Corbett v. Cochran

21 S.C.L. 41
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedMay 15, 1835
StatusPublished

This text of 21 S.C.L. 41 (Corbett v. Cochran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corbett v. Cochran, 21 S.C.L. 41 (S.C. Ct. App. 1835).

Opinion

Curia, per

Earle, J.

The casé made on the trial below, seems to be this : Mrs. Pellott being • indebted to the plaintiff, in the sum bf $407,69, on a book account for merchandize, and the account being presented to her for payment, the defendant came to the plaintiff, produced the account, and assumed tb pay it, in consideration that she should be discharged from the debt. Her account was accordingly credited in full; and the amount was cháfged to the defendant, by his own direction. In the argument here, a question has been raised, whether Mrs. Pellott was privy to the arrangement by which the defendant assumed the payment of her debt; and whether the credit,, discharging her, was entéred with the knowledge and by the direction of the defendant. Both these were questions for the jury.' It was only on proof of both, that the liability of the, defendant arose. And I think that the jury were warranted in the conclusion, that the defendant, when he exhibited Mrs. Pellott’s account, arid assumed the payment of it, came from her, and with her assent, for that purpose. And also, that the credit given to her, on the books, was by the direction of the defendant, and in pursuance of the agreement with him; for his undertaking was to pay her debt, in consideration that she should be discharged. The questions raised below, were, 1st, whether the undertaking was void, under the statute of frauds, not being in writing. 2d. Whether the debt of Mrs. Pellott was actually discharged. It seems hardly necessary, at this day, to speak of the distinction between original and collateral undertakings, in reference to the statute of frauds, a distinction so well understood, arid so well established by the whole current of authorities. The general rule is well stated in Comyn on Contracts: “If it be part of the agreement, that the original debt be discharged, that is a sufficient consideration to [44]*44support the undertaking of another to pay the debt; and the agreement need not be in writing. But if no such stipulation be made, and the original debt be permitted to subsist, the undertaking is merely collateral, and the agreement must be in writing.” Says Justice Nott, in Boyce vs. Owens, 2 M’Cord, 208: “The reason is obvious. The original debt being extinguished, it is no longer an undeitaldng to pay the debt of another, because there is no such debt existing, but it is a newly created debt of the undertaker.” The principle is well put by Roane, J. 2 H. & M. 603, Waggoner vs. Administrators of Gray: “Where the person, on whose behalf the promise is made, is not discharged, but the person promising agrees to see the debt paid, so that the promisee has a double remedy, the promise is considered collateral, and must be in writing; but where the promiser undertakes to become the paymaster, it becomes immediately his debt, and he is liable without writing.” [ The consideration to support an agreement, need not of necessity be a pecuniary one, nor even a beneficial one, to the person promising. If it be a loss, or even an inconvenience, to the promisee, the relinquishment of a right, as the discharge of a debt, or the postponement of a remedy, as the discontinuance of a suit, or a forbearance to sue, it is enough. In relation to the class of contracts we are now considering,nvhere the promise is to pay another’s debt, in consideration of his being discharged, it seems to be well settled now, that there need be no consideration moving between the person promised for, and the person who promises.'^) For the undertaking of one man, for the debt of another, says Lord Eldon, in Ex Parte Minet, 14 Ves. Jr. 190, “does not require a consideration moving between them.” Vid. 9th East. 348 — 1 Camp. 242 — 8 John. Rep. 29. In the earlier cases on this point, such promises seem to have been supported, rather on the ground of their being a purchase of the debt, than a mere undertaking to pay. So they seem to be regarded by Mr. Roberts in his treatise on the statute. Such was the case in Anstey vs. Marden — 1 New Rep. B. & P., 124, decided in 1804 — where A. being insolvent, a verbal agreement was entered into between several of his creditors, and B. who was father in-law, whereby B. agreed to pay the creditors ten shillings in the pound, in satisfaction of their demands, which they agreed to accept, and to assign their debts to B., and it was supported as an original undertaking. Sir James Mansfield, Ch. J. at the trial, considered it not within the statute, being an undertaking to pay a debt of a new description, ten shillings in the pound, in consideration of A. being discharged, and not an undertaking to pay the debt of A. — But afterwards,- on a rule for a new trial, it seems to have been put on the footing of a purchase of the debts, [45]*45The Case of Castling vs. Aubert, 2 East. 325, had before been determined on the same ground. But it Would seem, if no consideration is necessary, as between the person promised for, and the person promising, and the loss or inconvenience to the promisee, by reason of discharging the debt of the former, be a suffipient consideration for the new undertaking,- that there can be no sufficient reason for holding that the promiser should have the former debt assigned to him for his indemnity, as in Antsey vs. Marden, or should have funds in his hands to reimburse himself, as in Castling vs. Aubert; and so it was considered in Goodman et. al. vs. Chase, 1 B. & A. 297, in 1818. The plaintiff had taken Chase, Jr. in execution, and the defendant, (his father,) in consideration that the plaintiff would discharge him, undertook to put him again in custody, on a day certain, or pay the debt. Whereupon, the plaintiff discharged Chase, Jr. out of custody-; and it was held that the promise of the defendant was binding, though not in writing; that it was an original undertaking, and not collateral. Lord' Ellenborough said it was unnecessary to hear counsel on the case of Wain and Warlters, inasmuch as it appeared to th.e'm that the plaintiff, by agreeing to let Chase, Jr. out of custody, had entirely discharged the' debt, as to him, and then the case would be that the defendant promised to pay a certain sum of money, in consideration of the debt between the plaintiff and Chase, Jr. being put an end to, which being a detriment to the plaintiff, would be a good consideration for an original promise, and take the question entirely out of the statute of-frauds. So in Roe vs,Hough, 1 Salk, 29, soon after the statute, which I shall presently cite for another purpose, A. was indebted to B., and C. in. consideration that B. would' accept him, C,, as his debtor in the place of A., undertook to pay B. the debt of A. It was held a good consideration and. the promise binding;- and all the authorities are now to the same effect.

I have thus far remarked on this branch of the case, because we have' no precedent in our own Reports of an undertaking to pay the debt of another, on the sole consideration of the discharge of such debt. But the ex-' ception mainly urged here, is that the promise of the defendant was without consideration, as in point of fact and law, the debt of Mrs. Pellott was not discharged. In considering this question, we should bear in mind the distinction between a release and payment, between that which is to operate as a relinquishment to the debtor of a right of action, and that which is1 accepted in discharge or satisfaction of the debt. In regard to the former, it is laid down : “An express release must regularly be in writing- and by deed, according to the common rule, eodummodo quo oritur, eodum modo dissolvitur,

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.C.L. 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corbett-v-cochran-scctapp-1835.