Lawrence v. Beaubien

18 S.C.L. 623
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 15, 1831
StatusPublished

This text of 18 S.C.L. 623 (Lawrence v. Beaubien) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawrence v. Beaubien, 18 S.C.L. 623 (S.C. Ct. App. 1831).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

No question has been raised, as to what were the rights of Samuel F. Isaacs, and the defendant, in the real estate devised by Abraham Isaacs to the latter, and for the price of which the bond, on which this suit is founded, was given: and it is very clear, that under the rule in Vaux v. Nesbit, 1 M’C. Ch. 352, the land was liable to escheat, but that the defendant, although an alien, was intitled take under the devise, and to hold until office found; so that Samuel F. Isaacs had no interest in it, either presently, or prospectively. The defendant, therefore, acquired nothing by his release, and he, Samuel F. Isaacs, parted with no right, nor suffered any loss; and if we add to this, the circumstance, that the defendant acted upon the advice of counsel leárned in the law, we shall have no difficulty in coming to the conclusion, assumed in the argument, that he purchased in the mistaken belief, that he, himself, had no interest in the land, but that on the contrary, the fee was in Samuel F. Isaacs, by descent. The question then arises, whether this contract can be enforced against him; or to put it abstractedly, whether one is bound by a contract, entered into under a mistaken deduction of law from facts which were known to him, by which he acquired nothing, and the party contracted with, parted with no right, nor suffered any loss.

If this proposition is to be considered with reference to the rules of morality, there could be no diversity of opinion about it. [648]*648The plaintiff seeks, in this action, to recover that, which, of natural right, belongs to the defendant. It is an universal principle, founded in reason, that no one is intitled to have, or retain that, which ex aequo et bono belongs to another: a principle found in every code, and circumscribed in its application only by positiva rules, founded on the convenience and necessities of mankind; and when rightly understood, says Sir Henry Finch, the very maxims and principles of the positive law will yield to it, as to a higher and more perfect law. Finch’s Law, Book 1, Ch. 3.

In the inquiry, whether this principle is opposed in its application to the case under consideration by any other conflicting1 principle, or positive rule, we are met with the maxim, ignorantia juris non excusat; which, it is insisted on behalf of the plaintiff, covers the precise ground, and supersedes it. To allow one to shelter himself from the punishment due to crime, or to excuse a wrong done to, or right withheld from, an individual, under a pretended, or even real ignorance of the law, would uproot the very foundation of society: and in this we see the reason and propriety of the maxim, and the fitness of its application. But there is certainly nothing in the principle, which authorizes its application in a manner calculated to effectuate a wrong; and, unless the principle, ex aequo et bono,is erroneous, clearly it would so operate, if applied to this case. If it is to be regarded as a mere arbitrary rule, and to take effect according to the terms in which it is expressed, it is equally evident, that it was designed as one of the means of attaining right, and preventing wrong. The very necessity for an excuse presupposes that some wrong has been done, or some right withheld. He that has done neither, needs no excuse, for he is already justified; so that whether the rule is interpreted according to its letter, or spirit, its application is limited to those cases, in which redress is sought for a wrong done, or a right withheld. J

The propriety, and necessity, of its application, as the means of enforcing the obligation of contracts, is to my mind an utter perversion of the use for which it was designed; for that is sufficiently attained by other rules, of equal obligation, framed for the express purpose. Amongst these, that, which has the strongest analogy to, that contained in the maxim, is that which provides, that no one shall aver against his own deed: but that is founded on a very different principle. The uncertainty of [649]*649contracts, and the temptations to perjury, incident to the substitution of facts depending on slippery memory, for those reduced to writing, are the foundation of this rule; and it would seem to furnish, itself, a sufficient security against all abuses, without the aid of ignorantia juris non ezcusat: And yet this rule* whilst it is imperative in the interpretation of contracts, is made to promote the great ends of justice, by letting in proof, that the most solemn contract was obtained by fraud, or duress* or other-corrupt, and illegal means; and I am utterly unable to conceive of any solid foundation for the exclusion of proof, that the consideration was founded in a mistake of law./fAll the difficulty and confusion, which have grown out of th® application of the maxim, appear to me to have originated in confounding the terms ignorance and mistake. The former is passive, and does not presume to reason ; and, unless we were permitted to dive into the secret recesses of the heart, its presence is incapable of proof f but the latter presumes to know, when it does not, and supplies palpable evidence of its existence. Hence it was well remarked by Lord Rosslyn* in Fletcher v. Toilet, 5 Ves. 14, that “ ignorance is not mistake.” )

The case in hand furnishes, I think, materials for an apt illustration of this distinction. The case of Vaux v. Nesbit had been recently decided, when this contract was entered into, and the rule established by it was not generally known to the profession. The defendant did not act of his own head, or confide in his own judgment, but sought the advice of counsel; who instructed him, that the land descended to Samuel F. Isaacs, notwithstanding the will; and upon the faith of this advice he gave the bond sued on. Now I hazard little in affirming, that no one who reasons correctly will doubt: 1st. that the defendant did not intend this bond as a gratuity to Samuel F. Isaacs; nor 2dly* that, acting upon the mistake of his counsel, he did intend it as the price of the fee simple of the land. The proof of the mistake is then clearly made out; but if he had acted of his own head, and confiding in his own unassisted judgment, proof of his ignorance would have been impracticable: and his contract might have been set down to the account of a compromise of a doubtful right, or the improvident investment of money on a speculating bargain; and in either view he would have been bound,

[650]*650Having premised thus much) I will proceed to notiee a few of ^)e teathng cases, of the very many that have been referred to in the argument. ^That of Bilbie v. Lumley, 2 East, 469, is the first, I believe, in which the rule was broadly laid down, that if one paid money to another, voluntarily,-with a full knowledge of all the facts of the case,- he could .not recover-it back on the ground of his ignorance of the law. jI attach no importance to the circumstance,- that there the action was to recover back money paid, and not, as here, to enforce a contract founded upon a mistake of law; for without intending to enter into the inquiry, whether there is, or is not a difference between the two cases, Í incline to think that there is none in principle: for,.in general, the same principle, which furnishes a protection from loss, supplies also the remedy for a wrong. |But the manner in which that case went off is calculated to lessen its authority as- a precedent.

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Bluebook (online)
18 S.C.L. 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-v-beaubien-scctapp-1831.