St. Paul's Episcopal Church v. Fields

72 A. 145, 81 Conn. 670
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 5, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 72 A. 145 (St. Paul's Episcopal Church v. Fields) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Paul's Episcopal Church v. Fields, 72 A. 145, 81 Conn. 670 (Colo. 1909).

Opinion

Thayer, J.

Upon the pleadings the plaintiffs were bound to prove that they raised $10,000 within a year from the date of the Boardman note, for the purpose of *676 building a church. They claimed that $6,000 of this sum was raised within the time, by the appropriation, by the Standing Committee of the Diocese of Connecticut, of a legacy from a Mrs. Terry. The entire evidence in the case is certified as a part of the record. From this it appears that Hatch learned that Mrs. Lucre'tia Terry had left a bequest of $6,000 to the Standing Committee, and he wrote to the bishop asking him to present the claims of St. Paul's Church, and to-ask the committee to give that bequest toward making up the sum of $10,000. At a meeting of this committee held on February 18th, 1907, at which the bishop and all the members of the committee were present, “it was, among other things, unanimously agreed as follows: That when the legacy of Mrs. Lucretia Terry of $6,000 to the Bishop and Standing Committee shall become available, so much of the same as shall be necessary to secure the conditional gift of $20,000 from Mrs. Lucy H. Boardman shall be appropriated for the use of St. Paul’s Church, Willimantic.” The bishop notified Mr. Hatch of this action of the committee. No part of the $6,000 has ever been paid to the plaintiffs. This was the only evidence introduced upon the trial tending to support the plaintiffs’ claim that they had raised $6,000 from the Standing Committee, except that there was proof that at some time — whether before or after March 27th, 1907, did not appear — $6,000 received from the Terry estate was on deposit in a Hartford bank subject to the order of the Bishop and the secretary of the Standing Committee. The jury were instructed that in order to find that the plaintiffs had raised the $10,000, they must at least find that the money had been paid to the mission, or that good, substantial, bona fide subscriptions or obligations had been made to it for that sum within the year.

The plaintiffs did not and cannot complain of these instructions. In determining whether the verdict should have been set aside, the evidence must be viewed, as the *677 jury must have viewed it, in the light of the instructions given. But, so viewed, it does not support the verdict.

The subscriptions and obligations which the jury were permitted to treat as equivalent to money raised, were subscriptions and obligations legally binding the obligors to pay and such as would be enforcible at law, not mere moral or honorary obligations. The action of the Standing Committee did not bind them to pay $6,000 absolutely at any time. It was not even a present appropriation of the particular fund to which it referred, the legacy; but merely an agreement that in the future, when it should become available, they would appropriate to the plaintiffs’ use such part of it as should then be necessary to secure the Boardman gift. Thus it was not an absolute obligation to pay money, but, at most, a promise, if and when a certain fund should become available, to appropriate a part thereof to the use of the plaintiffs. The legacy might fail and never become available, in which case there would be no legal obligation resting upon the committee to pay anything. Such a conditional obligation did not fulfil Mrs. Boardman’s requirement that the money should be raised within one year. Bates College v. Bates, 135 Mass. 487, 488; New York Exchange Co. v. De Wolf, 31 N. Y. 273, 279. It is unnecessary to consider the other grounds upon which it is claimed that the verdict was against the evidence. It was essential to a recovery upon either count, that the plaintiffs should prove that the sum of $10,000 had been raised. Having failed to establish this fact, the verdict should have been set aside.

The defendants claimed that the evidence showed that there was no consideration for the note. The court instructed the jury, as to the second count, that a promise to donate money to a charitable or religious organization, either by subscription or by giving a note, could not be enforced unless some consideration therefor existed, and that to support the contract of subscription claimed, *678 they must find either that a benefit accrued to Mrs. Board-man by signing the note, or that a loss, trouble or inconvenience accrued to the plaintiffs or one of them; but as to the first count it charged, in substance, that there could be a recovery regardless of the claim of want of consideration. The defendants had requested a charge as to both counts substantially like the charge given as to the second count, and they complain of the court’s refusal to apply it to the first count, and of the charge as given as to that count. It is urged in support of the charge, that as the note is under seal the consideration cannot be questioned. Formerly such an instrument as that declared on in the first count was held to be a specialty and not a note, and the consideration could not for that reason be inquired into. Kennedy v. Howell, 20 Conn. 349, 352. Such instruments were then not negotiable in this State, although in some of the other States they were held to be notes and negotiable as such. By the Negotiable Instruments Act of 1897, General Statutes, chapter 234, §§4171 and 4176, an instrument like that in question is a negotiable promissory note, and by § 4198 is open to the defense of want of consideration. The charge as given with respect to the second count might, therefore, properly have been given with respect to the first, in view of the claims of the defendants.

The fact that Fields was the agent of Mrs. Boardman at the time she delivered the note to him did not preclude his being the depositary of it in escrow, provided he received it, not in his capacity as agent, but in his individual capacity. There was nothing in the fact of his agency that so identified him with the note that the law will refuse to treat him as a stranger to it, and nothing to prevent his proper discharge of the duties of a depositary of it. Anciently, escrows were confined to writings under seal. The law regarded the delivery of such a writing to the party to whom it was made as an absolute delivery, although it was in fact *679 to be effective only upon the performance of some condition. It was not permissible to prove the condition, the reason given being, that we are to look to what was done, not what was said — “non quod dictum est, sed quod factum est inspicitur.” 1 Coke on Littleton, [36 a.]. So a delivery in escrow to the agent of the grantee was a present delivery to the grantee, and such delivery to the agent of the grantor was no delivery. The delivery, therefore, had to be to a stranger or third party, and because the delivery to such a person would be of no effect without words explaining it, the conditions upon which it was delivered or deposited might be shown. In later times, instruments other than deeds have been delivered in escrow, and the law does not, at least as to these, hold to its ancient strictness as regards the delivery, although there is considerable conflict in the authorities. A promissory note may, in this State, be delivered to the payee in escrow, to become effective if certain conditions are fulfilled, otherwise to remain ineffective. McFarland v. Sikes, 54 Conn.

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Bluebook (online)
72 A. 145, 81 Conn. 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-pauls-episcopal-church-v-fields-conn-1909.