Force v. Haines

17 N.J.L. 385
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 15, 1840
StatusPublished

This text of 17 N.J.L. 385 (Force v. Haines) 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
Force v. Haines, 17 N.J.L. 385 (N.J. 1840).

Opinion

Ford, J.

Henry Force sold the custody and services of his adult slave Minna, unto Elizabeth Haines, by deed, to be holden from September, 1822, till June, 1826, when the slave was to he returned to him. Elisabeth Haines, at the expiration of the time, accordingly tendered the slave to Mr. Force, and on his refusal either to receive the said Minna, or be accountable for her maintenance, she maintained the slave about two years herself, and then turned her out of doors. After being absent about six months, Minna returned again to Mrs. Haines, who received and maintained her about seven years more; and then, in an action of assumpsit, in Middlesex Pleas, declared against said Force, 1. That in consideration she had furnished board, [386]*386clothing and necessaries for the slave of said Force, (not saying, at his request,) that he afterward promised to pay &c. 2. That being indebted to her in g2000, for board, clothing and necessaries furnished for his slave, at his request, in consideration thereof; lie afterward, promised to pay &c. The defendant pleaded non assumpsit, and the statute of limitations.

At the trial, the plaintiff proved the tender of the slave, to Force, find his refusal to receive or be accountable for her maintenance; that the plaintiff then maintained the slave, as before stated; that she had a very bad temper; that she had lost the sight of one eye, by intemperance, and was partially and sometimes wholly blind of the other; that her services were of little or no value; and that her maintiaance was worth a dollar and a half a week. There was no evidence of her being requested by Force, to maintain the slave, or that be ever promised to pay for it.

When the plaintiff had given all the evidence she had to offer, the court refused a motion, made by the defendant, for a nonsuit, as appears by the bill of exceptions. The defendant moved the court to charge the jury, that this action for the maintenance of his slave, could not be maintained against him, in law, unless they were satisfied, from the evidence, that the maintenance was furnished at his request, or that he subsequently promised to pay for it. But the court refused so to charge the jury; and thereupon they found a verdict for the plaintiff, and damages to the amount of gSOO. The errors assigned are two in substance.— 1. That this action will not lie without proof that the maintenance was furnished at his request, or that ho subsequently promised to pay for it. 2. That the court erred in not so charging the jury.

The action of indebitatus assumpsit being founded in its very nature on a contract, can never be maintained, unless a contract lias been expressly made between the parties, or implied in law; and as no express contract requesting the maintenance or promising to pay for it, is pretended in the face of notice that he would never pay it: the sole question is whether the law will imply a promise.

Now the great and leading rule of law is, to deem an act done for the, benefit of another, without his request, as a voluntary [387]*387courtesy, for which, no action can bs sustained. The work! abounds with acts of this kind, done upon no request; but would more abound with ruinous litigation, and the overthrow of personal rights, and civil freedom, if the law was otherwise. A man who has nothing else to do, goes to mowing in his neighbour’s meadow.; or when his team lies idle, to ploughing in his neighbour”: field; or a carpenter out of employment, goes to mending his neighbour’s sleigh, without the slightest request to do so; taking away from that neighbour, the common right to mow and plough for himself, when he is unable or unwilling to hire, and the right of doing without a sleigh, or of using it in the plight it was in, rather than incur the expense of repair; is it to be believed that they can maintain actkns, and make that neighbour pay for such unrequested work, and with costs too, as Lord Mansfield said in a like case, “ in spite of his teeth.” No man’s private business, in the mode or time of it, would be under his control, or free from the interference of strangers, perhaps idlers, drunkards, and perhaps enemies, under such pretences, drawing him from business into litigation. The rule of law, that an act done for the benefit of another, without his request, will! not maintain an action, need be traced no farther back than the year, 176?, at which time it is stated in Bul. N. P. 147, thus:— “It a thing be done without my request, and for my benefit, when I was under no moral obligation to do it, and I promise to pay Use money, the promise is void; hut if Í wan under a moral obligation todo the thing, and afterward promised to pay the money, that is good.” The same author in page 281, illustrates the rule thus: As where a pauper wan suddenly taken ill, and an apothecary is sent for” (without the knowledge of the overseer of the poor) who attends and cures her, and after the cure, the overseer promises payment, this is good, for they are under a moral obligation to provide for the poor. Even a moral obligation on the defendant to da the act, will not render him liable without an express promise to pay. The case before Lord Mansfield, of Stokes v. Lewis, 1 Ter. Rep. 20, need not be stated at large; it was decided on the great point mentioned by Erskims thus: “One of the first principles of law is, that an assumpsit cannot be raised by ¡laying the debt of another, againsthis will.” The case of Jenkins v. Tucker, 1 Hen. Bl. Rep. 90, establishes [388]*388the rule beyond controversy. In Tucker’s absence, bis wife was obliged to contract debts for necessaries in sickness, and at length died. Jenkins her father, after her death, paid those debts for the husband who was a wealthy West Indian; and they were debts which the husband was not only morally but legally bound to pay; but be did not request bis father-in-law to do it, nor did he afterwards promise to pay him; and Lord Loughborough and the whole court held, that no action could be maintained for money paid without his request or subsequent promise. We may nest look to our own Supreme Court, where this rule was established by the solemn opinion of all the judges, in the case of Potter v. Potter, 1 Pen. Rep. 415, nearly forty years ago, in an action for maintaining the defendant’s slave, without his request or any promise to pay for if. The court held without a dissenting voice, “That the plaintiff could not lake on himself to maintain the slave, and then bring an action against the owner of the slave, for such maintenance.” That decision has stood as the law in this state, for upwards of thirty years, and never been shaken; yet the owner was under both a moral and legal obligation to maintain bis slave. The Supreme Court of the State of New York, came to the same conclusion, on common law principles, afterward, in the case of Dunbar v. Williams, 10 Johns. 249. An action was brought against Dunbar, for curing his slave of a venereal disease, without the owners request or subsequent promise; but the court held, that it being done without either, it must he deemed in law as being done gratuitously, and no action would lie for it. So afterward in Everts v. Allen, 12 Johns. 352, a physician sued the overseers of the poor, for his attendance on a pauper in an ordinary case, without any request or promise by them.

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Related

Dunbar v. Williams
10 Johns. 249 (New York Supreme Court, 1813)
Everts v. Adams
12 Johns. 352 (New York Supreme Court, 1815)
Bartholomew v. Jackson
20 Johns. 28 (New York Supreme Court, 1822)
Forsyth v. Ganson
5 Wend. 558 (New York Supreme Court, 1830)

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.J.L. 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/force-v-haines-nj-1840.