Martin Lewis & Co. v. Simons
This text of 1 Handy 82 (Martin Lewis & Co. v. Simons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
There is no doubt, that the promise of the defendant is without consideration, and therefore void, unless the fact of the preceding indebtedness, from which he was discharged by the act of the plaintiffs, can be set up as still subsisting in foro conscientiae, and thereby constitute a valid foundation for the new promises.
The question, thus presented, is one which has been much considered and variously decided. All the earlier cases hold in general terms, that a moral obligation is a sufficient consideration for an express promise. And Chief Justice Mansfield, in Merrill v. Gibbs, 3 Farm. 311, went [84]*84so far as to say that “ an obligation in honor” will suffice for such a promise. But this doctrine, in modern cases, has undergone much modification, and is to be taken with many exceptions. . Indeed the current of authority now is, that -a mere moral obligation, where there has existed no prior legal one, unless, where a legal obligation would have existed but for the interposition of some positive rule of law, is not a sufficient consideration for an express promise. Chitty on Con. 46-50. A .mere- obligation of honor cannot be enforced, nor does it lay the foundation for a new promise. A voluntary note is -an obligation of this sort; but if cannot be enforced though the maker should afterwards, time -and -again, promise to pay it. So if one make a voluntary gift to another, an express promise by the latter to pay the value of it, is not binding. 11 Ad. & El. 438; Eastwood vs. Kenyon. In what cases then will a moral obligation, as it is called, lay the foundation for an express promise ? I answer, in those cases where in the forum of conscience and in the forum of law, the party would have been bound to do the thing promsed, had he not been released, or rendered unable to contract by mere positive law. Of this character are promises by an adult to pay a debt contracted during infancy— by a bankrupt to pay a debt discharged by bankruptcy— by an endorser to pay a note from which he was discharged for want of notice — by a person to pay the sum due upon a note void for usury — or' to pay a debt barred by .the statute of limitations. In all these cases, and others of a like sort, the party would have been bound in conscience, and by the principles of sound morality, to pay the debt, irrespective of the new promise. Indeed, so far as the new -promise is concerned, though it gives [85]*85legal vitality to the moral obligation,. it confers no additional sacredness upon it. But, a debt which is voluntarily discharged by the act of the párty to whom it is due, for a valuable consideration, is wholly gone, and leaves no obligation to pay on the part of the other, either legal or moral. It is not necessary that the consideration received should have been equal in value to the debt discharged; certainly not in a legal point of view, nor, as it seems to me, in morals. The question to be decided in such cases is, what did the parties intend ? If the intention was to put an end to the debt, then, all obligation ceased, and the thing became, as if no obligation had ever existed. It is difficult to perceive how any obligation could exist to discharge that, which has already been discharged by the party to whom it was due. To hold otherwise, would prevent a creditor from forgiving his debtor, either in whole, or in part, if he were ever so well inclined to do so; and would thus virtually deprive him of the right to control his own property. As already stated, it has been held that a gift, voluntarily made, will not sustain an express promise to pay its value. 11 Ad. & El. supra. Upon the same principle, it seems equally clear, that a debt voluntarily and fully discharged, will not be revived by a new promise.
So far as any American cases have been found on the subject, their weight is decidedly in favor of the position thus taken. The only case which has been cited to the contrary, is that of Willing v. Peters, 12 Serg. & R. 182, where the ease is assimilated to a discharge in Bankruptcy ; and it is said that there is no distinction between a discharge by operation of law, and one by the act of the party. The authority of this case, as remarked by [86]*86Judge Cowan, in Stafford v. Bacon, 1 Hill 533, is very much weakened, if not entirely overturned by that of Snevilly v. Reed, 9 Watts 396, decided by the same Court. In the latter case, the defendant having been arrested on a Ca. Sa. and voluntarily discharged therefrom by the plaintiff, made a new promise to pay the debt, and it was ' held he was not bound. The debt was discharged by the arrest and release. It was not paid, though satisfied in law. Yet, not more satisfied, than if it had been wholly released by any other act of the party. The Chief Justice, in delivering the opinion of the Court, without directly impeaching the validity of the decision in Willing v. Peters, says it went a very great way.
But the cases of Warren v. Whitney, 24 Maine 562, and Stafford v. Bacon, 1 Hill 533, are directly in point to the question we have been considering. In both of which it was held, that a debtor voluntarily discharged by his creditor on payment of part of the debt due, was not liable on a new promise, without further consideration, to pay the residue.
These decisions seem to us well founded in principle; and in accordance therewith, the demurrer will le sustained.
Judgement for the defendant.
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1 Handy 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-lewis-co-v-simons-ohsuperctcinci-1854.