Cobb v. Cowdery

40 Vt. 25
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 40 Vt. 25 (Cobb v. Cowdery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cobb v. Cowdery, 40 Vt. 25 (Vt. 1867).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Kellogg, J.

The plaintiff took issue upon the truth of the defendants’ second plea, and the facts found by the county court to be proved by the testimony on the trial established every material averment of that plea. It is now claimed by the plaintiff that, notwithstanding the issue upon the truth of this plea was found in favor of the defendants, the plea itself was not an answer to his cause of action, because the agreement or contract between Downer and the defendant Cowdery was without any legal consideration, and was void as being against public policy. This claim raises the same questions in respect to the sufficiency in law of the facts alleged in the plea which would have been raised if the plaintiff had demurred to the plea instead of traversing it. As in the case of a motion for judgment non obstante veredicto, the motion is necessarily founded on the record alone, and can never depend on any state of evidence which is not disclosed by the record (Snow v. Conant, 8 Vt. 301), so in this case [28]*28the propriety of the judgment of the county court, to which the plaintiff excepted, must be tested on the facts which were within the issues tried, and not upon facts which were proved aliunde. The case depends wholly upon the sufficiency and legality of the consideration for Downer’s undertaking.

! The general principle is, that if part of a consideration be merely ¡void, the contract may be supported by the residue of the consideration, if good per se; (Bradburne v. Bradburne, Cro. Eliz. 149; Tisdale’s case, ibid., 758; Crisp v. Gamel, Cro. Jac. 128), but if any part of a consideration be illegal, it vitiates the whole. Featherston v. Hutchinson, Cro. Eliz. 199; Bridge v. Cage, Cro. Jac. 103; Scott v. Gilmore, 3 Taunt. 226; Woodruff v. Hinman, 11 Vt. 592; 2 Saund. R. (Ratteson & Wms. edit.), 136, note 2. A promise by a party to do what he is bound in law to do is not an illegal consideration, but is the same as no consideration at all, and is merely void; in other words, it is insufficient, but not illegal. Thus, if the master of a ship promise his crew an addition to their fixed wages, in consideration of and as an incitement to their extraordinary exertions during a storm, or in any other emergency of the voyage, this promise is nudvm pactum, the voluntary performance of an act which it was before legally incumbent on the party to perform being in law an insufficient consideration ; Jand so it would be in any other case where the only consideration for the promise of one party was the promise of the other party to do, or his actual doing, something which he was previously bound in law to do. Chitty on Contracts (10th Amer. edit.), 51; Smith on Contracts, 87, 88; 3 Kent’s Com. 185. The finding of the county court excludes the. idea that there was any improper intent or purpose on the part of either Downer or Cowdery in making the contract or agreement set forth in the plea. The thing which Cowdery agreed in this contract to do on his part was to give to Downer information in respect to the witnesses by whom the suit-in favor of the South Royalton Bank against Baxter and Moore could be supported — Downer being the plaintiff in interest in that suit— and also in respect to the facts which could be proved by those witnesses, and to settle a claim which Hyde and Sprague were making against Downer on account of his having caused certain horses and [29]*29colts, which they had conditionally sold to Cowdery, to be levied on and sold as Cowdery’s property, and to indemnify Downer against that claim. The plaintiff claims that what Cowdery agreed to do on his part was no more than he was under a legal and moral obligation to do, and that, for this reason, there was no legal consideration to support the agreement; and this claim presents the question whether Cowdery was under any legal obligation to furnish to Downer the information which was the subject of their agreement. Although the duty of Cowdery to furnish the information without fee or reward may be established by the principles of ethics as a moral duty, it was a duty of imperfect obligation, and one which could not be enforced at law. Even in a court of equity, a bill of discovery does not ordinarily lie against one who is a mere witness, and has no interest in the suit. • 2 Story’s Eq. Jurisp. (Redfield’s edit.), §§ 1499, 1500. Whatever might have been Cowdery’s duty to Downer in respect to furnishing this information to him, it was duty which the law did not impose and could not enforce ; and, however strong may have been his moral obligation to do that which he agreed to do, it is only promises founded on the performance of duties imposed by law which are regarded in law as merely gratuitous and not binding. The same principle is applicable to that part of the contract or agreement in respect to paying Hyde and Sprague for the colts, because, whatever might have been the duty of Cowdery to Hyde and Sprague, he was under no legal obligation or duty of any kind to Downer, in respect to the colts ; and his undertaking to do that which he was under no legal obligation to do, was a good consideration for Downer’s promise, even if the residue of the consideration relied on should be treated as being merely void.

But the plaintiff claims that this contract or agreement between Cowdery and Downer should be treated as being illegal and void as being against public policy, because it was a contract to fix a price on the testimony of Cowdery as a witness, and thereby it tended to obstruct and prevent the due administration of justice. The undertaking of Cowdery was not to conceal, but to disclose his knowledge in respect to the facts which were material on the trial, and the witnesses by whom those facts could be proved ; and he did not under[30]*30take by the contract either to become a witness, or to furnish any testimony, for Downer on the trial. The plaintiff claims that Cowdery was under a moral, if not a legal, obligation to do just what he undertook in this contract to do, and it is clear that there was no illegality in the thing Which he agreed to do, unless it was illegal becaúse its tendency was to prevent or impede the due course of public justice. If this was a contract to suppress evidence, it would clearly have been illegal on this ground, but there is no such feature in it. It was a contract to give information in respect to evidence,— to disclose, and not to suppress, the truth, — and the tendency of the disclosure cannot be regarded as in any respect interfering with or obstructing the administration of justice. Contracts for the payment of rewards offered for the detection of offenders, or the discovery of proof establishing their guilt, have always been upheld and enforced in law. In England v. Davidson, 11 Ad. & El., 856, (39 E. C. L. R. 254), the defendant offered a reward to whoever would give such information as would lead to the conviction of a felon. The plaintiff, who was a constable and police officer of the district where the felony was committed, gave such information. On demurrer, it was claimed for the defendant that no consideration was shown on the record for the defendant’s promise; that the plaintiff was bound to that, the doing of which was stated as the consideration ; and that the contract declared on was against public policy. The plaintiff claimed that he was not bound to procure evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 Vt. 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cobb-v-cowdery-vt-1867.