Duvoll v. Wilson

9 Barb. 487
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 9 Barb. 487 (Duvoll v. Wilson) 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
Duvoll v. Wilson, 9 Barb. 487 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1850).

Opinion

By the Court, Selden, J.

It is conceded that the pecuniary consideration named in the deed was nominal merely, and that nothing was in fact paid. The position taken by the defendants , is this : that while natural love and affection between near relatives is a sufficient consideration to support a deed, or an executed contract, yet that it will not render obligatory a mere covenant or promise, or executory agreement. That to support the latter, in equity, as well as at law, a valuable consideration is necessary.

This raises a question of considerable nicety, and one which can not, perhaps, be considered even at this day as very well settled. The point seems to have been first distinctly presented in the year 1835, in the case of Ellis v. Nimmo, (Lloyd & Gould, 333.) That was a case of an agreement by a father, without consideration other than mere natural affection, to make a provision for a married daughter. The father declining to carry out the agreement, a bill was filed, and Sugden, Lord Chancellor of Ireland, decreed a specific performance of the agreement, on the ground that it was founded upon a meritorious consideration. The authority of this case, however, was questioned by the vice chancellor, in a case which arose two years afterwards, (see Holloway v. Headington, 8 Sim. 324;) and in the still later case of Jeffreys v. Jeffreys, decided in 1841, (1 Craig & Phil. 138,) it was expressly overruled by Lord Chancellor Cottenham. This last case was identical in principle with the one before us. There a father had conveyed, by voluntary settlement, certain freehold estates to trustees for the benefit of his daughters, and by the same instrument had covenanted to surrender certain copyhold estates, subject to the same trusts. The father died, and his widow having been admitted to some of the copyholds, a bill was filed to compel a specific execution of the trusts. The chancel[489]*489lor decreed that the settlement was valid as to the freeholds, but void as to the copyholds, for want of a consideration. This decision, if law, fully sustains the position of the defendants here, who admit the validity of the deed as a conveyance, but deny the obligation of the covenants which it contains.

We have then these two cases of Ellis v. Nimmo and Jeffreys v. Jeffreys, one decided by Lord Chancellor Sugden in 1835, and the other by Lord Cottenham in 1841, in direct opposition to each other If there are no other considerations bearing upon the relative weight of these decisions, I suppose the last one should be followed. But we are not to confine our attention to their relation in point of time alone, but should look to see whether any other reasons can be found for following one rather than the other. It is to be observed that Ellis v. Nimmo stands alone, but Jeffreys v. Jeffreys receives some support from the decision of the vice chancellor in Holloway v. Headington, before cited; while the force of Ellis v. Nimmo is impaired by what is stated by the vice chancellor as to the decision of the successor of Lord Sugden in the same case.

The case of Dillon v. Coppin, (4 Myl. & Craig, 647,) may also be considered as to some extent going to confirm the principle of Jeffreys v. Jeffreys. There a father, by deed, had conveyed certain freehold estates for the benefit of his daughter, and by the same deed had also transferred certain East India stock and shares in an insurance company. By the East India charter, stock could only be transferred by an entry in the books, in a particular form; and the shares in the insurance company were also, by the articles of the company, to be transferred at the office of the company only. After the death of the father, a bill was filed by some of his children to set aside the deed, so far as it purported to convey the East India and insurance stock. On the argument of that case the question here raised was fully discussed; the counsel for the plaintiff taking the ground that the deed amounted to no more than an executory agreement to convey, which, being without consideration, other than what is termed a meritorious consideration, could not therefore be enforced; while on the part of the defendants it was contended that being made in [490]*490favor of children and grandchildren, the moral obligation to provide for them was a sufficient consideration to support it. The chancellor held that the deed, so far as the stocks were concerned, was wholly inoperative and void, thus virtually, in this case as well as in that of Jeffreys v. Jeffreys, overruling the ease of Ellis v. Nimmo.

It may be remarked, also, that the counsel for the plaintiff in Dillon v. Coppin, stated without its being denied on the other side, that the decision of Chancellor Sugden, in Ellis v. Nimmo, was substantially overruled by Lord Plunket, his immediate successor, upon a rehearing of the same cause; thus confirming what was said by the vice chancellor in Holloway v. Headington.

There are, therefore, the three later cases to which I have referred standing opposed to that of Ellis v. Nimmo. Still it is to be observed that the decisions in these three cases are very brief, while that of Lord Chancellor Sugden goes into an elaborate course of reasoning to support the conclusion. If this reasoning, therefore, should be found upon investigation to be entirely satisfactory, it might justify the courts at this day in following that case. I shall not attempt a minute examination or analysis of the argument of the learned chancellor, but shall simply advert to some considerations which seem to me to be suggested by it.

The principal analogies referred to by the chancellor to support his decision, are the practice of courts of equity, prior to the statute of uses, to execute covenants to stand seised, founded upon a meritorious consideration only, and to aid the defective execution of powers, and defective surrenders of copyhold estates, where there Was a like consideration. It is worthy of remark that all these examples relate to the transfer of estates. Now what is termed a meritorious consideration, (which it is unnecessary here to define,) having always been held sufficient, even at law, to support an actual conveyance, all that was done by equity in cases of the defective execution of powers, and defective surrenders, was to carry into effect a conveyance imperfectly executed. The intentiqn of the parties being clear, the conside[491]*491ration sufficient, and the necessary act to effectuate the intent having been attempted, but not perfectly performed, equity comes in and perfects the conveyance. This is no more than the exercise of the ordinary power of the court to relieve against mistakes or accidental omissions. The difference is manifest betweeen such cases and interfering to give effect to a mere ex-ecutory contract, where nothing has been done. The distinction between agreements executed wholly or partially, and those resting in fieri, runs through all the cases on this and analogous subjects. The example of covenants to stand seised, is the only one, as it seems to me, which bears very directly upon the point in question. There the court did, .it is true, interfere to enforce what prior to the statute of uses might be regarded as to some extent an executory contract.

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9 Barb. 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duvoll-v-wilson-nysupct-1850.