Duncan v. Littell

5 Ky. 424
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJuly 1, 1811
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ky. 424 (Duncan v. Littell) 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
Duncan v. Littell, 5 Ky. 424 (Ky. Ct. App. 1811).

Opinion

[424]*424OPINION of the Court, by

Ch. J. Boyle.

This was an action nf assumpsit. Two counts are laid in the , * ,11-. declaration : the first charges the defendant as assignor of a bom], but alleges no consideration upon w}ylch the assignment was made ; the second is a general count for money had and received. Upon non-as-sumpsit the plaintiff had a verdict and judgment, to ¾⅜⅞-⅛ the defendant has prosecuted this writ of error. ‘

,. , , , . r I he first question made by the assignment of error, grows out ol the bill of exception taken to the opinion 0£ ^ court overruling the motion of the defendant . . ? , r . , to instruct the jury to disregard the first count m the declaration. If the count were faulty or defective the lnotjon wa3 a correct one and ought to have been sus-tamed. I he count vve think was substantially detective in not alleging a consideration upon which the assignment was made. The act of assembly making bonds and notes assignable, which were not so at corn-¡non law, has provided no remedy for the assignee aSainst assignor, nor has it placed those instruments upon the footing of bills of exchange. The responsi* [425]*425biiitv of the assignor depends therefore neither upon the provisions of the statute nor upon the custom of merchants, bat upon the principles of the common law. This doctrine is abundantly established by the repeated decisions of this court — See Drake vs. Johnson, Hard. Rep. 218, Smallwood vs. Woods, vol. 1, 546, Nolin vs. Woods, Sprat vs. M'Kinney, vol. 1, 596, Thompson vs. Caldwell, ante 290, and Lyon vs. Coleman, at the present term.

A jury may *nftr one ⅜. ⅛ inferred muft b.e ®ne whii& the'/ ira 5 greater num ber oí cafes attends the fa& from which-it ia inferred» The cauri will judicially take notice of the general courfe of tranf-adbions and or- , dealingi'among men, From the fa£t 'ijfignment Úxq. jury are not au-thorlfed to infer that a consideration in money was paid for the aifigment rather than la tfon ⅛ property paitthe ^isn~ for the affign-merit, will not fuPP°rt » eene-ral indebitatus affumpfit byaiij fignee ag*jnfta&

Upon the principles of the common law, an action by the assignee against his assignor, must be founded either upon an express or an implied promise that the assignor will be responsible far the goodness of the debt and the solvency of the obligor.

in most cases of assignment, there is no express mise made ; but where there is such a promise, if made without consideration, no action can be maintained it. Whatever mav be the rule of ethics with respect the moral obligation of a promise that is merely voluntary, nothing can be more clear than that its performance cannot be legally enforced. There is no doctrine better settled than that an action cannot be supported upon a naked promise without consideration, for it is established rule of the common law that ex nudo pacto non oritur actio. This rule does not apply to mercantile instruments, because they are governed bylaws founded upon the custom of merchants ; nor does it extend to deeds or instruments under seal, since from the so-lemnitv of the instrument, the law implies a consideration. In actions founded upon these instruments therefore it is not necessary to allege or prove a consideration ; but in an action upon any other contract, a consideration must be alleged and proven in order to support the action. If this doctrine be correct when applied to express contracts or promises, it requires no argument to shew the propriety of its application to those that are implied by law. If indeed an action cannot be supported upon an express contract or promise made without consideration, the law cannot without the most palpable inconsistency with itself imply a promise where there is no consideration. We are , r - . . , , , . therefore of opinion that the court erred m not sustaining the motion to instruct the jury to disregard the first count of the declaration.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ky. 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duncan-v-littell-kyctapp-1811.