
Bisph. Eq.
227
;
Allen
v.
Jackson,
v.
L. R. 1 Ch. D. 399
Newton
;
;
Mars-
C,
s
den, 2 Johns.
Bisph. Eq.
227
Hill
496;
&
McCullough's
Harvey
r.
Jones
v.
App., 12 Penn.
St.
197;
Vance
v.
v.'
Jones, L. R. 1 Q. B. D. 279
Phillips
Medbury,
Conn. 568
;
10 Penn.
St.
350
;
v.
Allen
r.
Jackson, L. R. 1 C. D. 399.
v.
Parsons
Winslow,
6 Mass. 169.
10 Watts, 348
666
CHAP. XV.]
are not void,
if
ILLEGALITY.
[ 397.
undue
is
restraint
upon the
freedom of marriage.
policy,
it
If the condition
in restraint of mar-
life,
And
so if the condition
still
is
not
in restraint of
is
the prohibition
whom
.
it
is
to operate
it
is
will fall
But the same principles of public which annul such conditions, when they tend to a general restraint of marriage, will confirm and support them when they merely preserve such reasonable and prudent regulations and sureties as tend to protect the individual from those melancholy consequences to which an over-hasty, rash, or precipitate match would probably lead. If parents, who must
naturally feel the deepest solicitude for the welfare of their
who may
well
with
whom
they are associated by ties of kindred or friendby imposing some restraints upon their bounty,
guard the inexperience and ardor of youth against the wiles and delusions of the crafty and the corrupt, who should seek to betray them from motives of the grossest selfishness, the law would be lamentably defective, and would, under the pretence of upholding the institution of marriage, subvert its highest purposes. Such a reproach does not belong to the common law in our day and, least of all, can it be justly attributed to courts of equity."^ A distinction, how. .
.
those in general restraint, between limitations of real and limitations of personal estate.
estate,
it
When
the limitation
is
as to real
must be
strictly
dition to be good.
But
is
1 story, 1 Story,
Hoopea
;
v.
Dundas, 10 Penn.
St.
75
but
289
see Otis
v.
567
399.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
about marriages for a money consideration are void* The reason given Is, that parties in a matter so im-
portant and so essential to the state as marriage should not be exposed to the machinations of speculators.^
Even a bond given by a partj'^ after marriage in consideration of assistance rendered by the obligee in effecting the obligor's marriage, has been held void.'^ 399. Not only is a fraudulent settlement by a woman, on eve of marriage, of property of which he is cognizant, and settlements which he might therefore be supposed to marry on ^ the faith of, void as against the husband,^ but he is maritof rights will also held entitled to avoid settlements made by her be set aside. in fraud of his marital rights of property of which knowledge.* Nor will an ante-nuptial contract by has no he
.
....
the woman, without a fair disclosure of her husband's circumstances, be enforced against her.*
by a man in prospect of marriage, in such a way as to deprive the wife, if successful, of dower, will be void against her.^
1 Fonbl.
;
parte,
Eq. B. 1
Keat
v.
Law
v.
v.
Hub-
Williamson
Supra, 266
v.
Gihon, 2 Sch.
&
L.
Logan v. Simmons, 3 Baker v. Jordan, 73 N. Jordan v. Black, Meigs, Tenu. C. 145 142 Freeman v. Hartman, 45 111. 57. 6 Kline v. Kline, 57 Penn. St. 120 Kline's Est., 64 Penn. St. 122; cited
2 Clark, 1
; ;
357.
8
;
supra, 161.
6 2 Bishop, Married Worn. Bispham's Eq. 253 343 England v. Downs, 2 Bear. 522 God- Wald's Pollock, 289, where the cases dard v. Snow, 1 Russ. Ch. 485 Wil- are cited Schouler on Dom. Rel. 271 liams V. Carle, 2 Stockt. Ch. 543 Wal- Bisp. Eq. 499 Gibson r. Hutchinson, Manes 120 Mass. 27 Swaine v. Perrine, ler V. Armistead, 2 Leigh, 11 Pierce v. Pierce, V. Durant, 2 Rich. Eq. 404 McAfee v. 5 Johns. Ch. 482 Ferguson, 9 B. Mon. 475. 71 N. Y. 154; Petty v. Petty, 4 B. * Goddard v. Snow, 1 Russ. Ch. 485 Mon. 215; Leach v. Duvall, 8 Bush, Chambers v. Crabbe, 34 Beav. 457 201 Gainor v. Gjinor, 26 Iowa, 337 Taylor v. Pugh, 1 Hare, 608 Linker Crawsonr.Crawson, 4 Mich. 230; Brown Tucker r. Bronson, 35 Mich. 415 Littleton v. V. Smith, 4 Wash. C. C. 224 Terry v. Hop- Littleton, 1 Dev. & B. 327; Tate v. V. Andrews, 13 Me. 124 kins, 1 Hill Ch. 1 Williams v. Carle, Tate, 1 Dev. & B. Eq. 22; Davis v. 2 Stockt. 543 Duncan's App., 43 Penn. Davis, 5 Mo. 183 Butler v. Butler, 21 Robinson v. Buck, 71 Penn. Kan. 521; Hamilton v. Smith, S. C. St. 67
; ;
St.
386
S.
C,
8 Phil. 87
;
Belt
v.
Fer-
Iowa, 1881.
See Killinger
v.
Reiden-
Greenawalt ex
hauer, 6 S.
&
R. 532.
568
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
is
[ 400.
to be determined
may
the con-
veyance be fraudulent, to set it aside; and a court of equity can be invoked for this purpose.^ Whether such conveyance was made with intention to defraud the intended wife is to be determined from all the circumstances of the case.* The strong inferburden is on the party setting up the fraud.'
ence of fraud
400.
is
to be
The
is
children,
,
inalienable,
.
and he
,
.
is
not bound by an
from
their extreme
inrancy, or his
incompetency, the
agreement
force.^
is
feel called
upon to en-
" He cannot, therefore, by any contract, relieve himfrom the responsibility of discharging this duty; and hence it must be considered as settled (at all events in England), that contracts by a father to give up to his wife the custody and education of their children, are contrary to public policy, and will not be enforced in equity against the husband and this although the husband may have been guilty of adulself
;
v. Bowes, 1 Ves. Jr. 28. Pugh, 1 Hare, 613. In 2 Kent's Com. 175, it is said " If the
1
Strathmore
Taylor
v.
V.
an
^
Cent. L. J. 399.
Littleton v. Littleton, 1 Dev.
;
&
;
B.
327
Tucker
v.
32
be valid without notice," citing King v. Colton, 2 P. Wms. 674 Jones v. Cole, 2 Bailey, 330. And see supra, 266.
;
Mo. 464.
'
Bispham's Eq.
;
547
2 Lead. Cas
R. 8 Q.
Eq. 671
Andrews
in re,
v.
in re, L.
See Jiggitts
;
v.
Jiggitts,
40 Miss.
153 249
Besant
L. R. 11 Ch. D. 508
718
ute.
Davis
is
v.
The
Vansittart
;
Vansittart, 2
De G. & J
right
&
B. 327
M'Intosh
239.
v.
Ladd, 1 Huntph,
459
1 8
Jiggitts v. Jiggitts,
I
40 Miss. 718.
Supra,
Farnsworth v. Richardson, 35 Me 267 Richardson v. Richardson, 35 Me 560 Johnson v. Terry, 34 Conn. 259 Torrington v. Norwich, 21 Conn. 543; Mercein v. People, 25 Wend. 64 People
;
;
Gibson v. Hutchinson, 120 Mass. 27; Baker v. Chase, 6 Hill (N. Y.) 482 Crawson v. Crawson, 4 Mich. 230 Tate V. Tate, 1 Dev. & B. Eq. 27 ; Davis
;
V.
State
v.
Baird,
384 Com. v. Smith, 1 Brewst. 547 Gates v. Renfroe, 7 La. An. f 69 Byrne v. Love, 14 Tex. 81.
6 C. E. Green,
;
569
402.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
But the
father may,
by
And a father,
wages have been earned, retract such consent.' But, as a general rule, "the husband can in no circumstances bind himself not to set up his paternal rights,"* nor will such an agreement be operative unless in cases in which the father would on other grounds be deprived of his children's custody."
VII.
402.
Ajp"eement
privately to influence legislature is invalid.
An
agreement to
is
by the
indi-
members
vidually
A fortiori^
made
to a
member
of a legis-
way is void.^ But an agreement between a landowner and the promoter of a railroad that the land-owner, whose land is affected by a proposed railroad, will withdraw his opposition on the payment of a sura of money, has been
See
Wh. Edwards
ed.
v. v.
R. R., 1 My.
R. R., 16
&
C. 650;
&
Aih.
v.
v.
Am.
Marshall
guire
V. V.
1435, 1508-10
citing
;
Hope
Hope, 8
Vansit-
D. M.
tart,
*
&
G. 731
Vansittart
;
4 K.
&
J.
62
2 De G.
&
J. 249.
;
Curtis
V. v.
Van
Artsdalen
St.
Van
v.
;
Artsdalen, 14 Penn.
Gilkeson, 1 Phila.
Powers v. McBratney, 3 Dill. 385 Skinner, 34 Vt. 274 Pingry v. Washburn, 1 Aik. 264 Frost v. Belmont, Mills v. Mills, 40 N. Y. 6 Allen, 152
;
; ; ;
384;
;
Com.
194
5 Clark, 30
Com.
;
v.
Dougherty,
v.
Mercein
i-.
Peo-
Wend.
64; State
Smith, 6
v. Roof, 10 Barb. 489; Rose V. Truax, 21 Barb. 361 Smith v. Hatzfield v. Applegate, 3 Zab. 352 Clippenger v. Gulden, 7 Watts, 152 Hepbaugh, 5 W..& S. 315; Martin v.
543;
Harris
Campbell, 74 Penn.
St.
V.
13 Eq. 520.
Bispham's Eq. 547. By act 36 Vict. c. 12, such agreements are, under
certain conditions, validated.
6
Wood r. McCann, Dana, 366 McBratney v. Chandler, Cummings v. Saux, 30 22 Kan. 692 La. An. Part I. 207. ^ Leake, 2d ed. 725. Per cur. Howden V. Simpson, 10 Ad. & El. 821. To same general effect, see Fuller v. Dame,
;
18 Pick. 472 Harris v. Roof, 10 Barb. 489; Bell v. Quinn, 2 Sandf. 146; Gulick V. Ward, 5 Halst. 87.
;
570
CHAP. XV.l
ILLEGALITY.
[ 402.
held in England not to be invalidated by the fact that the land-owner is a member of the legislature, his vote not being
part of the consideration.^
In this country it is settled that agreements by which parties are to be allowed contingent fees for procuring specific legislation are void as against puband on this ground it has been held by the lic policy Supreme Court of the United States that a plaintiff was not entitled to recover on an agreement by which he was to be
;
must
exercise of
means and the Their necessary consequence is the demoralization of the agent who covenants for them he is soon brought to believe that any means which will produce so beneficial a result to himself are proper means ;' and that a share of these profits may have the same effect of quickening the perceptions and warming the zeal of influential or ' This, however, is careless' members in favor of the bill."^
necessarily lead to the use of improper
undue
influence.
'
A member
of con-
who is
is
a stockholder in a national
up
bank,
money
But a
bargain
is
The ruling
excused by Mr.
an indictable conspiracy.
point in
As
to the
Howden
v.
Simpson, that a
England) that "in practice there is little chance of a conflict between duty and interest, as the legislature generally informs itself on these matters by means of committees proceeding in a quasi-judicial manner. Of course," he adds, "it would be improper for a member personally interested to sit on such a committee." There can be no objection, it is true,
to
may make
liti-
474; Young
;
v.
Burtman,
Phil.
203
2
Smith
V.
v.
Marshall
Tool Co.
Norris, 2 Wall. 45
see
Rose
3
*
V.
16 How. 335.
See, also. Fuller r.
;
Dame, 18 Pick.
;
to a
member
of the legislature
making
472
V.
Frost
v.
legislature, provided
Wis. 200
Wood
366.
571
402.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
not to be considered as conflicting with the " right of the citizen to appear Before the legislature or any other public
body
in person, or
any
Hence the
rule before
Smith's L. C. 7th
Am.
ed.
692,
Sedgwick v. Stanton, 4 Keru. 289; Wildey v. Collier, 7 Md. 273; Winpenny V. French, 18 Ohio St, 469; Bryan v. Reynolds, 5 Wis. 200; Wood Denison v. V. McCann, 6 Dana, 366 Crawford Co., 48 Iowa, 211. 2 Wildey v. Collier, 7 Md. 273 Winciting
;
mony,
thus stated by Field, J., in Oscanyan v. Arms Co., 103 U. S. 261: "In Trist v. Child, reported in 21st of Wallace, the distincdistinction
is
penny The
V.
French, 18
They
in
same principle
services
of ethics as
professional
rendered
court of justice,
ceptionable.
tion
is
of per-
sonal influence to
secure legislation
and legitimate professional services in making the legislature acquainted with the merits of the measures desired. Whilst the former is condemned, the
latter
are,
"
v.
See supra,
370.
In Meguire
Ill, Trist
to
V.
Corwine, 101 U. S.
See
Skin-
re-
com-
same general
543
;
;
Powers
v.
v.
There the defendant had employed the plaintiff to get a bill passed by congress for an appropriation to pay a claim against the United States. It was considered by the court to have been a contract for lobby services, and adjudged void as against
public policy.
Mills
v.
Mills, 40 N.
Y.
Bryan
Reynolds, 5 Wis.
200 Gil V. Williams, 12 La. An. 219. In Marshall v. R. R., 16 How. 336,
as
to
corrupt
legislative
Other
similar
court,
cases
Wh.
It
and,
them the
that compromise
legislation
to be against public
it
added, speaking
through
as
Mr. Justice
all
Swayne
'
We
for
to aflSx the
under
other circumstances, an
stamp
of illegality
on
many
beneficent
agreement,
express
or
implied,
is
legislative acts.
valid.
Within
this
category
are
included
which William of
672
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 403.
is to aiFect legislation by any other means than open argument, then a contract to promote such object will not be sustained. Even an agreement by which signatures to a petition are obtained by promise of money has been held invalid ;^ and so of an agreement to grant to individuals the right of passing a gate free from toll on condition of their
withdrawing their opposition to a bill before the legislature.^ 403. An agreement by which a party, for a contingent fee, agrees to influence government to grant a contract for purchase of supplies, will not be enforced
agreement
by the
to the
courts.^
"Considerations,"
it
was
said,
"as lyMuence
and economical mode of meet- ^^^^"tive. ing the public wants should alone control in this respect the
most
efficient
No
other consid-
government is concerned. Such is the rule of public policy, and whatever tends to introduce any other element into the transaction is against public policy. That agreements like the one under consideration have this tendency is manifest. They tend to introduce personal solicitation and personal influence as elements in the procurement of contracts, and thus directly lead to inefficiency in the public service and to unnecessary
expenditures of the public funds.
Orange, and which, as Macaulay vividly shows, were a compromise between
.
.
two
ral
conceptions
of
government, and
bill. Mr. compromise and "omnibus" bills were made up in the same way. Members from one section agreed to
Clay's
vote for
what was
distasteful to
them
James
II.
In
section in carrying a
measure in which
See
we have an analogous compromise they were particularly interested. recorded. In Jefferson's Ana (Jeff, as to barter of offices, infra, 407.
Works, ix. 93, see Irving's Life of Washington, v. 70), we have detailed the compromise by which, after the funding bill was defeated by southern votes, its reconsideration was carried and its passage insured by a bargain by which the northern members agreed to place the seat of government on the Potomac in consideration of enough
Maguire v. Smock, 42 Ind. 1. Pingry v. Washburn, 1 Aik. 264. That a contract fraudulently concocted between an engineer employed by a
^
local
is
void,
see Wakefield
Banking
Co.
v.
Norman-
Tool Co.
v.
673
403.]
CONTRACTS.
tlie
[CHAP. XV.
business operations of
appointment to public
offices,
without reference to
to the general tend-
closes the
door to temptation by
them recognition
in
And
contract, also, to procure an appointment to a public office by private influence is invalid f and so of a contract to obtain, for a contingent fee, the discharge of a drafted soldier ;^ and of a contract to obtain from the executive the appointment of C, the promisor, as special counsel, in consideration of the promisor dividing his fee with the promisee.' But it is otherwise as to professional services in procuring a pension or similar executive
action."
The
is
an
executive, there
is
why
it
should be invali-
dated, but many reasons why it should be sustained. So far from corruption being stimulated by agents of eminence apSee Hatzfield
;
v.
Gulden, 7 Watts,
152 Ashburner v. Parrish, 81 Penn. St. 52; O'Harar. Carpenter, 23 Mich. 410; Pickett V. School Dist., 25 Wis. 551
Mills V. Mills, 40 N. Y. 543
;
would receive a commission upon the purchase. It was held that the contract was illegal and would not be
enforced in the United States, even
Kelly
v.
Hutchen
Hope V. Hope, 8 D. G. M. & G. 731 Watson V. Murray, 8 C. E. Green, 257. In Oscanyanr. Arms Co., 15 Blatch'. C.
U. S. 1881, 103 U. S. 261, an agreement was made by a manufacturer of rifles with the Turkish
C. 79,
aff.
S. C.
though it would have been legal in Turkey. See opinion, sttpra, 402, and see Cook v. Shipman, 51 111. 316. Davison v. Seymour, 1 Bosw. 88 Hager v. Catlin, 18 Hun, 448 Filson v. Himes, 5 Barr, 452 infra, 407. See Weld v. Lancaster, 56 Me. 453, where a sale of a government contract was
; ;
;
held invalid.
Consul General at New York that in case such consul should influence an agent of the Turkish government employed to purchase arms to purchase
rifles of
Bowman
Maguire
Painter
v.
r. Cofi'roth,
59 Penn. St.
19.
^ ^
v.
Corwine, 101 U.
S. 101.
v.
Drum, 40 Penn.
St.
467
Formby
574
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 405.
pearing to represent private interests before the executive, such agencies, publicly acknowledged, and acting openly, are
Hence con-
fair, will be sustained.^ Under this a celebrated English ruling to the effect that a limitation in the will of the seventh Earl of Bridgewater that if his devisee should not acquire the title of Marquis or Duke of Bridge-
and
title,
go
over.
but this was reversed in the house of lords by four to one. Lords Lyndhurst, Brougham, Truro, and St. Leonards holding that such a limitation was against the policy of the law as putting an undue pressure on government, from which the appointments to peerages proceed. Lord Cranworth dissented, holding the limitation good.^ 404. When there is a board of pardons before whom counsel appear, or when there is a hearing before an executive, there is no reason why counsel should not Professiontion,
.-,.-,,
It
^^ services
as to par-
On
is
m^siWe'
whose consideration
him
in a serto influence
cers void.
vice of writs for the purpose of determining questions of title will be sustained,^
See Lyon
it is
otherwise
when
v.
Mitchell, 36 N. Y. 235.
See criticism
e se^.
;
in Pollock,
r.
3d ed.
289, 291
Egerton
Earl Brown-
low, 4 H. L. C. 1-250.
Pollock, 286. That a contract by the mayor of a city to lease a public park, and for an annual sum to keep it in repair, is void, see Macon v. HuflF, 60
See Bird
Hatzfield
v.
j.
Ga. 221.
Gulden, 7 Watts, 152; Filson V. Himes, 5 Barr, 492 Bowman V. Coffrath, 59 Penn. St. 23 Haines v. Lewis, 54 Iowa, 301.
;
See Grett
v.
v.
Clark
nelly
Con-
v.
v.
Walker, 45 Penn.
St.
449
v.
March
Com.
v.
Vandyke,
675
406.]
CONTRACTS.
is
[chap. XV.
to induce him to do an illegal act, or to neglect Such agreements constitute indictable offences, and are in themselves void ;^ and so of bonds which an officer takes of a prisoner in consideration of an illegal indulgence amounting to an escape ;^ and of agreements to pay officers commissioned to take testimony for prematurely divulging the testimony f and of agreements to pay public officers for doing their duty.* A note, however, accepted by an officer from a person charged with a revenue offence to save his property from attachment is not based on an invalid consideration." And, as has already been incidentally seen, bonds given to a public officer to indemnify him for an illegal act may be enforced when the bonds did not operate as inducements to violate the law, and were not illegal in their inception, but were bona fide meant to remunerate him for expenses incurred by him in a mistaken view of duty. The seal in such cases makes it unnecessary to prove consideration.^ An indemnity to a private person may, under the same circumstances, be sus-
the object
his duty.
tained.'^
406.
Independent of
local statutes
an agreement
And
so of
agreemeut
to bribe
voters.
invalid.
Hence
it
Hodsdon
v.
Wilkins,
Greenl.
St.
396
Kenworthy r.
I'.
Stringer, 27 Ind.
]13; Denny
Churchill
V.
498.
3
*
Doty
v.
Cooth
Webber
v.
Infra, 502
;
Blunt, 19
Brady,
1 Caines, 104
36 N. Y. 531
Richardson
v.
Crandall,
Jones, 3
1 South.
Ohio,
Miss. 9.
6
281;
246, an agreement between contractors to make collusive bids and pool profits was held
void, see infra, 443.
2
48 N. Y. 328; Satterlee r. Duer, 102 Fanshot v. Stout, 319 Newsom v. Thighen, 30 In Ray v. Mackin, 100 111.
; ;
Pilkington
V.
Green, 2 B.
v.
&
P. 151.
Miss. 44.
See Stonington
439.
6
Powers, 37 Conn.
Wh.
Drake on Attach. 189 Hall v. Huntoon, 17 Vt. 244 Marsh v. Gold, 2 Pick. 285 Avery v. Halsey, 14 Pick. 174
;
Churchill t'. 310 Perkins, 5 Mass. 541 Fanshot v. Stout, 1 South. 319 Green v. Hern, 2 Pen. & W. 167 Hopkinson r. Leeds, 78 Penn.
;
Sampson,
Coventry
1
v.
Barton,
17 Johns.
142
McCartney
Stone
r.
v.
Shepard,
21 Mo. 573
576
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
;^
[ 407.
him
in
and so of a
promise to pay him for money spent by him in travelling.^ An agreement to pay money in consideration of abandoning an election petition has also been held invalid.^ And it has been held that a promise to aid in the election of another cannot be made the subject of a suit.* Nor can a promise to pay
for treating a candidate's supporters.'
407.
Agreements to pay money to secure public honors,^ common law g^ ^^^ ^^^
;''
bv a person of his influence to ob- of public offices. and a contract to resign As we have already seen, a contract for a certain payment.^ for obtaining by private means the appointment to a public and so of a
sale
.
ment by two
is
justices, in
whom
nominations, that A. will vote for B. if C. will vote for D., a conspiracy at common law." And so, it is argued by
Curtis,
is
Judge
the legislature.^^
a similar combination between members of "Without accepting the position that such
8
Simpson
Cooper
Nichols
V.
v.
Yeend, L. R\ 4 Q. B.
Garforth
V.
v.
626.
8
*
Waldo
Slade, 6 E.
V. V.
v.
Martin, 4 B.
&
C. 319
R.
v.
&
B. 447.
Coppock
Bower, 4 M.
& W.
Cal.
361.
Charretie, 13 Q. B. 447; Carleton v. Whitcher, 5 N. H. 196; Cardigan v. Page, 6 N. H. 183 Mt^guire v. Corwine,
;
See Martin
Wude, 37
168;
O'Rear
^
^ 7
v.
Duke
Kingston
V.
Pierrepont, 1 Vern.
5.
;
Boynton v. Hubbard, 7 Mass. 119 Bowers v. Bowers, 26 Penn. St. 74 Stroud v. Smith, 4 Houst. 448 Martin v. Wade, 37 Cal. 168; Gaston
101 U. S. 108
; ; ; ;
Blachford
v.
Preston, 8 T. R. 89
V.
Card
son
V.
Hope, 2 B.
&
C. 661
Richard-
of cases in Benj.
V.
Thomson
v.
v.
Drake, 14 Nev. 175. See criticism on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 516 et seq. 8 Graeme v. Wroughton, 11 Ex. 146
;
Du
ton
C. 319
MeaSee Swayze
;
Whitcher, 5 N. H. 196 Cardigan V. Page, 6 N. H. 183 Ferris v. Adams, 23 Vt. 136 Gray v. Hook, 4
;
;
Hull, 3 Halst. 54
Ham
v.
Smith, 87
Penn.
10
Supra, 403
S.
N. Y. 449 Filson v. Himes, 5 Barr, 452 Hunter v. Nolf, 71 Penn. St. 282 Duke V. Asbee, 11 Ired. 112; Grant v. McLester, 8 Ga. 553 Lewis v. Knox, 2
; ; ;
101 U.
108
Filson
452; Anon., Lewis Cr. L. 126. Com. V. Callaghan, 2 Va. Ca. 460.
'2
Wh.
v.
Rodes, 3 Marsh.
VOL.
I. 37
677
408.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XT.
combinations, when limited to mere legislative compromises, form a criminal offence, it may be argued for several reasons that no suit for their enforcement would stand. (1) Bargains
for votes are in themselves invalid.
(2)
without transcending its functions, undertake to examine the motives of votes of legislators, or to impose damages in case such votes are not given in a particular way.^ A contract between twocandidates for a public office by which one, for a specific con-
withdraw in favor of another, is void.^ And by the marshal of a territory to give a subordinate x)ffice as consideration for receiving some private personal services from the appointee.^ 408. An agreement by which a trustee or director of a corpoSo of sales rate body gives his influence for a particular candidate
sideration, shall
so of a contract
of trusts.
Ijj
is
void.*
And
for the appointment to an office in which the public are interested the public will be better served by having persons best qualified to fill offices appointed to them ; but if money be given to those who appoint, it may be a temptation to them to appoint improper persons."' An agreement by a trustee of a mining corporation
;
money consideration
money
is
void.
owe
It is a violation of the
them
to be
bought out of
office."^
Specific
perform-
supra, 402.
R. 9 Q. B. 55,
r. Wade, 37 Cal. 168. See Gray i;. Hook, 4 N. Y. 449. ' Waldron v. Evans, 1 Dak. Ter. 11. * Wardell r. R. R., 103 U. S. 656.
Martin
same candidate
In Gaston
v.
for aid
was sustained.
Blachford
v.
Preston, 8 T. R. 89.
Madden, L. R.
9 Q. B. 55
^
J
supra, 407.
v,
Forbes
Ibid.,
Myrick, J.
ney, was to divide the salary and emoluments with him, was held invalid.
2
ral effect;
St.
478
Bowers
Bowers, 26 Penn.
Hunter
v.
v.
St. 74.
Benedict
578
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEQALITT.
[ 410.
ance will not be granted of a contract for the purpose of obtaining control of a national bank.^ "A director of a corporation
cannot
make
own
benefit, a contract
The
contract
may
be repudiated
by the company at the instance of a stockholder."^ An agreement to grant diplomas on any ground except merit is void.^ "All arrangements by directors of a railroad company," also, " to secure an undue advantage to themselves at its expense,
. .
are so
many
An
agreement, there-
by an
officer
invalid.*
ment by which he
officer, an agreeany undue preferences This has been held to be the case with a ments b^^" is void. contract by an administrator to sell the real estate traTors t of his intestate on certain terms, and then to make give undue title through the orphans' court f and with an agreement to assume a debt on condition of the plaintiff relinquishis
An
On
it
an election
01 a
p
is
contested, an agreement
,
,
when
Agreement
to with-
so of
an agree-
draw from
contesting
yo^l^*^"'^
legislature, that
Foil's App., 91
Reed,
;
L. 435
Guild
477 277
Am.
ed.
Olin
V.
Bate, 98
111.
53.
v.
Field, J.,
S.
Warden
Railroad Co.,
European R. R. v. Poor, 59 Me. Drury v. Cross, 7 Wall. 299. 5 Berryman v. R. R., 14 Bush, 755. See infra, 414. As to perversions of trusts by trustees, see supra, 378. 6 Myers v. Hodges, 2 Watts, 381. Bowers v. Bowers, 26 Penn. St. 74.
; ;
">
103 U.
Luxem-
St. 478.
bourg R. R. V. Magney, 25 Beav. 586 Benson v. Hathaway, 1 Y. & C. 326 Flint, etc. R. R. v. Dewey, 14 Mich.
;
Coppock
Ham
V.
W.
St.
361.
63;
see supra,
407.
579
413.] 411.
So of
as-
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XV.
When
.
a salary
. .
is
siffnments of salary.
a contract by which it is assigned to other i T T parties, IS voiQ as against the policy oi the law.^ in
oflacer,
1
^11
may
England,
it is
true,
it
in the
be valid.^
And
the " Customs Benevolent Fund," erected by special act of parliament, has been in England held good.^
But such
appoint-
ments are
is
assignable.
"
astopensioDB.
pension
1^^^
is
^g ^ consideration
may
law that it should be assignable."* In this country, assignments of federal pensions are prohibited by statute, though an agreement to profession all}' secure a pension for a contingent
fee has been sustained.'
413.
A public officer
^
is
An
agree-
ment by a
officer
to
from individuals for the performance of his public ^ ^ dutics, unless in the shape of fees prescribed by law and when such payments are made to an officer
V.
Ryall
Rowles, 2
citing
Wh. &
v.
T. Lead,
;
for
collection,
Leake,
Bute, 2
2d ed. 727
B.
Palmer
&
v. Reede (that of a Cooper v. Reilly, 2 Sim. 560 Davis v. Marlborough, 1 Swanst. 74. In Osborne v. Williams, 18 Ves. 379, an agreement to pay over the profits of a contract was held void, In State Bank v. Hastings, 15 Wis. 83, it was held that an unqualified order
peace)
Barwicke
;
military officer)
;
and was given without value. Paine, J., diss. The question of assignability of judicial salaries was not argued, the sole question heing held to be whether the order was negotiable.
Sterry
v.
Clifton, 9 C. B. 110.
Maclean's
Trusts,
L. R.
19 Eq.
274.
v.
Foster, 8 M.
&
W.
by a judge, on the treasurer of the state to pay a forthcoming quarter's salary to a bank, bound the maker to
a bonajide endorsee
for value,
Leake, 2d ed. 728, referring Tunstall to Priddy i'. Rose, 3 Mer. 86 Spooner v. r. Boothby, 10 Sim. 542
; ;
Painter
v.
Drum, 40 Penn,
St. 467.
though
580
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEQALITT.
[ 414.
may
subject
receive
payment
servffs'S
invalid,
In any view agreements by individuals to pay publie officers specially for their services are generally
Hence, a promise to a
which
duty to execute, is void f and so of promises of extra payments to officers in executing criminal process.* It is otherwise, however, as to extra services, not prohibited
was
his official
by law.
414. Railroad corporations
stitutions,
may be regarded
as public in-
bound, in exercising their franchises, not Railroad In ac- bargains as to be governed by private considerations. to stations cordance with this view an agreement between may be
. .
by which
the latter
city,
is
and to permit no other to be built within a specified distance, has been held void as against public policy f and in some states the extreme position is taken that an agreement between a railroad company and individuals, to place, in consideration of payments to it, a depot at a particular spot, is void.'' The same rule has been applied to an agreement not
to establish a station within a certain distance of a particular
point.^
Wh.
Williamson
v.
Infra,
502;
Pool
v.
Boston,
Tilden
v.
Iowa, 402.
1
Fuller
R. R.
V.
V.
PaR.
Walsh
v.
58;
cific
Bestor
.
Huffman Macon v.
3
Greenwood, 25 Kan. 64
;
V.
Wathen, 60
111.
138
Marsh
v.
and cases
R., 64
414; Holladay
Patterson,
5 Oregon, 177. In Southard v. R. R., 2 Dutch. 13; Cumberland, etc., R. R. v. Babb, 9 Watts, 458 and Jewett v. R. R., 10 Ind. 539, where actions on such
;
See Pool
v.
V.
Gilmore
V.
6
Com.
was not
;
raised.
v.
Chapman,
Converse
St.
111.
Louis, etc. R. R.
Mathers,
R. R.
v.
v.
v.
21 How. U. S.
463; Evans
etc.
and cases
581
415.]
CONTRACTS.
its
[chap. XV.
As we
road
is
any agreement to obstruct the course of justice an indictable conspiracy at common law, such r Agreement to obstruct agreements are to be regarded as void, and incapable of sustaining a suit;^ and this is the case with agreements for the suppression or perversion of testimony to be used in a judicial proceeding;* with agreements giving contingent fees to witnesses ;' with secret agreements by par 415. Since
^
.
is
./
other parties f with agreements to pervert insolvent and bankrupt proceedings as means of fraud f with agreements to covertly secure undue indulgences to the debtor;^ and with
That agreements to compound offences are void will be hereafter seen.^" It may be here noticed that an agreement for the collusive conduct of a divorce suit is void ;^* and so is an agreement not to expose immoral c nduct.^^
vol. 39
Keir
v.
Leeman,
6 Q. B. 308
Iowa, 402
2
9 Q. B. 371.
*
Wh.
et seq.,
Supra,
V.
408.
1380;
Shaw
r.
See R.
V.
Hamp,
;
Cox
C. C. 167
;
Dixon
Southern Ex. Co. v. Duflfey, 48 Ga., 358 Patterson v. Donner, 48 Cal. 369.
;
State
v.
v.
Norton, 3 Zab.
Willis
33
St.
Stoutenburg
228;
v.
Lybrand, 13 Oh.
52
and see
Grove
6
500
et
seq.; Collins v.
;
State
v.
v.
McKistry, 50 Ind.
Godefroy, 1 B.
v.
465;
Porter
Jones,
Mo. 399;
&
Baker
is
"There
namely,
of
Elliott V. Richardson, L. R. 5 C. P.
744.
"I
tracts falling
under
this class,
Caldecott ex parte,
of illegality created
by the rules
L. R. 4 Ch. D. 150.
8
common
law.
It consists of
contracts
Bracewell
v.
Williams, L. R. 2 C.
P. 196.
10
'1
Barron
v.
citing Collins
v.
Infra,
2 Wils.
341
Unwin
v.
Hope
V.
.Leaper, 1 M.
&
Gr. 747; E. C. L. R.
supra, 394.
2
Brown
v.
682
CHAP. XV.]
416.
ILLEGALITY.
[ 417.
able.
The right of free access to courts of justice is inalienHence a condition that a title should be taken without investigation is void, and does not preclude not^to {fa^e_ investigation and litigation ;^ and so of an agree- recourse to ment that an insured party, if sued in a state court, will not remove the suit into a federal court.^ No binding etfect, also, will be awarded to resolutions of corporations by which their members are to renounce the right to appeal from
their action to courts of law.^ 417. So strongly
is
justice maintained in
England and
in the
United
agreement
^rwtnite
determining is incident to an arbitration.' And an award, under statute, to bind must comply with the statutory conditions.^
Jones
V. Clifford,
L. R. 3 C. D. 779.
v.
Morse, 20 Wal.
445.
8
Lon-
don
r.
Bernadiston, 1 Lev. 16
;
Ballard
Sear-
of
Middleton's
v.
the
Austin
bound by the
Lavarello,
ing, 16 N. Y. 123
Gold Exchange,
Ab.
Pr.(N. S.) 251, it was held that a rule of the Gold Exchange, an unincorporated
society,
Lafond v. 2 Hun, 201 Deems, 81 N. Y. 507. * Street v. Rigby, 6 Ves. 815 Cooke Hill v. More, V. Cooke, L. R. 4 Eq. 77
; ;
40 Me. 515
390
293.
;
Pearl
v.
that
its
members should be
Hurst
v. Litchfield,
39 N. Y. 377
bound by the
and other
15
S.
Havard,
Cooper, 7
member (who
&
R, 165
;
Bowen
v.
Watts, 311
707-8.
and
J.,
James, L.
Llanelly R. R.
v.
N.
effect,
;
Saffery
W.
6
308.
583
421.]
CONTRACTS.
VIII.
'
[CHAP. XV.
421.
Champerty
is illegal
Champerty (campi
which
is
an oftence by
,
common law,' is an ag-reement for the the English n division between the parties of a particular piece of
property to be sued for by one of them.^
|j^
profltTof
litigation.
The
offence,
it beinj^
brought by one of them. Should a number of parcombine in such a way, public justice, it is argued, would be imperilled by the pressure which would be thus brought to bear on behalf of the suit so supported and the danger would in most cases be aggravated by the fact that those who had this contingent interest in the success of the suit would work out of sight, or, if seen, would not be known to be parties in interest.^ Several old English statutes make champerty and maintenance (to be presently defined) indictable; but these statutes are regarded merely as affirmations of the common law, and virtually absorbed in that law, so that with the modification of the common law the statutes have become modified.^ In Missouri the statutes are not in force, though the principle will be applied in all cases where there is a vexatious stirring up of litigation.* The statutes are not in force in Vermont,* in Iowa, in Delaware,^ in Tennessee,^ and in New Jersey.' In New York there is a special statute limiting the rule,*'' while Massachusetts and Rhode Island adopt the prinAn agreement by a third ciple of the statutes as common law."
suit to be
ties
;
staph. Dig. C. L.
;
art.
141
Wh.
Durke
51.
v.
66
see
Broughton
Mo.
5 ^
64 Ala. 210.
w.
Danforth
SeeDe Houghton
Pechell
V.
Money, L. R. 2
Wright
Bayard
Sherley
v.
Ch. 164.
472.
Watson, 8 M.
is
& W.
691.
v. v.
v.
Whether
Co.
V.
Humph.
53.
J. L.
Pennsylvania
reserved in Chester
It
Schomp
Schenck, 40 N.
v.
195.
i"
Hassenfrats
v.
33 Ed.
I.
Etheridge
that state.
V.
Roberts' Dig. 96
;
Foster
Gray
v.
Packer,
J.
Lathrop
v.
Bank,
I.
9 Met. 489
Martin
309
Clark, 8 R.
389.
584
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 421.
and evidence to support it, is against " Besides tlie policy of the law, and will not be enforced. the objection that a stranger has acquired an interest to carry
to furnish information
on the litigation, the bargain to procure evidence for the consideration of a money payment has a direct and manifest tendencj' to pervert the course of justice."^
This
is
eminently
It
is
when a party
interested
makes such an
fomenting of
agreement.^
But generally
contracts
for the
litigation, enabling a party unwilling himself to bear the expense of a suit to undertake it under the auspices of If he others, are invalid as against the policy of the law.
be so poor that
if
may
be defeated,
then
it
;*
is
him
rights
but where he
not_ in
to
such
and where
stimulate
him
to a litigation
which he would not otherwise encounter, then the contract is one which the courts should not enforce.' Whether a contract is champertous is determined by the law of the place of
performance.^
Hump.
it
'
Per
v.
cur. in
;
Stanley
v.
Jones,
7
;
Fall, 9
505.
Under
local statsuit,
Bing. 369
cited
utes the
purchase of land in
to
Sprye
V.
Porter, 7 E.
&
B. 58
;
Reynell
knowing
De HoughMoney, L. R. 2 Ch. 164 Wellington V. Kelly, 84 N. Y. 543 Holloway V. Lowe, 7 Port. 488. Whitaker v. Cone, 2 John. Ca. 58 McGoon V. Ankeny, 11 111. 558 Dexter
Sprye, 1 D. M. G. 660
V.
tive purposes,
and not
in pursuance of
ton
may
be void
Jackson
It
is
v.
otherwise, as
we
will see, as to
Infra,
sales of
personal property.
V.
424
s
;
et seq.
Wellington
o.
v.
Kelly, 84 N. Y. 543
Supra, 361.
It is also settled in
see Findpn
infra,
*
Parker, 11 M.
et seq.
& W.
675
422
v.
Perine
V.
State
Chitty,
cases cited
Dunn, 3 John. Ch. 508 1 Bailey, 379, and Wald's Pollock, 303.
;
the furtherance of
to the suit,
a suit,
is
no defence
v.
nor
ground
731
;
for injunction.
Leake, 2d ed.
L. R.
Reynell
v.
v.
Hilton
Woods,
v.
4 Eq. 432
S. Cir. Ct.
Sprye, 1 D. M. G. 680-6
Edwards
Elborough
v.
Parkhurst, 21 Vt. 472; Brinley v. Whiting, 5 Pick. 355 Whitaker v. Cone, 2 John. Ca. 58 Dunbar v. Mc;
In Courtright
Burns (U.
Mo. 1881), 14 Cent. L. J. 89, it was held that the fact of the existence of a
585
422.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
profits,
and
consists in an agreement,
the champertous agreement
L.
by a
is
agreement between the is no ground "The for the dismissal of the suit. answer," said McCrary, J., "alleges that this suit being prosecuted by one
itself
v.
Whitney
;
Robison
v.
champertous contract, to pay the expenses of the litigation and receive as his compensation forty
per cent, of the
that reason.
upon a by which he is
V. Beall,
26 Ga. 17
;
Allison
R. R.,
42 Iowa, 274 Small v. R. Co., 55 Iowa, 582. This latter view is in my judgment supported by the better reason.
It is
sum
allegation of champerty
the testimony
point.
is in no manner bound by the champertous agreement nor are there any reasons founded on
conclusive
upon that
This
makes
it
dismissal.
upon the
note,
he has made a champertous contract with his attorney. In other words, can the defendant, the maker of a promissory note, avoid payment thereof or prevent a recovery thereon, upon the ground that the holder of the note has made a void and unlawful agreement with an attorney for the prosecution of a suit upon it ? The authorities upon this question are in conflict. Some courts have ruled that if the fact that a suit is being prosecuted upon a champertous contract comes to the knowledge of the court in any proper manner, it should refuse longer to entertain the proceeding. Barker v. Barber, 14 Wis. 142 Webb v. Armstrong,
; ;
nanced to the same extent and in the same manner as are all other unlawful, fraudulent, or void contracts. If, on the other hand, the defendant in an action upon a valid and binding contract
may
ment
between the plaintiff and his attorney, an eflfect would thus be given to the champerty, reaching very far beyond that which attaches to any other illegal The defendant in such case contract. he is not is no party to the champerty interested in it nor in any wise injured by it. If the contract upon which he is sued is f^ftona Jide contract upon Morrison v. Deadrick, which a suui of money is due from him 5 Humph. 379 10 Humph. 142 Greenman v. Cohee, to the plaintiff, and if he has no defence 61 Ind. 201. upon that contract, I can see no good "Other courts have held that the reason for holding that he may be refact that there is an illegal and cham- leased by showing that the plaintiff pertous contract for the prosecution of has made a void and unlawful agreea cause of action is no ground of de- ment with his attorney concerning the fence thereto, and can only be set up fee and expenses of the suit. " The tendency of the courts in this by the client against the attorney when
; ;
586
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 422.
ing
is
its litigation.^
That maiiitenance,
in this sense,
. .
Mainte-
is an indictable offence in England, is nance no longer o stirring up illustrated by the fact that, in the Tichborne litiga- unfounded litigation. i tion, parties having no pecuniary interest in the result not only were permitted without prosecution to canvass the country for support for the claimant, but were adjudged in so doing, notwithstanding the publicity and excitement that attended their proceedings, not to be guilty of a contempt of court.2 It should be noticed, also, that the English
,
.
^ 1
company
for
the purpose of instituting suits to restrain the directors from acts alleged to be illegal.^ In this country, though there are
jurisdictions in
which maintenance
is
is
mon
that
country
is
somewhat the
to
apply
it
to
make use
"
It
of
it
to
cham-
which gave
to dismiss
must be
Wh.
R.
V.
altogether repudiated,
is
and
it is
now
in-
Wh.
V.
Sedgwick v. Stanton, 14 N. Y. 289 Voorhees v. Dorr, 51 Barb. 580 Richardson v. Rowland, 40 Conn. 572 Matthewson V. Fitch, 22 Cal. 86 Hoffman v. Vallejo, 45 Cal. 564 Lyttle v. State, 17 Ark.
;
and Pr. 957. See Com. Dupuy, Bright. 44 S. C, 4 Clark, 1. 8 Bloxam v. R. R., L. R. 3 Ch. 353.
Cr. PI.
;
degate, in
1881, 345.
* Thurston v. Percival, 1 Pick. 415 Lathrop v. Amherst Bk., 9 Met. 489 Martin v. Clark, 8 R. I. 389 Elliott v. McClelland, 17 Ala. 206 Duke v. Harper, 66 Mo. 51 Hayney v. Coyne, 10 Heisk. 339. See Newkirk r. Cone, 18
; ;
;
609.
"The common-law
ever,
to the doctrine of the
doctrine,
howof
supreme court
ruling,
I
the state, in
55.
Duke
v.
Harper, 66 Mo.
am
111.
449
Thompson
v.
to
relax
11
Backus
111.
587
423.]
suits in
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XV.
which they have no pecuniary interest are not, in It has been^^held, also, in England, that the common law is not in this respect in force in India.^ And a transaction is not void on this ground unless it be " something against good policy and justice, something tending to promote unnecessary litigation, something that in a legal sense is immoral, and to the constitution of which a bad motive is in the same sense necessary."^ Mr. Pollock, in citing this passage, says that "it fairly represents the principles on which English judges have acted in the modern cases."* 423. An agreement, also, by which a party seeking to Agreement establish his title to property, divides it with parties to sell "w^ho are to aid him in collecting information by claims on shares not which his title may be secured, is. not in itself invalid ;' and were a contrary view to be held, not only few agreements for the vindication of patent and other rights could stand, but contracts for the sale of goods would be vitiated in all cases in which it became subsequently necesthemselves, void.^
.
.
title to such goods. added that there are few business adventures that do not involve sales on shares.'^
It should be
Roberts
v.
v.
make."
ner, 475
.See
;
Baker
v.
r.
Whiting, 3 Sum-
Danforth
ardson
V.
Call
v.
v. v.
Rowland, 40
Conn.
;
565
Thallhimer
to
Voorhees
same
eflfect.
Sprye
v.
Porter, 7 E.
v.
&
B. 58.
Stanton, 14
N. Y. 289
J. L.
Schomp
;
v.
See Wilson
Schenck, 40 N.
Riggs, 11
195
;
Bayard
Sherley
w.
v.
Dickinson
^
r. Biirrell,
v.
Humph.
53
Wright
Meek,
L.
Mr. Pollock (3d ed. 319) states the law as follows: "It is not unlawful
to purchase an though adverse
interest
in
property
Ram Coomar
Fischer
v.
v.
Chunder Canto,
claims
exist
which
make
8 Moo.
Kamala Naicker,
that interest but it is unlawful to purchase merely for the purpose of litigation." Hence, it has been held that
Lord Abinger con- the creditor of an insolvent company "to cases where a may sell his claim, but that he cannot man improperly, and for the purpose of sell the right to proceed on a windingstirring up litigation and strife, encour- up petition. Paris Skating Rink Go.
ker, 11 M.
675,
& W.
fined maintenance
in re, L.
R. 5 Ch. D. 959.
make
588
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 424.
424. It has just been observed that, while an agreement to share a property or right not yet in possession Purchase
with one aiding in establishing it is not in itself valid, such an agreement becomes invalid when
consideration
litigation.
is
inits
It is
hard to see
invalid
suit should
is it
make
agreement by a party to
why the mere fact of bringing a what would otherwise be valid nor in which there is an honest and fair sustain by money and personal ser;
an agreement would be made to depend upon whether a suit on the claims had already been brought. But there is a wide difference between the sale of property on which a question of title subsequently arises, and the sale of a merely speculative claim. It is against the policy of the law that claims of this kind should be hawked about in the market, for the same reason that it is against the policy of the law that gambling ventures should be put up for sale. Hence, it has been held that the assignment of an alleged claim against trustees for breach of trust is void.^ And this has been decided to be the case with regard to claims to salvage,^ and with regard to suits for the redress of personal wrong, which, it has been said, are not marketable commodities, and have no settled
business value.?
that,
With
this
is
pending
other.'*
can be permitted to
of the
But
there
is
parties) in the
mere
in litigation to pre-
vent the sale to third parties, provided the object of the sale be not to foment litigation, but to- dispose of a right.' Were
1
Hill
V.
Boyle, L. R.
4 Eq. 260.
See
Prosser
Bell
V.
v.
Edmonds,
Smith, 5 B.
&
set-off,
s
et seq.
;
Woods, L. R. 4 Eq. 432. 2 The Rosario, L. R. 2 Adm. D. 41. Ibid. Wald's Pollock, citing Nor;
1050
Stanley
v.
Jones,
Bing. 377
Harrington
;
v.
v.
Long, 2 M.
ed. 733)
&
K.
590
Williams
ton
V.
Tuttle, 60
111.
;
Means, 12 Ga. 61
rick, 10
*
130
Thallhimer
v.
Brinckerhoff,
Humph.
v.
342.
3 Cow. 647.
Bellamy
Sabine, 1
De G. &
J.
589
426.]
it
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XV.
inalienable
otherwise, (1) all that would be necessary to make property would be to subject it to litigation, and (2) a poor
money on
it
that
because he
425. Partners jointly interested in a suit may bind themselves to divide the expenses of litigation, aljotntiy^nterestcd
though their rights and interests are several f and ^\^ applies whenever there is an honest belief in a ^^ may bind themselves common interest,^ and where the relation between to expenses ofiitigation the parties IS that or principal and agent, or master and servant.* 426. For several reasons an attorney is precluded from
,
...
/'it
purchasing his client's claim when in litigation 1. If in Ordinary cases purchases of litigated claims
are invalid
when
management of
that
all sales to
is
litigation.
2.
An
attorney
is
is
fidential adviser,
and a
sale to hira
An
at-
an officer of the court, and the dignity and just influence of the office would be destroyed if he is to have a contingent personal interest in the result of the litigation in which he is engaged. Hence, as a rule, a purchase by an attorney of a claim he is litigating on behalf of his client is against the policy of the law, and he will not be permitted to avail himself of such a purchase unless it should appear that the sale was fair, was not in any way under restraint, and was made under independent advice. But an assignment by the
torney
1
It
'
Williamson
v.
v.
III.,
Vaughan
*
ing a suit
of itself
the
title to it is
not
Elborough
Supra,
Ayres, L. R. 10 Eq.
champerty." Pollock, 3d ed. 317, citing 2 Ro. Ab. 113 B. Findon v. Parker, 11 M. & W. 675 Call V. Calef, 13 Met. 362; and cases cited Wald's Pollock, 303; Wellington V. Kelly, 84 N. Y. 543.
;
367.
378.
;
Cent. L, J. 168
v.
Mining
Supra, 161;
;
Wh. on
Agency,
;
574
Hall
v.
Wood
690
CHAP. XV.]
client to his
ILLEGALITY.
[ 427.
lawyer by way of compensation for services rendered will be sustained,^ provided there be no undue influence exercised.^
427. It is a
far
an agreement between
distinctions,
will be
sustained.^
The following
Agreement
forcontin-
however, may be suggested: (1) When the suit is fotnecespurely speculative, e. g.^ a suit for damages, such an j^wfui""' agreement partakes of the nature of a gambling contract, and will not be enforced by the courts.'* (2) Nor will
it
be enforced
when
extortionate.^
which the
client
Simpson
v.
v.
E. 806.
Lamb,
&
B. 84
Dunn
v.
Record,
1
63 Me. 17
Stanton
v.
Haskin,
Mac-
for the
purpose of
Ar. 558
Arden
Patterson, 5 Johns.
Ch. 48 Coughlin v. R. R., 71 N. Y. 443 West v. Raymond, 21 Ind. 305. In Coughlin v. R. R., 71 N. Y. 443,
; ;
Ramsey
Earl,
J.,
said:
"An
attorney
may
purchase of stock in corporations. v. Gould, 57 Barb. 399. 8 See Sharswood's Legal Ethics, 102. In 23 Alb. L. J. 484; 24 Alb. L. J. 4,
18,
24, the
question
is
discussed at
is
such compensation may be absolute or contingent but he may not purchase a claim for prosecution, and he may
;
of the law.
money
for
man, in Albany, 1882, under the title, " Compensation for Legal Services."
*
Martin
v.
Clarke, 8 R.
I.
389
Hal-
Anderson
v. Radcliffe,
E. B.
&
E.
806, 819.
*
As
to
undue
Bowyer, 2 De G. & " I am J. 445, Turner, L. J., said aware of no rule of law which prevents an attorney from purchasing what anybody else is at liberty to purchase, subject, of course, if he purchases from a
161.
In Knight
loway V. Lowe, 7 Port. 488. * Gardener v. Ennor, 35 Beav. 549 Thurston v. Percival, 1 Pick. 415 Phillips V. Overton, 4 Hayw. 291 Rose V. Mynett, 7 Yerg. 30 Scoby v.
;
;
Ross,
13
21
Ind.
Ind.
107;
;
Cognillard
v.
Boardman v. 479 Brown, 25 Iowa, 488 Lecatt v. Sallee, Halloway v. Lowe, 7 3 Port. 115
Bearss,
; ;
Port.
488;
Elliott
Byrd
v.
v.
Odem,
Ala.
client, to the
755;
206.
6
McClelland, 17 Ala.
Cham-
Anderson
v, Radcliife,
E. B.
&
Jenkins
v.
591
427.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
management of the suit, may be sustained.^ In this we have numerous rulings sustaining contracts for
were free from fraud or abuse, of confidential relations.'^ In England, however, an agreement with an attorney for a contingent percentage has been held invalid f and we have cases in this country, which, while admitting the lawfulness of contingent fees within the limits above stated, hold that when
gation, they are illegal,* and that they are illegal
^
Protheroe, 5 Bing.
burden
is
on the attorney
v.
309.
Lock-
man, 34 N. Y. 167
Hitcliings
v.
Van
S.
Brunt, 38 N. Y. 335.
Earle
;
S. 404; Scott v. Mass. 237 Haight v. Moore, 37 N. Y. Sup. Ct. 161 Porter
V.
son
Cox, 96 U. 109
v.
Hopwood, 9 C. B. N.
Harmon,
566
Pinee
r.
Beattie, 32 L. J. C. 734.
V.
176 195
St.
Scbomp
;
v.
Schenck, 40 N.
v.
J. L.
Strohecker
HoflFman, 19 Penn.
227
;
Dickerson
v.
259
139
Bayard
v.
Equit. Life
* Stanton v, Haskin, 1 MacAr. 558 Thurston v. Percival, 1 Pick. 415 Lathrop , Bank, 9 Met. 489 Boardman I'. Brown, 25 Iowa, 502 Holloway V. Lowe, 7 Port. 488 Elliott v. McClelland, 17 Ala. 206 see Evans v. Ellis, 5 Denio, 640 Howell v. Ransom,
;
;
28; Major
Gibson, 1 Pat.
AUard
Evans
v. v.
H. 48 Wis. 502;
;
&
Cross
v.
v.
Moses
r.
Bag-
Test, 8 Ala.
and he
713 305
V.
Martinez
v.
ment to
this effect,
Wal.
.Jr.
453
Trist V. Child, 21
Wal.
441.
In
Duke
Harper, 66 Mo. 51, it was held that a contingent fee was not champertous
unless the attorney agreed to pay part
of the expense of litigation. In Chester
County V. Barber, 97 Penn. St. 455, the supreme court of Pennsylvania held that it was not within the power of
county commissioners to make a contract giving a contingent fee of fifty per cent. See, also, Meguire i'. Corwine, 101 U. S. 111. That in contracts of
the suit. It was held that the agreement was invalid. " The defendant's answer and bill of exceptions," said Gray, C. J., " fairly construed, show that the agreement set up by the defendant was an agreement by which,
in
consideration
that
an
attorney
592
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
r 427.
provide for furnisliing the funds to conduct the suit.^ Should the agreement between the client and attorney be void for
in case of sdccess,
nothing
ure.
"The law
By the law of England from
is
of
Massachusetts being
in
"
ancient
clear, there
would be no propriety
ment
for
cham-
If it is
and tending to speculation and fraud, and cannpt be upheld, either at com-
thought desirable to subordinate the rules of professional conduct to mercantile usages, a change of our law in this regard must be sought from the
legislature
mon law
C. J.,
or in equity.
Lord Coke, 2
Inst. 208,
Box
;
V.
Hart,
and not from the courts. by virtue of his employment by the plaintiff, and of his professional duty, was bound to prose-
"The
defendant,
S.
C,
him
for
Sir
William Grant, M.
v.
ens
V.
Tindal,
C. J., in Stanley
377
S.
C,
Moore
&
&
on appeal, 2 Coop. Temp. Earle, C. J., Grell v. Cottenham, 1 Levy, 16 C. B. (N. S.) 73 Sir George Jessel, M. R., in re Attorneys' & Solici-
ham,
S. C.
and holds the amount recovered as money had and received to the plaintiff's use. The agreement set up by the defendant that he should keep one-half of the amount, being illegal and void, he is accountable to the plaintiff for the whole amount, deducting what the jury have allowed him for his services and costs. In re Moshers and Grell v. Levy, above cited
;
Pince
V. Beattie,
32 L.
J.
tors' Act, 1
Ch. D. 573.
"
It is
V.
law of this commonwealth. Thurston Lathrop v. Percival, 1 Pick. 415 Amherst Bank, 9 Mete. 489 Swett v.
; ;
Allen
v.
Hawks,
13 Mete.
13 Pick. 79, 83
Call
v. Calef,
Of Best v. Strong, 2 Wend. 319, 734. on which the defendant relies as showing that, assuming this agreement to be illegal, the plaintiff cannot maintain this action, it is enough to say that there the money was voluntarily paid to the defendant with the plaintiff 's
Rindge v. Coleraine, 11 Gray, 1 Dane, Ab. 296 6 id. 740, In Lathrop v. Amherst Bank, 741. the fact that the agreement did not require the attorney to carry on the suit at his own expense was adjudged to be
362
;
157, 162
suit
is
by which
was recovered
and
it
unnecessary to consider whether, upon the facts before the court, the
case
1
v.
Clarke, 8 R.
;
I.
389
immaterial.
9 Mete. 492.
In Scott
v.
Weakly
V.
Stearns
v.
in Tapley
for
Meeks
DewLowe,
the
Hollow ay
v.
and other cases cited in 7 Port. 488 Wald's Pollock, 296 Story on Cont.
;
VOL.
I.
38
713,
As deprecating
the
practice^
593
429.]
CONTRACTS.
is
[chap. XV.
entitled to recover
on a quantum
our"
428.
Barrister
The
difference
o^n
in this relation
may
be in part attributable to
can recover
for services
for a fee for his professional services is invalid and cannot be enforced.^ In the United States there is no jurisdiction in which suit cannot be maintained on such contracts. 429. The taint of champerty only invalidates contracts The better as between the parties to champerty. setup by a Opinion is that it is no defence to a suit on a claim stranger. ^-^^^ ^j^^ plaintiff has made a champertous bargain concerning it with his attorney.^ The right to attack a contract on the ground of champerty belongs, on principle, only to the parties immediately concerned. And it is clear that subsequent assignees of property obtained by a champertous contract cannot be prejudiced by the champerty in which they
Kennedy
Hilton
V. v.
v.
Brown, 13
C. B. (N. S.)
Plitt ex parte, 2
Wall.
Jr.
453
Foster
r.
677.
Wright
Teb-
bitts,
Elborough
made " after the ser- Courtright v. Burns, U. S. Cir. Ct. Mo had been rendered, and after, as 1882, 13 Rep. 261 14 Cent. L. J. 89 was supposed, the claim had been Whitney v. Kirtland, 27 N. J. Eq. 333 secured." The contract, which was for Allison V. R. R., 42 Iowa, 274 Small V. R. R., 55 Iowa, 582 Robison ten per cent., was sustained.
the contract was
vice
; ; ;
i-.
In Coughlin
it
v.
R. R., 71 N. Y. 443,
was held
th-at
a client by releasing
S.
man
V,
Barker
i>.
v.
Webb
;
Armv.
contingent interest.
P. Britton
v.
Deaderiek, 10
would appeal and pay his fees pay any judgment that might ultimately be entered against the client, was held void. See to same effect, Lewis v. Lewis, 15 Ohio, 715 . Boardman v. Brown, 25 Iowa,
client
in case of success, to
As has been already observed, in some of the states the common law rule is no longer considered obligatory, and it has been held that no contract is, on the ground that it is infected with champerty,
487.
1
Richardson
Stearns
v.
Folker, 28 Wis.
594;
V.
infra, 711.
V. Fitch,
694
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 430.
IX.
RESTRAINT OF TRADE.
430. Life, liberty, and the privilege of pursuing any employment not prohibited or limited by the state are rights of which no person can divest himself by a mentsto Jus publicum privatorum vol- fnaiientbie binding contract. Hence an agreement by rights are untate mutari nequit. which life is to be taken is void ;^ and so of an
agreement that a party's liberty should be restrained '^ or that fundamental constitutional privileges should be surrendered.^ In the same line may be placed agreements by a party that he will abstain everywhere from the exercise of a particular business of which the state permits the exercise.* Such agreements are prejudicial to the body politic in depriving the
community of the
labor of
men
in the spheres in
564; Lytle
v.
State, 17
Ark. 608.
doctrine, however,
Duke
v.
Harper,
Courtright
v.
Burns,
ut supra.
making platform scales, and to employ him in that business. Taylor was to pay Keeler $50 for each scale he should make for any other person than Keeler, or which should be made through inThe court formation given by him. held that this was an unreasonable restriction
Wh.
Ibid. 146;
Smith
v.
Com., 14
S.
&
R. 69.
on Taylor's liberty of action, and that the contract was Invalid. " Though contracts," so said the court,
"for partial restraints
Ibid. 145 a.
may
be good at
Leake,
Slayton,
2d
40
ed.
735;
195
51
Mitchel
;
v.
law, equity
force
is
Reynolds, 1 P.
V.
Wms.
Me.
Whitney
Alger
v.
v.
the
224;
;
Thacher,
19
Pick.
Taylor
terms be at all hard or even complex." " If it were not void, however, a chancellor
of
11 Wend. 67; Keeler v. Taylor, 53 Penn. St. 467 Gompers v. Rochester, 56 Penn. St. 194 Harkinson's App., 78 Penn. St. 196 Davis v. Barney, 2 Gill & J. 382 Lange r. Werk, 2 Oh. St.
;
; ; ;
hand
in enforcing it."
As
erty of travel
not to be restrained,
see State
v.
Hartford
&
N. H. R. R., 29
520
Craft
v.
v.
McConoughy, 79
111.
;
346
Conn, 538.
Belmont, 6 Allen, 152. Thacher, 19 Pick. 51, " The unwhere Judge Morton says
5
Jenkins
Calla-
Frost
V.
han
V.
V.
In Keeler
468, Keeler
See Alger
i'.
Taylor,
595
431.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
431. An agreement, therefore, by which a party, entitled to do a particular business, binds himself generally not to do
of trade and business is very apparent 1. Such from several considerations
:
making
their
Gray (1 M. & G. 195), and and the rule, if not obviously just, is at any rate simple and
in
Hinde
v.
in other cases
them,
because
they
diminish
very convenient.
case of
No
doubt, in the
v.
means
of obtaining livelihoods
competency for their families. tempt improvident persons, for the sake of present gain, to deprive themselves of the power to make future acquisitions. And they expose such persons to imposition and oppression.
2.
and a They
L.
J.
(then
on
unlimited in area."
They tend
From
N.
is
the services of men in the employments and capacities in which they may be most useful to the community
as well as themselves.
3.
no absolute rule as
eflFect
citing
They
dis-
to this
courage industry and enterprise, and diminish the products of ingenuity and
4. They prevent competition and enhance prices. 5. They expose
& N.
by an an
See
189.
Rousillon
v.
Rousillon, however,
of trust
skill.
violation of
the public to
all
were wealthy companies and large corpora- champagne merchants at Epernay, in tions, who have the means, unless France. The defendant, whose name restrained by law, to exclude rivalry, was the same as that of the plaintiffs, monopolize business, and engross the having entered their house and learnt market. Against evils such as these the business, acted for two years as wise laws protect individuals and the their representative in England, and public by declaring all such contracts then wrote a letter to them, by which void." Compare Perkins v. Clay, 54 he undertook not to represent any N. H. 518 Fuller v. Dame, 18 Pick. other champagne house for two years 472. after leaving the plaintiffs' employIn Allsopp V. Wheatcroft, L. R. 15 ment, and not to establish himself or Eq. 59, Wickens, V.-C, thus speaks associate himself with other persons or " There has been a natural inclination houses in the champagne trade for ten
this
And
especially
applicable to
The
plaintiffs
The defend-
ant
left
nants laid
down
but
it
March, 1877, and in May, 1878, commenced business in London as a retail wine merchant, and sold champagne
as well as other wines.
lars
In his circu-
is
on the face of it void. This seems to have been treated as clear law in Ward V. Byrne (5 M. & W. 548) and
and advertisements, and on the labels and corks of the champagne bottles, were the words "Ay Champagne," but he had no establishment
596
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 431.
such business, is void on the ground that the right to do business, under such limits as the state prescribes, is an inalienable right, of which no person can divest him- binding^^
self.^
It is otherwise,
however, as to an agreement
^o^^bu^ueS
ular place
profes- inapartic,
may have
maybe
ous of leaving.
which, on account of health, or for other reasons, he is desir!N'ow, so far from trade being restrained by
sell
permitting him to
energies,
is
way
business
which might otherwise be lost, are preserved. The away obtains something like a price for his past labors the market value of labor of the same class is placed on a more definite footing and while he is able to pursue his calling elsewhere under more convenient conditions, immediate activity is given to his successor, whom the climate and
party moving
;
;
may
is
suit.^
" It
may
was
527),
and
sustained, according to
see
Lange
Werk, 2 Oh.
St. 519.
sell
covenant not to
marl
off
the
the plaintiffs.
for
and, as the case an injunction was a breach of trust, it stood on different grounds from infringements
of
been held void. Brewer v. Marshall, 4 C. E. Green, 537. And so of an agreement not to manufacture goods in
general. Allen, 370
St.
;
See,
infra,
Taylor
Keeler
v. v.
Blanchard,
v.
13
as
to
breaches of trust,
Taylor, 53 Penn.
Hall, 2
Mr. Pollock, 3d ed. 335, holds V, Wheatcroft to be in direct conflict with Rousillon v. Rousillon. As to danger of assuming public policy
AUsopp
Brewst. 342.
' See Horner v. Graves, 7 Bing. 743 Crawford v. Wick, 18 Oh. St. 190; Beard v. Dennis, 6 Ind. 200.
;
v.
Eckersley, 6 E.
&
47 Hill v. Spear, 50 N. H. 274. In Mallon v. May, 13 M. & W. 511, Parke, B., adopted the rule of Tindal, C. J., in Horner v. Graves, 7 Bing. 743, that " whatever restraint is larger than
B.
;
'
Mitchel
;
V.
181
and notes
;
Cases
Mallon
v.
May, 11 M. &
v,
W.
653
with
whom
the contract
is
made
is
is
un-
adopted
by Mr. Benjamin
(Sales,
3d Am. ed.
v. Slayton, 40 Me. 224 Dean v. Emerson, 102 Mass. 480 ; Noble V. Bates, 7 Cow. 307 Richardson V. Peacock, 33 N. J. Eq. 597; Guerand v. Dandelet, 32 Md. 561
; ; ;
Lorsont, L. R. 9
597
431.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XV.
even be beneficial to the country," argues Judge Story, " that a particular place should not be overstocked with artisans or
other persons engaged in a particular trade or business
particular trade
;^
or a
may
especially if
it
it
of adventurers."^
Hence
not to carry on a specific business within certain reasonable " When a limit of space is imposed, limits, will be sustained. the public, on the one hand, do not lose altogether the ser-
he will carry it on within elsewhere nor the limited space will in the they be deprived of the benefits of the trade being carried on, because the party with whom the contract is made will probably within those limits exercise it himself. But where a
vices of the party in the particular trade
same way
is
imposed, the
the individual, and do not derive any benefit in return."^ the other hand, the protection
is
to be
On made commensurate
with the risk; and, as we have seen, a confidential agent will not be permitted to carry on a business in any place competing with employers with whom he promised not to compete.*
Lange Bowser v. Bliss, 7 Blackf. 344 Heichew i'. Hamilton, 4 Greene (Iowa), 317; Hedge v. Lowe, Smalley v. Greene, 52 47 Iowa, 137
Warfield
V. v.
;
Booth, 33 Md. 63
St. 519
;
v.
Simonton, 55
Iowa,
144.
As
to
to
Werk, 2 Oh.
;
Dethlefs
v.
Tamson, 7
Daly, 354.
*
Parke, B.,
Ward
v.
Byrne, 5 M.
&
Iowa, 241.
1
W.
v.
Perkins
Lyman,
9 Mass. 522.
;
562; adopted in Leake 2d ed. 735, citing farther Hinde v. Gray, 1 M. & G.
citing BryWhitehead, 1 Sim. & St. 74 Vickery v. Welch, 19 Pick. 523 see
195
*
Allsopp
Rousillon
v.
Wheatcroft, L. R. 15
Roasillon,
supra,
son
Eq. 59.
v.
v.
Taylor
Gillis V.
v.
430.
In Gale
Kalamazoo, 23 Mich.
344, an
license
An agreement
his practice,
by a physician, on selling
void.
agreement by a city not to more than one market was held A contract by which a telephone
gives
company
preference to certain
has been held not to preclude him from practising in such town after becoming resident in another town. Haldeman
parties, is void
local statute.
when
conflicting with a
598
CHAP. XV.]
432. It
is,
ILLEGALITY.
therefore,
[ 433.
no objection to such an agreement that So far from the public ^, No oDjecinterests being impaired by the substitution of the tiontosucb industry of one man for that of another by the that it is'^ sale of good-will, they are promoted, as has been artcTtiSe. noticed, by business capacity acquiring a merchantable value, just as the public interests are promoted by the alienability of other branches of labor and enterprise. It is no objection, therefore, to a sale of good-will that the party selling is permanently restrained by it from returning to do business in the community over which the good-will extends;^ and if there be no limitation in such a sale as to time, the
it is
unlimited as to time.^
life.^
Yet,
it is
when
the question
it is
is
whether an agreement
is
is
reason that
unlimited as to time
tion.^
An
assignment of a patent,
be so ex-
433.
space,
is
Whether a
restraint
is
a question of law, to be decided in view of Reasonall the circumstances of the particular case.^ It may abieness
"^
. .
restraint
^'^'
a question
munity
for
particular site,
line
'
Catt
V.
v.
Tourle, L.
Lorsont, L. R. &
.Clay,
Perkins
Clay, 54 N. H. 518.
v.
54 N. H.
See Gueraud
i;.
Bandelet, 32 Md.
561; Hubbard
'
Miller,
;
27 Mich. 15.
citing Hitch;
Dwight, 13 Gray, 356 Taylor v, Blanchard, 13 Allen, 370; Treat v. Melodeon Co., 35 Conn. 543
518
;
Gilman
v.
cock
ton
V.
Coker, 6 A.
&
E. 438
PemberHastings
v.
1).
Vaughan, 10 Q. B. 87
;
;
Elves
v.
Crofts,
10 C. B. 241
Games
Nisbett, 7 H.
&
N. 778.
*
Proctor
V.
Sargent, 2 M.
v.
&
G. 20.
Wetherill
Catt
Bandelet, 32 Md. 561 Lowden, 11 Oh. St. 349 ; McAlister v. Howell, 42 Ind. 15 Linn Hedge v. Lowe, v. Sigsbee, 67 111. 75 47 Iowa, 137. See remarks of Bronson, J., in Chappel v. Brookway, 21 Wend. 157 and see Jones v. Heavens, L. R. 4
Guerand
r.
Grasselli
v.
Ca. 50.
6
Ch. B. 636.
V.
599
433.]
miles.*
OOHTRACTS.
It
[chap. XV.
would
a medical
man, whose
practice
miles in diameter, to be bound by an agreement not to practise within one hundred miles of a particular place;' though an agreement not to practise within what is under the circumstances the ordinary bounds of practice will be sustained.^ The area over which a solicitor practises is larger, and an agreement by a solicitor, selling his good-will, not to practise in London or within one hundred and fifty miles, has been held good.* A similar limitation was held good on the sale of the business of a publishing house.' The vendor of a business
limited in
visions,
its operation to a small neighborhood, such as may be personally visited for sale and delivery of perishable pro-
may bind
by
himself,
on
five miles
On
the other
Hamis
r.
* Bonn r. Gut, 4 East, 190. See Dcnpreme ooort of Penasflraiiia enjoined dj r. Hendoson, 11 Ex. 194, whoe a limitation of twenty-one miles was hdd on a radios of ire miles.
r. Edge, 33 Bear. 227; Oregon XT. Co. r. Winsor, 20 Wall. 64 Morse Drill Co. r. Moose. 103 Mass. 73. * Horner r. Orares, 7 J&ng. 735. See L<Mig r. Towl, 42 Mo. 543 : Betts's App., 10 Weeklj Notes, 431, whoe the su-
soD
St-
field r. Booth, 33 Md. 63; Bowser r. Kiss, 7 Blackf. 344 : Heichew r. Hamilton, 4 Greene (Iowa), 317 ; Hubbard
ple,
27 IBdi. 15 ; Joikins r. Tem39 6a. 655 ; Thompscm r. Means, 11 Sm. ft M. 604; Mote r. Bonnet, 40
r. Miller,
Cal. 251.
*
r.
I>aTisi'.Mason,5T.R.118;Sainter
r.
Barnard,
L. R. 18 Eq. 51S
Perkins
r.
r.
Oaj, 54
In Smallej r. Greene, 52 fowa, 241, an agrceaMat br a lawyer not to practise in a particular town was held ralid. In Whittaker r. Howe, 3 Bear. 3S3, an agreement not to pracnot exeessrre.
tise for twmtj years in any part of Great Britain was upheld. s TaUis r. Tallis, 1 E. & B. 391. EItos w. Crofis, 10 C. B. 341 : Proc-
N. H. 51S ; Batln-
Burleson, 16 Yt.
176; Pierce r. Woodward, 6 Pick. 206; DewD w. EmeisoD, 102 Mass. 4$0; Dwight p. Hamilton, 113 Mass. 175; Tiat r. Mdodeon Co., 35 Conn. 543 Sand V. Hofinan, 64 N. T. 24$ : Mott
r.
tor r. Sargent,
r.
2 M.
&
;
G. 20
Benwell
Pierce r.
Wood-
Mott, 11
r.
58 Penn.
1
ward, 6 Pick. 206; NoUm v. Batea, 7 Cow. 307. See Gompen v. Boebcster, 56 Penn. St. 194; OraaadU r. Lowden, 11 Oh. St. 3& ; HdfaMS v. Martin, 10 Ga. 503; LanbenheiBr v. Mann, 17
9ra;
:
Wis.M3.
Guerand
r.
War-
600
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 434.
hand, a person conducting a business which may be extended over the whole United States, may bind himself not to exercise this business within a particular state or considerable section of such state ;^ and in cases in which there would be breach of trust if a defendant were allowed to violate an agreement not to do business anywhere, he may be generally Distances, also, in such cases, are to be measured restrained.^ by a radius on the map, and not according to lines of travel.^ But when such an agreement goes to deprive an entire state of competition in transportation, it will be held invalid; and this was held to be the case with an agreement not to run
;* though an agreement not to compete for seven years with the northwest trade has been sustained,' and so of an agreement not to run an opposition stage between Boston and Providence f and of an agreement not to run an opposition on the Connecticut river.' An agreement of this class may be divisible; if so as where the restriction is as to London, which was valid, or as to any place within six hundred miles of the same, which is invalid the invalid condition may be stricken out as surplusage.^ A contract by a dealer in isTew Jersey not to ship poultry to JnTcw York or Washington has been held not to contain an unreasonable restriction.' 434. Such an agreement must have a valuable considera-
tion
if
Oregon N. Co.
v.
Winsor, 20 Wall.
pierce
v.
v.
See
ments not
V. V.
ticular state
See
Catt
v.
v.
AUsopp
Thomas, 4 Bibb, 486. ^ Palmer v. Stebbins, 3 Pick. 188. * Price . Green, 16 M. & W. 346. See Mallan v. May, 11 M. & W. 653 Oregon J^^. Co. v. Winsor, 20 Wall. 64 West. Un. Tel. Co. v. Burlington R. R., 11 Fed. Rep. 1 Dean v. Emerson, 102 Mass. 480; Lange r. Werk, 2 Oh. St. 520. As to divisibility, see
Pyle
; ;
Rousillon
V.
supra, 338.
Mouflat
V. V. v.
Richardson
v.
Peacock, 33 N.
J.
Eq.
Wright
Perkins
597.
Lyman,
9 Mass. 522.
601
435.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
tion be adequate.^
is requisite, even when In parol contracts, the burden of proving the consideration is on the party setting up the contract.3 But the consideration need not be specifically stated in the deed. It may be proved by parol.* sale of good-will does not of itself imply a contract 435. not to resume the same business in the same place,' beSoS ^^^ ^ party so selling out will be restrained from for breach advertising of " that he has removed his former place ^ of trust. business to another location, in the same vicinity.'
A consideration
seal.''
the contract
is
under
The vendor
is
entitled
ment
apply to such through travellers, asking for a continuance of the patronage to him personally, even though he is not precluded from so doing by the articles of sale.' But it was held in England in 1882 that the purchaser
customers privately, or by
letter, or
I
Hitchcock
V.
Coker, 6 A.
15 M.
Pilkington
Fuller,
v. Scott,
& E. & W.
;
438
660
same case
at
Tallis V. Tallis, 1 E.
V.
&
;
B. 397, n
;
Pierce
v.
On
in
the other
8 Mass. 223
Laurence
McClurg's App.,
and
Lindley,
L.
JJ.,
Walker
v.
Palmer t?. Graham, 1 Pars. 476 Grasselli v. Lowden, 11 Oh. St. 349; Linn v. Sigsbee, 67 111. 75. See Jenkins v. Temples, 39 Ga. 655. That inadequacy will not in general be
58 Penn.
St. 51
; ;
Mottram.
Law
N.
In Mogford
S, 303, it
Courtenay, 45 L. T.
J.
:
" The
in-
who has no
infra, 517.
Hutton
Ross
r.
V.
Parker, 7 Dowl. P. C.
739.
They amount,
think, shortly
Sadgbeer, 21
Wend.
166.
Homer
Wh.
*
Eq. 322.
6
Hall's
v.
App., 60 Penn.
St.
;
458;
Palmer
f.
^
Graham,
v.
1 Pars.
476
Rupp
Labouchere
Dawson, L. R. 13
he may carry on a similar trade or similar business, but he cannot he is carry on the identical business at liberty to do everything which flows from the right to carry on a similar business he is prohibited or liable to be restrained from doing anything which, conduces to his carrying on the identical business but what acts come within
to this, that
; ; ;
Eq. 322.
is
Douglas, 33 L. T. Rep. 0.
602
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 435.
from a trustee in bankruptcy is not entitled to restrain the bankrupt, even though he joined in the assignment, from commencing bona fide a new business, and to seek assistance for the purpose privately, as well as otherwise, from his old customers.^ It has also been held that the vendor of a business cannot be restrained, unless there be special covenant, from dealing with his old customers when they come to him.^ It was ruled in California, in 1881,^ that where an employee of
by his employers, whose term was expiring, he not notifying would be enjoined from interfering with the possession of the em" We understand it to be the duty of the employee," ployer. 80 it was said, " to devote his entire acts, so far as his acts may affect the business of his employer, to the interests and service of the employer; that he can engage in no business detrimental to the business of the employer; and that he should in no case be permitted to do for his own benefit that which would have the effect of destroying the business to sustain and carry on which his services have been secured. An agent should not, any more than a trustee, adopt a course that will operate as an inducement to postpone the principal's interest An agent or subagent, who uses the information to his own. he has obtained in the course of his agency as a means of buying for himself, will be compelled to convey to the principal." An attempt by an ex-agent to secure the business of his late
his employers of his intention to apply for the same, he
S.
A sale of a
Labouchere
v.
Dawson, 25 L. T. Rep.
erley
(N. S.) 894, which has received the assent of the Conrt of Appeal, that the
L. J., in Leggott
v.
Barrett, 43 L. T.
person
who has
'
Rep. (N. S.) 641, considered to be in accordance with the previous decisions,
that such a person might,
business
he thought fit, have carried on business with the customers of the old firm, provided that
if
with the defendant or not to deal with the purchaser.' " ^ Walker v. Mottram, 45 L. T. N. S.
659
^
;
to
them that
his
was
Law
T. Jan. 7, 1882.
w.
the old business, or that he was the successor in business of the old firm
Leggott
Barrett, L. R. 15 Ch. D.
206.
*
*
it
Gower
v.
Rousillon
603
437.]
riojht to
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
article not
within the description.^ patent right, however, is not subject to these con 436. ditions; and contracts have been validated when Patent rights and transferrin? such rights either within particular secret processes may states or districts,^ or absolutely without restriction as to space.^ The rights, also, to an unwithout hmitation. patented invention may be, in this way, sold, and the sale may contain a binding covenant, giving exclusive rights to the vendee without limits as to space.* Hence a stipulation in such a sale that the vendor will not disclose the process nor carry on the manufacture at any place whatsoever,
is
good.'
437. It is not against the policy of the
i
should bind themselves to deal, within a certain Parties may mi bind them- range, exclusively with each other, i he law of
i
i
deal ^exciu-
and employee to
workexciuemployer.
and we Enorlish more pointed illustrations in the = '^ cases which sustain purchases of land from brewers With covenants that the purchaser, in case he opens ^ public housc, shall buy all his beer from the vendor. A covenant, also, by an author to write ex;
, .
all
Garrison
v.
Nute, 87
205.
v.
724
Wetherill
;
v.
SampWhitev.
Cas. 50
Peabody
v. v.
Norfolk, 98 Mass.
Bryson
74
;
v.
452;
see
Gillis
Hall,
2 Brewst. 342;
head, 1 Sim.
Drill Co.
V.
&
St.
Kinsman
289
; ;
Roiisillon
Rousillon, L. R. 14
Parkhurst, 18 How. U.
V.
S.
Morse
430
Leather
Stearns
V.
Lorsont, L. R. 9
Sanford
v.
Dorsey Rake Co. v. Bradley, 12 Blatch 202 Vickery r. Welch, 19 Pick. 523 Peabody v. Norfolk, 98 Mass. 452 Morse Drill Co. v. Morse, 103 Mass. 73 Gilmore v. Aiken, 118 Mass. 94 see Jones V. Lees, 1 H. & N. 189 Thomas r. Miles, 3 Oh. St. 274 Wilson v. Mar; ; ; ;
Whitehead, 1 Sim. & St. 74 Jones v. Lees, 1 H. & N. 189 Vickery v. Welch, 19 Pick. 525; see
Eq. 345
Bryson
v.
292.
Cooper
V.
r.
Twibill, 3
;
Camp. 286 n;
Catt
v.
Gale
L. R.
Read, 8 East, 80
;
Tourle,
49 Cal. 665.
1
low, 66
*
111.
385.
v.
Morris
Hammond
Organ
Co., 92 U. S.
604
CHAP. XV.]
its
ILLEGALITY.
is
[ 437.
policy
when
it
the
facili-
To
however, the commodity or services rendered should be fairly up to the market value f and such covenants will not be extended so far as to cover agreements by employers to induce their employees to deal exclusively in a particular store.^ contract whereby a railroad corporation grants to a telegraph company the exclusive right to put up on the railroad track a
telegraph line
in Illinois
limited.
is
A contract
company to grant to a single company the exclusive right of establishing lines of telegraphic communication along its right of way. The purnot competent for a railroad
telegraph
is
They
are also in
contravention of the act of congress of July 24, 1866, which authorizes telegraph companies to maintain and operate lines
of telegraph
clared such
'
may
hereafter be de-
by act of congress.' " The last point might be open to criticism, were it not that it is sustained by the supreme court of the United States.^ The first point may be now regarded as settled. Telegraph communication is now as much a business necessity as is railway transportation and a contract which would operate to give a monopoly to a particular telegraph company must be regarded as conflicting with public policy.7
;
v.
R. R., 73 Mo.
96 U. S. 1
v.
Am.
39.
2 Cooper V. Twibill, 3 Camp. 286 n; Thornton v. Sherratt, 8 Taunt. 529. 3 Crawford v. Wick, 18 Oh. St. 190. 4 West. Un. Tel. Co. v. Chicago R.
Union
^
Co., 19
Am. Law
Reg. 173.
R., 86
5
111.
246.
West. Un. Tel. Co. v. Burlington R. R., 11 Fed. Rep. 1. 6 Pensacola Tel. Co. r. West. Un. Co.,
r. R. R.,1 McCrary, West. Un. Tel. Co. v. Bait. & Oh. R. R., McKennan, J., 1882 West.Un. Tel. Co. v. R. R., 1 McCrary, 565, 585, 597; West. Un. Tel. Co. v. Am. Tel. Co., Sup. Ct. Ga. 1880 and see supra^
541
412.
605
437.]
coi^RACTS.
[chap. XV.
The question,
that
is
invalid.
much
pany can contract to deal exclusively with a particular telegraph company. The validity of such a contract has been
affirmed in Connecticut.^
On
it
It
implied in
all
undertake no business that makes him a competitor for the In some contracts of service a pledge of this kind is expressly included, and when so included will be sustained, although it is extended to the life of the employee, provided it be limited as to space.* And when unlimited as to space, it is good if limited to the term of service of the employee,* or to a period extending so far as ten years
business of his employer.^
' American Rapid Telegraph Ck). v. Telephone Co., 13 Rep. 329. 2 State V. Telephone Co., 36 Oh. St.
quires
it.
It
appears to ns a proposi-
argument
296.
The
any
species of property
mental
tem or line of telephones in this state, and in the face of the statute, either
directly
may
through the agency os or, in licenses, without impartiality other words, with discrimination
or
;
impose such conditions and regulations as in the judgment of the law-making jwwer are necessary to promote the
public good.
*
'
against any
member
is
of
the general
to
public
who
willing
and ready
Windscheid,
401
Rousillon
i*.
comply with the conditions imposed upon all other patrons or customers who . The are in like circumstances. property of an inventor in a patented
. .
Scott,
v.
v.
machine, like
all
mains subject to the paramount claims of society, and the manner of its use may be controlled and regulated by
state laws
5 C. B. 247 Ward i-. Byrne, 562 AUsopp v. Wheatcroft, See Keeler v. Taylor, L. R. 15 Eq. 59.
Cummings,
5
M.
& W.
Wallis
v.
Day, 2 M.
& W.
273.
when
606
CHAP. XV.]
after the
ILLEGALITY.
[% 438.
employment
ment.^
riers
law that common carshould be relieved from all liability for neglio Agreegence; and agreements so relieving them are void,3 meutsre 488. It is against the policy of the
,
though certain special duties may be transferred from liawifrom the carrier to the other contracting party, and ii|enceafe the carrier may be by such agreements relieved from ^o^'ihis liability as insurer.* When a valid agreement to this eftect is made, the carrier, while he loses the character of an insurer, continues to be charged with liability for negligence." Proof of such exceptions and limitations, however, to be operative, must be brought home to the party to whom they are imputed, and this must be shown by the other party .^ For
*
Rousillon
;
V.
Rousillon, L.
S. 679
;
R. 14
to
Ch. 351
J.,
42 L. T. N.
cited at
Brown
V.
down
Buckland
Gott
R. R., 11 Cush. 97 Express Co., 97 Mass. 124 Dinsmore, 111 Mass. 45 Gaines
v.
;
v.
sillon V. Rousillon, however, as has been observed, was the case of a confidential agent, binding himself not to
V. Trans. Co., 28 Oh, St, 418; Pittsburgh R, R, V. Barrett, 36 Oh. St. 449. The following summary of the law is given by Bradley, J., R. R, v. Lock-
mon
Gravely v. Barnard, L. R. 18 Eq. 518 Benwell v. Inns, 24 Beav. 307. * Whart. on Neg. 589, and cases
*
;
there cited
20,
22; Gill
V.
R. R., L. R. 8 Q. B. 186.
The
conflicting opinions in the American courts, with the authorities, are given in Wh. on Neg. 590-1-3. The subject can only be treated in outline
them a position in which they can take undue advantage of the persons with whom they contract, must rest upon their fairness and reasonableness. It was for the reason that the limitations of liability first introduced by common carriers into their notices and bills of lading were just and reasonable, that the courts sustained them. It was just and reasonable that they should not be responsible for losses happening by
sheer accident, or dangers of navigation that
Ibid. 594.
Wh. on
where
Neg.
587
is
see supra,
no
human
skill or vigilance
it
22,
this topic
incidentally disof
cussed.
That notice
condition
is
question of
572.
As
607
438.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
when
operating
common
carriers
using certain
facilities of travel.'
It
United States District Court of Indiana/ that a contract between an employer and employee, by which the employee agrees to release the employer from liability for negligence of employer or fellow employees, is void.^ similar limitation is applicable to
in the
was held
in 1881
by Judge Gresham,
telegraph companies.
"
The
is
well settled,
skill and care which a careful and prudent man would, under the circumstances, employ and that any stipulation or regulation by which he undertakes to relieve himself from the duty to exercise such skill and care in performance of the service, is contrary to public policy, and consequently illegal and void. In our
articles liable to
be stolen or damaged,
value
But the proposition to allow a public carrier to abandon altogether his obligations to the public, and stipulate for exemptions that are unreasonable and improper, amounting to an abdication
of the essential duties of his employment, would never have been enter-
animals
fright,
state,
liable
to
get
unruly from
and
when such
mals
became injured without their fault or negligence. And when any of these just and reasonable excuses were
into notices
or
company from damage " from whatsoever cause arising," made in considrelease of a railroad
all
Incorporated
ers, the
special
contracts assented to
by
their custom-
liability for
law might well give effect to them without the violation of any important principle, although modifying
the strict rules of responsibility im-
Mynard
v.
R. R., 71 N. Y.
restrictions
That unreasonable
Co.
V.
V.
Wentz, 37 Oh.
St.
;
333
Penn. Capehart
Chicago
posed by the common law. The improved state of society, and the better administration of the laws, had diminished the opportunities of collusion and
R. R., 81 N. C. 438
V.
Louisville R.
;
R.
etc.
R. R.
Hale, 2
111.
App. 150.
bad
and
^ Wiggins Ferry Co. v. R. R., 5 Mo. Ap. 347. * Roesner v, Hermann, 8 Fed. Rep.
exceptions
referred
to
782.
'
Western
etc.
R. R. Co.
v.
Bishop,
50 Ga. 465.
608
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
fall
[ 439.
; care and skill in the transmission of messages, they become liable for the resulting
and in
the
The right to make rules and regulations to govern management of their business, is expressly conferred by statute. But such rules must be reasonable and if they fail to accord with the demands of a sound public policy, they are
;
void."i
439.
Boynton, C.
V.
Griswold, Sup.
Ohio, 1882, 25
Neg. 839, 4; West. Un. Tel. Co. v. Carew, 15 Mich. 525 Ellis v. Tel. Co.,
;
13 Allen, 226
Birney
S.
v.
Tel. Co., 18
v.
Md. 358;
U.
Tel.
Co.
Gilder-
the following
these princi-
164; Passmore
St.
v.
Tel.
Co., 78
Penn.
238; Aiken v. Tel. Co., 5 S. C. 358." S. P., West. Un. Tel. Co. v.
may now
be
considered
as
Blanchard,
liability
66 Ga.
limitation
of
by express contract or by proper and regulations contained in printed notices, or otherwise, and brought to the knowledge of those with whom they deal, under such circumstances as to create an implied concan,
rules
tract,
on half-rate night messages to ten times the amount paid for the message was held in this case reasonable and the court went on to say
; :
"Another regulation
of
telegraph
companies held to be reasonable by the great weight of authority is the right to demand, in a proper case, as a
condition of liability, that the message
and
errors in transmitting
and deliver-
when caused by
be repeated at a reasonable
Sedg. on
cost.
;
Dam. (7th
6
;
ed.) 130
;
2 Redf.
2 Thomp.
servants or agents.
on Neg. 841,
character,
"In
claimed
cases of this
that
V.
Ellis v. Tel.
v. v.
exemption
for
from
liability
Co.,
Tel. Tel.
Co.,
want
of the
of
due
common law which has become deeply rooted into our own jurisprureceived the sanction of ages.
Co., 113 id. 299 Wann v. Tel. Co., 37 Mo. 472; Breese v. Tel. Co., 45 Barb. 274 reaffirmed, 48 N. Y. 132 Camp
; ;
V. Tel.
Co., 1 Mete.
V.
2 Sedg.
more
Tel. Co.,
78 Penn. St.
238;
2 Redf. on
2 Thomp. on
C. B. 3;
VOL.
I. 39
609
439.J
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XV.
community has a
it
would
it would be fixed under the ordinary laws of supply and demand. Hence, combinations to monopolize the labor of a community by refusal of the parties combining to do work except at a fixed price, have been held, when undue influence is used to prevent others from laboring at a lower
price, or
a labor-famine
is
spiracies at
common
law.
But
must be part of the agreement, or the agreement must amount to an entire absorption of the particular kind of labor, so as
to establish virtual duress.
lieve," said
Lord CampbeW,^ " without authority much more cogent, that if two workmen who sincerely believe their wages to be inadequate should meet and agree that they would not work unless their wages were raised, without designing or contemplating violence, or any illegal means for gaining their object, they would be guilty of a misdemeanor, and liable to be punished by fine and imprisonment. The object is not illegal, and therefore, if no illegal means are to be
used, there
illegal,
is no indictable conspiracy." If the object is not then an agreement otherwise valid does not become invalid because this ingredient enters into its composition.
But the
presence of either of the above qualifications makes invalid. (1) We must, therefore, predicate this agreement the invalidity of an agreement to keep other operatives out of employment by threats or fraud.^ (2) And we must further hold, that when the object is to monopolize all the labor of a particular community, then, like all other attempts to monopolize for extortionate purposes a necessary staple, the agree-
ment
fore,
is
to obtain
be enforced.^
V.
an advantage by duress, and will not, thereThe duress is analogous to that already
&
;
Hilton R.
r.
Eckersley, 6 E.
B. 62.
;
196
Wh.
;
1 Bl.
R.
r.
17 Q. 3 Inst.
B. 671.
V.
Fisher, 14
Wend.
9.
Hawk.
P. C.
c.
80, s. 3
610
CHAP. XV.]
noticed iu cases where
ILLEGALITY.
[ 442.
money
as
much
in the
all
the labor
community, so as to compel employers to pay extorbuy up the necessaries of life, so as to obtain extortionate prices, or to hold back goods from their owner until an extortionate bonus is paid for them. 440. For the reason that the right to labor is inalienable,
tionate prices, as to
a party
who
is
certain*
work
for a particu-
P^ce or
obnoxious individual, so as to preclude him from ticuiar person are 1 * procuring labor, are invalid.' invalid. 441. On the same ground, an agreement of all employers of labor in a particular line limiting themselves in And so of
is
void, the
^'
to'^of
being inalienable.*
And,
ground, such an
agreement amounts to duress which invalidates contracts laborer is entitled to a market for his labor. based upon it. For all employers to unite to exclude him, except on extortionate concessions, from employment necessary to sustain life, is to apply to him a duress which invalidates the concessions thus extorted. The question is whether such a duress is actually applied. It certainly is not when a group of employers agree to reduce wages to a figure proportioned to their temporary receipts. It certainly is when all the employers of a community agree to reduce wages unreasonably, leaving to the operative the choice only between submission and starvation.
442.
Whenever a
particular staple
is
is
invalid,
^^sorba
staple or fix prices invalid.
This
is
absorb
1
all
See supra,
149
infra, 738.
v.
Collins
v.
674.
*
Close, L. R.
4 Q. B. 612
v.
Springhead
Hilton
1
v.
&
B. 66.
;
Spinning Co.
Hawk.
80, s. 3
1 Bl.
611
442.J
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
and a combination to absorb all coal procurable in the market.^ But a combination between a coal company and a carrying company by which the latter grants to the former half of its capacity, is not of itself invalid.^ On the other hand, an
Com. 150
hops)
; ;
R.
v.
Waddingtou,
1 East,
is
an
article
up
price of
111.
Craft
v.
McConoughy, 79
Raymond v. Leavitt, Sup. Ct. 346 Michigan, 1881 (a combination to force up price of wheat).
1
munity
alone
illegal.
is
Morris
Run
Coal Co.
v.
;
Barclay
enough
Arnot v. Crawford v. Wick, 18 Oh. St. 190, held invalid an agreement between the lessor and the lessee of a coal mine, by which the
Coal Co., 68 Penn. St. 173 Coal Co., 68 N. Y. 558.
latter
tinct prohibition.
The
cases of Morris
Run
Coal Co.
St. 173,
v.
Penn.
and Arnot
Coal Co.,
was
to
employees in
store,
the
former's
neither to
public policy.
iar
And we
is
any other store. * Com. V. Del. & Hudson Canal Co., 43 Penn. St. 295. See Del. & Hudson
Canal Co.
St. 131.
v.
common law principles, which apply more strongly to provisions than to any
other articles.
"There
is
no doubt that
modem
In Collins
674
set
28
of
W.
up between the
port
an equivalent,
tors,
to be fixed
by
arbitra-
to the
party superseded.
v.
:
The
supra,
Raymond
Leavitt,
ut
" The object of the arrangement between these parties was to force a fictitious and unnatural rise
Campbell,
J., said
unduly hamper comAt the common law there is no doubt such transactions as were here contemplated, although confined to a single person, were indictable misdemeanors under the law applicable to forestalling and engrossing. Some of our states have abolished the old statutes which were adopted on this subject, and which were sometimes regarded as embodying the whole law of such cases. Where this has been done, as in New York, the statutes have replaced them by restraints on combinaare supposed to
merce.
tions for that purpose, leaving indifree. In England there have been several statutes narrowing
in the
wheat market
vidual action
But
as to all persons
who had
to obtain or
was con-
612
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 442.
agreement to create a corner in stock, so as to control a market, and then, when the fact of this absorption is un-
known,
is
to
make
is
void.^
It
held, also, that an agreement by an association of salt manufacturers that no member should sell salt for a specific term below prices to be fixed by a committee is invalid, as
in restraint of trade f
sell
with the consent of a majority of their number.' "All restraints upon trade are bad, as being in violation of public policy, unless they are natural and not unreasonable for the protection of parties in dealing legally with some subjectmatter of contract."* " We must wilfully shut our eyes, before we can fail to see that a combination between a man who furnishes money, and dealers who manipulate the market
sidered that enough remained of the
common law
to
punish combinations
of commodities.
.
.
to
.
enhancethe value
We do not think public opinion has become so thoroughly demoralized and until the law is changed we shall
them.
;
"We
gard so
do not
feel called
upon
to reto be
If
much
of the
common law
to invest
money
it
in
such
back by
"When
The statute
of
New
York, which
is
common law
oflFences, is referred to
in the case in 68 N. Y. as rendering such conspiracies unlawful, and this had been previously held in People v.
Fisher, 14
is
Wend.
in
discussed at
difficulties
determining conduct as
us the conduct of the parties comes within the undisputed censure of the law of the land, and we cannot sustain
the transaction without doing so on the
and are void in law." Per cur. Barnard i'. Backhaus, 52 Wis. 597. 1 Sampson v. Shaw, 101 Mass. 145, and cases cited infra, 453. As to Illinois statute against "options" and "corners," see Tenney v. Foote, 4 111. Ap. 594; Williams v. Tiedemann, 6 Mo. Ap. 269. As to "corners," see
bling,
4536.
2
v.
Guthrie,
ground that such dealings are so manifestly sanctioned by usage and public approval that it would be absurd to suppose the legislature, if attention were called to them, would not legalize
35 Ohio St.
Qm.
' India Bagging Ass. v. Knox, 14 La. An. 168 seeGulick y.Ward, 5 Halst. 87. * Bramwell, B.,, Jones v. Lees, 1 H. & N. 189.
;
613
442 a.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
where the money invested is but a trifling percentage of the property to be handled, and where the only intent is to produce unnatural fluctuations in prices, is entirely outside the limits of buying and selling for honest trade purposes. It is the plainest and worse kind of produce gambling, and it is impossible for any but dangerous results to come from it."' 442 a. An agreement between all carriers and transporta , Soofae;ree-
mentto
transportation.
all
competition, and
community
arbitrary
and unreasonable
would be
to inflict a serious
If it were illegal for railroad companies to agree to upon remunerative rates, then, each company caring for
'
Campbell,
J.,
Raymond
v.
Leavitt,
ut supra.
et seq.
to
draw one-
2 Oregon St. Nav. Co. v. Winsor, 20 Wall. 64 Hooker v. Vandewater, 4 Denio, 349 Stanton v. Allen, 5 Denio,
; ;
was
fixed.
Each mem-
434
Maguire
v.
Smock, 42 Ind.
reported
Transportation
cases
Wh.
an
article in the
Criminal
Law Mag.
In these cases,
which were prosecutions instituted in Pittsburgh in 1842, a habeas corpus was taken out before Judge Grier, then sitthe Pittsburgh appeared in evidence that the defendants, being "engaged in the business of carriers and transporters of merchandise on the Pennsylvania canal," made an agreement, which they swore to observe,
District
he had observed the rules, though the option of withdrawing from the association on two weeks' notice was reserved. Of this combination. Judge " It is nothing less than a Grier said combination between the chief capitalists and carriers on this line of our public works to raise or depress the
:
rate of freight, as
it
may
suit their
own
profits
or crush
a competitor."
See
opinion in full
Wh.
Prec.
No. 658.
in the event of
any
The defendants were remanded for and were convicted before Judge Patten in the Quarter Sessions, June T. 1842, No. 37. They were pardoned
trial,
imprisonment.
614
CHAP. XV.]
itself,
ILLEGALITY.
442 a.
snatch at whatever
help,
a reckless and bankrupt corporation, whose object is to it can and pay out nothing that it can
competitors, and
would be able to inflict sometimes ruinous loss on its permanently damage transportation, by
charging non-remunerative rates. It is likely, also, that the country will be far better served, and customers be encouraged to far larger shipments, if it is understood that prices between
the chief centres of trade are equitably and permanently fixed
carriers,
and are
may
dictate.
On
were to be permitted to combine to charge extortionate rates. It is as much against the policy of the law that such a combination should be permitted as
it is
all
a community should be permitted.* The line to be taken is analogous to that to be drawn in respect to the absorption of staples. On the one side, combinations of carriers to enforce uniformity and constancy of reasonable rates are consistent with the policy of the law. On the other side, combinations to absorb all the possible carrying interests between specific centres into a general direction, and for the purpose of imposing unreasonable rates, are void as against the policy of the
law.^
w
Supra, 442.
Special contracts
transportation of
oil
special
It is not complained that the price of freight from Pittsburgh east was increased by this arrangement, nor that tlie public
carrier, are
in
v.
Hersh v. R. R., Munhall v. R. R., " The cause of complaint," said the court in Munhall v. R. R., "is that the Alleghany Valley Railroad Company entered into an
Gage, 12 Gray, 399
arrangement with
of
a corporation or association
men
in-
whereby
creased,
its
business sliould be
In refer-
Pennsylvania Railroad Company, the effect of which was to take from the plaintiflFs that
Shrewsbury R. R.
v.
615
443.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
443.
An agreement
to^sup^ress
bidsatauc-
by parties capable of influencing a sale by auction to suppress competition at such sale is void, and as between the parties will not be enHeuce a sheriflfs sale was set aside where fQ^ged.^
;
17 Q. B. 652
2 MacN.
115.
S.
&
G. 324
4 De G. M. & G.
R. R., 5 Jur. N.
In Charlton
r.
1097, it was said by Sir W. P. Wood, Y.-C, that " an agreement that the profits and loss (of two roads) shall be brought into one common fund, and
the net receipts divided, without the authority of an act of parliament, ap-
and palpably do not think the court ought to hesitate in its views in that respect otherwise it might be that all the railways in the kingdom might be
pears to
so clearly
illegal, that I
;
me
New York statute that, two or more persons shall conspire to commit any act injurious to trade or commerce, they shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor," it is sustained also on common law reasoning. See Marsh v. Russell, &Q N. Y. 288 Clancey v. Salt Co., 62 Barb. 395; Hartford R. R. v. N. Y. R. R., 3 Robt. 411. That pooling when it destroys
rested on the
*
'
if
competition
among
carriers is against
48 N. H. 321
State
v.
Peoria R. R.
v.
Coal Co., 68
Co., 17
111.
489
Stewart
v.
Trans.
on
1
this topic in 10
Central R. R.
v.
Collins,
40 Ga. 582.
Supra, 268
;
Levi
v.
Levi, 6 C.
&
; ;
But while a consolidation was thus held ultra vires, it is otherwise as to an agreement between two competing roads to divide traflBc on a reasonable basis, and equity will not enjoin such an arrangement. " When," said Sir W. P. Wood, "in an application for an injunction in
a case of this class (Hare
v.
P. 239
Cocks
v.
Izard, 7
Wal. 559
Toler
Me. 140
387 112
;
Phippen
v.
Stickney, 3 Met.
R. R., 2
Johns.
&
Thompson v. Davis, 13 Johns. Troup v. Wood, 4 Johns. Ch. 228 Brisbane v. Adams, 3 N. Y. 129 Atcheson V. Mallon, 43 N. Y. 147 Wheeler Bank of the V. Wheeler, 5 Lans. 355
; ; ; ; ;
Metropolis
v.
Sprague, 5 C. E. Greene,
sembled in general meeting, it is found advantageous to give up certain contingent profits in order to secure certain other profits expected from the
159
SlingluflF v. Eckel,
472
Wood
V.
v.
Hudson,
arrangement,
to treat
an
individual
share-
Mackin, 100 111. 246 Hannah V. Fife, 27 Mich. 172; Ingram v. Ingram, 4 Jones N. C. 188 Hamilton v.
Ray
to
himself."
22 Mo. 333
Allen, 5 Denio, 434,
all
In Stanton
prietors
of
95
James
v.
v.
Fulcrod,
Tex. 512
a combination of
boats
Jenkins
As
to
canals to fix
tion,
25 6; as to puffers, supra,
and pool
616
CHAP. XV.]
it
ILLEGALITY.
[ 444.
t'ons
appeared that the purchaser had deterred others 1.1T I-' 1-1T irom bidding by claiming that he was bidding as the representative of the family ;^ though fraud in
such cases must
be substantively proved.^
and
public pro-
posaisare
competition in bidding in answer to proposals for a public work ;3 and hence a combination of contractors, by which the
secured by one, the others to share the with the policy of the law, and a letting on unreasonable terms thus induced will be held inoperative.* But when parties cannot singly purchase a property at public sale, or are partners in a public enterprise in which they cannot sever, or desire to make a purchase larger than individual bidders could ordinarily aflFord, an agreement between them to combine to make a purchase has nothing in it unlawful.^ "The mere fact that an arrangement, fairly entered into, with honest motives, for the preservation of existing rights and property, may incidentally restrict competition at a public or
privilege of bidding
is
profits, is in conflict
judicial
illegal.''^
sale,
does not,
we
think,
make
the arrangement
444.
for a
Whether an agreement between parties not to bid particular article but to make a lumping tender Agreement
depends upon whether the tendency of the "^^ ^f^ ^^^agreement is to suppress competition. Supposing make joint
is illegal,
way
deterred from
v.
invalid""
Bellows
Russell, 20 N. H. 427
;
15
pen
v.
PhipBk. of the
;
Metropolis
Sprague,
5 C. E. Gr.
159
;
Small
v.
Jones, 1 Watts
S.
&
S.
128
People
V.
Stephens, 71 N. Y. 527.
Watts Penn.
Oh.
St.
&
St.
122
;
Dick
v.
Cooper, 24
An
for
529; Smith
w.
Greenlee, 2 Dev.
;
126;
draw
and
to aid in securing
is
the contract
for
his rival,
void as
when
to be effectv.
Ray ed by underhand means. Mackin, 100 111. 246. 6 Kearney v. Taylor, 15 How. U.
519
;
S.
Hawkins, 2 Dev. Eq. 393 and cases cited in Wald's Pollock, 310. ^ Andrews, J., Marie v. Garrison, 83 N. Y. 28, citing Wicker v. Hoppock, 6 Wall. 94 Phippen v. Stickney, 3 Met. 834 Marsh v. Russell, 66 N. Y. 288.
v.
; ;
Goode
Gardner
v.
617
445.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
coming forward, there is no more reason why an article should not be bought by six persons than that it should not be bought by one person.^
445.
Foreign revenue laws will not be
enforced.
As analogous
regarded the
trade
may
be
much
American
gling," says
made illicit by foreign revenue laws.'' " SmugGoldwin Smith,^ " is the irregular protest of na;".
and to work into all trading whose dominion the goods contracted for should proceed, would expose such contracts to a distressing uncertainty, and greatly limit the freedom of international trade, as well as sanction what may be great wrongs. Hence, we have numerous rulings in England and the United States, that contracts will not be declared void simply because they conflict with a foreign revenue law.* It is true that high authorities unite in condemning this conclusion ;' but it is nevertheless now regarded as settled law.^
ture against an artificial line
contracts the revenue laws of all states from
Jones
V.
Kearney
tingdon
v. V.
Taylor, 15
How. 494
Hun;
wayman
law
*
Bardwell, 46 N. H. 492;
would hide my purse from a highif he came to rob me on the road, although England has made a
as I
to the contrary."
SmuU V. Jones, 1 Watts & S. 128 6 W. & S. 122 Breslin v. Brown, 24 Oh.
;
Briggs
V.
St. 565
111.
Clugas
foot V.
section
and other cases cited in last and in Wald's Pollock, 310. That an agreement to pay off other
148,
is
void, see
;
Wald
v.
Stevens
Perrier, 12
2
Kan. 297.
PlanchS V. Tenant, 1 B. & P. 551 Sortwell Harris v. V, Hughes, 1 Curtis, 244 Runnells, 12 How. U. S. 79 Smith v. Godfrey, 28 N. H. 379 Ludlow v. Van Merchants' Rensselaer, 1 Johns. 94
; ; ; ; ; ;
Penaluna,
Wh.
Con. of L.
484.
Swift, in
Bank
V.
v.
Spalding, 5 Selden, 53
5 La.
;
Kohn
;
Schooner Renaisance,
V. V.
An. 25
a letter to Motte, the London printer, speaking of the English statutes restricting the woollen trade, said: "I
Ivey
draz
5
Armen-
see Hill v.
Spear, 50 N. H. 273.
am
See citations in
Pollock,
from England, and have so little regard to the laws they make, that I do, as a clergyman, encourage the merIreland) both to export wool and woollen manufactures to any country in Europe, or anywhere else,
484;
Story, Cont,
chants (of
In Sharp
v.
regis-
618
CHAP. XV.]
446.
ILLEGALITY.
[ 446.
An
Ensjland cannot be maintained in the Enorlish courts ^ even though the plaintift', a domiciled Englishman,
^ i ^ Intended evasion of
was, at the time of the contract, living in a foreign nue laws made ;^ nor can a vitiate )n-
vendor recover
if
"^^^^y-
English revenue laws by intentionally packing the goods in a way fitting them to be smuggled.^ But
the mere fact that a foreign vendor
knew
was arranging to evade the English tarifi" does not preclude the vendor from recovering in an English court.^ When, on
the other hand, the object
this
vitiates
object.^
is
to violate the
party to pay
acted on in England
But in
for services to be rendered in obtaining a loan to be thus secured, is not void as contrary to public
own
own
4
der of the money in adopting such form of security was to evade taxation
May bin
1
v.
Boynton,
this
effect of
J.,
Yeates, 24.
"As
respects
objection,
Panaluna, 4 T. R. 466. v. Reed, 5 T. R. 599 Leake, 2d ed. 782. That there can be no action generally for the price of
Clugas
V.
2
the
Waymell
whom
the
v.
Walker,
agreement,
not
now
concerned,
Supra,
393
Holman
v.
v.
Johnson,
Angell, 2 C.
Drexler
v.
Tyrrell,
15 Nev. 115.
form of the security to money borrowed, was not such, in our judgment, as to defeat
tion, or to the
In Patrick
v. Littell,
compensation
the
for
the
ad-
loan of
money was
to be secured
by a
services rendered, or
money
conveyance of real estate in fee to the lender, with a lease back for a specified number of years, with a privilege of redemption to the lessees at the expiration of the term, the lessees to
vanced.
to
They were
constituted agents
pay was
by the plaintiff and her husThe written request to procure the same explicitly defined the form of
scribed
band.
per
It
was
in
pursuance
for
in equity a
of these directions
to taxation
under
the
619
449.]
CONTRACTS.
X. "WAGERS
[chap. XV.
AND GAMBLING.
a contract on a wager, by which A. agrees to pay money to B. conditioned on a cerWagers on tain fact transpiring, in consideration of B. paying matters which money to A. conditioned on the same fact not transought not piring, is valid, provided the fact which is the subto be inves tigated are ject of the wager be not one which it is against the illegal. policy of the law either to have investigated or to have made dependent upon such influences as a wager
449.
At common law
would be
a child
;^
The
woman had whether a person is of a particular sex ;' whether a certain person has committed adultery ;* and whether certain
refused to sustain wagers whether an unmarried
disguise
it
as to
change
its legal
char-
The agreement
acter or effect."
v. Walsh, L. R. 1 Q. wager is defined to be " a contract by A. to pay money to B. on the happening of a given event, in consideration of B. paying money to him on the event not happening." This is defective as excluding cases where the wager is based on an existing fact not yet ascertained. That a wager is not at common law unlawful, see Leake, 2d ed. 748 Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. Good v. Elliott, 2 T. R. 693 542 Hussey v. Crickett, 3 Camp. 168
1
by the defendants was fully executed, and the services rendered were performed in good faith. To refuse them
redress,
In
Hampden
B. D. 192, a
for
seems to
a state of
within
ser-
The
and, had the transaction been executed throughout in the mode contemplated
Cousins
V.
v.
Nantes,
Taunt.
515
by the
fact
would, in
have been but a loan secured by what in equity would have been regarded as a mortgage only, and the investment, without doubt, have been as much the subject of taxation, under the statute relating to that subject, as if a mortgage pure and simple had been taken. Where
legal effect,
and
Walsh, ut supra ; Grant v, Hamilton, 3 McL. 100 Bunn v. Riker, 4 Johns. 426; Haskett v. Wooten, 1 Nott & McC. 180 Dunman v. Strother, 1 Tex. 89. That an agreement is none the less a wager because the wagering element is put in the shape of a con; ;
Hampden
v.
Simpson, L. R.
the
transaction,
within
the
is
under-
Ditchbum
r.
Goldsmith, 4 Camp.
a loan of
152.
' *
money upon
the
security,
transaction
may assume
620
Da Costa
;
r.
See Atherfold
Beard,
2 T. R.
610
Hartley
v.
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 451.
domestic relations existed which could not be explored without giving great personal pain or public scandal.^ wager, also, will not be sustained when the thing 450. to which the wager relates is one which it is against the policy of the law to have thus acted on. This ^"gersas^ between to matters has been held to be the case with a wager which it 18 two voters as to the result of an election, which it against the is against the policy of the law to have made de- theiaw to pendent upon pecuniary gain -^ with a wager, that aSVupon. a person indicted would be convicted on a coming trial ;' with a wager by a party that he would not marry within six months, this being in restraint of marriage ;* with
wagers as to the result of illegal games.* 451. By the act of 8 and 9 Vict. c. 109, s. 18, it is enacted " that all contracts or agreements, whether in parol ^ ^ ^ n By statute or in writing, by way of gaming and wagering shall wagers are ^^^ be null and void ; and that no suit shall be brought or maintained in any court of law or equity for recovering any sum of money or valuable thing alleged to have been won upon any wager, or which shall have been deposited in the hands of any person to abide the event on which any wager shall have been made; provided always that this enactment shall not be deemed to apply to any subscription or contribution or agreement to subscribe or contribute for or toward any plate, prize, or sum of money to be awarded to the winner or winners of any lawful game, sport, pastime, or exercise." Under this statute, notes given in payment of money won by wagering are held not to be illegal in their inception, but simply null and void so far as concerns their consideration, and
'
.
'
Eltham
v.
684; Shirley
130.
*
v.
Thomas v. Cronise, 16 Ohio, 54 but Shaw v. Gardner, 30 Iowa, 111. As to the right to recover back money de;
see
Allen
V.
V.
wood
Weeden, 12 R.
; ;
Bunn
v.
Riker,
Evans
Hartly
v. v.
Jones, 5 M.
& W.
77.
Rust v. Gott, 9 Cow. 4 Johns. 426 169; Brush v. Keeler, 5 Wend. 250; Wagonseller v. Snyder, 7 Watts, 343 Machir v. Moore, 2 Grat. 257 Foreman v. Hendwick, 10 Ala. 316 see
;
Egerton
;
613
^
Kennedy
v.
621
452.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
consequently
be sued on by bona fide holders.^ It has been also held, under the statute, that if money won by wagering be paid to an agent of the winner, the agent must
may
pay
it
over.^
statute, so
it
clude a person from recovering his deposit, on repudiating the wager, before the money has been actually paid over.^
452.
In this country tendency is to hold all
The tendency
in the
common
It
a wager, are
for instance,
wagers
illegal.
was ruled,
at
was not
principle
was
the general tendency in this country is to hold that wagering contracts, in a matter in which the parties have no business interest, are in any shape illegal.* Money staked on
And
Fitch
V.
Jones, 5 E.
&
B. 238.
Johnson v. Lansley, 12 C. B. 468. ' Leake, 2d ed. 750 Varney v. Hickman, 5 C. B. 271 Hampden v. Walsh, L. R. 1 Q. B. D. 189 see supra, 354 infra, 452, 729. As to the construction
; ; ;
which
it is laid, if it
v.
Marriott, 5
v.
Higgs,
Batsonr. Newman,
;
and does not lead to indecent evidence, and is not contrary to public policy. I look with concern and almost shame on the subterfuges and contrivances and evasions to which the judges in England long resorted in struggling against this rule." But as Mr. Pollock (3d ed.
L. R. 1 C. P. D. 573
ble, L. R. 1
Ex. 248.
Sutphin
Crozer,
As
to
construction of
v. Burden, 2 Ex. 22 Higginson v. Simpson, L. R. In Ramloll Thackoor2 C. P. D. 76. seydass v. Soojumnull Dhondmull, 6 Moo. P. C. 310, where it was held that
Moon
may surely be thought at least doubtful whether decisions so produced and so reflected upon can in our own time be entitled to
290) well remarks, "it
any regard
*
at all."
Lewis
v.
V.
Littlefield,
15 Me. 233
;
Perkins
Eaton, 3 N. H. 152
;
Colla-
which the act of 8 & 9 Vict, mer v. Day, 2 Vt. 144 Ball v. Gilbert, does not apply, a wager on the price of 12 Met. 399; Sampson v. Shaw, 101 opium at the next government sale is Mass. 150 Edgell v. Laughlin, 6 Whart. " I 176; Phillips' v. Ives, 1 Rawle, 36; not illegal, Lord Campbell said regret to say that we are bound to con- Lloyd V. Leisenring, 7 Watts, 294 sider the common law of England to be Fahnestock i-. Clark, 24 Penn. St. 501 that an action can be maintained on a (a wager to try the right of a public
in India, to
;
622
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 453.
a horserace can, in Pennsylvania, be recovered by the loser from either the winner or a stakeholder.^ In Vermont and Massachusetts, where the money is demanded of the stakeholder before it is paid over, it can be recovered, or it can be recovered from the winner if the money has been received by him.2 In New York there can be a recovery from the stakeholder even after he has paid over to the winner.^ distinction, also, under the statute, is to be taken between a premium on speed and betting on stakes the former of which may be " Illegal gaming implies gain legal and the latter illegal.^ and loss between the parties by betting, such as would excite a spirit of cupidity."* It is otherwise with racing for a purse or premium, which " is ordinarily some valuable thing, offered by a person for the doing of something by others, into the strife of which he does not enter. "^ contract to purchase shares of stock or other chat 458. tels, as a mere speculation, without any intention of A contract to purchase ! IT 1 IT receiving and holding them, is void as a gambling stocks or transaction under the English statute.^ In this tefs^'wUh^*"
-
J^^
'
officer)
;
Thomas
i\
Cronise, 16 Ohio,
6
6
People
V.
& McC.
;
White, 81
illegal,
Martin
v.
N. Y. 539.
at
V. Torrill,
12 Sm.
& M.
571
Carrier
common
law, to
;
make
a bet or wager
Brannon, 3 Cal. 328. A note payable " on the election of R. B. Hayes to the
office of
president"
is
void as against
v.
public policy.
Lockhart
Hullinger,
111.
1882).
App
V.
v.
Coryell, 3 P.
& W.
;
494.
on a horserace and an action to recover a wager won has been maintained. M'Allester v. Hadeu, 2 Camp. 438 Blaxtop V. Pye, 2 Wils. 309 Gibbons V. Gouverneur, 1 Denio, 170 ;" Folger, C. J., 81 N. Y. 544. See infra, 759. ' Benj. on Sales, 3d Am, ed. 542a. In Grizewood v. Blane, 11 C. B. 526,
;
See Oulds
8
Day, 2 Vt. 144 TarleMorgan v. ton V. Baker, 18 Vt. 9 Beaumont, 121 Mass. 7 Patterson v. Clark, 126 Mass. 531. So in England, Hampden v. Walsh, L. R. 1 Q. B. D.
Collamer
;
meant
to
purchase or
sell
the shares in
if
they did
189
'
supra, 351
infra, 729.
S.
a gambling transaction, and void. On a motion afterwards for a new trial, the opinion of the chief justice was
not, the contract was, in his opinion,
among other
to the evi-
nett, 43 N. Y. 273,
*
See
infra, 754.
"As
Harris
V.
Alvord
think
it
623
453.]
out any
in-
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
tention of receivingor
them^7s^
void.
country we have a series of decisions holding such t agreements to be invalid wherever the understanding hetween the parties is that there is to be no delivery
"^
price
jjy^ ^jj^^ Qjj]y ^YiB difference between the contract and the market price at a designated time is to be paid.^
act
upon
to
be
set-
and in
by the payment of differences. It clearly was a gambling transaction within the meaning of the statute."
and
cast,
Their
Porter
v.
Young
7
ex parte, 6 Biss.
Biss. 338
;
53
v.
Green
in re,
Clarke
sions
and buy
or
sell
in a
boria Jide
Noyes Simpson v. V. Spaulding, 27 Vt. 420 Shaw, 101 Mass. 185 Bigelow v. Benedict, 70 N. Y. 202; Story v. Salomon, Kingsbury v. Kirwan, 71 N. Y. 420 77 N. Y. 612 Harris v. Tumbridge, 83 N. Y. 95 Brua's App., 55 Penn. St 294; Smith v. Bouvier, 70 Penn. St 325 Maxton v. Gheen, 75 Penn. St
v.
Rumsey
way."
In Barnard
v.
Backhaus, 52 Wis.
added:
"And
demn such
intention really
and received
when
Gabell, 89 Penn.
St.
89
Penn. St. 250 Gheen v. Johnson, 90 Penn. St. 38 Dickson v. Thomas, 97 Penn. St. 278 Ruchizky v. De Haven, 97 Penn. St
North
V.
Phillips, 89
performed in the future by the actual delivery of the property by the vendor,
and the receipt and payment of the by the vendee, if the contract is in writing and it is also true that a
price
;
202; Lyon
v.
Culbertson, 83
111.
33
Wendell, 39 Mich. Backhaus, 52 Wis. Sawyer v. Taggert, 14 Bush, 727 liams V. Garr, 80 N. C. 294 and
Gregory Barnard
v.
337
593
;
day
is
not invali-
v.
Wilcases
dated by the circumstance that at the time the contract was made the vendor
cited
Biddle on
Stockbrokers, 299.
In Kirkpatrick
St. 165,
Bonsall, 72 Penn.
said:
Agnew,
J.,
"We
must
has neither the goods in his possession nor has entered into an agreement to, buy them. A party may go into the market and buy the goods which he has agreed to sell and deliver. Therefore a contract to deliver at a future
witb what is commonly termed 'speculation.' Merchants speculate upon the future prices of that in which they
deal,
contract
sell
accordingly.
and
weigh
that
is,
speculate
upon
the
price agreed
at
price
probabilities of the
comes within
624
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 453.
On
law.
between the parties which enter into the consideration of a note and mortgage are mere gaming transactions, they render the whole security void.
In the case In re Green, 7 Biss. 338,
be delivered at the price paid. It was held that the contract was void as involving a wager. As to agreements to create a corner'
' '
Hopkins,
J.,
said:
'They advanced
make
the
gaming
and without their aid in that respect the contracts would not have been made. So if these contracts are gaming contracts, they must be held to have advanced the money for margins to make them, and their claim for repayment falls within the prohibThey ited class mentioned in the act. made the illegal contracts and advanced the money required to give them colorable validity. To take their case out of the statute would be establishing a most flagrant evasion of its proviscontract,
ions.'
handle grain economically. In Chandler in re, 13 Am. L. Reg. N. S. 310 (an attempt to get up a "corner" in oats), the court held that none
of the parties to the transaction
who
went
into
it
"
Illinois
v.
statute
Foote,
upon the future any that could be made upon the speed of a horse or the turn of a card." The
as manifestly a bet
Ap. 594 Williams v. Tiedemann, and see article on 6 Mo. Ap. 269 Political Economy and Criminal Law, in Criminal Law Magazine for Jan.
;
1882.
In Rourke v. Short, 5 E. & B. 904, under the English statute, there was a difierence of opinion between the plaintifl' and the defendant, when settling a
The contract only became gambling when the object was to corner or otherwise to speculate. " Options stand on the same footing as any
the article on hand.
other species of contract.
ties is to contract for
'
Where
it
appears that the intention of the parthe payment of and not to deliver or accept stock, the law pronounces it
differences' merely,
tween the
jjarties.
They
if
finally agreed
but, on the
the defendant's
is
a bona fide
was
the
and six
shillings a cwt.
;
if
plaintifi''s
shillings
more than the value of the goods per cwt. The goods were in any view to
VOL.
I.
40
The rulings of the courts on this must be considered in connection with the legislation to which they are
issue
625
453.]
CONTRACTS.
is liable
[chap. XV.
principal
amount
so paid.^
And
to vacate an agreement as a gambling venture, whether at common law, or under the English or analogous American statutes, it is necessary to show that it was understood by both parties that the transaction was a mere wager, and that there was to be no delivery of the goods or stock.^ But where
subject.
Of such legislation the following illustrations may be given The Revised Statutes of New York (1 Rev. Stat. 710, 6) contained a pro:
follows
In
time in
hand were void. In 1858 (ch. 134) this was repealed, and it was provided that
no contract for the sale of stock " shall be void, or voidable, for any want of
consideration, or because of the non-
by
r.
'
84,
payment
of
any consideration,
is
or be-
been repealed."
such contract
Rosewarne
it
v.
Billing, 15 C. B.
N.
S. 316.
In Rogers ex parte, L. R. 15
Ch. D. 207,
appeared that
S.,
a stock
buy and sell specified stocks for C., and to receive or pay for him the " difbought and sold large amounts
as a principal,
of stock
same
is,
at the
time of making the contract, the owner or assignee thereof, or is authorized by the owner or assignee, or his agent, to
among
make
See as conv.
Hyde, 7
Gray, 160
238
;
Wyman
v.
v.
Fiske, 3 Allen,
Price
same
"This," said whole transaction. James, L. J., "is the ordinary case of a broker employed by a person who is
speculating on the stock exchange, and
quently repealed.
Phila. 32.
Krause
v.
Setley, 2
An
power
See Fareira
thus to speculate was repealed in 1864. See 13 U. S. Stat. 303 Dos Passes on
;
Green
V.
in re, 7 Biss.
338
c.
28 (1860).
Lehman Rum;
See history of this legislation in Dos Passos on Stock Brokers, 382 etseq. Mr.
Yerkes v. Salomon, 11 Hun, 471 Parsons v. TayBigelow v. Benedict, lor, 12 Hun, 252
sey
Berry, 65 Me. 570
; ;
;
CHAP. XV.]
stock-jobbing
it
is illegal,
ILLEGALITY.
[ 453.
money
on cannot be recovered, supposing it appear that the money was lent knowingly and with the purpose of furthering the "If it be unlawful in one man to pay, how illegal act. can it be lawful for another to furnish him with the means of
paj'ment?"^
70 N. Y. 202 Story v. Salomon, 71 N. Y. 420 Morris v. Tumbridge, 83 N. Y. 95 Kirkpatriek r. Boiisall, 72 Penn. St. 155 Pixley r. Boynton, 79 111. 351 Cole v. Melmine, 88 111. 349 Logan v. Brown, 81 111. 415 Gregory v. Wendell, 39 Mich. 337 Barnard r. Barkliaus, 52 Wis. 593 Williams v. Carr, 80 N. C. 294 Sawyer v. Taggart, 14 Bush, 727 Williams v. Tiedemann, 6 Mo. Ap. 269, and other cases cited Wald's Pollock, 278; Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 542. 1 Per cur. Cannan v. Bryce, 3 B. & Aid. 179. In Third National Bank v. Harrison, 10 Fed. Report. 248, we have the following from Treat, J. " Tlie principle may be considered
; ;
tected,
and contracts contra bonos mores, which cannot be enforced between the original parties thereto, but are held enforceable when, being negotiable in form, they have passed to innocent
holders for value.
" The notes in question were, it must be held for the purposes of this
motion, given for balances on an
tion deal,'
;
'
op-
an illegal contract being, as alleged, a mere betting transaction on future prices, with no purpose of
delivering or receiving the articles con-
If
when a statute pronounces a gaming or usurious contract absolutely void no recovery can
well established that
Alexander could not recover on the notes in suit and the court was in doubt whether the position the bank occupies should not be considered as exceptional, and thus open the equities between the original parties. It is
;
be had thereon.
of
The gaming
the
statute
Missouri
destroys
negotiable
mand
him the
viz.,
collaterals
and
it
The docof
dant's position
had
quire validity
obligations
by transfer
paper
cir-
based thereon finds full sanction not tmly in authorities, supra, but in the many bond cases before the
cumstances was merely for the purpose of excluding the equities between the original parties. Still the stubborn
United States supreme court. Thomp- fact remained that the bank is a bona son V. Bowie, 4 Wall. 463 Wells v. Jide holder for value within the rules Supervisors, 102 U. S. 625 Buchanan laid down by the United States suV. Litchfield, 102 U. S. 278; Jarrolt v. preme court in Swift v. Tyson, 16 Pet.
; ;
S. 580 McClure v. Ox94 U. S. 429. The broad distinction remains between contracts void
Moberly, 103 U.
1,
and Goodman
v.
Simonds, 20 How.
ford,
bank had
paper.
ab origine,
627
453.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
may
be actual
sale,
an action against his principal to reis not within the terms gaming laws of Missouri, but if cover money expended for his principal at his principal's request in the settleit was an option deal, as charged, would be unenforceable between the ment of losses accruing under such original parties, and even in the hands contracts. This precise question was
tion in question of the
of an innocent indorsee for value.
is
so clearly
drawn,
W,
D.
and the doctrines so exhaustively considered by Judge Thayer, of the St. Louis circuit court (with whose manuscript
Wis.), and
it
have been favored) that it would be a mere repetitioii of what has been thus
so ably done, to attempt to travel over
But
it
is
to
be observed
quote
:
The law
is
now well
settled, in all
of the states
had upon a contract or sale of personalty where the parties to such contract do not intend an actual delivery of the
articles
or gaming.'
And
the
case cited
only made
question,
in
tlie
bargained
for,
settle differences at some future day between the price agreed to be paid for the commodity and the then Such contracts are market price.
tend to
money
for
The court
fell
accordingly held
the case
universally
held
to
be
invalid
in
as
against public
policy,
and
some
gaming
145
St.
Kirkpatrick
;
v.
Bonsall, 72 Pa.
155
Gregory
v.
337; Rumsey v. Williams v. Tiedemann, 6 Mo. App. 269. But there is an apparent conflict of opinion touching the question whether a broker, factor, or commission merchant, who has been employed by
his principal to
gambling transaction. " There are other cases, arising between factors and brokers and their principals, which the courts have apparently treated as though the action was between the principals to the illegal transaction. But the different relation existing between the agent and his principal, in actions by the former to recover moneys expended for his principal in the settlement of losses on wager contracts, was apparently not
'
make
contracts of this
Vide Gregory
V.
liams
'
has done so in his own name, but for his principal's benefit, may maintain
628
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
It
[ -153.
may
often
desires,
and
employed to make wager contracts, such as are voidable under 8 & 9 Vict. c. 109, 18, and at the request of his principal the broker pays thr amount due under such contract, he can recover the amount so paid from his principal, and
the illegal nature of the contract with
If
rise
and
prices merely,
sells in his
and the
agent buys or
own name,
which the money is paid no defence to an action founded on such claim. Rosewarne v. Billing, 33
reference to
is
Law. Jour. (18G4) 55, N. S. Common Pleas, Michaelmas term, 1863 Pidgeon
;
V.
Jessopp
v.
agent advances money at his principal's request to pay such losses, or if the agent pay such losses and the principal
afterwards executes notes in the agent's
favor to cover the
Lutwyche, 10 Exch. 614. " In this country the same doctrine has been held substantially in the following cases Lehman v. Strassberger, 2 Woods, 554; Warren v. Hewitt, 45 Ga. 501; Clark v. Foss, 10 Chicago Leg. N. 213. " 'In the case of Marshall u. Thurston the court says We understand the
: :
amounts
so advanced,
the agent
prin-
at his re-
quest, or
so executed,
notwithstanding the
illegal character
The promise
'
want
with
illegality.
in the
ingly assisted the defendant by an advance of money and active agency, though not as principal, to gamble in the rise and fall of bonds, no recovery can be had but if the broker merely
;
recover the
ant,
between him and third parties for the purchase or sale of bonds on time, the defendant and third parties intending to speculate in the rise and fall of prices, and defendant suffered losses
amount from the defendand that the illegal character of the transaction out of which the fund arose was no defence. " But, on the other hand, if a broker or factor supply his principal with
'
at de-
him
to
if
engage in
illegal trans-
In this
supported by the
of
he (the agent) conducts the illegal venture in his own name, it seems clear that he becomes a particeps criminis, and the law will not aid him to recover monej's advanced for such
actions,
and
it
enforce securities
may
Melchert
v.
Ins.
Co.,
Cir.
Ct.
629
453.]
CONTRACTS.
sell
[chap. XV.
him
either in
any time he may desire. Endorsement of negotiable paper rests on this principle. I do not have the money which my endorsement calls for in my pocket I may not have it in bank but nevertheless my endorsement There is no reason why is a perfectly legitimate transaction. a debt payable in wheat or in any other common commodity should not be regarded in the same light. The custom of merchants, it is agreed, sustains transfers of money which is not in hand there is no reason why the custom of merchants
;
should not be permitted to establish similar transfers of artiThis has cles into which money can be readily converted. been held to be the case with regard to assignments of goods
in transit
by transfers of
it
bills
of lading
period,
I
was held
for negli-
a contract.
but a contract
for
company
But
if it
gambling investment. " If these contracts," said Judge Love, "were illegal gambling contracts, within the statute laws of Illinois, it was the plaintiff's plain duty not to fulfil them, and he cannot complain of the defendant's
be not the bona fide intention of the parties that the property shall be in
fact delivered in fulfilment of the con-
may,
and pay
tract
is
'differences,'
telegraph
were not
him
were
to
ments.
for
The contracts
of September,
in
question
month
option.
seller's option
It
may be
valid or invalid.
Such a dealing amounts to a mere speculation upon the rise and fall of prices. It required no capital, except the small sums demanded to put up margins and pay differences. Any It promotes no legitimate trade. impecunious gambler can engage in it, with infinite detriment to the bona fide dealer. It enables mere adventurers,
void.
at small risk, to agitate the markets,
option as
shown
in the intention
and
The option
If it
down
financial ruin
It
of
may
the unwary.
lous speculator, with little or no capto oppress and ruin the honest Corners and and legitimate trader. black Fridays and sudden fluctuations
ital,
be the intention of the parties that the property shall be in fact delivered, giving the seller's option as to the time of delivery within a certain
in values
ai'e its
illegitimate progeny."
630
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 453.
may
be
Supposing
my
specialty
is
is
an agreement by
me
to deliver a certain
week should
ing
my
me
to be a professional
professional
rule;^
country there are high authorities to the it is true, it has been held that where, as a matter of fact, it appears that the vendor has not any reasonable expectation of procuring the article he sells, and no intention of procuring it, the sale is to be regarded as
in this
and
same
effect.^
In Pennsylvania,
The
on the hypothesis that, as a matter of fact, it appeared that there was no intention to deal with the things sold in specie, but merely with difference in price. If so, the proposal would substantially be, "if I deposit $1000 with you will you give
me
particular
way
;"
and
this
On
the
purchased to the purchaser or his agent, or if there be a right to call for such thing so deposited, such thing being obtainable
for the purpose, then the transaction
cannot be regarded as a
fact.^
gambling adventure.
things exists
1
Whether
is
"
If
89
North
v.
would be gambling
for in
almost every
Gheen v. Johnson, 90 Penn. St. 38 Ruchizky v, De Haven, 97 Penn. St. 202; Dickson v. Thomas, 97 Penn. St.
278.
*
made
to
him,
and giving up the name of a third party as the purchaser." Biddle on Stock
Brokers, 305.
2
PennsylDos Passos on
et seq.
Cameron
;
425
Pixley
w.
Sawyer
ering
v.
"I want
to
r.
Cease, 79
111.
.55
727.
Brua's App.,
Penn.
294;
mortgage
New
631
458 a.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
gambling
transactions
is,
not necessarily the case. The fact the meaning of the term " option" varies with local usage.
;
but this
is
York and Oswego Railroad, and do it ?" The plaintiffs answered that they would, and at once bought the stock, and soon after sold it by defendant's
order at a profit.
lished, one
way
no
difficulty in
"Now
between these parties some of the elements which are usually found in a gambling contract. For instance, it is
pretty evident that the parties did not
was was
satisfied
with
price advanced,
if
the
the difference
that extent
the price
pay declined. To
to
payment
market value
by one or the other as the case may be, is a mere gaming contract and void.
So
if
was a contract for the payment of differences. But it was more than that. The defendant through
it
not
to the principal,
but
having no goods, and the parties not intending an actual delivery, but contemplating merely a payment of the difference between the market value on that day and the
seller in fact
it is a gaming contract and cannot be enforced. Contracts of
The
agreed price,
contracts.
A
or
man may
legitimately
buy goods
of an advance in
there
is
one.
In such a
of a decline, but
day,
and acceptance.
The actual
in-
tention
prove
were ready at any time defendant on payment of the purchase-money. The import of the finding is, and we must so regard it, that it was an actual and bonajide employment of the plaintiffs to purchase stocks, and not a mere formal employment designed to cover a betting operation. It does not appear that the plaintiffs assumed any risk. They were entitled to their commissions and interests on their advancements, whether the stocks went up or down. The most that can be said of them is, that they knew that the defendant was speculating, and that they advanced him money for that purpose. But that was neither illegal nor immoral."
The
plaintiffs
632
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
453
a.
In a recent excellent work on stockbrokers^ is the following " Option signifies in America a right or privilege to receive or deliver a certain number of shares of a n'o^^necesspecified stock on a certain day at a certain price^ ?.^"^y In England it signiwith or without interest. fies the right to buy or sell at a future day at a certain price,
or to do neither."
Now
if this
were
all,
there
is
nothing in
or purchase
illegal.
Contracts to
sell
more
illegal
Nor
is
there anything
sell in
agreement to buy or
I
may own, for instance, a house in a particular block, and I may say to my neighbor who owns the next house, " now there may come a contingency in which it may be important for me to own both houses, or to own neither, give me the option' to do
the future at the election of one of the parties.
'
pay you so much at once for this privilege." This, as we will presently see, is what, were the bargain made in the stock-market, would be called a " straddle ;" nor, however disreputable may be some of the brokerage transactions to which the name is applied, is there anything in such a bargain which is in itself immoral or inequitable, or which should prevent it from being enforced. If this be the case, we must a fortiori hold that an agreement by one party to give another an "option" has in it nothing necessarily immoral or inequitaThere may be a contingency, for instance, which may ble.
this,
and I
will
'
Ac-
'spread eagles.'
'call' gives
A.
tlie
'put' gives
tion of the
payment
of a certain
sum
to B. specified
'
straddle' or
'
'
spread eagle'
'
a combination of a
put' and a
call,'
(To this are cited Story v. Salomon, 71 N. Y. 420, and opinion of Van Hoesen, J., in court below, 6 Daly, 531 Yerkes v. Salomon, 11 Hun, 471.) " These options are of three kinds, viz.,
;
and secures the right to buy or sell B. or not a certain number of shares
specified
to of
securities."
Dos Passos on
et seq.
'calls,'
'puts,'
and
'straddles'
or
633
453 a.]
CONTRACTS.
necessary for
[chap. XV.
make
it
go to Liverpool next week, and 1 room in a particular steamer, and this right, or I pay something for the reto
me
a month hence, of a yacht, or of a horse, or of a bale of cotton. l!^ow there can be no question that when there is a
fixed price, so that the contract
is
ments of
*'
At
we must
remember that
option"
"
is
used.
Thus
:
we
Whoever
the option to
commodity, stock of any railroad or other company, or gold, or forestalls the market by spreading false rumors to influence the prices of commodities therein, or corners the market, or attempts to do so, in relation to any of such commodities, shall be fined not less than $10, nor more than $1000, or confined in the county jail not exceeding one year, or both, and
all
contracts
made
Illi-
The argument
money thus
it
if
the security
is
is
pos-
sessed of certain securities to be desirif he could get a bid, say one per cent, higher than the present price, and to be at the same time desirous of doubling his holding if he could buy at a price one per cent,
put upon him, and would equally, as it were, go to increase the selling price if it is called from him. There is, of
course,
this
is
difference,
that
if
the
same price on the option day as on the day the bargain was made, it may happen that
security
at precisely the
the security
is
lower.
If
and
owner
will
have
may
well
secured his one per cent, without further liability, and be in a position to
ate sufficiently to
make
it
possible to
Under such
cir-
But the
same practical result may be attained with certainty by the owner of the securities taking a one per cent, price for the put and call of them, for the
Rev. Stat.
111.,
see
453.
634
CHAP. XV.]
noia,
'
ILLEGALITY.
453
a.
this statute:
abpve given] are denounced three misdemeanors the sale of options, forestalling the separate market, and cornering the market. All these have either, in name or in spirit, been always interdicted by the common law, and that of 'forestalling' was, at a very early day, made punishable in England by statutes. Over a century ago a movement arose in England for abolishing the restrictions upon the freedom of trade, and these statutes were, as a part of them, repealed but the common law has remained, both there and in this country, unchanged, though fallen into disuse. The exigencies of the times induced our legislature a few years since to re-enact the statute against forestalling, and to add to it those touching options and corners, which I have read offences in which the criminal ingenuity of our ancestors seems not to have been equal.
"By
"
The
is
first
offence
is
The
day does not make the contract illegal or that it is not at the time possessed or owned by the seller or that the time of its delivery is left, within fixed limits, optional with the buyer or seller; though in one sense any such sale is a sale of an option apparently witliin the statute. What makes it a gambling contract is
perty
sold to be delivered at a future
;
of the market.
it
Of
may
"By
"The
>
15th,
Wolcott
V.
1881, p. 37.
^_
v.
111.
328
Pixley v. Heath, 78 IlL 433 Boynton. 79 111. 351. 3 Logan v. Brown, 81 111. 415.
;
,'^
635
453a.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
from
selling or
buying grain
such was
make any difference, as to the legality of the contract, whether the person who sells for
nor can
it
future delivery, at the time the sale was made, has on hand the grain; a party
livery in a
may sell
or a
week
Illinois,
for
and
as such is illegal.^
nothing in
itself illegal in
The vendor of goods may expect to ties to perform them. produce or acquire them in time for a future delivery, and, while wishing to make a market for them, is unwilling to enter into an absolute obligation to deliver, and, therefore, bargains for an option which, while it relieves him from
liability, assures
him of a
sale, in case
he
is
able to deliver
and
difference,
Boynton, 79
Cease, 79
111.
111.
3f>l
;
Pickering
v.
v.
v.
agreement,"
party
is
in
328
Sawyer
see Cole
Taggart,
...
it is
If
the one
14 Bush, 727.
88
2
And
Milmine,
111.
349.
this statute a sale
name
Under
"where
the seller had only an option as to the time of delivery" is valid. Blodgett, J.,
name never
nature
of
changes
things.
of the
the
It
quality
or
Jackson r. Foote, 12 Fed. R. 41 citing Pixley V. Boynton, 79 111. 351 Cole v. Milmine, 88 111. 349. It was afterwards held in the same state, that a contract for the sale of wheat by which " neither party expected the delivery of any wheat, but in case of default in keeping margins good, or even at the time of delivery, they only expected to settle this contract on the basis of
; ;
law to encourage, or even sancgaming transactions, or such as are injurious to trade or are immoral in their tendency and the old maxim
tion,
;
new
and
the
to
son, 83
33.
636
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[453 a.
the purchaser may in the same way guard himself against loss beyond the consideration paid for the option, in case of his inability to take the goods."^ The mere fact, also, that wheat
is
'
Andrews,
J.,
Bigelow
v.
Benedict,
plaintiff, it
53 N. Y. 318
Story
v.
Salomon, 71 N.
v.
Y. 420
Kirkpatrick
155
;
Bonsall, 72
was the defendant's duty have closed the contract by exercising the option at the most favorable time, and to have acted for her in that It was respect with reasonable care.
to
Penn.
'
St.
discussed in Biddle on
et seq.
Stockbrokers, 311
and want
111.
of skill
and care
in the per-
Cole
V.
Milmine, 88
349
see
supra, 453.
formance of his duty as agent, was properly submitted to the jury, and
authorized a recovery.
In a case in the
New York
r.
court of
Tumbridge,
H.,
bought through the defendant, a New York stock broker, a stock option or
privilege
which secured
mand
known
and as such prohibited by statute. It was held that the contract was not of necessity a wager contract and void under the statute.
"The
plaintiff,"
said
Finch,
J.,
certain
number
of shares of a specified
of the
stock, or to require
him
to
take said
known
is
was in evidence that the plaintiff was induced to make the purchase by printed circulars issued by
days.
It
'straddle.'
The word,
'
if
not elegant,
at least expressive.
It
'
double privilege of a
put
and secures
demand
his
selection
specified
fluctuation in the
pendency
not,
would amount
it
him to take, at the same price within the same time, the same shares
quire
of stock.
and in case
did
tion
this
is
The
plaintiff
The continuance of the opby the agreement, and in case was for sixty days. The
fixed
it is
$400 to the defendants to invest Under in a sixty day "straddle." this supposed guaranty, on the next
value of a 'straddle,'
proven, de-
day
defendant
which resulted in a loss. In an action to recover damages, it was ruled that defendant had no authority to make the sale, that in the absence of any directions from
pends upon the fluctuation of the stock selected. The wider the range of these fluctuations, whether up or down, the greater the amount which may be
realized
;
and
"It
is
637
453
b.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
in^"7nvaiidates contract.
get up a corner in stock, connected with a plan by the " comerers" to make large purchases to be delivered to
had been completed by them, This may be sustained on is invalid at common law. the ground that such a "corner' involves a cheat by false pretence. When the " cornerers" go to A., and say to him, " we want to buy 10,000 bales of cotton, to be delivered next month," this is equivalent to a representation on their part that as far as they know the cotton is obtainable and if they have taken measures making it impossible that it should be obtained, their conduct amounts to a false pretence. For another reason
after the "corner"
.
.
them
such a contract
may
be regarded as inoperative.
is
A contract
is
whose performance
made
Now
this
the case
deliverstatute,
;
when
cles
makes a contract
The Jllinois
and Jameson, of this we have the following exposition by Judge in the charge just quoted: "The offence of cornering the market is not, so far as I am aware, mentioned in the books, but it is one of the numerous family of frauds of which the various members in their tight with society assume an infinitude of shapes and colors. To detect and punish these, notwithstanding the novelty and apparent innocence of their
as has been just seen, invalidates sales based on corners
disguises, is the first business of courts
and
justices.
The
thing which
we know
as a
'
corner
'
in the
market, might be
in grain, stocks,
and the
like, into
corral,'
and relieving
them of
their purses.
The
and
was a gambling
transaction,
as
money
v.
to be
employed by the
latter in
such prohibited by statute. It may have been, but there is no proof that it was, and no such defence was pleaded.
Hardy, 27
v.
Strassberger, 2
W. R. Wood
158
C. C. 554
Lehman v. Wood;
The
contract
was not
of necessity a
worth
'
Bennett, 43 N. Y. 273.
v.
wager contract."
a broker
Sampson
Supra, 312.
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
453
h.
the party securin^^ a contract for the future delivery of some commodity at his option, and then, by engrossing the stock
of such commodity in the market, making it impossible for the other party to complete his contract, but by purchasing
of his adversary at his
own
price, or
paying
is
ence fixed by such adversary. wrong, if this is not wrong then nothing
'
As was
wrong."^
The
vided as "bulls" and "bears." The " bears " are looking forward to a decline,
ties,
date
to beat
down
the stocks as
speculators
much
who hear
depends not upon the object but on the means employed. For one man to corner' another by buying something that that other wants, is not an indictable offence since the whole basis of trade is the purchase of goods by one person in order to sell to another person at an advance. If this is allowable for one
ner'
itself,
'
person,
it is
allowable for a
in
number
of
persons
acting
combination.
In
the securities as they can, so as to compel the " bears " to buy from them In itself there at an exorbitant price. is nothing illegal in a contract to sell a
security at a future day, nor
is
there
anything
rities
The
is
illegal-
fact, it has been by companies of men combining to buy certain commodities and to refuse to sell except on highly remunerative terms, that some of our most beneficial business enterprises have been conducted. Had it been held to be indictable for two or more capitalists to combine to hold any property
a comfalse
until
is
it
bination
by several
parties
by
depress value, or (2) when the object is to absorb a staple in such a way as
to
been built, scarcely a mine that could have been dug. Nor are such combinations
tion of
ficial.
when
By
the
New York
statute of 1858,
Some months
ago,
when
the
"short"
sales of securi-
by a party by
whom
How
below 40
figure
if
to
they are prohibited by the Illinois statute has been already discussed.
that figure,
all oflfered
below
was reached.
is
thus dis-
Criminal
:
Law
see,
it
invalid
Similar ope-
indictable
639
454.]
454.
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
s.
The
statute of 9
Anne,
c.
14,
1,
avoids
all securities
is
money won
being made from time to time by great capitalists, in the interest of the administration, for the purpose of keep-
or fraud.
" As
ing
up the funds
to a specific
mark.
often
not only
up a
'
corner'
offence
is is
though the
Nor, even
when
these attriit
unconsummated.
to
It is as to coercion
be said
conspiracy
is
obtain
money by
coercion
un-
hold of
are got
all
cases
for
in
which
'
corners'
up
And
The
buy at an inordinate advance. To determine what advance is and what is not inordinate is a funcling purchasers to
tion that (fraud nbt being charged)
physical,
money, there
dictable
is
no doubt that an
is
no
offence
made
out.
The
Is
it
court of justice
cise.
is it
second
moral'
is
Nor can
is
question
'
us
emerges.
as
to
a contract
it,
coercion, so
for
make the
or
any one
use of
it
indictment.
ability,
money
ticular
indictable, to
we must remember,
are far
from being convertible. So far from all contracts which are void in law being
indictable,
it is
guide us.
It
indictments do not
punish participation in void contracts which are not tainted by fraud or coercion. Sun-
who
and
It
him
till
the
drowned,
is
guilty of homicide.^
usurious con;
also, that
the maxim,
many
states void
but to
extreme need or
fear.*
It is
up
community
the
so exhaustively as to
and
to
speculators
demand.
misrule.
The
conditions of
indicta-
But
ket,
to
make
>
R.
V. Pitts,
Carr.
& M.
284.
is
added a purchase
for
future
To
modity from a party ignorant of the "cornering," this, as has been said, is an attempt to cheat by false pretences,
commodity that
is
in the mar-
is
void.
640
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 454.
by gambling or betting, or the repaying of money lent for gambling or betting. By the statute 5 & 6 Wm. securities IV. c. 41, s. 1, such securities, instead of being abso- |amhig"^ lutely void, are deemed to have been made for an debts void, but money illegal consideration; and under this statute notes paidcaunot for gambling debts may be good in the hands of eredback.
*'
'
~2wfag^ ing the onus on them of proving consideration.^ But materials. at common law a gaming contract, not tainted by fraud, is
not void.2 And when money, fairly lost, has been paid, it cannot at common law be recovered back ;' though it may be otherwise by statute.* There is, it is true, high authority for holding that a court of equity will compel the surrender of
securities given for
gambling
debts.*
And
necessary
First, the
life.
thing should be
a necessity of
or taste.
We
cannot spealc
which would expose and as there is no large enterprise that would not be open to this charge, those entering into such enterprises would be men without
into speculations
them
to
indictment
character."
1
make
sell
it
16 Q. B. 423
M. & W. 642
Q. B. 117.
2
and
moved, but the regulation of prices would be given to courts. This might be consistent with high toryism. It * Spalding v. Preston, 21 Vt. 9 might be consistent with communism. GotBut it is not consistent with constitu- walt V. Neal, 25 Md. 434 Thomas v. tional republicanism. Nor can such a Cronise, 16 Ohio, 54; Cleveland v, jurisdiction affect beneficially even the WolflF, 7 Kans. 184 Thorpe v. Coleman, Mono- 1 C. B. 990. See Story on Cont. 695. classes it is designed to aid. " If one, having lost money by gampolies, unless protected by the state, are soon headed off, when their gains bling, or on a wager, pays it, the law become exorbitant, by the intrusion of will not aid him to recover it back." other capitalists offering reduced prices. Blodgett, J., Jackson v. Foote, 12 Fed. But when a price is fixed by law it Rep. 41. 6 1 Story Eq. Jur. 12th ed. 303, cannot be changed. It may prove to be ruinous to purchaser, or it may prove citing Rawden v. Shadwell, Ambl. 268 to be ruinous to vendor but whatever Woodroffe v. Farnham, 2 Vern. 291 it may prove to be it must remain. Nor Portarlington v. Soulby, 3 My. & K. would business men of character go 104; Osbaldistou v. Simpson, 13 Sim.
;
Wilkinson r. L'Eaugier, 2 Y. & Babcock v. Thompson, 3 364 Pick. 446 ; but see Wilkinson v. Tousley, 16 Minn. 299. Cotton 17. Thurland, 5 T. R. 405.
Col.
;
VOL.
I.
41
641
454.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XV.
which
is
an
illegal
wager.^
But a
money paid by Judge Story, indeed, goes so far as to maintain that money lost by gambling should be recovered back "in furtherance of a great public policy, independently of any statutable provision." But Mr. Perry, the latest editor of Judge Story's work on Equity Jurisprudence, adds, "the opposite rule has finally prevailed, with few exceptions. And we are not able to comprehend how, or why, a court of equity should be able to grant relief upon principles different
dupe, will not be assisted in recovering back
his losses.^
him on
from those recognized in courts of law. There may be exceptions, based upon great oppression, and unconscionable advantage taken of one's weakness or want of caution, through the form of an illegal contract, where the courts of equity will treat the fraud as being the chief ingredient, and grant relief to the injured party upon that ground. But where the parties stand upon equal footing, and the contract is illegal, they cannot expect aid either from the courts of law or equity."* In most states, by statute, provision is made for the recovery back of money lost in gambling.'* That a deposit on an illegal wager may be recovered back will be hereafter seen.* broker cannot recover for the value of services in conducting gambling contracts.'^ When articles which are exclusively used for gambling are sold, their price cannot be recovered.
But
when they may or may not be so used. no defence to an action for the price of a billiard table that it may be used for gambling purposes, even though
it is
otherwise
Thus,
it is
513
^
though see
;
contra,
guet, 14 Ohio, 55
55
Thomas
v.
r,
Cronise, 16 Ohio, 54
Adams
to
See as
Skipwith
r.
Strother,
3Rand. (Va.)
recovery back
from stakeholder,
214.
2 3
supra, 450.
Thomas
v.
Bispham's Eq. 223 Adams v. Gay, 19 Vt. 358 Spalding v. Preston, 21 Vt. 9 Gotwalt v. Neal, 25 Md. 434 Cowles v. Raguet, 14 Ohio,
Supra, 353
; ;
Infra, 729.
Barnard
v.
642
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
.[
457.
in-
the vendor
tended.^
455.
may have
is
By
c.
37,
s.
1,
marine insur-
ances, without
Hence to By statute void as far as concerns British ships.^ ^ mariue inentitle a party on such an insurance to recover, he surances must prove
his interest, and. can recover only
what
terestvoid'
The
parties,
however,
may bind
themselves to value the insured interest &,t a specific fissure ;* and in case of total loss, the insured can recover the full extent
of this valuation, though no more.* "Where the loss the insured recovers pro tanto on the agreed value.
456.
is
partial,
By
c.
out interest are void; though under this statute it is sufficient if there was an insurable interest at the
So of msurances
,.
time of effecting the insurance.'^ As insurable interests are regarded the interest a person has in his
or in that of his wife,
or, in
own
life
life,
band f the interest a creditor has in his debtor's interest an employee has in the life of an employer
not the interest a parent has in a child's
life,
f the
;^^
though
be in some
457.
way dependent on
fire
the child. ^^
is
void in England, both as a wagering contract and And so of But as having fireinsuras prohibited by 14 Geo. III. c. 48.
insurable interests have been regarded carriers or
Brunswick
;
v.
Valleau,
50 Iowa,
303
616.
^
Lidgett
v.
Secretan, L. R. 6 C. P.
120
*
supra, 343.
V.
Jupe, L. R. 2 C. P. D. 375.
'
228
v.
Seagrave
;
Ins.
Bousfield v. Barnes, 4 Camp. Bruce v. Jones, 1 H. & C. 769. Lewis V. Rucker, 2 Burr. 1167;
Ibid.
; ;
Denoon v. 7 Dalby
8 9
10
part of the
see
common law
Pritchett
in
Pennsylvania,
v.
;
Downes Hebdon
v. v.
v.
Green, 12 M,
& W.
481.
West, 3 B.
v.
&
S. 579.
Ibid.
;
Irving
v.
Manning,
6 C. B.
Halford
419.
Kymer, 10 B. &
C. 724
391
Barker
Janson, L. R. 3 C. P.
Worthingtou
Curtis, L. R. 1 C. D.
643
461.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
if responsible for losses by fire ;^ and trustees, and caretakers, responsible to the real owner.* 458. With gambling contracts may be associated contracts When a statute makes lotto violate lottery laws. tcrics illegal, all contracts to carry on lotteries, or of basedon^ lotteries which lotteries form part of the consideration, are ^ illegal. void.^ A lottery, however, to be within the purview of the statutes, must be a distribution of prizes by chance among parties invifed to buy shares, and does not include contracts between two or more individuals to settle a disputed issue by lot. But a distribution of prizes by chance among
Other bailees,
assignees,
'
shares, this not being in pursuance of a prior between them, is a lottery, no matter how artarrangement Thus, in an action in fully the scheme may be disguised. !N'ew York, in 1876, the defendant to a suit for goods sold, consisting of candies and silverware, claimed that they were The candies were put up by the to be used in a lottery. plaintifl" in packages, known as prize candy packages, in some of which there were tickets, each with the name of a piece of silverware on it. The defendants intended to sell the packages for more than their value, the purchaser taking the chance of getting a package containing a ticket. It was ruled that this was a lottery under the statute, and that the plaintiff
all
invited to
buy
Nor does
^
it affect
XI.
USURY.
political
461.
Usury laws ^^^
to^be
strictly
According to modern
moncy should be
'
construed.
In
Waters
etc.
E.
London,
2
R. R.
v.
Glyn,
1 E.
Wh.
V.
Marks
v.
Hamilton, 7
Co., L.
Ex. 323
to
Hull
Ruggles, 56 N. Y. 424.
Morris
v.
same
eflfect,
Blackman, 2
v.
Hurl.
&
;
C. 912;
;
U. S.
v.
Olney, 1
U.
S. V.
V.
Deady, 461
Y. 240
6
People
Art Union, 7 N.
59
111.
State
V.
Clarke, 33 N. H. 329
;
Hull
v.
v.
Com. Rug-
160
488.
gles,
Hunt
Knicker-
644
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 461.
practice, however, there is this wide difference, that usury laws are passed to regulate the traffic of subjects intra-territorially, while tariff laws are laid to regulate their traffic "We hear of no tariff" on the exportation extra-territorially. of money, and no usury limitations on the home sale of goods. But both as to tariff and usury laws the same tests are appliThey both are in restraint of liberty, and are, therecable. And this view is strengthened fore, to be strictly construed. by the gradually diminishing area of territory in which usury laws prevail.^ The presumption of sympathy with accepted economical views is now as much against the authority of When they usury laws as it once was in favor of them.
exist, also,
basis.
common
international
In other states the only In other states intermediate positions are taken. In this complexity
penalty
of legislation
common
basis of
rest.^
See,
however, supra,
362.
Bk.
V.
it
from
judicial
the
letter
statute
Moore, 30 N. J. Eq. 543 Duquesne Bank's App., 74 Penn. St. 426 Cooper V. Braswell, 59 Ga. 616. In Montague v. Sewell, 57 Md. 407, a case in which the facts, which were
;
And
arrived at except
dehors
by
resort to matters
the particular
instruments of
evidence must
the real
transaction.
be received to
intent
show
of
of
ground-rent,
of
is
nature and
the
and the instruments used fail to disclose any taint of usury. But, as said by the supreme
in all respects legal,
Tyson v. Rickard, 3 H. & J. 109, 114; Andrews v. Poe, 30 Md. 486 See, also. Wetter v. Hardesty, 16 Md. 11 and Rouskulp v.
;
court in Scott
v.
"It
found
is
insisted,
may
be
never been
be a loan of money, and infected with usury, yet, as the defendant was entirely innocent of any participation in the original transaction,
cent, profit
if
manifest that,
645
463.]
462.
Between
conflicting
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
laws, that
least
onerous to be
applied.
is
it would and they will be made void if not fraudulent; be supposed, in case of conflict, to have incorporated that law by which it would be made effective.^ It is true that this opinion has been zealously disputed by Judge Story ,^ and in New York, where it was at one time adopted,^ it has been recently questioned.* But supposing there is nothing in the document with which this construction conflicts, its acceptance is in harmony with the rule that " where a contract is capable of two constructions, the one making it valid and the other void, it is clear law the first ought to be adopted."* 463. Ordinarily it is the law of the place of performance that determines whether or no a contract is usurious f and
of
any
N. H. 312
Fisher
Street,
Peck
v.
Mayo, 14 Vt. 33
;
v. Otis,
3 Chand. 83
;
Bolton
v.
v.
3 Cold. 31
Depau
;
;
Hum-
and that she cannot be affected by the usury that may be -found to exist. But this position
relief as against her,
supra, 337.
Conf. of L. 298.
Walworth,
*
J.,
Chapman
v.
v.
Robert-
cannot
for
a
is
moment be
sustained.
No
principle
Edwards,
77 N. Y. 578.
6
Erie, J.,
;
B. 397
and
affects
Ev.
6
1249
infra, 654.
III.
them
in the
hands
of third persons,
Burge,
;
774
Phillimore, IV.
;
even though they be ignorant and innocent holders thereof. Lloyd ?;. Scott,
515
Henry
Pet. 228,
;
2 Parsons
Westlake
;
quoted Andrews v. Poe, 30 Md. 485, 488." But see 2 Pars, on Cont. 145. 1 Pars, on Cont. ii. p. 584; Wh. Cromwell v. Sac, 96 Con. of L. 507
;
Story, 291
Kent,
Com.
Lect. 39, p.
et
460
seq.
;
Jones on Mort-
Leavenworth Bk. v, Smoot, U. S. 51 Kellogg v. Miller, 2 2 MacAr. 371 McCrary, 395 Townsend v. Riley, 46
;
; Cash v. KeuniRobinson v. Bland, 2 Bur. R. 1077 Fergusson v. Fyffe, 8 Andrews v. Pond, 13 CI. & Fin. 121 Junction R. R. v. Bank, 12 Pet. 65
gages, 656
646
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 463.
ia
IT lands
money
n
invested.
'/-111
perfoim^'^^'
interest
may
be lent in
bank.
NewYork
Colorado,
where the money is employed. The interest is great, but so is the risk and the lender should have full remuneration for Similar reasoning applies to the bonds executed by this risk. western railroads payable in Boston and New York. To declare such obligations usurious, because conflicting with the local law of the place of payment, would not only be a gross
;
v. TiflFany, 1 Wal. Bank, 91 U. S. 406 Dodge in re, 17 Bk. Reg. 504 Houghton V. Page, 2 N. H. 42; Little v. French v. French, Riley, 43 N. H. 109 126 Mass. 360 Phelps v. Kent, 4 Day,
Wal. 226;
;
Miller
v.
Ala. 702
Cubbedge
Bolton
;
v.
Napier, 62 Ala.
v.
298
Sciidder
518
Brown, 57
3 Cold.
Miss. 308;
Street,
Greenwade i>. Greenwade, 3 Dana, 497 Young v. Harris, 14 B. Mon. 556 Butler v. Edgerton, 15 Ind.
(Tenn.) 31
; ;
96
Fanning
3-
v,
Consequa, 17 Johns.
v.
15; Butler
R. 511;
Scudder
J.,
v.
Stewart
v.
v.
v.
said:
2 Paige,
604; Potter
;
Tall-
New
Balme
Wom-
Illinois for
money
legal in
is
valid, although
77 N. Y. 578 Cartwright v. Greene, 47 Barb. 9 Healy v. Gorman, 3 Green (N. J.), 328 Archer v. Dunn, 2 W. & Wood v. Kelso, 27 Penn. St S. 327
; ;
; ;
cent.^ interest is
allowed
Miller
v.
by the laws
V.
Tiffany,.
Wal.
310
Depau
;
;
Humphrey,
V.
V.
8 Mart. N. S. 1
Chapman
241
Mullen
v.
v.
Morris,
2 Barr, 85
73
Grat.
Irvine
Bowman
Roberts
v,
;
Miller,
25
331
Robertson, 6 Paige, 634 Andrews Pond, 13 Pet. 65." That the lexfori determines what interest is payable on
McNeeley, 7 Jones'
Law (N
a note
when no
place of
v.
payment
is
C), 506
Findlay
v.
Hall, 12 Ohio St
Jordan, 58
610; Collins' Ins. Co. v. Burkam, 10 Mich. 287 Savary v. Savary, 3 Iowa, 272- Boyd v. Ellis, 11 Iowa, 97;
;
Me. 106.
In Consequa
it
v.
Fanning, 3
Arnold
v. Potter,
22 Iowa, 194
;
New-
lating to interest,
would be applied in
man
V.
V.
Lapice
New York
351.
to
a contract distinctively
Howard v. Brauner, 23 La. An. 369 Kennedy v. Knight, 21 Wis. 340 Hunt r. Hall, 37
Smith, 13 La. R. 91;
;
And
see supra,
647
464.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
to innocent and meritorious creditors, but a serious shock to national enterprise. Improvements in new countries would be slow, if capital should be exposed to such risks of forfeiture. It would be otherwise, however, if the rule be maintained that the place of performance {%. e., the place that
is that where the money This view, it should be added, is maintained by Bar,^ and by a high French tribunal.^ It has also the sanction of an eminent Scotch court.^ Nor is this view unfamiliar to the Roman law. " Usurae vicera fructuura ob-
wrong
lent
to be used.
tinent
;"*
where the
is
tree
is,
there properly
is
the fruit.
It is
if
But
he
goes to a foreign land, and uses the money there, applying it by his labor and skill to the realization of foreign staples,
is
used
is
that
which determines the interest.' And this view derives support from parallel cases which the most eminent civilians have regarded as definitely settled.^ But where a note is made in the state of A. and discounted and delivered in the state of B., as between the two, in case of conflict, Mistake in the law of B. prevails.^ fact will
not avoid contract otherwise &6 to mistake in law
1 *
on account of
French authorities
is
to hold
Jour,
:
du
v.
is to
be deter-
128
'
of the place
where
Jour,
Parker
;
D. 372
r.
money
is
to be
employed.
1875,
p.
du
droit int.
priv4,
354
204, note.
Harvey
S.
Archibold, 1 Ry.
&
Moo. 104;
v.
C,
3 B.
&
C. 626
;
Young
i-.
Godbe, 15
Potter
v.
Hert. IV. 53
Seuflfert,
Comment.
;
Wal. 562
Phelps
Georgia
V.
Fitch
p. 254.
6
Kent, 4 Day, 96
35
v.
Wh.
Bar,
65
Tallman,
Barb.
182;
Bank
of
p. 256.
^
Bowen
;
v.
Andrews
v.
Pond, 13
Pet.
;
Tilden
V.
v. Blair,
21 Wall. 241
;
Upham
Hiatt
v.
395 Findlay v. Hall, 12 Oh. St. 610 Arnold v. Potter, 22 Iowa, 194 Senter
;
f.
Bowman,
Heisk. 14;
Story on Cont.
V.
730, citing
;
Glassv.
furd
Gibson
648
CHAP. XV.]
465.
ILLEGALITY.
rights given
[ 467.
The
strictly
Stranger
stranger cannot be heard to avoid a avaiThimsdf of statcontract on the ground that it is usurious.^
personal.
466.
affected
When
bv the
a contract
,
is
by a
1
^
,, T r 1.9 ling the contract, an excess oi interest.-* *^^^* 467. Supposing that a statute exists prohibiting the reception of interest beyond a fixed amount, and cannof be making void all contracts of loan in which the in- evaded by disguising , terest is beyond this amount, the statute cannot be loan as sale evaded by disguising loans as sales. If the transac- constmct'tion is put in the shape of a sale with a right of re- ^"^ ^**^demption at a rate equivalent to a usurious penalty, then it will be regarded as a loan.^ Interest beyond the legal
J.
,,
standard, also,
when paid
in
money
Nor, by technical
subtleties, such as
by antedating,^ or by forcing depreciated currency or goods upon the borrower,^ or by retaining a bonus,^ or by masking the transaction in the form of discounts,^ can the penalties of the statute be escaped.' Nor is an agreement not to reclaim
valid.''' Nor can the usurious taint of a loan be got rid of by reconstructing or remoulding of the loan. No
usurious interest
mattei:
Stearns, 3 N. H. 185
Bank
of Utica v.
Negley, 13 S.
Co.
v.
&
R. 218; Citizens'
;
and cases
cited
Land
las V.
I.Williams
v.
Tilt,
36 N. Y. 319;
Scott
v.
Man-
Stoney
v. Ins. Co.,
11 Paige, 635.
1 H. Bl. 462 9
iPet.
;
derson
Bank, 28 Penn.
v.
St. 379.
U.
S. V.
Bank
"
Witham
Tate
of
V.
Williams, 3 Green, N.
531
399
;
RamsBremen v.
;
J. 255.
6
Wellings, 3 T. R.
v.
Hess, 13 Johns. 52
see Kilgore v.
Em-
Bank
f
the Valley
Stribling,
Leigh, 36.
Barker v. Vansommer, 1 Bro. C. C. 151 Waller v. Dalt, 1 Ch. Ca. 276 1 Dick. 8 Scott v. Lloyd, 9 Pet. 418
3
; ;
;
East River
8 9
Whitney v. Bank
V.
Tyler,
v.
12 Met. 193
Hoyt, 32 N. Y. 119.
Powell
Train
ton
V.
v.
Agricul;
See Auriol
v.
Thomas, 2 T. R. 52
St.
Day124;
Fitzsimmons
'0
Baum, 44 Penn.
32
Moore, 30 N.
J.
Eq. 543
Philip
Kirkpatrick,
v.
Add.
(Penn.)
;
Bosta
V.
Rheem, 72 Penn.
St. 54.
Musgrove
Evans
649
469.]
CONTRACTS.
if
[chap. XV.
is
modifications of a security,
But
if
the trans-
as a loan at interest,
is
the contract
tion to the lender of compensation for trouble he may have been put to, or may be put to in suing out the debt '^ provided such compensation is not excessive.^ Nor is compounding
interest, at certain risks, in mercantile accounts, usury,
when
such
is
;*
But
all securities
partake of
468.
Statutes do
its taint.^
statutes are to be applied to all loans, they are not to be stretched to extend to any trans-
not apply
to any transactions but loans.
They do not
;''
cover, therefore,
469.
Borrower
in usurious contract cannot de-
A court of
interest.'^
contract
cut doing
equity.
he
oft'er
whatever
is
actu-
^^j^
^^^ ^^
with legal
6
interest.'*
But he
1 Archer v. McCray, 59 Ga. 546 Wilkinson v. Wooten, 59 Ga. 584 King V. Ins. Co., 57 Ala. 118. * Lee V. Cass, 1 Taunt. 511 Scott v. Lloyd, 9 Pet. 440 Huling v. Drexel, 7 Watts, 126 Gray v. Brackenridge, 2 Pen. & W. 75 Beadle v. Munson, 30 Conn. 175. ' Large i-. Passmore, 5 S. & R. 51 Grubb V. Brooks, 47 Penn. St. 485. * Bevan ex parte, 9 Ves. 223 Eaton Wilcox v. HowV. Bell, 5 B. & Al. 34
;
;
Campbell
v.
Sloan,
62 Penn. St.
481.
^
See Easterlin
v.
Rylander, 59 Ga.
292.
8 8
"
Lawley
Larnego
v.
v.
Long
V.
v.
see
Jennings
12
" Huston
WycoflF
V.
I'.
Gaul
wiler
Moorhead, 7 Barr, 45. Longhead, 2 Dall. 92; FulWillis, 26 Penn. St. 259
V.
;
Eagle
Bank
v.
613; Eaton v. Bell, 5 B. & Al. 34; Wilcox V. Howland, 23 Pick. 167.
"
301
Mason
650
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 469.
may
precluded from suing as much in equity as in law, when barred by statute.'^ " If the lender," says Judge Story, " comes into a court of equity seeking to enforce the contract, the court will refuse any assistance and repudiate the contract.^ But, on the other
hand,
if
the borrower
come
relief against
upon pay
and bonajide due to him, deducting the usurious interest;* and if the plaintiff do not make such an oifer in his bill, the defendant may demur to it, and the bill be dismissed.' The ground of this distinction is, that a court of equity is not positively bound to interfere in such cases by an active exertion of its powers but it has a discretion on the subject, and may prescribe the terms of its interference and he who seeks equity at its hands may well be required to do equity. But, in the other case, if equity should relieve the lender, who is plaintiff, it would be
really
; ;
.
. .
what
aiding a wrong-doer,
who
is
seeking to
make
means of carrying into effect a transaction manifestly wrong and illegal in itself."^ "And, upon the like principles, if the borrower has paid the money upon a usurious contract, courts
of equity (and, indeed, courts of law also) will assist
him
to
"
Fanning
Fanning
v.
Dunham,
Dunham,
5 John.
Ch.
v.
142.
'
v.
v.
i'.
v.
John. Ch.
37 N. Y.
;
Dunham,
142.
*
Williams
;
v.
Fitzhugh,
v.
Ballinger
;
v.
Edv.
444
Whitehead
v.
Sporrer
Heiak.
633.
See Ahern
;
v. v. v.
v. Morris, 2 Cowp. 792 Hays, 12 Mass. 36 Thomas v. Shoemaker, 6 W, & S. 179 Heath v. Page, 48 Penn. St. 130; Hopkins v.
' ;
Browning
V.
Bond
Edwards, 4 Ired. Eq. 449. ^ Mason v. Gardiner, 4 Bro. Ch. 436 Rogers v. Rathbnn, 1 John. Ch. 367 Fanning v. Dunham, 5 John. Ch. 142 Ware v. Thompson, 2 Beasl. N. J. 66 Ruddell v. Ambler, 18 Ark. 369; Noble v. Walker, 32" Ala. 456.
Ballinger
301.
West, 83 Penn.
St. 109.
651
470.]
interest; but not further.
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XV.
So, the borrower may maintain a compel the giving up of securities left as collateral security for a usurious debt, although he might have a defence in an action at law."* Under the Pennsylvania statute, the reservation of an illegal rate of interest does not prevent the recovery of the amount actually loaned with legal interest.^ But under the act of congress, a national bank, by reserving usurious interest on a loan, forfeits the entire interest, but not
bill to
the principal.^
470.
Under
tion
It
is
is
one ofTx-
the promise
was
^^^^tcd as a Condition of the loan, though the payof*'a"ment ment was not actually made.* The penalty, however,
imposed on
illegal reception of
on the party setting up usury to prove it.' The taint must be brought home to the lender himself in order to infect the transaction. Thus, usury was held not to attach to a loan of $17,000 on real estate security, from the fact that the agent negotiating the loan charged the borrower five per cent, for his services, and $100 for the expenses of a journey from Chicago to Peoria in the specific business.* 'But exactions by an agent may implicate the principal wherever the principal ought to be cognizant of
The burden
the
1
facts.'
Ibid., citing Peters r.
Mortimer, 4
is
Edw. Ch.
plicity
279.
That a borrower
illegal
not
Longnecker, 16 Penn.
^
St. 269.
an
;
transaction, see
v.
Kirkpatrick
Hotel Co.
v.
v.
Houston, 4
W. &
S.
S.
supra,
353
Vandyck
Hewitt,
11.
7
v.
Wade, 97 U.
111.
50; 513
Philadelphia, etc. R. R.
v.
Lewis,
Wilson
8
Kirby, 88
v.
566.
111.
Ballinger
Bourland, 87
v.
Bearing,
see
Van Wyck
;
v,
Walters, 16 Hun, N.
Brown v. Bank, 72 Penn. Lucas v. Bank, 78 Penn. St. 228 Overholt v. Bank, 82 Penn. St. 490. * Clark V. Badgley, 3 Halst. 233 Hammond v. Hopping, 13 Wend. 505.
209
; ;
Y. 209 Marshalltown Bk. v. Bonawitz, 47 Iowa, 322. 9 Cheney v. Eberhardt, 8 Neb. 423. See New England Co. i;. Hendrickson,
15 Cent. L. J. 132.
662
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 473.
XII.
473.
At common
enemy
are void.^
Even a
,.
T1111
avoided by
^
common
with the country of the port of loading.'' And the courts of one belligerent state will refuse to enforce any business contracts between the citizens of such state and the citizens of the other belligerent state, no matter through what agencies such contracts may have been negotiated. The rule is that there must be absolute suspension of business between the citizens of one belligerent state and the citizens of another belligerent state.' A partnership, also, is dissolved by war intervening between two countries, of one of which one partner is subject and of the other of which another partner is subject.* And a bill drawn by an alien enemy on a subject of the state in whose courts the suit is brought, and endorsed by the payee, such payee being a subject residing in the enemy's
country, will be held void as an act of trade between subjects
^^^^'
of belligerent states.'
>
A British
Con. of L.
;
Wh.
Albrecht
497
Potts
V.
V. Bell,
8 T. R. 561
;
Es-
posito
rick
V.
v. Sussman, 2 V. & B. 323 Montgomery v. U. S., 15 Wall. 395; Crawford v. The William Penn, 3 Wash.
C. C. 484; Philips
v.
Hatch,
Dill.
field V.
V.
U. S.
v.
v.
Grossmayer, 9 Wall. 72
;
Kershaw
Stevenson
Payne, 109 Mass. 378 Griswold v. Waddington, 15 Johns. 57 S. C, 16 Johns. 438 Hyatt v. James, 2 Bush, 463 Graham v. Merrill, 5 Cold. 622 Perkins v. Rogers, 35 Ind. 124 Shack; ;
by a citizen to ohserve neutrality with an enemy may be valid when it is out of the power of his own government to protect him. Miller v. The Resolution, 2 Dall. 10. * Pollock, Wald's ed. 282 Matthews V. McStea, 91 U. S. 7; Hubbard v.
571.
contract
Matthews, 54 N. Y. 43
Griswold
;
v.
lett
V.
Polk,
51 Miss.
;
378
Rice
v.
Hennan v. Gilman,
see supra, 94-
and
Waddington, 15 Johns. 57 S. C, 16 Johns. 438 McStea v. Matthews, 50 N. Y. 166 supra, 305, 319.
;
;
Willison
V.
Esposito
Supra,
;
V.
See Williams
v.
Woods
319
V.
Wilder, 43 N. Y. 164.
;
6 T. R. 23
653
474.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
eign country at war with Great Britain, cannot, it is held in England, sue in English courts.^ It is otherwise as to a British
an enemy's country. ^ It has been held by the supreme court of the United States that an assignment of shares in a company originally formed to
subject
is
who
a prisoner of
war
in
is
by the late Confederate government, general or state, as war bonds, do not constitute a lawful consideration for a promissory note, though those bonds were used as currency.* A contract, however, which has been executed, will not be overhauled because its consideration, in whole or in part, was aid to a public enemy.'' This distinction holds as to
issued
But bonds
"
After
been carried out, and money contributed by one of the parties has passed into other forms, the results of the contemplated
operation completed, a partner in whose hands the profits are
474.
The general
belligerency
and hence, belligerent insurgents, when their belligerency is recognized by the parent state,
are put in this respect in the category of public
with contracts to furnish goods to support a rebellion. Aside from the reason that such contracts are void as made with a public enemy, they are void
enemies.'
is
A fortiori
A note, therefore,
;
Roberts
other cases cited supra, 94, 305, 319. 2 Willison V. Patteson, 7 Taunt. 449.
tis V.
8
McBlair
v.
v.
Gibbes, 17
How.
r-
232.
Hanauer
;
Texas v. White, 7 Wall. 700 HanWaitzV. Doane, 12 Wall. 342 felder v. Kahnweiler, 56 Barb. 300 see White v. Hart, 13 Wall. 646 McKesson V. Jones, 66 N. C. 258 Cronly
auer
;
V.
Hall, 67 N. C. 9
see
Wh.
Cr.
is
L.
dis-
454.
6
8th ed.
V.
Brooks
Martin,
r.
Wall. 70
cussed in detail.
Planters'
Bank
r.
483
Lewis
654
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 476.
given in consideration of the payee acting as the payor's substitute in the Confederate army is void.* Contracts which in-
money
475. In England it is within the power of the crown to grant a valid license to trade with a public enemy. License it mi X 1 " crown may exempt any persons and
The
any
validates
branch of commerce, in its discretion, from the dis- g^'^Jl^y^^*'^ abilities and forfeitures arising out of a state of war, and its license for such purpose ought to receive the most liberal construction. "3
But a
a public enemy.* The license is limited to nor can it be transferred to other parties.^
476.
is
contract between the citizens of two friendly suspended by a declaration of war between the two states, so that there can be no suit in either suspended
states
state unless
is
by
which the
suit
^*^
fifties.
brought.^
authorities
may
And when
the contract
of a
character that
its
its efiiciency
permanently, then
Chancely v. Baily, 37 Ga. 532. Martin v. Wallace, 40 Ga. 52. ' Per cur. in Usparicha v. Noble, 13 East, 340 see Kensington v. Inglis, 8 East, 273 Patton v. Nicholson, 3 Wheat. 207 Crawford v. The William Penn, Peters C. C. 106.
Wash.
111.
C. C. 484; Stiles
v.
v.
Easley, 51
111.
275; Seymour
Bailey, 66
288.
Mennett
v.
As to alien enemies, see supra, 94. As to effect of embargo, see supra, As to effect of temporary ne 305.
8 Clementson v. Blessig, 11 Ex. 135 Matthews v. McStea, 91 U. S. 7. The effect of war on a policy of life insur;
Bonham, 15
5
Keir
v.
Andrade,
Taunt. 498
Clark
6 7
V. Ins. Co., 1
Story R. 128.
Ibid.
;
Abbott on Ship., 9th ed. 485 O'Mealey r. Wilson, 1 Camp. 482; Reid V. Hoskins, 4 E. & B. 979 6 E. &
;
ance
V.
is
Statham, 93 U.
9
cited
B. 953
McConnell
v.
Hector, 3 B.
&
P.
;
S. 24, and other cases Wald's Pollock, 282. Esposito V. Bowden, 7 E- & B. 763;
v.
113
Geipel
655
479.]
Insurance
Bhips^and^
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XV.
goods
478.
Alien enemies can-
Even supposing a contract continues in force during a war, an alien enemy cannot, without license, sue when sued, he may appear, if not qjj j^ 2 thouffh i-r j o
' i
>
make
,
defence.^
.
Permission
ground to
do business.*
by the lexfori^ is void." English courts, also, it has bceu held, will refuse to sustain suits brought on contracts to raise money to support an insurrection against a state in amity with Great Britain.^ It voi<L^^ should be remembered, as is elsewhere shown,^ that neutrality, as defined by the law of nations, and neutrality, as defined by local law, are far from being convertible. government (as was the case with our own government during the Napoleonic wars, and with the British government during our " the law of nations in this respect late civil war) may say imposes on us greater obligations than we can impose on our subjects, but this does not affect our liability for breaches of
,
not prevent."
of nations.
local law,
On
subjects limitations
more
strict
"
Phillips on Ins.
v.
Thompson, 3 Cranch C.
C. 108
;
Ker-
147, 223
Brandon
v.
Nesbitt, 6 T.
;
shaw
kins
v.
San;
R. 23
Bristow
v.
Towers, 6 T. R. 35
;
derson
v.
v.
Morgan, 39 N. Y. 231
Per-
Vandyck
tado
V.
V.
Hewitt, 1 East, 96
Fur-
Rodgers, 3 B.
& P.
191
;
Semmes
v.
Delmas
14 Wall. 661. Wh. Con. of L. 737 McConnell v. Hector, 3 B. & P. 113 U. S. V. Isaac Hammett, 10 Pitts. L. J. Crawford v. The William (0. S.) 97 Penn, 3 Wash. C. C. 484 Otteridge v.
Ins. Co.,
8
Infra, 97
475.
* *
">
Wh.
De Wiitz
Wh.
656
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY,
[ 483.
"Whether prohibition.
con-
good when
legislation.
But
is
law, which
now
common law
The
object,
it
must bring the party furnishing the illegal aid into privity of contract with the belligerent to whom it is unlawContracts to sell naval ammuniful for him to furnish aid.
tion will not be
made
illegal
way
would be
valid.^
IN'or,
according
by neutrals to supply munitions of war to a belligerent illegal.' But it is a breach of neutrality for a neutral to recruit soldiers and fit out cruisers for belligerent service,* and to establish a system of coalto the better opinion, are contracts
is
Contracts
foreign
not
illegal,
and,
when
XIII.
COMPOUNDING OFFENCES.
but
all
^ xr D criminal oiiences oi
.
class
are
Contracts
as
to
com-
against the
policy of
the law.
"It
made matter
6
;
of private bargain."^
Wh. Wh.
Con. of L.
Cr.
1.
Kent,
;
iii.
267
Wh.
Con. of L.
see
496 a
;
Chavasse ex
parte,
4 D.
J. S.
supra, 343,
where
this topic is
more
655
7
The Helen,
L. R. 1 Ad.
&
Ec. 1.
fully discussed.
'
Wh.
Bluntschli, 764,
and authorities
cited in
Wh. Cr. L. 8th ed. 1903. Wh. Cr. L. 8th ed. 1904.
Ibid., 1907.
Clubb V. Hutson, 18 C. B. N. S. and to same eifect 414, by Erie, C. J. see remarks of Fry, J., in Whitmore v.
8
;
VOL.
I.
42
Farley, 43 L. T. N. S. 1*92
S.
P.Ward
657
483.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
This rule has been held to apply to an agreement to acknowledge the signature of a forged bill in consideration of the holder forbearing to prosecute the forger ;^ to an agreement for the compromise of a prosecution for an offence subjecting the party to a pecuniary forfeiture f to taking security for the amount of forged bills with an understanding that the prosecution should not be pressed f to an agreement to settle a riotous assault involving a forcible interference with a public officer when executing his duties ;^ to a note given on consideration not to prosecute a larceny to an agreement of which the consideration is to abandon prosecution for embezzlement f to an agreement to suspend extradition proceedings against a fugitive ;^ to a bond given in consideration of the obligee not proceeding to prosecute a charge of perjury f to a promissory note given in consideration of not prosecuting a charge of obtaining money on false pretences ;^ and to a mortgage given by a wife in consideration of a prosecution for false pretences against- the husband being withdrawn.^"
;**
V. Allen,
2 Met. 57
;
McMahon
v.
Smith,
V.
Farley, 43 L. T. N. S. 192
;
Shaw
v.
47 Conn. 221 Von Windisch v. Klaus, 46 Conn. 433 People v. Buckland, 13 Wend. 592; Den v. Moore, 2 South. Roll V. Raguet, 4 Ohio, 400 470 Henderson v. Palmer, 71 111. 579
;
Taylor
2
v.
Jaques,
B.
Fivaz
V.
Nichols,
C.
501
Critchley ex parte,
3 D.
Shaw
to
Wisner
V.
v.
v.
Chandler
& L. And
527
statutory larceny.
ley, infra, 484.
Whitmore
v.
Far-
Snyder
v.
Wil-
Brook V. Hook, L. R. 6 Ex. 89. It has been held, however, not compounding felony for a person whose name has been forged to adopt the signature and give money to the forger to enable him to pay the note forged.
1
Dixon V. Olmstead, 9 Vt. 310. Rawlings v. Coal Consumers' Co., 43 L. J. M. Ill Hinds v. Chamber1
N. H. 225. 9 Clubb V. Hutson, 18 C. B. N. S. 414;- Shaw v. Spooner, 9 N. H. 197; see Shaw v. Reed, 30 Me. 105.
lain, 6
'0
McMahon
Shaw
v.
v.
Edgcombe
Williams
Keir
v.
v.
v.
And
text,
V.
200.
*
Spooner, 9 N. H. 197;
;
Shaw Boweu v.
;
Leeman,
see
Williams
6
v.
Bayley, L. R. 1 H. L. 200.
;
Supra, 151 a
;
Com.
v.
v.
Pease, 16
Mass. 91
Ga. 89
;
Chandler
Johnson, 39
and
see generally
Whitmore
Buck, 28 Vt. 308 Pierce v. Kibbee, 51 559 Com. v. Johnson, 3 Cush. 454 Sharon v. Gager, 46 Conn. 189 Von Windisch v. Klaus, 46 Conn. 433 National Bank of Oxford v. Kirk, 90
Vt.
; ; ; ;
668
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 483.
it
To
sustain a charge of
compounding crime,
ance of evidence that a crime was committed.^ It is important here to observe the diftereuce in this relation between the
the defence of duress
defence of duress and that of compounding crime. To sustain it is not necessary to show that the party
To sustain
the
But, without such proof, an agreement by parties to settle a criminal prosecution is inmortgage-note given in consideration of comvalid.2 pounding a prosecution for forgery is bad in the hands of an assignee for value, but with notice ;* though it is otherwise An agreemeat, also, not to as to party without notice. expose immoral conduct has been held void. Money paid inadvertently, and not with criminal intent, to compound a prosecution, cannot be recovered back.' A forged endorsement cannot be ratified, this being against public policy f though a party may estop himself from setting up forgery.
that a crime was committed.
Penn. St. 49 Shisler v. Vandike, 92 Penn. St. 447 Roll v. Raguet, 4 Ohio, 400 7 Ohio, 76 Buck v. Bank, 27 Mich, 293 Fay v. Oatley, 6 Wis. 42 Kimbrough v. Lane, 11 Bush, 556 Gardner v. Maxey, 9 B. Mon. 90 Cor;
;
if the note was given it would probably be paid by the son, and no one would then know anything about'
that
'
ley
V.
Bell
v.
Wood,
Robinson v. Cranshaw, 2 St. & P. 276 Averbeck v. Hall, 14 Bush, 505 Ozanne v. Haber, 30 La. An. Part II. 1384. And see
; ;
This tended to show an agreement on the part of the bank not to prosecute, and the question was accordingly submitted to the jury." Sterrett, J., 93 Penn. St. 254.
the forgery.
2
*
Supra, 148
et seq.
Supra, 151
Pierce
9
;
infra, 484.
;
v.
Smith
supra,
151
a,
V.
Bank,
5
Neb. 31.
supra, 146.
v.
Ibid.
Swope
;
V.
Ins.
v.
Co.,
93 Penn.
St.
Brown
Brine, L. R. 1 Ex. D. 5
251
Catlin
In Nat. Bk.
v.
Mapleback
parte,
in re, L.
R. 4 C. D. 150
" the defendant offered testimony tending to show that he was induced to
give the note in consequence of the
Butt ex
46 L.
J. B.
14
13 Cox
2d ed. 928;
Shisler
V.
447.
bank
659
484.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XV.
no longer regarded as the law! (1) In the distinction between felonies misdemeanors and misdemeanors is abolished, and in all jurisdicobsolete. tions it is regarded as artificial, and even where retained, its abandonment is a mere question of time. (2) There are many misdemeanors whose compounding militates far more against public policy than does the compounding of
between felonies and
this can be
many jurisdictions
some
felonies.
It is
more important,
murder, conspiracies to rob, and treasonable conspiracies, should be prosecuted by the state unswayed by private interest, and that private hands should be kept off such prosecutions, than that there should be this rigor manifested If no agreement whose in all prosecutions for larceny. consideration is the holding back a prosecution for larceny should be held valid, there is no offence, touching the public as such, whose prosecution we can consistently allow to be a To adopt the language of matter of private arrangement. " 1881,^ is in it immaterial whether the Baggallay, L. J., charge which was attempted to be compromised was a felony or only a misdemeanor."^ The proper view is that it is a criminal
spiracies
to
Whitmore
In
tlie
v.
Farley, 45 L. T. N. S.
101.
*
See supra,
345.
J.,
an agreement
to
abandon a
fiat
said
in bankruptcy.
The
the offence here was a would not matter if it were a misdemeanor. There are, no doubt, certain cases, as that of an assault, where the parties may compromise the offence without being guilty of an But this does not apply illegal act. to misdemeanors of a serious kind. Embezzlement is only a misdemeanor,
"Althougli
it
felony,
been applied in cases where a debtor has entered into a bargain with certain
creditors not to opppse
him
It
in obtain-
the
is
general
body
of
his creditors.
a wellillegal
public rights
is
an
agreement.
Whether the
felony could
a criminal offence to compromise a prosecution for embezzlement. The principle has been stated by Lord
yet
it is
have been proved here or not, there is no doubt that a criminal charge was made, and the prosecutrix could not legally withdraw it." See to same
general effect
21, 22, 1559
in re, L.
;
Holding (1 M-& W. 159). The court there held that an agreement which was illegal and void, as being against
V.
R. 10 Ch. D. 667
;
Keir
v.
Lee-
6&0
CHAP. XV.]
offence to
ILLEGALITY.
[ 485.
misdemeanor would be a corrupt usurpation and prostitution by an individual of a high prerogative of the state. And, whatever we may think on this point, it is settled that no contract will be sustained the consideration of which is the refusal by an individual to aid in prosecuting an offence whose prosecution is a matter of interest
for a personal benefit, a
;
compound,
for this
to the state.
is
To induce
;^
with an agreement to suppress a prosecution as a whole, or to use it as means of private gain and a contract will not be sustained whose consideration is the commission of an indictable offence. As
indictable
a fortiori
may
was held that while a merely private and secret assault may be settled by the parties, it is otherwise with an assault connected with a breach of the public peace, and with resistance to an officer in discharge of his duties.^
which
it
485. The approval of the magistrate before whom the case was heard cannot legalize such an agreement, howApproval ever much it might relieve the parties to the com- of magistrate does pounding from a criminal prosecution. Thus, in a not legalize contract. case tried in London in 1881, D., having been ar-
committed
the oft'ence of larceny as a bailee, was brought up before a magistrate and remanded. D.'s wife then induced P. to with-
amount taken. The title deeds of the property were deposited at a bank in the joint names
Mass. 91
;
McMahon
v.
eflfect
of duress in vacat-
Wh.
Keir
v.
Leeman,
v.
9 Q. B. 371
see
Davies
In Whitmore
and if I merely look at this case as one an offence, without specifying to what category it belongs, I will ask myself is it an offence of a strictly private character, or is it one in which the public have an interest." That the proper prosecuting officer may compel a prosecutor to elect between a civil and
of
"Whether, then,
Wh.
Cr. PI.
&
Pr.
me
to
See generally
and
supra, 345.
i
661
486.]
CONTRACTS.
T>.
[CHAP. XV.
allowed the prosecution to be withdrawn. D/s wife having refused to perform her agreement, P. brought an action to
and D.'s wife counter-claimed for a declawas entitled to have the deeds delivered up to her. It was held by James,Baggallay,and Lush,L. JJ.(affirming the decision of Fry, J.), that the agreement to charge the separate property was illegal and could not be enforced, and that the defendant was entitled to the declaration for delivery
enforce the charge,
ration that she
of the deeds.'
chancellor,
"The
all
and
agreement," said James, L. J., "would the lord chief justice, the lord high the judges of the court of appeal had conif
sented to
it."
many
-,
may
be pro-
Thus,
an assault
and battery
may
;
-.
be sued on as damages, or as either a cheat at common law, or an offence under for the same act. ^j^^ false pretence statutes, exposing the offender to conviction in a criminal court. If we were to say that no case could be compromised which involves a criminal offence, we would not only say that litigation to the bitter end is imperative in multitudes of cases in which compromises are on general grounds eminently proper, but we would almost indefinitely extend litigation by holding parties who do not in such cases
th
t^*^
a cheat
may
inai prose-
It is
keep criminal and civil prosecutions strictly separate, in all cases in which both may be instituted for the same act. In England this is in part effected, so far
as concerns felonies,
by the
is
cution
is
1 Whitmore 151a.
v.
Farley, 45 L. T. N. S. 99
afF.
S.
662
CHAP. XV.]
ILLEGALITY.
[ 486.
In
this country,
is
which the power of proseofficers ;2 and neither in in public exclusively cution is vested this country nor in England has the rule been supposed to apply to misdemeanors.' Assuming, therefore, that there is now no case in which the fact that a criminal prosecution can be brought for an act sued upon in a civil court is ground for abating the suit, it follows that there is no reason why such a suit, if begun, should not be settled by compromise, supposplicable in those jurisdictions in
ing the settlement does not imply the illegal, stifling of the prosecution. "In all oftences which involve damages to an
injured party for which he
may maintain an
action,
it is
com-
damage
in
any
fit."*
This
is
which
how much
how much
the prose-
cutor received.''
And
and the
for infringing
;^
questioned in Keir
v.
Wh.
and
Leeman,
'
9 Q. B. 394.
v.
Wellock V. Constaiitine, 2 H. & C. 146 London Law Times, Apr. 12, 1879. 2 See Wh. Cr. PL and Pr. 8th ed. 453.
*
Fisher
ApoUonaris Co.,
L. R. 10
Ch. 297.
8
Wh.
V.
Holv.
comb
Howe
Fissington
;
v.
Litchfield,
Maurer
v.
Hutchinson, 15 L. T. N.
Kea,ting,
S.
390 Boody v.
v. Griffin,
Mitchell,
W. &
S.
69,
overruling
;
4 Me. 167
;
Nowlan
68 Me. 235
Boston, etc. R. R.
v.
Dana,
V.
1 Gray, 83.
*
Straughen, 7
v.
J. J.
Marsh. 583
Ste-
Leeman,
9 Q. B.
phens
reason
V.
is
Spiers,
25 Mo. 386.
395.
8
perceived
why
Baker
v.
V.
v.
not receive from one guilty of a private injury satisfaction for such injury, and
Beeley
Wingfield, 11 East, 46
Bird, 2 Sim.
v.
El-
worthy
6
&
S. 372.
is
Fallowes
Taylor, 7 T. R. 475.
person
may
663
487.]
CONTRACTS.
;^
[CHAP. XV.
to extort
money, all
And
where merely private injury has been eflected, the party injured may recover on securities given to him to indemnify him for his losses, though a part consideration may have been his forbearance to prosecute criminally for these injuries, on which a criminal prosecution might have been sustained.' In a case in 1882 in Georgia, D.'s widow having instituted a suit against K., under the Georgia statute, for damages sustained by her through her husband's killing by K., K. gave her his notes in consideration of the settlement of the suit. It was held that the notes were valid and the consideration good, w^hether K. was actually concerned in the killing of D. or not.* But wherever the consideration is the illegal abandonment of a criminal prosecution, the contract fails. Thus, where a party
charged with cheating at cards gave a promissory note to the party detecting him in consideration of the offence not being
prosecuted, a decree
under
local law, be
it
the consideration.^
by law,
it
But, unless the settlement is authorized vitiates any contract of which it is the consideration.
legality of settlements of this
local
487.
depeudent
upon
local
noiieprose*"*'
some
to this officer
v.
Williams, 1 Bailey,
5 N.
Heaps
V.
Dunham,
95
111.
111.
588, citing
588
8
supra, 151,
Schommer
1
v.
Farwell, 56
542.
v.
H. 553 Stone
;
Summers, 2 South. 578 Rushworth v. Dwyer, 1 Phila. 26 see Gray v. Seigler, 2 Strobh. 117. That notes given to compromise a prosecution of assault and battery, when a
Price V.
;
Osbaldiston
Price v.
v.
513.
^
v.
Maurer
Mitchell, 9
W. &
S.
69
440
Vincent
v.
Groom,
1 Yerg. 430.
664
CHAP. XV.]
court.^
ILLEGALITY.
[ 488.
is thus cannot but be held that a settlement of a prosecution by a private individual is not only inoperative, but is not a consideration on which a contract can be sustained. On the other hand, it is equally clear that the proper
Where
defined by law,
public oflScer
may impose
practicable,
the prosecutor.
is
eminently
the court that the defendant should restore the property stolen " if not already restored," recognizing the duty of final if not
intermediate restitution.
cheats.^
And
there
is
no reason
why
the
to prosecutions for
488. It should further be observed, that in states where imprisonment for debt is abolished, it is not proper criminal to permit indirectly, by means of a criminal prosecu^o^j^g'^^' tion, compulsory collection of debts by imprison- should not ment which is forbidden in civil process. Hence, collection any securities given as a consideration for the with- ^*^* drawal of a prosecution should be held void when it appears that the prosecution was undertaken for the purpose of enforcing the collection of a debt, unless such securities be allowed by the proper authorities as part of the terms on which the prosecution is to be abandoned.^
1
See
Wh.
Cr. PI.
and
1 Leg.
Gaz. Eep. 76
;
Lindsay
v.
Smith,
383.
2
'
78 N. C. 328
v. Rice,
and
See Jones
18 Pick. 440.
148
et seq.
665
CONTRACTS.
[chap.
XVL
CHAPTER
XVI.
CONSIDERATION.
Consideration
is
what
is
done in return
Party
513.
may waive
benefit of statute,
495. 496.
Executed
gift
cannpt be recalled,
497.
and "valu-
Amount
516.
able" considerations,
Cumulative promise a nullity, 498. But agreement for extension or modification not cumulative,
517.
Gross inadequacy
aside, 518.
499.
may be ground
to set
Promise to do what a party is bound to do is not valid, 500. Question as to promise to reward duty
to others, 501.
consideration
may
Agreement
502.
to
pay public
men,
ise,
503.
be recovered back, 520. Release of unliquidated debt a sufficient consideration for promise to pay a specific sum, 521. One consideration can support several
promises,
522.
Detriment or
a consideration,
505.
sustain promise,
523.
Party suing must show consideration flowing from himself, 506. Cannot recover unless on duty assumed
to himself, 507.
be contingent, 524. Promise to support illegitimate children good when on good consideration,
525.
And
so of impossible consideration,
510.
When considerations
gal or inoperative
511.
are divisible,
ille-
Fraud
529.
vitiates
such subscriptions,
may
be rejected,
con-
Moral obligation
not
sufficient
sideration, 512.
6QQ
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
suffi-
[ 493.
of another a
Assuming indebtedness
So of marriage,
538.
537.
gift,
is
on party
539.
may
be proved or varied
by
493. Consideration,
parol, 540.
is
that
which
one party to a contract gives or does or promises in Consider exchane-e for what is given or done or promised by tioniswhat *8 done in A 1 consideration, thereiore, is an return for a the other party. essential incident of a contract; nor is the English P''^^^common law peculiar in so holding. According to the Roman standards, a contract from the necessity of things is bilateral, one party agreeing to a particular thing in exchange for something to be done by the other party. A. mere unilateral en,
,
IP
gagement is not a contract.^ But in a contract e. g.^ a bilateral engagement each stipulation is at once a promise and a consideration. A. agrees to work for B. for wages. What A. says is a promise so far as concerns himself and a consideration so far as concerns B. what B. says is a promise so far as concerns himself and a consideration so far as concerns A.2 Other systems differ from ours in recognizing as valid
under
seal
but
all
To
a contract
it is
;
according to our terminology, the consideration for what the other party does or gives. A consideration, in this
sense, has been said to "consist either in
profit, or benefit
'
some
right, interest,
It is
Roman
title.
sense
e.
g.,
the purchaser
have the term " unilateral" sometimes applied to contracts executed on one side e. g., sales on credit. But even
Promise
523.
is
set
up against
promise.
2
See infra,
667
493.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVI.
given, suftered, or
undertaken by the other ;"^ but as a mere advantage to the promisor without detriment to the promisee would not avail,^ the proper test is detriment to the promisee. At the same time we must remember, that " consideration" in our law is not convertible with " causa" or " reason" in the Roman law. All our " considerations" \yould be " reasons" in the Roman sense but it does not follow that all " reasons," e. g.^ desire to aid a meritorious object, or to benefit one of my own family, are considerations in our sense. And though all " consider;
many of them are so slight that as mere reasons they would be entitled to little weight.^ An
ations" are reasons, yet
whom
know
is
to be insol-
me
yet
a sufficient conconsideration,
must be a quid jpro quo ; though its value is to be determined by the parties themselves, and this determination
will not be overhauled unless there be fraud.
it
It is a 'price
sit
may be very
it
to fix
values, but
promised.
must be something actually given or done, or One reason for this condition is fairness. A man
should not be compelled to give unless on terms of reciprocity and charity, as such, when ceasing to be voluntary, ceases to
exist.
tion.
Another reason
Men ought
is implied in the very term consideranot to be bound by their loose talk. If so,
all
suppressed.
it
must be made
parties
will be presently
which the
doc-
authority,
'
r.
Misa, L. R. 10
See to this
J.,
effect,
observations of
v.
Ex. 162.
2
Patterson,
in
Thomas
Thomas, 2
Q. B. 859.
668
CHAP. XVL]
CONSIDERATION.
It
is
[ 493.
a gratuitous promise may be the subject of suit. wise in Germany and by the most authoritative
;
other-
when
no quid pro quo, no obligation which can be the subject of a suit, and can at any time be revoked by the
there
is
maker.^
position that a
by
itself
we
hold
it, is
peculiar
With
us, there
matter
how
slight, to
make
In the
Germany, there must be a sustain the promise, and this reason must
as held in
;
In other words, we require a material quid Germans do not they require that if the reason be irrational the promise is not to bind, while we susbe rational.
tain irrational bargains on considerations often slight
when
there
>
is
no fraud.^
Windscheid, Pand.
In the old
304;
Koch,
mean
contracts without
consideration,
but
69.
*
Roman
From Koch,
:
following
wide sense, included all promises not made under the form prescribed by the law but in its techtation, in its
;
condensed
oral,
In the old
Roman law
(1) real,
and
(4) con-
nical sense
it
was a promise
to the
sensual.
When
a polli-
citation
was with
justa causa,
it
e.
g.,
one of these heads did not bind. According to the modern view all contracts bind unless prohibited accord;
when
avert
some was
votum
Koch,
to
142.
was a promise
religious use.
not bind
state.
holding,
when
tially
a,
pollicitation or
a votum
as
parthe
fulfilled,
this,
leading
unless authorized by the Under the old Roman system a specific form of stipulation was prescribed, and no contracts not solemnized in this form bound unless (1)
public body or
institution
partially
endowed
they were executed on one side, or (2) they fell under certain specified heads to be hereafter mentioned. The reason
why
Nuda
pacta in the
Roman law
do not
restricted,
was stated
to be the dilfi-
669
494.]
494.
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVI.
The
in the
which ia hands of
was used, whether one party actually meant to bind himself to another. The
use of forms,
precision
also, it is
one
side,
at will,
argued, adds
to business
;
1.)
Contracts which do not
pacta, nudae pactiones
fall
and deliberation
under
people
who have
to resort to a
form to
is
on these no suit
the case
when
conducted
true that
it
be the basis of an exception. It will be seen, therefore, that the term nuda pacta has a very different meaning in the Roman law from what it has in our own law. In the Roman law it
may
means a
and it form much fraud will ensue is on this ground that the English Statute of Frauds, re-enacted with greater or less modifications in all our
states, rests.
contract not clothed in the terms the law prescribes in our own law it is used (leaving specialties and negotiable paper out of account) as
;
But that this was not Roman law, however, in respect to by the early Roman nuda pacta was relaxed and it was jurists is shown by the fact that stipu- held that suit could be brought on (1) '^ pacta in continenti adjecta bei bonaejidei lation, prescribed by them as the primary form of binding contract, was not Kontrakten ;" (2) pacta praetor ia, which. to be in writing, and could be solem- were contracts on which suit was alnized without witnesses. The prescribed lowed by praetorian edict and (3) form fell into two classes, oral and pacta legitiina, on which suits were verborum, literarum obligatio. given by imperial constitutions. These literal Of oral contracts, there were two kinds: contracts, on which suit could thus be nexus and stipulation. In addition to brought, were called pacta vestita, as
the ground taken
; ;
In the
common law
in force in
Germany the
contracta
obligatio,
Real-
Contract),
business
on the contrary, by
(i. e.
the
title of
any
specific
may
take their origin in popular usage, and without support of such usage cannot
societas,
mandatum,
In
popularize
and agency.
agency,
it is
partnership
and
way the stipulation took Rome and in the transfer of the Roman j urisprudence to Germany
exist.
its
In this
origin in
since
it
670
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
[ 494.
consideranarliy'^in-
a honajide endorsee, and to sealed obligations, "which will be presently considered, a gratuitous promise, ^. e. a promise not based on some detriment to the
popular usage.
in
^^^^^*
Hence,
when
the rule
tion
rule, that
already received
as this
its
On
yet sufficient. In
is
the
Roman
maxim
that nudae
suit
was
in
Rome.
bargains
not "clothed" with legal form. In causa, in other words, when the plea ex England they were bargains " naked" falsa causa is set up, the defendant
the parties.
Causa distinguishable from consideration.
the term causa impulsometimes causa, is equivalent to motive, or " Bewegsgrund," and
must show (1) that the causa specified was untrue, and (2) that he would not have made the contract had he not supposed that it was true. Falsity of
cause alone will not be sufficient to rescind a contract
;
In the
Roman law
siva, or
it
is
necessary to
gives, according to
is
known
made.
tion
is
It differs, therefore,
from our
not always
is
a reason, and a
reason
moral obligation, for instance, while a reason, is not a consideration, while many considerations (e. g. a carrier being permitted to withdraw the thing carried from the owner's care, and a
trivial forbearance as to time) are not
much
critical
examination.
Accord-
any right sense of the term reasons. Hence follows an important difference between the Roman law and our own by the Roman law the true reason must be given, while by our law it is enough if a sufficient consideration be expressed even though this considerain
:
law in other words, a contract on which debt, then the sole form of acit was necestion, could be brought sary " that the thing given or done, in
exchange
assumed,
that
it
shall be received
by the
671
494.J
CONTRACTS.
is
[chap. XVI.
to
promisee,
Hence a promise
make a
a^nming
that
i. e.,
the obligation
and, lastly,
exchange
be actually
it.
given or done,
Unless tbere
satisfies
a consideration which
"debt" was based on a contract which was virtually the real contract of the " The consideration, Roman law. therefore, was of the very essence of a debt was in fact what created it. But when the action of assumpsit was introduced, and a new class of contracts came to be enforced, it was
make the
branch of our literature, there should be some qualification, I think, Waiving the of the above statement. question whether the second condition (viz., that the consideration "should
this
new
contracts
binding.
it
necessary because
posed nor claimed that the new contracts created or constituted debts
it
;
and
was not
be received by the obligor" as a full equivalent) is not defective in imposing, if the term be used subjectively, an impracticable test, I cannot concur
in accepting the third condition, viz.,
reason
why
new
action
had not a
result
is
sufficient consideration to
"The
consideration'
the
*'
sole motivfe."
is
question whether
has practically changed its meaning having formerly meant the consideration necessary to create a debt,
it
there
now
to
Roman
Common Law, by
debt was
'
made
not necessary
'
that
either of the above conditions anything should contribute. If whatever (which the law can notice) be given or done in exchange for the
'
by
force,
for
Roman
law,
promise,
it is sufficient
and, therefore,
he holds that
Pick. 429
it
"is
of
pure German
Wilkinson v. Buyers, 1 Ad. & El. 2 N. & M. 853 Holliday r. Atkinson, 5 B. & C. 501 Dodge v. Adams, 19
'
Thome v.
etc.
108
Philadelphia
R. R.
Johnson, 7
W. &
S. 317.
672
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
[ 494.
surrenders something in exchange ;^ and this, even though such gift be sustained by the consideration of natural love
descent."
The
however,
it
may
be replied that, as
is
must be
stated in the
text,
mere
benefit to
he attributes to the fact that were proved by witnesses (the oldoflB.cial witnesses), who " could only swear to facts within their knowledge, coupled with the accident that these witnesses were not used in transactions which might create a debt, except
sucli debts
for a particular fact,
things,
be
consideration,
un-
less it
be accompanied by detriment
Mr. (.infra, 505). Holmes, in saying that debt could only be used where the consideration
to the promisee
was a
promisor,
ery of property, together with the further accident that this delivery was quid
pro quo;'^
is
when
But this is not enough. Debt could at no time be maintained, unless the consideration proceeded from
the promisee
;
was proved by witnesses, there must be quid pro quo," " But these debts proved by witnesses," he adds, " instead of by
what we call simple contract debts, and thus, beginning with debt, and subsequently extending itself to
deed, are
titled
other contracts,
culiar
is
Zur Geschichte der obligatorischen Vertrage, Nordlingen, 1881. He shows by abundant citations that in
the old jurisprudence of Franks and
"The
' '
action of debt,"
he proceeds to say, has passed through three stages. At first, it was the only remedy to recover money due, except when the liability was simply to pay The damages for a wrongful act. second stage was when the doctrine of consideration was introduced in its
. .
.
law pre-
scribed.
was the doctrine of the continent of Europe during the middle ages but it
;
gradually gave
a naturalis
of the
way to
ohligatio
would sustain an
According
to Seuf^
Roman
law.
The third stage was reached when fert, informal contracts (formlose Ver-^ a larger view was taken of considera- trage) could not be sued on in the old tion, and it was expressed in terms of German law. According to Stobbe detriment to the promisee." To this. (Privat. R. 3, 64), a more liberal ten-
Benj. on Sales, 3d
v.
Am.
Mahon
U.
S.,
16 Wall.
Dorsey v. Packwood, 12 How. 143 126; Hanson v. Millett, 55 Me. 184; Wing V. Merchant, 57 Me. 383 Loring Stone v. HackV. Sumner, 23 Pick. 98
;
212 Carhart's App., 78 Penn. St. 100 Hitch V. Davis, 3 Md. Ch. 266 Shepherd V. Shepherd, \ Md. Ch. 244 Bu;
ford
ett,
12 Gray, 227
Kimball
v.
Leland,
McKee, 1 Dana, 107 Holland v. Hensley, 4 Iowa, 222 People v. JohnAdams v. Hayes, 2 son, 14 111. 342 Sims v. Sims, 2 Ala. 117 i Ired. L^ 366 Ea;i:lsley v., Hanlan, 55 Miss. 606.
V.
; ;
;
VOL.
I.
43
673
495.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVI.
warranty, also, given after a sale, is void as and affection.^ without consideration f and so of a promise to leave a proposal open when the promisee does nothing whatever on faith of the promise,^ though such a promise binds if the other party does or omits to do anything, no matter how slight, in promise, also, to pay for unsolicited past services is return.^ void for want of consideration '^ and so of promises to pay to religious or charitable objects, when purely gratuitous;^ and of promises to pay debts that have been released.^ 495. An exception at common law is recognized in cases ^^ documents under seal. The solemnity of such an Exception
as to
isG
promunder
obligation
is
a guarantee,
and
to
so
it
is it
argued, that *~
validity
Tlien,
it is
seal.
deliberately made,
deny
would be
to
dency arose in the later middle ages, and suits on informal contracts were sustained. "It is in the nature of
dispensed
with.
prevent
im-
But
in
German
as well as
is
Roman
not
1881, p. 505,
"
and con-
prescribed
form.
1
and obstructive.
the
stipulation
Am.
ed. 59;
In
the
Roman law
Bret
J.
V.
S.
&
would not have been regarded as the normal form of contract had not in
early
Duvoll
nington
infra,
Roman
business
life
the habit
Wilson, 9 Barb. 487 PenGittings, 2 Gill & J. 208; 540 as to executed gifts, see
V.
;
infra, 496.
' Infra,
was (as a rule, subject to some exceptions) a nudum But gradually, so it is shown, pactum. when other habits of business and manners grew up, the Roman law approached the rule that good faith was to be the test that is, want of form, when this was not a note of fraud, did not From this came a reaffect validity. It was found that to dispense action. with all forms led to fraud, and hence came legislation like our own statute
;
3 Q. B. 234
457
Wilmot
Am.
;
Benj. on Sales, 3d
r.
Cook
13
Abbott r. Shepherd, 48 N. H. 16
r.
Boston etc. R. R.
*
Bartlett,3Cush. 224.
Supra, 13.
;
of frauds.
Germany.
in
First
no
contracts
except
the
all
prescribed
Hale
V.
and
Then
forms were
674
CHAP. XVI.]
to
CONSIDERATION.
[ 495.
deny the right of a party deliberately to dispose of his eft'ects.^ In some of our states the distinction between sealed and unsealed obligations is now obliterated,^ and in others, as
adopted as part of the common law. Illegality of consideration, and impossibility of performance, may be set up as a defence to a speciality as fully as it can be to a suit on an unsealed instrument.' In equity, while a contract under seal without consideration is regarded as so far binding that a suit on it will not be enjoined,* its specific performance will not be compelled.' In distributing assets, a creditor holding a voluntary bond is postponed to creditors for value f though he ranks ahead of legatees and all others except creditors for value.^ In those states where equitable defences can be made at common law this rule applies to suits at common law.^ But
'
Infra,
680
et seq.
;
man, 2 Q. B. 580
L. R. 4 Eq. 30;
Case
V.
Boughton,
11
Wend. 106;
; ;
Page
v.
i\
Trufaut, 2
Hays V. Kershaw, 1 Sandf. Clu 258 Sherman v. Wright, 49 N. Y. 231 Solomon V. Kimmel, 5 Binn. 232 Bayler
;
Mass. 159
Aller
Aller, 40 N. J. L.
V.
446; Burkholder v. Plank, 69 Penn. Harris v. Harris, 23 Grat. 737 St. 225 Hannon v. State, 9 Gill, 440 Caldwell
; ; ;
Smoot v. Rea, 19 Md. 398; Walker v. Walker, 13 Ired. 335 Matlock v. Gibson, 8 Rich. L. 437 Martin v. Iron Works, 35 Ga.
Cora.,
St.
40 Penn.
37
V.
M'Cut-
320.
6
chen
M'Cutchen, 9 Port. 650. That a sealed release without consideration discharges a debt, see infra, 682
Ellison
V.
V.
Col-
man
V.
Sarel, 3 Bro. C. C. 12
As
to
Hatch frauds on
Lee V. R. R., L. R. 6 Ch. Ap. 527 Bender v. Sampson, 11 Mass. 42 Schuylkill Nav. Co. v. Harris, 5 W. &
S. 28.
2
Dawson
186,
Mete,
on Cont. 162;
Ortman
v.
tees
8
St. 119.
;
As
to
New
Jersey,
;
Swift
Hawkins,
5 S.
1 Dall.
17
;
Car-
and
penter
loch
V.
V. GraflF,
&
R. 162
St.
McCul;
McKee, 16 Penn.
289
Leon-
Supra, 300
Supra, 493
1,
et seq.
;
335
et seq.
;
ard
V.
That in
Adams
;
Eq. 78
Fonbl. Eq. B.
5
ch. 5, 1.
Lowe
V.
Jeflferys
Jefferys,
1 Cr.
&
P. 138;
Lister
Hodgson, L. R. 4 Eq. Kekewich v. Manning, 1 D. M. G. Willard v. Taylor, 8 Wal. 557; mour V. Delancy, 6 Johns. Ch.
v.
30;
176
Sey-
4 Burr, 2225 Emmens v. Littlefield, 13 Me. 233 Ely v. Wolcott, 4 Allen, 506 Treadwell v. Buckley, 4 Day, 395 Farnum v. Burnett, 21 N.
Peers,
;
J.
Eq. 87
S.
Strawbridge
;
v.
Cartledge, 7
222;
W. &
394
Hoeveler
v.
Mugela, 66
675
4P6.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVI.
even in Pennsylvania, where equitable defences are admissible in common law suits, mere want of consideration is no defence, as between the parties, to a suit on a bond, unless
gift made in fraud or imposition of some sort be alleged. It is this way cannot, as between the parties, be recalled.
meant as a gift, the conwhich fails.^ 496. "When a gratuitous promise has been finally executed by a gift, then the party making the gift _ ,
otherwise, however, as to a bond not
sideration of
gift
cannot be recalled.
(thousrh
it is
.
Thus, a parent cannot recover back an article given by him to a child,^ and a gift binding the donor may be made of a chattel already in donee's hands if acceptance be shown.^ Gifts inter vivos " when made perfect by delivery of the things
and the donor cannot disturb is perfected by delivery and acceptance.' But. delivery and acceptance (in all cases where there is not a valid transfer by deed) are necessary to perfect a gift of chattels,^ even though the donee may have
given, are executed contracts
;"*
St.
348
r.
Jones
r.
Jones, 12 Ind.
v.
Ham
v.
Van
24
Lawton
Jeter
v.
Buckingham, 15 Iowa,
1 S. C.
;
Orden, 84 N. Y. 257.
22
Tucker,
246
Johnv.
Wilde,
;
J.,
Grover
v.
v.
Grover,
sou
V.
Bennett
Pick. 264
Ham
Van
Orden, 84 N.
Good
V.
W. &
S.
v.
Plank,
Y. 257. Jones v. Lock, L. R. 1 Ch. Ap. 28 Richardson v. Richardson, L. R. 3 Eq. 686 Sheedy v. Roach, 124 Mass. 472
;
Noble
r.
v.
Smith, 2 Johns. R. 52
Picot
Smith v. Smith, Bromley v. Brunton, L. R. 6 Eq. 275 Faxon v. Durant, 9 Met. 339; Rockwood r. TVMggin, 16 Gray, 402 Noble v. Smith, 2 John. 52 Bond V. Bunting, 78 Penn. St. 210; Picot r. Sanderson, 1 Dev. 309 University r. McNair, 2 Ire. Eq. 605 Matthews v.
7 C.
&
P. 401
Am.
;
ed. 60
;
Ward v. Audland, 16 M. & W. 862 Irons r. Smallpiece, 2 B. & Aid. 551 Hanson
Brown, 23 Barb. 565; Withers v. Weaver, 10 Barr, 391 Kidder v. Kidder, 33 Penn. St. 268 Trough's Est., 75 Penn. St. 115 Zimmerman v. Streeper, 75 Penn. St. 147 Adams r. Hayes, 2 Ired. L. 366 Sims r. Sims, 2 Ala. 117.
v. Millett,
;
55 Me. 184
Brown
v.
r.
Gavins,
See supra,
r.
377.
Shower
Wing Champney v.
;
'
Sliower
v.
Dole
Huntington
v.
676
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
if
[ 498.
may
bind.^
good consideration is such as that of blood, or of natural love and aifec- Distinction an estate to a near relation, H^^^^fJ^ tion, when a man grants =" "good" being founded on motives of generosity, prudence, and"vaiu. and natural duty. A valuable consideration is such sideratioa J^^gatory. as money, marriage, or the like, which the law esteems an equivalent for the grant; and is, therefore, founded
According
' '
_
_
to Blackstone, " a
tive.
motives of justice."^ But this distinction is merely speculapromise based on a merely good "consideration will not be enforced against creditors, nor, in equity, against the
in
party himself, unless there be a sealed obligation amounting " good" consideration, therefore, is virtually no to a gift."^
though it may be sustained, when executed, as a family arrangement between the parties, or by solemnization through a sealed obligation.*
consideration, so far as concerns creditors,
A deed in consideration
is
of marriage, as
we
made on a valuable
consideration, and
therefore
good
against creditors.^
498. When a legal obligation already exists, a cumulative promise to perform it, unless upon a new consideration, is a nullity. Such promise adds nothing to and ^y^prol takes nothing from the original obligation, and miseanuibeing without consideration to support it, will not sustain a suit. Thus, although my promise to pay the debt
me, if it be in from suit on such note;^ yet a mere promise to pay such debt, without any new consideration, cannot be regarded as imposing on me a binding duty.^ Even a promise to pay a specific sum on account of a
will bind
me
consideration of
my being indemnified
set aside
;
executed
supra,
2
an and see
McManus
v.
Bark, L. R. 5 Ex. 65
;
164
3
*
540
18
supra, 494.
Pulvertoft
;
v.
Pulvertoft,
100
Violett
v.
Deacon r. Gridley, 15 C. B. 295 Mallalieu v. Hodgson, 16 Q. B. 689 Robb v. Mann, 11 Penn. St. 300 Gilmore v. Green, 14 Bush, 772. t Williamson v. Clements, 1 Taunt. 523 see Conover v. Stillwell, 34 N. J.
; ; ;
L. 54.
"v
Infra, 537.
Davis
v.
'
677
499.]
liability for unliquidated
ise
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVI.
invalid, unless the
damages
is
prom-
new
A cumulative promise of marriage, one promise being already in force, is a nullity.* 499. An agreement between debtor and creditor, however, by which, before breach, the time for performance ^ ^ * But agreemeut for is extended, though on the same conditions or on the Same rate of interest, cannot be called cumulative, notcumulative. This is eminently the case with loans, the extension of which gives the creditor the benefit of a renewed fixed investment, not liable to be paid oft" at the debtor's will, which constitutes the detriment to the debtor.^ The same rule is
or forbearance or release.'
also,
.
from the delay, does not bind the creditor. The debtor's promise to pay is only cumulative, and no consideration for the promise to delay.' There must be some advantage moving to the
creditor in order to
make
What
has
been said applies to all cases of modification and reconstruction. In such cases the abandonment of the old agreement is a good consideration for the new agreement.'^ But there must be something surrendered by the promisee to make the promise binding. The thing surrendered may be very slight but And the reif appreciable, it is an adequate consideration. construction of an old contract, based on a past compromise, contains mutual concessions, which, as constituting a novation, form in themselves a binding contract.^
;
> Smart v. Chell, 7 Dowl. 781 see Bryan v. Brazil, 52 Iowa, 350. 8 Raymond v. Sallick, 10 Conn. 480. Infra, 870, 1000 Chute v. PatMcNish v. Reynolds, tee, 37 Me. 103
;
;
Back, 11 Vt. 166 Kellogg v. Olmsted, 25 N. Y. 189 Parmellee v. Thompson, 45 N. Y. 58 Grossman v. Wohlleben, and cases cited Wald's 90 111. 537
;
Pollock, ut supra
Deacon
v.
Gridley,
cited
tJi/ra,
15 C. B. 295.
Wright v. Bartlett, 43 N. H. 548 Beckner v. Carey, 44 Ind. 89 ClarkMartin v. son v. Creely, 35 Mo. 95
;
; ;
870
Fawcett
and
*
Goss
v.
V.
Nugent,
B.
&
;
Ad. 58
v.
Carrier
*
Bates
2 Vt. 536
Russell
Infra, 856
et seq.
67
CHAP. XVI.]
500. to B,
CONSIDERATION.
is
[ 500.
A promise by A. to do what he
.
already bound to do
.
is not a sufficient consideration to support a Promise , promise by 13. to do something in return to A.; in do what other words, a promise cannot be conditioned on a fe^Jafiy*
to
promise to do a thing to which a party is already legally bound. ^ Hence, a promise to pay a witness
extra fees for attendance on court
this
is
Qo^*^g*^;
cjent con-
in reference to promises to
and
seen of a promise to pay a debt already existing.* promise to finish a work already undertaken is a good consideration depends upon whether the party
we have Whether a
making the prowhich might give him an excuse for surrendering the work, or whether any additional burden has been cast on him. In either of these cases, the promise to finish the work is a good consideration to support a promise to give some additional advantage to the employee ;' though otherwise not.^ In other words, if there
mise has encountered any fresh
difficulties
is
a novation, the
but
it
in consequence of
tion.^
compromise, an agreement to perform it, and to waive any defence that may heretofore have been made to its performance, will be held a good consideraable, then, as a matter of
tion.^
the debtor
is
Infra, 720
Patterson
v.
Donner,
48
Cal.
;
369
Am.
ed. 60
citing
Dawkins
v.
v. Gill,
10 Ala. 206
181.
Sweany
Jackson v. Cobbin, 8 M. & W. Bayley v. Homan, 3 Bing. N. C. Dixon V. Adams, Cro. Eliz. 538 laghan v. Hallett, 1 Caines, L'Amoreux v. Gould, 3 Seld, Cleveland v. Lenze, 27 Oh. St.
790
915
Hunter,
Murph.
Wh.
on Ev.
456.
infra, 514.
Cal-
Supra,
498
104
349
;
9 Pick. 96.
305
311
383
303.
Cole
v.
Shurtleflf,
41
25
Vt.
Runnamaker
officers
v.
Cordray, 54
to
111.
Reynolds
v.
Nugent,
Ind. 328
;
That agreements
influence public
405. That
Ayers
76.
'
v.
Anson,
sitpra,
when
2
there
et seq.
"
Dodge
V.
26 Conn. 463;
679
501.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVI.
may
him
additional compensation.^
a reconstruction of the contract amounting to a novation which, as such, binds the parties.^
has been taken by a learned English judge in this relation between a promise to reward Question as to promise A. for doing his duty to a third party, and a promise to reward to reward A. for doing his duty to the promisor. duty to others. "If a man," said Wilde, B.,^ "has already contracted with another to do a certain thing, he cannot make the performance of it a consideration for a new promise to the same individual but it is possible to make a valid promise to another to do the same thing." And in a much-discussed English case, where an uncle wrote to a nephew, who was about to be married, " I am glad to hear of your intended marriage to E. ]^., and as I promised to help you at starting, I am happy to tell you I will pay you one hundred and fifty pounds yearly, during my life;" this was held a binding promise.* But apart from the fact that the letter in this case seems to indicate a continuous promise conditioning the nephew's engagement, the ruling was weakened by the dissent of Byle, J., as against Erie, J., and Keating, J. It is supported, indeed, by Mr. Pollock,' but as is pointed out by Mr. Wald, the learned American editor of Mr. Pollock's work,^ by reasoning which assumes that the party thus promising to pay another to do his duty to a third party has a right in the very matter concerning which his right is ques;
A distinction
tioned.^
To
this it
may
g.^
by enabling A., when there is a relation of debtor and creditor established between B. and C, to become B.'s creditor as to the very matter in which B. is debtor to C), is to create a
Munroe
r.
v.
Shadwell
v.
Shadwell, 9 C. B. N.
Lattimore
Harsen,
14 John. 330
S. 159.
5
6
7
Stewart v. Keteltas, 36 N. Y. 388; Cooke V. Murphy, 70 111. 96; cited, Wald's Pollock, 164.
2
cited
;
Gordan
v.
Scotson
V.
Pegg, 6 H.
&
N. 295.
son
V. Seller,
33 Ala. 265.
680
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
[ 502.
double duty, against the policy of the law. There cannot be equal loyalty to two duties which would be likely to conflict.^ 502. We have already seen that an agreement by a private person to pay a public officer for doing his duty
is
to^pay'pub*.
]^^ officers
without con-
'
invalid.
however, as to matters not in the scope of the officer's public duties. Unless it be one of the conditions of his office that his whole time should be given up to the state, he is entitled to sell to third parties such of his services as the state does not require.* Hence a constable, or other peace officer, may be remunerated for special attentions not in the line of his employment. But
sideration.* It is otherwise,
agreement to pay for such services must be special in order to bind.^ On the same reasoning, special services rendered by
1
pany
v.
to
2 8
To same
1
effect,
v.
Hallett,
Caines,
;
104 Evans v. Trenton, 4 Zab. 764 GilSmith V. Whildin, 10 Barr, 39 more V. Lewis, 12 Ohio, 281 Burk v.
;
any other fact. But the law does not imply such promise in all cases where one performs service at the request of another. Take the familiar example of a son who conto live
Mitchell
v.
v.
Vance,
request.
Monroe, 529
9.
v.
*
Odiueal
Barry, 24
Miss.
expected to be paid wages, but, from the mere fact that he acted under
direction of his father in the
England
Davis
V.
Davidson, 11 A.
676.
&
E.
same way
856.
6
Munson, 43 Vt.
is
was
any price should be fixed, but words must be employed showing that both parties understand that wages are to be paid. It is the duty of the prosecuting attorney to conduct the prosecution of offenders in the court of com-
company, and prosecuting cerThe plaintiflf had judgtain felonies. ment, and defendant assigned error. This was reversed in the supreme court, Okey, J., saying: "Lee having performed services as an attorney, in pursuance of the request of the railroad company, the agreement of the comof the
pleas but in Smith v. Portage County, 9 Ohio, 25, it is said that he is not bound to appear before a justice of
;
mon
The law remains the same to the presBut in fact that officer, in
cases,
many
appears
voluntarily
in
.681
504.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVI.
an officer of a corporation, though in the line of his duty, form no consideration for a subsequent promise by the corporation to pay for them.^ 503. When a seaman is bound by his contract of service to serve for a particular voyage, a promise to inPromises to crease his wages, unless there is increased duty or seamen of increased does not bind the promisor.^ It is otherhazard, pay not ordinarily wise, however, if the promise is made in considerabinding. tion of increased peril and labor under circumstances which would have justified the seaman in throwing up the
contract.'
504.
Part
a debt no consideration for a promise by
creditor to debtor.
On
debt
at the
debtor
release
of the
no consideration for a promise from the where the debt is time due and payable.* Hence, as between and creditor alone (the element of reciprocal by other creditors, the one in consideration other, not coming in), the payment of one
512
;
Harris
v.
i'.
Carter, 3 E.
&
B. 559
He
on
14 Johns. 260 The Brookline, 8 Bost. L. Rep. 70. Hartley v. Ponsonby, 7 E. & B.
Bartlett
Wyman,
872
see Clutterbuck
;
v. Coffin, v.
4 Scott
N. R. 509
Newman
Walters, 3 B.
We
&
P. 612
Am.
ed. 61.
*
Leake, 2d ed.
1
pay Lee compensation for his services. The further proposition is urged by the counsel for the company that even an express agreement to pay would have been void as contrary to public policy. But upon that question we express no
part of the
to
company
619;
Cumber
;
v.
Wane,
Str.
426;
S. C. in 1
Am.
ed. 595
Waite, 5 Bing. N. C.
Bailey
341;
V.
Orme
opinion."
1
Met. 278
v.
Loan Ass.
534.
Stonemetz, 29 Penn.
106
559
St.
Pabodie
V.
v.
720.
officer
Watts
V.
French, 19 N.
Eq. 407;
Daniels
v.
Culbreth, 66 N. C. 534
;
Supra, 499
ed. 621
; ;
and
v.
see, also,
Leake,
2d
317
Stilk
v.
Myrick, 2 Camp.
Frazer
Hatton, 2 C. B. N. S.
682
CHAP. XVI.]
part of a debt
is
CONSIDERATION.
[ 504.
And
hence, also,
payment of the
principal of
a note
is
At the same
more fully, the surrender by one party of any vantasje ground is a sufficient consideration for a counter promise from the other party ;' and this is the case, also, with the giving of any security which the creditor did not before possess. Hence an accepted draft for a part of the debt will be a consideration for the release of the rest ;* and so will the note of a third person ;' and so of a guaranty of a third person ;^ and so of a specific article or bonus received in satisfaction.^ It has also been held that payment before maturity may be a good consideration for a reduction of the debt.^ And a payment of a smaller sum in cash may be a
and
will hereafter be seen
sufficient
In
what
is
cases
payment amounts
to
accord
and
satisfaction
hereafter
independently discussed.^"
1
Fitch
v.
Lewis
Down
v.
Hatcher,
Little V.
V.
Smith v. Page, 15 M. & W. 683 Goodwin r. FoUett, 25 Vt. 386 Harriman v. Harriman, 12 Gray, 341; Bunge i-. Koop, 48 N. Y. 225; Rising Line v. Nelson, 9 Vroom, 358 V. Patterson, 5 Whart. 319 see Jenness V. Lane, 26 Me. 475. 2 Willis V. Gammill, 67 Mo. 730.
10 A.
E. 121
; ; ;
;
&
Richards, 14
Swartz, 7
Bliss
v.
v.
Bevan,
Pin-
39 Md. 485.
?
Infra, 1006
Met. on Con.
;
191
logg
Blinu
V.
v.
Boyd
Hitchcock, 20 Johns. 76
Richards, 14
Kel-
V.
Wend. 116
; ;
McSanseal
* Infra,
534
et
seq.,
852
et
seq.;
Kenzie
ders
V.
v.
Culbreth, 66 N. C. 534
Brooks Kellogg
V.
V.
t-.
and cases
Whether a
Harper
<
Graham, 20 Ohio,
makes a
v. v.
8
difference has
been already
considered.
Infra,
;
Supra,
495.
V.
Tripp, 15 M.
& W.
23; Frisbie
;
Larned, 21
Wend. 450
;
Douglass
White, 3 Barb. Ch. 621; Milliken v. Brown, 1 Rawle, 391 Raid v. Hibbard, 6 Wis. 175. 6 Hinckley v. Avey, 27 Me. 362 Brooks V. White, 2 Met. Mass. 283
Kellogg
V.
1001-3 Brooks
v.
Pinnel's case, 5
v.
White, 2 Met.
Childs, 3 Allen,
Arnold
v.
Park, 8 Bush, 3;
;
Smith
v.
3 Hawkes, 580
infra, 1002.
9
1"
and
Richards, 14
Wend. 116
;
Sanders
v.
infra,
Infra, 996
et seq.
954.
683
505.] 505.
Detriment
^
ri hte b promisee
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVI.
misee
is
as
good a consideration as
is
benefit to the
considera^*'
detriment to the promisee will be a sufficient consideration.^ But this is not strictly accurate. While
is
a sufficient considera-
not a sufficient consideration without detriment to the proIf I receive a benefit, for instance, this does not subto suit from a party
misee.
ject
me
me
who has done nothing to procure how solemnly he may have bound
;
me in obtaining this benefit. Detriment to the promisee of some kind there must be to sustain the promise though this detriment may consist of rights surrendered as
himself to aid
well as of
work done
is
is
promise, in fact,
the detriment
or money or goods parted with. The conditioned on this detriment, and unless
This
condition
may
be contingent,
when
occurs
{e.g.,
the
work done,
The
condition
may
Hence
has been held that a promise by the heir-at-law of a dying relative, to pay a designated person a certain sum out
of the estate, supposing there
;*
on his resignation.'
ties is
1
Hence,
also,
a sufficient consideration.^
V.
The
loss or
inconvenience
;
Nerot
V.
Wallace, 3 T. R. 24
Baiv.
ley
Croft,
4 Taunt.
;
611
Bunn
v.
Gay, 4 East, 190 Thomas v. Thomas, 2 Q. B. 851 Towsley v. Sumrall, 2 Pet. 182 Chick v. Trevett, 20 Me. 462 Foster i;. Phaley, 35 Vt. 303 Forster v. Powell v. Brown, Fuller, 6 Mass. 58 3 Johns. 100 Miller r. Drake, 1 Caines, 45 Seaman v. Seaman, 12 Wend. 381 White V. Baxter, 71 N. Y. 254; Lewis Conover v. V. Seabury, 74 N. Y. 409
;
Supra, 24
v.
infra,
545
et seq.
;
Hilton
ridge
'
Ethe-
v.
Thompson,
;
Infra, 579
Richafdson
Gosser,
26 Penn.
*
St. 355.
96.
^
Simpson College
;
v.
Bryan, 50 Iowa,
Stillwell,
34 N.
J. L.
54
Bradshaw
v.
293
infra, 528.
684
CHAP. XVI.l
CONSIDERATION.
[ 505.
the promisor
is
a promise by
way
before us
it is
may
be noticed guarantees.
if
In contracts of this
class
whom the guarantee is given an inducement to the surety to beThe abandoncome guarantee for the principal debtor.^ ment of any right by the promisee, no matter how slight or how disputable, is a sufficient consideration for a promise by
of guarantee
suffers inconvenience, as
the promisor.'
abandonment of a right
is
shown, the courts will not undertake to determine the value of the right abandoned. It will form, no matter how slight, a consideration for a promise unless the transaction was so
preposterous as to indicate fraud.*
The
though of little value to the owner, illustrates the position above given that a surrender of a right, or a detriment, as it is called, is a good consideration. In conformity with this view it was held in Michigan, in 1880, that when D. a debtor, and M. a party holding a mortgage on D.'s property, agreed with S., a subsequent mortgagee, that the property should be put up at aucat
high
prices,
was a
sufficient con-
involved.**
Infra, 514.
1 Ex. D. 5 Edgeware Gas Co., L. R. 10 Q. B. 92; Laurence v. McCalmont, 2 How. 426 Warren v. Whitney, 24 Me. 561 Whit-
Highway
v.
Mather
v.
Maidstone, 18 C. B. 273
tie v.
Forster
V.
v. Fuller, 6
Mass. 58
;
Stebbins
v.
v. v.
Smith, 4 Pick. 97
;
Smith
20 Wend. 184 Haines v. 435 Williams w. Alexander, 4 Ired. Eq. 207 Pitt V. Gentle, 49 Mo. 74. As to forbearance to sue, see infra, 532 as
;
;
Eyre, 45 N. Y. 38
Neal
v.
Gilmore, 79
v.
Penn.
111.
St.
421
Buchanan
500; Tompkins
u. Philips,
Bank, 78 12 Ga.
52.
*
Bradshaw
Supra,
v.
McLaughlin, 39 Mich,
infra, 518.
as to
480.
^
531.
;
169
Brown
v.
685
506.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVI.
new terms
are
imposed.
The
promisee's
wise when the old agreement has been absolutely done away with, and when after an entire vacating of the old agreement a new agreement is established on a new consideration. To make such new agreement binding the new consideration
must be proved.
Of
was
taken
is
it
them
is
them
safely.^
To
sustain
such a consideration, however, it must be something appreciable on which the minds of the party are fixed. It must be, " if you will carry the goods I will surrender possession of
them
to you."
sum of
it.'
mon^y by
is
a sufficient
safely
is
and return
cases
where a consideration
required, a party
we will hereafter see more must show consideration flowed from that the must show considerahim. Consideration means something which is of tion flowing from himsome value in the eye of the law, moving from the self. plaintiff; it may be some benefit to the defendant, must be some detriment to the plaintiff", and it must it but move from the plaintiff',^ and this is tantamount to saying
suing on a contract, as
fully,
'
Brown
v.
;
Evcrhard, 52 Wis.
205';
858 Cutter v. Cochran, 116 Mass. 408 Rollins r. March, 128 Mass.
infrcL,
men Law,
116
174.
Whitehead
;
205
Jac. 668
371.
*
see Riches
V.
Briggs, Yel. 4.
In Coggs
and
see supra,
184.
^
Raymond
ried
is
J.,
Thomas
v.
Thom-
as,
adopted in Leake, 2d
ed. 612.
contract of carriage.
CHAP. XVI.J
CONSIDERATION.
all
[ 506.
cases
The
suffered
something at the promisor's request as a reason for The promise, so far as he is concerned, must not have been gratuitous.' Hence g, promise to me by B. to pay C.'s debt to me does not bind B. to me, unless in exchange for this promise I give C. indulgence, or in some way benefit B. nor can I support the suit by showing that some one else agreed to give C. indulgence or to confer some benefit on B.^ A promise by me, also, to pay a reward for the discovery of a lost article can only be enforced against me by a person who has done something, no matter how slight, in bringing the lost article to light, and who was aware of the reward.^ The
the promise.
if
is
a principal acts
through an agent,
and against In some of the earlier cases liability was further extended.^ '* If A. promised to pay B. 1000 if C. would go to Rome, and C. took the journey, he and not B. was regarded as entitled to the reward, and to compel the payment of it by suit. For as the action of assumpsit was, as stated, brought not to enforce the contract specifically, but to recover compensation for the injury occasioned by the breach of faith, the person who parted with his property, or rendered the stipulated service, was obviously the one who should be compensated in damages." In a Pennsylvania case, adopting substantially the same rule, the evidence was that the defendant, a member of a congregation of which M. was the minister, promised the plaintiff" to pay him twentyiive dollars for the services to be rendered by M. as minister for
it is
the principal
who
to sue,
whom
set-offs
may
be introduced.^
a particular year.
1
and
it
was held
et seq.
Infra,
>
Bourne
2 Denio, 403
Mason, 1 Vent. 6 Crow v, Rogers, Company of Felt Makers v. 1 Str, 592 Davis, 1 B. & P. 102; Mandeville v. Welch, 5 Wheat. 277 ; Fugrove v.
V.
;
784
et seq.
See Price
1
v.
Easton, 4 B.
S.
v.
C,
^
N.& M.
303
overruling Martyn
;
Dougl. 146.
Mutual Soc, 46 Vt. 362; Segars v. Segars, 71 Me. 530; Stoddard v. Ham, Bury v. Ziegler, 93 129 Mass. 383
;
Supra, 96
infra, 802.
Penn.
St.
;
367
Gibson
v.
Pick. 18
Stewart
tracts, 20.
687
506.]
CONTRACTS.
for
it
it.
[CHAP. XVI.
that
"
A parol
was held by Gibson, C. J., " can support an action on it only by him from whom the consideration moved, or who was the meritorious cause of it. And the rule is founded in good sense, not only because it avoids
the benefit of another," so
circuity, but because there is
who
has
as a trus-
when
is
there
is
no
trust,
beneficially
entitled
is
The words italicized show that what Chief Justice Gibson had in view were contracts of agency in which the principal can unquestionably sue on a paroF contract made by his agent.^ But the prevalent English view' is that where a promisa is made to A. for B.'s
a hare recipient a party
benefit, the suit to enforce the
A.*
flows
It is
promise must be brought by true that the party from whom the consideration
in his
name
own name when a party, or in the when not a party. But, nevertheless,
none but a party to the contract can sustain on it a suit. no hardship in this. The party beneficially interested may use his trustee's name, or compel the trustee to sue. On the other hand, a mere stranger, who is not a trustee, and who has not done anything or surrendered anything in consideration of the defendant's promise, cannot sue on the promise.
section,
There
is
t?. Penny, 1 Barr, 334. on Agency, 4, 5, 147, 398, 722. In an early case, where a conversation took place between two fathers, in which one promised that if the other would give his daughter in marriage to his son he would settle certain lands on the married couple, and the marriage took place in part reliance on this statement, but the settlement was not made, it was held that the husband might maintain an action for the default. But of this Mr. Leake, 2d ed. 483, says " no modern case can be found to support
Edmunson
Wh.
been held that no stranger can take advantage of a contract made with another person." Tweddle r. Atkinson, and see as to children 1 B. & S. 393 under marriage settlement suing, /n/ra, In Dashwood v. Jermyn, L. R. 790.
;
enable
M.
to
marry one
It
of F.'s
married
to F.'s
daughter.
was held
such an exception to the general rule and, on the contrary, it has always
;
799.
688
CHAP. XVI.]
507.
CONSIDERATION.
just seen that the party
[ 507.
We have
is
from
whom
the
when
not recover
^"j^^^^g"^
made by an
agent, he
may
sue either
name. We have eumed to in his own next to observe that a party cannot recover unless on a duty assumed to himself. " When two persons for valuable consideration between themselves covenant to do some
or in his
principal's
a right to enforce the covenant against the two, although each one might as against the other."^ " No one can be made a debtor for money paid, unless it was paid at his request."^ " debtor cannot discharge his liability to his creditor by
whom his creditor happens to owe and paying his debt to him."^ That to entitle a person to sue on a contract, not only must he be, as was just seen,' beneficially interested in the contract, but he must be a party to the contract,
is,
as
we
more
fully,
a settled princi-
common
law.^
Much
conflict of opinion,
however, exists in this country on the question whether a party for whose benefit a contract is made, but who is not a party to it, can sue on such contract. If a credit is obtained by my agent or trustee, there is no question of my right to sue on it, although I knew nothing of the transaction at the time, and was not even known to the party who thus became my
debtor.'
But suppose
made
to
by a stranger, without notice to me. In such case by the English common law, entitled to bring suit on the deposit which is thus made in my name until I am notified by the depositary, and adopt the deposit as for my use,
my credit I am not,
v.
Mul-
'
Van
Fleet,
V. C, Receiver,
etc. v.
grave, 2 Keen, 98
L. R. 9 Ch. 33
;
That
Tweddle
see Segars
Atkinson,
Segars, 71
make
creditor,
see Patillo v.
Me. 530 Stoddard v. Ham, 129 Mass. 383; Biery v. Ziegler, 93 Penn. St.
367.
2
Curtis
V.
v.
S. P.,
infra,
784
et seq.
Anderson
75.
VOL.
I.44
689
507.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVI.
he agreeing with me, on sufficient consideration, to hold the deposit for nie.^ There must be, to entitle an alleged creditor to sue, a prior recognition by the creditor of the indebtedness as part of an agreement either express or implied by him with the debtor, that the debtor is to hold for the benefit of the creditor.^ On the other hand, as will be hereafter seen more fully, the rule in most states in this country is, that a person for whose benefit a contract was made is not precluded from suing on it by the fact that he is not a party to it.^ It is worth considering, however, whether our relaxa-
common-law princi-
The increasing complexity of our civilization ple is wise. makes it each day the more important to maintain the principle that without privity of contract there can be no contractual relation. It is not likely, in fact, that money will be deposited by a volunteer to my credit, or work done for me,
unless for some sinister purpose.
politician,
may
be a capitalist or a
be an object of importance to the party rank volunteering to me as co-operating in his schemes, so or to subject me to him by the ties of gratitude. The true
and
it
may
principle
is
be the consent, express or implied, of the contracting parties. Even supposing that work is done for me or goods supplied to me from motives of disinterested kindness, there are strong
1 Williams v. Everest, 14 East, 582 Tweddle v. Atkinson, 1 B. & S. 393 Thomas v. Thomas, 2 Q. B. 857 Mandeville v. Welch, 5 Wheat. 277 Hinkley v. Fowler, 15 Me. 285 Gibson V. Cooke, 20 Pik. 18; Brewer v. Dyer, 7 Cush. 337 Exchange Bank v. Rice, 107 Mass. 37 Hind v. Holdship,
; ; ;
Arnoldv. Lyman, 17 Mass. 400. The advance in this direction was subsequently checked and it has been held that
;
on a promise made to the seller by the buyer of an equity of redemption, to secure and cancel the mortgage with the note for which it was given, no action lies by the mortgagee. Mellen v. Whippie, 1
2 Watts, 104 Beers v. Robinson, 9 Page v. Becker, 31 Mo. Barr, 229 466 Fithian v. Monks, 43 Mo. 503 and cases cited infra, 784 et seq. In
;
Gray, 317.
Infra, 784
;
B. 930
W.
S.
126
an early Massachusetts
case, Felton v.
393
Cobb v. Becke, 6 Q. Barlow v. Browne, 16 M. & Tweddle v. Atkinson, 1 B. & Bigelow v. Davis, 16 Barb.
;
Dickinson, 10 Mass. 287, it was held that a son can maintain an action on a contract made for his benefit with his father,
See, also, Felch
v.
561. As to novation, see in/ra, 852; whether members of an association can sue as a committee, see infra, 808.
Infra, 785.
690
CHAP. XVI.]
reasons
CONSIDERATION.
[507..
why
(1) Disinterested kindness would cease to exist if it gave a legal claim against the party to whom it is shown. (2) Every
determine what service he needs in his household, what comfort he requires, what investments he will make. It may be a matter of true charity to supply service or
be
left to
man must
goods to another but to assert that A. has a right to supply his neighbors with what they need and then exact payment makes A. the master of every family with which he may meddle. In conformity with this view, it has been held that voluntary aid given in securing lost property does not support an action against the party aided ;' nor does aid in saving property from fire.^ On this topic the Roman law takes a diiterent position, it being held in that law, that when aid is given in extremity in relief of an absent person, the party relieving can recover compensation afterwards from the party relieved.' No such system of agency, however, is recognized in our jurisprudence. The only exception is that of salvage it being part of the maritime law that compensation may be obtained for services rendered in saving property from marine loss or from piracy.* Another question to be considered in this connection is, whether a consideration is sufficient of which the party setting it up was not aware at the time he did the act for which he sues. reward, for instance, is oflered for certain
;
services
this service
unconscious of the
?
reward.
Can he afterwards
York
On
who
1
Nicholson
;
Chapman, 2 H. BL
Buck, 2
v.
254
2
Binsteed
W. Bl.
1117.
Bartholomew
Jackson, 20 Johns.
Fitch
v.
Snedaker, 38 N. Y. 248.
v.
28.
In Williams
Carwardine, 4 B.
& Ad.
Agency, 358. * Abb. on Ship, part 4, ch. 12; Chase v. Corcoran, 106 Mass. 286, where it was held, that a party claim'
Wh. on
apparently contra, it does not appear that the party doing the service
621,
water was entitled to recover from the party who brought it to shore the
Leake, 2d ed. 24
and
see cases
691
510.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVI.
edge that any other persons will act upon his undertaking, and without inviting other persons so to act, is not liable on
his undertaking.^
508.
cases in
which
illegal
Wherever a
it is
not a
valid consideration, because (1) such matters should be disclosed to the proper public officer, or not disclosed at all, and
(2) to
mailing.*
509.
Illegal consideration VI la es.
For the same reason an illegal consideration vitiates of one side being: a contract.^ The engagement no & void. the engagement of the other side based on it falls.^ _^nd where the contract is indivisible, and a part of
the consideration
It
is
is illegal,
whole transaction.^
otherwise, as
we
siderations.^
510.
When
Bible con-
Bideration.
jide^ becomes impossible of performance, without the fault of the party agreeing to supply it, ^jjgj.^ being j^q guaranty against such impossibility
made bona
Ellis V. Clark,
Witcher, 5 N. H. 196
ris,
;
Prescott
v.
Nor-
Supra, 325
'
See also
Ham
v.
Smith, 87 Penn.
St. 63.
*
Brown
v.
Brine, L. R. 1 Ex. D. 5.
et seq.
;
^
6
Supra, 335
Supra, 338-9
;
Benj. on Sales,
v.
Ladd
Dillingham,
v.
Supra, 339
;
Chater
v.
Beckett, 7
T. R. 201 C. 656
;
Waite Hopkins
v.
v.
Jones, 1 Bing. N.
Thayer v. Rock, 13 Wend. Plank Road, 17 Barb. 397 Baldwin v. Palmer, 6 Selden, 232 Filson V. Himes, 5 Barr, 452 BIy v. Bank, 79 Penn. St. 453 Ives v. BosStoutenburg v. Lyley, 35 Md. 262 brand, 13 Oh. St. 228 Collins v. Merrell, 2 Met. (Ky.) 163; Chandler v.
Johns. 253
53
;
Barton
v.
578 793
Howden
Taylor
Pettit v. Pettit,
v.
Chester, L. R. 4 Q. B.
v.
Tucker
v.
309; Armstrong
Toler,
11 Wheat.
;
Cummings
Porter
v.
258
Ladd
v.
Carletonw.
Infra, 511.
692
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
[ 512.
falls.^
on his
we have
already seen,
How
511.
The
fact that
is
invalid
or nugatory or impossible does not vitiate an agree- When conment if there remains any one valuable considera- siderations
are divis-
In such case
all
the
re-
ible, illegal
invalid
and
ineffective considerations
may
be
be
jected as surplusage.^
note and a
in
bill
Thus, where a promissory of exchange had been given at the same time
sailor's bill to his landlord, part
charge for spirituous liquors, and it appeared that the whole charge for liquors was not equal to one of these securities, it was held by Lord Tenterden that
illegal
of which
When,
a divisible consideration falls as contravening the statute of frauds, the rest will support a promise.' And, as a general rule, where one consideration is nugatory or inoperative, it does not impair liability if a valid consideration remains f and so where there is a divisible agreement to do two things, one legal and the other illegal.'^ It is otherwise, however, when the consideration is entire, and wholly illegal
also, part of
or inoperative.^
512. Gratitude for past benefits will not support a
ise to
prom-
way
361
;
Supra, 296
Supra, 298
Mayfield
v.
Wadsley, 3 B.
Best
& C.
'
et seq.
;
infra, 338.
;
supra, 338-9
v. Jolly,
11
Am.
;
Sid. 38
Jones
v.
v.
Waite, 1 Bing. N. C.
v.
Shackell
Rosier, 2 Bing. N.
341; Parish
Earle
v.
C. 646
King
v.
v.
Sears, 2 C.
M.
;
&
R. 48
Goodwin
Bliss v.
Negus, 8 Mass. 51 Loomis v. Newiiall, 15 Pick. 159 Andrevrs v. Ives, 3 Conn. 368 Hook v. Gray, 6 Barb. 398 Tracy
; ; ;
Tread well
v.
Davis,
Lewis
V.
Davidson, 4 M.
Hall
v.
& W.
654
supra, 338.
8
V.
Talmage, 14 N. Y. 162
;
Wiggins
v.
Supra, 509
;
infra, 338.
B. 785
;
Loomis
see to
Crookshank v. Rose, 5 C. & P. 19 same effect Carleton v. Woods, 28 N. H. 290; Robinson v. Green, 3
Met. (Mass.) 159.
167 Mead v. Combs, 19 N. J. Eq. 112 Floyd V. Goodwin, 8 Yerg. 484 Hall v. Heydon, 41 Ala. 242 Burke v. Murphey, 27 Miss. 167.
;
693
512.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVI.
it
We
have,
is
true, the
high
ligation
support a promise.
tion
;"^
under a moral obligation, which no court cquit}'' can enforce, and promises, the honesty and rectitude of the thing is a consideraand for a time this position was accepted by the
a
is
man
of law or
courts.^
Where,
for
instance, a married
woman borrowed
of her cover-
ture, and after her husband's death gave a written promise to pay the debt, it was held that the "moral obligation" incumbent on her to pay the debt, though not one that bound her at the time it was incurred, was a sufficient consideration for the written promise made on her discoverture.^ But it was soon felt that if a moral obligation in one case would sustain a promise, moral obligations in all other cases would have the
complex conditions of society some sort of moral obligation to those with whom they deal, to treat moral obligations as always a sufficient consideration, would be to do away with the rule by which consideration is required. Hence, Lord Mansfield's opinion that a moral obligation is a consideration to support a contract was soon afterwards abandoned even in his own court ;* and it is now settled, both in England and the United States, that no merely moral obligation, no matter how strong, can support a promise unless the benefit from which the obligation arises was conditioned on the promise.' A promise by a son, for instance, to take an
effect
;
same
and that as
in
who
Hawkes
V.
v.
Watkins
;
v.
Halstead,
2 Sandf. 311
'
See Atkins
Geer
*
v.
Dodge
V.
ii.
Updike
Beauv.
Lang. Cont.
mont
Reeve, 8 Q. B. 483
;
Warren
1025
'
Am.
ed. 284,
and
v.
Whitney, 24 Me. 561 Mills v. Wyman, Loomis v. Newhall, 15 3 Pick. 207 Dearborn v. Bowman, 3 Pick. 159 Met. 155 Andrews v. Ives, 3 Conn. 368 Cook v. Bradley, 7 Conn. 57 Stone v. Stone, 32 Conn. 142 Smith r. Ware, 13 Johns. 257 Ehle v. Judson, 25 Wend. 97 Whitaker i-. Whitaker,
; ;
52 N. Y. 368
390
;
Snevily
v.
v.
Reed, 9 Watts,
Parker
Carter,
4 Munf. 273.
694
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
[ 512.
extreme
parent,
case, to
is
nor
is
a father
bound by a promise to pay for aid rendered to an adult sou during sickness.^ Even negotiable paper, as between the parties, will not be sustained by a consideration consisting of mere gratitude for a benefit previously conferred.^ No matter
how
may
unless the one were conditioned on the other, for the courts can
less sacred,
and
thus constitute themselves the arbiters of ethics, than they can discriminate between prices more or less adequate, and thus constitute themselves the arbiters of the market.*
Even
an agreement by a man to pay a yearly sum to a woman whom he had seduced to support her in her destitution has on this ground been held inoperative.' And a promise made by a
'
Cook
V.
Bradley, 7 Conn. 57
;
Stone
Car-
to
of
V.
Parker
v.
money
a compensation, this
is
ter,
2
4 Munf. 473.
Mills
V.
V.
Wyman,
for the
itself,
El-
person
7
licott
That an
of a son's
undertaking
debts
is,
payment
v.
damages,"
Dowl. 781.
of
citing
Smart
v.
Chell,
by
without considera-
tion, see
Mortimore
Seaborne
Wright, 6 M.
9 C.
& House
P.
Employment
where
it
W.
482
;
v.
Maddy,
&
Penn.
in
St. 178,
497 Raymond v. Loyl, 10 Barb. 483 1 Smith's Lead. Cas. 7th Am. ed. 285. ' HoUiday v. Atkinson, 5 B. & C.
501.
*
payment
a
for
case
necessity,
to
paupers
See Eastwood
;
v.
Kenyon, 11 A.
v. v. v.
&
2
from directors of the poor, under the special legislation of the state imposing
E. 438
Chamberlin
;
Whitford, 102
McAllister,
Greeves
on them the duty of supplying medical aid to such paupers and this though,
;
Kennedy
v.
Ware,
1 Barr,
;
was no
445
Snevily
Pennington v. Gittings, 2 Gill & J. 208 Parker v. Carter, 4 Munf. 273 Johnston V. Johnston, 31 Penn. St. 450 Shealey v. Toole, 56 Ga. 210 though see Hemphill v. McClimans, 24 Penn.
;
; ;
the paupers.
6
Beaumont
V.
v.
Reeve, 8 Q. B. 483
;
Hulse
tine
V.
V.
Hulse, 17 C. B. 711
and see
;
Mills V.
Wyman,
3 Pick. 207
;
Jour. 411,
we have
the following
Bowman, 3 Mete. 155 Wend. 97 Stafford v. Bacon, "If 25 Wend. 384; 1 Hill, 533; 2 Hill,
son, 24
;
;
one person has been guilty of a wrongful act which would render him liable
in
damages
to another,
and he promise
453 Van Derveer v. Wright, 6 Barb. 547; Snevily v. Reed, 9 Watts, 396; Kennedy v. Ware, 1 Barr, 445 Car;
695
512.]
CONTRACTS.
after divorce or her husband's death, to
is
[chap. XVI.
woman,
pay a debt
also at
common law
The same
;^
and before
his discharge
though, as will be
after discharge
is
made
would be
man
284
;
valid.'
no consideron his
dis-
v.
though see Carson v. Ely, 23 Mo. That the rule in Connecticut differs from the text, see supra, 373. That agreements for illicit cohabitation are invalid, see supra, 373. That agreements to support illegitimate children are invalid, see infra, 525. Howe V. Wildes, 34 Me. 566 Hay267.
;
by way of accord and satisfaction, that he had, subsequently to the original promise, say on the day of March, 1878, made an additional promise to pay the debt, and it was accepted by' the defendants, and therefore the last promise, and not the original undertaking, created the liability, can
it
be
ward
V.
r.
Watkius
Felton
v.
? We think not; There must be some distinct agreement based upon a consideration in which
&
E. 467.
;
is
merged
or dis-
Stebbins
V.
jroves
Ala.
charged before such a promise can be made available, except for the purpose
of defeating a plea of limitation.
1 Ky. L.
.J.
;
249
Nelson
v.
Stewart, 54
Where
115
though
see, contra,
;
Brix
v.
the debt
is
Braham,
'
1 Bing. 281
Otis v. Gazelin,
than a promise to pay a debt already owing and collectible by law, and a re-
is no longer by law, a new promise based on the moral obligation to pay, creates a liability but so long as the original contract can be enforced, a mere prom-
ise or recognition of
newed assurance to the creditor, witho"ut any additional consideration, that the debt will be paid. The original contract remained in full force, and had never been discharged, and as
long as the creditors can maintain an
action on the original promise, a
not do
ise
new
an action. That is the rule laid down in Ogdeu v. Redd, 13 Bush, 581, as well as by all the elementary authorities. Suppose
sideration, will not affect
bear to act with reference to his claim, will not amount to a contract with his
debtor.
his claim
He must
by reason
forbear to present
of
some
contract,
made by both
parties,
based upon a
696
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
[ 513.
An apparent exception to the rule that a moral obliganot a sufficient consideration to support a promise is to be found in the rule still recognized ever, may that the fact that a debt once binding has been dis- J^ofstatute
513.
is
tion
by law without satisfaction to the debtor is charged ^ a sufficient consideration to pay such debt. This has been held where a bankrupt promises to pay a debt
'
^
paying
;' and d fortiori of promises barred by Insolvent discharges, such discharges being only locally effective.^ The same view has been taken in regard to promises
discharged in bankruptcy
ed by the debtor as to estop the latter from relying on his defence in bankruptcy.
sufficient.
Hill
13
In
& Den. Sup. 371 Ogden v. Redd, Bush. 581." Day, J., Knapp v.
;
mere promise
to
pay
is
not
Hoyt,
S. Ct.
v.
promise to pay a debt already existing cannot be made the foundation of an action. Gilmore
V.
A mere
Shaw
:
Burney, Sup.
Ct.
N. C.
1882 (14
said
to
Law Rep.
Valentine
v.
Foster,
Met. 520,
1 Sandf.
;
remove the bar of a discharge in bankruptcy and revive the debt, the
proof should
and
*
show a
distinct
See Stebbins
;
v.
Sherman,
510
Scouten
v.
;
v.
Eislord, 7 Johns. 36
is
Stafford
Hill, 353
Bacon, 25
Wend. 384; 2
announced by
Riggs
V.
Willing v. Peters, 12 S. & Johns v. Lantz, (i3 Penn. St. 324 Chambers v. Rubey, 47 Mo. 99. It would be otherwise if the promise
R, 177
;
Kelly, 67 N. C. 78,
and approved in
In Stew-
art V. Reckless,
4 Zabr. (N.
was made before discharge supra, defendant) had always told Stewart " The very decided weight of (the plaintiff) he intended to pay him, 612. authority holds that a promise made and the court say the expression of
;
'
has been adjudicated a bankrupt, but before he has obafter the debtor
of discharge, is
is
:
binding.
This doctrine
sustained by
Brix
v.
Bra-
Otis v. Gazelin, 31
v.
Me. 567;
;
Swaim, 2 Penn.
is
L. J. 393
Kelly, 67 N. C. 78.
The con-
trary doctrine
authorities,
an intention to do a thing is not a promise to do it. An intention is but the purpose a man forms in his own mind a promise is an express undertaking or agreement to carry the purpose into effect.' But a case in its essential features the same as that now before the court was decided in 1851 by the supreme court of Massachusetts. Pratt V. Russell, 7 Cush. 462." 3 Badger v. Gilmore, 33 N. H. 361
;
so
:
as
we have been
v.
Maxim
v.
Way
v.
v.
able to discover
IngersoU
Rhoades,
Erwin
Saun-
697
513.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVI.
But the
The
now based
the
of a statute relieving
him from
indebtedness.
"Where
yet
he be protected from liability by some provision of the common law meant for his advantage, he may renounce the benefit of that law and if he promises to pay the debt, which is only what an honest man ought to do, he And it has been is then bound by the law to perform it."^ promise to pay a debt which has held in this countrj' that a been voluntarily released is void as without consideration.^
if
statute or
Earnest v. Parke, 4 Rawle, 452 Thomas v. Hodgson, 4 Whart. 492; Turner v. Crisman, 20 Ohio, 332; McWillie r. Kirkpatrick, 28 Miss. 802. Per cur. Earle i'. Oliver, 2 Ex. 90
;
'
Eastwood v. Kenyon, In England promises to pay debts discharged in bankruptcy are now by statute void. That such is also the case with promises to pay debts which were incurred in inally overruled in
11 Ad.
&
El. 438.
same
A.
effect see
Eastwood
o.
v.
v.
To the Kenyon, 11
See discussion in
Lang. Cont.,
668
ii.
1028;
Leake, 2d ed.
&
E. 447
;
Beaumont
v.
Reeve, 8 Q.
supra, 43.
v.
B. 487
Flight
Reed, 1 H.
&
C. 766
Warren
v.
and
see
Wal bridge
Harroon, 18 Vt.
Valentine
520;
Met. (Mass.)
448; Way v. Sperry, 6 Cush. 338; Shepard v. Rhodes, 7 R. I. 470 Scouton V. Eislord, 7 Johns. 36 Shippey v. Henderson, 14 Johns. 178 Geer v. Archer, 2 Barb. 424 Ehle v. Judson, 24 Wend. 97 Harper v. Fairley, 53 N. Y. 442 Turner i'. Crisman, 20 Ohio, 332 Runnamaker v. Cordray, 54 111. 303 Simonton v. Clark, 65 N. C. 525. In Geer v. Archer, 2 Barb. 424, it was
; ; ; ; ;
;
Hale v. Rice, 124 Mass. 292; Shepard v. Rhodes, 7 R. I. 470 Snevily though see, V. Reed, 9 Watts, 396 24 contra, Hemphill v. McClimans, Penn. St. 367"; Willing v. Peters, 12
; ;
S.
&
R. 177.
In Ingersoll
v.
Martin,
Ap. Md. 1882, 13 Rep. 782, it is held that a promise to pay a released debt is void for want of consideration, following Warren v, Whitney, 24 Me.
Ct. of
rightly said:
"The
maxim
v.
it
test is,
it
could
it
561
Shepard
v.
Rhodes, 7 R.
I.
470
was barred
5
by the
sion."
legal
or statute provi-
In Lee
Muggeridge,
as
Taunt.
Peters,
12 S.
179,
&
R. 177.
In Mete, on
said
36, however,
was held,
for
we have
Cont.
after
citing Valentine r.
it
woman gave a
money then
is
"The
case
money.
between the validity of a promise to pay a claim that is discharged by operation of positive law, and a claim that
698
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
[ 514.
In
may
be cited the
charged for want of notice of dishonor, become liable, if, after notice of such discharge, they promise payment.^ Whether the party promising had notice is to be inferred from all the Under the same head are sometimes classed facts in the case.^
promises by infants, which, it is alleged, are subject to ratification when they reach majority, and promises of married women renewed after divorce or their husband's death. But
the analogy with the case of an infant
fails
from the
fact that
bound, though not capable of enforcement during his minority, and was subject to repudiation upon his majority.^ A married woman's promise, on the other hand, is at common law a nullity, which no subsequent promise can resuscitate.*
514. An executed act (i.e., an act already performed) cannot constitute a valid consideration unless a request ^ An exeto perform such act be proved. That a benefit has cuted act been conferred on me, for instance, without my re- cousidera.
*'*
my
whom
the
morally obligatory
kindness done me,
it,
not only
is
am
but a promise
1034.
been recognized and applied by other courts. See ex parte Hall, 1 Deacon, Stafford v. Bacon, 1 Hill, N. Y. 171 532 Warren v. Whitney, 24 Me. 562 Lewis V. Simons, 1 Handy, 82 Montgoraery t'. Lampton, 3 Met. (Ky.) 519 Shepard v. Knowles, 7 R. I. 474 contra, Willing v. Peters, 12 S. & R. 177."
;
^ Lundie v. Robertson, 7 East, 231 Gibbon v. Coggon, 2 Campb. 188 Pickin v. Graham, 1 C. & M. 725 Byram v. Hunter, 36 Me. 217 Andrews v. Boyd, 3 Met. 434 Breed v. Hillhouse, 7 Conn. 523; Dorsey v. Watson, 14
;
;
Miss. 59.
3 Kent, 113
text, see 1
;
East;
438 Streeter v. Horlock, 1 Bing. 34 Oakes Manter v. V. Gushing, 24 Me. 313 Churchill, 127 Mass. 31 Bulkley v. Chaffee v. Landon, 2 Conn. 404
E.
; ;
Kenyon, 11 A.
&
among other cases, Sigerson v. Matthews, 20 How. U. S. 496 Thornton v. Wynn, 12 Wheat, 183 Farrington v. Brown, 7 N. H. 271 Andrews v. Boyd, 3 Met. 434 Tebbetts v. Dowd, 23 Wend. 379.
citing,
;
; ; ;
8
''
et seq.
Thomea,
Cow. 358.
That a release
699
514.]
CONTRACTS.
part to repay
it, if
[CHAP. XVI.
it, is
on
my
void for
want of consideration.^ The reasons may be thus stated (1) To banish expressions of gratitude from conversation would be to impose on conversation an insufferable burden, yet expressions of gratitude would have to be suppressed if
they were the subjects of suits in courts of justice. (2) In the long run, the welfare of society is more promoted by a system in which it is understood that acts of kindness are gratuitous, than it would be were it understood that when a benefit is conferred and acknowledged then a suit could be maintained
on the acknowledgment. (3) To make an executed act a consideration would be to virtually declare that considerations
are not necessary in cases of prior dealings between the parto do away with the entire sanction of conAfter a benefit, no matter how great, has been received, and the transaction is terminated, the plaintiff suffers the same detriment, and the defendant retains the same
ties,
and hence
sideration.
is
made
or not.
The
past
is
to gain by promising,
is
all, it will support a promise at any future period if it will not support a promise at any future period, which is conceded, it ought not to support a promise at all.^ In some of the old English cases it is
Leake, 2d ed. 19 Hughes, 7 T. R. 350 Roscorla Hopkins v. V. Thomas, 3 Q. B. 234 Logan, 5 M. & W. 241 Eastwood v. Kenyon, 11 A. & E. 438 Lonsdale v. Brown, 4 Wash. C. C. 148 Comstock r. Smith, 7 Johns. 87 Parker v. Crane, 6 Wend. 649 Johnston v. Johnston, 31 Penn. St. 450 Chambers V. Davis, 3 Whart. 40 Hopkins r.
'
;
Supra, 494
v.
Riggs
;
r.
Bullingham, Cro.
Rann
Townsend v. Hunt, Cro. Lampleigh v. Brathwaite, Car. 408 Hob. 106 are shown by Mr. Langdell to have been on this point clearly
715
;
overruled.
As an
stated in 1880, railroad
above
may
McMahan
1035
r. et
v.
ticular time
ii.
seq,
The
Pearle
r.
Edwards,
Leon.
102
Barker
Halifax,
Cro.
The contract turned out badly, and C. incurred great losses. The company then agreed to pay any debts that C. had incurred in the prosecution of the
700
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDEKATION.
is
[ 514.
a sufficient con-
goods or service which I previously requested, then a promise on my part to pay for such goods or service will be held to be on a sufficient consideration. But this position cannot be sustained. Either my request implied a promise to pay or it did not. If it did, then the suit must be brought on the request, thus implj'ing the promise. If it did not, then my promise, after the benefit has been received, is without consideration. If, to illustrate this distinction, I order goods from a grocer whom I am dealing with on the basis of paying for what I take, then my order implies a promise to pay and when he sues me, he sues on this implied promise.^ On the other hand, if I ask a member of my family to do me a service, such a request does not imply a promise to pay f and not only can no suit be brought for such service, but a subsequent promise to pay for it, after the service has been received, is without consideration.^ The question whether there was a promise to pay concurrent with the acceptance of the goods or services is to be determined from all the circumstances of the case; and where a party accepts a benefit knowing it is one for which payment is expected to be made, then a promise to pay may be inferred.* Where the facts in the pleading sustain the implication, there need be no express averment of request.'^ An express promise made sub;
if
from the promise which the law implies from the same consideration. Thus a promise to pay
essentially different
*
work. It was held that this agreement was without consideration. Ayres
V.
Supra, 7
infra,
;
709
et seq.
Had
the agree-
ment been
Saund. 264, note Mete, on Cont. 200 Wilson v. Edmonds, 4 Foster, Oatfield v. Waring, 14 Johns, 546
1
; ;
tractor resuming work, the law would have been otherwise. See infra,
192.
*
Infra,
709
et
;
seq.;
852
1
et seq.
Smith, 7 Johns. 88
10 Johns. 243
;
Hicks
v.
Supra, 7.
719.
;
Doty
Infra,
8
Johns. 382.
Lampleigh
;
Am.
;
f.
Brathwaite, Hob.
105
S.
C,
Kaye
v.
Dutton, 7 M.
&
G. 807
Ros-
Am.
ed. 280
corla v.
Jackson
701
515.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVI.
on a future day cannot ordinarily be sustained on an account stated, though a general request to pay may be inferred;^ nor is a promise of warranty, after a perfected sale, sustainable when from the mere fact of sale no such promise can be
inferred.^
515. It
Continuing
consideration will
may
be,
is only,
part
support promise.
coutinuous scrvicc, and while this service has been begun but has not yet been completed, the party
'
benefited promises to
pay
for
it.^
Under
is
this rule, a
retrospective
and so of marriage.'
has been taken in regard to the consideration of a lessee permanently occupying and paying rent. Promises made in
respect to existing debts, also,
when
made on
a continuous consideration,^
The
was held where the plaintiff declared sideration he had bought three parcels of land
same
rule
lar day, the
make him
sufficient assurance
sale.^
not sufficient
any repairs which are not the of landlord.^ ordinary duty a A continuous guaranty is, from the nature of the case, a continuing consideration and a continuous guaranty is one which is meant to remain in force until terminated by its own limitations,- or by notice.*"
to sustain a promise to put on
Hopkins
Roscorla
v.
v.
Cotten
v.
v.
Wesv.
Supra, 513
ed. 74
;
cott,
Pearle
;
Unger,
Noble,
Am.
^ 9
Hodge
Cro. Eliz. 94
Leon, 102
517;
Carroll v.
t\
Nixon,
4W. & S.
As
Carman
Warcop
1 Ch.
v.
v.
9 Barr, 366.
to continuous
prom-
Brown
fall v.
74
Horse-
Mather, Holt, N. P.
w Brandt on Suretyship,
seg.; Heffield v.
;
130
et
infra, 537.
Pearle
v. linger,
Meadows, L. R.4 C. P. 595 Nottingham Hide Co. v. Bothrill, L. R. 8 C. P. 694 Mussey v. Rayner, 22 Pick. 223 Boston, etc. Glass Co. v.
;
702
CHAP. XVI.]
516.
CONSIDERATION.
[ 516.
undue influence be
if
set up,
material,
the consideration was adequate, prices would have to be fixed not by parties,
'j^nt
by courts.
A consideration, it
is
said
by
Tindal, C.
tift'
tained by the
in-
convenience
suffered
may
performed or inconvenience
with the consent, express or implied, as sufiicient considerations have been held the dating an account,^ the showing of a deed,^ and the making an afiBdavit in exposition of a case,* the parting with a letter which belonged to the promisee,' the trust manifested in a bailee by depositing with him goods for delivery.
plaintiff
by the
of the defendant."^
And
Moore,
119
Mass.
435
Melendy
v.
C. E. Green, 441
Harlan
v.
Harlan, 20
Penn. Penn.
111.
St. St.
;
4
V.
V.
W. &
S.
;
517
Carman
v.
Noble, 9
475
Barr, 36(5
and see
5
as instances
;
Wood
v.
Iowa, 689
651
;
Hitchcock
Humfrey,
1
M. & G. 559
J.,
Burgess
Laythoarp
v.
Bryant,
tit.
3 Scott, 250
Haskell, 4 Desaus. McDonald, 33 Ark. 97. In Brooks v. Haigh, 10 Ad. & El. 323, it was held that a piece of paper on which a void contract is drawn is a sufl5cient consideration for a guaranty
Butler
v.
Woodrufl'
v.
"Assumpsit;" adopted in Leake, 2d 1 Ch. on Con. 11th Am. ed. ed. 611 29. That detriment is essential see supra, 505. That its amount is immaterial, see Westlake v. Adams,
;
of 10,000/.
2 8 * *
Haws
V.
Sturlyn
Albany, Cro.
Eliz. 67.
Brooks
V.
5 C. B. N. S. 248
Harrison
;
v.
Guest,
C. 490
6
N.
8 H.
L. Ca.
481
Erwin
v.
v.
Parham,
Supra, 505.
And see
v.
generally to
Maxwell, 6 Wall. 273 Nash v. Lull, 102 Mass. 60 Lee v. Kirby, 104 Mass. 420 Rutgers V. Lucet, 2 John. Ca. 92 Worth Earl v. Peck, 64 V. Case, 42 N. Y. 362
Slater
; ;
12 How. 197;
same
effect Coles v.
;
Trecothick, 9 Ves.
Jun. 246
Le, 488
;
Murray
Eyre
v.
Palmer, 2 Sch.
&
Potter, 15
How. 42
;
Bedel
V.
v.
Loomis, 11 N. H. 9
;
Howard
Edgell, 17 Vt. 9
v.
v.
Snyder, 2
Weitling, 3
703
517.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVI.
" If a contract is deliberately made without fraud and with full consideration of all the circumstances, the least consideration will be sufficient."^
517.
Courts will
or bad bargain,
mine
s*uffi-
^^ud,
is
ciency.
to determine.
ness
must decide
for himself
is
a particular object
Every person competent to do busiwhether the price he receives for sufficient to induce him to part with it.
"What may be very inadequate to the mind of a stranger may be adequate to me. There may be particular reasons why I want to buy particular property or to obtain the services of a particular agent and these reasons I alone can weigh. If I
;
sell
its
it
know
what
it
really is
and beside
maj' be reasons,
Aside from
prices
this, for
rule
would be in conflict with the established economical that by parties in business alone can prices be justly
Hence,
it is
a settled principle that " the adequacy the consideration is for the parties to consider at the time making the agreement, not for the court when it is sought be enforced.'"'' The rule is applied in equity as well as
fixed.
see
of of
to in
Austyn
v.
v.
20 Penn. 22 Penn.
St.
303
Greaves
McAllister, 2
St. 245.
Harlan v. Harlan, 20 Penn. St. 303. Wilde, J., Train v. Gould, 5 Pick, 384, cited Read v. Hitchings, 71 Me. 596. To same effect see Nash v. Lull, 102 Mass. 60 Howe v. Richards, 102
'
;
518.
As
Bainbridge
in which
it
Firmstone, 8 A.
if
Mass. 64 n; Hardisty
41.
*
v.
Smith, 3 Ind.
9 Q. B. 57
E. 743.
them up
613; Bainbridge
Beale, 11 A.
Firmstone, 8 A.
effect
;
&
v.
tion as before.
See to same
Skeate
Lawrence v. McCalmont, 2 How. 426 Newhall v. Paige, 10 Gray, 366 Leonard v. Vredenburgh, 8 Johns. 29 Cowel v. Cornell, 75 N. Y. 91; Harlan v. Harlan,
E. 983
;
;
&
Lord Denman, "had some reason for wishing to weigh the boilers, and he could do so only by obtaining permission from the plaintiff,
which he did
good condition."
704
CHAP. XVI.]
law.'
CONSIDERATION.
is
[ 518.
That the giving up of goods to a bailee a sufficient conthem safely, has When there conflicting construcshown.^ are been already
sideration for a promise on his part to keep
tions assignable to a disputed consideration, that will be ac-
cepted which
518.
is most consistent with good faith.^ Although the courts will not determine the question of the adequacy of a consideration, if the issue be
presented singly, yet, if the issue of fraud be raised, ^'^acymay pegrouna of consideration is of decisive importthe adequacy J^ ^ to set aside. ance. Where the consideration is grossly inadequate
'' _
,
in
any way
authority or influence over the other party, then, as we have seen, the bargain is one which a court of equity will not only refuse to execute, but will rescind.^ Gross inadequacy of consideration, by itself, therefore, is not ground for setting aside a conveyance, but it may be of controlling moment in determining whether a conveyance was fraudulent.' A court of equity, also, will not give its aid to the enforcement of a barhe expected to derive. Chadwick, 18 Wall. 141, also, a release of a supposed right of dower, though actually unfounded, was held a good consideration. In Gravely v. Barnard, L. R. 18 Eq. 518, it was held that an agreement to continue an existing service terminable at will is a good consideration. 1 Pollock, 159 1 Ch. on Cont. 11th Am. ed. 30 1 Sug. V. & P. 8th Am. ed. 273 Cheale v. Kenward, 3 De G. & Taylor v. Manners, L. R. 1 Ch. J. 27 48 Lee v. Kirby, 104 Mass. 420 Osgood r. Franklin, 2 John. Ch. 23 Haines v. Haines, 6 Md. 435 Comstock
benefit
v.
what
Madison Co.
v.
v.
Peo-
In Sykes
456
Case
Case, 26 Mich.
484
239.
s
et seq., 239, 376 et Kerr on Fraud and Mist. 187 Gwynne t'. Heaton, 1 Bro. C. C. 5
Supra, 157
seq.
Emigrant Co. v. Wright Co., 97 U. S. 339 Shepard v. Rhodes, 7 R. I. 470 Byers v. Surget, 19 How. 303; East;
man
v.
v..
S.
C 14
Eq. 245
269
149
;
V.
Purple, 49
111.
;
158
Harrison
v.
Melick v. Dayton, 34 N. J. Johnson v. Dorsey, 7 Gill, M'Kinney v. Pinckard, 2 Leigh, Judge v. Wilkins, 19 Ala. 765
; ;
Davidson
v. Little,
Morris
chell
v.
Mitv.
St. 245.
V.
Schnell
Supra, 505.
654.
;
* Infra,
*
in consideration of
and see Borell V. Dann, 2 Hare, 450 Summers V. Griffiths, 35 Beav. 27 Hamet v. DunSee supra, 157-165, 239
;
VOL.
I.
45
705.
520.]
CONTRACTS.
is
[CHAP. XVI.
gain which
rule
I.
peculiarly hard
and unconscionable.^
Of
this
we have an
C, a
creditor.
mature, demanded the amount due. The company refused to pay until a blank receipt on the back of the policy was filled
up by
I.'s wife.
sum
of money.
It
was
was
to be regarded as exorbitant,
as unconscionable.*
is also to be observed that while courts will not undertake to determine prices, a consideration that ^^
and absolutely valueless will be reHence a covenant by a garded as insufficient.^ invalid. -iii-ii grantee of land that he will build on the land such a house as he thought fit, as it does not bind him to anything, is not a sufficient consideration to sustain the deed against subsequent purchasers for value from the grantor;* and so, as we have seen, it has been held that a promise to do what a party is already bound to do is no consideration for a promise
on^iuteriy vaiueiess is
ueccssarily
in return.'^
And
utter inadequacy
may
of fraud.
520.
When
tivc.
is
made
Money paid fails absolutely, then the promise becomes inoperaof consid^
This
et
is
Supra,
165, 239
;
seq.;
Kelley
r.
see
pham's Eq.
Am.
So.
ed. 31
;
Kan. 232,
as another case of
an unconscionable
ed. 275
Tennent
;
651
Ap. 6 Willard
bargain.
^
Am.
;
ed. 29
Sykes
37
v.
Dixon, 9 Ad.
&
;
E. 693
Cabot r. Has-
Howard r. Edgell, 17 Vt. 9 Chamberlin, 41 Vt; 62 Franklin, 2 Johns. Ch. 23 527 Seymour v. Delancy, 3
;
; ; ;
Kidder v. Osgood r. 14 Johns. Cow. 445 Hough V. Hurst, 2 Ohio, 495 Williams V. Powell, 1 Ired. Eq. 460 Butler v. Haskell, 4 Dessaus. 651 Gasque v. Small,
; ; ;
kins, 3 Pick. 83
Pfeiffer v. Adler,
v.
N. Y. 164
134.
*
Maull
v.
Vaughan, 45 Ala.
Kosher
Supra,
Williams, L. R. 20 Eq.
210.
s ^
500.
2 Strobh.
72.
706
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
[ 520.
;^
supposing that this is not attributable in any way covered to the misconduct of the promisor f or that the risk is not one against which he guarantees.^ The acceptance, by the receiver, of money on any kind of trust, exposes
Ill-
eration
^y
^ '-
him
sideration.*
fails,
and
a warranty either express or implied, the purchaser is entitled to rescind, and recover back the price.' This is a fortiori the case where there is a breach of warranty of title.^
there
is
And
a promise
made under
is
inis
no express warranty of title, the prevalent opinion is, that a party selling goods as his own gives an implied warranty of title f and that total failure of title is a defence to a suit for purchase money .^ It has also been held, that the price of goods sold which the seller fails to deliver may be recovered back;^" and so of money paid as a deposit on application for shares in a projected company which is subsequently abandoned ;^^ and BO of money paid to a corporation on an undertaking which
Supra, 300.
Supra, 309.
* 9
Supra, 230
infra,
;
742
v.
et seq. v.
' *
Tillotson
Supra,
361.
v.
v.
Grapes, 4 N. H. 448
Rice
v.
Goddard,
Whitehead
;
464
143.
5
Shillibeer
Stocking, 11
Infra,
521, 742
seq.;
;
Benj.
v.
bee
V.
V.
423
Giles
Young,
2
6
Scam.
Barr,
S.
Howe Machine
333.
Matthews,
Cook, 3 98
Vickers, 11
111.
Willie, 85
111.
That this
W. &
111.
;
money paid on an
;
327
People
v.
v.
Sisson,
abandoned adventure, see infra, 742 and with money paid for worthless
securities, see infra, 744.
*
335
;
Sturgis Bk.
Peck, 8
of re
214
see
Infra, 746
supra, 214
Eichholz
;
V.
Banister, 17 C. B. N. S. 708
Speller, 14 Q. B. 621.
et
Chap-
Devaux
v.
Couolly,8 C. B. 640
300.
man V.
I
supra, 190
et seq.,
Supra, 177
v.
&
Warder
I'.
Cabot
W.
S.
501
;
Johnson
v.
Goslett, 3 C. B. N.
As
to error in
569
Watson
v.
Charlemont, 12 Q.
et seq.
707
523.]
CONTRACTS.
;^
[chap. XVI.
bills,
was
bills
ultra vires
and
so of
or on
or securities turning out to have beeo forged f and so of money paid for articles turning out to be valueless.^ But a
a speculation which fails cannot, in cases where there was no fraud or imposition, either refuse to pay for the thing purchased, or recover back its price if paid, because it turns out not to be what he expected.^ Whether on a partial failure of consideration there can be a recovery back will be hereafter considered.' 521. But where an unliquidated debt is liquidated, and a new promise is made to pay the sura thus assessed,
party
who buys on
Release of
unliqui-
is
a sufficient con-
dated debt
a sufficient consideration for
new
promise.*
And
a pay-
ment of a smaller
dated sum.^
sura in
hand may be a
sufficient
old agreement
One consideration
new agreement which the reconstruction contains.^ 522. One and the same consideration may support several successive promises, or several promises
to distinct persons.^
prom-
ises.
523.
Promise
As
may
port
ise.
sup-
And when
prom
>
Alison's
case,
et seq.
L.
Cli.
24;
V.
Lamert
v.
supra, 135
*
Heath, 15 M.
Jones
v.
& W.
487.
Infra,
744;
Ryde, 5
6
6
Taunt. 488
E.
&
8
B. 133
1000
Wilkinson
v.
Byers, 1 A.
'
&
E. 106.
v.
C. B. 345.
Longridge
;
Dorville, 5 B.
v.
&
Aid.
Supra, 282
V.
infra,
746
117
Palmerton
Tillotson
Grapes, 4
Vaughan
inson
kiss
V.
V.
V.
v. Porter,
16 Vt. 266
N. H. 448; Dick;
937,
Hotch-
1000.
8
Chapman
;
Infra, 858
;
et seq. ;
supra, 505,
Brooklyn, 40 N. Y. 372
Davis
v. v.
533
Cutter
Rollins
r.
v. v.
408
Brown
;
Infra, 749
v.
Leake, 614
Ven-
Erwin
Parkham, 12 How. 97
Forbes
ables, L. R. 7
Ex. 235.
708
-.
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
[ 523.
be sued on by the party to whom the promise is made," supposing him to be in no default.^ Each party, in such case, must be bound, as otherwise there is no mutuality, and no contract;* though, as we will presently see, an obligation may be contingent.^ As illustrations of promises thus made in
consideration of each other
ises
;*
may
promises of exchange of
work
;'
a railroad
company
;^
Promises
it
thus to sus-
must be simultaneous.
is
not, therefore, a
good consideration.
The
from
this,
take their origin at the same time. One may have been made a long time ago, the other may have been made only a few moments since. All that is necessary is that they should be
renewed and reaffirmed at the time of the inception of the " I will promise to do a particular thing if you will contract. promise to do a certain other thing." If this be agreed to by the party addressed, there is a contract. There would be no contract, however, if one party should say, " because some
1 Wilkinson v. Byers, 1 A. & E. 106 Steinman v. Magnus, 11 East, 390 Bolton V. Madden, L. R. 9 Q. B. 55
Ired. 257;
Martin
v.
v.
Black, 20 Ala.
;
309
Hartzell
see Holmes's
Common Law,
Phillips
V.
V.
Preston, 5
Appleton
.
Chase, 19 Me. 74
;
Robinson
;
v.
2 Hopkins v. Logan, 5 M. & W. 241 Dorsey v. Packwood, 12 How. 126 Ewins v. Gordon, 49 N. H. 444 supra,
;
;
Batchelder, 4 N.
H. 40
Quarles
v.
v.
2.
Burr
Wilcox,
v.
13 Allen, 269
Ken-
Wightman
v.
v.
Coates, 15 Mass. 1
7
Tucker
v.
Woods,
Willard
537.
^
Stone,
Cow. 22
infra,
12 John. 120
647
;
Briggs
v.
v. Sizer,
30 N. Y.
;
Coleman
V.
Eyre, 45 N. Y. 38
;
Giles
Kiester
v.
mJ.
Penn. St. 481 Carrier v. fra, 549. ^ Cheale Dilworth, 59 Penn. St. 406 Watkins r. Hodges, 6 Har. & J. 38 Funk v. 27.
Miller, 25
;
Kenward, 3 De G.
Reid, 9 Bing. 68.
&
Hough, 29
111.
145
Colgin
v.
v.
Henley,
McNeill
v.
6 Leigh, 85;
Whitehead
Potter,
709
524.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVI.
"time
to
ago you promised to do a particular thing, I now promise do the other thing. "^ Promises, therefore, to thus lend support to each other, must be reciprocally dependent. When forming an oral contract, they must be simultaneous. If one promise is not made until the other is complete, one is not the consideration for the other, even though they were made on the same day.^ If made in a written correspondence, the acceptance must be conditioned on the proposal.' They must therefore be, in the eye of the law, made at the same moment of time, as otherwise both will be without consideration. If one
on as a promise may be a good consideration for a promise as a promissory note or acceptance for another promissory note or acceptance. But the promise wiiich shall form a valid consideration must be such a one as the promisee may have in hand to enforce by law."' It may be said, in answer to this, that an infant is not
is
falls.
The promise,
;
also, relied
"
bound on
since he
may
may
is a nullity,^ and so is an illegal Absolute capacity to perform is not necessary, since, What is requisite is if it were, few promises would be good. such a chance of performance as the other contracting party may find it worth while to purchase.^ As has already been seen, the concessions which form part of the reconstruction of an old agreement may form the consideration of a new con-
But an infant's contracts are not void, them when of full age, or waive the defence Such promises, also, must be to do a possible thing,
ratify
tract.io
524.
1
31-2
and see
to the ef-
Livingston
Rogers,
feet
that mutuality
Supra,
510.
is essential, supra,
Keep v. Goodrich, 12 1 Caines, 585 Johns. 397. As to conditional promises, see infra,
s
*
2.
'
545
et seq.
Supra, 509.
Supra, 8
et seq.
Supra, 509.
'
Knapp,
J.,
Crowell
v.
Osborne, 43
v. Wallace, 3 T. R. 17 HasSherwood, 10 Bing. 540, are to be understood in the sense of the text.
9
;
Nerot
v.
lam
N.
J. L. 335.
w Supra,
505
infra, 858.
710
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
[ 525.
raay be revoked before acceptance;^ but this eontin- Promise though 1 ^^ gency does not prevent a promise to sell certain contingent goods, if ordered, from being a good consideration ^o^^onfor a contract between the party so promising and sideration.
'
"The
consideration for a
is,
promise
may
it
may
consist in
the doing something by the promisee which he need not do unless he chooses, but which being done by him the contract
complete and the promise binding."' Whether a continuing offer to supply to a particular party goods indefinitely for a particular period binds him unless the promisee agrees to depend on him exclusively, or there be an acceptance for specific goods, raay be doubted.* guaranty, however, dependent
is
on the employment of a particular person, would be good.' Contingent promises of this class may be retracted at any time until some act based on them is done by the other contracting Any surrender of a right on the other side, no matter party. how slight, even though amounting only to an understanding
that there shall be a suspension of inquiries elsewhere, will be a consideration for a promise to keep open an oft'er.^ 525. A promise to support an illegitimate child in consideration of its surrender by its mother, and other promise to forbearance on her part, will be sustained as made f"PP?.'"*^5 ^ illegitimate on sufficient consideration.^ Hence it has been held child good that a bond for an annuity by the father to the good conmother of illegitimate children conditioned on her ^^^^^''^tioii' '
Supra, 10.
2
3
See supra,
16
infra,
575
et seq.
as
to
continuous
considerations
see
supra, 515.
5 Newbury v. Armstrong, 6 Bing. 201 Kennaway V. Treleavan, 5 M. & W. 501.
6
^
Great N. R. R.
P. 16.
to Pollock,
Routledge
See supra,
v.
v.
Kendall, 121
13.
v.
and see cases cited supra, Turnpike Co. v. Coy, 13 Oh. St. 84 and see Babcock v. Wilson, 17 Me. 372 Appleton v. Chase, 19 Me. 74.
Mass. 528
16
; ; ;
Jennings
v.
Brown,
M.
& W.
&
5
496
Ridley
Hammersley
Alderson
293
V.
;
De
v.
Biel, 12 CI.
v.
Maddison, L. R.
F. 45 Ex. D.
;
See Great N. R. R.
v.
v.
Witham,
ut
Holcome
V.
supra; Thayer
Burchard, 99 Mass.
Howe
Litchfield, 3 Allen,
;
443
v.
Hook
Teese,
508
Bailey
v.
Pratt, 78 N. Y. 376
Sharp
v.
Tinsley, 30
711
526.]
CONTRACTS.
is
[chap. xvr.
good
;^
made on
consideration of the
affiliation.^
It is otherwise,
when
the consideration
is
past
illicit
intercourse.^
526.
Assignment of debt a good considera-
At common
namc,^
it
. i
own
.
and
entitles
him
name
to sue it
statute or by local usage suit may be most jurisdictions by the party beneficially interested.^ This is the case with negotiable paper, and with negotiable securities such as railway bonds and other similar obligations.^ It is sufficient, on this topic, to say that wherout.**
By
now brought
in
Plaskett's Est. in
;
re,
30 L. J. C.
was no law
606
cited Leake,
;
2d
ed. 620.
;
Supra,
V.
gar
Linnev.
v.
Follit
Smith
In Wallace
v.
by which Walupon her the capacity of inheriting his estate upon his intestacy, to give the contract any force at all, it must be construed as an undertaking on his part to secure to her by deed, will, or some other appropriate
at that time
Rappelye, Sup. Ct. 111. 1881, it appeared that W., the father of an illegitimate child, agreed with the mother,
as she
to, if
ment to him of all claim for damages, and releasing custody of the child, he would adopt the child as his own, and
give her a portion of his estate.
parties, except that
would
This
render
it
inoperative altogether.
This
we
agreement was carried out by both no legal form of adoption was ever had, but the child was taken into the family of her father,
woman
952
Mete, on
and ever after treated as his daughter. It was held that the agreement was
sufficient in equity to sustain the
Cont. 187
V.
Welch Wheat.
Legh,
claim
277
5
Riley
v.
of
such child
to a portion of
her father's
1
Infra, 836
seq.;
Legh
v.
v.
estate.
B.
&
P. 447;
Dunn
Snell, 15
"
What was
really intended
and ob-
Mass. 481.
Mete, on Cont. 188 Dunlop, 8 T. R. 595 Thompson V. Farden, 1 M. & G. 535. 1 Vertue v. R. R., 5 Exch. 280 Thomson v. Lee Co., 3 Wall. 327 ; see
6
Infra, 841
v.
"was
that Wallace
as
in-
Innes
was to adopt such legal measures would secure to the child the same
terest in his estate as she would,
on his
to, if
a legiti-
infra, 838.
mate
child.
If,
as is claimed, there
712
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
is
[ 528.
is
ever a debt
tion.
a good considera-
527.
lease the
Where
who
agree to
re-
re-
common
Releases by
lease
by one creditor
"If you will release him, I equitable; and supposing the transaction to be fair, and there be no concealwill."
ment
his reception of his share of the assets assigned, loses his right
of the
release.^
But a promise by a
is
void
want of consideration.^
528.
A voluntary subscription
when
the consideration
Mutual
subscriptions to charities
..
is
.11.11 made,
..
whom
.
it,
though without other consideration. ^ It is a sufficient consideration that the labor and responsibility of the trust is undertaken by the party to whom the subscription is made, though this condition is inferred from the whole transaction, and is not expressly made,* or by other subscribing
'
Infra,
et seq.
;
1005
and see
svapra,
;
379
Stein-
man
V.
*
Norman
210; Caley v. R. R., 80 Penn. St. 363 Petty v. Board, 70 Ind. 290 Underwood v. Waldron, 12 Mich. 73 Comstock v. Howd, 15 Mich. 237 Lathrop
; ;
; ;
Van
;
Rensselaer
v.
Aiken, 44 N. Y.
et seq.
;
v.
Gait
v.
v.
Swain,
126
3
9 Grat. 633 8 B.
see Collier
;
Baptist Soc,
v.
Trustees
Mon. 68
;
Robertson
March, 3
State Treasurer
Goss,
v.
Vt. 289
Scam. 198
tions
Bridgewater
Pick.
Academy
v.
Gilbert,
certain promisee.
Goodenow, 5 v. Eames, 9 Gush, Pick. 229 537 Mirick v. French, 2 Gray, 420 Barnes v. Perine, 9 Barb. 202 Knoxboro Church v. Beach, 74 N, Y. 72 Phipps V. Jones, 20 Penn. St. 260
579
; ;
Bryant Watkins
must be accepted
bind, see
Buell, 2
supra, 16 a.
*
University of Vermont
;
v.
Gittings
V.
Mayhew,
v.
Md. 113
Edin-
Troy Academy v. Nelson, 24 Vt. 189 Homes v. Dana, 12 Mass. 190 "Warren v. Stearns, 19 Pick. 73 Mirick v. French, 2 Gray, 420 Ladies'
Vt. 48
;
boro Acad.
713
528.]
parties.^
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVI.
A fortiori
"
is
when
there
is
any outlay
by
trustee or fellow-subscriber
on the
sued on.2
ity or
duty assumed, in reliance upon the subscription, in order to carry out the object, the promises are binding and may be enforced, although no pecuniary advantage is to result to the promisors."^ But the endowment, actual and prospective, of a literary institution
by others
is
is
exertions to
made by
that B.
induced to subscribe
196
vis,
Jar-
Barnes
v.
Ferine, 9
;
Barb. 202
Gait
Caul
v.
Grafif V. Pitts.
V.
R. R., 31 Penn.
;
489
Commis.
v.
Perry, 5 Ohio, 56
the death of the promisor, it would have stood on the footing of the principle applied in Chambers v. Calhoun, 6 Harris (18 Penn. St.), 13; for in such case, if the trustees assumed the duty imposed upon them by the terms or conditions of the note, it would have
111.
Hall
v.
v.
Virginia,
been a
535; Mouton
;
Noble, 1 La.
But,
when
the de-
An. 192 Collier v. B. E. Society, 8 B. Mon. 68 Lathrop v. Knapp, 27 Wis. 214; Philomath College v. Hartless, 6
;
cedent died, the trustees had not accepted the note, and his death was a
Oreg. 158
290.
see Petty
v.
Board, 70 Ind.
377.
Miller
v.
Ballard, 46
v.
111.
countermand in law of the offer, for such it must be considered until acIn Phipps V. Jones, 8 Harris cepted. (20 Penn. St.), 260, where there was a
subscription with others for the benefit
of a proposed association
to build a
it was a mere proposal, revocable until the association was formed and the promise accepted, and that the death of the subscriber was such a revocation." * Hamilton College v. Stewart, 2
Knoxboro Church
;
Beech, 74 N. Y.
72
'
Robertson
89,
Commissioners v. Perry, 5 Ohio, v. Ruley, 5 Ind. 69. In Helfenstein's Est., 77 Penn. St. 331, Sharswood, J., said: "Had the decedent united with others as a sub185
59
;
Peirce
Denio, 403
5
S.
C,
1 Comst. 581.
the appellant
and cases cited supra. See Pitt V. Gentle, 49 Mo. 74. In the London Law Times of May 21,
Ibid.,
made
have been sustained under the case of Caul v. GibOr if the note had son, 3 Barr, 416. been accepted by the trustees before
his claim might
1881,
is
the following:
"We
see
it
714
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
[ 528.
by C. subscribing is a good consideration for B.'s subscription depends upon whether C. loses any right or suffers any detri500, which he had promised towards
the
set
undersigned, hereby
bind
our-
selves, individually, to
sum to the faculty committee in 1877. He had paid no portion of it until the
committee had not only done the work,
to
aggregate, $10,000
so secured
is
pro-
pledged by
object,
but had
active
part against
faculty committee.
Grinnell, March 20, 1, 1870. The defendant had judgment, and plaintiflF appealed. The judgment was affirmed in the supreme court. The question,' said Day, J., involved in this case is whether the proof shows
1869.'
' '
August
Lord Cowper then refused to pay any on that ground, and so pleaded in his defence to the
of his subscription
action.
On
conflict that the subscription sued upon was without consideration. In Meth. E. Church v. Kendall, 121 Mass. 528, which is comparatively a
without
has been abandoned. It has always been a moot point whether, and under
recent case,
what
ered.
conditions, subscriptions
prom-
of
and which contains the supreme court Massachusetts upon the question of
employed
:
ised to a charitable
It
The performance
of
But in Cottage met with success. Street Church v. Kendall (121 Mass. 528), cited by Pollock on Contracts, 2d ed. 598, note, the earlier dicta, that
a sufficient consideration that others were led to subscribe by the very subscription of the defendant,'
'it
is
depends wholly upon the good-will which prompted them, and will not be enforced by the
gratuitous
promises
law.
is
that,
in
were overruled.
must have been made upon a legal consideration moving from the promisee to the promisor. Exchange Bank v. Rice, 107 Mass. 37. To constitute such consideration there must be either a benefit to the maker of the promise, or
a
loss, trouble, or
inconvenience
the
to,
or
whom
promise
is
made.'
most of the Massachusetts cases cited by appellant's counsel are referred to, and it is
In this
case,
declared that
this
in every case in
which
action
was
to recover the
to
amount
of a sub-
court has
sustained
an
scription
the
University
:
of
Des
'
upon a promise
ant's
"
For
and
either
by
and known
legal or equiact,
table, or else
by some unequivocal
715
528.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVI.
ment by
his subscription. If he does if his promise, by the law to which he is subject, binds hira ;^ if he pays up, either in whole or in part, or gives a sealed instrument or negotiable paper on which his liability is fixed, then in such case B. is bound.^ Supposing, however, that the subscription is merely tentative supposing that from the whole state of facts involved it is to be gathered that until certain independent conditions are complete the money shall not be due then there is no consideration until these conditions are complete.^
such as advancing or expending money, or erecting a building, in accordance with the terms of the contract, and upon the faith of the defendant's promise.'
20 Conn. 178;
Garrett
;
v.
v.
R. R., 78
Ballard, 46
;
Penn.
111.
St.
;
465
Miller
v.
377
Peirce
Ruley, 5 Ind. 69
The colhad been purchased, and the debt in question had been contracted, before that time. The plaintiff
did not even obligate
itself to raise
Comstock V. Howd, 15 Mich. 237; Smith V. Plank-Road Co., 30 Ala. 650. As to effect of seal, see Ball v. Dunsterville, 4 T. R. 313 Cooch v. Goodman,
;
2 Q. B. 580.
'
Ives v. Sterv.
M'Auley
Billenger,
the
sum
of $10,000.
The
case
v.
is,
in prin-
ciple,
Trustees, 2
20 Johns. 89 Ayers's App., 28 Penn. Commissioners v. Perry, 5 St. 179 Ohio, 58; Stuart v. R. R., 32 Grat.
;
Den. 403 S. C, 1 N. Y. 581, in which it was held there could be no recovery. See Limerick Academy v. Davis, 11 Mass. 113. In most of the authorities
cited
146
supra, 16 a.
v.
French, 16
Gray, 196, where the implied promise of the promisee to disburse in conformity with the terms of the subscription
tion,
by appellant
it
sufficient
considera-
C. J., said:
"Sub-
have been
made the
instances
subject of litigation in
;
many
and the
not err in directing a verdict for the defendant upon the proof admitted.' "
1
See supra,
523
;
infra, 595.
v.
Infra, 595
Oilman
Veazie, 24
some of which have not been sustained by later decisions. But in the cases of Amherst Acad. V. Cowls, 6 Pick.' 427 Williams College V. Danforth, 12 Pick. 541 and
reports contain dicta,
;
;
Me. 202; George v. Harris, 4 N. H. 533 Cong. Soc. in Troy v. Perry, 6 N. Fisher v. Ellis, 3 Pick. 323 H. 164 AmTrustees v. Stetson, 5 Pick. 506
;
Thompson
validity
of
it
v.
is
established,
is
definitely stated.
held
herst Acad.
Watkins
V. Cowles, 6 Pick. 427; Eames, 9 Cush. 537 Mirick Brigham r. V. French, 2 Gray, 420 Mead, 10 Allen, 245 Mann v. Cook,
v.
and ap-
716
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
[ 528.
In those states, also, in which it is held that a third party cannot sue B. and C. on a contract made between them for
the subscription, and thus mutual and
in their subscriptions,
made purchases,
and
sufficient
conare
They
and entered into contracts necessary for the consummation of the common enterprise. She is presumed to have assented to all that was done. Those
facts
respect
to
concurrent
promises."
In Carr
v.
was said by
Peters,
J.
and those
ment
of
association
:
containing
clearly show.
following clauses
'
plaintiffs are
for
the sub-
and
vicinity,
They are themselves and operating a cheese subscribers. factory, . and we severally and subscribers. In their name, for the individually bind ourselves, by these benefit of the associates, they conpresents, on or before the first day of tracted for the erection of the factory. May, 1874, to pay our regularly ap- Under the agreement they are the pointed building committee the several payees or promisees by description, in sums set opposite our names for the whose names the subscriptions are colpurpose of building and furnishing lectible for the benefit of all concerned. said factory. The above not to They are the association by repre. . . . .
sentation.
is
presented in
remained inchoate and incomplete, was not binding upon the defendant. It was without consideration. It was
it
mutual
do not
a contract
not
sufficient
consideration
that
same promise,
Foxcroft
;
relying
with a third person, for a want of privity between the subscribers and Thompson v. Page, 1 such person.
Met. 565
;
Cottage
Ives
v. Sterling,
6 ib. 310
;
M. E. Church
v.
Fisher
V.
v. Ellis,
3 Pick. 323
Watkins
;
528.
The
an instructive note, citing and discussing a mass of authorities, in Am. Law Reg. Sept. No. 1877. At this stage of the undertaking the defendant could have withdrawn from it, or
she could continue a party until the
and binding upon her.
Cush. 537; Athol Music Hall V. Carey, 116 Mass. 471 Curry There can be V. Rogers, 21 N. H. 247.
Eames,
no valid objection
selves
808.
to a suit in the
name
them
and
associates.
See infra,
same became a completed agreement She took the latter course. The subscription became completed. Her associates paid
"
It is
But
this
was
717
528.]
his benefit, the
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVI.
mere
binding be-
tween B. and
does not enable the corporation subscribed to, to sue.^ And a mere agreement by A., B.,C., and D. to subscribe a sum opposite
to their names to
named
an}'^
in the paper,
some public object, there being no promisee and no privity of contract between the
one of them on his subscription. It would be otherwise, as we have seen, if a promisee be named who is to make and does make certain efforts in consideration of the subscription.
As between
liability if
the subscribers, also, there would be mutual they agree together to make up a specific sura, so that the withdrawal of one increased the amount to be paid
others.
is
by the
if
there
But if neither of these conditions exists, and no privity of contract between the parties sub-
must be regarded as inchoate or subscription to an incorporated church can a tentative.^ !N'or be enforced by the corporation unless it appear that the subscription was for its specific uses, though the treasurer to
scribing, the subscriptions
whom
bility
the subscription
is
made may
all
sue if
it
was made
to
per-
became
fixed.
It
seems that
release
a company with a corporate name, without any change in the purposes of the association or adding any liabilities to
them
tion
little
more than
'
The vote was without any consideration, and before the vote was acted upon, it was reconsidered and annulled. That affords no defence
to the action."
^
and a name.' Whether the defendant became thereby legally a member of the incorporated body or
not,
it
v.
Kendall, 121
et
Mass. 528;
supra,
184
seq.;
506-7.
That something
to
is
not a reason
scription
why
committee to whom the payment by the agreement was to be made. No right can be taken from her. For any
loss
be done by the institution subscribed to is a consideration for the subscription, see Simpson College v. Bryan,
50 Iowa, 293
*
;
supra, 505.
v.
See George
v.
Harris, 4 N. H. 533
;
or injury caused
by others she
Curry
Farm;
ington Acad.
Reid,
Machias Hotel
Sharp, 6
718
CHAP. XVI.]
sonally to
CONSIDERATION.
[ 530.
him
Until
some
taken on the basis of a subscription to a benevolent or other enterprise, it may be revoked.^ " The promise, in such case, stands as a mere offer, and may, by necessary imaction
is
revoked at any time before it is acted on. It is the expending of money, etc., or incurring of legal liability on the faith of a promise, which gives the right of action, and without which there is no right of action. Until action upon it, there is no mutuality, and, being only an oifer, and susceptible of revocation at anytime before being acted upon, it follows that the death (or insanity) of the promisor, before the offer is acted upon, is a revocation of the offer. "^ It would be otherwise, as has been already stated, if other parties had made themselves legally liable on the faith of the subscription claimed to be revoked. 529. As we have already seen, subscribers to business corporations will be relieved from liabilitj' on subscriptions Fraud vitiP T mi obtained from them by iraud.* ihe same principle ates subplication, be
...
and
religious
^'^"^ ^'
Should
is
subscription
it appear, for instance, that, when the conditioned on raising a specific sum, some of
the subscriptions were to be regarded as merely honorary, or were fictitious, this relieves the parties making the other subscriptions.^
l!^or
if
the object
be materially changed.'
530.
is
patronage is a valid consideration. Thus where A., chS^eof a subscriber to a charity, with B., another patronage J T asrreed b
5
.
Bufflcient.
A. would vote at one meeting for a particular candidate for relief, if B. would at a subsequent meeting vote for another candidate, this agreement was held
subscriber, that
'
Knoxboro Church
10.
v.
Beech, 74 N.
Middlebury College
v.
Looinis,^
Vt. 189.
6
Pratt
V.
v.
Trustees, 93
111.
475
aflf.
Vt. 189
'
in
*
Beach
Church, 96
111.
179.
Wolf, 31 N. Y. 273.
Supra, 276.
v.
Bigelow, 6
Gray, 498.
719
532.]
valkl.^
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVI.
electors to a public office
law.'*
make
it
riorht.^ an equitable ^ '^ by a mortgagor of an equity of redemption is a valid consideration ;* and so, in England, forbearance by the assignee of a debt, whose title is there merely equitable.' 532. Forbearing to press either a legal or equitable claim is a sufficient consideration for a promise. GuarForbearantees of debts are constantly rested on consideraance of legal protions of this kind and when no time of forbearceedings
Sufficient if it be
Hcnce a
release
is
a sufficient
consideration.
ance
is
mean a forbearance
forbearance to
sell
And
goods under a bill of sale, or to execute a writ oifi.fa. has been held a sufficient consideration for a promise by a third party to pay the debt ;* and so of forbearance to press an action for a tort, though it may be that the plaintiff iji such action sustained no actual loss ;^ and so and of withdrawing obof forbearance in issuing execution
;^''
Bolton
y
V.
Madden, L. R.
9 Q. B. 55.
Perkins
V.
v.
Gray, 3
S.
&
;
R. 327
Giles
*
s
v.
Wells,
,9
1 Vent. 40
Gully
;
v.
Bishop of Exeter,
v.
10 B.
&
C. 606
;
Carpenter
v.
Dodge,
20 Vt. 595
Johns. 26
;
;
Pearson
Pearson, 7
2 Strob. Eq. 258 Hartford Ins. Co. v. Olcott, 97 111. 439 see Mechanics' Bk. V. Wixson, 42 N. Y. 438.
;
Whitbeck v. Whitbeck, 9 Cow. 266 Ewing v. Ewing, 2 Leigh, 337. * Thorpe v. Thorpe, 1 L. Raym. 663. 6 Morton v. Burn, 7 A. & E. 19. See
Thornton r. Willatts v. KenFairlie, 2 Moore, 397 nedy, 8 Bing. 5 Union Bk. v. Geary, 5#Pet. 99 Lonsdale v. Brown, 4 Wash. C. C. 148 King v. Upton, 4 Me. 387 Chapin v. Lapham, 20 Pick. 467 Barlow V. Ins. Co., 4 Met. 270 Abbott v. Fisher, 124 Mass. 414 Stewart v. McGuin, 1 Cow. 99 Ward v. Fryer, 19 Wend. 494 Russell v. Cook, 3 Hill, 504;
6
;
Oldershaw
V.
v.
King, 2 H.
&
;
N. 517
;
Coles
Pack, L, R.
5 C. P. 65
Robin-
infra, 532.
son V. Gould, 11 Cush. 55 Sage v. Wilcox, 6 Conn. 81 Watson r. Randall, 20 Wend. 201 Hamaker v. Eberley, 2 Binn. 506; Muirhead u. Kirk; ;
Colgin
v.
Henley, 6 Leigh, 85
see
Cary v. White,
4 Taunt. 117
52 N. Y. 138.
8
Barrel!
V.
r.
Trussell,
Pullin
see
Hockenbury
8
Davis
V.
Morgan, 4 B.
&
C. 8.
w Lent
V.
720
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
vvill,^
[ 532.
a justice's court.^
an executor, and that the consideration is the debt of his testator, relieve the executor from personal liability when he personally promises to pay in consideration of forbearance to the estate.* An agreement, also, hy a petitioner to withdraw his application for winding up a company, is a sufficient consideration for a promise to pay the debt of the party so withdrawing, although there is nothing in the agreement to preclude him from presenting another petition to the same effect." And an agreement by a tax collector to forbear distraining will be a consideration for a promise by the owner to pay the tax.^ Agreements to forbear criminal prosecutions, as we have seen, when amounting to compounding indictable offences, are, on independent grounds, illegal.^ But there is no reason why such agreements to forbear should not be valid, and hence should form a sufficient consideration for a promise, in cases where the prosecution is only quasi criminal, and is virtually for the collection of a debt.^ Hence forbearance in an affiliation procedure is a valid consideration for a promise by the alleged father to support the child.^ forbearance, however, to be a consideration must be for a reasonable time as otherwise, if the forbearance be not appreciable, there is no consideration.^" But an agreement to forbear
is
Hill
V.
Harris
v.
v.
McGuin, 1 Cow. 99 Richardson v. Brown, 1 Cow. 255. Baker v. Walker, 14 M. & W. 465 Jennison v. Stafford, 1 Cush. 168 see
2
Stewart
Burrs
See supra,
Supra, 486.
Calkins
v. v.
Martin
As
to
Follit v.
is
a satisfaction,
citing Fisher
;
Mecorney
v.
v.
Stanley, 8 Cush. 85
;
et seq.
;
Boyd
Galbreath, 32 Penn.
cited
10
;
V.
Rann
v.
see as sus-
Hughes, 7 T. R. 350 n.
VOL.
I. 46
721
532.]
CONTRACTS.
will,
[CHAP. XVI.
under the circumstances of the case ;^ and so when the length of time is left open.^ And there must be some definite party to have been sued.^ When the promise is to forbear to sue generally, this will be construed, if the context require no other inference, to mean a promise to forbear permanently.* Mere forbearance, however, without an agreement, being an executed act, is not a sufficient consideration.'' The fact that the suit is not well founded makes no diflerence, if it has a show of title f though it is otherwise in cases of fraud,^ and in cases where the claim to be forborne is utterly
immediate pressure
be construed to
mean
destitute of support.^
ment
;
of indulgence is a consideration,
v.
V.
Bischoffsheim, supra,
is
stated
by Mr.
Broom, 2 Dr. & Sm. 289 contra, see Nelson r. Serl.e, 4 M. & W. 795 Bixler v. Ream, 3 Barr, 282. ^ Pollock, 166 Oldershaw r. King,
Alliance Bk.
; ;
promisee
2 H.
&
23 Vt,
v. Hotclikiss, v.
had a fair chance of success,' so that he might have sued without bad faith and that, as there
bona fide believed he
;
Brown, 4
v.
is
Wash.
C.
C.
148
see
;
Hamaker
r.
Clark
Russell,
made
C. B. 172.
Elting
V.
Nelson
V.
v. Serle,
4 M.
& W.
795
see
Jones
*
Elting
Clark
6
As
to
Lang. Cont.
ii.
1018.
It
may
be that
infra, 1036.
;
Manter
v.
supra, 514.
6
Callisher
;
v.
Bischoflfsheim, L. R. 5
throwing on the defendant the burden of proving that the plaintiff knew that he had no cause of action. But it does
not go too far in holding that probable
Q. B. 449
1
infra, 533.
Supra, 232.
V.
cause
is
sufficient to
is
which success is absolutely certain der V. Blake, 45 N. H. 530; Pitkin and if there is a show of a case bona 48 N. H. 304 Freeman v. fide brought, its abandonment is a t;. Noyes,
Serle,
Smith Nelson r.
8
Algar, 1 B.
&
Ad. 604
795
;
mise.
There
no
4 M.
& W.
;
Kid-
Martin
r.
Black,
good consideration
course,
for
a promise.
Of
20 Ala. 309.
The ruling
in Callisher
722
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
[ 533.
533. As has been incidentally noticed, a promise to compromise a claim utterly unfounded will not be soofcomregarded as a valid consideration, (1) because such a Soufjjfy]^^ claim is obviously and transparently valueless; (2) claim. because to sanction such promises would be to sanction blackmailing; and (3) because the selling of unfounded claims, which
such a transaction would virtually amount to, would be illegal as a species of champerty.^ It is otherwise when a suit is brought bona fide on probable cause and a promise to com;
promise such suit is a valid consideration, even though the Were it otherwise there suit should be held to be unfounded. there is no litigation litigation, since be no compromise of could in which one or the other party, if the case be pressed to judgNot only will ment, does not fail to make out his case.^ such agreements, when there is no fraud, be sustained by the courts, but they are highly favored, as productive of peace and good-will in the community, and reducing the expense and
pereistency of litigation.^
The
Stearns
v.
Johnson, 17
Minn. 142
;
2 Mich. 145
;
Truett
i;.
Taylor
v.
McKinley
Wat-
et
seq.; infra,
kins, 13
836
2
20 Mo. 102
infra, 1000 Leake, Longridge v. Dorville, 5 B. Atlee v. Backhouse, 3 M.
;
;
Supra, 198
;
2d ed. 627
v. Dugan, Kershaw, 52 Mo. 224; Snow v. Grace, 29 Ark. 131. 3 2 Ch. on Con. 11th Am. ed. 46; Cook V. Wright, 1 B. & S. 559 Long111.
140
Livingston
v.
Riley
parte,
v.
4 De G. M. Brown, L. R. 1
ridge V. Dorville, 5 B.
&
Aid. 117
Edwards
Stewart
v.
v.
Baugh, 11 M.
Stewart, 6 CI.
Q. B. D. 714 Home Ins. Co. v. Baltimore, 93 U. S. 527 Blake v. Peck, 11 Vt. 483 Hodges v. Saunders, 17 Pick.
;
; ;
& W. & F.
;
641 911
Read
V.
v.
Pitkin
470 Clark v. Gamwell, 125 Mass. 428 Crans v. Hunter, 28 N. Y. 389 Wehrum V. Kuhn, 61 N. Y. 623 Wrege v. Westcott, 30 N. J. L. 212; Hoge v. Hoge, 1 Watts, 216 Tryon v. Miller, 1
; ;
Wliart.
11
Fleming
v.
v.
Ramsey, 46
St.
Penn.
406
349
;
St.
252; Zane
v.
Zane, 6 Munf.
111.
Blake v. Peck, Leach v. Fobes, 11 Gray, 509 Powers v. Freeman, 2 Lans. 127 Brown v. Sloane, 6 Watts, 421 Barton Logan v. MatV, Wells, 5 Whart. 225 thews, 6 Barr, 417 Fisher v. May, 2 Bibb, 448 Truett v. Chaplin, 4 Hawks, 178 Williams v. Alexander, 4 Ired.
Noyes, 48 N. H. 304
;
11 Vt. 483
;
Grasselli v.
Lowden, 11 Oh.
Schneider, 4
Hindert
Ap.
Warren
203; Paulin
v.
198
infra, 1000
723
533.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVI.
cases the courts, unless
which
On
set-
tlement of a large unliquidated claim on a cash payment much smaller in amount.' It is not necessary, as we have
new
consideration to alter
an old contract.* Whether or no suit has been instituted makes no difference;'' but there must be some probable cause, so as to make out a case of doubt, to make such an agreement binding.^ If an executor, for instance, should say to a legatee, whose claim is unquestionable, " I dispute your claim," and thus get from the legatee a promise to take a less amount
than that designated by the will, the legatee would not be bound by the promise.^ But the fact that a suit must have failed from want of technical proof does not make such a compromise void for want of consideration f nor is it necessary that the question in dispute should be one as to which, looking back on it from our present stand-point, we should say, "this was really a question of much doubt." It is enough it it was one as to which doubt at the time could honestly be
felt.3
Groves
v.
v.
Perkins,
Sim.
576
;
Longridge
v.
Dorville, 5 B.
&
;
Aid. 117
;
Langstaffe
Hamaker
net
V.
V.
v.
Ben-
Muirhead
v.
V.
As
to limitations
et
Kirkpatrick, 21 Penn.
8
St. 237.
on
seq.
8
Supra, 532
Edwards
v.
Baugh,
11 M.
& W.
641.
;
Stewart
V.
v.
Stewart, 6 CI.
1
&
F. 969
'
Infra, 535
Thomson
Eastwood,
Shotwell
Murray,
1000 supra, 521 Backhouse, 3 M. & W. 651 Wilkinson v. Byers, 1 Ad. & El. 106
Infra, 937,
V.
App. Ca. 215. See Moore v. Fitzwater, 2 Rand. (Va.) 442 Foster
L. R. 2
;
Atlee
V.
Thomas
Cook
v.
v.
Brown, L. R.
Q. B. D.
Tuttle
V.
V. Tuttle,
12 Met. 551
;
Howard
714.
9
Norton, 65 Barb. 161 Palmerton v. Huxford, 4 Denio, 166 Cutter r. Cochrane, 116 Mass. 408 Rollins v. Marsh,
; ;
V.
Wright, 1 B.
;
&
v.
S.
559
Kerr
Russell
v.
Hoge, 1
Watts, 216
;
Durham
;
v.
Wadlington,
Brown
v.
Str. Eq.
258
Allen
v.
v.
Prater, 35 Ala.
infra, 858.
169.
In Little
Cal Usher
;
v.
Bischoflfsheim, L. R. 5
v.
0, B. 451 P. 497
;
Wilby
v.
.
Elgee, L. R. 10 C.
ing
1882 (13 Rep. 413), we have the followfrom Stayton, J.: "A mutual
for
Cook
Wright, 1 B.
&
S.
559
agreement
compromise
is,
in
itself,
724
CHA1>. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
[ 535.
534. It
may
B.
may
be worthless; but
mere fact that it would sustain "prima facie a suit by 3,eddocuwhich A. could be benefited makes the surrender a ient. sufficient consideration to support a promise from B. to A. This has been held to apply to the surrender of an invalid will ;^ and to the surrender of an invalid guaranty.^ 535. While forbearance of a claim that has a prima facie
case
is
with an utterly void claim.^ This has been held to considerabe the case with regard to a release by a party of all *^^' interest in an estate in which he has not even a show of an interest ;* with regard to a promise to conduct bankrupt proceedings so as to inconvenience the promisee as little as possible f with regard to the surrender of a tenancy at will, because a tenancy at will is not an estate of appreciable value f and
is
obviously
M'Kelvey, Addison,
56, it
other contract."
In Flannagan
it
v.
Kilit
come, 58 N. H.,
the text that
was upon valuable consideration, though the title bought was bad. In O'Keson V. Barclay, 2 P. & W. 531, which was an action for libel, it was held that a compromise of the action was a valuable consideration sufficient to sustain
was shown that the ought to have prevailed citing Pitkin u. Noyes, 48 N. H. 294, 304; Peirce v. Building Co., 9
it
abandoned
;
suit
an
agreement,
although
the
words
and other cases. Smith V. Smith, 13 C. B. N. S. 429. 2 Haigh V. Brooks, 10 A. & E. 309. 3 Leake, Cowper v. 2d ed. 625 Green, 7 M. & W. 633 N. H. Bank v.
La. 397,
1
; ;
No investigation into
it
the char-
Colcord, 15 N. H. 119
R.,
;
Palfrey
v.
R.
be made,
between them. 1 In Hoge v. Hoge, 1 Watts, 216, it was held that the compromise of a doubtful title was a valuable consideration, and sufficient, although a party thereto may have been ignorant of his rights, unless the compromise be vitiated by fraud sufficient to set aside any
439.
4 Allen, 55 Knotts v. Preble, 50 111. 226 Hennessey v. Hill, 52 111. 281 Mulholland v. Bartlett, 74 111, 58; Lowe V. Weatherley, 4 Dev. & B. 212 Prater v. Miller, 25 Ala. 320 Barkley
; ;
V,
P. 196.
Leake,
ut supra,
citing Richardson
V.
725
536.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP..XVI.
action.^ Hence it has been held in England that promise of forbearance by the assignee of a bond upon which, by reason of equities subsisting between the obligor and the assignor, the assignor had no right to sue, is not a sufficient consideration to support a promise by the obligor, in ignorance of his rights, to pay the bond.'* And, a fortiori^ an agreement to take money for abandoning a claim which the party holding knows is unfounded is void as fraudulent and extortionate.^ But the mere fact that a claim has not a strong case to rest on does not preclude it from being the basis of a binding settlement and this is peculiarly the case with compromises of family disputes.*
no cause of
536.
Assuming
collateral
con-
a conside-
Hence a promise by A.
consideration
to
undertaking to supply the tion. money binds A., such promise by B. being a sufficient And a promise by the residents of a town consideration.^ that they will pay a tax levied on the town in consideration
of
B.
of allowance of discount
is
binding.^
And
a party
may
make
1
Jones
r.
I'.
Barber
Fox, 2
Wms. Saund.
136
a good considerait is
New Hampsbire
H, 119.
admitted
"That
there
is
Callisher
;
v.
Bischoffsheim, L. R. 5
Q. B. 489
;
(Woodward v. Anderson, 9 Bush, 624.) It is laid down, both in Parsons on Contracts and in Chitty on Contracts, that an agreement to forbear to prosecute a claim which is
wholly and certainly unsustainable at law or in equity is no consideration for a promise. (Parsons, vol. i. p. 44Q
Chitty, vol.
sition
1.
H. 294 Knotts v. Preble, 50 For criticisms on Callisher v. sheim, see supra, 532.
*
226.
Bischoflf-
Supra, 533.
Stadt
V. Lill,
9 East, 348
;
Homes
Leonard v. Dana, 12 Mass. 190 Cook v. Vredenburgh, 8 Johns. 29 Bradley, 7 Conn. 57; supra, 506-7. 6 Skidmore v. Bradford, L. R. 8 Eq. 134 see Bryant v. Goodnow, 5 Pick.
r.
; ;
that
228.
'
seems to us unnecessary.
We
need
BaileyviUe
v.
726
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
[ 537.
" It
is
enough,
if
or the
whom the guarantor becomes surety has beneperson to whom the guaranty is given suffer incon-
But unless a guarantee is contemporaneous with and an incident of a debt, it requires an independent consideration in the way of an indulgence from the
to the principal debtor."^
creditor, to
537.
make
it
valid.
Marriage is a valuable consideration as between the parties ;^ and hence a settlement by a man on his Marriage is wife, or by the wife on her husband, in considera- a valuable consideration of marriage is as valid and binding, even against tion.
subsequent bona jide purchasers for value, as would promise by be a sale of the same property for a full price.^ a third party to either the intended husband or the intended
wife,
it
to be
Biiig. 113.
D'Wolf V. Rabaud, 1 Pet. 476 Packard v. Richardson, 17 Mass. 129 Mecorney v. Stanley, 8Cush. 85 Leonard V. Vredenburgh, 8 Johns. 29. As
; ;
clearer, both upon and authority, than the doctrine that to make an ante-nuptial settlement void as a fraud upon credi-
Nothing can be
principle
infra,
necessary that both parties should concur in, or have cognizance of, the intended fraud. If the settlor
tors, it is
570.
3
Whelan
V.
v.
v.
Wright
Wright,
party have no notice of it, but is innocent of it, she is not and cannot be
affected
6
Whitehill
Lonsey, 2 Yeates,
;
by
it."
v.
Derry v. Can-
Shadwell
;
Shadwell, 9 C. B. N. S.
In Stratton
v.
159
trel,
*
11 Leigh, 136.
;
was an
Supra, 377
Clarke
v. v.
H.
&
N. 849
;
Price
5 C. D. 619 6 C. D. 29
;
Kevan
Crawford, L. R.
ante-nuptial agreement that if the wife would take a farm, on which she held a mortgage, and the husband would carry it on, she would contribute the
Gale v. Gale, L. R. 6 C. D. Tomlinson v. Matthews, 98 111. 178; Latimer v. Glenn, 2 Bush, 535; Miller v. Edwards, 17 Bush, 397 Wall Ploss v. V. Scales, 1 Dev. Eq. 476 Thomas, 6 Mo. Ap. 157 Magniac v. Thompson, 7 Pet. 348. In Magniac v.
144;
; ;
products to the support of the family and herself after marriage. Marriage
took place, and the husband made valuable improvements at his own expense. After two years the wife con-
to
another in violation
:
Thompson,
it
727
539.]
CONTRACTS.
is
[chap. XVI.
largely in-
not be set aside on ground of fraud unless on clear proof of the wife's complicity .2 marriage settlement in fraud of marital
When
wm
3,fter full
fairly
revoke it, unless it was intended bv the donor to be revocable ;* and a declaration of trust, although without consideration, will, when made and deliberately, and when vesting a specific interest in
terfere to
the
cestui
que
trust,
be sustained.**
to have been
this
made
is
we have
seen.
prcsumption
on party
disputing considera-
bona fide endorsees for value without notice. As between the parties, however, and against endorsees
personality,
of
legal
imposed upon
able
by
process of law.
Specific perfor
married
women by
the use
by statute, and by change of customs and conditions of society from which common law is largely derived, as to present no
law, are so far removed
obstacle to the maintenance of this
mon
may be enforced
him
to
to
prevent
his
expend
money
in valuable improvements on
action
by the plaintiff against his wife. Clough V. Russell, 55 N. H. 279. Her agreement was valid as a contract for
a marriage settlement in his favor
or the proceeds of
Supra, 377
et
seq.
and her conveyance to Ladd was a Under fraud upon that settlement. the former law, the husband, acquiring by marriage great and immediate rights in his wife's property, was entitled to
relief
Wilson v. Wilson
;
2 8
"
As
377.
to
Prewit
V.
Wilson, 103 U.
Toker, 31
L. R.
S. 22.
Supra, 399.
against
her
fraudulent
ante-
Toker
V.
v.
Beav.
629
Coutts
Acworth,
8 Eq. 558;
she had represented herself to him to be possessed of. 1 Story Eq. 273. And for the purpose of this case, the
legal capacities of the plaintiff
and his
is
Manning,
son
supi'a,
and equally
enforce-
728
CHAP. XVI.]
CONSIDERATION.
[ 540.
with notice or after maturity, the want of consideration may be shown, though the burden is on the party attempting to show such want of consideration.^ But if the paper is shown to have been stolen or lost or fraudulently obtained, then the burden of proving consideration is on the holder seeking to
avail himself of the
540. It
is
bill.^
if
there be
CQ^gj^g^^
,,,
may
I'-n
proved or varied by
^^^'^
vent the parties, or either of them, from showing that the price paid was one thousand dollars.' Nor
is
the
averment of a consideration of natural love and affection binding on the parties. It may be disputed by showing on the one side an additional valuable consideration, or on the other side that the whole transaction was a fraud.* A party is not estopped from proving such variation.' But, even in equity, a party claiming under a sealed document is bound by
the general character of the consideration stated, unless mis-
take on both sides be shown, or the omission be satisfactorily exp)lained. He cannot, for instance, as part of his case (unless
if
money be
averred, prove
Ashley, 4
Supra,
493
5
et
seq.; Holliday v.
;
nett, 26
v.
Atkinson,
B.
Barber, 1 M. v. Warren, 16 Me. 465 Thurston v. McKown, 6 Mass. 428 Wheeler v. Guild, 20 Pick. 545 Case v. Banking Ass., 4
; ;
v.
Pick.
71
Hannan
;
;
Mass. 441
Tingley
v.
v.
Cutler, 7
Conn. 291
N. Y. 57
;
Comst.
166
Barnet
r. v.
OflFermau,
Ettling,
Md. 219
466.
*
Hebbard
Watts,
130;
Swain
32
Penn.
St. 486.
;
Filmer
v.
v.
Gott,
4 Br. P.
C.
230
405
;
Mills v. Barber,
Gale
ard
Williamson, 8 M.
v.
& W.
;
;
Kelson
v.
GowBrown v.
C. B. N. S. 273;
Jones
;
v.
Gordon, L.
v.
v.
Brewster,
Lenheim
Wil-
marding, 55 Penn.
St. 73.
;
Wh. on
v.
;
Townsend
459
and other cases 410 cited in Wh. on Ev. 1046. Maigley v. Hauer, 7 Johns. 341 Leonard v. Vredenburgh, 8 Johns. 29
Buckley's App., 48
Llanelly R. R.
;
Penn.
St.
491
L. R. 8 Ch. 955
Hendrick
v.
729
540.]
CONTRACTS.
if
[CHAP. XVI.
fraud
may impeach
1 Peacock v. Monk, 1 Ves. Sen. 128 Gale r. Williamson, 8 M. & W. 408 Morse r. Shattuck, 4 N. H. 229 Hoibrook V. Holbrook, 30 Vt. 432 Sobermerhorn v. Vanderbeyden, 1 Johns, 139 Winchell v. Latham, 6 Cow. 682
; ;
;
Ryerson, 27 N.
J.
brook
on Ev. 923-8, 1047 EstaSmith, 6 Gray, 572 Bowen Hoeveler v. v. Bell, 20 Johns. 338 Mugele, 66 Penn, St. 348 Johnson v. Taylor, 4 Dev. L. 355.
Wh.
v.
730
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
CHAPTER
XVII.
CONDITIONS.
I.
Description
may
be a condition presuit
condition
a limitation on an un-
cedent, 560.
certainty, 545.
But
When
after
due opportunity
of inspection,
void, 547.
is still
While condition
promise pended,
is
undetermined,
operative
though sus-
548.
may
be con-
scribing
them
as
on board a ship
is
a warranty,
are suspensive
563.
In
Condition
may on
part performance be
representation, 564.
Conditions precedent
552.
II.
may be
divisible,
Construction.
2. Notice.
553.
Whether a
stipulation
is
a condition
When
required
by
contract,
notice
depends on intention,
must be given,
567.
554.
Whole
557.
When
dependent,
to
party
suing
for
non-performance
558.
And
When
debt
is
conditioned on event in
should be given,
571.
Conditions Precedent.
Whether
notice
is
received
is
a ques-
Truthfulness of description.
entitled to notice
731
CONTRACTS.
Lessor's covenant to repair conditioned
[chap. XVII.
on
notification, 574.
3.
guaranty,
596.
Request or demand.
to consti7.
Prior
Collateral matter
may
be made a con-
Demand
when
implied in
exchange
may
be accepted or
When payment
is
conditioned on deis
Successive instalments
580.
may be
Precedent.
Performance depends on terms,
Fiction of fulfilment of condition
601.
when
ful-
party releases,
602.
And
so
filment, 603.
And
so
waived,
604.
may
Delivery of goods
may
be conditioned
act
Substantial performance
is
sufficient,
607.
of-promisor.
invalid, 588.
if
V. Conditions Subsequent.
Conditions subsequent divest
title,
Otherwise
but
And
and return,
608.
Burden
is
is
not to be capri-
tion of property
quent,
Contract
609.
may give
Third party
condition,
may
be made arbiter of
title
593.
Building contracts
may
be conditioned
ac-
on approval
Subscriptions
of architect, 594.
612.
may be dependent on
mu-
732
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 546.
of condition
On happening
subsequent
Defeasible title
615.
passes to vendee,
may
be waived,
I.
617.
545.
trarily
A CONDITION
dependent on an event at the time uncertain.^ Hence there can be no condition, in the proper sense T of the term, when the limitation is one of the neces-
,,....
/.
uncer^^^ ^'
conditiones tacitae,
or quae insunt^
tacite insunt, extriiisecus veniunt? Limitations of this class are usually mere matters of surplusage " frustra
:
adduntur."^
546.
is
limitation dependent upon a present or past event not technically a condition, " in praetoritum vel
collata^
praesens
relata, concepta
conditio,"
e.
g.
if
^'^t^^gas
* an unCertainty.
Titius were consul last year, or if Titius be consul n 1 1 n> now. feuch a provision may be eiiective, but the
'
is
But
an event which has transpired but of which the parties are not yet advised, and which they look upon as a future event, it is to be regarded as a condition based on a future contingency. The condition is, " if I am ;" advised next week of a particular fact, then I will be bound as where a party agrees to sell an imported commodity next week if a particular piece of intelligence by that time transpire of the failure of the crop of last year. "We have several illusthe limitation
is
when
as to
trations in the
Roman
gationem, aut omnino non differunt, veluti si Titius consul fuit, vel si Maevius vivit^ dare spondes ? Kam si ea ita non sunt,
^
Savigny, op.
cit.
122.
;
L. 1, 3, de Cond. (35-1)
L. 99
16,
See Savigny, op. cit. 126, citing L. de injusto (28, 13), and other au-
eod. L. 25, 1,
3
quando
I.
thorities.
v. v.
To same
de V. 0.
;
effect,
see Olive u.
999
;
Grey
Coddington
;
I.
3.
15
I.
37-39 D. de
Clement
R. C. 12. 1
I.
100, 120, D. de V. 0.
Clement, 8 N. H. 210.
45. 1. 6. L.
cit.
733
647.]
;
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVII.
nihil valet stipulatio sin autem ita se habent, statim valet. Quae enim per rerum naturam sunt certa, non morantur obligationem, licet apud nos incerta sint." On the other hand, interesting questions were raised as to whether any future event was to be regarded as uncertain but this was answered by saying that so far as we are concerned, all future is uncertain: "nee rerum naturam intuendam, in qua omnia certa
essent,
cum
sit,
aspici debere."^
futura utique fierent, sed nostrara inscien tiara The question is whether " quantum in natura
possit sciri."^
hominum
But
in
any view,
if
the event on
which the condition depends is certain, then the promise is not " Qui sub condicione stipulatur, quae omnimodo conditional
;
exstatura
547.
,^ When
con-
est,
A contract
precedent
*
tract de-
Ira-
Fmpossibiiity
it is
void
autcm condicio habetur, cui natura impedij^jgnto cst, quo minus existat, veluti si quia ita dixerit,
si
cited,
of a certain music hall on certain days, the continued existence of the music hall being a condition of the fulfilment of the
contract,
down
vail, as
was held a good defence that the hall was burned But this rule does not prewe have seen, where the casus or other obstacle set up
it
L. 38 D. de R. C. (12. 1).
L. 9, 1 D. de nov. (46. 2).
Mr.
v.
<
Harvy
v.
r.
Gil-
pins
promise depends upon whether a certain event has already happened, there
is
If
the
promise
if
no covenant or promise at all." To this he cites Olive v. Booker, 1 Exch. 416, and Behu r. Burness, 3 B. & S. 751. But this does not apply when the condition
is
Cowpland, L. R. 9 Q. B. 467 Dickey v. Lenscott, 20 Me. 453 Knight v. Bean, 22 Me. 531 Stewart t'. Loring, 5 Allen, 306. See, also, to same effect, Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 570, citing Faulkner v. Lowe, 2 Ex. 595 Hall v. Wright, E. B. & E. 746 Lovering v. Goal Co., 54 Penn. St.
; ;
291.
^
de inut.
v.
Taylor
Caldwell, 3 B.
&
S. 826
784
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 547.
does not absolutely prevent performance, though it may make performance extremely difficult or expensive ;^ nor where the performance can be by some other agency than that which it becomes impossible to use f nor when it is a risk that the promOn the same reasoning a bond with an impossible isor took.' condition is void.* " The object [of a bond] is to secure the performance of the condition, and the real meaning of the parties is that the obligor contracts to perform it under the convenOn principle, theretional sanction of a penal sum.
...
fore, a
bond with an impossible condition, or a condition that becomes impossible, should be dealt with just as if it were a direct covenant to perform that which is or becomes impossible."' At the same time a bond to be void on the happening of an impossibility would bind and so of a bond conditioned on an event which became impossible through the laches of the obligor.^ Legal impossibilit}'', as we have already seen, stands in this respect on the same basis as physical impossiIn no case can impossibility be set up as a defence bility.^ by the party by whom it is brought about.^ Payment of the
;
premium
is
ance f and though the duty may be suspended by a state of war between the country of the insured and that of the insurer,
1
White
V.
supra,
300,315.
2
performance."
see Mizell
S. P.
Appleby v. Meyer,
C,
1 C.
V.
Robinson
;
v. v.
Davison, L. R. 6
v. Edwards, Wheeler, 1 Gray, 282 School Dist. No. 1 v. Dauchy, 25 Conn. 530 Beebee v. Johnson,
Hughes
v.
Wheat. 489
;
Lord
19
v.
Bingham,
v.
Kribs
v.
Jones,
v. Bell,
Ins. Co.,
Sm, & 44 N. Y.
6
Cowpland, L. R. 9 Russell v. Levy, 2 Low. Can. 457, cited Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 555. In Dexter v. Norton, 47 N. Y. 62, a contract to sing was held to be conditioned on the defendant's capacity to sing, and that sickness producing incapacity
Ex. 269
Howell
aflf.
Q. B. 462
L. R. 1 Q. B. 258
was a defence.
* s
^
'
276.
In Taylor
v.
Caldwell, 3 B.
is
&
S.
Supra,
329.
826 (supra,
stated to
Pollock,
Wald's
309. 305.
ed. 377.
Supra, Supra,
^-^pra,
a condition
is
sibility arising
309,312; tn/ra, 603, 661. ^ Roshner v. Ins. Co., 63 N. Y. 160 Evans v. Ins. Co., 64 N. Y. 304.
8
735
549.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVII.
the policy.^
this
effect.''
But the
is still
While conditionis
termined^ promise is
operative
',
so far as concerns
.
any
"^
.
pcndcd.
nihil
"Ante condicionem non recte agi, cum interim debeatur."^ But the promise is not
>/
..
party account to be treated as a nullity. lj conveying away his property to escape an indebtedpended. ,= iL -uj *i ^ * ^ ness would expose himself to process u nder the statutes making penal fraudulent insolvency, and any assertions based on a negation of such indebtedness would sustain an action for deceit, but the conveyance would stand if the indebtedness were cleared. Contracts of this class are like contracts by infants; their efficiency is suspended for the time, but they nevertheless exist.* The Roman jurists speak on several occasions to this effect.* The promisee, also, in such a contract, has a right susceptible of valuation, of taxation, and of assignment. The promisor is not to be bound only in the future he is bound from the time he makes the promise; and the title he passes
qj^ ^}jjg
"^
^
though sus-
Any
intermediate disposition
of the
title
condition
is
upon
B.'s marriage,
C, but C.'s interest expires when B. marries, and the estate passes to B. The promisor, also, who agrees to convey an estate on a future contingency,
intermediately convey this estate to
is liable in damages if he makes his compliance with his promise impossible, or subjects the property to waste.^ 549. Whether a promise to pay at some future date is to be regarded as conditional has been questioned; Promises to f" i though in contracts in which the whole debt bepay in
.
, ,
Supra,
^
6
2, 28.
89.
476.
2
So, in the
;
Wheeler
v.
Ins.
Co.,
82
N. Y.
545.
'
Windii. p. 700 That a party who makes the condition impossible cannot set up
Romanlaw,
Wiichter,
s.cheid, 89.
16.
312.
736
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 550.
future may on failure of payment comes immediately ^J payable tJ ^ beregarded ,, oi interest, there is no question that the promise is ascondi^^'^^ conditioned by the duty to pay interest punctually. But be this as it may, there is high authority to the effect that a promise to pay a debt infuturo is to be regarded as a
,
.
^.
'
And
it is
plain that
is
when the
so far con-
payment
arrives.^
Whether
to be
determined from all the circumstances of the case.^ Taking in payment of goods a bill of exchange, payable at a future
date, for instance, postpones the period
when
but
if
the contract of
recovered.*
sale,
As
bill be not given, in conformity with then the price of the goods can be at once will be hereafter seen, the acceptance of
the
immature negotiable paper on account, operates as conditional payment f though such paper may be accepted in satisfaction of the debt.'
550.
upon a contingency,
;
may
operate
f,.
first,
.,
,
when
contingency, which is called a suspensive condition suspeusfve and secondly, when its effect is terminated by the ?y resoiucontingency, which is called a resolutive or destructive contingency. Of suspensive conditions, Savigny enumerates three phases The first is the state of indecision which arises from the nature of the condition (pendat conditio). Here a right does not yet exist, and its future existence is made more or less dependent on the will of the parties in interest. This condition can be modified in two ways: (1)
:
actually occur;
the
;
condition, in
see
Holmes
v.
882
et
seq.
431 see Stockton Iron Co. in re, L. R. Hanna v. Mills, 21 Wend. 2 C. D. 101 90; Rinehart v. Olwine, 5 Watts & S..
;
8 *
Ibid.
157
v.
infra,
881
et seq.,
953
et seq.
Mussen
Price,
East,
147 P. 582
Infra, 956.
jn/ra, 957.
&
Ad.
VOL.
I. 47
737
551.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVII.
other words, is fulfilled, impleta or expleta conditio, by which the contract becomes unconditionally obligatory.^ The second is the converse, when the contingency does not occur, deficit
conditio, in
is finally abandoned. In our own law, the same distinction is recognized though with a different nomenclature. Conditions In our law, , ^^ t t conditions suspensive are called by us conditions precedent, while conditions resolutive are substantially the asprece-^ condition ^^^^ ^^ ^"^ conditions subsequent. '^ubse^'i^nt precedent must be satisfied before the promise it e. g,, I promise to send goods to qualifies becomes effectual A. if A. first sends a cheque for them, in which case my promise does not bind me until A. sends me the cheque. A condition subsequent does not preclude the promise from being at once obligatory, but provides for its rescission upon the happening of a future contingent event.^ But the distinction between
of the contract
551.
a condition precedent and a condition subsequent is rather formal than real. There is no condition precedent that is not
in one sense a condition subsequent
;
i.
e.,
there
is
no con-
formance of a contract by which the parties are already bound. And there is no condition subsequent that is not a condition precedent, i. e., there is no condition subsequent that is not precedent to the as yet unperformed subject matter of the There are no conditions, also, which are not both contract. conditions precedent and conditions subsequent. The payment of an insurance premium, for instance, is at once a condition precedent, and condition subsequent to the insurance.^ On a bond with a penalty, the condition is in form a con-
dition subsequent, as
it.
attests
a general
is
;
indebtedness to
be released when a
done yet in substance it is a condition precedent, since something must take place before suit can be brouscht.^ So in the cases hereafter men8pecifi.c
thing
>
Savigny, op.
See Clement
;
cit.
250, citing L. 26
People
v. Ins. Co.,
78 N. Y. 114
188.
de cond.
2
Clement, 8 N. H.
210
377.
Goodwin
v.
Holbrook, 4
Wend.
738
CHAP. XVII.]
tioned,
it is
CONDITIONS.
[ 552.
of apprentice, that the master should be able to instruct the apprentice, while failure to instruct arising from incapacity
is a condition subsequent which vacates the indenture.^ The same may be said of all contracts to be performed on the happening of a certain event. The contract binds from the time it is made, and ceases to bind on the non-occurrence of a certain event, which is, therefore, in this sense, a condition subsequent. Yet performance does not take place until the occurring of the event, which is, therefore, a condition precedent.^ The same remark is made by Windscheid, in refer-
now
recognized in the
Roman
law.^
may
It
depends upon the terms of the con- ^arbe' As a divisible. tract whether the conditions are divisible. rule, it may be said that where each of the things to be done by the one party is conditioned upon a specified act by the other party, then the performance of each thing may be separately compelled.* Thus, where a land-owner agrees to let land for building purposes, and on this land a builder is to put a series of houses, and to receive leases on the houses when built on separate ground rents, the builder, it has been held, is entitled to receive^ a lease on each house when completed,
without being compelled, as a condition precedent, to finish the other houses." The question is, whether the subject of the condition is so divisible that its component parts may be apportioned, at least so far as concerns one or more members, to the corresponding part of the promise. If this cannot be done, all the alternative parts of the condition are to be performed before the promisee can recover. Thus, if A. promises to do
two
he
1
is
happening of two distinct events, not compellable to do either until both events happen.^
infra, 613.
v.
See
As
;
See Wilson
v.
511
s
as
to
Amesbury
3 *
supra, 338.
Windscheid, Pandekt.
See infra, 607
;
;
Wilkinson
Neale
v.
Clements, L. R. 8 Ch.
15 Q. B. 916.
Lang. Cont.
96.
b
1007
Neale
v. RatcliflF,
15 Q. B. 916.
v. Ratcliflf,
739
553.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVII.
On the other hand, he may hind himself to do a particular thing on the occurrence of one out of several events.^ It should be remembered that entirety depends upon the intention of the parties, and not upon the divisibility of the price
or the thing to be delivered.
may
tract
be divisible
and
yet, if intended
by the
money
is
pay;'
and
price.*
II.
CONSTRUCTION.
on the whole contract an intention that either party is to have redress in damages for
the default of the other, irrespective of the question
pressionsof
^^ ^^^ ^^ default, then mere formal expressions denoting interdependence will be made to yield to the substantial purpose of the contract. This has
been held to be the case with contracts providing that a promise is conditioned on the other party " well and truly perform-
and agreements," or " on the performance of the terms and conditions" imposed on the other party. All this, when from the whole document it appears that a promise made by one party was to have inde.
ing
all
and singular
his covenants
pendent redress irrespective of the default of the other party, will be regarded as purely formal and inoperative.' In order to ascertain the intention of the parties, the whole context of the contract is to be taken into consideration, in view of all
Infra, 619.
281
;
Shinn
v.
v. Worsted Co., 2 Cush. Dodge v. Gardiner, 31 N. Y. 239 Todd v. Summers, 2 Grat. 167. That
:
Knight
286
Morgan
v.
a general covenant of
title is
restrained
it
by
special covenants
among which
v.
St. 351.
6
occurs, see
;
Browning
Hesse
v.
Wright, 2 B.
Boone
v.
v.
Eyre,
P. 13, 26 P. 565
;
Stevenson, 3 B.
& &
W.
1312
Stavers
;
Curling, 3
v.
Bing. N. C. 355
Fishmongers' Co.
162
99
;
Robertson, 5 Man.
V.
&
;
G. 131
Tufts
Keenan
Kidder,
Sumner v. Williams, 8 Mass. Whallon v. Kauffman, 19 Johns. Miller v. Heller, 7 S. & R. 32 and
;
Brown, 21 Vt. 86
v.
v.
Hood, 13 Pick.
740
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
facts.*
[ 554.
class, as is
the extrinsic
all contracts,
Contracts of this
intent of the parties,'^ so as best to sustain good faith.^ 554. " "Whether covenants are to be held dependent or in-
is
to be determined
it
by the
whether a
f^a'cmidi^
tion de-
,
;
to
pends on
intention
^^^ p^*"*'*^^-
give way."*
Lord
Mansfield lays
down
as
Benjamin* declares to be unchanged, " that the dependence or independence of covenants is to be collected from the evident sense and meaning of the parties, and that however transposed they might be in the deed, their precedency must depend on the order of time in which the intent of the transaction requires their performance." Hence, where the condition of a bond for 1000 was to render a fair and just account in writing of all sums received, it was held that the word " account" meant payment, since it was not to be supposed that the parties would impose so heavy and solemn a penalty on mere accounting without paying. The intention of the parties, as evidenced in the contract, is to determine whether the allegation in question is a condition precedent, whose performance is necessary to make the contract binding on the other party, or a representation, which does not interfere with the contract taking effect, though if false it exposes the party making it to a cross suit.'^ Whether the promise is on its face conditional,
Wms.
;
Graves
v.
v.
Sales,
v.
3d Am. ed.
v.
561, citing
Jackson,
B. 522;
;
Jones
6
i
Jowett
v.
v.
Spencer, 1 Exch.
5
Bache
ed.
647;
Kingdom
V.
Cox,
C.
Infra, 650;
Benj. on Sales, 3d
Couch
V.
Am.
561
;
Knight
v.
Worsted
Co.,
Infra, 657-9.
Infra, 654.
Per
cur.,
Stavers
v.
Curling,
Bing. N. C. 368;
adopted in Leake,
v.
Booth v. Mills Co., 74 2 Cush. 287 N. Y. 15 Phillip v. Allegheny Car Co., Brockenbrough v. 82 Penn. St. 368 Ward, 4 Rand. 352; Moore y. Waldo,
; ;
;
2d
ed. 649
69 Mo. 277.
Powell, 2 Smith, L. C. 1
see infra,
650
et seq.
741
554.]
CONTRACTS.
it
[chap. XVII.
subject
it
to a
words to be proved.^
Leake, 2d ed. 219, citing Fumess In Hale Meek, 27 L. J. Ex. 34. V. Finch, Sup. Ct. U. S. 1881, the suit was hased on a contract between the California Steam Navigation Company and the Oregon Steam Navigation Company, by which the latter company,
Harlan,
J.,
V.
we have
seen,
an
New World
engaged in the navigation of the Columbia river and its tributaries, purchased a steamboat, called the New World, from the California Steam Navigation Company, then engaged in like business upon the rivers, bays, and
nor its machinery shall be used on the waters of California within ten years from May 1, 1864, and, also,
to
as actual liqui-
The
bill of
Oregon Steam Navigation Company to Winsor and his associates waters of the state of California. The terms of the sale are embodied did not contain any words of covenant in a written agreement, from which it or agreement. But the company, in appears that the consideration was view of its express covenants to the ^75,000, and the covenant and agree- California Steam Navigation Company, ment of the vendees, not only that they took care to exact from its vendees a would not "run or employ, or suffer to separate written obligation, in which be run or employed, the said steamboat the latter, in express terms, covenanted New World upon any of the routes of and agreed with that company, in like travel upon the rivers, bays, and waters manner as the latter had covenanted of the state of California for the period and agreed with the California Steam of ten years from the first day of May, Navigation Company. The next writ1864," but that its machinery should ing executed was the bill of sale from That instrument not be "run or employed in running Winsor to Hale. any steamboat, vessel, or craft upon shows nothing more than a covenant any of the routes of travel, or on the to warrant the title to the steamboat. rivers, bays, or waters of that state It makes no reference, in any form, to The Oregon Steam any waters from which the steamboat for that period. Navigation Company, in that agree- should be excluded. Then comes the ment, further stipulated, that in case bill of sale executed by Hale to Finch. of any breach of their covenant and Its material portions are the same in agreement, they would pay the Cali- substance, and iu language almost fornia Steam Navigation Company the identical with the bill of sale given by sum of $75,000 in gold coin of the the Oregon Steam Navigation Company United States " as actual liquidated to Winsor. Each contains a covenant damages," such stipulation, however, and agreement, upon the part of the not to have the effect to prevent the vendor, simply to warrant and defend latter from taking such other remedy, the title to the steamboat, its machinby injunction or otherwise, as they ery, etc., against all persons whomsomight be advised. ever. But. each recites, let it be ob"The written memorandum," said served, only an agreement that the
742
CHAP. XVII.]
555.
CONDITIONS.
[ 555.
The whole context, also, of the document is to be considered.* The effect of the condition cannot be determined
upon the express condition that employed upon those waters. Upon the sale by the Oregon Steam Navigation Company to Winsor and his associates, the former, as we have seen, was careful to take
sale
it is
which would
covenant.
against
plaintiflf
the
construction
for
which
with surety, containing covenants and agreements, described in such terms as to show that the draughtsman, as
well as all parties,
contends.
if
" But,
we omit
all
consideration of
bill
knew
the diflference
by Finch and Hale, at the time of the execution by the latter of the bill of The latter writing sale to the former.
shows,
it
is
true,
several covenants
Hale to Finch was executed, and look solely at the language employed in that instrument, there seems to be no ground upon which the claim of plaintiff can stand. The words are precise and unambiguous. No room is It is undoubtedly left for construction. true, as argued by counsel, that neither express words of covenant, nor any particular technical words, nor any
special form of words, are necessary in
found in the writings which passed between the California Steam Navigation
Vesey, 516
161, 162
;
Sheppard's Touchstone,
v.
Courtney
;
Taylor, 7 Scott,
N. R. 765
Winsor and his associates. " If, therefore, we suppose (which we could not do without discrediting some
of the testimony) that Finch, at the
'The law,' says Bacon, 'does not seem to have appropriated any set form of words which are absolutely necessary to be
covenant.'
made use
So, in
it is
of in creating a
upon
prior
nant, A.
sales of the
New World,
the absence,
stone, 161-2,
'
by
'
covenant,'
him, as from the written agreement of the same date, signed by him and Hale, of any covenant or agreement that he would not use that vessel, or permit it
be used, on the prohibited waters within the period prescribed, quite
to
and the like, to make a covenant on which to ground an action of covenant, for a covenant may be had by any other words and upon any
;
whatsoever words
it
Pearsall
;
v.
593
Hassell
V.
v.
Worcester Bk.
Russell
dict
V.
v.
V.
Nicoll, 3
U.
S.
V.
Field, 16 N. Y. 595
;
Wend. 42 BeneRamsey v.
;
;
Bell
Bruen,
How. (U.
S.) 169
infra, 662.
743
555.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVII.
without taking into consideration the stipulations that it Wh lecon ^["^11^68,* aud it wiU be constrtied, as far as possitexttobe
coDsidcrfid.
The
the parties, to be collected in each particular case from the terms of the agreement itself, and from the subject matter to
which
it relates."^
is
time prescribed takes place), is to be gathered from the whole document. If the thing in question is something to be done by the party promising (e. g.^ where a party undertaking to ship corn engages to provide the means of transportation),
anything to he or not to he done, the party to or with whom the promise or agreement is made may have his action upon the breach of the agreement.'
'Sometimes,'
says
from the reason and sense of the thing, a covenant will not arise unless it can be collected from the whole instrument
that there
mise, or engagement,
Mr.
Parsons,
'words of proviso and condition will be construed into words of covenant when such is the apparent intention and meaning of the parties.' 2 Par-
There are also cases in the books in which it has been held that even a recital in a deed may
sons'
Cont. 510-11.
some
nant,
'
a thing,
make
a covenant.'
'
'But,'
where words
amount
ern R.
to a covenant.
Farrall
;
v. Hil-
ditch, 5 C. B. N. S. 852
Great North1
W.
Co. V. Harrison, 12 C. B,
v.
609; Severn
Clark,
Leon. 122.
to
do not amount to an agreement, covenant does not lie as, if they are merely conditional to defeat the estate as, a lease, provided and upon condi; ;
And
strument
nant
as,
if
man by
indenture
ways, and it is covenanted and agreed, between the said parties, that the It was adlessee should not alien.'
Law
1
3, p.
17."
2
Boyd
V.
Siflfkin,
Camp.
326;
Lovett
2
Hamilton, 5 M.
v.
& W.
639.
judged that this was a condition by force of the proviso, and a covenant by Coke Litt. force of the other words.
' '
Stockdale
;
224
600
8
Johnson
v.
W. W.
infra, 667.
203 b.
Hays, 2
744
CHAP. XVII.]
this
is
CONDITIONS.
;
[ 557.
an independent promise
{e.
other party
g.^
then
it is
a condition to be per-
formed by the promisee before the promisor is bound.^ 556. It may happen that whether a particular allegation is a representation or a condition may depend on extraneous facts. " If a vessel were described in a fact"ad^ charter party as a French vessel, the words would be "^issibie to explain. merely a description in time of peace but if England were at war and France at peace, with America, they would form a condition precedent of the most vital importance."^ In such case parol evidence is admissible of the ex*^
-'
'
557.
"Where a day
is
"^
day
is
to
is appointed for doing any act, and the happen or may happen before the promise
may
is
is
dition precedent
aliter^ if
ma-
performance is deemed a condition precedent."* Where from the nature of things the performance on the one side is conditioned on something to be done by the other, as where goods to be worked on by A. for B. have first to be furnished by B. to A., then the condition must be satisfied before the liability accrues.*
As
the time
is
desig-
himself
breach.*
may
Punctuality
II,
1004-5.
Putnam
ner
v.
v.
Mellen, 34 N. H. 71
Sum-
641
2
Parker, 36 N. H. 449.
Benj. on Sales, 3d
Am.
ed. 563;
citing
3 *
Behn
v.
Burness, 3 B.
&
S. 751.
Wh. on
;
Ev.
953,
Note by Williams to 1 Wms. Saund. adopted in notes to Cutter v. Powell, 2 Sm. L. C. 1, and given as
320 h
text in Benj. on Sales, 3d
citing
Clement v. Clement, 8 N. H. 210; Savage Hovey, 26 Vt. 109 Man. Co. v. Armstrong, 19 Me. 147 Mill Dam Foundry v. Hovey, 21 Pick.
Hill v.
;
439.
*
Am.
ed. 547
AUard
v.
Belfast,
40 Me. 376
745
358.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVII.
time in negotiation.^ Time may be made of essence bj special contract,^ or by notice.^ 558. Where promises relate to the same object, and are When acts J*^"^^^y conducivc to the furtherance of a common are to be re- enterprise, then one party cannot charge the other ciprocally -,, ^/.., ., dependent, With the consequcnccs of failure without averring ^"d showing that he either performed or was ready su^ng for The question in such cases is, ^^ perform his part. formance must aver are the promises reciprocally dependent ? If they and prove ,. i are, the rule just stated obtains, it they are not, readiness then One party can sue the other party for failure onWsown part. without averring and proving that he himself has performed or was ready to perform his own share of the undertaking.* Mr. Benjamin' adopts substantially the follow,
for the
breach of
it
but
it
is
not a
2 3
condition precedent."
to
v.
tini
Hankee, 61 Penn.
*
410.
As sustaining the
v.
position in the
v.
Leake, 2d ed.
Cole, 1
Warren
Wheeler,
650
citing
Pordage
e; Benj.
r.
Wms.
Saund. 320
ed. 592;
on Sales, 3d Am.
v.
Doogood
v. v.
Rose, 9 C. B.
132
see
Giles
Giles, 9 Q. B.
164
and
144 Dana v. land V. Leach, 11 Pick. 151 Smith v. Lewis, 26 Conn. 110 Gazley v. Price,
; ; ;
Cook
V.
Jennings, 7 T. R. 381
15
16 John. 267
Denio, 363
; ;
Williams
v.
Healey, 3
Me. 350 Smith r. Lewis, 26 Conn. 110 Gazley V. Price, 16 Johns. 267 Campbell v.
;
;
Howe
Huntington,
son, 17
111.
588 142
;
Jones,
infra,
L.
James v. Burchell, 82 N. Y. 109 Long v. Caffrey, 93 Penn. St. 526 see, also, remarks of Storrs, C. J., in Smith v. Lewis, 26 Conn. 110, as
;
quoted
rill,
infra,
606
;
Newman
v.
Per-
606.
v.
Lord
Ellenborough,
Ritchie
Atkinson,
10
2
East, -306,
following
Lord
Mansfield,
n,
Boone
v.
Skidmore r. Eikenberry, 49 Iowa, 621 Drake v. Hill, 54 Iowa, 37 Gjerness r. Matthews, 27 Minn. 320 Winona v. R. R., 27 Minn.
73 Ind. 153
; ; ;
W.
Bl. 1, 314,
415
'
'
Ernst
v.
Cummings, 55
Cal. 179.
to
be
that
"when
mu-
When conditions
are interdependent,
in
mutual covenants go
to the
whole con-
one party
but where the covenants go only to a part, then a remedy lies on the covenant to recover damages
the other
;
and willingness to perform. Finch, J., Levy V. Loeb, 85 N. Y. 372. As to tender, see infra, 970. That in in562.
Sales,
3d Am. ed.
746
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 558.
ing distinctions, being the third and fourth of Mr. Sergeant ""Where the mutual promises go to the whole consideration on both sides, they are mutual conditions pre" Where cedent ; formerly called dependent conditions."^
Williams':
do an act at the same time as the other, as where goods in a sale, for cash, are to be delivered by the vendor, and the price to be paid by the buyer, these are concurrent conditions, and neither party can maintain an action for breach of contract, without averring that he performed or offered to perform what he himself was bound to do."^ "In determining whether the stipulations as to the time of performing a contract of sale are conditions precedent," Mr. Benjamin states, " the court seeks simply to discover what the parties really intended, and if time appear, on a fair consideration of the language and the circumstances, to be of the
each party
is
to
it
will be
But where the understanding have been that each would be entitled
regard to the question whether he was in default himself, then he can bring suit without averring on his own part perform-
"outraged common
miums
is
and condition subsequent, see supra, 551. That substantial performance of a condition must be shown, see infra,
607.
Mr. Langdell, who discusses the points involved at great length and with much subtlety, thinks "that
sense."
by
tlie
Woodrow, 8 T. R. 366 Mill Dam Foundery v. Hovey, 21 Pick, 439 Knight v. Wor^
Citing Glazebrook v,
;
was to be conveyed when the money was paid, and hence, the covenants were mutually dependent by implication"
tract in that case, the land
Dox
;
r.
Dey, 3
v.
(Lang. Cont.
that
it is
II.
1067)
Wend. 356
2
Cole
v.
virtually overruled
Gazley
den
v.
Moore, 4 H.
&
N. 500.
On
the
Weis,
87
'
111.
Benj. on Sales, 3d
Am.
ed. 593
et seq.
Roberts
v.
v.
Brett,
18 C. B.
Pordage
Cole has
this topic;"
as apparently
v.
Lord KenT.
settled law.
Pordage
Cole
is
fur-
yon fGoodisson
v.
Nunn, 4
R.
580.
747
659.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVII.
remedy on the contract without averring and proving on his part performance or readiness to perform.^ A contract, however,
may
may be dependent, and on the other when this is not the case, and when
But
which the
unless release or
waiver be shown.^
one party refuses to perform a condition precedent, the other party may treat the contract as rescinded ;* and so when the party privileged waives or prevents performance;' and the failure of both parties to a contract to perform the conditions assumed by them, will constitute a waiver on the part of each of the default of the other, and either may tender the performance of his stipulation within reasonable time, and enforce the performance of the
contract against the other.*
III.
When
CONDITIONS PRECEDENT.
1.
Truthfulness of description.
559.
RepreseatatioDs and warranties
We have
"^
is
to be
tobedistin-
from conditions.
warrantv forms a basis for a suit no matter to what point it goes, a misrepresentation, to form a basis for ^ suit, must be material, and must have been productive of injury to the purchaser.^ We have also
;
4 Lucas v. Godwin, 4 A. & E. 599 Allard v. Belfast, 40 Me. Scott, 502 369 Putnam v. Mellen, 34 N. H. 71 Knight V. Worsted Co., 2 Cush. 271; Beecher r. Conradt, 3 Kern. 108. * Dey V. Dox, 9 Wend. 133.
Franklin
v.
Am.
Miller,
Ott
v. v.
v.
Lykens
Tower, 27 Penn.
Supra,
;
462
Schilling
190;
infra,
v.
601
et seq.,
898
Fletcher
Goodrich
v.
*
i
v. Lafflin, 1
Pick. 57
285.
et seq.
Dubois
et
seq.; infra,
Canal Co., 4
Wend.
904
601
869
et
seq.;
Johnassohn
v.
Infra, 602,
Mawman
v. Gil-
Brown
v.
Slee, 103
;
U.
S. 828.
2 Taunt. 327
;
McLean, 500
infra, 560.
748
CHAP. XVII.]
seen that a condition
in this, that
is
CONDITIONS.
[ 559.
where there
a condition there
it
is
no absolute
provided
which
may
assumes a concurrence as to a thing which may be immediately delivered, and binds the vendor to give damages in
case
it
fails
in certain requisites.^
condition precedent,
;
an integral part of the contract which it qualifies the contract cannot be severed from the condition. Representations and warranties, on the other hand, are severable from
also, is
may form
the
resentation or warranty does not prevent (if the parties had the same thing in mind) the contract from taking effect, but
To
regarded on both
is
sides.^
If, for
Hickie, 1 H.
&
N. 183
Dimach
;
Benj. on Sales, 3d
Am.
ed. 561
v. Corlett,
Wilson Sewing Mach. Co. v. Sloan, 50 Iowa, 367. As to "puflFs," as distinguished from representations, see supra,
261.
may
As
Am.
above given, Mr. Benjamin (Sales, 3d ed. 561) notices cases on charter
parties,
"where a statement
to sail, or to
that a
vessel
is
ceive cargo
decided to
abandon the contract, and sue for the losses he has sustained, see2Ch. Cont. 11th Am. ed. 1090 Dodge v. Greeley, 31 Me. 343; Webb v. Stone, 24 N. H. 282 Hill v. Hovey, 26 Vt. 109.
; ;
' *
Am.
ed. 568;
Hays, 2 M. &G. 257 Oliver v. Fielden, 4 Ex. 135 Seeger v. Duthrie, 8 C. B. N. S. 45), but a stipulation that she
;
Notes to Cutter
1, citing
Powell, 2 Sm. L. C.
v. Buba, 2 C. B. N. S. Boden, 5 E. & B. 714; Danube R. R. v. Xenos, 11 C. B. N. S. 152 13 C. B. N. S. 825 Smoot's case,
Barrick
v.
563; Avery
749
560.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVII.
560.
condition precedent.
maTbe a" DOW, in the present relation, to recur to the importamounting ant distinction between descriptions to ' '^,
conditions precedent, on the one side, and warranties,
.
on the other
side.
in a passage adopted
is noticed by Lord Abinger by Mr. Benjamin :^ "A good deal of confumany of the cases on this subject, from the
This distinction
unfortunate use
made
of the
word warranty.
Two
things
have been confounded together. A warranty is an express or implied statement of something which a party undertakes shall be part of a contract, and though part of the contract,
collateral to the express object of
it.
But
in
many
of the cases,
its
but
it
would be
a
as, if
man
buy
him
beans, he does
;
but that is not a warranty there no loarranty that he should sell him peas; the contract is to sell peas, and if he sell anything else in their stead, it is a nonperformance of it." In other words, a warranty supposes a contract, since there can be no warranty without a contract to which it is collateral while a misdescription going to the
not perform his contract
is
;
when
dif-
a con-
by the vendor, or
tract.^
justifies the
As
may
be
Chanter v. Hopkins, 4 M. & W. Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 600. * Supra, 4 etseq., 186, 218. ^ Supra, 186-7. Mr. Benjamin (Sales, 600), after citing the above given passage from Lord Abinger, says *' There can be no doubt of the correct1
399
the sale
is
this con-
if
he
760
CHAP. XVIT.]
cited
CONDITIONS.
[ 561.
an English case,^ where the sale was of " foreign refined warranted only equal to samples." The oil corresponded with sample (the italics are Mr. Benjamin's), but the jury found that the article sold was not " foreign refi.ned rape oil." There was a dift'erence, therefore, not as to quality but as to identity. It was held that the sample warranty only extended to quality, and did not touch the generic question of identity. " If a man contracts to buy a thing," said Pollock, C. B., " he ought not to have something else delivered to him."^ more recent illustration, to the same effect, is to be found in a case^ where a sale was of cotton, through a broker, in what was
rape
oil,
known
as a certified London contract, which was as follows " Sold by order and for account of Messrs. J. C. Azemar & Co.
to Messrs. Casella
bales, at Ihd. per
&
D C
'
128
pound, expected to arrive in Loudon, per The cotton guarantied equal to sealed
sample in our possession," etc. The cotton, when delivered, turned out to be " "Western Madras," an article not only inferior to " Long Staple Salem," of which was the sample, but requiring different machinery for its manufacture. The contract contained a clause, " Should the quality prove inferior to the guaranty, a fair allowance to be made." It was held that this was not a question of quality but of kind that it was a condition precedent that the cotton should be " Long Staple Salem," and that it being generically different, the pur;
The
ruling to this
in the
the
common
there
is
pleas
exchequer chamber.
561.
Yet
whom
an
article has
been sold
Hopkins v. Mans65
; ;
for
it,
Schilizzi,
17 C. B.
819
Hitchcock, 14 C. B. N.
field V. Trigg,
S.
v.
Whitney Doane v.
on
'
And
;
see,
same
Dunham,
Sales,
cited Benj.
et seq.
distinction.
Shepherd
v.
Kain, 5 B.
&
;
A. 240
Taylor
Azemar
Casella, L. R. 2 C. P.
Allen
V.
Lake, 18 Q. B. 560
Wisler
v.
431.
751
562.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVII.
under a misdescription so essential as to amount to a condition precedent, can, by accepting the goods and waiving his right to throw up the contract, proceed may be against the vendor for breach of warranty. As and^^uit brought on ^q havc already seen, the line between essential and warranty. non-essential representations is very shadowy, and there are many representations as to which, in this respect,
''
'
A bushel of
;
peas, it
Lord Abinger's illustration, could not be held to be covered by a sale of a bushel of beans yet while between different kinds of peas there may be, in reference to the purpose of the sale, as great a difference as between peas and beans, it would, without proof of the purpose, not ordinarily be a misdescription which avoids a sale for the article delivered to be of a different grade of pea from that described in the contract. Hence, in cases of this class, the purchaser, by
true, to take
"
of this description
description
is,
that
it
The
mis-
and on
this I
It is in this sense that we are to understand the language of Shaw, C. J., as adopted by Judge Bennett, in a learned note to Mr. Benjamin's treatise: "There is no doubt that, in a contract of sale, words of description are held to constitute a warranty that the articles sold are of the species and
bring suit."
quality so described."^
562.
-^hen
acce^\ed^
specific description,
and
the purchaser, after due opportunity of inspection and examination, retains the goods, he cannot, on
and
re-
Hogins v. Plympton, 11 on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 600, citing also Beals v. Olmstead, 24 Vt, 114 Lamb v. Crafts, 12 Met. 355 Bradford v. Manly, 13 Mass. 139
Shaw, C.
;
Pick. 100
cited Benj.
same cautious limitation of warranties to articles "of the species, kind, and
qualiti/
sale,"
tions,
Hastings
Morrill
V.
v.
v.
Lovering,
Pick. 214;
;
Wolcott Mount, 36 N. J. L. 262 38 N. J. L. 496. It will be observed that in Windsor V. Lombard, 18 Pick. 60, there is the
Wallace, 9 N. H. 14
;
which preclude a contract from Hawkins v. Pemberton, 51 attaching, N. Y. 204 Bounce v. Dow, 64 N. Y.
;
411
Borrekins
v.
Batturs
6 H.
v. Sellers,
&
John. 249.
752
CHAP. XVII.J
as to
CONDITIONS.
[ 563.
tained,
which there was no concealment or fraud, either claim to vacate the sale or sue for damages for false
description.^
opportu-
In
all
matters of description,
it
is
open to the parties to show by extrinsic proof that wrong words were used by mutual mistake.^ When a party elects to hold goods erroneously described in the contract of sale, after he has become cognizant
gpecuon^' purchaser
for obvious
from descnption.
of the misdescription, this may be regarded as agreeing with the vendor to reform the contract so as to make it conform to the facts. At all events, the description cannot be regarded
in such case as a condition precedent, non-compliance with
contract.' On the other hand, where there an express warranty, the purchaser may fall back on the warranty as a collateral stipulation, not either expressly or by implication agreeing to reform the contract so as to make the description conform to the thing actually delivered.* vendor may bind himself absolutely to deliver 563. goods " on arrival" of a particular ship by a contract Describing
is
Whether delivery is conditioned on Fi^tosfrrive" the goods being on the ship, is to be determined by by a ship is maliinff a ^ , n T^T the construction or the particular contract. It I say condition that the goods " are now on passage" by a particular descrfwng
to that effect.
and engage to deliver the goods on arrival of the ship, this is a warranty that the goods are on board, and makes me liable for the goods when the
ship,
t^em
^s
on
shiporseiion^arrivai
ship arrives.*
And
"on
an absolute engage-
an absolute warranty.
ment
vendor
ship arrives, so that the goods not coming in the ship.^ On the other hand, a vendor may avoid a warranty by using
is liable
when the
in case of the
seq.;
Wh. on
Evi-
That extrinsic proof is admissible on question whether the variance between the description and the article delivered
15
8
Benj. on Sales, 3d
;
Am,
ed. 600,
is
v.
New-
Gibson v. Bingham, 43 Vt. 41 Gaylord Man. Co. v, Allen, 53 N. Y. 515 Dounce v. Dow, 57 N. Y. 16 64 N. Y. 411 Morehouse v. Comstock, 42 Wis. 626.
note
; ;
hall, 15
v.
Heathy
Gorrissen
v.
Perrin, 2 C. B. N. S.
681.
6
Hale
V.
Rawson, 4
C. B.
N.
S. 85.
Wadley
r.
Davis,
VOL.
I.
48
63 Barb. 500.
753
564.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVII.
"on
and
ery will be dependent not only on the arrival of the ship, but on the arrival of the ship with the goods on board.^ The
liable, on such a contract, where the goods have been sold were not shipped, though others of a similar character, consigned to the same vendor, but sold to other parties, were on the same ship '^ nor where goods of the same class were shipped, but consigned to another person ;' nor where goods were on the ship, belonging to the same vendor, and unsold, but substantially difterent.^
vendor
is
not
intended to
Condition
^^4.
As
will hereafter
be
seen, a substantial
may on
part per-
though o
,
lormance
become
representa-
>
Boyd
r. Siffkin,
r.
by the vessel
Hamilton,
by the
681.
he did not
afifect
to deal
but
semble,
if
fulfilled
the
ed. 586) gives the following classification of the decisions on the distinction
the ex-
Where
'
guage
is
which turns out to be unfounded, that they would be consigned Fourthly. Where the sale deto him.
scribes the
per ship A. or ex ship A.,' or <o arrive per ship A. or ex ship A.' (for these
expected
rice,'
cargo to be of
'
a particular description, as
400 tons
two expressions mean precisely the same thing), it imports a double condition precedent, viz.,
Aracan Neaensie
named
dent
is
be on board on her arrival. Secondly. Where the language asserts the goods to be on board of the vessel named, as ' 1170 bales now on passage, and expected to arrive per ship A.,' or other
terms of like import, there is a warranty that the goods are on board, and a single condition precedent, to wit, the
arrival of
wyn
V.
V.
V. Pryor, Ry. & M. 406 Johnson Macdonald, 9 M. & W. 600 Simond Braddon, 2 C. B. N. S. 324 Gorris; ; ;
sen
V.
Perrin, 2 C. B. N. S. 681
;
the vessel.
Thirdly.
The
Myers, L. R. 5 Q. B. 429
7 Q. B. 139.
754
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 567.
barring a suit
on
ground
565.
On a
sale
by sample
it is
perfecting the sale that the purchaser should have on sample an opportunity of comparing the bulk with the g^^^ser^^ sample.^ Should the vendor refuse to allow this should have oppor.,,. n opportunity, tins will justify the purchaser in throw- tunity of inspection. ing up the contract.3 566. "The vendor," says Mr. Benjamin,* "who sells bills of exchange, notes, shares, certificates, and other ^ Sale of nef securities, is bound, not by the collateral contract of gotiabie warranty, but by the principal contract itself, to de- pMesge.
'
'
'
'
'
which
is
genuine,
'^'"^^^-
is false,
name
while the above rule has been frequently recognized, and the soundness of the English rulings has been unquestioned,^ the distinction between covenants and warranties in this relation
has not always been maintained, and there are rulings to the effect that the purchaser of invalid paper may pursue the ven-
is
valid.
667.
When
it is
should be given as a condition precedent of indebtedness, then notice must be proved to have been
given.^
Thus where
it
de-
noScT*'
should be
given.
Infra, 604
et seq.;
3d Am. ed.
2
564. 225.
had
Supra,
Benj. on Sales, 3d
v.
Am.
ed. 594
Lorymer
* ^
Smith, 1 B.
&
C. 1.
Sales,
3d Am. ed.
607.
To
;
Taunt. 488
C. 724
Young
v.
Cole, 3 Bing. N.
C. B.
Baker
v.
Newcomb
v.
345
849
133.
Topping
v.
& &
B.
Mansfield
Beard,
B.
82 N. Y. 60.
Young
v.
7^5
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVII.
The subject of
notice of election
We
have already noticed cases in which the description " to arrive " in contracts for the sale of goods
goods to
arrive.
has been held to be a condition precedent.^ have ncxt to consider contracts in which it is provided that the vendor shall give notice of the name of the
We
ship on which the goods are expected as soon as the arrival becomes known to him. It has been held that he cannot enforce such contract without complying with this condition.* marine insurer is supposed to have opportunities 569. knowing what occurs within the range of the ^^ Ininsur-
ance, notice
of loss
re-
not
by the insured
and hence
it is
not necessary,
?t"s^8tipulated.
insured.^
]S^otice
of abandonment
is
to
compel
the insurer to take possession of the wreck.^ In fire insurance the same reasoning does not apply. As a rule, a marine in-
more opportunities to be informed of marine disasthan have the owners of particular vessels as a rule, on the other hand, the owner of a particular house is more likely to be promptly and accurately informed of injury to it than
surer has
ters
:
would
its insurer.
almost universally introduced into policies of fire insurance and when so introduced, notice being given in conformity with the limitatian is a condition precedent to a claim on the
policy.'
And when
v.
Quarles
Ronx
Infra, 621.
266
Supra, 563.
Benj. on Sales, 3d
V.
Am.
ed.
;
Bask
r.
5
588; Graves
Am.
^
Ins. Co.
v.
v.
11 Ex. 642.
Roper
Lendon,
&
E. 825.
Dawson
v.
756
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 570.
make prompt
notice a
condition precedent.
570.
The
may
be
him
;2
in-
ferred
rule,
from
all
This
entiti^d'to^ notice of
acceptance.
however,
which the
offer of
guaranty is a mere proposal. But, as is stated by Matthews, J., in a decision of the supreme court of the United States in 1881, " There seems to be some confusion as to the reason and foundation of the rule, and consequently some uncertainty as to the circumstances in which it is applicable. In some instances it has been treated as a rule, inhering in the very nature and definition of every contract, which requires the assent of a party to
signified to the party
whom
it,
making
it
binding promise
in others
a proposal
in
springing from the peculiar nature of the contract of guaranty, which requires, after the formation of the obligation of the
its incidents, that notice should be given of the intention of the guarantee to act under it, as a condition of the promise of the guarantor. The former is the
sense in
which the
rule
is
to be
The agreement
to
and completes that mutual assent necessary to a valid contract between the parties. It was, in the case cited, the consideration for the promise of the guarantor.
cient consideration of
And wherever a suffiany description passes directly between them, it operates in the same manner and with like eftect. It establishes a privity between them and creates an obligation. The rule in question proceeds upon the ground that the
1
Whyte
v.
Ass.
504
118.
*
Morrow
v.
v.
Waltz, 18 Penn.
St.
Co., cited in
;
Moore
v.
Harris, L. R. 1
Adams
&
R.
Welch,
1
Reynolds
v.
Douglass,
12 Pet.
10 How. 475
Story, 22.
Wildes
v.
Savage.
757
570.[
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVII.
case in
which
it
applies
is
whom
it is
made
that
by the proposer.
plated
is
and make
a guaranty may as well be for an existing debt, or it may be supported by some consideration distinct from the advance to the principal debtor, passing directly from the guarantee to the guarantor. In the case of the guaranty of an existing debt, such a consideration is necessary to support the under-
But
taking as a binding obligation. In both these cases, no notice of assent, other than the performance of the consideration, is necessary to perfect the agreement." Hence it was held that a guaranty made at the guarantee's request is the answer of the guarantor to the guarantee's proposal, and no further
notice
is
necessary
agreement to accept
and forms its guaranty is expressed to be in consideration of one dollar paid to the guarantor by the guarantee, the receipt of which is therein acknowledged, it is not an unaccepted proposal, requiring notice of acceptance to bind the guarantor, but without such notice becomes binding on delivery.^ The question
and the same rule applies when the contemporaneous with the guaranty, consideration. It was also held that when a
;
is
Davis
V.
Wells, S. C. U. S. 1881.
The law
in refer-
Bank
v,
Phelps, 86
that
N. Y. 484.
there
of
is
See to the
eflFect
when
ready distinctively
discussed,
supra,
25 In
a.
As
to
guaranty no notice
Douglass
necessary to
Hillhouse, 7
v.
v.
Thompson
J.,
v.
Conn. 523
Howland, 24
Hines,
Wend. 35; Whitney v. Groot, 24 the court, said: "It is well estabWend. 82 Smith v. Dunn, 6 Hill, lished that there must be an acceptUnion Bank v. Coster, 3 N. Y. ance of the offer of guaranty, and a 543
;
;
Powers v. Bumcratz, 12 Oh. St. 273 Caton v. Shaw, 2 Har. & G. 13 Cooke V. Orne, 37 111. 186 Carman v. Elledge, 40 Iowa, 409 Case r. HowDavis S. M. Co. v. ard, 41 Iowa, 479
203
;
The reason
may
have an opportunity of arranging his relations with the party for whose
758
CHAP. XVII.]
in such case
is
CONDITIONS.
[ 570.
whether the contract of guaranty was comand the guarantee. If it was, it is not necessary, as has been just seen, for any notice to be given to the guarantor in order to fix his liability though it is otherwise where, from the structure of the agreement, or from other facts determining the relations of the parties, the guarantor's acceptance is dependent upon further notification.^
pleted between the guarantor
;
whose favor the guaranty The rule should not be pressed beyond this reason. When the whole of the transaction is connected, and of such a nature as to give the guarantor this information, no spebenefit or in
is
given.
us
by that
court.
But
it
is
of
much
greater im-
cific
or formal notice
v.
is
necessary."
ut supra,
upon sound principles and correct law. The rule as to notice as to guaranty was
In Powers
court said:
Bumcratz,
the
unknown
to the
common
it
law, yet
it is
have carefully examined the cases of Oxley v. Young, 2 H. Bl. 613, and Peel v. Tatlock, 1 Bos. & Pull. 419, and cannot see how the fairness and correctness of the comment upon them of Co wen, J., before quoted,
can be denied or disputed. If there be English cases sustaining the doctrine
of Douglas V. Reynolds, they
"We
on our jurisprudence as a common law rule to attach conditions to the contract of guaranty
sought to engraft
When
party
makes a complete
position
is
The pro-
made
is
to the person of
whom
have not
In several of the
and he accepts it. Upon what principles of law can it be said that this proposition, which was intended to be accepted and take effect
the credit
desired,
In Craft
v.
Isham,
13 Conn. 28, 39, which, though decided before Douglas v, Howland, had not
from that date, should not be binding on the guarantor without notice ? The guarantor makes the person whom he
vouches
for
is
not re-
of credit
by Cow en,
v.
J., it is said, as to
v.
Reynolds,
is it
not the
and Adams
thorities,
they are founded on principles which long since have been settled and are familiar in Westminster Hall. We barely refer to the authorities."
In Wilcox
i\
Draper,
ut supra, after
an
M'lver
;
V.
Richardson, 1 M.
&
S.
elaborate survey of
the authorities,
Maxwell, C. J., said: "The question here involved is presented to this court A desire to conform for the first time.
our rulings, where the authorities are
conflicting,
557 115
Allen
GraflF,
V.
Fellows Kellogg
v. v. v.
v.
Prentiss,
3 Denio,
St.
512
Emerson
29 Penn.
358;
to those
of
the supreme
759
570
a.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVII.
But on an ordinary letter of credit there should be a notice of acceptance given to the guarantor by the guarantee in all cases where the letter is a mere proposal.^ When a guaranty
is
equivalent to a
is
a continuing guaranty,
notice of acceptance,
it is
when that is requisite) that the guarantor should have reasonable notice of the amount of the credit given f though it is otherwise when the guaranty goes to a liquidated contract, of which the guarantor has notice.^
570
a.
tract, a
to notice of
Unless the right is expressly reserved in the conguarantor of a fixed liability is not entitled,
maturing of his
in-
though it is otherwise when notice is expressly stipulated.' The same distinction is a fortiori applicable to contracts for indemnity. But by notifying A., who has agreed to indemnify B. from an impending claim, that the claim has been made, and by calling on A. to come in and defend, A. may be subsequently estopped from maintaining that the claim
debtor,"
Orne, 37
111.
186
Wilcox
v.
Draper,
J.
v.
Davis, 5
209
Allen,
54
Bushnell
v.
Church, 15 Studebaker, 15
v.
Mo. 673
citations
Supra, 254
v.
Sicklemore
Lilley
V.
v.
Thistleton, 6
M. &
; ;
S. 9
Price
v.
v.
157.
>
Gates
Allen,
V.
Kay
v.
V.
320
Kellogg
;
Kincheloe
v.
Holmes, 7 B. Mon.
*
McCollum
Kirkham, 3 H. & C. 437 Mascall, 13 M. & W. 452 Page, 27 Me. 73 Gibbs v. S. & R. 198 Leech v. Hill, Voltz v. Harris, 40 448
;
;
Walton
Cooper
Cannon, 9 4 Watts,
HI.
;
155
Kline
v. r.
Bowv.
Douglass
V.
V.
man
Forest
Wildes
V.
Savage, 1 Story, 22
;
Howe
Rem-
see Brant on
Clark
v.
v.
Suretyship, 168
*
et seq.
Babcock
v.
Bryant,
Lawrence
;
v.
Walmsley, 12 C. B. N.
v.
12 Pick, 133
Pick. 353 Miss. 486.
;
Thomas Montgomery
;
Davis, 14
Kellogg, 43
S. 799
Duncan
Heller, 13 S. C. 94.
v.
760
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
570
a.
A continuing
but
other-
stands on a different
sum.
it is
And
to
when
a guarantor
Leake, 2d
Scott, 3 T. R.
7 M.
& W.
Duffield
v.
v.
an end
tor,
Williams,
Lewis, L.
v.
he
is
K. 8 Ch. 1058.
Thus in a case in 1881 in Iowa the was on a bond executed by L. as principal and the other defendants as
action
be
sureties,
ment
pay a corporation
to
it,
indebtedness
it
the defendants in
whether upon notes, accounts, or in any manner, either party having the
right to terminate the contract at pleasure. The bond was executed upon L. becoming agent of the corporation for the sale of sewing-machines.
therein.
But counsel
this case
an ingenv.
Mills.
Beck,
J.,
in
:
They
that case
was a guaranty,
in this case
The controlling question in the case, and the only one argued by counsel,
involves the correctness of the court's
and are
jointly liable
of the extent of
ment with
court,
we
C,
think,
is
55 Iowa,
543
S.
8 N.
'
W. Rep.
356.
We held
is
in that case,
The error of this position is apparent. L. was or was about to become indebted to plaintiff upon the contract under which he was appointed agent. Defendants were not bound upon that contract. Neither were they bound upon the notes, accounts, acceptances, or upon any contract upon which L. became indebted to plaintiff. They became first and only bound upon the bond, whereby they guarantied that L. would pay his indebtedness to plaintiff
have understood their liability thereunder would be increased and diminished from time to time, and the guaranty
is
in whatever form
it
uncertain as to
when
it
will
upon the guarantor, and when the party indemnified has the power at pleasure to annul and put
cease to be binding
formance of a prior or collateral contract upon which the principal is alone indebted. A surety is bound with the
761
570a.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVII.
would be prejudiced by want of notice of his principars default, and the guarantee was advised of this default in time to give notice, then notice should be given of the fact, and of the
intention to hold the guarantor responsible in all cases in
guarantor is not direct, but is deIn case of a continuing guaranty of is guilty of dishonesty, and the master does not notify the fact to the guarantor, but retains the
liability of the
arises.
which the
This
is
a familiar doctrine of
it
notice to the
the law.
Upon applying
to the facts
of the case,
for
and the surety did not know of was held that it was not the company's duty to notify the surety of
It
upon which L.'s indebtedness to plaintiff arose. They were therefore entitled
to notice,
and the
of
Machine
It may be observed that V. Mills. guarantors are often called sureties. We use the term 'sureties,' in the
Co.
was not There is no rule of law, so it was argued by Morton, J., giving the opinion, which makes it a duty which the creditor, unfailure
to
do
so
der
the circumstances of
this
case,
who
is
his
principal
owes to the surety either to dismiss its agent or to notify the surety of his default.
It is
becomes
But, as
thereon.
we have
seen, a guarantor
Wright
v.
cipal's
and
only becomes
Simpson, 6 Ves. 734 Adams Bank r. Anthony, 18 Pick. 238 Taft v. GiflFord,
;
liable
upon
his default.
is
guarantor,
it
under
this rule,
entitled to notice of
bound
him
counts between
him and
is liable.
debtor
and
creditor."
whom
the surety
v. Littler,
12 Rep. 777.
Simmons, 131 an action upon the surety bond of an agent of an insurance company. The evidence showed
Ins. Co. v.
Watertown
it
amounts
Louisville Co.
;
r.
Welsh, 10 How.
when
Talbot
he failed to pay the balance due the company, and that thereafter his indebtedness increased monthly until March, 1879, when he died, owing a balance larger than the bond. The
Gay, 18 Pick. 534 Allen v. Rightmore, 20 Johns. 366 Douglass v. Rowland, 24 Wend. 35 Fai-m. & Mech.
V.
;
Cox
v.
762
CHAP. XVII.]
servant, the guarantor
CONDITIONS.
570a.
But there must be negliis relieved.^ gence imputable to the guarantee, and consequent loss to the guarantor, in order to enable the latter to make want of notice surety is not disa defence to a suit by the former.^ " charged from liability by the mere fact that the principal is
continued in the master's employment after he has failed to make his payments promptly, of which fact the surety has not
been advised."^
1
Phillips V. Foxall, L. R. 7 Q. B.
18
V.
660.
2
Barnes, 64 N. Y. 385
Cowley
v.
The
Douglass
V.
V.
Clark
V.
Craft
Holway, 55 Iowa, 578 Jones v. U. S., 18 Wall. 662 Albany Dutch Ch. v. Vedder, 14
;*
;
page 592
chine
Rep. 809 (Wis.) [49 Wis. 409] Atlas Bank v. Brownell, 11 Am. Rep. 231
9 R.
I.
58
168.
N. Y. 541 Atlantic Tel. Co. i-. Barnes, 64 N. Y. 385; Pittsburgh R. R. v. Schaflfer, 59 Penn. St. 350. In Home Ins. Co. v. Holway, 55 Iowa, 575, we have the following summary of the cases "The case of Roper v. Trustees of
:
"The
cases relied
Sangamon Lodge,
directly in point,
its facts, in
91
111.
518,
is
also
was held that A person taking a bond for the future good conduct of an agent already in his employment, must communicate to a surety his knowledge of
Sooy
V. State,
'
39 N. J. L. 135,
it
agent in the course of such employment, in order to make such bond binding.'
No
follows
He made
It
and
members
of the society
knew
of his pre-
Upon the when he found himself running behind in his accounts, he made
defraud them in any way.
contrary,
and with such knowledge reelected him and failed to communicate such fact to his sureties, and they doing no act to put the sureties off their guard or prevent them from ascertaining the facts, no fraud can be imputed to the society which can be set up in avoidance of the sureties' liability on the
bond.'
arrangements
delinquencies,
He may
management
of his principal's
is
not shown by
In Philit
was
See also
Ham
v.
Grove, 34 Ind.
763
571.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVII.
it
571.
As between
may happen
for the honesty of a servant, if the master discovers that the servant has been guilty of dishonesty in the course
who
is
igno-
and consent
whom
dence.
the agent
is
from the dishonesty of the servant during the subsequent service.' In this case the surety guaranteed the honesty of a servant.
arise
which may
The failure to communicate such knowledge under such circumstances would be a fraud upon the
guarantor.
in acts
and took an agreement from the servant to pay a certain amount monthly on account of a defalcation which existed, which facts were un-
known
to the surety.
It
was
for a deit
" In Graves v. Lebanon National Bank, 10 Bush, 23, when a cashier who had given no bond was guilty of embezzlement which might easily have been discovered, and the bank furnished a statement of its good condition, after which parties became sureties for the cashier, it was determined
that they could not be held.
lotte,
V.
'
was sought
In Franklin
179,
In Char-
Bank
v.
Cooper, 36 Me.
procured at the
its
Gaw, 59 Ga.
defaulter,
who was then known to be a bond to account and pay over daily, and was made to cover past cannot be trusted with more money at
the sureties' risk after dishonesty of
the agent has been discovered by the
corporation, but
St.
to disclose
he may be so trusted
upon a bond to indemnify the Adams Express Co. against loss from the dishonesty or unfaithfulness of an agent. The agent was at the time in the employment of the company, and had been guilty of acts of embezzlement, which fact was not communicated to the surety. The court say 'Admitting that a principal, in accepting a guaranty for the faithful
:
but
to a
want
all
of diligence or punctualto a
ity rather
than
want
of integrity.'
"In
of
of these
In the last
case
agent
may
of his agent,
is
not
gence or punctuality, and not a want of integrity. Under the facts disclosed
in this case, the court, in our opinion,
erred, both in giving the instructions
can be no doubt,
764
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 571.
debt
the debt becomes payable, is one which would naturally come first to the knowledge of the creditor,
tioued on
within
In such case a stipulation that notice of the happen- pgctnar ^ ine of the event should be eriven by the creditor to knowledge, notice the debtor before the maturing of the debt is a should be matter of substance, and will be enforced as a condi- febtor.**
tion precedent.^
when
a debt
is
is
of the rule
plaintiff,
is
that
when
a thing
is
in the
knowledge of the
but cannot be in the knowledge of the defendant, but the defendant can only guess or speculate about the matter, then notice is necessary."^ It is otherwise when the occurrence of the event is not more distinctively in the knowledge
The
6
true test
454.
to
is
declared by
Watson
V.
Walker, 23 N. H. 471
;
M.
& W.
Lent I'. Padelford, 10 Mass. 230 Tasker V. Bartlett, 5 Cush. 359 Clougli v. Hoflfman, 5 Wend. 500; see Benj. on
;
nanted not
Sales,
3d Am. ed. 577 Webber v. 71 Me. 331. 2 Bramwell, B., Makin v. Watkinson, L. R. 6 Ex. 25. To same eflfect see Vyse V. Wakefield, 6 M. & W. 453; but see Hayden v. Bradley, 6 Gray,
;
Dunn,
or prejudiced it was held that the defendant was not bound by this covenant until the plaintiff had given him notice that he had chosen an office, and
;
had
425.
was too
The following cases are policy he was to observe. Vyse v. Wakegiven by Mr. Leake as illustrations of field, 6 M & W.442 see also Rippinghall V. Lloyd, 5 B. & Ad. 742." Upon a covethe rule in the text " A buyer promised to pay for barley nant in a lease by the lessor to keep the as much as the seller sold it for to any demised premises in repair, it was held other man the seller was held bound that notice of want of repair was a conto give notice before he could call upon dition precedent without which he
N. H. 471.
. ; :
could
not
v.
whom
Makin
who might
Haale
v.
whom
he pleased.
;
Homyng,
cited
though see Hayden v. Bradley, 6 Gray, 425. In Tasker v. Bartlett, 5 Cush. 359, Wilde, J., said it was a settled
765
572.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVII.
Mr. Benjamin to be this: "that if the obligee has reserved any option to himself, by which he can control the event on which the duty of the obligor depends, then he must give notice of his own act before he can call upon the ohligor to comply with his engagement.*'^ 572. It ma3' be a question whether a condition is properly
notified to the party
condition a question of
whom
it is
sought to charge
with
tion)
it.
This
(as
common
carriers,
the party
bound by
But the
must be put in such a shape as to impose the duty of reading it on the party taking the document.^ Whether the party should have taken notice of such
receipt, or bill of lading,
conditions
is
con-
which
a business man ought to notice, then they will bind a party holding such ticket or bill of lading.' As to notice the fol-
Ignorance of the contents of a contract will not ordinarily relieve a party who has signed it when charged with notice of a condition that the contract recites.* And a condition inserted in a contract in such a way as would attract the attention of a person using due care binds, if not otherwise illegal, the party to the contract.^ It is otherwise, however, as to conditions inserted on tickets or other papers in such a way as not to attract attention. And
:
riile
known to the
is
bound
to give notice."
Elmore
Parker
Harris
v.
2d ed. 577, citing Vyse v. Wakefield, 6 M, & W. 442, supra. 2 Bywater v. Richardson, 3 N. & M. 748 1 Ad. & El. 508 Head v. TatterSales,
; ;
v.
v.
R. R., L. R, 1 Q. B. D. 515.
Supra, 196.
Supra, 22
;
sail,
L.
R.
7 Ex. 7
Hinchcliflfe
v.
Wh. on
v.
Neg.
v.
587
Barwick, L. R. 5 Ex. D. 177. That assent must be definite to bind, see supra, 22.
Wh. on
;
Ev.
1243; Austin
R. R.,
16 Q. B. 600
Behrens
R. R., 6 H.
&
N. 366 Bk. of Kentucky ?;. Adams Ex., 93 U. S. 174 Squire r.R. R., 98 Mass. 239 McMillen v. R. R., 16 Mich. 80.
;
766
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 573.
way
to a telegraph blank
on such blank, although the heading was never read by him.^ 573. By the law merchant, the drawer and indorsers of a bill of exchange, and the indorsers of a promissory note, are entitled to notice of dishonor of the Drawer
paper by the party by whom it is primarily due.^ Whether the paper is properly presented for payand indorser entitled to notice of
dishonor.
ment, and whether the notice of dishonor is adequate, depends upon the law of the place of payment.* !N"otice, however, is not required in cases where the drawer or indorser, as the case may be, whom the object is to fix with the debt, is
the party primarily liable, as where the acceptance was
for the drawer's
made
accommodation.^ Nor is it necessary that notice should be given to a surety, who, without becoming a party to the paper, by a collateral agreement, guarantees the payment of a bill, the guarantee binding him absolutely in default of payment. Nor need notice be given to a party who is out of reach, so as to make notification impracticable.^
Supra, 22
Gray, 388;
'
Bowes
V.
Howe,
Taunt. 30.
That
notice
may
or constructively, see
Moore, 37 N. H. 539
v. Tel. Co.,
Redpath
v.
v.
Grinnell Breeze
contra,
7 Met.
;
212
Ridgway
Day, 13 Penn.
St. 208.
See,
Sweatland
27 Iowa,
433
'
and see
Leake,
Am.
Byles on Bills,
And
Adams
this applies
v.
overdue notes.
Dwight
v.
even to Emerson, 2
mand, see 1 Pars, on Cont. 278, citing Lane v. Steward", 20 Me. 98 Buchanan
;
V. V.
Berkshire Bk,
N. H. 159
865.
* V.
Torbert, 6 Ala.
In
v.
Wh.
Con. of L.
454; Rouquette
1 T. R.
Overmann,
8
L. R. 10 Q. B. 542,
v.
Bickerdike
v.
BoUmann,
405; Turner
D. 23.
6
Samson, L. R. 2 Q. B.
v.
such
to the
Warrington
V.
Walton
Mascall, 13 M.
& W.
452.
767
573.]
CONTRACTS.
is
[chap. XVII.
not perfect
dili-
e.,
the party
is
" It renot be presumed to know. mains," said Danforth, J., "to consider the case of Turnbull v. Bowyer
(40 N. Y. 456), cited by the appellant. There the names of persons to whom a check was payable were forged, and afterward it was innocently indorsed
which an indorser
is
liable
Bick-
it
by the defendant. By his negligence went into circulation, and reached the hands of one who, in good faith and
without notice of the true relation of the indorser to the check, paid value
it, and was permitted to recover it back from him upon the ground that the indorsement was a warranty to
Bollman (1 Term Rep. 405) is said by Parke, B., in Carter v. Flower (16 M. & W. 743) to have made the first exception to the general law which requires such notice. There the indorser knew the draft was not to be paid and another is illustrated in The
;
Mechanics'
(7
Bank
of N. Y.
v.
Griswold
for
faith,
where the indorser had all the maker's property. But that any exception should be allowed has been many times regretted, because thereby nice distinctions were introduced into the law, and a plain and
165),
intelligible rule
Wend.
that the instrument itself and all the signatures antecedent to such indorse-
departed from.
It
has,
that,
It
whoever will avail himself of an exception to the general rule, must bring his case within it, either by some recognized authority, or the application of
ment
itself
for
by any
fact
in the case.
tion reference
made
to Story
on
Promissory Notes, 135, 379, 380, 387, and cases there referred to, and such
is
Such exceptions Turnbull Bowyer (swjora) goes no farther than make an indorser liable upon an im-
But
on the ground
if
called
upon
repay money received by him upon an indorsement of a void title, for the author says, There is a failure of the consideration on whicli the transfer was made.' In Daniels on Neg. Inst,
'
ment, purporting to be that of the payee, was genuine and upon the same principle it has been held that a bank certifying a check in the usual form simply certifies to the genuineness of
;
he has funds
sufficient to
meet
it.
It
language similar
to that
of Story is
amount.
City
made
use of ( 669), but the cases cited in its support do not meet the They are like those facts of this case.
before referred to, and only upheld the
rine National
Bank
where the
recovery of
to
check which had been altered, by changing the date, name of payee, and raising the amount,
plaintiff certified a
whom
it
Ryde, 5
Taunt. 486.)
no doubt,
ant.
and subsequently paid it to the defendIt was decided by this court that
768
CHAP. XVII.]
respect to
it
;^
CONDITIONS.
[ 575.
but
is
men
of
cir-
It
may
,
and
.,,
conditioned
on
notifica-
open to his continuous any damages by casualty, or even by ordinary wear and tear, so it has been held in England, must be notified to him in case it is desired to fix him with the duty of repairing;^ though in this country this has been doubted as to matters concerning which the landlord ought himself to take notice.*
as the premises are not
But
inspection,
3.
Bequest or demand.
is
demand
make
A request for
,
^
priord"
immaterial, unless the of a debt is qute the paviuent ^ ' ^ parties to the contract have stipulated that it shall
mandisnot
necessai-yto
indebted-
be made;
if
bound
money so paid could be recovered back from the defendant who had rethe
ceived
it.
and we
" So the defendant in the case before us might be held responsible for the
truth of facts presumed to be within
There
to
any intention
rights
fore
except as indorser.
He had
all
the
an implied affirmation that so far as he was connected with it the draft was not defechis
for
and
privileges of one,
was there-
subject
tive.
It is
which that relation imposed, and as he was not charged according to the law merchant, he cannot be held."
'
Wh.
on Neg. 59
V. V.
et seq.
;
draft,
and
for
whose
it,
consideration
Clark
Man-
Pickering indorsed
chester Bk.
appearing upon
its
The
it
Watkinson, L. R.
Ex.
payee's
finds
name
VOL.
as indorser
was forged
testator's
no undertaking on the
I.
49
Haydon
v.
769
575.]
creditor,
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVII.
and pay him the debt when due."^ ^Even the insertion of the words " payable on demand" in a promissory note,
does not
make
prior
demand necessary
to the institution of a
though when a note is made payable at a particular place, it must be presented for payment at that place,^ and where the note is payable in specific articles, the specific artiAnd "when a party accepts a cles should be demanded.* negotiable bill, he binds himself to pay the amount without notice to whomsoever may happen to be the holder, and on the precise day on which it becomes due."' Even when a demand is required, it need not be in writing unless required by
8uit,2
it be exact in amount unless this be party who puts it out of needed to individuate the debt.' his power to perform a contract may be sued without demand, even though the time specified for performance has not arrived.^ This is eminently the case with regard to promises of marriage.
by his conduct that he does not consider himself bound, cannot complain that marriage was not de-
M.
& W. 458
647.
Wagenseller
v.
Simmers, 97 Penn.
J.,
St. 465.
said
and
2
Norton v. Ellam, 2 M. & W. 461 Maltby v. Murrels, 5 H. & N. 813; Wenman Little V. Blunt, 9 Pick. 488 V. Mohawk Ins. Co., 13 Wend. 267; Wheeler v. Warner, 47 N. Y. 519; Fleming v. Potter, 7 Watts, 380. Leake, 2d ed. 642 Byles on Bills,
;
;
'
I is
entreat
you
to
a civil contract.
refusal to fulfil
it
may
be as unmis-
infra, 871.
V.
an intention
to be
no
of
v.
Hopkins, 5 Cow. Vance v. Bloomer, 20 Wend. 196 V. Churchill, 2 Denio, 145. 6 Parke, B., Poole r. Tunbridge, & W. 225 see Cotton v. Godwin,
Lobdell
;
;
518
Rice
longer bound.
an agreement
Freeth
2M.
7
Burr, L. R. 9 C. P. 208.
this rule applies
We
think
to
M.
& W.
414.
6
147
City
Bank v.
Cutter, 3 Pick.
Colby
Ibid.
V.
Reed, 99 U. S. 560.
on mutual affection. His denial that he had ever promised to marry was very
strong evidence of a refusal.
'
Coupled
infra,
* Infra, 885
and
it
in finding a refusal."
;
See
infra, 606.
770
CHAP. XVII.]
576. It
CONDITIONS.
[ 576.
may
demand
In such case
_ Demand
necessary
pned
in^
prerequisite to the inception of liquidated indebted- baUmentor ness. Thus, when ffoods are left with a bailee for other contract.
with the duty of returning them until a demand is made on him ; though it is otherwise when they have been converted by him wrongfully, in which case the bailment is determined, and he is at once chargeable as a wrong-doer.^ Between a factor and his principal, also, the factor's duty is to account on demand and until the demand is made, or there be instructions to remit, he is not liable to a suit for non-accounting.^ And whenever demand is requisite, it must be given in reasonable demand, however, may be made at any place where time.^ the party holding the goods may be found.* pledgee of stock or other assets, where the debt in question is payable on demand, cannot sell without demand, even where it is agreed that he may sell without notice to the debtor.' And unless a clause is contained in the contract dispensing with notice, the
safe custody, he is not chargeable
sale,
That a demand, when requisite, under a contract of should be made within a reasonable time, will be hereafter A note payable in " legal services on demand" will not sustain an action until a demand, specifying the nature of the necesservices required, has been made.^ When a demand
seen.^
is
'
Wilkinson
v.
v.
Verity, L. R. 6 C. P.
Kirton, 11 Ves. 377
;
Mason
v.
Briggs,
206.
See Wren
v.
Foster
Coal Co.
Bank, 17 Mass. 479. Penn. Blake, 85 N. Y. 227. 2 Wh. on Agency, 787 Topham v. Braddick, 1 Taunt. 572 Burns v. Pillsbury, 17 N. H. 66 Cooley v. Betts, 24 Wend, 203. In Massachusetts, it has
V.
;
; ;
Dunlap
871
v.
infra,
et seq.
Comst. 443.
^ Tucker v. Wilson, 1 P. Wms. 261 Hart v. Ten Eyck, 2 Johns. Ch. 100 Stearns v. Marsh, 4 Denio, 227.
?
for-
demand
v.
is
not necessary.
See,
Dodge
contra,
3
V.
Infra, 882 a.
Cooley
Wend.
5
203.
76.
Haskell
v.
Higgins
V.
Emmons,
Conn.
771
577.]
sary, it
is
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVII.
if
generally
is is
must be determined before suit is brought.^ 577. Where a bond binds the obligor to a specific duty in case he does not pay a designated amount on deBonds conditioned mand, that demand is necessary to constitute liabilfor payity on the bond though it is otherwise when the ment on demand rebond is merely conditioned for the payment of a quire de;
mand.
specific
required.*
And
when
given for the payment of money on demand, demand is necessary to enable the warrant of attorney to become operative.' And interest on a money bond, not
a warrant of attorney
specifying any day for payment, runs from the date of the
bond.^
Bank, 84 N. Y. 421. Brown, 60 Ala. 498;
proof that the defendant was keeping
Southwick
r.
Hammett
;
v.
out of the
refusal to
supra, 575
infra, 885 a.
' Thus, in a Wisconsin case, in 1882 (Wheeler Man. Co. v. TeetzlafF, 53 Wis. 211), the plaintiflfs were shown to have delivered to the defendant a sewing machine under a contract for the sale thereof, by which title was not to pass to the defendant until full payment was made in specific instalments, and on default of any payment the plaintiff was to be at liberty to take the machine away at his option. It was held that the plaintiff, on default in a payment, could not replevy the machine from the
way
his wife,
demand
it
and
refusal to
surrender
it,
especially
to
when
had
were not a demand upon and refusal and claim by the defendant, unless she was especially authorized to act for him in that behalf, and the mere fact that she had made all the previous payments was not sufficient to establish such agency. In support of these views were cited Smith v. Newland, 9 Hun, 553 Johnston r. Whittemore, 27 Mich. 463 Giddey v. Altman, id. 209 Deyoe v. Jamison, 33 id. 94 Cushman V. Jewell, 7 Hun, 525-530 Hutchings V. Munger, 41 N. Y. 155-158. < Leake, 2d ed. 642 Carter v. Ring,
;
been suffered
remain in defendant's
3 Camp. 459
Gibbs
v.
Southam,
5 B.
&
Ad. 911.
Infra, 881.
772
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 579.
4.
579. It
may
by conditions of
goods
is
is
sale,
express or im-
when paya condition ^^^^^^ precedent to the purchaser's liability on the contract, tioned on
to precede the
payment of the
price.
If so, delivery
and no action can be maintained for the price before completion delivery.* Thus, where by the terms of sale fifty condition tons of iron were to be delivered " forthwith," while precedent, the price was to be paid within fourteen days, it was held that the delivery of the iron was a condition precedent to the paying of the price.^ And where, by the terms of the contract, a condition must be complied with by one party before there can be performance by the other party, this condition is a condition precedent.^
after considered.*
delivery or
case of rescission
is
is
here-
divisible,
performance
It
is
may
otherwise
when
a delivery as an aggregate
contracted
for.^
Whether completion
In a case before the supreme court of the United States in 1880, it appeared that C. had contracted with the government for the removal of a rock in a particular harbor, the work to be finished at a specified time; and if he should be unable or unwilling to complete the work after beginning, the officer in charge was to terminate the engagement, and employ others to finish the work, deducting expenses from any money due C, who was to be responsible, for damages caused to others by his delay or laches. As the several sections of the work were in turn completed, he was to be paid pro tanio^ reserving ten per cent, until the completion and acceptance of the whole work. The work was not
construction of the contract.^
Ripley
v.
See
v.
Bean
At1
v.
Altimas, 62
Morris
v. Sliter,
et acq.
Infra, 919.
Infra, 899.
See
v.
infra,
898
Wood, 16 Q. B. 638. ' Mill Dam Foundry v. Hovey, 21 Pick. 439; Knight v. Worsted Co., 2
Staunton
6
''
Infra, 900.
Supra, 554
e<
773
580.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVII.
requisite
compound
work. The officer in charge terminated the engagement, and there was no evidence to show that his action in The work was completed by other this respect was wrongful.
parties at a less price.
It was held that C.
was entitled
to recover
the reserved ten per cent., but not the profits he would have
and delivered by instaldoes default by the purments at fixed periods Succe i instaichaser in accepting and settling for an instalment relieve the vendor from forwarding subsequent inditioned stalments?^ and does default on the part of the cha^geof duty as to vendor in sending the first instalment relieve the purchaser from his obligation in taking the other instalments? The last question was the first decided in England in the exchequer chamber, it being held that default in delivery of an early instalment entitled the purchaser to refuse subsequent instalments.'
lock, C.
The only question," said PolB., " is whether, if a man who is bound to perform his
In a subsequent case' in the queen's
"
bench,
it
when goods
but
is
ground only for a suit for damages. In 1881 the question came up before the court of appeal on the following facts: The plaintiff contracted with the defendant for the purchase of 2000 tons of iron at 42s. per ton, free on board delivery November, 1879, or equally over November, December, and January, at 6c?. per ton extra. During November the defendant wrote to the plaintiff and his broker asking whether he
;
>
Quinn
v.
U.
S.,
99 U. S. 30.
See supra,
14
possibility,
3
and
167.
Hoare
v.
Rennie, 5 H.
& N.
19.
Honck v.
Miller, L. R. 7 Q. B. D. 92,
45 L. T. N.
S. 202.
Bradford
774
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
in
[ 580.
November.
The
plain-
broker replied,
first
and afterwards, that the plaintiff would be obliged if none were delivered till December. The defendant then wrote (on the Ist Dec.) to plaintiff saying that the contract was cancelled* The action was for non-delivery of 666f tons of iron in Dec. 1879, and of 666^ tons of iron in January, 1880. It was held by Bramwell, L. J., and Baggallay, L. J. (Brett, L. J., dissentiente, and reversing the judgment of Field, J., and Manisty,
J., in
Bramwell, L.
v.
J.,
said:
"The
N. 19,
case
is
that
wholly erroneous.
In parcel
of Hoare point.
Rennie, 5 H.
&
in
Tlie
Bosanquet
is to be done on one side is the consideration for the whole of what is to be done on
what
was there held that on a sale of 2000 tons of sugar, to come in two ships, when the first ship was not equal to contract, the huyer was not bound to take the other. But it is said that Hoare v. Rennie has been overruled by Simpson v. Crippin, ubi supra. That is not so. That decision was quite right. The case was distinguishable from Hoare v. Rennie, for the contract had been part performed, and could not, therefore, be undone. One
the other."
"Were
J.,
it
which has been much pressed upon us, I should have felt no doubt as to the propriety of holding that the refusal by the plainCrippin,
tiff
by himself
for
was a
sufficient justification
the
may
It is to
my mind
with what the learned judges said in Simpson v. Crippin, viz., that they did not understand Hoare v. Rennie. The
other cases cited are distinguishable
the
L.
on the same ground. It has never yet been held that a man may break his contract, render the performance of the whole impossible, and though nothing has been done under it, insist on performance of the remainder. Pordage V. Cole, 1 Wm. Saund. 548, has absolutely nothing to do with the case. That was an action on a specialty. This is not. As to the argument that
in a case like the present there are
do not find that the decision in Simpson v. Crippin was in any way
I
but
rested
upon the distinction pointed out by the lord justice. Indeed, Mellor, J., stated in his judgment that he was
unable to distinguish the two cases. If then the decision in Simpson v. Crippin, ubi supra, is to be considered as conflicting with that in Hoare v. Rennie, ubi supra, and I think that it was so considered by the judges who
decided
it, I
am bound 775
to
say that
580.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVII.
of the majority of the court of appeal, therefore, if a contract provides for a sale of specified articles, in successive instalments, forming a continuous system, a failure in either party
in respect to the first instalment vacates the contract as to the
remainder. The point is thus strongly put by Bramwell, L. J. "Suppose 10,000 tons of coal bought to be delivered at Gibralat Bombay in tar, Aden, and Bombay, in equal quantities in March, and Gibraltar and at February, in January, at Aden made to take the the buyer be no delivery at Bombay, could other deliveries? Suppose a contract to supply bread to a workhouse for a year from the 1st January, and the contractor says he will supply, and does supply none in January, can he Suppose he insist on supplying in the other eleven months ? does not supply for eleven months, can he insist on supplying Would it make any diflference if he was paid in December? hope not. I think not. Suppose a man orders monthly? I
a suit of clothes, the price being 'Jl. il. for the coat, 21. for the trousers, 11. for the waistcoat, can he be made to take the
coat only, whether they were
all to
be delivered together, or
is
The question
' '
dependent
Reg. 395,
Am. Law
with reason and justice than those upon which the former was expressed
to be decided
;
1st,
1880."
It
ments that
need not refer to them I may mention that in in detail. the case of Bradford v. Williams, L. R. 7 Ex. 259, which was decided in the early part of the same year as Simpson v. Crippin, Hoare v. Rennie
I
was held
that,
on failure
to deliver the
Butler,
however, said
as
that
he regarded
in
"the point
on general
in the
involved
serious
was quoted and recognized, and the principles upon which it was decided Bradford v. Williams was adopted. mentioned in argument in Simpson v. Crippin, but was not noticed in any of the judgments. The dissent of Brett, L. J., was on the ground that Simpson r. Crippin was in conflict with Hoare V. Rennie, and that between the two he preferred Simpson v. Crippin."
doubt, not so
light of
McKennan,
in
In an elaborate note by
Mr. L.
S.
Landreth,
it
is
argued that
776
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 580.
upon the construction of the contract. It is no doubt competent for rae to say " For the title to the property in question I will give you at once the price agreed on, though delivery need not be at once made." This is all that is ruled in principle in Pordage v. Cole^ and the error in that famous and much-discussed case is, not in recognizing this principle, but in placing under the principle the facts then before the " The court.^ It is also competent for the parties to say
: :
and that in such case there can be no rescission. Honck v. Miller, L. R. 7 Q. B. D. 92, is admitted to rule to the contrary, but is held to be untained,
'
&
21 Charles
2
The
To the
effect
that,
when
and the defendant was to pay the plaintiff 775 for the land at an appointed time. The plaintiff, to adopt Judge Potter's summary in King
sell
land,
contract
is
an
V.
Haines
Tucker, 50 N. H. 309
;
15 Vt. 571
Allen,
Winchester
Thompson v. Conover, 492 Morgan v. McKee, Vroom, 466 77 Penn. St. 228 Lucesco Oil Co. v.
;
;
Brewer, 66 Penn.
St.
;
351
Kirkland
v.
v.
Dunlap
v.
v.
Petrie,
Whitney,
is.
38 Iowa, 60
403.
Sawyer
R. R., 22 Wis.
V. Slater, 12 R. I. 82, " did not allege that he had ever conveyed or offered to convey the land, but sued the defendant for the money. To persons of ordinary intelligence it would seem that although the money was to be paid at a particular time, yet as it was stated and admitted that purchaser it was for the land, the should not be required to pay until he unless, which does not got the land
Philip Mills
The question
in such cases
when making
the
Was
knew
it
dependent upon the due delivery to him of the prior instalments ? If so, he ought not to be comlater instalments
and
is
them.
Y. 217
;
See Catlin
v.
Tobias,
26 N.
339
It
is
Bradley
V.
v.
King, 44
111.
Smith
for
veyed by that time. Then the defendant would have contracted with his eyes open. But the learned court held that the plaintiff should have his judgment for the money, and the defendant should be left to sue for his damages In some for not conveying the land. cases of this sort, justice might be done
otherwise
when
under the law and practice of set-off, by letting both parties sue and retaining the cases until both could be decided.
dependent.
of
In such cases
we have
But
this
which there can be a separate suit. See Dugan v. Anderson, 36 Md. 567 Loomis V. Bank, 10 Oh. St. 327 More and other cases V. Bonnet, 40 Cal. 251
; ;
influenced by the fact that the agreement was under seal. But justice requires that the intentions of the parties
cited 21
406.
777
580.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVII.
goods are to be delivered by instalments, but the whole amount is to be paid at once." But the ordinary meaning of a contract to deliver in instalments is not this. It is "I want these goods in instalments if they do not arrive each
:
it
tract ; if the supply does not come in at the proper moment, I must immediately look elsewhere, and consider your con-
tract with
me
as abandoned."
This
is
the meaning
we would
enable
is
him
to carry
given to a manufacturer, at stated periods, to on his works, as, for instance, where coal
needed for a furnace, and without which the fires would be That, if there be an agreement to this effect, it is to be carried out, and rescission permitted whenever there is a failure to pay an essential instalment, is plain and it is also plain that whether such is the purport of a contract is to be determined from its terms, as explained by the circumstances under which they were And to this conclusion the cases in this country made.
extinguished and irreparable loss incurred.
;
tend.^
In
in
payment of a
should control as
in
be independent as
justice of the case.'
'
contrary to the
an action on a con-
making
marks
I
of Lawrence, J."
etc..
with 1 Rol. Abr. 415, pi. 8, and Blackwell v. Nash, 1 Str. 535, were cited for the plaintiff, Lord Kenyon, C. J., in giving his deciv.
Cole,
Phillips,
Const. Co.
;
v.
common
sense.
Dwinell v. Howmour, 91 U. S. 646 ard, 30 Me. 258 King Philip Mills v. Reybold v. VoorSlater, 12 R. I. 82 Hartje v. Colhees, 30 Penn. St. 116 lins, 46 Penn. St. 268 Robson v. Bohn, 27 Minn. 333. In Van Buren v. Digges, 11 How. U. S. 461, it was held that
; ; ; ;
when payment is
to be
made by
instal-
And
Buller,
there
had been no
case in
not hesitate to
Gross,
J.,
make
a precedent.
And
on payment not being made, may quit the work and sue for what has been done and this though the contract
;
work
shall be prose-
So in Glazebrook
366, 371,
In
the 11th
American
edition
of
778
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 580.
first instalment is made with the evident intention of repudiating the contract, or indicates incapacity to perform it
Chitty on Contracts,
the following note:
rescission
tions.
for
II. 923,
the
unperformed por-
be reached as soon as practicable, and to be maintained. About April 17, two lots, 1000 pieces each, were delivered,
mistake not the effect Dox of Grant v. Johnson, 1 Seld. 252 Bradley v. King, V. Dey, 3 Wend. 361
if I
;
And
the contract
44
111.
339
Upon
where the subject is divided in quantities and times for delivery, and price, as each portion is performed or partially performed, and
ble rule that
The
plaintiff
S. for
is
accepted,
July 1 manufactured, tendered, and refused. It was ruled that the con-
Ayre applies
leaving
tract
was
having failed in the first decompel S. to take goods subsequently manufactured and
plaintiff liveries could not
offered.
which Boone
V.
v.
Ayre
it
applies.
is
"
' '
It
J.,
same
times
and number
coming
mission to
make
deliveries at different
makes the
difference."
An
in-
by Mr.
also,
Law
been so few where the agreement was for successive deliveries at more or less definite periods and that when they have occurred, the decisions should
;
Solicitors' Journal,
have been so
conflicting.
This conflict
Slater, 12 R.
which came before the supreme court of Rhode Island in 1877, the plaintiff, the King Philip Mills, on January 28, 1873, being about to go
82,
marked
cision
July 1.
to
;
him the production of 400 looms up cedent becomes more dificult of appliThe goods were to be made of cation. So, also, when in such cases
and quality,
lots
the
articles
already delivered
have
and
be delivered in
of 1000
pieces
to
be made
The mill was expected to be in by April 1, but deliveries were to be made earlier if possible, and the maximum production was to
lot.
been used, it becomes impossible for the party rescinding to return them and put the other party in statu quo. " In the progress of improvement in
mechanics and the arts old systems of
labor and of trade are changing, each
full operation
779
581.]
CONTRACTS.
for the
[chap. XVII.
seller
and to pay
The insolvency of
the purchaser, coupled with failure to pay for the first instalment, will relieve from the duty to deliver the remaining
instalments.^
default in
payment of
instal-
the
first
when
is
relieve the
nor does an imperfection in performance which may be compensated for by a set-off", or by an action for damages.* What
has been said applies a fortiori to sales of perishable articles, deliverable day after day, and to be paid for at the end of each week. Upon a single failure to pay, the vendor has a right
to rescind.
581. In executory agreements for the sale of goods, the vendor's obligation to deliver and purchaser's oblitory^aereements delivery
and payment
g^tion to pay, are ordinarily concurrent,^ and each constitutes a condition precedent, which cannot be
enforced by either party without showing on his P^rt performance, or oft'er to perform, or prevention
,
,
,
.
,
concim-ent.
by the other side coupled with readiness and willingness on his part to perform.^ Thus in an English case
more subdivided, and, in consequence,
every subdivision becomes more dependent upon others, and upon the
strict
*
588
Ad. 882.
Infra, 603, 885 a, 901
;
portion of the
Chalmers
towards the
it is
Freeth
Scott
V.
v.
Burr, L. R. 9 C. P. 208.
;
and
see as to
St.
without regard to the mere technicalities, and we might well say quibbles,
of the older decisions."
See infra,
ed. 592
584.
;
Supra, 558
;
Benj. on Sales, 3d
Am.
effect are St.
Rey116,
;
2 B.
&
P.
;
Voorhees, 30 Penn.
and Shinn v. Bodine, 60 Penn. St. 182 though see remarks of Williams, J.,
Lucesco Oil Co.
St.
v.
v.
Brewer, 66 Penn.
AUaway, 6 M. & Wheeler, 21 Me. 484 Jones v. Marsh, 22 Vt. 144 Lord Smith v. V. Belknap, 1 Cush. 279
East, 203
Jackson
v.
G. 942;
;
Warren
v.
351
Morgan
McKee, 77 Penn.
St. 229.
16 Johns. 267
780
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 581.
the undermentioned noils (coarse woollen cloths so-called) also agreed to draw for 250?. on account, at three months, 16
packs No. 5 noils, at lO^d. ; 8 packs No. 4 noils, at 12d." The defendant had bargained with the plaintiff for the purchase of the fleeces, and had agreed to sell him the noils. The noils
having
The
but he was nonsuited, all the judges holding that he should have alleged an oft'er to deliver the fleeces, which was a condition precedent to his right to claim the noils.
is
When
land
conveyance of the title, and payment for it, are usually concurrent acts, one dependent on the other. There can therefore be no suit for the purchase money in such case, without a conveyance of title ; there can be no suit for the land without a payment or tender of purchase money.^ The vendor, it is true, on tendering conveyance, may sustain a bill for specific performance ; or the purchaser may sustain a bill for specific performance on tendering the purchase money.^ But at law, while either party may claim damages for the other's default, neither party can sue the other on his direct promise without proving that he has done his part and hence if the purchaser refuses to take title, while liable to a suit for damages, or to a bill for specific performance, he is not liable at law on his promise to pay the purchase money .^ It is otherwise, however, as we have seen, when the conveyance and the
sold, the
;
payment
It
may
while
;
it is
not
Hough
588; Coler.
V.
Grandy As to
et
Manby v. 474 Marsden v. Ex. 808 Moore, 4 H. & N. 500; Bankart v. Bowers, L. R. 1 C. P. 484; Smith v. R.
Pirn, 7
M.
6
& W.
Cremonini,
mode
seq.
1
et seq.;
363
'
*
Campbell v. Gittings, 19 Ohio, 347. Bispham's Eq. 370 et seq. Laird v. Pirn, 7 M. & W. 474.
;
Heard
v.
Wadham,
1 East, 619
Laird
Supra, 545
et
seq.
781
584.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVII.
temporary
dis-
more of the parties, to have the conveyance ready on that day. In such case the conveyance is not a condition precedent to the payment and to enable the vendor to recover, all that is necessary is for him to show that he took all the steps obligatory on him towards tendering the conveyability of one or
;
ance.^
And
which from the nature of the transaction delivery and payment are not concurrent duties.^ 582. Where the time fixed for payment is to But payment may happen or may happen before the time fixed for
precede
delivery.
performance, an action
583.
Purchaser
Although a
sale of
goods
not to be perfected
loss
until delivery,
may
not attach
may
take
risk of delivery.
den of
loss
from the time of the contract, this throws the buron the purchaser in case the goods are destroyed
other.''
is
No
formal
;
payment
are concur-
necessary
enough for the vendor to be ready and willing rent. to deliver, and the purchaser to be ready and willing to pay. If the sale is made on this basis, the contract is complete. It may happen, however, that the goods are deliv
Wms.
15
son, 6 C. B. 103.
As
to
L. R. 7 Ex. 98
Martineau
v.
Kitching,
317.
Supra, 545
Supra,
et seq., infra,
L. R. 7 Q. B. 436.
^
See supra,
seq.
*
Supra,
558
Morton
v.
Lamb,
559
et
;
seq.;
Peeters
v.
v.
T. R. 128.
^
Irving
King, 4
Rawson v. John-
& P. W. 315
C.
309
;
Pistor v. Cater, 9 M.
v.
&
;
Lord
B. 222.
782
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 586.
ered without payment, with the express understanding that the title remains with the vendor until the price be paid. If
80,
the payment
is
title in
the purchaser.^
585.
A delivery of
them
furnish
in a state
may
be
A.
conditioned on receiving from the promisee the proper raw material. In this case the receiving the
material
is
dclivGrv of goods
itk)nedon
to the delivery of supply of a condition precedent ^ matenal. the goods.2 ^What has been said with regard to the delivery of goods applies, mutatis mutandis^ to agreements for
'
the finishing of a particular piece of work, the materials to be furnished by the other contracting party.^
lessee may bind himself to repair, providing cer 586. tain things are first done by the lessor, in which case
lia-
by lessee to
This is the case when the lessee's be^made^^ <iependent made dependent upon the supervision engagement is r r on jr upon prior by a surveyor to be appointed by the lessor ;* or upon acts of les^
the lessor finding the timber, in which case, however, readiness and willingness to furnish the timber are sufficient without actual cutting until required ;* or upon certain
preliminary repairs being done by the
by a tenant to
repair,
Smith
V.
V.
Ayer
v.
v.
Bartlett, 9
Baker, 20 Barb.
364
'
v.
2 Selden, 585.
In Robertson
v.
Amazon
Armstrong, 19
v.
Tug
Co., 45 L. T.
N.
Me. 147
8 N.
H".
Mill
;
Dam Foundry
see Clement
v.
Hovey,
10 Vt.
21 Pick. 417
Clement,
212, it was held that where one party undertakes to perform certain services
210
Downer
v. Frizzle,
541; See
v.
Partridge,
2 Duer, 463.
Where
cific
a note was payable in goods, to be delivered to the creditor on a speday, with the right reserved to
the creditor to
tion,
for the other party with the means to be provided by such other party, there is an implied warranty that such means
are reasonably
fit
for the
purpose
for
and the
Hall
V.
infra, 605.
it
Coombe v. Greene, 11 M. & W. 480. Thomas v. Cadwallader, Willes, 496 Martyn v. Clue, 18 Q. B. 681.
"
Neale
v. RatcliflTe,
15 Q. B. 916.
783
588.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVII.
is
held to
be absolute, not dependent upon there being suflGlcient timber on the premises.^ promise, also, may be conditioned on the exercise 587. of prudence and diligence on the part of the promPromise isee. Illustrations of this are to be found in conmay be conditiontracts of service which are conditioned on the good ed on pruconduct of the employee, and in contracts of comdence and diligence of mon carriage which are conditioned on the owner promisee. doing nothing to interfere with the due performance of the carrier's duties.^
5.
Discretion of 'promisor.
Promise
determinable at promisor's choice is
invalid.
588.
promise which
is
is
determinable at the
inoperative.^
held to be the case with a contract to take into service at wages to be fixed by the promisor, which
is
virtually
1
a promise to
make a
E.
promise.*
It
has been
faith
Dean
of Bristol v. Jones, 1 E.
&
fixing of
wages in good
484.
Wh. on
Neg. 334
et
;
seq.
Faulkner
v.
N. Y. 502
cited supra,
"It appears," said Clark, " from the findings of fact that the plaintiff performed services for the defendant corporation under a contract whereby it was agreed that plaintiff was to enter the service of the defendemployee.
J.,
*
by it, and
was
to be left entirely
as,
under
all
agent upon the terms of making him such remuneration as he, the employer,
shall think right, there
liability to
is
(defendant)
It
no legal
that
pay anything."
v.
On
the
Flight, 5
M.
& W.
was
on a quantum
;
meruit
left to
the jury
sum
of $2.50 per
amount
of
In Butler
1881,
v.
Winona, Sup.
Minn.
plaintiff's
it was held that in such case the agreement could be perfected by the
784
CHAP. XVII.J
CONDITIONS.
[ 588.
no legal liability is imposed by a stipulation take whatever the promisor feels able to pay ;^ and by an agreement to build a house if the promisor chooses.^ At the same time if there be a consideration for such a proheld that
to
imposes any specific duty on the promisor, it may be enforced by a court of equity, and if broken, exposes the party making it to an action for damages.^ Under
mise, and
if
it
head may be noticed the line of cases already discussed in which it is held that an inchoate negotiation which is not to take effect until reduced to form does not bind.* Hence, a court of equity will not enforce specific performance of an agreement " subject to a contract to be settled," or " subject to a proper contract and the payment of a deposit to be agreed on."* The Roman standards are emphatic to the effect that a promise by a person to do a thing in the future at his own
this
The further
and
it,
in good faith,
and
if it
did so fix
found that the services were reasonably worth four dollars per day.
fulfilled so far as
con-
The court below gave judgment for the amount of the compensation at the rate of two and a half dollars per day. The
plaintiff claims that he was entitled to a judgment at the rate of four dollars per day. We think the judgment, as
is correct. The contract was and unambiguous. The stipulation that the amount of the compensation should depend upon the judgment and decision of the employer may have been an undesirable one for the plain-
cerned.
It is
ings nor found in the decision that the defendant acted fraudulently or in bad faith, and fraud or bad faith is not to
be presumed. The mere fact that the defendant fixed the compensation at
rendered,
an amount considerably
less
than the
clear
upon the evidence before him, the services was reasonably worth, is not of itself sufficient to justify an inference of fraud or bad faith.
'
tiff to
consent to
'
Nelson
v.
less, chose to accept the employment on those terms. The contract was an entirety and of obligation in all its parts, and the law cannot, after it has been executed, relieve the plaintiff from the consequences of one of its stipulations which proves to be disadvantageous to him. That would, in
effect,
352.
2
Rosher
;
v.
210
see Harrison
111.
Guest, 6 D. M. G.
v.
424
5
'
Deaf and
v.
Dumb Inst.
Piatt,
III.
Ap. 567.
See
Graham
;
Graham, 34 Penn.
v.
St.
475
Nees, 63 Ind.
245.
* 5
for
Supra,
5.
the parties.
defendant
to
Harvey
S. 280.
v.
Barnard's-inn, 45 L. T.
N.
amount
VOL.
I.
50
785
590.]
election is inoperative.^
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVII.
si vol-
wm5
"Nulla promissio
potest
consistere,
quse ex voluntate promittentis statum capit."^ " l^eque enim debet in arbitrium rei conferri, an sit adstric-
tus."
As Windscheid*
:
contradiction
it
is
to
assume a duty and not to assume a duty. But a distinction is to be taken between cases where the condition is the promisor's future intention to do the particular thing, and cases in which the condition is his intention to do some other thing. For a man to say, " I will to do this thing when I will to do for him to say, " I will to do it,'" is a mere play on words this thing when at some future time I will to do some other thing," makes a promise which can at least be understood. 589. It may be that on the last distinction may be ex;
vendee shall "on trial" or " on approval " be satisfied with the thing delivered.*
work.
for trial, however, makes the sale absolute. The buyer has the entire time allotted for trial in which to change his mind and return the goods.^ If the buyer unnecessarily consumes such a portion of the goods as materially impairs
makes the
sale absolute.*
590. Contracts " of sale or return " differ from contracts of sale on trial in this, that the sale on trial calls for some
sort of trial of the goods,
1
L.
8,
1,
D. de O.
et A.
(44, 7)
;
L.
much
see supra,
16.
'
(4. 38)
2 8
L. 46, 3,
1, cit.
cit.
Ibid.
;
L. 108,
East, 45
field,
L. 7, pr. cit.
48 Vt.
St.
;
Dewey
v.
v.
93.
Benj, on Sales, 565, 595
v.
;
Penn.
Dela-
211
Spickler
Erie, 14 Marsh, 36
v.
Md. 222
69
J
Prairie
Farmer
Co.
Taylor,
mater
V.
Mc
111.
440.
Cormick
Hunt
v.
Ellis V.
;
Mortimer, 1 B.
v.
&
P. N. R.
Upv. Mcton, 10 Pick. 522 Nulty, 7 Gray, 139 Atkins v. Barncases which go stable, 57 Mafis. 428
100 Mass. 198
;
Wyman,
Hyde, 99 Mass. 183. 8 Elliott V. Thomas, 3 M. & W. 170 Lucy V. Mouflet, 5 H. & N. 229 see Smith V. Love, 64 N. C. 439.
257
;
;
Aiken
786
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 591.
of approval as well as on retention beyond the time fixed for while contracts " of sale or return" do not trial And so as 1 , T make subjection to trial a condition, and consist to con;
.
of a mere proposal of sale, the retention of the goods sate or beyond a reasonable time being an acceptance.^ But r*>i^-" a contract which provides for the delivery of the goods to the purchaser to be paid for in the future or returned if he cannot pay, constitutes a present
sale.^
To agree to purchase
;
if satis-
"An agreement he liked is essentially dift'erent from an option to return a purchase if he should not like. In one case the title will not pass until the option is determined in the other the property passes at once, subject to the right to rescind and return."^ And a return before the time limited is not made
to purchase if
;
inoperative by the fact that the article returned has been in-
had nothing
to do.*
But
in
any case the return must be within is absolute, and even a suit on
the warranty
is
excluded.'
may
.
be conditioned on the promisor's approval of certain extraneous acts or things are to be found in cases in
of approval
which an oft'er of a reward is made to parties who capriciouscome up to certain conditions determined by the ^y^^^^^^^'^ promisor;^ and in cases of offers to architects to make plans
for a proposed building, such plans to be paid for if satisfactory.'^ In such case the duty of examination must not be exercised
though
1
it is
must be a reasonable trial of the plans f competent for the parties to leave the question
;
Moss
V.
V.
Sweet, 16 Q. B. 493
El;
* 6
Head
v.
Tattersall, L, R. 7 Ex. 7.
v.
phick
r.
Barnes, L. R. 5 C. P. D. 321
v.
Hinchcliffe
Barwick, L. R.
Ex.
Perkins
ger
Ray
D. 177.
6
?
Schlesin-
Supra, 24.
Moflfatt v.
R.
I.
578
Chamber-
Dickson, 13 C. B. 543
lain
2
15 C. B. 583.
As
v. v.
Martin
Wells,
McKinney
3
Dallman
;
King, 4 Bing. N. C.
Sexton, 4 C. B. 899.
J.,
Hunt
v.
Wymau,
100
105
Parsons
Mass. 198.
787
593.]
CONTRACTS.
"
[CHAP. XVII.
found in the conditions, common in leases, prohibiting assignments unless with the lessor's assent. The lessor's right of rejection in such cases cannot be arbitrarily exercised. Hence, it has been held that
faith.^
Another
good
mere arbitrary and unreasonable refusal to assent to an assignment does not preclude such an assignment, though each limitation of this kind is to be determined by its special terms.^ Still more strongly is the fairness of such discretion insisted on when its exercise has in it anything of the judicial element. Thus, where, in an assignment for creditors, it is provided that debts shall be verified by such proof as the assignee shall require, it has been held obligatory on the assignee to subject the claims only to reasonable tests.^ And a similar duty is imposed upon insurers by the clause in policies requiring that, before payment of an alleged loss, the insured must furnish to the insurers such proofs as they shall
a
deem
the arbiter of the comwith Condition.** pHancc a Thus, an agreement to Third party money on mortgage, provided ^^^^ the property to "^'^d^^bi ter of com- be mortgaged receives a certain valuation, is conditioned on the furnishing of such a valuation ;^ an with condition. agreement for the price of transportation to be fixed by the quartermaster is conditioned on the decision of the quartermaster f an agreement to pay a price to be determined on measurement by a particular person is conditioned on
593.
v. Belfield, 2 C. B. N. S. Stadhard v. Lee, 3 B, & S. 364 2 Pars, on Cont. 59. 2 Treloar v. Bigge, L. R. 9 Ex. 151 Lehmann v. McArthur, L. R. 3 Ch.
1
Andrews
;
Worsley
v.
v.
779
Vose, 71 Me. 17
;
N. Y. 182
149.
Nofsinger
v.
Ring, 71 Mo.
As
infra,
594
of engineer,
Bean v. Miller,
v.
496.
3
4
69 Mo. 384.
Coles V. Turner, L. R. 1 C. P. 373.
Thurnell
Bal-
Braunstein
v.
Ins. Co., 1 B,
&
S.
birnie, 2
7
M.
& W.
v.
786.
S.,
782.
5
Kihlberg
U.
97 U. S. 398.
Benj. on Sales, 3d
Am.
ed. 574
788
CHAP. XVII.l
CONDITIONS.
;^
[ 593.
in-
be conditioned on a certificate being obtained as to the loss from a neighboring magistrate.^ An agreement,
also, for
may
may
;
be
made
this
power
dependent upon the charter of the company and unless is given to the directors, their consent to a bona fide
by A., the price, when fixed, is as it would have been if fixed by the parties themselves.* When, also. P., on leasing V.'s railroad, agrees to pay V.'s debts when duly adjusted and audited, there can be no suit on this agreement when V. refuses to make such an adjustment, even though the creditors of V. have obtained a judgment for their particular. debts.* If an agreement is made for a sale at a specific price, provided that if a third party decide in a particular way the price shall be higher, and the third party, without fault of the buyer,
to pay a price to be fixed
much
must be delivered
at the
is
When
V.
>
Bayley, 2 H.
&
C.
36.
Neuman, 22 Penn.
V.
s
460
Cunning-
Where
ham
595.
6
Bills V. R. R.
Assoc, 7 Baxt.(Tenu.)
Marriott, 2 Bing..N.
In Bogden
v.
by a
per-
was
son to be appointed by the auctioneer, and the decision of such person shall
pushed
to
its
extremest
limit.
An
be
final ;" it
plaintiff
who had
agreement between A. and B. provided that A. should sell a horse to B. for one shilling, provided that if, to the satisfaction of C, the horse should trot eighteen miles in an hour, B. should
Hincliffe
pay the
to
price
of
200.
C.
refused
attend without
It
any
fault of
the
Wood,
Ins.
6 T. R. 710
buyer.
was held
that
A.
was
said
Columbia
513 265
*
;
Ins. Co. v.
v.
Lawrence, 10 Pet.
Co.,
Leadbetter
13 Me.
374.
J.,
Turley
v. Ins. Co.,
25
Wend.
"was
Weston's case, L. R. 4 Ch. 20. Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 87; Fuller V. Bean, 34 N. H. 301 Nutting
;
been performed, or that the performance was prevented by the fault of the opposite side."
V.
McCandlish
789
594.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVII.
to
price,
at a price to be fixed by A., and A. refuses to fix the without any fault of either party, then, as the fixing the price 18 a condition precedent of the sale, there is no sale.^ If, in the case of a sale of real estate, the appraiser is ready to
sell
enter and
make
vendor to allow him to enter and appraise, so that specific performance can be decreed.^ When an appraiser refuses to act on a sale of goods whose price is to be fixed on his appraisement, this also is a condition precedent to a sale though if the buyer obtain possession of and retain the goods after such non-appraisement, he may become liable on an implied contract for their value.' If the contract is to be performed to the
;
If,
however, there
Thus,
is
in a
on
certificates
by the
plaintiffs' engineer.
The
engineer,
him by them.
them to lay this cable also for a price It was held that this agreement was a
and
to
. 594.
have the money they had paid under it returned. Building contracts often contain the provision that
the owner shall not be liable to the builder until the work has been approved by the architect em-
contracts
ployed ; and this provision, made*dependent on ^jjg work suWcct to it, and ' ** approval of .
architect,
builder takes
architect acts
as
'
Emery
r.
Wase,
8 Ves. 505
Milnes
v.
v.
Gery, 14 Ves.
v.
Borden,
400
786
*
Thurnell
Firth
r.
Balbirnie, 2
M. &
W.
v.
Brown
r.
v.
Zaleski
Gray
See Anderson
Wallace, 3 CI,
&
F. 26,
R, R., 11
Smith
V. Peters,
L, R. 20 Eq. 511,
;
ege, 39 Mich, 49
594.
Thurnell
;
v. v.
Balbirnie, 2 M.
& W,
786
Clarke
Infra, 594.
Westrope, 18 C, B, 765.
See Fuller
v.
Panama
Rubber
790
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 594.
be strictly enforced.
since the architect
with this
The owner has no right to complain, was selected bj him, and charged by him very power the builder has no right to complain,
;
work on
how
arbitrary
may
by the contract,
yet, if
he per-
price.^
It
is
otherwise
when the
owner and the architect may together be liable in an action for conspiracy, or the owner may be made liable on the contract being estopped by his own fraud from setting up the
refusal of the architect to certify.^
The converse
is
also true:
a settlement
made by
When
it
Benj. on Sales,
v,
3d Am.
Clarke
Morgan
v.
Birnie, 9
Bing. 672
v.
Grafton
can only be in those cases where the is shown to have been grossly and palpably perverse, oppressive, and
refusal
Watson, 18
v.
;
Goodyear
Weymouth,
;
35 L. J. C. P. 12
unjust, so
of
much
when
once arise
Supra, 279.
S. C.
Butter-
field,
73 Whiteman v. Mayor, 21 Hun, 117 North Lebanon R. R. v. McGrann, 33 Penn. St. 530 Reynolds v. Caldwell, 51 Penn. St. 298 O'Reilly v. Kerns, 52 Penn. St. 214; Condon v. R. R., 14
; ; ; ;
giving
tlie
opin-
by the defendant
Grat. 302
Lull
v. Korf,
84
111.
225
C. 42
Bean
2
v.
Miller, 69
v.
Mo. 384.
Vyse, 2 H.
Batterbury
v.
&
;
Ludbrook
son
V.
V.
Barrett, 46 L. J. C. P. 798,
cited Leake,
van
lusion, see
Panama
;
Rubber
supra,
Co., L. R. 10
593
v.
and
see. supra,
279.
In Hudson
Dixon, C.
J.,
such a state of facts as would at least have justified an inference of bad faith on the part of the architect in accepting the work. Knowingly accepting unsound and rotten materials- where the contract called for sound materials would certainly tend to prove bad faith, and if the evidence had shown that he had permitted large quantities of such material to be used, when the contract called for sound and perfect materials, it would be almost conclusive
fact. Proof that a few pieces of imperfect material had been used, or that in some slight mat-
evidence of that
by
ters the
strict
791
594.]
tect's duties is
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVII.
made
contract.'
The general
A
well as in law.^
certain
builder, also,
who undertakes
to finish
work ordered by an
work, dispute the feasibility of performance within the time, and is liable for the delay.' When, also, it is provided by the contract that the owner's liability should cease upon a default by the builder determined by the architect, the architect's decision on the question of default binds the builder.* Even a forfeiture of what is due on prior work may be thus determined, so that the architect's decision imposing such forfeiture is final.* The certificate must be exact and conform to the condition.^ The principal is not bound by the architect's decision in a matter not within the architect's range of authority. Thus, in a case in Connecticut in 1880,^ B. made a written contract to furnish materials and build a house for C, according to definite plans and specifications, for a fixed sum of money. All materials and work were to be accepted by a certain architect, who was to superintend the construction. B., under directions of the architect, did extra work. It was held that the direction and approval of such work was beyond the scope of the architect's agency, and that, therefore, C. was not liable thereupon.*
not, after undertaking the
would not
be sufScient to avoid the acceptance of the work by the architect, nor establish bad faith on his part but it seems to us, if the defendant had
;
5 Faunce v. Burke, 16 Penn. St. 469. That an architect's certificate can be by parol, see Roberts v. Watkins, 14 though it is otherwise C. B. N. S. 592
;
when
certifiv.
proved
all
cate to be in writing.
Lamprell
;
answer to their full extent, it would have shown such a want of faithfulness on the part of the architect as
should render his acts bind the defendant."
1
Russell
Bandeira. 13 C. B. N. S. 149.
essential
to
When
is
ineflFectual
to
made an
a recovery for
Westrope, 18 C. B. 765 see supra, 312 infra, 603. 2 Scott V. Liverpool, 3 D. & J. 334 De Worms v. Mellier, L. R. 16 Eq. 554 M'Intosh V. R. R., 2 Mac. & G.74.
Clarke
v.
;
Tharsis Co.
v.
Jones
V. St.
John's Coll., L. R. 6
101.
*
Q. B. 115.
<
same
111.
effect,
Downey
v.
Roberts
v.
v.
Wadsworth
O'Donnell, 86
49.
792
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 597.
And where a third party is made arbiter, his decision must be conformed to. Thus, on a contract to guarantee the payment of a certain sura in consideration of the building of a county bridge at a place to be determined by viewers, there can be no recovery if the location determined by the viewers is
changed.^
As
A
if
subscription to a charity or other public under 595. taking may be conditioned on a certain amount be- subscriping elsewhere subscribed and if the condition be ^'g "o^jj not complied with, the subscription is void.^ On the tioned on * action of / other hand, when such subscriptions are made with- third ^^^' out such condition, each one on the faith of the other, ^^^ each subscriber is estopped so far as concerns other bona jide subscribers who have paid in from denying the binding eft'ect of his subscription.* But unless the condition on which the
;
.
1-1
subscription
596.
is
dependent
is fulfilled, it is
not due.
to
is
do an act the defendant guaranteed he should do no defence to an action against the defendant on
rule applies to a contract
the guaranty.
a particular thing.
dition.'
becomes absolutely bound on such a promise on the happening of the conit is settled,
The promisor,
7.
597. Although, unless so limited by the contract, the performance of a promise will not be regarded as conditioned by
Mercer Co.
Tetz
V.
v.
Coovert, 6
W. &
C.
S. 70.
10 Allen, 245
Mann
v.
v.
Cook, 20 Conn.
Butterfield,
S.
Wise.
178; Garrett
465
;
Smith
r.
and other
Supra, 16 a, 528
New YorkExc.
;
Supra,
528.
Co. V.
De Wolf,
31 N. Y. 273.
Supra, 321.
Wh. on
Ev.
1068
Gilmore
v.
v.
et seq.
Brigham
Mead,
793
599.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVIL
an act to be done by the promisee when not necessary ta such performance, yet it is competent for the parties to Collateral matter make a collateral matter a condition precedent. may be If they so declare, their intention will be carried out made a condition by the court, unless the object be to cover an illegal precedent. wager.^ "Parties may think some matter, apparently of very little importance, essential, and if they
ciently express an intention to
suffi-
make
will
be one; or
they
may think
is
cedent,
may
be compensated for in
it
damages, and
Whether
the creditor
having peculiar knowledge of the occurrence of the contingency is bound to notify the debtor has been already discussed.^
598.
Promise to pay out of a fund restricts the
When
fied,
there
is
non-recep-
promisee to such
fund.
tion
to be contributed to
specific parties, is
conditioned
corporation."*
to be so restricted depends
is not inconsistent with the requisites of a bill of exchange that its acceptance should be conditioned and a holder who takes it change may on a future Contingency
;
Supra, 449.
Shields
v,
v.
Pattee,
Sandf. 262;
Gye, L. R.
Comst. 122.
1 Q. B. D. 183;
Supra,
571. v.
Chambers
V.
Jaynes, 4 Barr, 39
260 Green v. Birch, 2 111. Ap. 528. For promises conditioned on arrival of ships at a certain time, or a cargo being in a certain condition, see Boyd v. Seflfkin, 2 Camp, 327 Ellis v. Mortimer, 1 B. & P. 257
Fuller, 88
111.
; ;
Snell
*
16 Q. B. 925
L. R. 6 C.
Lovatt
V.
Hamilton, 5 M.
& W.
639;
794
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 600.
be accepted
condition^^^^'
bill is paid,"^
or
when
a cargo arrives.^
"When, however, the engagement is to pay a certain sum in specific articles at a given price, it has been held this gives an election to pay either the money or the articles / though it is otherwise if the meaning to be collected from the entire writing is that goods are to be specifically delivered.* An indorsement, also, may be conditional.^ But a bill of exchange must, to be negotiable as such, be payable absolutely at a specified date. If it be conditioned on a future contingent event, it is not negotiable, and the holder must sue upon it as on an ordinary contract, proving consideration.^ And a note payable in a particular kind of money is not negotiable.^ This is the case, also, with an order drawn by a consignor to his consignee to pay a fixed
sum when
in funds
from
a consignment.^
600.
may
special liability
He may
n
vacater^
institute obligation.
unless destroyed by
insurer's duties
am bound
^
fire.
-1
m,
This
fire.
is
the reverse of an
casus of accidental fire
who
by
The
also settled
Byles on
Bills,
9th ed. 186 but see, contra, Syracuse Bank v. Armstrong, 25 Minn. 530.
v.
Fan-
Dunlop, Cowp. 571. 8 Miln V. Prest, 4 Camp. 393. * Perry v. Smith, 22 Vt. 301 Brooks Pinney v. V. Hubbard, 2 Conn. 58 Gleason,5Wend. 393; 5 Cow. 152. As
2
Pierson
v.
court, 5 T. K. 482
Hill
Halford, 2
B.
&
P. 413
;
E. 213
Dodge
Cook
v.
Satterlee,
side w. Knox, 2
Edgar
V.
v.
Boies,
11 S.
&
R. 445
94
Cole
Ross, 9 B.
v.
Man. Co.
6
McCormick v. Trotter, 10 S. & R. Wright v. Hart, 44 Penn. St. 454. Muuger v. Shannon, 61 N. Y. 251;
v.
Gillespie
Byles on
Bills,
Supra,
795
601.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVII.
may be made inoperative on the happening of a contingency; e.g.^ when a contractor reserves the right to abandon boring for coal in case he should find " what is known as conglomerate or iron stone before he reaches 300
that an agreement
feet."^
IV.
PERFORMANCE
is
601.
An
it
affirmative condition
regarded as performed
that party prescribes,
way
pends on
terms.
A negative condition
when
is
to be regarded as performed
it as
such
either
the limits designated, or to be incapable of occurring or existthe condition was that a particudo a particular thing, and this thing was one he could do at any time during life, the non-fulfilment of the condition could not be shown until death.^ In our own law we have illustrations of conditions of this class in cases in which estates are limited on the death of parties of whose whereabouts nothing is known.^ Of conditions based upon the non-happening of events requiring certain bodily aptitudes to insure them we have illustrations in estates limited on capacity for child-bearing, which, with women, is supposed to
ing.
In the
In what way the condition is to be specifically fulfilled is to be determined from the terms of the contract.' When, however, a party claims to recover on the ground of having performed a condition precedent, the burden of proving such performance is on him ; and the performance must be satisfactorily established.^ The performance of the
cease at fifty-five years.*
1
Lambert
4.
I.
v. Fuller,
88
111.
;
260.
et seq.; infra,
de V. 0.
(3, 15)
I.
73 D, de
see
624
6
et seq.
Johnson
v.
Reed, 9 Mass. 78
;
Dana
Wh. on
v. v.
Finlay
seq.
;
V.
V.
Albany Church
;
Decorah
to divisi-
Bank
*
V.
see
Jones
V.
r.
U.
S.,
96 U.
;
24
Dana
92
Stockton Soc.
V.
V.
As
to con-
Church
V.
Burgess, 64 N. Y. 390.
796
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 603.
mode
mode be
modified by agreement.^
602.
An
In the
Roman law an
ered as fulfilled whenever the party to be benefited by the condition releases its performance " quotiens
:
in
by Ashurst,
who
in an opinion of the
court of king's bench said, that when the promisee dispenses with the performance of the condition, this " is equal to per-
formance."*
The same rule obtains when the party to be beneby the non-performance of a contract pre- ^jj^g^ In the when such vents the happening of the condition. party preRoman law the rule is thus stated " Jure civile re- vents .. fulfilment. i X Jcondiceptum est, quotiens per eum, cujus interest tionem non impleri, fiat, quo minus impleatur, perinde haberi
603.
fited
.
ac
si
A
6
way
own
wrong.^
"The
conduct of one
and other
infra,
^ Supra, 558 Savage Man. Co. v. Willington Armstrong, 19 Me. 147 Hunt v, LivV. Boylston, 4 Pick. 101 ermore, 5 Pick. 395 Mill Dam Foun; ; ;
and
citations in
Wind-
dery
v.
Dutch Church
V.
Stockton Soc.
See,
as to
performance of contracts,
2
3
infra, 898.
Supra, 547.
mitage V. Insole, 14 Q. B. 728 Frost Knight, L. R. 7 Ex. Ill Mackay Dick, L. R. 6 Ap. Ca. 251 Williams
;
v.
v.
v.
Savigny, op.
cit.
138, citing
I. 5,
5,
quando
*
Hotham
E.
I.
Co., 1 T. R. 645
adopted in Benj. on Sales, 3d Am. ed. 567, citing also Pontifex v, Wilkinson,
1 C. B. 75
;
Bank, 2 Pet. 102 Webb v. Stone, 24 N. H. 288 Webster v. Coffin, 14 Mass. 196; Miller v. Ward, 2 Conn. 494; Burtis u. Thompson, 42 N. Y. 246
;
Howard
V.
v.
Daly, 61 N. Y. 370
;
Risley
v. Ins.
Armitage v.
Insole, 14 Q. B.
Smith, 64 N. Y. 576
Homer
v.
728
V.
Laird v. Pim, 7 M.
;
& W.
R. R., 17 Q. B. 127
;
Co., 67
N. Y. 478; Marie
;
Garrison,
Grove v. Donaldson, 15 Penn. St. 128 Kugler v. Wiseman, 20 Ohio, 361 Follansbee v. Adams, 86 HI.
26 Conn. 110
;
;
13.
1031
et seq.
83 N. Y. 14 Lawrence v. Miller, 86 N. Y. 131 Winch v. Ice Co., 86 N. Y. 618 Kline v. Cutter, 34 N. J. Eq. 329 Johnson V. Somerville, 33 N. J. L. 152; Grove v. Donaldson, 15 Penn. St. 128
; ;
;
797
604.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVII.
covenant.^
equity f nor can a party sue on a quantum meruit^ on part performance, treating the contract as rescinded in consequence of
contract.*
But
may
performance
sion
is
well settled.'
The
the non-performance of a condition precedent when that non-performance is And BO when imputable to himself.'^ Thus, in the familiar case waived. of a sale of goods to be paid for on delivery, if the purchaser notifies the vendor that he refuses to accept the goods, this relieves the vendor from the condition precedent of delivering the goods f and such, also, is the case where the vendor is asked by the purchaser not to deliver, or to postpone the delivery (though a default in delivery is not cured by a
604.
Kugler
V.
v.
Supra, 579
Infra, 919
;
Lowry
Swift
V.
21
Oh.
St.
;
St.
;
324; Jones
and
V.
Dewy, 37 Oh.
et seq.
">
R. R., 14
W.
Va. 514
;
Crump
Reynolds v. v. Mead, 3
infra,
;
891,
901, 945
Sales,
Benj. on
Mo. 233; Aller v. Pennell, 51 Iowa, 537 Smith v. Wheeler, 7 Oregon, 49 and cases cited infra, 712 supra, 312. That a party by disabling him;
; ;
2d Am. ed.
566
Cooper
v.
self
may make
Bradley,
J.,
Peck
v.
U.
5
S.,
102 U.
Mowry, 16 Mass. 7 Betts v. Perrine, 14 Wend. 219 Whitney v. Spencer, 4 Cow. 39 Haden v. Coleman, 73 N. Y. 567 Swift v. Dewy, 37 Oh. St. Crump V. Meas, 3 Mo. 233 see Brown and see cases V. Slee, 103 U. S. 828
;
; ; ;
;
S. 65.
2
cited supra,
v.
559
as to release, see
Borden
v.
Borden,
Mass. 67
;
infra,
8
1031 etseq.
v.
Marshall
V.
8 *
Shaw
V.
Ripley
Fitt
Cassanet, 4 M.
V.
&
G. 898.
See .Jack;
son
see
4 Pick. 114.
infra, 994-5.
798
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 605.
subsequent request not to deliver) ;^ and where performance on a later day is accepted as a substitute for performance on a
and where on a contract to manufacture and deliver goods, the vendor is notified by the purchaser that he has changed his mind and will not accept the goods when ready.' A waiver, however, is not to be implied from silence, unless the silence be of a party whose duty was at the time to speak.* But performance of a particular thing is waived by the acceptance of a substitute for such particular thing ;' and this is the case with the waiver of conditions precedent in
prior day
;^
cannot enforce a performance upon the refusal of the other party to perform, and then rely on such non-performance as a ground for reinsurance.
It should be added, that a party
scinding the
established
contract.''^ The intention to waive must be by language and conduct, and not by speculation
as to intention.' 605.
On
whn a
specific job, is to
employee for damages for breach of contract.^" And, where the plaintiff agreed to build a barn for a from^orkfixed price, the defendant to supply the materials, l.gfo^'^ it was held that where the barn was not completed
in consequence of the defendant's failure to supply the mate-
the plaintiff was entitled to recover for part performance." But as a general rule, " where the plaintifl' himself is
rials,
1
Plevins
v.
Downing, L. R. 1
C. P.
Hartford Ins.
Co.
v.
Davenport,
5
37
83
D. 220.
2
Mich. 609.
v.
Warren
Cort
V.
'
Selway
v.
v.
Fogg,
M.
&
S.
R. R., 17 Q. B. 127
Frost
Allen
V.
Gray
v.
et seq.
Leake, 2d ed,
Porter
v.
Stevrart, 2 Aiken,
427
;
667
Peeters v. Opie, 2
Wms.
1
Saun.
C. B.
Warren
see
346
'"
Morton
Pontifex
v. v.
v.
Lamb,
7 T. R. 130.
Flannery
6
v.
Williamson,
75";
Planche
Hadley
v.
v.
Bennett
Ins.
Y.
H. 110 273;
Hall
V.
799
606.]
to
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVII.
do an act to entitle himself to the action, he must either show the act done, or if it be not done, at least that he has performed everything that was in his power to do."^ And as will be hereafter seen,^ when a term of service is broken into by the employer, the employee may recover on a quantum meruit. It will be also seen, that the duration of a term of service, when not limited in writing, is determined by the facts of the particular case, as modified by local usage.^ party who disables himself from performing a con 606. tract cannot set up in defence to a suit on it a techParty disabling him- nical default by the other party subsequent to the self cannot occurrence of the disability.* Thus when, after a set up technical decontract for the sale of goods to be delivered when fault by other requested by the purchaser, the vendor sold the party. goods to a third party, it was held that to subject the vendor to liability to the purchaser it was not necessary that the purchaser should have requested delivery ;' nor when one party has disabled himself absolutely from performing his part of the contract need the other party even tender to perform his part in order to bring suit.^ man, who, when engaged to be married to one woman, marries another, cannot, to a suit for breach of promise brought against him by the first, set up the want of a request to him to marry ;^ and generally after an agreement to sell real estate to A. upon certain conditions precedent, an absolute sale to B. relieves A.
Note to Peeters
Infra, 716. Infra, 612, Infra,
v.
Opie,
xit
supra.
Bowdell
v.
V.
Amory
717
et seq.
;
Brodrick, 5 B.
&
Aid. 712
infra, 994-5.
6
712-16
supra, 312,
Clark
V.
325; Kerrison v. Cole, 8 East, 231; Avery v. Boden, 5 E. & B. 714 Cort
;
supra, 575
7
Supra, 575
;
Short
v.
Stone, 8 Q.
V.
R. R., 17 Q. B. 127
;
Caines
v.
Smith,
B. 358
;
Freath
v.
Burr, L. R. 9 C. P.
;
V.
& W. 189 Mill Dam Foundry Hovey, 21 Pick. 417 Heard v. Lodge, 20 Pick. 53 Smith v. Lewis, 24 Conn.
15 M.
;
;
and cases
v.
see
387.
to a
624
tas,
26 Conn. 110
;
Stewart
r.
Ketal-
Harrison
Cage, 1
is
Ld. Ray.
36 N. Y. 388
;
7 Watts, 380
414
195,
see
Law Denby v.
no defence
supra,
see
324.
and see
infra,
995, for
other cases.
800
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 606.
from proving that the conditions precedent had not been performed by him, provided there was no default on his part promisor, also, prevented by the prior to the sale to B.^ interference of the promisee from completing his contract may recover for part performance, though the contract was entire.^ An employer who refuses to give notes, as required by the contract of employment, is suable at once on quantum meruit.^ Whenever, in other words, there are concurrent conditions, neither party can sue without showing that he was ready and willing to perform, or that performance on his part was prevented or waived by the other party.'* " The plaintiff," as was said by Storrs, C. J., in a well-considered case in Connecticut,' "in order to sustain this action, need only to show that he did what the law required of him and all that it required was that he should be ready and willing to perform on his part if the defendant was also ready to perform on his." "Some misapprehension or confusion appears to have arisen from the mode of expression used in the books in
of offer as
when
used in reference to
where the money is offered to a creditor who is entitled to receive it, and nothing further remains to be done, but the transaction is completed and ended but it only means a readiness and willingness accompanied with an ability on part of one of the parties, to do the acts which the agreement requires him
;
Main's case, 5
Brown
;
v.
Co. 20 b; Lovelock
B. 371.
Franklyn, 8 Q.
9 Q.
Wilinfra,
helm
Caul, 2 Watts
&
S.
26
714
et seq.
not set
up a
failure in service
Atkinson v. Smith, 14 M. & W. 695 Bankart v. Bowers, L. R. 1 C. P, 484 Howe v. Huntington, 15 Me. 350 and cases cited in prior notes to For other this section and to 558.
B. 164
;
hy himself
as a defence to a suit
by the
employee, seeinfra, 716 et seq. That a quantum meruit lies in cases of failure
on defendant's part
to
VOL.
I. 51
801
607.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVII.
which he
and a notice by the former to Such readiness, ability, and notice are sufficient evidence of, and indeed constitute and imply, an ofler or tender in the sense in which those terms are used in reference to the kind of agreement we are now considering. It is not an absolute unconditional offer to do or transfer anything at all events, but it is in its nature conditional only, and dependent on, and to be performed only in case of, the readiis
required by
it
to do,
divisibility of perform-
ance are considered in other sections.^ 607. When there is a substantial performance of a condition precedent, the agreement, if the condition
will be enforced ^ pro tanto} divisible, '
'
is
performanceofcondition pre-
Thus, where a
be
suffl-
full cargo and deon payment of freight, but sailed with only a partial cargo, it was held that, supposing the load-
be proved
ing to be a condition precedent, yet, as the condition was divisible, a suit might be maintained for freight pro rata on the goods carried.^ Where it was a condition precedent in a contract for the sale of a business that the profits should appear by the books to amount to a certain sum per week,
the purchase money to be paid by instalments, it was held, after the purchaser had taken possession of the business and
carried
it
on until
all
not set up as a bar to a suit for the purchase money that the profits fell below the figure designated in the agreement.*
And
is
See supra,
et seq.
898
2 Leake, 2d ed. 664; Benj. on Sales 3d Am. ed. 564; Ellen v. Topp, 6 Ex 441 Havelock v. Geddes, 10 East, 563 Bradford v. Williams, L. R. 7 Ex. 260 Stanton v. Richardson, L. R. 7 C. P 421 Divinal v. Howard, 30 Me. 258 Holden Steam Mill Co. v. Westervelt, 67 Me. 446 Maryland Fertilizing Co. McGrath. v. V. Lorentz, 44 Md. 418
; ; ;
Roberts
450.
Havelock, 3 B.
& Ad.
404
As
to divisibility of conditions,
As
to other cases of
Pust
V.
Dowie, 5 B.
&
S. 20.
802
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
is
[ 608.
quantum meruit}
remarkable that, according to this may be varied by matter ex post facto \ and that which is a condition precedent when the deed is executed may cease to be so by the subsequent conduct of the covenantee in accepting less. This is no objection to the soundness of the rule, which has been much
rule, the construction of the instrument
acted on.
But there
is
often a difficulty in
its
application to
cannot be intended to apply to every case in which a covenant by the plaintiff forms only part of the consideration, and the residue of the consideration has
particular cases, and
it
That residue must be the subBut while substantial performance of a condition is essential, such performance must be proved by the party setting it up.^-A condition whose performance is of no possible value whatever to the promisee
been had by the defendant.
stantial part of the contract."^
608.
it
A condition
subsequent
is
a limitation of
title so
that
tingent event.
sense,
The term
title is
used in a general
title to
Conditions subsequent
divest
title,
and includes
it
title to labor,
and
By
precedent,
1
is
created
29 Penn. St. 358.
et
Supra, 603
V.
4 *
Emerson
v. Graflf,
Blood
V.
Champlin Wilhelm v.
;
seq.
infra,
v.
Blake, 1 Lev.
88
Poussard
;
v.
Spiers, L. R. 1 Q. B.
v.
In
it
Raymond
v.
D. 410
S. 55
;
Cowell
Rowell
v.
v.
was held that a master would not be liable for not teaching an apprentice when the apprentice would not be
taught.
Randall
V.
Wells Brigham v.
Osborn
v.
Dresser Man.
;
See infra,
613.
Waterston, 3 Met. 9
v.
Ev. 353 et seq. ; Penn. Life Ins. Co. v. Dovey, 64 Penn. St.
Wh. on
r.
Goodell
Fair-
233
Knight
v.
v.
R. R.,
70 Mo. 231
McClelland
Nichols, 24
51
and see
Minn. 176.
803
608.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVII.
condiby a condition subsequent, a duty is extinguished. tion precedent is put in evidence by the plaintiff in order to
establish his right to sue
;
a condition subsequent
is
put in
evidence by the defendant for the purpose of showing why he should not be sued. But while this is the general rule, " it is
by a condition performing the obligation subsequent before the time Yet, if arrives, and hence before any right of action accrues. an action be brought after the time for performance arrives, the plaintiff will be able to state and prove facts which will entitle him to recover, unless the defendant sets up and proves
possible for an obligation to be extinguished
for
from the condition subsequent."^ It is also elsewhere more fully shown,^ that so far as concerns the reason of the thing, the distinction between conditions precedent and conditions subsequent is purely artiThere is no condition that is not in one aspect preceficial. dent and in another aspect subsequent. That a stranger cannot take advantage of a breach of a condition subsequent, springs from the very nature of contracts f and as a stranger, so far as concerns the right to insist on a broken covenant on land, is to be considered an heir of the grantor when such heir has no interest which would be served by the exaction of the Thus, in a case in Michigan in 1881, the plaintiff forfeiture. sought to take advantage of a condition in a deed that no intoxicating liquors should be sold on the premises. " May an owner of lands," said Marston, C. J., " when conveying the
his defence arising
to be observed, as
is
same, insert such conditions subsequent as his fancy may dicand upon a breach thereof insist upon a forfeiture of the estate, although such breach in no way tends to his prejudice? May he insert a condition that even an objectionable business
tate,
on upon the premises or that a particular or if use of the premises, and none other, shall be made any violation of the laws of the land occur thereon, as an assault and battery, that the estate shall be forfeited and that
shall not be carried
; ;
he
may
Upon
what
ii.
1002.
784.
804
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 609.
conditions in restraint of trade, and that would tend to prevent alienation of the property, may be inserted at pleasure,
called
upon
The
right
we do
not ques-
where
it
An
owner of
real estate,
when
conveying a part thereof, may undoubtedly impose conditions, which, if reasonable, courts would, by an appropriate remedy, restrain and prevent the violation thereof, for the protection of the grantor and his privies in estate, certainly so long as the reasons which gave rise to the condition still existed. Nothing, however, of this kind exists in the present case. It
does not appear that the plaintiffs, at the time of the convey-
ance or since then, owned any other lands in the village or vicinity of Otsego, or that they resided in the village or vicinity, or
of this condition."^
609. When property is vested in A. subject to a condition subsequent that on the happening rr o of a certain con- ^ Burden is tingency it is to revert to B., the burden is on B. to on party
,
.
reverted.
'''Prima
devolution
every contract
.
is
by cond^*^
and
upon a person who says it is revocable or ^'^^'^ subsequent. determinable to show either some expression in the contract itself, from which it is reasonably to be implied that it was not intended to be permanent and perpetual, but was to be in some way or other subject to determination. "^ ^Yet the question is complicated by the circumstances just mentioned,
it lies
,
that a condition
is
in
another aspect a condition subsequent. hold that the burden is on the actor ; i.
to establish a point.^
1
e.,
Barrie
v.
Wh.
on Ev.
;
353
1881,
2
Gray
v.
James, L.
V.
Mass. 188.
London R.
can
Dun-
Findley, 6 S.
&
R. 235.
51*
805
613.]
CONTRACTS.
CHAP. XVII.
610. Ordinarily, as
Contract
however, may agree that on breach of warranty the goods may be returned, and the contract rescinded, though the right is usually limited to a specific time, after which the right to claim rescission ceases to exist even as to latent defects not detected until after that period.^
breach of warranty.
we have seen, a breach of warranty does not give a right to rescind except in case of fraud or of honest misapprehension.^ The parties,
611.
As we have
On
con-
already seen, when there is a contract of " sale or return," the intention being that the purchaser shall take the property with a right to return
return"
title vests.
within a certain limit, the title vests in the purchaser, the condition being a condition subsequent.^
612. The right to determine contracts of service depends upon the terms of the particular contract interpreted by usage.* That a contract may be made to terminate and a forfeiture imposed on the decision of an architect or other referee has been
Right to determine
contracts of service de-
pendent
upon
concrete
case.
already shown.'
Indentures of apprenticeship
is
conditioned on the
.
mutually dependent,
apprentice's willingness to learn, while the appren^ ^ ,.' ^. ^, ticc 8 Covenant to serve is conditioned on the mas.
^g^jg
If the appren-
from his covenant f though mere misconduct on the part of the apprentice, not amounting to
'
V.
Denton, 1 C,
& M.
207;
;
Head
v.
Tattersall, L. R. 7
V.
Ex. 7
;
Thornton
v.
Fairman v. Oakford, 5 H. & N. The conditions on which such contracts may be terminated, and the
K. 10
635.
;
Wynn,
12 Wheat. 192
Scranton
effect of
distinctively discussed.
718.
*
2 Hill, 288.
v.
Hyde, 8 M. & W. 723; Chapman v. Gwyther, L. R. 1 Q. B. 463 see Bryant v. Isburgh, 13 Gray,
Smart
Supra,
594; Faunce
ed.
v.
Burke,
Leake,
2d
663
607.
Humphreys,
Supra, 589.
Infra, 718; Leake,
v.
6 B.
&
C. 680
;
Hughes r. Rayment v.
supra, 323.
2d ed. 673;
;
See Blunt
v.
Baxter
Nurse, 6 M.
&
G. 938
1 C,
&
Holbiuok
V.
806
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 615.
from the duty of teaching, though it may subject the apprentice to a cross-action, or, under our practice, to a set-ofl' for damages, should he sue the master for failure in the latter's covenants.* The apprentice's covenant to serve is conditioned on the master's readiness to direct
and
teach.^
And
formance
614.
is
Deeds of separation between husband and wife reand Deeds of cease to be operative when they resume cohabita^gtwTen^'^ tion ;* though, when the deed by its own terms is husband and wife , ,.,., to remain in lorce until there be a written consent are revoked to resume cohabitation, it is not avoided by cohabi- new^d^cotation without written consent.' And a deed pro- habitation. jected to meet an intended separation which never took place As has been already seen, agreements modiis void ab initio.^ fying the marriage relations are void as against the policy of
main
the law.'
customary to insert in leases stipulations that, by the lessee of certain duties (e.^., paying of rent, repairing), the lease is maybe to be forfeited. These stipulations are for the ben- ^^^^^^
615. It
is
in case of non-discharge
efit
of the lessor,
and cannot,
therefore, be set
up by the
lessee
as
ground
forfeiture
by acceptance of rent
Winstone
v.
Handle
Bindley
v.
&
B. 457.
Linn, 1 B.
&
C.
460
Phillips
v. Clift,
v.
Mulloney, L. R. 7 Eq.
4 H.
&
N. 168.
It is
otherwise
that
when
343.
^
the indenture
provides
misbe-
Supra, 394.
Westwick
v.
The-
odor, L. R. 10 Q. B, 224.
Ellen
V.
V.
Boast
Rede v. Farr, v. Woodward, Jones v. Carter, 15 M. 6 B. & C. 519 & W. 718. See Garnhart v. Finney, 40 Mo. 449. Dendy v. NichoU, 4 C. B. N. S. 376 Toleman v. Portbury, L. R. 6 Q.
^
M. &
121
Arnsby
B. 245.
807
616.]
CONTRACTS.
[chap. XVII.
order to avoid the lease on ground of forfeiture, he must notify the tenant, or do some other act showing that he holds the lease to be terminated. The same rule obtains with re-
Thus in a case, already cited, in Michigan in 1881, the evidence was that the plaintiflf8 conveyed certain lots in the village of Otsego Lake by wargard to other defeasible conveyances.
ranty deed, subject to the condition that if the grantees, their heirs or assigns, should sell, or knowingly permit another to
sell
conveyed should cease and revert to the grantors. was shown that defendant, a subsequent grantee, had sold intoxicating liquors on the premises. The defendant introduced evidence tending to show that intoxicating liquors had been sold on the premises with the knowledge and consent of the plaintiffs, and it was held that this, if proved, was a waiver.^ And, independently of the question of waiver, conditions limitestate thereby
It
we have
seen, be en-
(auflosende
party to
right,
;
whom
it is
limited.
The
reversioner has a
on the condition occurring, to resume possession and according to the Roman law, he has an immediate title to the thing, not merely a claim
any
steps being taken
"It is well settled," said Marston, "that a condition subsequent may be waived, where broken, by the party who has the right to avail him'
by the
plaintiffs
C. J.,
to insist
upon a
forfeiture, this
would
and
forfeitiire.
self of
it,
and
this
may
be proven, as
Pick. 284.
v.
Blanchard, 8
could
plaintiffs
waive the condition there can be no express agreement, and where once question, and, if they permitted the waived it is gone forever. If, there- premises to be used in violation thereof, fore, it appeared that the grantor of they could not stand by, see the propthe defendant had used these premises erty change hands, and, after valuable or the buildings thereon for the pur- improvements had been made thereon, pose of selling intoxicating liquors then step in, insist upon a forfeiture, therein, to the knowledge of the plain- and thus acquire the improvements made upon the strength of their seemtiffs, or either of them, and the deBarrie v. Smith, fendant subsequently purchased the ing acquiescence." premises, and made valuable improve- Sup. Ct. Mich. 1881. Ibid. ments thereon without objection, or supra, 608.
;
808
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 616.
According to our own law, on breach of a condition subsequent the property reverts to the grantor.^
against a person.^
Hence, a settlement by a father of four thousand dollars on a married daughter, with a provision, that the money should revert to him should she die in an approaching confinement? has been held to give a vested right to her father to the reversion upon her death taking place at such confinement.^ Whether the condition reverts is a matter of law when there Thus, in a case decided in "Wisconsin, are no disputed facts.
in 1881,^ a " reaper
and
self-binder"
was delivered
to a con-
and used in the harvest of that In January or February following, the vendor's agent called on the purchaser in relation to payment for the machine, and the purchaser said he would give nothing for it but he still kept it and did not ofter to return it until the following April. It was held that as a matter of law, the machine was not returned in reasonable time, and judgment should be entered for the value. In such cases it was said, the question may be treated as one of law, and passed upon by the court without any encroachment upon the province of the jury. The title that reverts, however, may be merely a title not to be sued. Thus, an insurance policy may
ditional purchaser in July,
season,
and found
defective.
Windscheid, 90. Cowell V. Spring Co., 100 U. S. 55.In this case there was a condition in a deed of land, avoiding it in case intoxicating liquors should be sold in any place of public resort on it. It was held that on breach of the condi'
by the grantor until he had made entry upon the land after condition broken, or made claim, if entry was
impossible.
C. 10.
'
Hammond
v.
v,
R. R., 15 S.
Herrington
;
Robertson, 71 N. Y.
v.
had a
right to treat
Reist,
Where a deed conveyed a strip of land to a railroad company, to them, their successors, and assigns, forever, "provided always, and this deed is upon the express condition," that a certain system of drainage was to be kept up by the railroad company, it was ruled that
the estate as reverted.
this
Gammon
v.
Williams v. Porter, 41 Hutchinson v. Chicago, etc. R. Co., 41 id. 542; Berg v. Chicago,
and notes;
Wis. 423
etc.,
;
R.
Co.,
v.
;
50 id.
419.
etc.,
See, also,
Lemke
;
Chicago,
R. Co.,
39
voidable
condi-
Booth by v. Scales, 27 id. 626 2 Sedg. Damages, 173 Vaughn v. Howe, 20 Wis. 497.
Wis. 450
809
617.]
CONTRACTS.
[CHAP. XVII.
is
to be forfeited
when
is
established.^
617.
Defeasible title passes to vendee
Under a
Thus
defeasible, is attachable
in
1881, for the conversion of a mowing machine, the evidence was, that the plaintiffs sold the machine to C. in June, 1879, upon the condition that he should pay one half of the price on August 15, and the other half on September
20, of the
The defendant,
deputy sheriff, attached the machine as the property of C. on July 9, and sold it on execution August 22, 1879. The plaintiffs' writ was dated July 28, 1879. At the trial in the
superior court, a verdict
was directed
was reported to the supreme judicial court. This was affirmed by the supreme court. " The agreement between the plaintiffs and C," said Morton, J., "amounted to a conditional sale, liable to be defeated upon the non-performance of the conditions. C, after the delivery to him, had a rightful possession which the plaintiffs could not interfere with until a failure by him to perform the condition. He had an interest in the property which he could convey, and which was attachable by his creditors, and which could be ripened into an absolute title by the performance of the conditions.^ Even if the sale by the defendant without performing the condition made him a trespasser ab initio^ so that the plaintiffs could at any time after the breach of the condition maintain trover against him yet the difficulty is, that, at the time the plaintiffs commenced this suit, there had been no breach of the condition, and they had no right of possession. In order to maintain trover, a plaintiff must show that at the time he commences his suit he
parties, the case
by agreement of the
Semmes
Vincent
v.
Day
;
v.
Currier
v.
v,
Knapp, 117
810
CHAP. XVII.]
CONDITIONS.
[ 617.
has possession or a right to the immediate possession.^ It follows that this action was prematurely brought, and that
the ruling of the superior court was correct."^
1 Winship v. Neale, 10 Gray, 382 Ring V. Neale, 114 Mass. Ill Hardy i;. Munroe, 127 ib. 64.
; ;
Newhall
v.
445.
811
END OF VOL.
I.
1964
University of Toronto
Library
DO NOT REMOVE
THE
CARD
FROM
THIS
Acme