Shepard Co. v. Rhodes and Another

7 R.I. 470
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedSeptember 6, 1863
StatusPublished

This text of 7 R.I. 470 (Shepard Co. v. Rhodes and Another) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shepard Co. v. Rhodes and Another, 7 R.I. 470 (R.I. 1863).

Opinion

Bullock, J.

The count demurred to states, in substance, that the plaintiffs had discharged the defendants from a certain debt, then due and owing from them to the plaintiffs, in consideration of dividends to be received from the proceeds of certain effects assigned by the defendants; and that, subsequent to such discharge, the defendants feeling themselves honorably bound to pay to the plaintiffs this debt, in consideration thereof and of one dollar to them paid, made the following new promise, to wit, to pay to the plaintiffs in one year after a'final dividend, any difference that might then exist between their full debt and interest and the amount of any dividend or dividends the plaintiffs might *472 have previously received. The count further states, that more than one year has elapsed since the plaintiffs received notice that no dividend would be paid them from the assigned effects.

This statement of the cause of action shows, in effect, two separate and distinct considerations, as the foundation of the new promise: first, a moral consideration, that the defendants, notwithstanding their discharge, felt themselves in honor bound to pay the plaintiffs’ debt; and, second, the vakiable consideration of one dollar, paid to the defendants by the plaintiffs when the new promise was made.

Are these considerations, as stated, sufficient in law to sustain the promise ? Passing by the earlier cases, referred to at length in a note to the report of Wennall v. Adney, 3 Bos. & Pul. 249, and some of which hold to the opposite, it may now be, deemed settled, that no action can be maintained upon a promise founded upon a mere moral consideration. Mills v. Wyman, 3 Pick. 207; Eastwood v. Kenyon, 11 Ad. & Ell. 438; Beaumont v. Reeve, 8 Ad. & Ell. (N. S.) 483; S. C. 55 Eng. C. L. 483. It has been said, that such a doctrine is not creditable to the common law; but the rule has its origin in the widely diversified character of moral duties, and the consequent difficulty of measuring them with exactness, and determining which are so high and obligatory in their nature as to demand, in their performance, the payment of money.

There is a class of cases which, for the most part, have been regarded as hot falling within the rule, that a mere moral consideration will not support a promise. Of such is the case of a promise barred by the statute of limitations, where the party is under no legal liability to pay when the promise is made. And so, of the promise of an infant, made after he becomes of age, to pay a debt incurred during his minority, and which debt he is then at liberty to ratify or avoid. Upon the same principle, a promise to pay a debt originally usurious, where usury avoids the contract, but freed from all usury at the time the new promise is made, is binding, because the original contract is not void, but voidable only at the election of the borrower. And so, the promise of a bankrupt, made after certificate of discharge granted, may be enforced, although now, in England, by statute (6 Geo. *473 IV. c. 16) the promise must be in writing. But it is settled, that such considerations as love, friendship, natural affection, even the close relation existing between parent and child, are not, of themselves, sufficient to support an express promise. Whethep the promise of a feme covert, after coverture ended, to pay a debt contracted during coverture, falls within the limit of the exception, has been a subject of frequent discussion, and of decisions somewhat contrariant. In Lee v. Muggeridge, 5 Taunt. 36, an action was upheld against her executors, upon the bond of a, feme covert, followed by her promise to pay, dnrni sola. But this case can-hardly be deemed authority since the decision in Eastwood v. Kenyon, supra; and, in New York, an action was maintained against a woman, upon a contract of retainer entered into by her before a divorce. Wilson v. Burr, 25 Wend. 386. A more leading case, in the same State, affirming the validity of such a promise, is that of Goulding v. Davidson, 3 Am. Law Reg. No. 1. N. S. 34, recently decided in the Court of Appeals. The facts were, that a feme covert represented herself as unmarried and as trading on her own account, and so procured credit, and purchased goods, for which she gave her note. Her coverture was not known to the creditor. After the death of her husband, she promised to pay this debt, and an action was brought upon this promise. The decision proceeds, mainly, upon the ground, that being guilty of fraud in the original undertaking, trover or replevin might have been brought against her and her husband at any time after the supposed purchase was made, and since this cause of action existed against her during coverture, a promise by her, after coverture, rested upon this as a sufficient consideration.

The principle recognized in, and which, almost without exception, has controlled this class of cases, is this : that when the precedent original consideration was sufficient to sustain the promise, but the right of action Was suspended or barred by some positive rule of statutory or common law, the debtor might, by a subsequent promise, waive the exemption which the law has interposed indirectly for his benefit, but, mainly, from reasons of sound policy.

The case here is one where the original right of action was *474 extinguished, not by the act of the lazo, but by the act of the parties. It was a voluntary release of the debt by the creditor to the debtor. In Willing v. Peters, 12 S. & R. 179, the question arose, how far a promise to pay a debt, thus discharged, might be enforced ; and, because of the analogy between waiving a discharge created by act of law and one created by act of the parties, the court upheld the action. Shaw, C. J., in Valentine v. Foster, 1 Metc. 522, admits the closeness of the analogy, and suggests, if the rule be not narrow that allows the waiver in the one case to bind the party, and rejects it in the other; but he adds, that the Pennsylvania authority is the only one he has been able to find in support of the doctrine ; and in the case then before him, ruled, that when a creditor released a debtor to make him a witness, the subsequent promise of the debtor was not binding. Considering his own decision, and that the case of Willing v. Peters was subsequently overruled in the same court, in Snevily v. Read, 9 Watts, 396, while in other courts it has been repeatedly adjudicated, that after the voluntary

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Related

Snevily v. Read
9 Watts 396 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1840)

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Bluebook (online)
7 R.I. 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shepard-co-v-rhodes-and-another-ri-1863.