Hockett v. Jones

70 Ind. 227
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 70 Ind. 227 (Hockett v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hockett v. Jones, 70 Ind. 227 (Ind. 1880).

Opinion

Worden, J.

— This was a claim filed by the appellant, against the estate of Barnabas Coffin, deceased. The cause was submitted to the court for trial, on an agreed statement of the facts. Finding and judgment for the defendants. The proper steps were taken to present the questions involved, for the decision of this court.

The following is the statement of the facts, signed by the respective parties:

“ On the 16th day of September, 1867, the deceased, then in life, executed and delivered to plaintiff his five (5) certain promissory notes, each for the'sum of eight hundred and seventy-two dollars and four cents, and due at five, six, [228]*228seven, eight and nine years from date, with interest, for value received, without any relief from valuation or appraisement laws; that two hundred dollars were paid and credited on the first note, September 19th, 1867, the balance of the principal due on said five notes being four thousand one hundred and sixty dollars and twenty cents ; that, after the execution and delivery of said notes, the deceased, then in life, was discharged from the ■ payment of the same, with others, by certain proceedings in bankruptcy in the District Court of the United States for the District of Indiana; that subsequent to his said discharge in bankruptcy, and without the knowledge of Hockett, the deceased, then in life, executed to Hockett his certain agreement, which is as follows :

“ ‘ Whereas I executed my promissory notes dated September 16th, 1867, amounting in the aggregate to four thousand three hundred and sixty dollars and twenty cents ($4,360.20), with credits dated September 19th, 1867, two hundred dollars, payable to the order of Samuel Hockett ; whereas I have been discharged from all liability to pay said notes, in certain proceedings in the United States District Court of the District of Indiana; now, in consideration of one dollar to me paid in hand by said Samuel Hockett, the receipt of wbhich is hereby acknowledged, and other good and sufficient reasons, I agree to pay said Samuel Hockett said notes, without interest; and, in case said notes are not paid during my lifetime, I hereby agree that my executors shall pay the same out of my estate coming into their hands. (Signed) B. Coffin.’
.“‘May 27th, 1876.’'
“ That, at the time of the execution of said agreement, the deceased delivered the same to his.son David, with the verbal direction to hold the.same until his death, and then deliver same to Jrloekett. which David agreed to do. The agreement was delivered to Hockett, by David, after [229]*229his father’s death, which occurred in August, 1876. Ilockett had no knowledge of the existence of the agreement, until after the death of Coffin and its delivery to him by David ; that Hockett never paid the one dollar consideration, mentioned in said agreement, to any one.”

Two questions seem to arise upon the agreed statement of facts:

.1. Was the agreement of Coffin based upon a sufficient consideration ?

2. If the consideration was sufficient, was the agreement so delivered as to become valid and binding ?

Both of these questions must, in our judgment, be answered in the affirmative.

“A promise to pay a debt contracted during infancy, or barred by the statute of limitations or bankruptcy, is good, without other consideration than the previous legal obligation.” 1 Parsons Contracts, 6th ed., p. 434. In Wiggins v. Keizer, 6 Ind. 252, 257, it- was said by this court, that, “ If a bankrupt, after his discharge, or a person under a disability, after the disability is removed, or a debtor whose debt is barred by the statute of limitations, expressly promises to pay his debt, the moral obligation is apparent, and the promise has a substantial basis oh which to rest, that is, a consideration actually received.” It is, therefore, not material that the dollar mentioned in the agreement was never paid.

The question of delivery is perhaps not so clear, but it is free from serious difficulty. It is true that an instrument, whether operating as an executory contract or as a conveyance, must be delivered, in order to be effectual. The delivery, however, may be actual or constructive. 1 Daniel Negot.Tnstru. 57.

In this case, the instrument was delivered by Coffin, the maker, to his son David, with directions to hold the same until his, Coffin’s, death, and then deliver it to Hockett. [230]*230This David agreed to do; and he delivered it accordingly, after Coffin’s death. It will be noticed that there were no conditions accompanying the direction to David to deliver the instrument to Hockett upon the death of Coffin, nor did Coffin reserve any right to withdraw or control the instrument.

We do not feel at all embarrassed with the legal proposition, to which our attention has been called by counsel for the appellees, that the powers of an agent terminate upon the death of his principal; because, in our opinion, the proposition has no application to the case. We do not regard David as Coffin’s agent, in respect to the delivery of the instrument to Hockett, but .rather as the agent of Hockett.

. .This point is illustrated by the case of Richardson v. Lincoln, 5 Met. 201. There, Zaccheus Richardson was the payee of certain promissory notes, which he had placed in the hands of Sidney Williams for the purpose of suit upon them. While they were thus in the hands of Williams, the payee endorsed them to the plaintiff, Fanny F. Richardson, his daughter. When the indorsements were made, the notes were still left in the hands of Williams, for the use of the indorsee, and were not otherwise delivered to her. It was objected that .there was no sufficient delivery, and upon this point it was said by Siiaw, C. J., in delivering the opinion of the court:

“ It was then contended,that there was no pi’oof of delivery of the indorsed note by the father to the plaintiff, so as to enable her to sue as indorsee. It is no doubt true, that if the holder of a note simply makes an indorsement upon it, directing it to be paid to a third person, and retains it in his own possession or power, no interest vests in the indorsee. But a constructive delivery is sufficient; any act which puts it into the power or under the control qf the indorsee. Even in case of the sale of the goods, de[231]*231posited in the hands of a third person, a contract of sale, with an order to the depository to deliver them to the vendee, it is a good constructive delivery.
“ In this case, the note was in the keeping . of Mr. Williams, as the attorney of the promisee, and he ivas then his agent. But when Richardson, the promisee, negotiated the note to his daughter, and left it in Mr. Williams’ custody for her use, he thereby consented to hold it for hei-, and became her agent, and brought an action upon it in her name, which she sanctioned by original order or subsequent ratification. This is abundant proof of actual transfer and constructive delivery, and makes her indorsee and' holder of the note, although she never saw it.”

So, in the case here, when David consented to receive the instrument, and deliver it to Hockett upon the death of Coffin, he undertook to act in that behalf as trustee or agent for Hockett; and Hockett ratified the agency by receiving the instrument from David.

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Bluebook (online)
70 Ind. 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hockett-v-jones-ind-1880.