Straus v. Cunningham
This text of 159 A.D. 718 (Straus v. Cunningham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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The question presented by this appeal is when will a moral obligation survive the release of a debt by a composition agreement so as to furnish a .sufficient consideration to support a subsequent promise to pay the debt.
The latest and most comprehensive decision upon this subject in this State is to be found in Taylor v. Hotchkiss (81 App. Div. 470; affd., 179 N. Y. 546). In that case Mr. Justice Hiscocic, writing for the Appellate Division, stated the general rule as follows: “ If plaintiff under proceedings in bankruptcy or in other involuntary form, had been compelled to accept the stock received by him in full legal settlement of an indebtedness which it did not in fact actually pay, a moral obligation upon the part of the debtor to pay the deficiency would have survived his discharge from his legal and enforeible obligations which would be a sufficient consideration for a subsequent [719]*719promise to pay such balance. Upon the other hand * * * if plaintiff, without further agreement or provision by voluntary proceedings of compromise, had accepted the stock in question in full settlement and satisfaction of the indebtedness’due to him, no moral obligation upon the part of the debtor would have survived which would have furnished an adequate consideration for a subsequent promise to pay.” That these two propositions, so far as they go, accurately state the law upon the subject seems to be conceded and, at all events, is well settled. There is a third case, however, not precisely covered by either of the foregoing propositions, and that third case is illustrated by Taylor v. Hotchkiss. In that case the firm of H. L. Hotchkiss & Co., being financially embarrassed and unable to pay its debts, made a general assignment. It then sought an adjustment with its creditors and issued a circular letter to them suggesting that they should accept certain stocks and bonds at a valuation of eighty per cent of their par value, and should thereupon release the firm so that it might resume business on the Stock Exchange. This was accepted and a general release executed. In their circular letter Hotchkiss & Co. said: “ We propose to offer our moral obligation to take these securities back from our creditors at. 80% at a date not later than April 1, 1895.” Then followed an explanation as to how the firm proposed to fulfill this moral obligation. Of course this proposition was intended to, and doubtless did, have an influence in inducing the creditors to execute the composition agreement, although of itself it did not amount to a binding agreement to take the stock back. The court, however, found that after the execution of the release Hotchkiss renewed by independent agreements his obligation to retake the stock at eighty. The question was whether a moral obligation arose out of the composition agreement sufficient to serve as a consideration for the new promise. The court held that it did notwithstanding the composition and release were voluntary acts on the part of the creditors. The court was of the opinion that even in case of a voluntary composition, the debtors may, .by their acts, expressly provide for that survival of the moral obligation to pay, in the future, in full the indebtedness compromised which would serve as a sufficient consideration for a new promise.
[720]*720This seems to be a reasonable rule in view of the wide power which individuals have to contract as between themselves. Nor is it necessary that the reservation of this moral obligation be so closely interwoven with the composition agreement as it was in Taylor v. Hotchkiss. We see no reason why a debtor may not, at the time he accepts a voluntary extinguishment of his debts, expressly reserve a moral obligation to pay in full, if able, which will support a subsequent promise to pay.
The facts alleged in the complaint in the present case, which for the purpose of this appeal must be taken as true, are that in March, 1905, the firm of Ellingwood & Cunningham owed the plaintiff the sum of $27,000; that said firm entered into a composition agreement with certain of their creditors wherein and whereby said creditors for certain consideration therein expressed agreed to release said firm and the members thereof from all their legal obligation to pay the debts and obligations due to said creditors; that plaintiff signed said agreement and became a party thereto. The complaint then proceeds as follows: ££TV. That prior to and simultaneously with the making of the said agreement, the defendant expressly reserved from the operation of the said agreement and release his moral obligation to pay the debt of the plaintiff, amounting, as aforesaid, to the sum of twenty-seven thousand ($27,000) dollars and interest, and duly acknoiuledged and recognized said moral obligation as then existing and continuing to exist thereafter.
££V. That thereafter and on or about the 19th day of April, 1905, the defendant, recognizing his said moral obligation to pay to the plaintiff the said debt of twenty-seven thousand ($27,000) dollars, and, in consideration thereof, did then and there promise that he would pay to the plaintiff the said sum of twenty-seven thousand ($27,000) dollars with interest from April 19th, 1905, as follows: $8,000 on or about May 22nd, 1906, and the balance within a year thereafter, the said defendant, however, to be credited on account of said payment with all sums which the plaintiff might receive from the trustees or assignees under said composition agreement.
££ VI. That thereafter, from time to time, the defendant made payments upon account of the said sum agreed to be [721]*721paid by him, as aforesaid, in the amounts and at the times set forth in the annexed schedule, which is marked Schedule ‘ A ’ and made a part hereof as though the same were herein specifically set forth in full, and the plaintiff received various sums from the trustees or assignees under said composition agreement at the times and in the amounts set forth in said schedule ‘A.’”
It is also alleged that from time to time plaintiff sent to defendant statements of account which were received and accepted by defendant. Attached to the complaint is a schedule showing the payment of several thousand dollars by defendant to plaintiff between June 1, 1905, and January 20, 1908.
These allegations, as it seems to us, bring the present case fairly within the principle of Taylor v. Hotchkiss.
It was certainly competent for the defendant to reserve a moral obligation to pay his debt in full if possible, and perhaps most honorable men would feel that such an obligation rested upon them. It may well be, although not so alleged, that the defendant’s recognition and reservation of this moral obligation had weight with the creditors in consenting to compromise and release the debts.
The rule is, we think, satisfied by holding that, unless specially reserved, no moral obligation to pay the debts survives a voluntary composition and release, but that where at the time of the release the debtor expressly recognizes and reserves a moral obligation to pay notwithstanding the release, that express reservation keeps alive the obligation after release to the extent that it will furnish a sufficient consideration for a subsequent and quite distinct promise to pay.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
159 A.D. 718, 144 N.Y.S. 1014, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/straus-v-cunningham-nyappdiv-1913.