Conover v. Stillwell

34 N.J.L. 54
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 34 N.J.L. 54 (Conover v. Stillwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conover v. Stillwell, 34 N.J.L. 54 (N.J. 1869).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Depue, J.

The validity of the contract sued on is denied for the want of a consideration to support it. The money mentioned being payable on a contingency, the instrument is not a promissory note., As a consequence, a consideration will not be .implied from the form of the instrument, and the plaintiff, to establish his right to recover, must aver and prove the consideration on which the contract was founded.

Even in the case of a promissory note, the words value received” only import a consideration so as to relieve the party from proving it in the first instance; and it is well settled that the consideration may be inquired into, and if a want of consideration is shown, the plaintiff cannot recover. The circumstances attending this transaction are all before the court, and the inquiry will be, whether they show a [57]*57consideration which will give to the contract any legal efficacy.

The general principle underlying this subject is well settled. Its application in some cases is a matter of difficulty, but in this case it is easily applied to the facts agreed upon in this state of the case.

The consideration to support a promise, may be either a benefit accruing to the promiser, or a loss or disadvantage.to the promisee.

A consideration emanating from some injury or inconvenience to the one party, or from some benefit to the other party, is a valuable consideration. Story on Contracts, § 429; 1 Parsons on Contracts 431. But to give a consideration value sufficient for the support of a promise, it must be either such as deprived the person to whom the promise was made of a right which he before possessed, or else conferred upon the other party a benefit which he could not otherwise have had. Thus, part payment of a debt overdue is not a valid consideration for an agreement to postpone or discharge the payment of the residue. Pabodie v. King, 12 Johns. R. 426; Reynolds v. Ward, 5 Wend. 501; Gibson v. Renne, 19 Wend. 389; Smith v. Bartholemew, 1 Metc. 276; Deacon v. Gridley, 15 C. B. 294.

Bo a promise to pay increased compensation for services which the party was under a prior legal obligation to render, is not valid. Stilk v. Myrick, 2 Camp. 317; Harris v. Carter, 3 E. & B, 559; Voorhees v. Woodhull's ex'rs, Court of Errors, March Term, 1869, 4 Vroom 494.

The relinquishment of a security deposited by a debtor with his creditor, as collateral security for a debt, which was afterwards discharged by a composition deed, is no consideration for a promise by the debtor to pay the residue of the debt beyond the amount of the composition; the debt being released and the debtor entitled to the return of the security, the creditor cannot make its surrender a consideration of a new promise. Cowper v. Green, 7 M. & W. 633; McDonald v. Neilson, 2 Cow. 140; Crosby v. Wood, 2 Seld. 369.

[58]*58In this case, the Conovers, at the making of this contract, were under a prior legal obligation, by virtue of the mortgage given for a portion of the purchase money, to pay the money which they were induced to pay by the defendant’s undertaking.

The performance of this obligation neither gave the defendant nor the assignee of the mortgage a benefit to which he was not previously entitled nor did it deprive the Conovers of anything which they were not previously bound to render. The performance by the plaintiff of what he was under a prior legal obligation to perform in the manner and at the time stipulated in the mortgage, is not a sufficient consideration to support the new contract he obtained from the defendant at the time of perfoi'mance.

It was argued by the plaintiff’s counsel, that this contract might be upheld by placing it on the ground, that it was the result of a compromise between the parties of a claim made by the plaintiff, the right whereof was in doubt.

The evidence before the court affords not the slightest pretext whereon to form a claim of an abatement or indemnity for a defect in the title conveyed. Of the existence of any title in another, there is no legal evidence whatever. Nothing but the loosest neighborhood rumor is produced to raise the probability or possibility of an outstanding title to a portion of the premises.

A compromise of a doubtful claim is, in law, a sufficient consideration to support a promise, whatever the actual rights of the parties may have been. What substance there must be in a claim, to make a compromise of it, unless it is actually in suit, a valid consideration, has occasioned great contrariety of decision.

The cases, are carfully collected in the American Notes to Stapleton v. Stapleton, 3 White & Tudor’s Lead. Cas. (5th Am. Ed.) 406; Farmers’ Bank of Amsterdam v. Blair, 44 Barb. 641; Cabot v. Haskins, 3 Pick. 83.

But whatever conflct there may be in the cases as to the character of the claim which entered into the compromise, [59]*59there is no controversy that the claim, whatever it was, must ho extinguished or discharged. Its extinguishment by force of the compromise is the benefit accruing to the promiser •which gives to it the effect of a consideration.

"What claim on the part of the Conovers was compromised, released, or discharged in this arrangement? An adverse claim actually set up to a portion of the land conveyed to them would have been no defence to a recovery of the mortgage debt, unless they had been actually evicted from a portion of the mortgaged premises, or an action was then pending against them for the recovery of it. Glenn v. Whipple, 1 Beas, 50; Long’s adm’r v. Long, 1 McCarter 462. The covenant of warranty in the deed from the defendant to them had been transmitted by their conveyance of the premises to a third party. The covenants for seizin and against encumbrances were left in full force. Whatever liability the defendant incurred to answer for defects of title sprang from these covenants. Neither the Conovers nor their grantee had any claim against the defendant with respect to any outstanding title, except by and through these covenants. These covenants were unaffected by this pretended compromise, and still remain in full force — not discharged, released, or extinguished. Nor was it any part of the arrangement that the Conovers should purchase and extinguish the outstanding title, which was the pretence under which they claimed additional indemnity. That title, whatever it then was, it still is, and no claim which the Conovers, at the time of this agreement, might have made, or they or their grantee might in the future make, against the defendant by reason of it, was relinquished as a consideration of the agreement of the defendant. The entire effect of the arrangement was to leave the legal rights of the parties just what they previously were. A promise made under such circumstances will not create a legal cause of action.

The plaintiff should have been non-suited. The Circuit Court is advised accordingly.

[60]*60Dalrimple, J.

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Bluebook (online)
34 N.J.L. 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conover-v-stillwell-nj-1869.