Bowen v. Tipton

1 A. 861, 64 Md. 275, 1885 Md. LEXIS 34
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 20, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1 A. 861 (Bowen v. Tipton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowen v. Tipton, 1 A. 861, 64 Md. 275, 1885 Md. LEXIS 34 (Md. 1885).

Opinion

Irving, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was instituted upon an alleged promise of the appellant to the appellee to pay the appellee a certain debt of John Bowen, Jr., the appellant’s son, in consideration of the appellee’s forbearance of certain attachment proceedings about to be instituted by him. The first count in the declaration is in strict conformity with the form prescribed in Art. 75, section 22, sub-section 24, of the Code. The demurrer thereto, therefore, was properly overruled. The second count was somewhat more specific [286]*286as to the character of the claim of the plaintiff against the defendant, and of the suit about to be instituted, but alleged the promise of the defendant substantially as in the first count; and the abandonment of plaintiff’s attachment proceedings in consequence of said promise is distinctly averred, and the failure of defendant to pay, notwithstanding such abandonment is similarly averred ; so that there was no error in the overruling of the demurrer to the second count. In fact, the demurrer was not pressed by the appellant in this Court.

To sustain the plaintiff’s claim against the defendant, it was necessary to prové a subsisting bona fide claim against John Bowen, Jr., which plaintiff was about to sue for, in order to lay a foundation for the defendant’s promise to pay it in consideration of forbearance. The existence of such claim being a thing to be found by the jury as the subject of forbearance, any evidence which would establish the claim as against John Bowen, Jr., in a suit against him, must, in the nature of things, be evidence in a suit of this hind to enforce a promise of payment in consideration of a forbearance to sue on such claim. No higher grade of evidence can he required than would be necessary against the debtor. The admissions of the debtor, therefore, that he did owe the plaintiff the amount claimed, or something in that neighborhood, was certainly evidence to go to the jury by way of establishing such claim. The plaintiff testified directly to the existence of the debt and also the admission thereof by the debtor. The first exception being to the admission of this as evidence was properly overruled. °

The plaintiff after testifying to the-amount John Bowen, Jr., owed him, proceeded to say, that he put the claim in the hands of an attorney to collect, and that “ he brought two securities and executed a bond.” This evidence is the subject of the second exception. In terms the exception is to all this evidence, but we suppose it was intended to [287]*287be confined to tbe statement, that the bond was executed, without the production of the bond. The fact that two securities were brought for the purpose of giving bond in attachment, was clearly competent; and whether the simple fact, that a bond was executed as proceeding from this witness -was admissible, is rendered wholly immaterial by the evidence of another witness, to the same fact at a subsequent stage, of the case, which was admitted without objection.

The instructions granted and refused form the subject of the third exception. The first four prayers of the defendant in varied form, seek to take the case from the jury on the ground that there was no legally sufficient evidence to justify a verdict for the plaintiff. The Court was clearly right in rejecting them. The proof was, that John Bowen, Jr., owed the plaintiff and the claim was placed in the hands of an attorney for collection, who exhibited the claim both to John Bowen, Jr., and John Bowen, Sr., and informed them of the consequences of the suit which he was instructed to institute. After information of this claim, from the attorney having it in hand for suit, the appellant obtained a bill of sale from his son, John Bowen, J'r., for all his property. The appellee then went to see the appellant, and told him “he was going to send the sheriff up that day; that he was not going to stop for that bill of sale; it was all a fraud.” The appellant replied, “Don’t you do nothing; there is nothing done against you; you keep quiet.” Appellee said he did “ not know what else it was clone for on the top of this notice to John Bowen, Jr.; I am not able to lose the money,” &c. Appellant replied, “I know you have been a great friend of Johnny’s; nothing is done against you; you ought to know what it is done for; you keep quiet, and you will have your money; I guess I am worth it.” Appellee said he did not know whether he was or not, and then asked him to sign a note. Appellant declined, saying, “ no I [288]*288sign no notes, but you shall have your money.” Appellee then left him, and relying on that promise called immediately at his attorney’s and stopped the proceedings, and did not send the sheriff up, as was to be done that very day. In addition to the. testimony of the appellee, another witness, one William Stewart, testified that John Bowen, Sr., told him “his son John owed Tipton a good deal of money,” and said, “'I told him he should have his money, and he shall have it.” He also said, if he “ had let Tipton go on he would have' broken John up, and he wished he had let him do so.” The appellant denied these conversations, and offered evidence of a different character ; but the question raised by the prayers depends entirely upon whether, assuming the plaintiff’s evidence to be true, there was legally sufficient testimony to warrant a recovery by the plaintiff. We think there was, and that these prayers of the defendant were properly rejected.

Mr. Addison, in his valuable work on Contracts, Vol. 1, p. 11,(8thUd.,) states the law to be as follows: “Forbearance of legal or equitable rights forms a good consideration for an undertaking, and will make it binding, and this, even though no actual benefit accrue to the party undertaking. If the plaintiff, for example, at the request of the defendant, forbears to institute legal proceedings, or discontinues legal proceedings already commenced, against a third party for the enforcement of a lawful claim or demand for any convenient or reasonable period, or suspends, or withdraws an execution, or a distress against the goods, or the person of such third party, the suspension or withdrawal of such execution or distress, or the forbearance of further proceedings, forms a sufficient consideration for a promise by the defendant, to pay money to the plaintiff, or to satisfy the full amount of his claim.” It is to be noted that this statement of the law makes the actual forbearance, pursuant to request, and in reliance [289]*289on the promise to pay for it accompanying the request, the consideration perfecting the contract or agreement, so as to bind the person so requesting, to pay for the forbearance accorded. Numerous authorities exist for this statement of the law, but we content ourselves with citing a few of them: Smith vs. Algar, 1 B. & Ad., 603; Morton vs. Burn & Vaux, 7 Ad. & Ell., 19; Jones vs. Ashburnham, 4 East, 463, &c. It was “ the forbearance,” this Court says, in Emerick vs. Coakley, 35 Md., 190, which constituted the consideration in that case. Without forbearance, in fact, there could be no consideration for the promise. A written agreement could be so constructed as to coerce forbearance ; but in parol agreements of this kind, the mutuality is effected by actually according the forbearance in pursuance of the request and the promise. This is the substance of Lord Denman’s decision in Morton vs. Burn & Vaux, 7 Ad. & Ell., 19.

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Bluebook (online)
1 A. 861, 64 Md. 275, 1885 Md. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowen-v-tipton-md-1885.