Clarke v. McFarland's Executors

35 Ky. 45, 5 Dana 45, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 8
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 6, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 35 Ky. 45 (Clarke v. McFarland's Executors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clarke v. McFarland's Executors, 35 Ky. 45, 5 Dana 45, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 8 (Ky. Ct. App. 1837).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Matilda McFarland Clarke, an infant, suing by her next friend, William Duncan, filed a declaration in assumpsit, against John McFarland Ferguson, administrator, and Mary Jinn McFarland, administratrix, of John McFarland, deceased—averring that, she Joeing the illegitimate child of the intestate, and her mother being about to institute proceedings against him for maintenance, he agreed with the mother, in consideration of her promise to for[46]*46bear, and also to keep, and nurse, and Labor for, tho plaintiff, that ho would, from time to time, make such auxiliary contributions, in property and money, as might become necessary to “support” herself and the plaintiff “in comfort,” and moreover, at the same time and for the same consideration, fortified by his moral obligation, he promised the mother, that he would “secure and pay” to their daughter Matilda, the plaintiff, whenever requested, the sum of Ten Thousand Dollars; and averring, also that, although the mother had faithfully observed and performed all that she had undertaken to abstain from and to do, nevertheless the intestate had not, in his lifetime, paid or secured to the plaintiff, the ten thousand dollars, or any part thereof, and that his representatives, though specially requested, had refused to do so since his death and their qualification.

Demurrer, and questions for decision. A verbal promise made by one party to another, that the promiser will pay to a third party, may be enforced by action in the name of the latter, whenever, as between the contracting parties, there is a legal obligation, and the payee was not a stranger to the consideration.

The Circuit Court having sustained a demurrer to the declaration, this writ of error is brought to reverse the judgment in bar of the action.

As tho declaration is undoubtedly good in other respects, we shall consider only the two objections to it which have been urged in argument: first—that the plaintiff is not the proper person to sue; and, second—that the consideration, as alleged, is not sufficient to render the promise for the ten thousand dollars, enforcible by law.

First. Although the general rule, as stated by Mr. Chitty, in his treatise on Pleading (first volume, page 4,) seems to import, that a verbal promise to one, to pay to another, may, under all circumstances, be enforced by an action in the name of the payee, whenever, as between the contracting parties, there is a legal obligation; vet, we think that both authority and principle require that the plaintiff should not be a stranger to the consideration. 1 Comyn on Contracts, 26, Flatbush Ed. of 1809: Dutton and Wife vs. Poole, 2 Levinz, 210; 1 Vent. 318, argued, and same, 332, reconsidered and decided; 1 Strange, 592; 1 Bos. and Pul. 101. n. c.; Pigot vs. Thompson, 3 Ib. 149, and notes, and Schemerhorn vs. Vanderheyden, 1 Johnson’s Repts., 140.

The natural affection and moral duty arising from the connection between a father and his illegitimate child, do not constitute d sufficient consideration to impart a legal obligation to a verbal promise— But— A moral obligation will support a verbal promise, where, and only where, the promiser has received something valuable from, or been the cause of some loss to, the promisee. When there is a consideration existing sufficient to uphold a verbal promise, as between the promiser and promisee, and the promise is to pay to a third party, and the third party is a child of the promisee, the effect of the promise (though made to the parent, to pay to the child,) will be the same as though It had been made to the child—who may, therefore, enforce it by an action in his own name.

In this case, according to the declaration, there was no binding consideration between the plaintiff and the intestate promiser; for it is well settled that, neither natural affection, nor the moral duty arising from the relation between them, is a sufficient consideration to impart to a verbal promise a legal obligation. Though it is said, and truly, that a moral obligation may be an effectual consideration for a promise, yet it is not every such obligation that will be so availing. In Pigot vs. Thompson, supra, the annotator, after collating British cases on this point, says, “An express promise, therefore, as it should “ seem, can only revive a precedent good consideration which might have been enforced at law through the “ medium of an implied promise, had it not been suspended by some positive rule of law; but can give no “ original right of action, if the obligation oil which it is “ founded, never could have been enforced at law, “ though not barred by any legal maxim or statute provision.” But the rule, thus defined, is, in our opinion, too comprehensive, and not sufficiently qualified and specific. The true doctrine, as we understand it, may be found in the text in Chitty on Contracts, illustrated by the cases there cited; and is this: that, to be a sufficient consideration for an express promise, a moral obligation must be of that kind which has been superinduced by the fact, that the promiser had received something valuable from the promisee, or had been the cause of some loss to him, for which the law did not imply a promise which it would enforce.

There is no such moral obligation in this case. But the case of Dutton and Wife vs. Poole, and some of the other cases to which we have referred, seem to have established the doctrine that, if there be a sufficient consideration between the contracting parties, to make the contract legally binding as between themselves, the relation of parent and child, between the promisee and the person to whom the promiser has undertaken to pay, will be sufficient to give to the child, as beneficiary, a legal right to demand and enforce the performance of [48]*48the promise: for, though such relationship would not alone be a sufficient consideration for an enforcible promise by the parent to the child, yet it will convert the valuable consideration, passing from the parent, to the benefit of the child, just as if it had actually passe'd from the latter directly to the party promising, in consideration of value received fro'm the parent, to pay the chili, instead of the parent, in consequence of the relation between them, which induced the latter thus to provide for the former, not by an executory parol contract between themselves, but by the promise of a strangers to pay the child what the parent purchased for, and, in this mode, actually advanced to, the child.

The obligations which rest upon the father of an illegitimate child towards its mother, are sufficient to uphold a verbal promise by him, to pay her a gross sum; and if the promise to her, is to pay to the child, the relationship between the mother and child, is sufficient to give the child a legal right to enforce it. The mother of an illegitimate child agrees with the father, that she will keep, nurse and labor for, the child, and will forbear to institute any proceedings against the father, for maintenance: in consideration of all which, he makes a verbal

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Bluebook (online)
35 Ky. 45, 5 Dana 45, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarke-v-mcfarlands-executors-kyctapp-1837.