Sanborn v. French

22 N.H. 246
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 15, 1850
StatusPublished

This text of 22 N.H. 246 (Sanborn v. French) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanborn v. French, 22 N.H. 246 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1850).

Opinion

Perley, J.

The plaintiff undertook, as administrator of his wife’s estate, to indorse the note before it fell due. But he had no letters of administration until the third Tuesday of May, and the note fell due on, the second day of April. An administrator derives his authority from the grant of administration ; and this indorsement, being made before the plaintiff* had letters of administration, was inoperative, and gave Hill no title to the note. Consequently the note would be liable in his hands to any defence that could be made against the payee. Indeed the case does not show that the note was ever legally transferred to Hill. It has always belonged to the estate of the intestate; and in the grant of administration the title to the note vested in the administrator. The attempted transfer to Hill, will not-protect the note against a defence that could be made to it in the hands of the payee.

This view of the case disposes also of the defendant’s objection that the action cannot be maintained by the plaintiff, for want of interest in the note.

But even if the indorsement had been valid, and transferred the note to Hill, being in blank, it made the note payable to bearer ; and it would then pass by delivery. The presumption of course must be, till the contrary is shown, that the plaintiff is the lawful bearer of the note which he produces in the cause, and as such he may well recover on his count for money had and received. Besides, though the fact appeared that Hill was the owner of the note, and the plaintiff had no beneficial interest in it, the action might still be maintained in his name. Egerton v. Brackett, 11 N. H. Rep. 218. Having disposed of these preliminary points, we come to the principal question in the case: whether the defendant’s note was given upon a sufficient consideration ?

The payee, a married woman, at the request of the defendant, executed to a third person a separate deed of land, in which she had an estate for life ; this is the only consideration for the note appearing in the case.

As a general rule, the separate deed of the wife is held to be void; and, except in the case of a lease, is incapable of being confirmed by the wife after the husband’s death. Ela v. Card, 2 N. H. Rep. 176. The deed in this case does not fall under any of the [248]*248exceptions to this rule, and must therefore be held inoperative as a conveyance.

Here is nothing in the nature of fraud or mistake ; it must consequently be taken that the parties understood at the time that no estate passed by the deed. Even if it appeared that the defendant, knowing all the facts, misapprehended the legal effect of the deed, his mistake of the law would not furnish him with any ground of defence. Bilbie v. Lumley, 2 East, 469; Ladd v. Kenney, 2 N. H. Rep. 340.

There has been no failure of consideration. The defendant has all, that we can understand, he contracted for. The defence which he sets up, is a total want of consideration for his note. It is now well settled, though the point continued to be questioned until a recent period in the history of the law, that want of consideration is a good defence to a suit brought on a promissory note by the payee or his representative. Pillans v. Van Mierop, 3 Burrow, 1671; Livingston v. Hastee, 2 Caines’ Rep. 247.

But in the absence of fraud and mistake, the court cannot inquire into the amount and adequacy of the consideration. If the contract is fairly made, with a full understanding of all the facts the “ smallest spark ” of consideration is sufficient.

It is enough, if a slight benefit be conferred by the plaintiff on the defendant or a third person; or, if the plaintiff sustain the smallest injury or inconvenience, or risk of injury or inconvenience, without benefiting the defendant or any other person. Com. Dig. Action Assumpsit, B. 1; Chitty on Contracts, 7 ; Pillans v. Van Mierop, 3 Burrows, 1672; Phillips v. Bateman, 16 East, 372; Stewart v. The State, 2 Harr. & Gill. 114; Austyn v. McLewe, 4 Dallas, 229.

In Sturlyn v. Albany, Cro. El. 67, the plaintiff, at the request of the defendant, showed him a deed, by which rent was reserved ; and this was held to be a sufficient consideration for the promise of the defendant to pay the rent.

In Traver against an anonymous defendant, 1 SiderSn, 57, a woman, after the death of her husband, promised a creditor, if he would prove her husband had owed him ¿620, she would pay it; and it was held a sufficient consideration, because it was trouble and charge to the creditor to prove his debt.

[249]*249In the present case the payee of the note executed the deed at the request of the defendant. This caused trouble and inconvenience, more or less, which the payee might have declined to incur; and to induce her to execute the deed, the defendant gave her this note. The adequacy of the consideration, the law does not undertake to measure. How can we say here was no spark of consideration, such as the cases recognize to be sufficient to support a promise ?

What particular motive the defendant may have had for desiring to obtain this deed from the plaintiff’s wife, does not appear. But the deed, though void as a conveyance to pass any legal estate, would still give color of title to the grantee, and those who claimed under her, and this color of title would extend an adverse seisin, by construction, to the limits of the land described in the deed, and might have very important effects on the rights of those who held possession under it. The grantee may therefore have expected to derive, and might have in fact derived substantial advantage from the execution of the deed.

On the other hand, in addition to the trouble the plaintiff’s wife must have taken, and the slight expense she may have incurred in executing the deed, this conveyance would be very likely to bring doubt and embarrassment on her title, and in case she survived her husband, might-interpose serious obstacles to her enjoyment of the land. She would be obliged to establish her claim against her own deed. The case indeed now finds that, at the time when she made the deed, she was a married woman, and on that account the law holds her conveyance to be inoperative. But the fact that she was a married woman, if denied, she would be obliged to establish by proof — and this, after a long lapse of time, she might find it difficult, perhaps impossible, to do. This cloud, which a void deed brings over the title to land, the law regards as a serious embarrassment, and equity gives relief by decreeing the void deed to be given up and cancelled. Lord St. John v. Lady St. John, 11 Vesey, 535.

In Perkins v. Bumford, 3 N. H. Rep. 522, the plaintiff had purchased land at a sale for taxes, and the tax had been paid by [250]*250the defendant, the owner. The note in suit was given for a quitclaim deed of the land, which the plaintiff executed to the defendant after the payment of the tax. The plaintiff had no title, or color, or pretence of title in the land, and in fact conveyed nothing whatever by his deed. The court indeed distinguish that from the case of a contract void for want of power in the party to contract, and refer to Fowler v. Shearer, 7 Mass. 14, as an authority for that distinction.

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Related

Fowler v. Shearer
7 Mass. 14 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1810)
Clark v. Sigourney
17 Conn. 511 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1846)
Ladd v. Kinney
2 N.H. 340 (Superior Court of New Hampshire, 1821)
Perkins v. Bumford
3 N.H. 522 (Superior Court of New Hampshire, 1826)
Edgerton v. Brackett
11 N.H. 218 (Superior Court of New Hampshire, 1840)

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Bluebook (online)
22 N.H. 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanborn-v-french-nhsuperct-1850.