McDevitt v. Stokes

192 S.W. 681, 174 Ky. 515, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 230
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 9, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 192 S.W. 681 (McDevitt v. Stokes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDevitt v. Stokes, 192 S.W. 681, 174 Ky. 515, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 230 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Cheep Justice Settle

Affirming.

In this action instituted by the appellant, Mike McDevitt, in the court below he sought to recover of the appellee, W. E. D. Stokes, the sum of $800.00 alleged to be the balance due him of a $1,000.00 claim which appellee agreed to pay him in the event he won with a mare called “Grace,” to be driven by him, the celebrated Kentucky Futurity race of the Kentucky Trotting Horse Breeders Association at Lexington, in October, 1910. In the opinion of the circuit court the facts alleged in the petition did not show a consideration sufficient to support the agreement on the part of appellee to pay the $1,000.00, for which reason the general demurrer filed by the latter to the petition was sustained. The appellant declining to plead further, "the petition was dismissed, and from the judgment entered in conformity to these rulings, he prosecutes this appeal.

The facts constituting appellant’s cause of action, fully set forth in the petition, are substantially as-follows : At the trotting meeting of the Kentucky Trotting Horse Breeders Association, held at the city of Lexington, in October, 1910, the mare “Grace,” owned by one Shaw, was entered in the Kentucky Futurity race, to be driven by the appellant, McDevitt, a driver of great skill and experience, who was then in Shaw’s employ. The Kentucky Futurity race is one of the most noted races' among trotting horsemen in the United States and the winning of it greatly increases the value of the win[516]*516ning horse and also the value of the sire, dam, brothers and sisters of the winner. The purse offered in the race in question was $14,000.00, to be divided as follows: To the winner, $10,000.00; to the second horse, $2,000.00; to the third horse, $1,000.00; to the fourth horse, $500.00; to the owner of the dam of the winner, $300.00; to the owner of the dam of the second horsé, $100.00; to the owner of the dam of the third horse, $75.00; to the owner of the dam of the fourth horse, $25.00. At the time this race occurred, and for some years prior thereto, the ap'pellee, Stokes, controlled and managed a large stock farm near Lexington, together with a number of valuable race horses, bred and reared thereon, and had formed, for operating the business, a corporation known as the “Patchen Wilkes Stock Farm,” of which he owns practically all the stock and is the president and manager. Among the horses then owned by this corporation was “Peter the Great,” the sire of the mare “Grace,” “Orianna,” her dam, “Yladimir,” a yearling, and “Kilpatrick,” a colt, her full brothers. As appellee named the mare “Orianna” as the dam of “Grace,” entered to win the Kentucky Futurity race, he, or the corporation of which he is president, was entitled, in the event of the latter’s winning it, to receive $300.00 out of the purse of $14,000.00, going to the winner. In addition, the value of each of the four horses, “Peter the Great,” “Orianna,” “Yladimir” and “Kilpatrick,” owned by the corporation of which he is president, would be greatly increased by “Grace” winning- the race. It is alleged in the petition that, influenced by the foregoing considerations, appellee agreed to pay appellant the sum of $1,000.00 if he would drive and win the Kentucky Futurity with the mare “Grace,” to which the latter agreed, drove the mare and won the race; that by reason thereof, appellee, or the corporation of which he is president, received, of the $14,000.00 purse won, $300.00, as the owner of “Orianna,” the dam of “Grace,” and the value of “Peter the Great,” the sire of “Grace,” was increased $10,000.00; that of “Orianna,” her dam, $5,000.00, and that of “Vladimir” and “Kilpatrick,” her brothers, $5,000.00 each.

It is insisted for appellant that the above enumerated benefits received by appellee from the winning of.the trotting race by the mare “Grace,” which resulted in large measure from his skill in driving her, constitutes [517]*517a sufficient consideration for the promise and undertaking of appellee to pay him the $1,000.00. This contention ignores consideration of another element of the alleged contract between the parties which, in our minds, is conclusive of its invalidity, viz.: That appellant, because of his employment by Shaw, the owner of the mare “Grace,” was already both morally and legally bound to perform the service required of him by the alleged contract he made with appellee; hence, its performance, as legally required by his contract with Shaw, would inevitably have resulted in the benefits received by appellee, in the absence of the alleged contract, made by the latter to pay therefor. To hold that appel-' lant would not'have won the race with “Grace” but for the agreement of appellee to pay him the $1,000.00 if he would do so, would be to say that he would have been recreant to the obligation arising out of his employment by Shaw, an inference not justified by anything appearing in the petition.

We find no fault with the argument of appellant’s counsel that a consideration which is either of benefit to the promisor or detrimental to the promisee, will be regarded sufficient to uphold the contract between the parties; nor are we inclined to depart from any principle announced in the cases of Talbott v. Stemmons, 10 R. 33; Ryan v. Tribble, 22 R. 1447; Moayon v. Moayon, 114 Ky. 864; Van Winkle v. King, 145 Ky. 693; First State Bank, &c. v. Morton, 146 Ky. 293; Shadwick v. Smith, 147 Ky. 160; relied on in the brief of counsel. The contracts discussed and passed on in those cases rest upon no such facts as are presented by the contract in the instant case, nor do they, or any of them, conflict with the conclusions at which we have arrived.

It will be found from an examination of those cases that the benefit resulting to the promisor, constituting the consideration of the contract, was some legal right acquired of the promisee by the promisor to which he would not otherwise have been entitled; or that the detriment resulting to the promisee, constituting the consideration of the contract, was the waiver or lose of some legal right in return for the promise he would otherwise have availed himself of. Our meaning will be better explained by the following excerpt from Page on Contracts, Volume 1, section 274, in which the author, in discussing the meaning of the words “valuable'consideration,” says:

[518]*518“The use of ‘benefit’ and ‘detriment’ in this connection needs explanation. While correct if properly understood, it is liable to misconstruction. ‘Benefit’ does not refer to any pecuniary gain arising out of the transaction, nor ‘detriment’ to any pecuniary loss. It is not possible to wait until the transaction is concluded and the books balanced, to see whether the consideration existed originally. ‘Benefit’ as used in this rule means that the promisor, has, in return for a promise, acquired some legal right to which he would not otherwise have been entitled; ‘detriment’ means that the promisee has, in return for the promise, forborne some legal right which he would otherwise have been entitled to exercise.”

In Clark on Contracts (Second Edition) pages 106-107, sections 61 and 62, it is said:

“Section 61. Consideration is that which moves from the promisee to the promisor, at the express or implied request of the latter, in return for his promise.....
“Section 62. As the term is used in the law of contracts, it means a ‘valuable’ consideration; that is something having value in the eye of the law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 S.W. 681, 174 Ky. 515, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdevitt-v-stokes-kyctapp-1917.