Douglass v. Howland

24 Wend. 35
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by151 cases

This text of 24 Wend. 35 (Douglass v. Howland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Douglass v. Howland, 24 Wend. 35 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1840).

Opinion

By the Court,

Cowen, J.

The statute provides that, in the following cases, every agreement shall be void, unless such agreement, or some note or memorandum thereof expressing the consideration, be in writing, and subscribed by the party to be charged therewith : 1. Every agreement, that, by its terms, is not to be performed within one year; 2. Every special promise to answer for the debt, default or miscarriage of another person. 2 R. S. 70, new ed. § 2.

It is objected that though the guaranty of the defendant be subscribed by him, it is void as not expressing the consideration. I have no doubt that the words “ for value received,” are a sufficient expression within the meaning of the statute. Watson’s ex’rs v. M'Laren, 19 Wendell, 557, 563. But the guaranty itself is not within the statute ; therefore, there was no need of any such expression. The statute in terms speaks only of a special promise to answer, &c. The instrument declared on is a covenant, the seal of which imports a consideration. I know a doubt was thrown out, upon this point, by the learned chancellor, in Rogers v. Kneeland, 13 Wendell, 121. We [40]*40think, however, without foundation, whether the words or the spirit of the statute be considered. It has been said in another case, that since the statute, where the guaranty is a simple contract, a more direct expression of consideration is necessary than under the former act. Packer v. Willson, 15 Wendell, 343. In that case, there was no consideration collectable from the words of the guaranty, within any of the English or American cases. The words were, simply, “ I guarantee the payment of the within note in six months.”

*So “I guarantee to you the payment of the above,” written under [ *41 ] an account current. Bewley v. Whiteford, 1 Hayes’ Irish Exch. R. 356. To imply a consideration in such cases, requires the merest straining of the fancy, and would be directly to overrule Wain v. Warlters, 5 East, 10, which held that a consideration must appear on the face of the writing ; in other words, be expressed by it. That rule had been followed in England by allowing expressions more or less direct, but has never been overruled there. By the courts of seme of the neighboring states, the rule had been questioned, and indeed repudiated, as not within the old statute, audit did not pass without some question even in England. In such a posture of things, to remove all doubt of its being adhered to, the legislature, when they came to revise the'statutes, enacted the rule. The difference between the old and new statute, as mentioned by the revisers in their note, is “ the requiring the consideration of the agreement to be specified.” 3 R. S. 656, 2d ed. The marginal note to Wain v. Warlters is, that the agreement was holden void, because the consideration was not stated. Whether we say it must be expressed as in the statute, specified as in the notes, or stated as in East, it appears to me the intent must be the same. The principle is, that the consideration, being an important part of the agreement, should be made apparent in writing, as well as the promise. That either should be expressed in any particular way, is contrary to the analogy of the law, which requires courts to construe the language of all contracts according to the intent of the parties, and at the same time with the view ut res magis valeat quam pereat. That in any of them, we must often labor to find the intent, is true. In the language of Tindal, Ch. J. in Morley v. Bothby, 10 Moore, 395, 3 Bing, 107, S. C., which in Packer v. Willson is doubted for law with us, how often arwe put to find the meaning by fair inference from the language, or as it were, to spell it out. The latter is but a figure of speech; but if taken literally, does it follow that the consideration is the less expressed because we arc obliged to spell out the meaning ? All that Tindal, Ch. J. declared, was but another mode of saying that this *part of the contract is open to [ *42 ] the rules of construction the same as the other parts. The commencement of his very phrase is, “If you can, by reasonable construction, collect from it the consideration, it is enough.” A thing is not the less egress [42]*42ed, because it might have been plainer. The legislature do not enact it shall not be obscurely expressed, nor could they with any propriety till human nature is remodelled. They prescribe no exact form. It may be in figures, abbreviations, in a foreign or dead language; defective in spelling or syntax, elliptical, ambiguous. Some of the most difficult cases on the rule respecting the ' ambiguitas latens of written contracts, have arisen on these guaranties. You are to see what they mean in such case by looking to collateral facts, or surrounding circumstances. You do this in order to'sustain the most solemn contracts, such as deeds or. wills. An abbreviation may be explained by an expert. Even records and judicial proceedings are often quite obscure, till you look abroad and connect them with what they are speaking of. Are all these and the like analogies to be violated, because the phrase to be construed happens to make part of a contract under the statute of frauds. I agree that Rogers v. Kneeland, 10 Wendell, 218, 250, presents, both in the case itself hnd the books cited by Mr. Justice Nelson, a fair specimen of the English construction under the rule in Wain v. Warlters. Rogers v. Kneeland raised a question of latent ambiguity. The expression of consideration was to be made intelligible by looking out of the contract in question for other transactions and contracts, express or implied, to which the guaranty had reference. In commenting upon the English cases, Mr. Justice Nelson observes: “ A consideration implied or inferred from the term or language of an instrument, is in judgment of law contained in it.” What is this but saying it is expressed, perhaps in a general way. You say a man made & feoffment: that is saying he made livery of seizin, though the latter words are not used. Feoff- [ *43 ] merit implies livery—therefore, the latter is expressed just as well and better than if the word livery had been used. Whatever then may be fairly implied from the language is expressed. I will add the cases cited in Fell on Guarantees 42, Theobald, 13, and especially the late case of Shortrede v. Cheek, 1 Adolph. & Ellis, 57, decided since Rogers v. Kneeland, but in the same spirit. The former is cited by Mr. Wigram as a striking illustration of the length to which courts will go in looking to surrounding circumstances, with a view to apply the words of a guaranty. Wigr. Extr. Ev. addendum before p. 1, Lond. ed. 1835. That case related both to the expression of consideration and promise. It was insisted that the writing should be so plain as to supersede the resort to parol testimony. But the court resorted to precisely the same rule for deciphering the meaning as they would in respect to a will. Mr. Wigram puts the case by the side of one on a will decided in the court of chancery. “ The result of all,” says Joy, Oh.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Wend. 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglass-v-howland-nysupct-1840.